212 research outputs found
Nucleotide sequence diversity of HLA class II genes in Australian Aborigines and populations of Asia-Oceania
The aim of this thesis was to investigate nucleotide
sequence diversity of HLA class II genes in Australian
Aborigines and indigenous peoples of Asia-Oceania. Nineteen
study populations represented eight major ethnic groups
including Australian Aborigines, Papua New Guinean
highlanders, coastal Melanesians, Polynesians, Micronesians,
Javanese, southern and northern Chinese, and a minority group
from northwestern China. Using PCR-based technologies, the
nucleotide sequence polymorphism in exon 2 DRB1, DRB3, DRB5,
DQA1 and DQB1 genes was examined in all these populations. The
DPB1 exon 2 polymorphism was examined in Australian Aborigines
and a Chinese population.
Six novel HLA class II alleles including four DRB1, one
DRB5 and one DPBl were discovered in this study by the
occurrence of unusual hybridization patterns in the PCR-SSO
typing procedure and were confirmed by DNA Sequencing. These
new alleles, DRB1*0412, 1408, 1409, 1410, DRB5*0203 and
DBP1*2201 have been recognized by the WHO Nomenclature
Committee. The nucleotide sequences and the deduced amino acid
sequences of the novel class II alleles indicated that
multiple molecular mechanisms were involved in generating
these alleles including point mutation and hypermutational
events of segmental transfer and intra-exonic recombination.
In two cases (DRB1*0412 and DRB1*1410), hypermutational events
have created unique peptide binding sites which are
drastically different from all their putative progenitor
molecules. Five of the six novel alleles were found in
Australian Aborigines and four novel DRB1 alleles were
detected in 45% of the Aboriginal individuals tested.
PCR-SSO typing revealed some HLA class II polymorphisms
previously difficult or impossible to detect with more
traditional typing techniques. Remarkable differences in the
V
class II HLA allele frequency distributions, especially in the
subtypes of major DR antigen groups, were observed between the
study populations. Australian Aborigines showed the most
divergent class II HLA profile; most of their DRB1 alleles did
not overlap with other study populations. PNG highlanders and
Javanese were highly homogeneous with quite restricted class
II HLA distributions. Other Oceanic populations of
Polynesians, Micronesians and coastal Melanesians were each
characterized with unique class II HLA distribution but shared
common features which indicated their historical ties.
Distinctive HLA distributions were observed between Chinese
populations from southern and northern China, while the
minority group from northwestern China demonstrated a mixed
ancestry of both Caucasoids and Orientals.
Further information came from the analysis of HLA-DR, -DQ
haplotypes. A total of 80 three-locus or four-locus DR-DQ
combinations including 16 DR2-related, 12 DR4-related, 11 DR5-
related, and 24 DR6-related haplotypes were inferred from the
study populations. Haplotype frequencies were used to
calculate genetic distances between these populations and to
reconstruct population phylogeny, which proved a sensitive
indicator of population affinities. The unusual linkage
relationships detected in the study populations also had
important implications for the understanding of MHC evolution.
Knowledge of the nucleotide sequence polymorphism of HLA
class II genes in general populations has fundamental
importance in HLA-related clinical investigations. The
apparent lack of susceptible alleles in the HLA gene pool of
native Australians and Pacific islanders, or the high
frequency of protective alleles, might partly explain the
extremely low incidence of autoimmune diseases in these
populations
Generating Multiple Diverse Responses for Short-Text Conversation
Neural generative models have become popular and achieved promising
performance on short-text conversation tasks. They are generally trained to
build a 1-to-1 mapping from the input post to its output response. However, a
given post is often associated with multiple replies simultaneously in real
applications. Previous research on this task mainly focuses on improving the
relevance and informativeness of the top one generated response for each post.
Very few works study generating multiple accurate and diverse responses for the
same post. In this paper, we propose a novel response generation model, which
considers a set of responses jointly and generates multiple diverse responses
simultaneously. A reinforcement learning algorithm is designed to solve our
model. Experiments on two short-text conversation tasks validate that the
multiple responses generated by our model obtain higher quality and larger
diversity compared with various state-of-the-art generative models.Comment: Accepted for publication at AAAI 201
A Deep-learning Real-time Bias Correction Method for Significant Wave Height Forecasts in the Western North Pacific
Significant wave height is one of the most important parameters
characterizing ocean waves, and accurate numerical ocean wave forecasting is
crucial for coastal protection and shipping. However, due to the randomness and
nonlinearity of the wind fields that generate ocean waves and the complex
interaction between wave and wind fields, current forecasts of numerical ocean
waves have biases. In this study, a spatiotemporal deep-learning method was
employed to correct gridded SWH forecasts from the ECMWF-IFS. This method was
built on the trajectory gated recurrent unit deep neural network,and it
conducts real-time rolling correction for the 0-240h SWH forecasts from
ECMWF-IFS. The correction model is co-driven by wave and wind fields, providing
better results than those based on wave fields alone. A novel pixel-switch loss
function was developed. The pixel-switch loss function can dynamically
fine-tune the pre-trained correction model, focusing on pixels with large
biases in SWH forecasts. According to the seasonal characteristics of SWH, four
correction models were constructed separately, for spring, summer, autumn, and
winter. The experimental results show that, compared with the original ECMWF
SWH predictions, the correction was most effective in spring, when the mean
absolute error decreased by 12.972~46.237%. Although winter had the worst
performance, the mean absolute error decreased by 13.794~38.953%. The corrected
results improved the original ECMWF SWH forecasts under both normal and extreme
weather conditions, indicating that our SWH correction model is robust and
generalizable.Comment: 21 page
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