681 research outputs found
Realizations of self branched coverings of the 2-sphere
For a degree d self branched covering of the 2-sphere, a notable
combinatorial invariant is an integer partition of 2d -- 2, consisting of the
multiplicities of the critical points. A finer invariant is the so called
Hurwitz passport. The realization problem of Hurwitz passports remain largely
open till today. In this article, we introduce two different types of finer
invariants: a bipartite map and an incident matrix. We then settle completely
their realization problem by showing that a map, or a matrix, is realized by a
branched covering if and only if it satisfies a certain balanced condition. A
variant of the bipartite map approach was initiated by W. Thurston. Our results
shed some new lights to the Hurwitz passport problem
RBM19 is essential for preimplantation development in the mouse
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>RNA-binding motif protein 19 (RBM19, NCBI Accession # NP_083038) is a conserved nucleolar protein containing 6 conserved RNA recognition motifs. Its biochemical function is to process rRNA for ribosome biogenesis, and it has been shown to play a role in digestive organ development in zebrafish. Here we analyzed the role of RBM19 during mouse embryonic development by generating mice containing a mutation in the <it>Rbm19 </it>locus via gene-trap insertion.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Homozygous mutant embryos failed to develop beyond the morula stage, showing defective nucleologenesis, activation of apoptosis, and upregulation of P53 target genes. A unique feature of RBM19 is its localization to the cytoplasm in morula stage-embryos, whereas most other nucleolar proteins are localized to the nucleolar precursor body (NPB). The nucleoli in the <it>Rbm19 </it>mutant embryos remain immature, yet they can carry out rRNA synthesis. The timing of developmental arrest occurs after expression of the inner cell mass markers OCT3/4 and NANOG, but prior to the specification of trophectoderm as reflected by CDX2 expression.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The data indicate that RBM19 is essential for preimplantation development, highlighting the importance of de novo nucleologenesis during this critical developmental stage.</p
Carbohydrate-derived amphiphilic macromolecules: a biophysical structural characterization and analysis of binding behaviors to model membranes.
The design and synthesis of enhanced membrane-intercalating biomaterials for drug delivery or vascular membrane targeting is currently challenged by the lack of screening and prediction tools. The present work demonstrates the generation of a Quantitative Structural Activity Relationship model (QSAR) to make a priori predictions. Amphiphilic macromolecules (AMs) "stealth lipids" built on aldaric and uronic acids frameworks attached to poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) polymer tails were developed to form self-assembling micelles. In the present study, a defined set of novel AM structures were investigated in terms of their binding to lipid membrane bilayers using Quartz Crystal Microbalance with Dissipation (QCM-D) experiments coupled with computational coarse-grained molecular dynamics (CG MD) and all-atom MD (AA MD) simulations. The CG MD simulations capture the insertion dynamics of the AM lipophilic backbones into the lipid bilayer with the PEGylated tail directed into bulk water. QCM-D measurements with Voigt viscoelastic model analysis enabled the quantitation of the mass gain and rate of interaction between the AM and the lipid bilayer surface. Thus, this study yielded insights about variations in the functional activity of AM materials with minute compositional or stereochemical differences based on membrane binding, which has translational potential for transplanting these materials in vivo. More broadly, it demonstrates an integrated computational-experimental approach, which can offer a promising strategy for the in silico design and screening of therapeutic candidate materials
An interdisciplinary investigation of a recent submarine mass transport deposit at the continental margin off Uruguay
