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  • Elsevier  (124,811)
  • Oxford University Press  (19,048)
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
  • 2010-2014  (145,855)
  • 1980-1984
  • 1925-1929
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Amsterdam : Elsevier
    Physics Letters B 294 (1992), S. 466-478 
    ISSN: 0370-2693
    Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
    Topics: Physics
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Amsterdam : Elsevier
    Physics Letters B 317 (1993), S. 474-484 
    ISSN: 0370-2693
    Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
    Topics: Physics
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  • 3
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Elsevier, 375, pp. 408-417, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2014-06-25
    Description: The Miocene expansion of C4 plants (mainly tropical grasses) between 8 and 4 million years (Ma) remains an enigma since regional differences in the timing of the expansion rules out decreased CO2 (pCO2) as a dominant forcing [e.g. Tipple and Pagani, 2007. The early origins of terrestrial C4 photosynthesis. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 35, 435–461]. Other environmental factors, such as low-latitude aridity and seasonality have been proposed to explain the low tree versus grass ratio found in savannahs and tropical grasslands of the world, but conclusive evidence is missing. Here we use pollen and stable carbon (δ13C) and hydrogen (δD) isotope ratios of terrestrial plant wax from a South Atlantic sediment core (ODP Site 1085) to reconstruct Miocene to Pliocene changes of vegetation and rainfall regime of western southern Africa. Our results reveal changes in the relative amount of precipitation and indicate a shift of the main moisture source from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean during the onset of a major aridification 8 Ma ago. We emphasize the importance of declining precipitation during the expansion of C4 and CAM (mainly succulent) vegetation in South Africa. We suggest that the C4 plant expansion resulted from an increased equator-pole temperature gradient caused by the initiation of strong Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation following the shoaling of the Central American Seaway during the Late Miocene.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2017-06-14
    Description: Linear Pottery Culture (LBK) are investigated. These are interpreted as resulting from a combination of internal socio-economic processes as well as external environmental parameters. Resilience theory is helpful in understanding periods of increased vulnerability and inherent trends to social complexity. Cycles and threshold levels also help to understand why societies experience periods of increasing fragility and subsequent decline. Results are based on the correlation of a typology and dendrochronology-based archaeological chronology for western LBK and various palaeoclimatic proxy-data. The 14C-production curve is taken as an indicator for solar activity fluctuations, and an age model for laminated sediments as an indicator for rainfall fluctuations. We currently consider this correlation as agreeably robust; however future finedating may result in slight shifts within the archaeological chronology. According to the applied age model, the simple farming societies of the LBK (5600e4900 cal BC) in west-central Europe were not immediately and devastatingly affected by most climate fluctuations. Yet, they might have been one destabilising component within broader processes. However, periods of decreased or irregularly spaced rainfall are contemporaneous to periods of population decline, while periods of increased rainfall may have favoured population growth. Towards the end of the 6th millennium cal BC, the final years of LBK in western Central Europe are contemporaneous to a general trend to less rainfall punctuated by short-term increases in precipitation. During this climatically highly volatile period LBK reaches its highest population rates and at the same time experiences a period of warfare. Thereafter population rates decline and LBK gradually vanishes from the archaeological record, being replaced by Middle Neolithic societies.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 6
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3Quaternary Science Reviews, Elsevier, 80, pp. 1-28, ISSN: 02773791
    Publication Date: 2016-11-06
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 7
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    Oxford University Press
    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Botany, Oxford University Press, ISSN: 0022-0957
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: Co-injection of a conservative tracer during the geological sequestration of CO2 can imprint a marker to the injected gas that can be easily recognized during soil gas surveys in case of CO2 leakage from the reservoir toward the surface. In this work, an ultra-trace detection method, based on gas chromatography with electron capture detection for analyzing perfluorocarbon tracers (PFTs) in soil gas samples was optimized. Three totally fluorinated cycloalcane compounds consisting of five and six atom carbon rings were selected for this purpose. We evaluated the feasibility of collecting PFTs on adsorbent tube packed with a commercial graphitized carbon black (Carbotrap™ 100) sampling 2 L of soil gas. The sorbent tubes were then analyzed by using a two-stage thermal desorption process. The developed method allows to quickly determine these compounds at very low fL/L level, method identification limits ranged from 1.3 to 5.8 fL/L. Moreover, it shows good precision, evaluated by within-day and between-day studies. A preliminary survey of the PFT soil gas background concentrations, conducted by analyzing some soil gas samples collected in two different areas in Central Italy and in the Po Plain, ascertained the PFT background concentration lower than MIL.
    Description: Published
    Description: 60-64
    Description: 2.4. TTC - Laboratori di geochimica dei fluidi
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: partially_open
    Keywords: Perfluorocarbon tracers; Soil gas; Carbon dioxide storage; Leakage monitoring; GC–ECD ; 04. Solid Earth::04.02. Exploration geophysics::04.02.01. Geochemical exploration
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: Repeating volcano-tectonic (VT) earthquakes, taking place at Mt. Etna during 1999–2009,were detected and analyzed to investigate their behavior. We found 735 families amounting to 2479 VT earthquakes, representing ~38% of all the analyzed VT earthquakes. The number of VT earthquakes making up the families ranges from 2 to 23. Over 70% of the families comprise 2 or 3 VT earthquakes and only 20 families by more than 10 events. The occurrence lifetime is also highly variable ranging from some minutes to ten years. In particular, more than half of the families have a lifetime shorter than 0.5 day and only ~10% longer than 1 year. On the basis of these results, most of the detected families were considered “burst-type”, i.e., show swarm-like occurrence, and hence their origin cannot be explained by a temporally constant tectonic loading. Indeed, since the analyzed earthquakes take place in a volcanic area, the rocks are affected not only by tectonic stresses related to the fairly steady regional stress field but also by local stresses, caused by the volcano, such as magma batch intrusions/ movements and gravitational loading.We focused on the five groups of families characterized by the longest repeatability over time, namely high number of events and long lifetime, located in the north-eastern, eastern and southern flanks of the volcano. Unlike the first four groups, which similarly to most of the detected families show swarm-like VT occurrences, group “v”, located in the north-eastern sector, exhibits a more “tectonic” behavior with the events making up such a group spread over almost the entire analyzed period. It is clear how both occurrence and slip rates do not remain constant but vary over time, and such changes are time-related to the occurrence of the 2002–2003 eruption. Finally, by FPFIT algorithm a good agreement between directions identified by nodal planes and the earthquake epicentral distribution was generally found.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1223 – 1236
    Description: 1.4. TTC - Sorveglianza sismologica delle aree vulcaniche attive
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: restricted
    Keywords: repeating earthquakes ; Etna ; 04. Solid Earth::04.06. Seismology::04.06.08. Volcano seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: The Geochemical Monitoring System II (GMSII)prototype was designed, assembled, tested and installed at the Acqua Difesa test site, near Belpasso (Catania).
    Description: Published
    Description: 273-306
    Description: 1.5. TTC - Sorveglianza dell'attività eruttiva dei vulcani
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: restricted
    Keywords: Geochemical Monitoring System ; 01. Atmosphere::01.01. Atmosphere::01.01.07. Volcanic effects
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 11
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science. 2nd edition, Amsterdam, Elsevier, 11 p., pp. 542-552, ISBN: 978-0-444-53643-3
    Publication Date: 2020-09-25
    Description: Syngenetically frozen deposits that are fine-grained and ice-rich are widely distributed in lowlands of northeastern Siberia, Alaska and northwestern Canada. These late Pleistocene sediments are specific to this region summarized as Beringia, and have been termed 'Ice Complex' or 'Yedoma' in Siberia, and 'muck' in North America. Silt is their dominant material, but they also include abundant organic matter preserved in permafrost since the time of deposition. Vegetation and faunal reconstructions indicate that the sediments aggraded largely under a cryoxeric environment characterized by graminoid and forb-rich vegetation that supported a grazing megafauna population during the Pleistocene.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Inbook , peerRev
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  • 12
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part D: Genomics and Proteomics, Elsevier, 8(4), pp. 344 - 351, ISSN: 1744-117X
    Publication Date: 2016-08-17
    Description: Abstract Research investigating the genetic basis of physiological responses has significantly broadened our understanding of the mechanisms underlying organismic response to environmental change. However, genomic data are currently available for few taxa only, thus excluding physiological model species from this approach. In this study we report the transcriptome of the model organism Hyas araneus from Spitsbergen (Arctic). We generated 20,479 transcripts, using the 454 {GS} {FLX} sequencing technology in combination with an Illumina HiSeq sequencing approach. Annotation by Blastx revealed 7159 blast hits in the {NCBI} non-redundant protein database. The comparison between the spider crab H. araneus transcriptome and {EST} libraries of the European lobster Homarus americanus and the porcelain crab Petrolisthes cinctipes yielded 3229/2581 sequences with a significant hit, respectively. The clustering by the Markov Clustering Algorithm (MCL) revealed a common core of 1710 clusters present in all three species and 5903 unique clusters for H. araneus. The combined sequencing approaches generated transcripts that will greatly expand the limited genomic data available for crustaceans. We introduce the {MCL} clustering for transcriptome comparisons as a simple approach to estimate similarities between transcriptomic libraries of different size and quality and to analyze homologies within the selected group of species. In particular, we identified a large variety of reverse transcriptase (RT) sequences not only in the H. araneus transcriptome and other decapod crustaceans, but also sea urchin, supporting the hypothesis of a heritable, anti-viral immunity and the proposed viral fragment integration by host-derived {RTs} in marine invertebrates.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 13
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3Progress in Oceanography, Elsevier, 112-11, pp. 38-48
