66 research outputs found
A Characterization of Scale Invariant Responses in Enzymatic Networks
An ubiquitous property of biological sensory systems is adaptation: a step
increase in stimulus triggers an initial change in a biochemical or
physiological response, followed by a more gradual relaxation toward a basal,
pre-stimulus level. Adaptation helps maintain essential variables within
acceptable bounds and allows organisms to readjust themselves to an optimum and
non-saturating sensitivity range when faced with a prolonged change in their
environment. Recently, it was shown theoretically and experimentally that many
adapting systems, both at the organism and single-cell level, enjoy a
remarkable additional feature: scale invariance, meaning that the initial,
transient behavior remains (approximately) the same even when the background
signal level is scaled. In this work, we set out to investigate under what
conditions a broadly used model of biochemical enzymatic networks will exhibit
scale-invariant behavior. An exhaustive computational study led us to discover
a new property of surprising simplicity and generality, uniform linearizations
with fast output (ULFO), whose validity we show is both necessary and
sufficient for scale invariance of enzymatic networks. Based on this study, we
go on to develop a mathematical explanation of how ULFO results in scale
invariance. Our work provides a surprisingly consistent, simple, and general
framework for understanding this phenomenon, and results in concrete
experimental predictions
Two novel missense substitutions in the VSX1 gene: clinical and genetic analysis of families with Keratoconus from India
BACKGROUND: Visual system homeobox gene (VSX1) plays a major role in the early development of craniofacial and ocular tissues including cone opsin gene in the human retina. To date, few disease-causing mutations of VSX1 have been linked to familial and sporadic keratoconus (KC) in humans. In this study, we describe the clinical features and screening for VSX1 gene in families with KC from India. METHODS: Clinical data and genomic DNA were collected from patients with clinically diagnosed KC and their family members. The study was conducted on 20 subjects of eight families from India. The coding exons of VSX1 gene were amplified using PCR and amplicons were analyzed by direct sequencing. Predictive effect of the mutations was performed using Polyphen-2, SIFT and mutation assessor algorithms. Additionally, haplotypes of VSX1 gene were constructed for affected and unaffected individuals using SNPs. RESULTS: In the coding region of VSX1, one novel missense heterozygous change (p.Leu268His) was identified in five KC patients from two unrelated families. Another family of three members had a novel heterozygous change (p.Ser251Thr). These variants co-segregated with the disease phenotype in all affected individuals but not in the unaffected family members and 105 normal controls. In silico analysis suggested that p.Leu268His could have a deleterious effect on the protein coded by VSX1, while p.Ser251Thr has a neutral effect on the functional properties of VSX1. Haplotype examination revealed common SNPs around the missense change (p.Leu268His) in two unrelated KC families. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we add p.Leu268His, a novel missense variation in the coding region of VSX1 to the existing repertoire of VSX1 coding variations observed in Indian patients with the characteristic phenotype of KC. The variant p.Ser251Thr might be a benign polymorphism, but further biophysical studies are necessary to evaluate its molecular mechanism. The shared haplotype by two families with the same variant suggests the possibility of a founder effect, which requires further elucidation. We suggest that p.Leu268His might be involved in the pathogenesis of KC, which may help in the genetic counselling of patients and their family
Induction of cancer-specific cytotoxicity towards human prostate and skin cells using quercetin and ultrasound
Bioflavonoids, such as quercetin, have recently emerged as a new class of chemotherapeutic drugs for the treatment of various cancer types, but are marred by their low potency and poor selectivity. We report that a short application of low-frequency ultrasound selectively sensitises prostate and skin cancer cells against quercetin. Pretreatment of cells with ultrasound (20 kHz, 2 W cm−2, 60 s) selectively induced cytotoxicity in skin and prostate cancer cells, while having minimal effect on corresponding normal cell lines. About 90% of the viable skin cancer cell population was lost within 48 h after ultrasound-quercetin (50 μM) treatment. Ultrasound reduced the LC50 of quercetin for skin cancer cells by almost 80-fold, while showing no effect on LC50 for nonmalignant skin cells
Comparative SNP and Haplotype Analysis Reveals a Higher Genetic Diversity and Rapider LD Decay in Tropical than Temperate Germplasm in Maize
Understanding of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium (LD) decay in diverse maize germplasm is fundamentally important for maize improvement. A total of 287 tropical and 160 temperate inbred lines were genotyped with 1943 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers of high quality and compared for genetic diversity and LD decay using the SNPs and their haplotypes developed from genic and intergenic regions. Intronic SNPs revealed a substantial higher variation than exonic SNPs. The big window size haplotypes (3-SNP slide-window covering 2160 kb on average) revealed much higher genetic diversity than the 10 kb-window and gene-window haplotypes. The polymorphic information content values revealed by the haplotypes (0.436–0.566) were generally much higher than individual SNPs (0.247–0.259). Cluster analysis classified the 447 maize lines into two major groups, corresponding to temperate and tropical types. The level of genetic diversity and subpopulation structure were associated with the germplasm origin and post-domestication selection. Compared to temperate lines, the tropical lines had a much higher level of genetic diversity with no significant subpopulation structure identified. Significant variation in LD decay distance (2–100 kb) was found across the genome, chromosomal regions and germplasm groups. The average of LD decay distance (10–100 kb) in the temperate germplasm was two to ten times larger than that in the tropical germplasm (5–10 kb). In conclusion, tropical maize not only host high genetic diversity that can be exploited for future plant breeding, but also show rapid LD decay that provides more opportunity for selection
Multistable Decision Switches for Flexible Control of Epigenetic Differentiation
It is now recognized that molecular circuits with positive feedback can induce two different gene expression states (bistability) under the very same cellular conditions. Whether, and how, cells make use of the coexistence of a larger number of stable states (multistability) is however largely unknown. Here, we first examine how autoregulation, a common attribute of genetic master regulators, facilitates multistability in two-component circuits. A systematic exploration of these modules' parameter space reveals two classes of molecular switches, involving transitions in bistable (progression switches) or multistable (decision switches) regimes. We demonstrate the potential of decision switches for multifaceted stimulus processing, including strength, duration, and flexible discrimination. These tasks enhance response specificity, help to store short-term memories of recent signaling events, stabilize transient gene expression, and enable stochastic fate commitment. The relevance of these circuits is further supported by biological data, because we find them in numerous developmental scenarios. Indeed, many of the presented information-processing features of decision switches could ultimately demonstrate a more flexible control of epigenetic differentiation
The transcriptome of Candida albicans mitochondria and the evolution of organellar transcription units in yeasts
B-PO05-007 RAPID AND ROBUST MAPPING OF CLINICAL DATA ON PERSONALIZED VOLUMETRIC ATRIAL GEOMETRIES
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