Assessing frequency and extent of mass movement at continental margins is crucial to evaluate risks for offshore constructions and coastal areas. A multidisciplinary approach including geophysical, sedimentological, geotechnical, and geochemical methods was applied to investigate multistage mass transport deposits (MTDs) off Uruguay, on top of which no surficial hemipelagic drape was detected based on echosounder data. Nonsteady state pore water conditions are evidenced by a distinct gradient change in the sulfate (SO42â) profile at 2.8 m depth. A sharp sedimentological contact at 2.43 m coincides with an abrupt downward increase in shear strength from âŒ10 to >20 kPa. This boundary is interpreted as a paleosurface (and top of an older MTD) that has recently been covered by a sediment package during a younger landslide event. This youngest MTD supposedly originated from an upslope position and carried its initial pore water signature downward. The kink in the SO42â profile âŒ35 cm below the sedimentological and geotechnical contact indicates that bioirrigation affected the paleosurface before deposition of the youngest MTD. Based on modeling of the diffusive reâequilibration of SO42â the age of the most recent MTD is estimated to be <30 years. The mass movement was possibly related to an earthquake in 1988 (âŒ70 km southwest of the core location). Probabilistic slope stability back analysis of general landslide structures in the study area reveals that slope failure initiation requires additional ground accelerations. Therefore, we consider the earthquake as a reasonable trigger if additional weakening processes (e.g., erosion by previous retrogressive failure events or excess pore pressures) preconditioned the slope for failure. Our study reveals the necessity of multidisciplinary approaches to accurately recognize and date recent slope failures in complex settings such as the investigated area
Human mobility:Models and applications
Recent years have witnessed an explosion of extensive geolocated datasets
related to human movement, enabling scientists to quantitatively study
individual and collective mobility patterns, and to generate models that can
capture and reproduce the spatiotemporal structures and regularities in human
trajectories. The study of human mobility is especially important for
applications such as estimating migratory flows, traffic forecasting, urban
planning, and epidemic modeling. In this survey, we review the approaches
developed to reproduce various mobility patterns, with the main focus on recent
developments. This review can be used both as an introduction to the
fundamental modeling principles of human mobility, and as a collection of
technical methods applicable to specific mobility-related problems. The review
organizes the subject by differentiating between individual and population
mobility and also between short-range and long-range mobility. Throughout the
text the description of the theory is intertwined with real-world applications.Comment: 126 pages, 45+ figure
Yeast and its derivatives as ingredients in the food industry
In the last 200 years, and still today, yeast is well known for its application in brewing, alcohol fermentation and wine and bread making. They are an endless source of new food ingredients and additives with excellent functional and nutritional properties, now through the use of innovative elaboration and fractionation techniques that come mainly from biotechnology. The book reviewed here contains fourteen chapters in 246 pages that deal with yeasts employed as food ingredients and their potential as Nutraceutics. It compiles the expertise of three Latin American institutionsthat have given priority to the generation of basic knowledge on yeast and set the grounds for the development of new technologies based on these microorganisms. This is a sample of the alternatives offered by yeast in the fields of food science and technology.Fil: Otero, Miguel A.. Instituto Cubano de Investigaciones de los Derivados de la Caña de AzĂșcar; CubaFil: Guerrero, Isabel. Universidad Nacional de Quilmes. Departamento de Ciencia y TecnologĂa. Laboratorio de InvestigaciĂłn en Funcionalidad y TecnologĂa de Alimentos; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; ArgentinaFil: Wagner, Jorge Ricardo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; ArgentinaFil: Cabello, AgustĂn J.. Instituto Cubano de Investigaciones de los Derivados de la Caña de AzĂșcar; CubaFil: Sceni, Paula. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; ArgentinaFil: GarcĂa, Roxana. Instituto Cubano de Investigaciones de los Derivados de la Caña de AzĂșcar; CubaFil: Soriano, Jorge. Universidad Nacional de Quilmes. Departamento de Ciencia y TecnologĂa. Laboratorio de InvestigaciĂłn en Funcionalidad y TecnologĂa de Alimentos; ArgentinaFil: Tomasini, Araceli. Universidad Nacional de Quilmes. Departamento de Ciencia y TecnologĂa. Laboratorio de InvestigaciĂłn en Funcionalidad y TecnologĂa de Alimentos; ArgentinaFil: Saura, Gustavo. Instituto Cubano de Investigaciones de los Derivados de la Caña de AzĂșcar; CubaFil: AlmazĂĄn, Oscar. Instituto Cubano de Investigaciones de los Derivados de la Caña de AzĂșcar; Cub