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: Coastal upwelling ecosystems are areas of high productivity and strong outgassing, where most gases, such as N2O and CH4, are produced in subsurface waters by anaerobic metabolisms. We describe seasonal CH4 variation as well as potential mechanisms producing CH4 in surface waters of the central Chile upwelling ecosystem (36°S). Surface waters were always supersaturated in CH4 (from 125% up to 550%), showing a clear seasonal signal triggered by wind driven upwelling processes (austral spring– summer period), that matched with the periods of high chlorophyll-a and dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) levels. Methane cycling experiments, with/without the addition of dimethylsulfide (including 13C-DMS) and acetylene (a nonspecific inhibitor of CH4 oxidation) along with monthly measurements of CH4, DMSP and other oceanographic variables revealed that DMS can be a CH4 precursor. Net CH4 cycling rates (control) fluctuated between -0.64 and 1.44 nmol L-1 d-1. After the addition of acetylene, CH4 cycling rates almost duplicated relative to the control, suggesting a strong methanotrophic activity. With a spike of DMS, the net CH4 cycling rate significantly increased relative to the acetylene and control treatment. Additionally, the d13C values of CH4 at the end of the incubations (after addition of 13C enriched-DMS) were changed, reaching -32‰ PDB compared to natural values between -44‰ and -46‰ PDB. These findings indicate that, in spite of the strong CH4 consumption by methanotrophs, this upwelling area is an important source of CH4 to the atmosphere. The effluxes are derived partially from in situ surface production and seem to be related to DMSP/DMS metabolism.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: Abstract Radiocarbon and uranium-thorium dating results are presented from a genus of calcitic Antarctic cold-water octocorals (family Coralliidae), which were collected from the Marie Byrd Seamounts in the Amundsen Sea (Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean) and which to date have not been investigated geochemically. The geochronological results are set in context with solution and laser ablation-based element/Ca ratios (Li, B, Mg, Mn, Sr, Ba, U, Th). Octocoral radiocarbon ages on living corals are in excellent agreement with modern ambient deep-water �14C, while multiple samples of individual fossil coral specimens yielded reproducible radiocarbon ages. Provided that local radiocarbon reservoir ages can be derived for a given time, fossil Amundsen Sea octocorals should be reliably dateable by means of radiocarbon. In contrast to the encouraging radiocarbon findings, the uranium-series data are more difficult to interpret. The uranium concentration of these calcitic octocorals is an order of magnitude lower than in the aragonitic hexacorals that are conventionally used for geochronological investigations. While modern and Late Holocene octocorals yield initial δ234U in good agreement with modern seawater, our results reveal preferential inward diffusion of dissolved alpha-recoiled 234U and its impact on fossil coral δ234U. Besides alpha-recoil related 234U diffusion, high-resolution sampling of two fossil octocorals further demonstrates that diagenetic uranium mobility has offset apparent coral U-series ages. Combined with the preferential alpha-recoil 234U diffusion, this process has prevented fossil octocorals from preserving a closed system U-series calendar age for longer than a few thousand years. Moreover, several corals investigated contain significant initial thorium, which cannot be adequately corrected for because of an apparently variable initial 232Th/230Th. Our results demonstrate that calcitic cold-water corals are unsuitable for reliable U-series dating. Mg/Ca ratios within single octocoral specimens are internally strikingly homogeneous, and appear promising in terms of their response to ambient temperature. Magnesium/lithium ratios are significantly higher than usually observed in other deep marine calcifiers and for many of our studied corals are remarkably close to seawater compositions. Although this family of octocorals is unsuitable for glacial deep-water �14C reconstructions, our findings highlight some important differences between hexacoral (aragonitic) and octocoral (calcitic) biomineralisation. Calcitic octocorals could still be useful for trace element and some isotopic studies, such as reconstruction of ambient deep water neodymium isotope composition or pH, via boron isotopic measurements.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The AND-1B drill core (1285 m-long) was recovered, inside the ANDRILL (ANtarctic geological DRILLing) Program, during the austral summer of 2006/07 from beneath the floating McMurdo Ice Shelf. Drilling recovered a stratigraphic succession of alternating diamictites, diatomites and volcaniclastic sediments spanning about the last 14 Ma. A core portion between 350 and 480 mbsf, including a 80 m-thick diatomite interval recording the early Pliocene warming event, was investigated in term of opal biogenic content and element geochemistry. Across the diatomite interval, in spite of the lithological uniformity, a fluctuating biogenic opal profile mirrors the δ18O record, testifying a decrease in productivity when temperature drops as a consequence of small glacial fluctuations. The comparison of biogenic opal data with Chaetoceros spp. abundances from Konfirst et al. (2012) documents alternations between periods of high primary productivity in stratified surface waters and of enhanced terrigenous input in ice-free conditions. Cluster analysis discriminates elements associated to terrigenous input from those subject to biogenic control. Further separation in sub-cluster was interpreted in term of different element response to changes in provenance but also to depositional/early diagenetic conditions at the seafloor. Whilst K and Ti are related to different sediment sources confirming previous studies from the same interval, V, Zn and, to a lesser extent, Fe, document reducing/anoxic conditions during the diatomites deposition (in particular in 400–460 mbsf interval). Mg, Sr and Mn contents are related to authigenic carbonate precipitation whilst Ba is interested by nonsteady-state processes leading to local peaks of barium below the sulphate-rich/sulphate-poor pore water boundary where generally the low degree of barite saturation is responsible for Ba remobilization. Such alteration in depositional dynamics, responsible of the precipitation of an oxygen-depleted barium phase, was probably induced by change in sedimentation rate and/or in palaeoenvironmental conditions.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: In recent years, a novel proxy for the past occurrence of Arctic sea ice has been proposed that is based on the variable marine sedimentary abundance of an organic geochemical lipid derived from sea ice diatoms in the spring. This lipid, termed IP25 (Ice Proxy with 25 carbon atoms), is a highly branched isoprenoid mono-unsaturated alkene that appears to be sufficiently stable in sediments to permit meaningful palaeo sea ice reconstructions to be carried out over short- to long-term timescales. Since the first proposed use of IP25 as a proxy for palaeo sea ice by Belt et al. (2007), a number of laboratories have measured this biomarker in Arctic sediments and it is anticipated that research activity in this area will increase further in the future. The content of this review is divided into a number of sections. Firstly, we describe the scientific basis for the IP25 proxy and its initial discovery in Arctic sea ice, sedimenting particles and sediments. Secondly, we summarise the relatively few studies that have, to date, concentrated on examining the factors that influence the production and fate of IP25 and we identify some areas of future research that need to be addressed in order to improve our understanding of IP25 data obtained from sedimentary analyses. What is clear at this stage, however, it that the presence of IP25 in Arctic marine sediments appears to represent a proxy measure of past seasonal sea ice rather than permanent or multi-year ice conditions. Thirdly, we highlight the importance of rigorous analytical identification and quantification of IP25, especially if measurements of this biomarker are going to be used for quantitative sea ice reconstructions, rather than qualitative analyses alone (presence/absence). Fourthly, we review some recent attempts to make the interpretations of IP25 biomarker data more detailed and quantitative by combining sedimentary abundances with those of phytoplankton- and other sea ice-derived biomarkers. Thus, the bases for the so-called PIP25 and DIP25 indices are described, together with an overview of potential limitations, concluding that investigations into the use of these indices needs further research before their full potential can be realised. In the final section, we provide a summary of IP25-based palaeo sea ice reconstruction case studies performed to date. These case studies cover different Arctic regions and timescales spanning decades to tens of thousands of years.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Cratons with their thick lithospheric roots can influence the thermal structure, and thus the convective flow, in the surrounding mantle. As mantle temperatures are hard to measure directly, depth variations in the mantle transition zone (MTZ) discontinuities are often employed as a proxy. Here, we use a large new data set of P-receiver functions to map the 410 km and 660 km discontinuities beneath the western edge of the East European Craton and adjacent Phanerozoic Europe across the most fundamental lithospheric boundary in Europe, the Trans-European Suture Zone (TESZ). We observe significantly shorter travel times for conversions from both MTZ discontinuities within the craton, caused by the high velocities of the cratonic root. By contrast, the differential travel time across the MTZ is normal to only slightly raised. This implies that any insulating effect of the cratonic keel does not reach the MTZ. In contrast to earlier observations in Siberia, we do not find any trace of a discontinuity at 520 km depth, which indicates a rather dry MTZ beneath the western edge of the craton. Within most of covered Phanerozoic Europe, the MTZ differential travel time is remarkably uniform and in agreement with standard Earth models. No widespread thermal effects of the various episodes of Caledonian and Variscan subduction that took place during the amalgamation of the continent remain. Only more recent tectonic events, related to Alpine subduction and Quarternary volcanism in the Eifel area, can be traced. While the East European craton shows no distinct imprint into the MTZ, we discover the signature of the TESZ in the MTZ in the form of a linear region of about 350 km width with a 1.5 s increase in differential travel time, which could either be caused by high water content or decreased temperature. Taking into account results of recent S-wave tomographies, raised water content in the MTZ cannot be the main cause for this observation. Accordingly, we explain the increase, equivalent to a 15 km thicker MTZ, by a temperature decrease of about 80 K. We discuss two alternative models for this temperature reduction, either a remnant of subduction or an indication of downwelling due to small-scale, edge-driven convection caused by the contrast in lithospheric thickness across the TESZ. Any subducted lithosphere found in the MTZ at this location is unlikely to be related to Variscan subduction along the TESZ, though, as Eurasia has moved significantly northward since the Variscan orogeny.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2018-02-15
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  • 20
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3The Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science, The Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science, Amsterdam, Elsevier, pp. 755-764
    Publication Date: 2014-04-15
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 21
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3The Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science, The Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science, Elsevier, pp. 73-85
    Publication Date: 2014-04-15
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 22
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    Elsevier
    In:  EPIC3Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, Elsevier, 76, pp. 66-84, ISSN: 09670637
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: We use a 27 year long time series of repeated transient tracer observations to investigate the evolution of the ventilation timescales and the related content of anthropogenic carbon(Cant) in deep and bottom water in the Weddell Sea. This time series consists of chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) observations from 1984 to 2008 together with first combined CFC and sulphurhexafluoride (SF6) measurements from 2010/2011 along the Prime Meridian in the Antarctic Ocean and across the Weddell Sea. Applying the Transit Time Distribution (TTD) method we find that all deep water masses in the Weddell Sea have been continually growing older and getting less ventilated during the last 27years. The decline of the ventilation rate of Weddell Sea Bottom Water (WSBW) and Weddell Sea Deep Water (WSDW) along the Prime Meridian is in the order of 15–21%; the Warm Deep Water (WDW) ventilation rate declined much faster by 33%. About 88–94% of the age increase in WSBW near its source regions (1.8–2.4 years per year) is explained by the age increase of WDW (4.5 years per year). As a consequence of the aging, the Cant increase in the deep and bottom water formed in the Weddell Sea slowed down by 14–21% over the period of observations.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2014-04-17
    Description: A high input of lithogenic sediment from glaciers was assumed to be responsible for high Fe and Mn contents in the Antarctic soft shell clam Laternula elliptica at King George Island. Indeed, withdrawal experiments indicated a strong influence of environmental Fe concentrations on Fe contents in bivalve hemolymph, but no significant differences in hemolymph and tissue concentrations were found among two sites of high and lower input of lithogenic debris. Comparing Fe and Mn concentrations of porewater, bottom water, and hemolymph from sampling sites, Mn appears to be assimilated as dissolved species, whereas Fe apparently precipitates as ferrihydrite within the oxic sediment or bottom water layer prior to assimilation by the bivalve. Hence, we attribute the high variability of Fe and Mn accumulation in tissues of L. elliptica around Antarctica to differences in the geochemical environment of the sediment and the resulting Fe and Mn flux across the benthic boundary.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Coral recruitment was assessed in highly diverse and economically important Spermonde Archipelago, a reef system subjected to land-based sources of siltation/pollution and destructive fishing, over a period of 2 years. Recruitment on settlement tiles reached up to 705 spat m�2 yr�1 and was strongest in the dry season (July–October), except off-shore, where larvae settled earlier. Pocilloporidae dominated nearshore, while a more diverse community of Acroporidae, Poritidae and others settled in the less polluted mid-shelf and off-shore reefs. Non-coral fouling community appeared to hardly influence initial coral settlement on the tiles, although, this does not necessarily infer low coral post-settlement mortality, which may be enhanced at the near- and off-shore reefs as indicated by increased abundances of potential space competitors on natural substrate. Blast fishing showed no local reduction in coral recruitment and live hard coral cover increased in oligotrophic reefs, indicating potential for coral recovery, if managed effectively.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Conservation Physiology 1 (2013): cot006, doi:10.1093/conphys/cot006.
