52 research outputs found
Root system architecture determines fitness in an Arabidopsis mutant in competition for immobile phosphate ions but not for nitrate ions
Plant root systems often have complex branching patterns. Models indicate that a complex architecture is only required for the acquisition of immobile resources, such as phosphate; mobile ions, notably nitrate, can be effectively taken up by very restricted root systems. We have tested this prediction using the axr4 mutation of Arabidopsis thaliana, the principal phenotypic effect of which is to reduce the number of lateral roots. Arabidopsis thaliana is not a host for mycorrhizal fungi and so acquires all its nutrients through the root system. In both a pot experiment and a field experiment conducted under natural conditions for A. thaliana, we found that only phosphate, and not nitrate, affected the fitness of the mutant relative to the isogenic wild-type line, Columbia. These results confirm model predictions and have implications both for the evolution of complex root systems and for the design of efficient root systems for crops
Blood lead levels in 2018/2019 compared to 1987/1988 in the German population-based KORA study
INTRODUCTION: Lead exposure remains of continuing concern due to its known and suspected impacts on human health and has been designated as a priority substance for investigation in human biomonitoring studies by the EU. The aims of this study were to measure blood lead levels (BLL) in a population based cohort of middle-aged individuals without major current exposures to lead, and to compare these to historical blood lead levels obtained thirty years earlier. METHODS: The population-based KORA study from 1984 to 2001 included inhabitants of the Augsburg Region, Germany. During 2018 to 2019, a subsample of these participants (KORA-Fit) was invited for interview regarding demographic and lifestyle factors, physical examination and blood withdrawal. Blood samples were stored at -80C prior to measurement of BLL via graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy (GF-AAS). Descriptive and multivariable analyses were performed. RESULTS: BLLs were measured in 3033 eligible persons aged 54 to 73, establishing a geometric mean (GM) BLL of 24.8 μg/l in 2018/19. Of these, 555 (18%) had BLL above proposed 95th percentile reference values of the German Environment Agency. Only small differences were found in BLL stratified by sociodemographic categories, however regular smokers had higher GM BLL (26.1 μg/l) compared to never smokers (23.7 μg/l), and an increasing BLL with increased wine consumption was noted. For 556 individuals, BLLs (GM: 54.0 μg/l) reduced by 35% in men and 50% in women compared to levels in 1987/88 with only 1.4% of individuals having an unchanged or increased BLL. DISCUSSION: KORA-Fit provided contemporary normative data for BLL in a Western European population without major current sources of lead exposure. Mean BLLs have fallen since the 1980s using historical BLL data which is likely linked to the ban of leaded gasoline. Nevertheless, BLLs in this population remain elevated at levels associated with morbidity and mortality
Validation of the 30-Year Framingham Risk Score in a German Population-Based Cohort
The Framingham Risk Score to predict 30-year risk (FRS30y) of cardiovascular disease (CVD) constitutes an important tool for long-term risk prediction. However, due to its complex statistical properties and the paucity of large population-based cohorts with appropriate data, validation of the FRS30y is lacking. A population-based cohort from Southern Germany (N = 3110, 1516 (48.7%) women) was followed up for a median time of 29.5 [18.7, 31.2] years. Discrimination and calibration were assessed for the original, recalibrated and refitted FRS30y version. During follow up, 620 incident CVD events (214 in women) occurred. The FRS30y showed adequate discrimination (original and recalibrated version: Area under the curve (AUC): 78.4 for women and 74.9 for men) but overestimated actual CVD risk (original version: discordance 45.4% for women and 37.3% for men, recalibrated version: 37.6% and 28.6%, respectively). Refitting showed substantial improvement in neither discrimination nor calibration. The performance of FRS30y is adequate for long-term CVD risk prediction and could serve as an important tool in risk communication, especially for younger audiences
The effect of retirement on biomedical and behavioral risk factors for cardiovascular and metabolic disease
Retirement is a major life event potentially associated with changes in
relevant risk factors for cardiovascular and metabolic conditions. This
study analyzes the effect of retirement on behavioral and biomedical
risk factors for chronic disease, together with subjective health
parameters using Southern German epidemiological data. We used panel
data from the KORA cohort study, consisting of 11,168 observations for
individuals 45–80 years old. Outcomes included health behavior (alcohol,
smoking, physical activity), biomedical risk factors (BMI, waist-to-hip
ratio (WHR), glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), total cholesterol/HDL
quotient, systolic/diastolic blood pressure), and subjective health
(SF12 mental and physical, self-rated health). We applied a parametric
regression discontinuity design based on age thresholds for pension
eligibility. Robust results after p-value corrections for multiple
testing showed an increase in BMI in early retirees (at the age of 60)
[β = 1.11, corrected p-val. < 0.05] and an increase in CHO/HDL in
regular retirees (age 65) [β = 0.47, corrected p-val. < 0.05].
