572 research outputs found
A stable and optimally convergent LaTIn-CutFEM algorithm for multiple unilateral contact problems
In this paper, we propose a novel unfitted finite element method for the simulation of multiple body contact. The computational mesh is generated independently of the geometry of the interacting solids, which can be arbitrarily complex. The key novelty of the approach is the combination of elements of the CutFEM technology, namely the enrichment of the solution field via the definition of overlapping fictitious domains with a dedicated penalty-type regularisation of discrete operators, and the LaTIn hybrid-mixed formulation of complex interface conditions. Furthermore, the novel P1-P1 discretisation scheme that we propose for the unfitted LaTIn solver is shown to be stable, robust and optimally convergent with mesh refinement. Finally, the paper introduces a high-performance 3D level-set/CutFEM framework for the versatile and robust solution of contact problems involving multiple bodies of complex geometries, with more than two bodies interacting at a single point
Disrupted neural activity patterns to novelty and effort in young adult APOE-e4 carriers performing a subsequent memory task
Introduction: The APOE e4 allele has been linked to poorer cognitive aging and enhanced dementia risk. Previous imaging studies have used subsequent memory paradigms to probe hippocampal function in e4 carriers across the age range, and evidence suggests a pattern of hippocampal overactivation in young adult e4 carriers.
Methods: In this study, we employed a word-based subsequent memory task under fMRI; pupillometry data were also acquired as an index of cognitive effort. Participants (26 non-e4 carriers and 28 e4 carriers) performed an incidental encoding task (presented as word categorization), followed by a surprise old/new recognition task after a 40 minute delay.
Results: In e4 carriers only, subsequently remembered words were linked to increased hippocampal activity. Across all participants, increased pupil diameter differentiated subsequently remembered from forgotten words, and neural activity covaried with pupil diameter in cuneus and precuneus. These effects were weaker in e4 carriers, and e4 carriers did not show greater pupil diameter to remembered words. In the recognition phase, genotype status also modulated hippocampal activity: here, however, e4 carriers failed to show the conventional pattern of greater hippocampal activity to novel words.
Conclusions: Overall, neural activity changes were unstable in e4 carriers, failed to respond to novelty, and did not link strongly to cognitive effort, as indexed by pupil diameter. This provides further evidence of abnormal hippocampal recruitment in young adult e4 carriers, manifesting as both up and downregulation of neural activity, in the absence of behavioral performance differences
Novel Associations between Common Breast Cancer Susceptibility Variants and Risk-Predicting Mammographic Density Measures.
Mammographic density measures adjusted for age and body mass index (BMI) are heritable predictors of breast cancer risk, but few mammographic density-associated genetic variants have been identified. Using data for 10,727 women from two international consortia, we estimated associations between 77 common breast cancer susceptibility variants and absolute dense area, percent dense area and absolute nondense area adjusted for study, age, and BMI using mixed linear modeling. We found strong support for established associations between rs10995190 (in the region of ZNF365), rs2046210 (ESR1), and rs3817198 (LSP1) and adjusted absolute and percent dense areas (all P < 10(-5)). Of 41 recently discovered breast cancer susceptibility variants, associations were found between rs1432679 (EBF1), rs17817449 (MIR1972-2: FTO), rs12710696 (2p24.1), and rs3757318 (ESR1) and adjusted absolute and percent dense areas, respectively. There were associations between rs6001930 (MKL1) and both adjusted absolute dense and nondense areas, and between rs17356907 (NTN4) and adjusted absolute nondense area. Trends in all but two associations were consistent with those for breast cancer risk. Results suggested that 18% of breast cancer susceptibility variants were associated with at least one mammographic density measure. Genetic variants at multiple loci were associated with both breast cancer risk and the mammographic density measures. Further understanding of the underlying mechanisms at these loci could help identify etiologic pathways implicated in how mammographic density predicts breast cancer risk.ABCFS: The Australian Breast Cancer Family Registry (ABCFR; 1992-1995) was supported by
the Australian NHMRC, the New South Wales Cancer Council, and the Victorian Health
Promotion Foundation (Australia), and by grant UM1CA164920 from the USA National
Cancer Institute. The Genetic Epidemiology Laboratory at the University of Melbourne has
also received generous support from Mr B. Hovey and Dr and Mrs R.W. Brown to whom we
are most grateful. The content of this manuscript does not necessarily reflect the views or
policies of the National Cancer Institute or any of the collaborating centers in the Breast
Breast Cancer Susceptibility Variants and Mammographic Density
5
Cancer Family Registry (BCFR), nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or
organizations imply endorsement by the USA Government or the BCFR.