    Description: Large whales are subjected to a variety of conservation pressures that could be better monitored and managed if physiological information could be gathered readily from free-swimming whales. However, traditional approaches to studying physiology have been impractical for large whales, because there is no routine method for capture of the largest species and there is presently no practical method of obtaining blood samples from free-swimming whales. We review the currently available techniques for gathering physiological information on large whales using a variety of non-lethal and minimally invasive (or non-invasive) sample matrices. We focus on methods that should produce information relevant to conservation physiology, e.g. measures relevant to stress physiology, reproductive status, nutritional status, immune response, health, and disease. The following four types of samples are discussed: faecal samples, respiratory samples (‘blow’), skin/blubber samples, and photographs. Faecal samples have historically been used for diet analysis but increasingly are also used for hormonal analyses, as well as for assessment of exposure to toxins, pollutants, and parasites. Blow samples contain many hormones as well as respiratory microbes, a diverse array of metabolites, and a variety of immune-related substances. Biopsy dart samples are widely used for genetic, contaminant, and fatty-acid analyses and are now being used for endocrine studies along with proteomic and transcriptomic approaches. Photographic analyses have benefited from recently developed quantitative techniques allowing assessment of skin condition, ectoparasite load, and nutritional status, along with wounds and scars from ship strikes and fishing gear entanglement. Field application of these techniques has the potential to improve our understanding of the physiology of large whales greatly, better enabling assessment of the relative impacts of many anthropogenic and ecological pressures.
    Description: This work was supported by the United States Office of Naval Research (award #N000141110435 to K.E.H., award #N000141110540 to R.M.R., and award #N0001412WX20890 to L.C.Y. and C.E.D.); the United Kingdom Natural Environmental Research Council (supporting A.J.H.); the National Center for Research Resources, a component of the United States National Institutes of Health (NIH; supporting C.E.D.); the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research (UL1 RR024146 supporting C.E.D.); The Hartwell Foundation (supporting C.E.D.) and the 2012 Marine Mammal Breath Workshop, which was funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program.
    Keywords: Blow ; Biopsy dart ; Cetacea ; Faecal samples ; Non-invasive ; Visual health assessment
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2012. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Nucleic Acids Research 40 (2012): W82-W87, doi:10.1093/nar/gks418.
    Description: Amplicon sequencing of the hypervariable regions of the small subunit ribosomal RNA gene is a widely accepted method for identifying the members of complex bacterial communities. Several rRNA gene sequence reference databases can be used to assign taxonomic names to the sequencing reads using BLAST, USEARCH, GAST or the RDP classifier. Next-generation sequencing methods produce ample reads, but they are short, currently ∼100–450 nt (depending on the technology), as compared to the full rRNA gene of ∼1550 nt. It is important, therefore, to select the right rRNA gene region for sequencing. The primers should amplify the species of interest and the hypervariable regions should differentiate their taxonomy. Here, we introduce TaxMan: a web-based tool that trims reference sequences based on user-selected primer pairs and returns an assessment of the primer specificity by taxa. It allows interactive plotting of taxa, both amplified and missed in silico by the primers used. Additionally, using the trimmed sequences improves the speed of sequence matching algorithms. The smaller database greatly improves run times (up to 98%) and memory usage, not only of similarity searching (BLAST), but also of chimera checking (UCHIME) and of clustering the reads (UCLUST). TaxMan is available at http://www.ibi.vu.nl/programs/taxmanwww/.
    Description: University of Amsterdam under the research priority area ‘Oral Infections and Inflammation’ (to B.W.B.); National Science Foundation [NSF/BDI 0960626 to S.M.H.]; the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/ 2007-2013) under ANTIRESDEV grant agreement no 241446 (to E.Z.).
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Briefings in Bioinformatics 15 (2014): 783-787, doi:10.1093/bib/bbt010.
    Description: The extremely high error rates reported by Keegan et al. in ‘A platform-independent method for detecting errors in metagenomic sequencing data: DRISEE’ (PLoS Comput Biol 2012;8:e1002541) for many next-generation sequencing datasets prompted us to re-examine their results. Our analysis reveals that the presence of conserved artificial sequences, e.g. Illumina adapters, and other naturally occurring sequence motifs accounts for most of the reported errors. We conclude that DRISEE reports inflated levels of sequencing error, particularly for Illumina data. Tools offered for evaluating large datasets need scrupulous review before they are implemented.
    Description: National Institutes of Health [1UH2DK083993 to M.L.S.]; National Science Foundation [BDI- 096026 to S.M.H.].
    Keywords: Next-generation sequencing ; Sequencing error ; Adapter ligation ; PCR ; Quality score
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 123 (2013): 322–337, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2013.06.011.
    Description: Despite the importance of diatoms in regulating climate and the existence of large opal-containing sediments in key air-ocean exchange areas, most geochemical proxy records are based on carbonates. Among them, Boron (B) content and isotopic composition have been widely used to reconstruct pH from foraminifera and coral fossils. We assessed the possibility of a pH/CO2 seawater concentration control on B content in diatom opal to determine whether or not frustule B concentrations could be used as a pH proxy or to clarify algae physiological responses to acidifying pH. We cultured two well-studied diatom species, Thalassiosira pseudonana and Thalassiosira weissflogii at varying pH conditions and determined Si and C quotas. Frustule B content was measured by both laser-ablation inductively coupled mass spectrometry (LA-ICPMS) and secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS/ion probe). For both species, frustules grown at higher pH have higher B contents and higher Si requirements per fixed C. If this trend is representative of diatom silicification in a future more acidic ocean, it could contribute to changes in the efficiency of diatom ballasting and C export, as well as changes in the contribution of diatoms relative to other phytoplankton groups in Si-limited regions. If B enters the cell through the same transporter employed for HCO3− uptake, an increased HCO3− requirement with decreasing CO2 concentrations (higher pH), and higher B(OH)4/HCO3− ratios would explain the observed increase in frustule B content with increasing pH. The mechanism of B transport from the site of uptake to the site of silica deposition is unknown, but may occur via silicon transport vesicles, in which B(OH)4− may be imported for B detoxification and/or as part of a pH regulation strategy either though Na-dependent B(OH)4−/Cl− antiport or B(OH)4−/H+ antiport. B deposition in the silica matrix may occur via substitution of a B(OH)4− for a negatively charged SiO− formed during silicification. With the current analytical precision, B content of frustules is unlikely to resolve ocean pH with a precision of paleoceanographic interest. However, if frustule B content was controlled mainly by HCO3− uptake for photosynthesis, which appears to show a threshold behavior, then measurements of B content might reveal the varying importance of active HCO3− acquisition mechanisms of diatoms in the past.
    Description: This work was funded by the European Community under the project ERC-STG-240222-PACE.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2015-01-22
    Description: Climatic hazards, such as severe droughts and floods, affect extensive areas across monsoon Asia and can have profound impacts on the populations of that region. The area surrounding Indonesia, including large portions of the eastern Indian Ocean and Java Sea, plays a key role in the global climate system because of the enormous heat and moisture exchange that occurs between the ocean and atmosphere there. Here, we evaluate the influence of rainfall variability on multiple tree-ring parameters of teak (Tectona grandis) trees growing in a lowland rain forest in Central Java (Indonesia). We assess the potential of, annually resolved, tree-ring width, stable carbon (δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) isotope records to improve our understanding of the Asian monsoon variability. Climate response analysis with regional, monthly rainfall data reveals that all three tree-ring parameters are significantly correlated to rainfall, albeit during different monsoon seasons. Precipitation in the beginning of the rainy season (Sep–Nov) is important for tree-ring width, confirming previous studies. Compared to ring width, the stable isotope records possess a higher degree of common signal, especially during portions of the peak rainy season (δ13C: Dec–May; δ18O: Nov–Feb) and are negatively correlated to rainfall. In addition, tree-ring δ18O also responds positively to peak dry season rainfall, although the δ18O rainy season signal is stronger and more time-stable. The correlations of opposite sign reflect the distinct seasonal contrast of the δ18O signatures in rainfall (18OPre) during the dry (18O-enriched rain) and rainy (18O-depleted rain) seasons. This difference in 18OPre signal reflects the combination of two signals in the annual tree-ring δ18O record. Highly resolved intra-annual δ18O isotope analyses suggest that the signals of dry and rainy season can be distinguished clearly. Thereby reconstructions can improve our understanding of variations and trends of the hydrological cycle over the Indonesian archipelago.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: This study presents a reconstruction of the Late Holocene climate in Kamchatka based on chironomid remains from a 332 cm long composite sediment core recovered from Dvuyurtochnoe Lake (Two-Yurts Lake, TYL) in central Kamchatka. The oldest recovered sediments date to about 4500 cal years BP. Chironomid head capsules from TYL reflect a rich and diverse fauna. An unknown morphotype of Tanytarsini, Tanytarsus type klein, was found in the lake sediments. Our analysis reveals four chironomid assemblage zones reflecting four different climatic periods in the Late Holocene. Between 4500 and 4000 cal years BP, the chironomid composition indicates a high lake level, well-oxygenated lake water conditions and close to modern temperatures (w13 �C). From 4000 to 1000 cal years BP, two consecutive warm intervals were recorded, with the highest reconstructed temperature reaching 16.8 �C between 3700 and 2800 cal years BP. Cooling trend, started around 1100 cal years BP led to low temperatures during the last stage of the Holocene. Comparison with other regional studies has shown that termination of cooling at the beginning of late Holocene is relatively synchronous in central Kamchatka, South Kurile, Bering and Japanese Islands and take place around 3700 cal years BP. From ca 3700 cal years BP to the last millennium, a newly strengthened climate continentality accompanied by general warming trend with minor cool excursions led to apparent spatial heterogeneity of climatic patterns in the region. Some timing differences in climatic changes reconstructed from chironomid record of TYL sediments and late Holocene events reconstructed from other sites and other proxies might be linked to differences in local forcing mechanisms or caused by the different degree of dating precision, the different temporal resolution, and the different sensitive responses of climate proxies to the climate variations. Further high-resolution stratigraphic studies in this region are needed to understand the spatially complex pattern of climate change in Holocene in Kamchatka and the surrounding region. �
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 31
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    In:  EPIC3Geophysical Journal International, Oxford University Press, 193(3), pp. 1399-1414, ISSN: 0956-540X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The Boreas Basin is located in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea between Northeast Greenland and Svalbard. Towards the east, it is bounded by the ultraslow mid-ocean Knipovich Ridge. Here, we present a 340-km-long seismic refraction line acquired during the expedition ARK-XXIV/3 of research vessel Polarstern in 2009, using 18 ocean bottom seismometers. It crosses the central Boreas Basin from the Knipovich Ridge to the Northeast Greenland margin. Thus, the line provides the first reliable crustal structure information of this basin. In addition, the gravity data acquired parallel to the seismic refraction line are used to calculate a 2.5-D gravity model. The P-wave velocity model shows an unusual ∼3-km-thin oceanic crust with seismic velocities less than 6.3 km s−1, indicating the absence of a significant oceanic layer 3. Mantle velocities vary between 7.5 kms−1 in the uppermost mantle and 8.0 km s−1 at approximately 15 km depth. The low velocities within the upper mantle may be explained by 13 per cent serpentinisation, which is negligible at about 15 km depth. Furthermore, the S-wave velocity model shows low Vp/Vs ratios in the mantle, indicating a highly serpentinised mantle at shallow depths. The gravity model has crustal densities between 2.3 and 2.9 g cm−3, which also point towards the absence of a significant thick oceanic layer 3. The results of our seismic refraction line and other geophysical data indicate that the entire Boreas Basin opened at ultraslow spreading rates since at least ∼28 Ma. No evidence for an extinct spreading ridge in the centre of the Boreas Basin was found.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2013-09-07
    Description: The predicted effect of effective population size on the distribution of fitness effects and substitution rate is critically dependent on the relationship between sequence and fitness. This highlights the importance of using models that are informed by the molecular biology, biochemistry, and biophysics of the evolving systems. We describe a computational model based on fundamental aspects of biophysics, the requirement for (most) proteins to be thermodynamically stable. Using this model, we find that differences in population size have minimal impact on the distribution of population-scaled fitness effects, as well as on the rate of molecular evolution. This is because larger populations result in selection for more stable proteins that are less affected by mutations. This reduction in the magnitude of the fitness effects almost exactly cancels the greater selective pressure resulting from the larger population size. Conversely, changes in the population size in either direction cause transient increases in the substitution rate. As differences in population size often correspond to changes in population size, this makes comparisons of substitution rates in different lineages difficult to interpret.
