41 research outputs found

    Natural images from the birthplace of the human eye

    Get PDF
    Here we introduce a database of calibrated natural images publicly available through an easy-to-use web interface. Using a Nikon D70 digital SLR camera, we acquired about 5000 six-megapixel images of Okavango Delta of Botswana, a tropical savanna habitat similar to where the human eye is thought to have evolved. Some sequences of images were captured unsystematically while following a baboon troop, while others were designed to vary a single parameter such as aperture, object distance, time of day or position on the horizon. Images are available in the raw RGB format and in grayscale. Images are also available in units relevant to the physiology of human cone photoreceptors, where pixel values represent the expected number of photoisomerizations per second for cones sensitive to long (L), medium (M) and short (S) wavelengths. This database is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial Unported license to facilitate research in computer vision, psychophysics of perception, and visual neuroscience.Comment: Submitted to PLoS ON

    Design of a Trichromatic Cone Array

    Get PDF
    Cones with peak sensitivity to light at long (L), medium (M) and short (S) wavelengths are unequal in number on the human retina: S cones are rare (<10%) while increasing in fraction from center to periphery, and the L/M cone proportions are highly variable between individuals. What optical properties of the eye, and statistical properties of natural scenes, might drive this organization? We found that the spatial-chromatic structure of natural scenes was largely symmetric between the L, M and S sensitivity bands. Given this symmetry, short wavelength attenuation by ocular media gave L/M cones a modest signal-to-noise advantage, which was amplified, especially in the denser central retina, by long-wavelength accommodation of the lens. Meanwhile, total information represented by the cone mosaic remained relatively insensitive to L/M proportions. Thus, the observed cone array design along with a long-wavelength accommodated lens provides a selective advantage: it is maximally informative

    Epigenome-wide association study of serum urate reveals insights into urate co-regulation and the SLC2A9 locus

    Get PDF
    Elevated serum urate levels, a complex trait and major risk factor for incident gout, are correlated with cardiometabolic traits via incompletely understood mechanisms. DNA methylation in whole blood captures genetic and environmental influences and is assessed in transethnic meta-analysis of epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) of serum urate (discovery, n = 12,474, replication, n = 5522). The 100 replicated, epigenome-wide significant (p &lt; 1.1E–7) CpGs explain 11.6% of the serum urate variance. At SLC2A9, the serum urate locus with the largest effect in genome-wide association studies (GWAS), five CpGs are associated with SLC2A9 gene expression. Four CpGs at SLC2A9 have significant causal effects on serum urate levels and/or gout, and two of these partly mediate the effects of urate-associated GWAS variants. In other genes, including SLC7A11 and PHGDH, 17 urate-associated CpGs are associated with conditions defining metabolic syndrome, suggesting that these CpGs may represent a blood DNA methylation signature of cardiometabolic risk factors. This study demonstrates that EWAS can provide new insights into GWAS loci and the correlation of serum urate with other complex traits

    Meta-analyses identify DNA methylation associated with kidney function and damage

    Get PDF
    Chronic kidney disease is a major public health burden. Elevated urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio is a measure of kidney damage, and used to diagnose and stage chronic kidney disease. To extend the knowledge on regulatory mechanisms related to kidney function and disease, we conducted a blood-based epigenome-wide association study for estimated glomerular filtration rate (n = 33,605) and urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (n = 15,068) and detected 69 and seven CpG sites where DNA methylation was associated with the respective trait. The majority of these findings showed directionally consistent associations with the respective clinical outcomes chronic kidney disease and moderately increased albuminuria. Associations of DNA methylation with kidney function, such as CpGs at JAZF1, PELI1 and CHD2 were validated in kidney tissue. Methylation at PHRF1, LDB2, CSRNP1 and IRF5 indicated causal effects on kidney function. Enrichment analyses revealed pathways related to hemostasis and blood cell migration for estimated glomerular filtration rate, and immune cell activation and response for urinary albumin-to-creatinineratio-associated CpGs

    Finishing the euchromatic sequence of the human genome

    Get PDF
    The sequence of the human genome encodes the genetic instructions for human physiology, as well as rich information about human evolution. In 2001, the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium reported a draft sequence of the euchromatic portion of the human genome. Since then, the international collaboration has worked to convert this draft into a genome sequence with high accuracy and nearly complete coverage. Here, we report the result of this finishing process. The current genome sequence (Build 35) contains 2.85 billion nucleotides interrupted by only 341 gaps. It covers ∼99% of the euchromatic genome and is accurate to an error rate of ∼1 event per 100,000 bases. Many of the remaining euchromatic gaps are associated with segmental duplications and will require focused work with new methods. The near-complete sequence, the first for a vertebrate, greatly improves the precision of biological analyses of the human genome including studies of gene number, birth and death. Notably, the human enome seems to encode only 20,000-25,000 protein-coding genes. The genome sequence reported here should serve as a firm foundation for biomedical research in the decades ahead

    Epigenome-wide association study of serum urate reveals insights into urate co-regulation and the SLC2A9 locus