BBCC: This study was funded in part by the ELAN-Program of the University Hospital
Erlangen; Katharina Heusinger was funded by the ELAN program of the University Hospital
Erlangen. BBCC was supported in part by the ELAN program of the Medical Faculty,
University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg.
EPIC-Norfolk: This study was funded by research programme grant funding from Cancer
Research UK and the Medical Research Council with additional support from the Stroke
Association, British Heart Foundation, Department of Health, Research into Ageing and
Academy of Medical Sciences.
MCBCS: This study was supported by Public Health Service Grants P50 CA 116201, R01 CA
128931, R01 CA 128931-S01, R01 CA 122340, CCSG P30 CA15083, from the National Cancer
Institute, National Institutes of Health, and Department of Health and Human Services.
MCCS: Melissa C. Southey is a National Health and Medical Research Council Senior
Research Fellow and a Victorian Breast Cancer Research Consortium Group Leader. The
study was supported by the Cancer Council of Victoria and by the Victorian Breast Cancer
Research Consortium.
MEC: National Cancer Institute: R37CA054281, R01CA063464, R01CA085265, R25CA090956,
R01CA132839.
MMHS: This work was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute, National
Institutes of Health, and Department of Health and Human Services. (R01 CA128931, R01 CA
128931-S01, R01 CA97396, P50 CA116201, and Cancer Center Support Grant P30 CA15083).
Breast Cancer Susceptibility Variants and Mammographic Density
6
NBCS: This study has been supported with grants from Norwegian Research Council
(#183621/S10 and #175240/S10), The Norwegian Cancer Society (PK80108002,
PK60287003), and The Radium Hospital Foundation as well as S-02036 from South Eastern
Norway Regional Health Authority.
NHS: This study was supported by Public Health Service Grants CA131332, CA087969,
CA089393, CA049449, CA98233, CA128931, CA 116201, CA 122340 from the National
Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services.
OOA study was supported by CA122822 and X01 HG005954 from the NIH; Breast Cancer
Research Fund; Elizabeth C. Crosby Research Award, Gladys E. Davis Endowed Fund, and the
Office of the Vice President for Research at the University of Michigan. Genotyping services
for the OOA study were provided by the Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR), which
is fully funded through a federal contract from the National Institutes of Health to The Johns
Hopkins University, contract number HHSN268200782096.
OFBCR: This work was supported by grant UM1 CA164920 from the USA National Cancer
Institute. The content of this manuscript does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of
the National Cancer Institute or any of the collaborating centers in the Breast Cancer Family
Registry (BCFR), nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations
imply endorsement by the USA Government or the BCFR.
SASBAC: The SASBAC study was supported by Märit and Hans Rausing’s Initiative against
Breast Cancer, National Institutes of Health, Susan Komen Foundation and Agency for
Science, Technology and Research of Singapore (A*STAR).
Breast Cancer Susceptibility Variants and Mammographic Density
7
SIBS: SIBS was supported by program grant C1287/A10118 and project grants from Cancer
Research UK (grant numbers C1287/8459).
COGS grant: Collaborative Oncological Gene-environment Study (COGS) that enabled the
genotyping for this study. Funding for the BCAC component is provided by grants from the
EU FP7 programme (COGS) and from Cancer Research UK. Funding for the iCOGS
infrastructure came from: the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme
under grant agreement n° 223175 (HEALTH-F2-2009-223175) (COGS), Cancer Research UK
(C1287/A10118, C1287/A 10710, C12292/A11174, C1281/A12014, C5047/A8384,
C5047/A15007, C5047/A10692), the National Institutes of Health (CA128978) and Post-
Cancer GWAS initiative (1U19 CA148537, 1U19 CA148065 and 1U19 CA148112 - the GAMEON
initiative), the Department of Defence (W81XWH-10-1-0341), the Canadian Institutes of
Health Research (CIHR) for the CIHR Team in Familial Risks of Breast Cancer, Komen
Foundation for the Cure, the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, and the Ovarian Cancer
Research Fund.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available via American Association for Cancer Research at http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/early/2015/04/10/0008-5472.CAN-14-2012.abstract
Deviations from normative brain white and gray matter structure are associated with psychopathology in youth
Contains fulltext :
285929.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access
Genome-wide association analysis of more than 120,000 individuals identifies 15 new susceptibility loci for breast cancer.