    Electronic ISSN: 1759-6653
    Topics: Biology
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: O -GlcNAcylation is an inducible, highly dynamic and reversible post-translational modification, mediated by a unique enzyme named O -linked N -acetyl- d -glucosamine ( O -GlcNAc) transferase (OGT). In response to nutrients, O -GlcNAc levels are differentially regulated on many cellular proteins involved in gene expression, translation, immune reactions, protein degradation, protein–protein interaction, apoptosis and signal transduction. In contrast to eukaryotic cells, little is known about the role of O -GlcNAcylation in the viral life cycle. Here, we show that the overexpression of the OGT reduces the replication efficiency of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) in a dose-dependent manner. In order to investigate the global impact of O -GlcNAcylation in the KSHV life cycle, we systematically analyzed the 85 annotated KSHV-encoded open reading frames for O -GlcNAc modification. For this purpose, an immunoprecipitation (IP) strategy with three different approaches was carried out and the O -GlcNAc signal of the identified proteins was properly controlled for specificity. Out of the 85 KSHV-encoded proteins, 18 proteins were found to be direct targets for O -GlcNAcylation. Selected proteins were further confirmed by mass spectrometry for O -GlcNAc modification. Correlation of the functional annotation and the O -GlcNAc status of KSHV proteins showed that the predominant targets were proteins involved in viral DNA synthesis and replication. These results indicate that O -GlcNAcylation plays a major role in the regulation of KSHV propagation.
    Print ISSN: 0959-6658
    Electronic ISSN: 1460-2423
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: Publication date: Available online 7 September 2013 Source: FEBS Open Bio Author(s): Veronika Temml , Susanne Kuehnl , Daniela Schuster , Stefan Schwaiger , Hermann Stuppner , Dietmar Fuchs Mediterranean Carthamus tinctorius (Safflower) is used for treatment of inflammatory conditions and neuropsychiatric disorders. Recently C. tinctorius lignans arctigenin and trachelogenin but not matairesinol were described to interfere with the activity of tryptophan-degrading enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells in vitro . We examined a potential direct influence of compounds on IDO enzyme activity applying computational calculations based on 3D geometry of the compounds. The interaction pattern analysis and force field-based minimization was performed within LigandScout 3.03, the docking simulation with MOE 2011.10 using the X-ray crystal structure of IDO. Results confirm the possibility of an intense interaction of arctigenin and trachelogenin with the binding site of the enzyme, while matairesinol had no such effect.
    Electronic ISSN: 2211-5463
    Topics: Biology
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: Publication date: Available online 7 September 2013 Source: FEBS Open Bio Author(s): Mitsuru Ishikawa , Jun Shiota , Yuta Ishibashi , Tomoyuki Hakamata , Shizuku Shoji , Mamoru Fukuchi , Masaaki Tsuda , Tomoaki Shirao , Yuko Sekino , Toshihisa Ohtsuka , Jay M. Baraban , Akiko Tabuchi Megakaryoblastic leukemia 1 (MKL1) is a member of the MKL family of serum response factor (SRF) coactivators. Here we have identified three rat MKL1 transcripts: two are homologues of mouse MKL1 transcripts, full-length MKL1 (FLMKL1) and basic, SAP, and coiled-coil domains (BSAC), the third is a novel transcript, M KL1- elo ngated d erivative of y ield (MELODY). These rat MKL1 transcripts are differentially expressed in a wide variety of tissues with highest levels in testis and brain. During brain development, these transcripts display differential patterns of expression. The FLMKL1 transcript encodes two isoforms that utilize distinct translation start sites. The longer form possesses three actin-binding RPXXXEL (RPEL) motifs and the shorter form, MKL1met only has two RPEL motifs. All four rat MKL1 isoforms, FLMKL1, BSAC, MKL1met and MELODY increased SRF-mediated transcription, but not CREB-mediated transcription. Accordingly, the differential expression of MKL1 isoforms may help fine-tune gene expression during brain development.
    Electronic ISSN: 2211-5463
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  • 36
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Print ISSN: 0959-6658
    Electronic ISSN: 1460-2423
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Print ISSN: 0959-6658
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: Galectins are potent adhesion/growth-regulatory effectors with characteristic expression profiles. Understanding the molecular basis of gene regulation in each case requires detailed information on copy number of genes and sequence(s) of their promoter(s). Our report reveals plasticity in this respect between galectins and species. We here describe occurrence of a two-gene constellation for human galectin (Gal)-7 and define current extent of promoter-sequence divergence. Interestingly, cross-species genome analyses also detected single-copy display. Because the regulatory potential will then be different, extrapolations of expression profiles are precluded between respective species pairs. Gal-4 coding in chromosomal vicinity was found to be confined to one gene, whereas copy-number variation also applied to Gal-9. The example of rat Gal-9 teaches the lesson that the presence of multiple bands in Southern blotting despite a single-copy gene constellation is attributable to two pseudogenes. The documented copy-number variability should thus be taken into consideration when studying regulation of galectin genes, in a species and in comparison between species.
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: In studying the molecular basis for the potent immune activity of previously described gamma and delta inulin particles and to assist in production of inulin adjuvants under Good Manufacturing Practice, we identified five new inulin isoforms, bringing the total to seven plus the amorphous form. These isoforms comprise the step-wise inulin developmental series amorphous -〉 alpha-1 (AI-1) -〉 alpha-2 (AI-2) -〉 gamma (GI) -〉 delta (DI) -〉 zeta (ZI) -〉 epsilon (EI) -〉 omega (OI) in which each higher isoform can be made either by precipitating dissolved inulin or by direct conversion from its precursor, both cases using regularly increasing temperatures. At higher temperatures, the shorter inulin polymer chains are released from the particle and so the key difference between isoforms is that each higher isoform comprises longer polymer chains than its precursor. An increasing trend of degree of polymerization is confirmed by end-group analysis using 1 H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Inulin isoforms were characterized by the critical temperatures of abrupt phase-shifts (solubilizations or precipitations) in water suspensions. Such (aqueous) "melting" or "freezing" points are diagnostic and occur in strikingly periodic steps reflecting quantal increases in noncovalent bonding strength and increments in average polymer lengths. The (dry) melting points as measured by modulated differential scanning calorimetry similarly increase in regular steps. We conclude that the isoforms differ in repeated increments of a precisely repeating structural element. Each isoform has a different spectrum of biological activities and we show the higher inulin isoforms to be more potent alternative complement pathway activators.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: The methylotrophic yeast, Pichia pastoris , is an important organism used for the production of therapeutic proteins. Previously, we have reported the glycoengineering of this organism to produce human-like N -linked glycans but up to now no one has addressed engineering the O -linked glycosylation pathway. Typically, O -linked glycans produced by wild-type P. pastoris are linear chains of four to five α-linked mannose residues, which may be capped with β- or phospho-mannose. Previous genetic engineering of the N-linked glycosylation pathway of P. pastoris has eliminated both of these two latter modifications, resulting in O -linked glycans which are linear α-linked mannose structures. Here, we describe a method for the co-expression of an α-1,2-mannosidase, which reduces these glycans to primarily a single O -linked mannose residue. In doing so, we have reduced the potential of these glycans to interact with carbohydrate-binding proteins, such as dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing non-integrin. Furthermore, the introduction of the enzyme protein- O -linked-mannose β-1,2- N -acetylglucosaminyltransferase 1, resulted in the capping of the single O -linked mannose residues with N -acetylglucosamine. Subsequently, this glycoform was extended into human-like sialylated glycans, similar in structure to α-dystroglycan-type glycoforms. As such, this represents the first example of sialylated O -linked glycans being produced in yeast and extends the utility of the P. pastoris production platform beyond N -linked glycosylated biotherapeutics to include molecules possessing O -linked glycans.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: Neurons and other cells require intracellular transport of essential components for viability and function. Previous work has shown that while net amyloid precursor protein (APP) transport is generally anterograde, individual vesicles containing APP move bi-directionally. This discrepancy highlights our poor understanding of the in vivo regulation of APP-vesicle transport. Here, we show that reduction of presenilin (PS) or suppression of gamma-secretase activity substantially increases anterograde and retrograde velocities for APP vesicles. Strikingly, PS deficiency has no effect on an unrelated cargo vesicle class containing synaptotagmin, which is powered by a different kinesin motor. Increased velocities caused by PS or gamma-secretase reduction require functional kinesin-1 and dynein motors. Together, our findings suggest that a normal function of PS is to repress kinesin-1 and dynein motor activity during axonal transport of APP vesicles. Furthermore, our data suggest that axonal transport defects induced by loss of PS-mediated regulatory effects on APP-vesicle motility could be a major cause of neuronal and synaptic defects observed in Alzheimer's Disease (AD) pathogenesis. Thus, perturbations of APP/PS transport could contribute to early neuropathology observed in AD, and highlight a potential novel therapeutic pathway for early intervention, prior to neuronal loss and clinical manifestation of disease.
