51 research outputs found
Fecal Metaproteomics Reveals Reduced Gut Inflammation and Changed Microbial Metabolism Following Lifestyle-Induced Weight Loss
Gut microbiota-mediated inflammation promotes obesity-associated low-grade inflammation, which represents a hallmark of metabolic syndrome. To investigate if lifestyle-induced weight loss (WL) may modulate the gut microbiome composition and its interaction with the host on a functional level, we analyzed the fecal metaproteome of 33 individuals with metabolic syndrome in a longitudinal study before and after lifestyle-induced WL in a well-defined cohort. The 6-month WL intervention resulted in reduced BMI (â13.7%), improved insulin sensitivity (HOMA-IR, â46.1%), and reduced levels of circulating hsCRP (â39.9%), indicating metabolic syndrome reversal. The metaprotein spectra revealed a decrease of human proteins associated with gut inflammation. Taxonomic analysis revealed only minor changes in the bacterial composition with an increase of the families Desulfovibrionaceae, Leptospiraceae, Syntrophomonadaceae, Thermotogaceae and Verrucomicrobiaceae. Yet we detected an increased abundance of microbial metaprotein spectra that suggest an enhanced hydrolysis of complex carbohydrates. Hence, lifestyle-induced WL was associated with reduced gut inflammation and functional changes of human and microbial enzymes for carbohydrate hydrolysis while the taxonomic composition of the gut microbiome remained almost stable. The metaproteomics workflow has proven to be a suitable method for monitoring inflammatory changes in the fecal metaproteome
FACT -- The G-APD revolution in Cherenkov astronomy
Since two years, the FACT telescope is operating on the Canary Island of La
Palma. Apart from its purpose to serve as a monitoring facility for the
brightest TeV blazars, it was built as a major step to establish solid state
photon counters as detectors in Cherenkov astronomy. The camera of the First
G-APD Cherenkov Telesope comprises 1440 Geiger-mode avalanche photo diodes
(G-APD), equipped with solid light guides to increase the effective light
collection area of each sensor. Since no sense-line is available, a special
challenge is to keep the applied voltage stable although the current drawn by
the G-APD depends on the flux of night-sky background photons significantly
varying with ambient light conditions. Methods have been developed to keep the
temperature and voltage dependent response of the G-APDs stable during
operation. As a cross-check, dark count spectra with high statistics have been
taken under different environmental conditions. In this presentation, the
project, the developed methods and the experience from two years of operation
of the first G-APD based camera in Cherenkov astronomy under changing
environmental conditions will be presented.Comment: Proceedings of the Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging
Conference (IEEE-NSS/MIC), 201
Altered localisation of the copper efflux transporters ATP7A and ATP7B associated with cisplatin resistance in human ovarian carcinoma cells
Metals in Catalysis, Biomimetics & Inorganic Material
Design and Operation of FACT -- The First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope
The First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) is designed to detect cosmic
gamma-rays with energies from several hundred GeV up to about 10 TeV using the
Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Technique. In contrast to former or existing
telescopes, the camera of the FACT telescope is comprised of solid-state
Geiger-mode Avalanche Photodiodes (G-APD) instead of photomultiplier tubes for
photo detection. It is the first full-scale device of its kind employing this
new technology. The telescope is operated at the Observatorio del Roque de los
Muchachos (La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain) since fall 2011. This paper
describes in detail the design, construction and operation of the system,
including hardware and software aspects. Technical experiences gained after one
year of operation are discussed and conclusions with regard to future projects
are drawn.Comment: Corresponding authors: T. Bretz and Q. Weitze
Making Deservingness of the Unemployed Conditional: Changes in Public Support for the Conditionality of Unemployment Benefits
Since the 1990s, stricter conditions for the (longâterm) unemployed to receive benefits have
been on the âactivationâ agenda. However, policymakers are constrained in their reform efforts by the economic and fiscal situation, the preâexisting institutional contexts and public opinion. This crossânational and longitudinal study investigates whether the social legitimacy of benefit obligations for the unemployed is affected by the changing economic situation and the varying institutional context. We use data from the European Values Survey, a repeated crossâsectional survey that was conducted in 1990, 1999 and 2008 in 23 European countries. Support for the conditionality of unemployment benefits is measured
with an item that asks whether people who are unemployed should have to take any job available. We find that the main economic indicators â economic growth and the unemployment rate â are significantly related to support for conditionality. People living in wealthier countries are more likely to be in favour of conditionality, whereas a high unemployment rate reduces such support. With regard to institutional features, we find some support for the assumption that people in welfare states with more generous social policies prefer stricter conditionality for access, in order to protect the generous benefits against any misuse
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