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and large-scale replication studies have identified common variants in 79 loci associated with breast cancer, explaining ∼14% of the familial risk of the disease. To identify new susceptibility loci, we performed a meta-analysis of 11 GWAS, comprising 15,748 breast cancer cases and 18,084 controls together with 46,785 cases and 42,892 controls from 41 studies genotyped on a 211,155-marker custom array (iCOGS). Analyses were restricted to women of European ancestry. We generated genotypes for more than 11 million SNPs by imputation using the 1000 Genomes Project reference panel, and we identified 15 new loci associated with breast cancer at P < 5 × 10(-8). Combining association analysis with ChIP-seq chromatin binding data in mammary cell lines and ChIA-PET chromatin interaction data from ENCODE, we identified likely target genes in two regions: SETBP1 at 18q12.3 and RNF115 and PDZK1 at 1q21.1. One association appears to be driven by an amino acid substitution encoded in EXO1.BCAC is funded by Cancer Research UK (C1287/A10118, C1287/A12014) and by the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement 223175 (HEALTH-F2-2009-223175) (COGS). Meetings of the BCAC have been funded by the European Union COST programme (BM0606). Genotyping on the iCOGS array was funded by the European Union (HEALTH-F2-2009-223175), Cancer Research UK (C1287/A10710, C8197/A16565), the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) for the CIHR Team in Familial Risks of Breast Cancer program and the Ministry of Economic Development, Innovation and Export Trade of Quebec, grant PSR-SIIRI-701. Combination of the GWAS data was supported in part by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Cancer Post-Cancer GWAS initiative, grant 1 U19 CA148065-01 (DRIVE, part of the GAME-ON initiative). For a full description of funding and acknowledgments, see the Supplementary Note.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from NPG via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.324
Natural killer cell reduction and uteroplacental vasculopathy
Uterine natural killer cells are important for uteroplacental development and pregnancy maintenance. Their role in pregnancy disorders, such as preeclampsia, is unknown. We reduced the number of natural killer cells by administering rabbit anti-asialo GM1 antiserum in an established rat preeclamptic model (female human angiotensinogen×male human renin) and evaluated the effects at the end of pregnancy (day 21), compared with preeclamptic control rats receiving normal rabbit serum. In 100% of the antiserum-treated, preeclamptic rats (7/7), we observed highly degenerated vessel cross sections in the mesometrial triangle at the end of pregnancy. This maternal uterine vasculopathy was characterized by a total absence of nucleated/living cells in the vessel wall and perivascularly and prominent presence of fibrosis. Furthermore, there were no endovascular trophoblast cells within the vessel lumen. In the control, normal rabbit serum-treated, preeclamptic rats, only 20% (1/5) of the animals displayed such vasculopathy. We confirmed the results in healthy pregnant wild-type rats: after anti-asialo GM1 treatment, 67% of maternal rats displayed vasculopathy at the end of pregnancy compared with 0% in rabbit serum-treated control rats. This vasculopathy was associated with a significantly lower fetal weight in wild-type rats and deterioration of fetal brain/liver weight ratio in preeclamptic rats. Anti-asialo GM1 application had no influence on maternal hypertension and albuminuria during pregnancy. Our results show a new role of natural killer cells during hypertensive pregnancy in maintaining vascular integrity. In normotensive pregnancy, this integrity seems important for fetal growth
A possible role for HLA-G in development of uteroplacental acute atherosis in preeclampsia
HLA-G, a non-classical HLA molecule expressed by extravillous trophoblasts, plays a role in the maternal immune tolerance towards fetal cells. HLA-G expression is regulated by genetic polymorphisms in the 3' untranslated region (3'UTR). Low levels of HLA-G in the maternal circulation and placental tissue are linked to preeclampsia. Our objective was to investigate whether variants of the 3'UTR of the HLA-G gene in mother and fetus are associated with acute atherosis, a pregnancy specific arterial lesion of the decidua basalis that is prevalent in preeclampsia. Paired maternal and fetal DNA samples from 83 normotensive and 83 preeclamptic pregnancies were analyzed. We sequenced the part of the HLA-G 3'UTR containing a 14-bp insertion/deletion region and seven single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Associations with acute atherosis were tested by logistic regression. The frequency of heterozygosity for the 14-bp polymorphism (Ins/Del) and the +3142 SNP (C/G) variant in the fetus are associated with acute atherosis in preeclampsia (66.7 % vs. 39.6 %, p = 0.039, and 69.0 % vs. 43.4 %, p = 0.024). Furthermore, the fetal UTR-3 haplotype, which encompasses the 14-bp deletion and the +3142G variant, is associated with acute atherosis in preeclampsia (15 % vs. 3.8 %, p = 0.016). In conclusion, HLA-G polymorphisms in the fetus are associated with acute atherosis. We hypothesize that these polymorphisms lead to altered HLA-G expression in the decidua basalis, affecting local feto-maternal immune tolerance and development of acute atherosis