    Print ISSN: 0964-6906
    Electronic ISSN: 1460-2083
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2013-09-08
    Description: With age, muscle mass and integrity are progressively lost leaving the elderly frail, weak and unable to independently care for themselves. Defined as sarcopenia, this age-related muscle atrophy appears to be multifactorial but its definite cause is still unknown. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in this process. Using a novel transgenic mouse model of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) double-strand breaks (DSBs) that presents a premature aging-like phenotype, we studied the role of mtDNA damage in muscle wasting. We caused DSBs in mtDNA of adult mice using a ubiquitously expressed mitochondrial-targeted endonuclease, mito- Pst I. We found that a short, transient systemic mtDNA damage led to muscle wasting and a decline in locomotor activity later in life. We found a significant decline in muscle satellite cells, which decreases the muscle's capacity to regenerate and repair during aging. This phenotype was associated with impairment in acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity and assembly at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), also associated with muscle aging. Our data suggests that systemic mitochondrial dysfunction plays important roles in age-related muscle wasting by preferentially affecting the myosatellite cell pool.
    Print ISSN: 0964-6906
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2013-09-09
    Description: Populations of widely distributed species encounter and must adapt to local environmental conditions. However, comprehensive characterization of the genetic basis of adaptation is demanding, requiring genome-wide genotype data, multiple sampled populations, and an understanding of population structure and potential selection pressures. Here, we used single-nucleotide polymorphism genotyping and data on numerous environmental variables to describe the genetic basis of local adaptation in 21 populations of teosinte, the wild ancestor of maize. We found complex hierarchical genetic structure created by altitude, dispersal events, and admixture among subspecies, which complicated identification of locally beneficial alleles. Patterns of linkage disequilibrium revealed four large putative inversion polymorphisms showing clinal patterns of frequency. Population differentiation and environmental correlations suggest that both inversions and intergenic polymorphisms are involved in local adaptation.
    Electronic ISSN: 1759-6653
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: We present a methodology for infrasonic remote sensing of winds in the stratosphere that does not require discrete ground-truth events. Our method uses measured time delays between arrays of sensors to provide group velocities (referred to here as celerities) and then minimizes the difference between observed and predicted celerities by perturbing an initial atmospheric specification. Because we focus on interarray propagation effects, it is not necessary to simulate the full propagation path from source to receiver. This feature allows us to use a relatively simple forward model that is applicable over short-regional distances. By focusing on stratospheric returns, we show that our non-linear inversion scheme converges much better if the starting model contains a strong stratospheric duct. Using the Horizontal Wind Model (HWM)/Mass Spectrometer Incoherent Scatter (MSISE) empirical climatology as a starting model, we demonstrate that the inversion scheme is robust to large uncertainties in backazimuth, but that uncertainties in the measured trace velocity and celerity require the use of prior constraints to ensure suitable convergence. The inversion of synthetic data, using realistic estimates of measurement error, shows that our scheme will nevertheless improve upon a starting model under most scenarios. The inversion scheme is applied to infrasound data recorded from a large event on 2010 December 25, which is presumed to be a bolide, using data from a nine-element infrasound network in Utah. We show that our recorded data require a stronger zonal wind speed in the stratosphere than is present in the HWM profile, and are more consistent with the Ground-to-Space (G2S) profile.
    Print ISSN: 0956-540X
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: Coda- Q is a stochastic parameter reflecting the heterogeneities of medium that seismic waves travel through. We confirmed that coda- Q would vary with the stress loaded to an elastic medium using numerical simulations of seismic wave propagation. When the stress is loaded, cracks in the crust could either close or newly open. The closure and opening of the cracks are not random but depending on the magnitude and the direction of the stress and the crack aspect ratio. The cracks in the medium after loading stress could be aligned in a specific orientation, and elastic wave velocity field would become anisotropic due to the alignment of specific crack orientations. Elastic wave velocity is in general faster along the direction corresponding with the crack orientation while slower along the perpendicular direction. In the numerical simulation, the effect of anisotropy in elastic wave velocity field due to the selective closure and opening of the cracks is calculated using a 2-D finite difference method assuming elastic wave velocity to be a function of the magnitude of loaded stress. The coda- Q calculated from seismic waves simulated for a model varies when the averaged normal stress changes. Our simulation indicated that the sensitivity of coda- Q –1 , that is the reciprocal of the coda- Q , would be 1.0 10 –2 (1.0 MPa –1 ) against the magnitude of the confining pressure and 1.0 10 –3 (1.0 deg –1 ) against the direction of principal stress. We would like to conclude that coda- Q , a stochastic parameter reflecting heterogeneities of subsurface medium, could become a quantitative state indicator of the stress field of the medium where seismic waves propagate through. Spatiotemporal variation of coda- Q reflects change in the stress field in the crust.
    Print ISSN: 0956-540X
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: How do body-wave traveltimes constrain the Earth's radial (1-D) seismic structure? Existing 1-D seismological models underpin 3-D seismic tomography and earthquake location algorithms. It is therefore crucial to assess the quality of such 1-D models, yet quantifying uncertainties in seismological models is challenging and thus often ignored. Ideally, quality assessment should be an integral part of the inverse method. Our aim in this study is twofold: (i) we show how to solve a general Bayesian non-linear inverse problem and quantify model uncertainties, and (ii) we investigate the constraint on spherically symmetric P -wave velocity ( V P ) structure provided by body-wave traveltimes from the EHB bulletin (phases Pn , P , PP and PKP ). Our approach is based on artificial neural networks, which are very common in pattern recognition problems and can be used to approximate an arbitrary function. We use a Mixture Density Network to obtain 1-D marginal posterior probability density functions (pdfs), which provide a quantitative description of our knowledge on the individual Earth parameters. No linearization or model damping is required, which allows us to infer a model which is constrained purely by the data. We present 1-D marginal posterior pdfs for the 22 V P parameters and seven discontinuity depths in our model. P -wave velocities in the inner core, outer core and lower mantle are resolved well, with standard deviations of ~0.2 to 1 per cent with respect to the mean of the posterior pdfs. The maximum likelihoods of V P are in general similar to the corresponding ak135 values, which lie within one or two standard deviations from the posterior means, thus providing an independent validation of ak135 in this part of the radial model. Conversely, the data contain little or no information on P -wave velocity in the D '' layer, the upper mantle and the homogeneous crustal layers. Further, the data do not constrain the depth of the discontinuities in our model. Using additional phases available in the ISC bulletin, such as PcP , PKKP and the converted phases SP and ScP , may enhance the resolvability of these parameters. Finally, we show how the method can be extended to obtain a posterior pdf for a multidimensional model space. This enables us to investigate correlations between model parameters.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: We have developed a network optimization method for regional-scale microseismic monitoring networks and applied it to optimize the densification of the existing seismic network in northeastern Switzerland. The new network will build the backbone of a 10-yr study on the neotectonic activity of this area that will help to better constrain the seismic hazard imposed on nuclear power plants and waste repository sites. This task defined the requirements regarding location precision (0.5 km in epicentre and 2 km in source depth) and detection capability [magnitude of completeness M c  = 1.0 ( M L )]. The goal of the optimization was to find the geometry and size of the network that met these requirements. Existing stations in Switzerland, Germany and Austria were considered in the optimization procedure. We based the optimization on the simulated annealing approach proposed by Hardt & Scherbaum, which aims to minimize the volume of the error ellipsoid of the linearized earthquake location problem ( D -criterion). We have extended their algorithm to: calculate traveltimes of seismic body waves using a finite difference ray tracer and the 3-D velocity model of Switzerland, calculate seismic body-wave amplitudes at arbitrary stations assuming the Brune source model and using scaling and attenuation relations recently derived for Switzerland, and estimate the noise level at arbitrary locations within Switzerland using a first-order ambient seismic noise model based on 14 land-use classes defined by the EU-project CORINE and open GIS data. We calculated optimized geometries for networks with 10–35 added stations and tested the stability of the optimization result by repeated runs with changing initial conditions. Further, we estimated the attainable magnitude of completeness ( M c ) for the different sized optimal networks using the Bayesian Magnitude of Completeness (BMC) method introduced by Mignan et al. The algorithm developed in this study is also applicable to smaller optimization problems, for example, small local monitoring networks. Possible applications are volcano monitoring, the surveillance of induced seismicity associated with geotechnical operations and many more. Our algorithm is especially useful to optimize networks in populated areas with heterogeneous noise conditions and if complex velocity structures or existing stations have to be considered.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: Fluid injection in and withdrawal from wells are basic procedures in mining activities and deep resources exploitation, such as oil and gas extraction, permeability enhancement for geothermal exploitation and waste fluid disposal. All of these activities have the potential to induce seismicity, as exemplified by the 2006 Basel earthquake ( M L 3.4). Despite several decades of experience, the mechanisms of induced seismicity are not known in detail, which prevents effective risk assessment and/or mitigation. In this study, we provide an interpretation of induced seismicity based on computation of Coulomb stress changes that result from fluid injection/withdrawal at depth, mainly focused on the interpretation of induced seismicity due to stimulation of a geothermal reservoir. Seismicity is, theoretically, more likely where Coulomb stress changes are larger. For modeling purposes, we simulate the thermodynamic evolution of a system after fluid injection/withdrawal. The associated changes in pressure and temperature are subsequently considered as sources of incremental stress changes, which are then converted to Coulomb stress changes on favourably oriented faults, taking into account the background regional stress. Numerical results are applied to the water injection that was performed to create the fractured reservoir at the enhanced-geothermal-system site, Soultz-sous-Forets (France). Our approach describes well the observed seismicity, and provides an explanation for the different behaviors of a system when fluids are injected or withdrawn.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: We report on a broad-band high-resolution attenuation model for the North China Craton and surrounding regions based on regional Lg -wave data. Vertical broad-band waveforms recorded at 39 stations from 176 crustal earthquakes are collected to extract the Lg -wave amplitude spectra between 0.05 and 10.0 Hz. We use the dual-station method to generate a preliminary Q Lg model and use it as the initial model. Then, we combine the dual- and single-station data together to jointly invert the Q Lg distribution and Lg source excitation functions. These inversions are conducted independently at individual frequencies without using any a priori assumption about the frequency dependences in Q Lg and source terms. The maximum spatial resolution is approximately 1° x 1° in well-covered areas for frequencies between 0.05 and 2.0 Hz. The Q Lg image is then used to determine the relationship between the attenuation and different geological structures. Results show an average Q 0 (1 Hz Q Lg ) of 374 for the entire North China Craton with an increasing trend from east to west. Average Q 0 values are 337, 361 and 421 for the east, central and west blocks, respectively. For the surrounding regions, the Eastern Tibetan plateau has a very low Q 0 of 188, while the Northeast China Plate and the Tianshan–Xingmeng fold belts are characterized by high Q 0 values of 506 and 424, respectively. We also investigate regional variations of the Lg attenuation in low-frequency band between 0.2 and 1.0 Hz.