Biosensors in occupational safety and health management: A narrative review
A sensor is a device used to gather information registered by some biological, physical or chemical change, and then convert the information into a measurable signal. The first biosensor prototype was conceived more than a century ago, in 1906, but a properly defined biosensor was only developed later in 1956. Some of them have reached the commercial stage and are routinely used in environmental and agricultural applications, and especially, in clinical laboratory and industrial analysis, mostly because it is an economical, simple and efficient instrument for the in situ detection of the bioavailability of a broad range of environmental pollutants. We propose a narrative review, that found 32 papers and aims to discuss the possible uses of biosensors, focusing on their use in the area of occupational safety and health (OSH)
IGD Motifs, Which Are Required for Migration Stimulatory Activity of Fibronectin Type I Modules, Do Not Mediate Binding in Matrix Assembly
Picomolar concentrations of proteins comprising only the N-terminal 70-kDa region (70K) of fibronectin (FN) stimulate cell migration into collagen gels. The Ile-Gly-Asp (IGD) motifs in four of the nine FN type 1 (FNI) modules in 70K are important for such migratory stimulating activity. The 70K region mediates binding of nanomolar concentrations of intact FN to cell-surface sites where FN is assembled. Using baculovirus, we expressed wildtype 70K and 70K with Ile-to-Ala mutations in 3FNI and 5FNI; 7FNI and 9FNI; or 3FNI, 5FNI, 7FNI, and 9FNI. Wildtype 70K and 70K with Ile-to-Ala mutations were equally active in binding to assembly sites of FN-null fibroblasts. This finding indicates that IGD motifs do not mediate the interaction between 70K and the cell-surface that is important for FN assembly. Further, FN fragment N-3FNIII, which does not stimulate migration, binds to assembly sites on FN-null fibroblast. The Ile-to-Ala mutations had effects on the structure of FNI modules as evidenced by decreases in abilities of 70K with Ile-to-Ala mutations to bind to monoclonal antibody 5C3, which recognizes an epitope in 9FNI, or to bind to FUD, a polypeptide based on the F1 adhesin of Streptococcus pyogenes that interacts with 70K by the ÎČ-zipper mechanism. These results suggest that the picomolar interactions of 70K with cells that stimulate cell migration require different conformations of FNI modules than the nanomolar interactions required for assembly
Complex mosaic structural variations in human fetal brains
Somatic mosaicism, manifesting as single nucleotide variants (SNVs), mobile element insertions and structural changes in the DNA, is a common phenomenon in human brain cells, with potential functional consequences. Using a clonal approach, we previously detected 200-400 mosaic SNVs per cell in three human fetal brains (15 to 21 weeks post-conception). However, structural variation in the human fetal brain has not yet been investigated. Here, we discover and validate four mosaic structural variants (SVs) in the same brains and resolve their precise breakpoints. The SVs were of kilobase scale and complex, consisting of deletion(s) and rearranged genomic fragments, which sometimes originated from different chromosomes. Sequences at the breakpoints of these rearrangements had microhomologies, suggesting their origin from replication errors. One SV was found in two clones and we timed its origin to ~14 weeks post-conception. No large scale mosaic copy number variants (CNVs) were detectable in normal fetal human brains, suggesting that previously reported megabase-scale CNVs in neurons arise at later stages of development. By reanalysis of public single nuclei data from adult brain neurons, we detected an extra-chromosomal circular DNA event. Our study reveals the existence of mosaic SVs in the developing human brain, likely arising from cell proliferation during mid-neurogenesis. Although relatively rare compared to SNVs, and present in ~10% neurons, SVs in developing human brain affect a comparable number of bases in the genome (~6,200 vs ~4,000 bps), implying that they may have similar functional consequences
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