Stratified analyses indicate that the increase in BMI might be driven by
women and low-educated individuals retiring early, despite increases in
the level of physical activity. The increase in CHO/HDL might be driven
by men retiring regularly, alongside an increase in subjective physical
health. Blood pressure also increased, but the effect differs by
retirement timing and sex and is not always robust to sensitivity
analysis checks. Our study indicates that retirement has an impact on
different risk factors for chronic disease, depending on timing, gender
and education. Regular male, early female, and low-educated retirees
should be further investigated as potential high-risk groups for
worsening risk factors after retirement. Future research should
investigate if and how these results are linked: in fact, especially in
the last two groups, the increases in leisure time physical activity
might not be enough to compensate for the loss of work related physical
activity, leading thus to an increase in BMI
automated detection of non-wear time in comparison to diary information
Estimation of physical activity using 24 h-accelerometry requires detection of
accelerometer non-wear time (NWT). It is common practice to define NWT as
periods >60 minutes of consecutive zero-accelerations, but this algorithm was
originally developed for waking hours only and its applicability to 24
h-accelerometry is unclear. We investigated sensitivity and specificity of
different algorithms to detect NWT in 24 h-accelerometry compared to diary in
47 ActivE and 559 KORA participants. NWT was determined with algorithms >60,
>90, >120, >150, or >180 minutes of consecutive zero-counts. Overall, 9.1%
(ActivE) and 15.4% (KORA) of reported NWT was >60 minutes. Sensitivity and
specificity were lowest for the 60-min algorithm in ActivE (0.72 and 0.00) and
KORA (0.64 and 0.08), and highest for the 180-min algorithm in ActivE (0.88
and 0.92) and for the 120-min algorithm in KORA (0.76 and 0.74). Nevertheless,
when applying these last two algorithms, the overlap of accelerometry with any
diary based NWT minutes was around 20% only. In conclusion, only a small
proportion of NWT is >60 minutes. The 60-min algorithm is less suitable for
NWT detection in 24 h-accelerometry because of low sensitivity, specificity,
and small overlap with reported NWT minutes. Longer algorithms perform better
but detect lower proportions of reported NWT
Association between abdominal adiposity and subclinical measures of left-ventricular remodeling in diabetics, prediabetics and normal controls without history of cardiovascular disease as measured by magnetic resonance imaging: results from the KORA-FF4 Study
Objectives: Local, abdominal fat depots may be related to alterations in cardiac function and morphology due to a metabolic linkage. Thus, we aimed to determine their association with subtle cardiac changes and the potential interaction with hyperglycemic metabolic states.
Methods: Subjects from the general population and without history of cardiovascular disease were drawn from the Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg FF4 cohort and underwent 3 T cardiac and body MRI. Measures of abdominal adiposity such as hepatic proton-density fat fraction [PDFFhepatic], subcutaneous (SAT) and visceral abdominal fat (VAT) as well as established cardiac left-ventricular (LV) measures including LV remodeling index (LVCI) were derived. Associations were determined using linear regression analysis based on standard deviation normalized predictors.
Results: Among a total of 374 subjects (56.2 ± 9.1 years, 58% males), 49 subjects had diabetes, 99 subjects had prediabetes and 226 represented normal controls. Only subtle cardiac alterations were observed (e.g. LVCI: 1.13 ± 0.30). While SAT was not associated, increasing VAT and increasing PDFFhepatic were independently associated with increasing LVCI (β = 0.11 and 0.06, respectively), decreasing LV end-diastolic volume (β = − 6.70 and 3.23, respectively), and decreasing LV stroke volume (β = − 3.91 and − 2.20, respectively). Hyperglycemic state did not modify the associations between VAT or PDFF and LV measures (interaction term: all p ≥ 0.29).
Conclusion: In a healthy population, VAT but also PDFFhepatic were associated with subclinical measures of LV remodeling without evidence for a modifying effect of hyperglycemic state
A Deep Learning Algorithm for Prediction of Age-Related Eye Disease Study Severity Scale for Age-Related Macular Degeneration from Color Fundus Photography
Acknowledgments The authors thank the Age-Related Eye Disease Study participants and the Age-Related Eye Disease Study Research Group for their valuable contribution to this research, and all study participants for contributing to the Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg study.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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