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: We present a systematic study on the influence of pressure (0.1–600 MPa), temperature (750–1200 °C), carbon dioxide fugacity (log f CO 2  = –4.41 to 3.60) and time (2–12 hr) on the chemical and physical properties of carbonate rock. Our experiments aim to reproduce the conditions at the periphery of magma chamber where carbonate host rock is influenced by, but not readily assimilated by, magma. This permits the investigation of the natural conditions at which circulating fluids/gases promote infiltration reactions typical of metasomatic skarns that can involve large volumes of subvolcanic carbonate basements. Results show that, providing that carbon dioxide is retained in the pore space, decarbonation does not proceed at any magmatic pressure and temperature. However, when the carbon dioxide is free to escape, decarbonation can occur rapidly and is not hindered by a low initial porosity or permeability. Together with carbon dioxide and lime, portlandite, a mineral commonly found in voluminous metasomatic skarns, readily forms during carbonate decomposition. Post-experimental analyses highlight that thermal microcracking, a result of the highly anisotropic thermal expansion of calcite, exerts a greater influence on rock physical properties (porosity, ultrasonic wave velocities and elastic moduli) than decarbonation. Our data suggest that this will be especially true at the margins of dykes or magma bodies, where temperatures can reach up to 1200 °C. However, rock compressive strength is significantly reduced by both thermal cracking and decarbonation, explained by the relative weakness of lime + portlandite compared to calcite, and an increase in grain size with increasing temperature. Metasomatic skarns, whose petrogenetic reactions may involve a few tens of cubic kilometres, could therefore represent an important source of volcanic instability.
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: The scattering of plane SH waves incident on a circular sectorial canyon is considered. An accurate region-matching technique is applied to derive a rigorous series solution. Appropriate wavefunctions are employed to describe antiplane motions. Judicious basis functions, involving Gegenbauer polynomials, are well utilized to correctly capture the singular behaviour in stress fields near the canyon bottom. The enforcement of matching conditions on the auxiliary boundary leads to the determination of unknown coefficients. Plotted results demonstrate the influence of pertinent parameters on surface and subsurface motions. Both steady-state and transient results are included. The solution technique proposed achieves a considerable reduction in the computational effort, facilitating benchmark computations. The derived series solution enriches the limited list of series solutions presently known for canyon problems related to SH -wave scattering.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: We present 3-D models of the P- and S -wave velocity distributions in the crust and uppermost mantle beneath Sicily, Calabria (Southern Italy), and surrounding submerged areas, obtained by tomographic inversion of traveltimes of regional body waves phases. Our method combines double-difference tomographic inversion with a post-processing procedure [Weighted Average Model method (WAM)]. This procedure was applied to a set of models consistent with the experimental data. We tested the ability of the WAM procedure to mitigate the uncertainty associated with the arbitrary nature of the many input parameters required for each inversion. The local reliability and resolution of the obtained models have been assessed through: synthetic tests, experimental tests carried out with independent data sets and unconventional tests based on the analysis of the internal consistency of the P - and S -velocity models. The tomographic images provide a detailed sketch of P- and S- wave velocity anomalies. These clearly show the shape of the Sicilian-Maghrebian belt beneath Sicily and Calabrian Arc at different depths. Low V P and Vs bodies are imaged beneath Stromboli and Marsili volcanoes in the southern Tyrrhenian, whereas high and low seismic velocities alternate beneath the Etna giving inferences on the possible depth of the mantle melting feeding the volcano. In the upper crust, the main sedimentary basins and tectonic features are also well imaged. Finally, tomographic cross sections show the trend of the Moho in the study area, where its depth ranges between 35 and 40 km beneath the Sicilian belt and between 15 and 22 km in the southern Tyrrhenian basin and Ionian Sea.
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: We used two tracks of ALOS PALSAR images to investigate the focal mechanism and slip distribution of the 2011 March 24, M W 6.8 Burma strike-slip earthquake. Three different SAR techniques, namely conventional interferometry, SAR pixel offsets (SPO) and multiple-aperture InSAR (MAI), were employed to obtain the coseismic surface deformation fields along the ~30 km length of the fault rupture. Along-track measurements from SPO and MAI techniques show a high correlation, and were subsequently used to precisely determine the location and extent of the surface fault trace. The best-fitting fault model geometry derived from an iterative inversion technique suggests that the rupture occurred on a near-vertical sinistral strike-slip fault west of the Nam Ma fault with a strike of 70°. A maximum slip of 4.2 m occurs at a depth of 2.5 km, with significant slip constrained only to the upper 10 km of the crust.
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: Knowledge of the mantle reflectivity structure is highly dependent on our ability to efficiently extract, and properly interpret, small seismic arrivals. Among the various data types and techniques, long-period SS/PP precursors and high-frequency receiver functions are routinely utilized to increase the confidence of the recovered mantle stratifications at distinct spatial scales. However, low resolution and a complex Fresnel zone are glaring weaknesses of SS precursors, while over-reliance on receiver distribution is a formidable challenge for the analysis of converted waves from oceanic regions. A promising high frequency alternative to receiver functions is P ' P ' precursors, which are capable of resolving mantle structures at vertical and lateral resolution of ~5 and ~200 km, respectively, owing to their spectral content, shallow angle of incidence and near-symmetric Fresnel zones. This study presents a novel processing method for both SS (or PP) and P ' P ' precursors based on deconvolution, stacking, Radon transform and depth migration. A suite of synthetic tests is performed to quantify the fidelity and stability of this method under different data conditions. Our multiresolution survey of the mantle at targeted areas near Nazca-South America subduction zone reveal both olivine and garnet related transitions at depths below 400 km. We attribute a depressed 660 to thermal variations, whereas compositional variations atop the upper-mantle transition zone are needed to explain the diminished or highly complex reflected/scattered signals from the 410 km discontinuity. We also observe prominent P ' P ' reflections within the transition zone, and the anomalous amplitudes near the plate boundary zone indicate a sharp (~10 km thick) transition that likely resonates with the frequency content of P ' P ' precursors. The migration of SS precursors in this study shows no evidence of split 660 reflections, but potential majorite–ilmenite (590–640 km) and ilmenite–perovskite transitions (740–750 km) are identified based on similarly processed high-frequency P ' P ' precursors. Additional findings of severely scattered energy in the lithosphere and distinct lower mantle reflections at ~800 km could be potentially important but require further verifications. Overall, our improved imaging methods and the strong sensitivity of P ' P ' precursors to the existence, depth, sharpness and strength of reflective structures offer significant future promise for the understanding of mantle mineralogy and dynamics.
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: Time-dependent probabilistic seismic hazard assessment requires a stochastic description of earthquake occurrences. While short-term seismicity models are well-constrained by observations, the recurrences of characteristic on-fault earthquakes are only derived from theoretical considerations, uncertain palaeo-events or proxy data. Despite the involved uncertainties and complexity, simple statistical models for a quasi-period recurrence of on-fault events are implemented in seismic hazard assessments. To test the applicability of statistical models, such as the Brownian relaxation oscillator or the stress release model, we perform a systematic comparison with deterministic simulations based on rate- and state-dependent friction, high-resolution representations of fault systems and quasi-dynamic rupture propagation. For the specific fault network of the Lower Rhine Embayment, Germany, we run both stochastic and deterministic model simulations based on the same fault geometries and stress interactions. Our results indicate that the stochastic simulators are able to reproduce the first-order characteristics of the major earthquakes on isolated faults as well as for coupled faults with moderate stress interactions. However, we find that all tested statistical models fail to reproduce the characteristics of strongly coupled faults, because multisegment rupturing resulting from a spatiotemporally correlated stress field is underestimated in the stochastic simulators. Our results suggest that stochastic models have to be extended by multirupture probability distributions to provide more reliable results.
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: Stress waves, known as acoustic emissions (AEs), are released by localized inelastic deformation events during the progressive failure of brittle rocks. Although several numerical models have been developed to simulate the deformation and damage processes of rocks, such as non-linear stress–strain behaviour and localization of failure, only a limited number have been capable of providing quantitative information regarding the associated seismicity. Moreover, the majority of these studies have adopted a pseudo-static approach based on elastic strain energy dissipation that completely disregards elastodynamic effects. This paper describes a new AE modelling technique based on the combined finite-discrete element method (FEM/DEM), a numerical tool that simulates material failure by explicitly considering fracture nucleation and propagation in the modelling domain. Given the explicit time integration scheme of the solver, stress wave propagation and the effect of radiated seismic energy can be directly captured. Quasi-dynamic seismic information is extracted from a FEM/DEM model with a newly developed algorithm based on the monitoring of internal variables (e.g. relative displacements and kinetic energy) in proximity to propagating cracks. The AE of a wing crack propagation model based on this algorithm are cross-analysed by traveltime inversion and energy estimation from seismic recordings. Results indicate a good correlation of AE initiation times and locations, and scaling of energies, independently calculated with the two methods. Finally, the modelling technique is validated by simulating a laboratory compression test on a granite sample. The micromechanical parameters of the heterogeneous model are first calibrated to reproduce the macroscopic stress–strain response measured during standard laboratory tests. Subsequently, AE frequency–magnitude statistics, spatial clustering of source locations and the evolution of AE rate are investigated. The distribution of event magnitude tends to decay as power law while the spatial distribution of sources exhibits a fractal character, in agreement with experimental observations. Moreover, the model can capture the decrease of seismic b value associated with the macrorupture of the rock sample and the transition of AE spatial distribution from diffuse, in the pre-peak stage, to strongly localized at the peak and post-peak stages, as reported in a number of published laboratory studies. In future studies, the validated FEM/DEM-AE modelling technique will be used to obtain further insights into the micromechanics of rock failure with potential applications ranging from laboratory-scale microcracking to engineering-scale processes (e.g. excavations within mines, tunnels and caverns, petroleum and geothermal reservoirs) to tectonic earthquakes triggering.
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2013-09-10
    Description: We used strong-motion records from the 2012 May 20 and 29 Emilia-Romagna earthquakes ( M w 6.1 and 5.9, respectively) and four aftershocks with magnitudes ranging between 4.9 and 5.5 to analyse the S -wave spectral amplitude decay with distance and estimate acceleration source functions and site effects. The data set consists of six earthquakes, 44 stations and 248 records with hypocentral distances in the range 10 〈 r  〈 100 km. We rotated the accelerograms to calculate transverse and radial components of the acceleration spectrum. We found non-parametric attenuation functions that describe the spectral amplitude decay of SH and SV waves with distance at 60 different frequencies between 0.1 and 40 Hz. These attenuation functions provide an estimate of the quality factor Q at each frequency analysed. Assuming that geometrical spreading is 1/ r for r  ≤ r x and 1/( r x r ) 0.5 for r  〉 r x with r x  = 60 km and normalizing at 15 km (the recording distance where the attenuation functions start to decay), we find that the average Q for SH waves can be approximated by Q SH  = 82 ± 1 f  1.2±0.02 and by Q SV  = 79 ± 1 f  1.24±0.03 for SV waves in the frequency range 0.10 ≤ f  ≤ 10.7 Hz. At higher frequencies, 11.8 ≤ f  ≤ 40 Hz, the frequency dependence of Q weakens and is approximated by Q SH  = 301 ± 1 f   0.36±0.04 and Q SV  = 384 ± 1 f  0.28±0.04 . These results indicate that the S -wave attenuation is radially isotropic at local distances in the epicentral area. Nevertheless, we used these attenuation parameters separately to correct the radial (with Q SV ) and transverse (with Q SH ) components of the acceleration spectra and to separate source and site effects using a non-parametric spectral inversion scheme. We found that the source function of the main event and the bigger aftershocks show enhanced low frequency radiation between 0.4 and 3.0 Hz. We converted the source functions into far-field source acceleration spectra and interpreted the resulting source spectra in terms of Brune's model. The stress drops obtained range between approximately 0.9 and 2.9 MPa. Although all the recording stations used are located in the Po Plain, the site functions obtained from the spectral inversion show important amplification variability between the sites. We compared these site functions with the average horizontal to vertical spectral ratios calculated for each station, and we found consistent results for most stations.
