42 research outputs found

    Clustering of Unhealthy Behaviors in the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study

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    Background Clustering of unhealthy behaviors has been reported in previous studies; however the link with all-cause mortality and differences between those with and without chronic disease requires further investigation. Objectives To observe the clustering effects of unhealthy diet, fitness, smoking, and excessive alcohol consumption in adults with and without chronic disease and to assess all-cause mortality risk according to the clustering of unhealthy behaviors. Methods Participants were 13,621 adults (aged 20–84) from the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study. Four health behaviors were observed (diet, fitness, smoking, and drinking). Baseline characteristics of the study population and bivariate relations between pairs of the health behaviors were evaluated separately for those with and without chronic disease using cross-tabulation and a chi-square test. The odds of partaking in unhealthy behaviors were also calculated. Latent class analysis (LCA) was used to assess clustering. Cox regression was used to assess the relationship between the behaviors and mortality. Results The four health behaviors were related to each other. LCA results suggested that two classes existed. Participants in class 1 had a higher probability of partaking in each of the four unhealthy behaviors than participants in class 2. No differences in health behavior clustering were found between participants with and without chronic disease. Mortality risk increased relative to the number of unhealthy behaviors participants engaged in. Conclusion Unhealthy behaviors cluster together irrespective of chronic disease status. Such findings suggest that multi-behavioral intervention strategies can be similar in those with and without chronic disease

    Deletions in the Repertoire of Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000 Type III Secretion Effector Genes Reveal Functional Overlap among Effectors

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    The γ-proteobacterial plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000 uses the type III secretion system to inject ca. 28 Avr/Hop effector proteins into plants, which enables the bacterium to grow from low inoculum levels to produce bacterial speck symptoms in tomato, Arabidopsis thaliana, and (when lacking hopQ1-1) Nicotiana benthamiana. The effectors are collectively essential but individually dispensable for the ability of the bacteria to defeat defenses, grow, and produce symptoms in plants. Eighteen of the effector genes are clustered in six genomic islands/islets. Combinatorial deletions involving these clusters and two of the remaining effector genes revealed a redundancy-based structure in the effector repertoire, such that some deletions diminished growth in N. benthamiana only in combination with other deletions. Much of the ability of DC3000 to grow in N. benthamiana was found to be due to five effectors in two redundant-effector groups (REGs), which appear to separately target two high-level processes in plant defense: perception of external pathogen signals (AvrPto and AvrPtoB) and deployment of antimicrobial factors (AvrE, HopM1, HopR1). Further support for the membership of HopR1 in the same REG as AvrE was gained through bioinformatic analysis, revealing the existence of an AvrE/DspA/E/HopR effector superfamily, which has representatives in virtually all groups of proteobacterial plant pathogens that deploy type III effectors

    Familial Resemblance for Loneliness

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    Social isolation and loneliness in humans have been associated with physical and psychological morbidity, as well as mortality. This study aimed to assess the etiology of individual differences in feelings of loneliness. The genetic architecture of loneliness was explored in an extended twin-family design including 8,683 twins, siblings and parents from 3,911 families. In addition, 917 spouses of twins participated. The presence of assortative mating, genetic non-additivity, vertical cultural transmission, genotype-environment (GE) correlation and interaction was modeled. GE interaction was considered for several demographic characteristics. Results showed non-random mating for loneliness. We confirmed that loneliness is moderately heritable, with a significant contribution of non-additive genetic variation. There were no effects of vertical cultural transmission. With respect to demographic characteristics, results indicated that marriage, having offspring, more years of education, and a higher number of siblings are associated with lower levels of loneliness. Interestingly, these effects tended to be stronger for men than women. There was little evidence of changes in genetic architecture as a function of these characteristics. We conclude that the genetic architecture of loneliness points to non-additive genetic influences, suggesting it may be a trait that was not neutral to selection in our evolutionary past. Sociodemographic factors that influence the prevalence of loneliness do not affect its genetic architecture.status: publishe

    Earliest seadfloor hydrothermal systems on Earth- Comparison with modern analogues

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    Recent developments in multiple sulfur isotope analysis of sulfide and sulfate minerals provide a new tool for investigation of ore-forming processes and sources of sulfur in Archean hydrothermal systems, with important implications for the Archean sulfur cycle, the origin and impact of various microbial metabolisms and the chemistry of surface waters. In the current study we show that most of the sulfides and sulfates in the 3.49 Ga Dresser Formation and 3.24 Ga Panorama Zn-Cu field of Western Australia have non zero ΔS values that indicate variable proportions of seawater sulfate and elemental sulfur of UV-photolysis origin were incorporated into the deposits. Our results show that the multiple sulfur isotope systematics of the Dresser Formation sulfides and sulfates mainly reflect mixing between mass independently fractionated sulfur reservoirs with positive and negative ΔS. Pyrite occurring with barite is depleted in S relative to the host barite that has been interpreted as evidence for microbial sulfate reduction. We note, however, that the reported quadruple sulfur isotope systematics of pyrite-barite pairs are equally permissive of a thermochemical origin for this pyrite, which is consistent with inferred formation temperatures for the chert-barite units in excess of 100°C. The variably positive ΔS anomalies of the Panorama VHMS deposits, disequilibrium relations among sulfides and sulfates and general trend of increasing sulfide ΔS with stratigraphic height in individual ore systems most likely reflects temperature evolution and fluid mixing through the life of the hydrothermal system. The absence of sulfides with significant negative ΔS anomalies suggests that volcanic sulfur, not seawater sulfate, was the dominant sulfur source for the Panorama mineral system. The data presented here require Paleoarchean seawater to be at least locally sulfate bearing
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