2,277 research outputs found
TAS2R38 is a novel modifer gene in patients with cystic fbrosis
The clinical manifestation of cystic fbrosis (CF) is heterogeneous also in patients with the same cystic
fbrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) genotype and in afected sibling pairs. Other genes, inherited
independently of CFTR, may modulate the clinical manifestation and complications of patients with
CF, including the severity of chronic sinonasal disease and the occurrence of chronic Pseudomonas
aeruginosa colonization. The T2R38 gene encodes a taste receptor and recently its functionality was
related to the occurrence of sinonasal diseases and upper respiratory infections. We assessed the T2R38
genotype in 210 patients with CF and in 95 controls, relating the genotype to the severity of sinonasal
disease and to the occurrence of P. aeruginosa pulmonary colonization. The frequency of the PAV allele
i.e., the allele associated with the high functionality of the T2R38 protein, was signifcantly lower in i) CF
patients with nasal polyposis requiring surgery, especially in patients who developed the complication
before 14 years of age; and ii) in CF patients with chronic pulmonary colonization by P. aeruginosa,
especially in patients who were colonized before 14 years of age, than in control subjects. These data
suggest a role for T2R38 as a novel modifer gene of sinonasal disease severity and of pulmonary P.
aeruginosa colonization in patients with CF
Intense myocyte formation from cardiac stem cells in human cardiac hypertrophy
It is generally believed that increase in adult contractile cardiac mass can be accomplished only by hypertrophy of existing myocytes. Documentation of myocardial regeneration in acute stress has challenged this dogma and led to the proposition that myocyte renewal is fundamental to cardiac homeostasis. Here we report that in human aortic stenosis, increased cardiac mass results from a combination of myocyte hypertrophy and hyperplasia. Intense new myocyte formation results from the differentiation of stem-like cells committed to the myocyte lineage. These cells express stem cell markers and telomerase. Their number increased >13-fold in aortic stenosis. The finding of cell clusters with stem cells making the transition to cardiogenic and myocyte precursors, as well as very primitive myocytes that turn into terminally differentiated myocytes, provides a link between cardiac stem cells and myocyte differentiation. Growth and differentiation of these primitive cells was markedly enhanced in hypertrophy, consistent with activation of a restricted number of stem cells that, through symmetrical cell division, generate asynchronously differentiating progeny. These clusters strongly support the existence of cardiac stem cells that amplify and commit to the myocyte lineage in response to increased workload. Their presence is consistent with the notion that myocyte hyperplasia significantly contributes to cardiac hypertrophy and accounts for the subpopulation of cycling myocytes
Activity and Process Stability of Purified Green Pepper (Capsicum annuum) Pectin Methylesterase
Pectin methylesterase (PME) from green bell peppers (Capsicum annuum) was extracted and purified by affinity chromatography on a CNBr-Sepharose-PMEI column. A single protein peak with pectin methylesterase activity was observed. For the pepper PME, a biochemical characterization in terms of molar mass (MM), isoelectric points (pI), and kinetic parameters for activity and thermostability was performed. The optimum pH for PME activity at 22 °C was 7.5, and its optimum temperature at neutral pH was between 52.5 and 55.0 °C. The purified pepper PME required the presence of 0.13 M NaCl for optimum activity. Isothermal inactivation of purified pepper PME in 20 mM Tris buffer (pH 7.5) could be described by a fractional conversion model for lower temperatures (55?57 °C) and a biphasic model for higher temperatures (58?70 °C). The enzyme showed a stable behavior toward high-pressure/temperature treatments. Keywords: Capsicum annuum; pepper; pectin methylesterase; purification; characterization; thermal and high-pressure stabilit
Geodetic model of the 2016 Central Italy earthquake sequence inferred from InSAR and GPS data
We investigate a large geodetic data set of interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR)and GPS measurements to determine the source parameters for the three main shocks of the 2016Central Italy earthquake sequence on 24 August and 26 and 30 October (Mw6.1, 5.9, and 6.5,respectively). Our preferred model is consistent with the activation of four main coseismic asperitiesbelonging to the SW dipping normal fault system associated with the Mount Gorzano-Mount Vettore-Mount Bove alignment. Additional slip, equivalent to aMw~ 6.1–6.2 earthquake, on a secondary (1) NEdipping antithetic fault and/or (2) on a WNW dipping low-angle fault in the hanging wall of the mainsystem is required to better reproduce the complex deformation pattern associated with the greatestseismic event (theMw6.5 earthquake). The recognition of ancillary faults involved in the sequencesuggests a complex interaction in the activated crustal volume between the main normal faults and thesecondary structures and a partitioning of strain releas
Optimal DCFP bearing properties and seismic performance assessment in nondimensional form for isolated bridges
The study analyzes the influence of double concave friction pendulum (DCFP) isolator properties on the seismic performance of isolated multispan continuous deck bridges. The behavior of these systems is analyzed by employing an eight-degree-of-freedom model accounting for the pier flexibility in addition to the rigid presence of both abutment and deck, whereas the DCFP isolator behavior is described combining two single FP devices in series. The uncertainty in the seismic input is taken into account by considering a set of nonfrequent natural records with different characteristics. The variation of the statistics of the response parameters relevant to the seismic performance of the isolated bridges is investigated through the proposal of a nondimensionalization of the motion equations, with respect to the seismic intensity, within an extensive parametric study carried out for different isolator and bridge properties. Moreover, two cases related to different ratios between the sliding friction coefficients of the two surfaces of the DCFP devices are analyzed with the aim also to evaluate the corresponding optimal values able to minimize the seismic demand to the pier. In this way, all the presented nondimensional results are useful for the preliminary design or retrofit of multispan continuous deck bridges, isolated with DCFP devices, located in any site and in relation, especially, to the seismic ultimate limit states
Yukawa potentials in systems with partial periodic boundary conditions I : Ewald sums for quasi-two dimensional systems
Yukawa potentials are often used as effective potentials for systems as
colloids, plasmas, etc. When the Debye screening length is large, the Yukawa
potential tends to the non-screened Coulomb potential ; in this small screening
limit, or Coulomb limit, the potential is long ranged. As it is well known in
computer simulation, a simple truncation of the long ranged potential and the
minimum image convention are insufficient to obtain accurate numerical data on
systems. The Ewald method for bulk systems, i.e. with periodic boundary
conditions in all three directions of the space, has already been derived for
Yukawa potential [cf. Y., Rosenfeld, {\it Mol. Phys.}, \bm{88}, 1357, (1996)
and G., Salin and J.-M., Caillol, {\it J. Chem. Phys.}, \bm{113}, 10459,
(2000)], but for systems with partial periodic boundary conditions, the Ewald
sums have only recently been obtained [M., Mazars, {\it J. Chem. Phys.}, {\bf
126}, 056101 (2007)]. In this paper, we provide a closed derivation of the
Ewald sums for Yukawa potentials in systems with periodic boundary conditions
in only two directions and for any value of the Debye length. A special
attention is paid to the Coulomb limit and its relation with the
electroneutrality of systems.Comment: 40 pages, 5 figures and 4 table
- …