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2013-09-12
    Description: Publication date: Available online 11 September 2013 Source: FEBS Open Bio Author(s): Gisele Castro , Maria Fernanda C. Areias , Lais Weissmann , Paula G.F. Quaresma , Carlos K. Katashima , Mario J.A. Saad , Patricia O. Prada Insulin acts in the hypothalamus, decreasing food intake (FI) by the IR/PI3K/Akt pathway. This pathway is impaired in obese animals and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and low-grade inflammation are possible mechanisms involved in this impairment. Here, we highlighted the amygdala as an important brain region for FI regulation in response to insulin. This regulation was dependent on PI3K/AKT pathway similar to the hypothalamus. Insulin was able to decrease neuropeptide Y (NPY) and increase oxytocin mRNA levels in the amygdala via PI3K, which may contribute to hypophagia. Additionally, obese rats did not reduce FI in response to insulin and AKT phosphorylation was decreased in the amygdala, suggesting insulin resistance. Insulin resistance was associated with ER stress and low-grade inflammation in this brain region. The inhibition of ER stress with PBA reverses insulin action/signaling, decreases NPY and increases oxytocin mRNA levels in the amygdala from obese rats, suggesting that ER stress is probably one of the mechanisms that induce insulin resistance in the amygdala.
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2013-09-12
    Description: The tension between the meaning of causality in science and law or public policy is well-known; however, defendants in product liability cases or industries that might be affected by a government regulation may try to convince the factfinder to require evidence of a causal relationship that meets the standards of science. From the perspective of public health, however, people may be exposed unnecessarily to a health risk during the time period between the establishment of reasonably strong evidence of a causal relationship and the overwhelming evidence required for scientific causality. The Bayesian paradigm enables one to update information from epidemiologic studies as they accumulate, providing estimates of the probability that the relative risk of a particular harm from exposure exceeds a threshold value, e.g. 2.0 or 4.0 that is sufficient to meet the preponderance of the evidence standard or to support a health initiative. In order to diminish the role of the initial prior distribution, which may be quite subjective, the first case-control study or an analysis of adverse event and case reports is used to determine two prior distributions. One is the most favourable to the defendant, or industry that might be regulated, which is consistent with the previous data. The other is centred on or near the estimated relative risk from the first study. The method is applied to the studies that linked aspirin use to Reye syndrome and demonstrates that the evidence of a causal association was sufficiently strong in 1982, when the Food and Drug Administration first proposed that the public be warned of the risk, to support the regulation. Thus, lives would have been saved had the warning been given at the end of 1982 rather than in early 1985.
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 2013-09-12
    Description: In law, inferences of causation are sometimes made through a structured process in which multiple participants play various roles, and make decisions concerning various logical components of the overall inference (such as legal rules, policy objectives, presumptions, evidence, burdens of proof and findings of fact). This article illustrates such a process using empirical research into compensation decisions in the USA for injuries allegedly caused by vaccinations. Empirical research into actual legal processes is essential, in order to discover how various players approach their sub-tasks of decision-making. It also provides insights for areas outside of law, such as non-monotonic logic, cognitive science, sociology and artificial intelligence.
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  • 61
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    Publication Date: 2013-09-12
    Description: Situations of causal factual uncertainty are relatively common in law. The problems and difficulties regarding ‘factual causation’ in law point to the need of ‘evidence’ and ‘proof’ models that are adequate and capable to accommodate the tests and methodologies used to explain and demonstrate it in a legal context. Given the configuration of the situations of causal factual uncertainty and the available ‘evidence’ and ‘proof’ models, I argue that it is justified to use an ‘argumentative-narrative’ model for ‘proving causation’ in law. However, considering that each model of ‘evidence’ and ‘proof’ reveals a different kind of ‘rationality’ that can still be viewed in different ways, I also argue that we must try to match the perspective we have on the ‘rationality’ behind the chosen model of ‘evidence’ and ‘proof’ with the ‘rationality’ underlying ‘causation’ in law.
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  • 62
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2013-09-12
    Description: At least in some cases, the values confronted in legal decision-making appear to be incommensurable. Some legal theorists resist incommensurability because they fear that this presents an overwhelming obstacle to rational decision-making. By offering a close analysis of proportionality and, more particularly, measures of proportional value satisfaction, I show that this fear is unfounded. Comparative measures of proportional value satisfaction do not require the values to be commensurable. However, assuming incommensurability presents us with the problem of public significance in the proportional satisfaction of values. When two values are commensurable, this public significance is provided by the mediating effects of the overarching third value that provides the common measure of the values. However, when this common measure is removed, then the public significance of value satisfaction must be otherwise achieved. This is why I propose an equal proportional value satisfaction as the most appropriate proportionality maximand. Under equal proportional value satisfaction, the proportional satisfaction of any one value has significance for each and every other value. This kind of public significance is interpersonal rather than impersonal (or second-personal rather than third-personal). The article then shows that the legal process that is most appropriate to equal proportionality is a process that implements defeasible legal rules.
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2013-09-12
    Description: In order to allocate the risk between parties in legal adjudication, we use evidentiary techniques with the main device among them being the standard of proof (SoP). The traditional view holds the grade of probability to be the parameter that shifts when moving to different standards. However, as soon as we dig slightly deeper, an incoherent picture is being revealed. In this article, I challenge the accepted view and try to show that it faces insurmountable problems concerning the rationality, the grammatical consistency and the impact of the SoP for the acceptability of verdicts. At the end of the article, I shortly discuss the theory of epistemological contextualism and propose a framework that allows rational distinctions to be drawn between different standards of proof. In the second part of this project (forthcoming), I will defend a contextualist view according to which shifting parameter is not the grade of (aleatory) probability, but instead the Set of Epistemic Defeaters in play.
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: There is much interest in using high-throughput DNA sequencing methodology to monitor microorganisms, complex plant and animal communities. However, there are experimental and analytical issues to consider before applying a sequencing technology, which was originally developed for genome projects, to ecological projects. Many of these issues have been highlighted by recent microbial studies. Understanding how high-throughput sequencing is best implemented is important for the interpretation of recent results and the success of future applications. Addressing complex biological questions with metagenomics requires the interaction of researchers who bring different skill sets to problem solving. Educators can help by nurturing a collaborative interdisciplinary approach to genome science, which is essential for effective problem solving. Educators are in a position to help students, teachers, the public and policy makers interpret the new knowledge that metagenomics brings. To do this, they need to understand, not only the excitement of the science but also the pitfalls and shortcomings of methodology and research designs. We review these issues and some of the research directions that are helping to move the field forward.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: We believe that undergraduate biology students must acquire a foundational background in computing including how to formulate a computational problem; develop an algorithmic solution; implement their solution in software and then test, document and use their code to explore biological phenomena. Moreover, by learning these skills in the first year, students acquire a powerful tool set that they can use and build on throughout their studies. To address this need, we have developed a first-year undergraduate course that teaches students the foundations of computational thinking and programming in the context of problems in biology. This article describes the structure and content of the course and summarizes assessment data on both affective and learning outcomes.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Bioinformatics is an integral part of modern life sciences. It has revolutionized and redefined how research is carried out and has had an enormous impact on biotechnology, medicine, agriculture and related areas. Yet, it is only rarely integrated into high school teaching and learning programs, playing almost no role in preparing the next generation of information-oriented citizens. Here, we describe the design principles of bioinformatics learning environments, including our own, that are aimed at introducing bioinformatics into senior high school curricula through engaging learners in scientifically authentic inquiry activities. We discuss the bioinformatics-related benefits and challenges that high school teachers and students face in the course of the implementation process, in light of previous studies and our own experience. Based on these lessons, we present a new approach for characterizing the questions embedded in bioinformatics teaching and learning units, based on three criteria: the type of domain-specific knowledge required to answer each question (declarative knowledge, procedural knowledge, strategic knowledge, situational knowledge), the scientific approach from which each question stems (biological, bioinformatics, a combination of the two) and the associated cognitive process dimension (remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, create). We demonstrate the feasibility of this approach using a learning environment, which we developed for the high school level, and suggest some of its implications. This review sheds light on unique and critical characteristics related to broader integration of bioinformatics in secondary education, which are also relevant to the undergraduate level, and especially on curriculum design, development of suitable learning environments and teaching and learning processes.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: The aim of this paper is to study the relations between the Hausdorff dimensions of k -quasilines and the theory of extremal quasiconformal mappings. We show that there is an open and dense subset (Strebel points) of the universal Teichmüller space T (H) such that, for every [ f ] in the set, the Hausdorff dimension of the k -quasiline determined by [ f ] is strictly less than 1 + k 2 . We also show that there are some points [ f ] != [id] outside the open and dense set in the universal Teichmüller space such that the Hausdorff dimension of the quasiline determined by [ f ] is 1. Moreover, some results on the Hausdorff dimensions of the quasilines varying in the asymptotic Teichmüller space are also obtained.
    Print ISSN: 0024-6093
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Next-generation sequencing (NGS) is increasingly being adopted as the backbone of biomedical research. With the commercialization of various affordable desktop sequencers, NGS will be reached by increasing numbers of cellular and molecular biologists, necessitating community consensus on bioinformatics protocols to tackle the exponential increase in quantity of sequence data. The current resources for NGS informatics are extremely fragmented. Finding a centralized synthesis is difficult. A multitude of tools exist for NGS data analysis; however, none of these satisfies all possible uses and needs. This gap in functionality could be filled by integrating different methods in customized pipelines, an approach helped by the open-source nature of many NGS programmes. Drawing from community spirit and with the use of the Wikipedia framework, we have initiated a collaborative NGS resource: The NGS WikiBook. We have collected a sufficient amount of text to incentivize a broader community to contribute to it. Users can search, browse, edit and create new content, so as to facilitate self-learning and feedback to the community. The overall structure and style for this dynamic material is designed for the bench biologists and non-bioinformaticians. The flexibility of online material allows the readers to ignore details in a first read, yet have immediate access to the information they need. Each chapter comes with practical exercises so readers may familiarize themselves with each step. The NGS WikiBook aims to create a collective laboratory book and protocol that explains the key concepts and describes best practices in this fast-evolving field.