A cross-sectional testing of The Iowa Personality Disorder Screen in a psychiatric outpatient setting
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Patients suspected of personality disorders (PDs) by general practitioners are frequently referred to psychiatric outpatient clinics (POCs). In that setting an effective screening instrument for PDs would be helpful due to resource constraints. This study evaluates the properties of The Iowa Personality Disorder Screen (IPDS) as a screening instrument for PDs at a POC.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>In a cross-sectional design 145 patients filled in the IPDS and were examined with the SCID-II interview as reference. Various case-findings properties were tested, interference of socio-demographic and other psychopathology were investigated by logistic regression and relationships of the IPDS and the concept of PDs were studied by a latent variable path analysis.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We found that socio-demographic and psychopathological factors hardly disturbed the IPDS as screening instrument. With a cut-off ≥4 the 11 items IPDS version had sensitivity 0.77 and specificity 0.71. A brief 5 items version showed sensitivity 0.82 and specificity 0.74 with cut-off ≥ 2. With exception for one item, the IPDS variables loaded adequately on their respective first order variables, and the five first order variables loaded in general adequately on their second order variable.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our results support the IPDS as a useful screening instrument for PDs present or absent in the POC setting.</p
Depression and parental bonding: Cause, consequence, or genetic covariance?
It is shown how information on the direction of causation between variables may be obtained from a cross‐sectional study of pairs of relatives. This method is applied to the study of the relationship between ratings of parents' rearing style and depression in their offspring. Adult female twins ascertained from a population‐based registry in Virginia completed the Center for Epidemiological Studies ‐ Depression Scale (CESD) and a 7‐item short form of the Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI) about each of their parents. Two dimensions of parental behavior, overprotectiveness and coldness, were analyzed jointly with depression data in both genetic factor and directional genetic models. Models that specify ratings of parents as a cause of depression in the offspring fit the data significantly better than models that specify depression as a cause of ratings of parents. A still better fit is obtained with models that specify common genetic variance to depression and ratings, though causal models with error variance perform almost as well. In general, ratings of fathers show more genetic and less shared environmental variance than ratings of mothers, which might arise from more consistent treatment of offspring by mothers than by fathers. No effect of children eliciting parental rearing style was detected with these data. The relative merits of instrumental variable, longitudinal, and family approaches to testing causal models are discussed. © 1994 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101796/1/1370110607_ftp.pd
What we learn about bipolar disorder from large-scale neuroimaging:Findings and future directions from the ENIGMA Bipolar Disorder Working Group
MRI-derived brain measures offer a link between genes, the environment and behavior and have been widely studied in bipolar disorder (BD). However, many neuroimaging studies of BD have been underpowered, leading to varied results and uncertainty regarding effects. The Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics through Meta-Analysis (ENIGMA) Bipolar Disorder Working Group was formed in 2012 to empower discoveries, generate consensus findings and inform future hypothesis-driven studies of BD. Through this effort, over 150 researchers from 20 countries and 55 institutions pool data and resources to produce the largest neuroimaging studies of BD ever conducted. The ENIGMA Bipolar Disorder Working Group applies standardized processing and analysis techniques to empower large-scale meta- and mega-analyses of multimodal brain MRI and improve the replicability of studies relating brain variation to clinical and genetic data. Initial BD Working Group studies reveal widespread patterns of lower cortical thickness, subcortical volume and disrupted white matter integrity associated with BD. Findings also include mapping brain alterations of common medications like lithium, symptom patterns and clinical risk profiles and have provided further insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms of BD. Here we discuss key findings from the BD working group, its ongoing projects and future directions for large-scale, collaborative studies of mental illness
- …