    Get PDF
    Serum urate concentration can be studied in large datasets to find genetic and epigenetic loci that may be related to cardiometabolic traits. Here the authors identify and replicate 100 urate-associated CpGs, which provide insights into urate GWAS loci and shared CpGs of urate and cardiometabolic traits.Elevated serum urate levels, a complex trait and major risk factor for incident gout, are correlated with cardiometabolic traits via incompletely understood mechanisms. DNA methylation in whole blood captures genetic and environmental influences and is assessed in transethnic meta-analysis of epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) of serum urate (discovery, n = 12,474, replication, n = 5522). The 100 replicated, epigenome-wide significant (p < 1.1E-7) CpGs explain 11.6% of the serum urate variance. At SLC2A9, the serum urate locus with the largest effect in genome-wide association studies (GWAS), five CpGs are associated with SLC2A9 gene expression. Four CpGs at SLC2A9 have significant causal effects on serum urate levels and/or gout, and two of these partly mediate the effects of urate-associated GWAS variants. In other genes, including SLC7A11 and PHGDH, 17 urate-associated CpGs are associated with conditions defining metabolic syndrome, suggesting that these CpGs may represent a blood DNA methylation signature of cardiometabolic risk factors. This study demonstrates that EWAS can provide new insights into GWAS loci and the correlation of serum urate with other complex traits.</p

    Meta-analyses identify DNA methylation associated with kidney function and damage

    Get PDF
    Chronic kidney disease is a major public health burden. Elevated urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio is a measure of kidney damage, and used to diagnose and stage chronic kidney disease. To extend the knowledge on regulatory mechanisms related to kidney function and disease, we conducted a blood-based epigenome-wide association study for estimated glomerular filtration rate (n = 33,605) and urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (n = 15,068) and detected 69 and seven CpG sites where DNA methylation was associated with the respective trait. The majority of these findings showed directionally consistent associations with the respective clinical outcomes chronic kidney disease and moderately increased albuminuria. Associations of DNA methylation with kidney function, such as CpGs at JAZF1, PELI1 and CHD2 were validated in kidney tissue. Methylation at PHRF1, LDB2, CSRNP1 and IRF5 indicated causal effects on kidney function. Enrichment analyses revealed pathways related to hemostasis and blood cell migration for estimated glomerular filtration rate, and immune cell activation and response for urinary albumin-to-creatinineratio-associated CpGs.Many genetic loci have been identified to be associated with kidney disease, but the molecular mechanisms are not well understood. Here, the authors perform epigenome-wide association studies on kidney function measures to identify epigenetic marks and pathways involved in kidney function.</p

    Toward a theory of the functional organization of the retina

    No full text
    The retina streams visual information to the brain through parallel channels with highly stereotyped patterns of organization and connection. Much progress has been made toward identifying the types of neurons present, and their connectivity. A key problem is inferring the function of a neural system based on its known anatomy and physiology, and identifying the advantages conferred by its particular design. Often, characterizing its architecture reveals some strange features of its organization, and the utility of these features is not always explained easily. Here evidence is presented that several intriguing \u27design features\u27 of the retina can be explained by careful application of a single hypothesis: that the retina is organized to maximize the information transmitted about natural visual stimuli, subject to a set of biophysical constraints. Specifically, the input neurons to the retina (photoreceptors) and the output neurons (ganglion cells) exhibit the following interesting features: (1) In trichromats, cone photoreceptors with peak sensitivity to long (L), medium (M) and short (S) wavelengths of light are asymmetrically distributed, so that the ratio of L/M (red/green) cones is highly variable, and S (blue) cones are relatively scarce. (2) Ganglion cell receptive fields are organized so that 3-4 cells of the same type represent each point in a visual image. (3) The retina devotes more resources to ganglion cells selective for negative contrasts (OFF cells) than those selective for positive contrasts (ON cells). (4) The shape of ganglion cell center/surround receptive fields depends on their spatial scale, so that the ratio of surround size to center size decreases with the visual angle subtended by the receptive field. In each case, statistical properties of natural visual stimuli could be coupled with realistic biophysical constraints to account for the features described. The analyses here constitute progress toward long-standing questions concerning the functional organization of the retina, and suggest a simple principle guiding the general design of neural circuits: equal numbers of synapses for equal information

    Toward a theory of the functional organization of the retina

    No full text
    The retina streams visual information to the brain through parallel channels with highly stereotyped patterns of organization and connection. Much progress has been made toward identifying the types of neurons present, and their connectivity. A key problem is inferring the function of a neural system based on its known anatomy and physiology, and identifying the advantages conferred by its particular design. Often, characterizing its architecture reveals some strange features of its organization, and the utility of these features is not always explained easily. Here evidence is presented that several intriguing \u27design features\u27 of the retina can be explained by careful application of a single hypothesis: that the retina is organized to maximize the information transmitted about natural visual stimuli, subject to a set of biophysical constraints. Specifically, the input neurons to the retina (photoreceptors) and the output neurons (ganglion cells) exhibit the following interesting features: (1) In trichromats, cone photoreceptors with peak sensitivity to long (L), medium (M) and short (S) wavelengths of light are asymmetrically distributed, so that the ratio of L/M (red/green) cones is highly variable, and S (blue) cones are relatively scarce. (2) Ganglion cell receptive fields are organized so that 3-4 cells of the same type represent each point in a visual image. (3) The retina devotes more resources to ganglion cells selective for negative contrasts (OFF cells) than those selective for positive contrasts (ON cells). (4) The shape of ganglion cell center/surround receptive fields depends on their spatial scale, so that the ratio of surround size to center size decreases with the visual angle subtended by the receptive field. In each case, statistical properties of natural visual stimuli could be coupled with realistic biophysical constraints to account for the features described. The analyses here constitute progress toward long-standing questions concerning the functional organization of the retina, and suggest a simple principle guiding the general design of neural circuits: equal numbers of synapses for equal information
    corecore