    Print ISSN: 1467-5463
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: A new uniqueness result for a general n th order differential equation is obtained. We show that some previous results follow immediately from our theorem.
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Consider a discrete uniformly elliptic divergence form equation on the d ≥3 dimensional lattice Z d with random coefficients. In Conlon and Spencer [ Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~conlon/paper/hom10.pdf ], rate of convergence results in homogenization and estimates on the difference between the averaged Green's function and the homogenized Green's function for random environments which satisfy a Poincaré inequality were obtained. Here, these results are extended to certain environments in which correlations can have arbitrarily small power law decay. These environments are simply related via a convolution to environments which do satisfy a Poincaré inequality.
    Print ISSN: 0024-6093
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: In this paper, we prove that, for any a , M N with ( a , M ) = 1, there are infinitely many Carmichael numbers m such that m a mod M .
    Print ISSN: 0024-6093
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: We give a topological analogue for openness of a criterion for flatness that originates with Auslander. Over a normal base of dimension n , failure of openness is detected by a vertical component in the n th fibred power of the morphism.
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Investigated are regular maps from real algebraic varieties into real Fermat varieties. It is proved that under some natural assumptions, all such maps are null homotopic.
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Let ( M , g ) be a complete non-compact Riemannian manifold. We consider operators of the form g + V , where g is the non-negative Laplacian associated with the metric g , and V a locally integrable function. Let be a Riemannian covering, with Laplacian g and potential . If the operator + V is non-negative on ( M , g ), then the operator is non-negative on . In this note, we show that the converse statement is true provided that is a co-amenable subgroup of 1 ( M ).
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Peak interpolation is concerned with a foundational kind of mathematical task: building functions in a fixed algebra A , which have prescribed values or behaviour on a fixed closed subset (or on several disjoint subsets). In this paper, we do the same but now A is an algebra of operators on a Hilbert space. We briefly survey this noncommutative peak interpolation , which we have studied with coauthors in a long series of papers, and whose basic theory now appears to be approaching its culmination. This programme developed from, and is based partly on, theorems of Hay and Read whose proofs were spectacular, but therefore inaccessible to an uncommitted reader. We give short proofs of these results, using recent progress in noncommutative peak interpolation, and conversely give examples of the use of these theorems in peak interpolation. For example, we prove a useful new noncommutative peak interpolation theorem.
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: We show how a parameterized family of maps of the spine of a manifold can be used to construct a family of homeomorphisms of the ambient manifold which have the inverse limits of the spine maps as global attractors. We describe applications to unimodal families of interval maps, to rotation sets, and to the standard family of circle maps.
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: For every prime p , we give infinitely many examples of torsors under abelian varieties over Q that are locally trivial but not divisible by p in the Weil–Châtelet group. We also give an example of a locally trivial torsor under an elliptic curve over Q that is not divisible by 4 in the Weil–Châtelet group. This gives a negative answer to a question of Cassels.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: We show that at least of the zeros of the Riemann zeta-function are simple, assuming the Riemann hypothesis. This was previously established by Conrey, Ghosh and Gonek [ Proc. London Math. Soc. 76 (1998) 497–522] under the additional assumption of the generalized Lindelöf hypothesis. We are able to remove this hypothesis by careful use of the generalized Vaughan identity.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: We construct an infinite family of hyperbolic, homologically thin knots that are not quasi-alternating. To establish the latter, we argue that the branched double-cover of each knot in the family does not bound a negative-definite 4-manifold with trivial first homology and bounded second Betti number. This fact depends in turn on information from the correction terms in Heegaard Floer homology, which we establish by way of a relationship to, and calculation of, the Turaev torsion.
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: We observe that E -resultant of a very ample rank 2 vector bundle E on a real projective curve (with no real points) is nonnegative when restricted to the space of real sections. Moreover, we show that if E has a section vanishing at exactly two points and the degree d of E satisfies d ( d – 6) ≥ 4( g – 1), then this polynomial cannot be written as a sum of squares.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Let G be one of the Ricci-flat holonomy groups SU( n ), Sp( n ), Spin(7) or G 2 , and M a compact manifold of dimension 2 n , 4 n , 8 or 7, respectively. We prove that the natural map from the moduli space of torsion-free G -structures on M to the moduli space of Ricci-flat metrics is open, and that the image is a smooth manifold. For the exceptional cases G = Spin(7) and G 2 , we extend the result to asymptotically cylindrical manifolds.
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: We improve the results of Booker and Krishnamurthy ( Compos. Math. 147 (2011) 669–715) by allowing restricted sets of poles among the unramified twists. This allows for a clean statement of the GL(2) converse theorem which includes all cases of Eisenstein series.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2013-09-13
    Description: Let G be a solvable subgroup of the automorphism group Aut( X ) of a compact Kähler manifold X of complex dimension n , and let N ( G ) be the normal subgroup of G consisting of elements with null entropy. Let us denote by G * the image of G under the natural map from Aut( X ) to GL( V , R ), where V is the Dolbeault cohomology group H 1, 1 ( X , R ). Assume that the Zariski closure of G * in GL( V C ) is connected. The main aim of this paper is to show that, when the rank r ( G ) of the quotient group G / N ( G ) is equal to n – 1 and the identity component of Aut( X ) is trivial, then the normal subgroup N ( G ) of G is finite. This affirmatively answers a question in Invent. Math. posed by D.-Q. Zhang.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2013-09-14
    Description: Publication date: Available online 12 September 2013 Source: Cell Reports Author(s): Debra A. Mayes , Tilat A. Rizvi , Haley Titus-Mitchell , Rachel Oberst , Georgianne M. Ciraolo , Charles V. Vorhees , Andrew P. Robinson , Stephen D. Miller , Jose A. Cancelas , Anat O. Stemmer-Rachamimov , Nancy Ratner Patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) and Costello syndrome Rasopathy have behavioral deficits. In NF1 patients, these may correlate with white matter enlargement and aberrant myelin. To model these features, we induced Nf1 loss or HRas hyperactivation in mouse oligodendrocytes. Enlarged brain white matter tracts correlated with myelin decompaction, downregulation of claudin-11, and mislocalization of connexin-32. Surprisingly, non-cell-autonomous defects in perivascular astrocytes and the blood-brain barrier (BBB) developed, implicating a soluble mediator. Nitric oxide (NO) can disrupt tight junctions and gap junctions, and NO and NO synthases (NOS1–NOS3) were upregulated in mutant white matter. Treating mice with the NOS inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester or the antioxidant N-acetyl cysteine corrected cellular phenotypes. CNP-HRasG12V mice also displayed locomotor hyperactivity, which could be rescued by antioxidant treatment. We conclude that Nf1/Ras regulates oligodendrocyte NOS and that dysregulated NO signaling in oligodendrocytes can alter the surrounding vasculature. The data suggest that antioxidants may improve some behavioral deficits in Rasopathy patients. Graphical abstract Teaser In this study, Ratner and colleagues show that altering intracellular signaling in oligodendrocytes affects brain astrocytes and blood vessels that together make up the blood-brain barrier. Increasing oligodendrocyte Ras-GTP, mimicking neurofibromatosis type 1 and Costello syndrome, disrupted astrocyte and endothelial cell tight junctions and gap junctions and caused a leaky blood-brain barrier. Exposure to a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor or an antioxidant reversed cellular phenotypes and behavioral hyperactivity. Thus, oligodendrocytes contribute to brain homeostasis, and antioxidant therapy may be beneficial when homeostasis is disrupted.
    Electronic ISSN: 2211-1247
    Topics: Biology
    Published by Elsevier on behalf of Cell Press.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2013-09-14
    Description: Publication date: Available online 12 September 2013 Source: Cell Reports Author(s): Dalit Ben-Yosef , Francesca S. Boscolo , Hadar Amir , Mira Malcov , Ami Amit , Louise C. Laurent Given the association between mutational load and cancer, the observation that genetic aberrations are frequently found in human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) is of concern. Prior studies in human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) have shown that deletions and regions of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) tend to arise during reprogramming and early culture, whereas duplications more frequently occur during long-term culture. For the corresponding experiments in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), we studied two sets of hESC lines: one including the corresponding parental DNA and the other generated from single blastomeres from four sibling embryos. Here, we show that genetic aberrations observed in hESCs can originate during preimplantation embryo development and/or early derivation. These early aberrations are mainly deletions and LOH, whereas aberrations arising during long-term culture of hESCs are more frequently duplications. Our results highlight the importance of close monitoring of genomic integrity and the development of improved methods for derivation and culture of hPSCs. Graphical abstract Teaser Human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) are potential sources of cells for transplantation therapy. However, given the association between mutations and cancer, the frequency of genetic aberrations observed in hESCs is concerning. Using unique pedigrees of hESC lines, Laurent and colleagues now find that aberrations that occur during cell-line derivation are mainly deletions and loss of heterozygosity, whereas duplications arise more commonly during long-term culture. These results highlight the need for improved methods for derivation and culture that preserve the genetic integrity of hESCs.
    Electronic ISSN: 2211-1247
    Topics: Biology
    Published by Elsevier on behalf of Cell Press.
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2013-09-14
    Description: Publication date: Available online 12 September 2013 Source: Cell Reports Author(s): Jason Karpac , Benoit Biteau , Heinrich Jasper Loss of metabolic homeostasis is a hallmark of aging and is commonly characterized by the deregulation of adaptive signaling interactions that coordinate energy metabolism with dietary changes. The mechanisms driving age-related changes in these adaptive responses remain unclear. Here, we characterize the deregulation of an adaptive metabolic response and the development of metabolic dysfunction in the aging intestine of Drosophila . We find that activation of the insulin-responsive transcription factor Foxo in intestinal enterocytes is required to inhibit the expression of evolutionarily conserved lipases as part of a metabolic response to dietary changes. This adaptive mechanism becomes chronically activated in the aging intestine, mediated by changes in Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling. Age-related chronic JNK/Foxo activation in enterocytes is deleterious, leading to sustained repression of intestinal lipase expression and the disruption of lipid homeostasis. Changes in the regulation of Foxo-mediated adaptive responses thus contribute to the age-associated breakdown of metabolic homeostasis. Graphical abstract Teaser Aging is associated with a loss of metabolic homeostasis, which is a risk factor for various human pathologies. Using Drosophila , Karpac, Biteau, and Jasper show that the transcription factor Foxo regulates intestinal lipid homeostasis as part of an adaptive response to dietary changes and that chronic intestinal activation of Foxo with age leads to the disruption of lipid metabolism. These results demonstrate that changes in the regulation of adaptive signaling mechanisms can contribute to the age-associated breakdown of metabolic homeostasis.
    Electronic ISSN: 2211-1247
    Topics: Biology
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2013-09-14
    Description: Publication date: Available online 13 September 2013 Source: Geoscience Frontiers Author(s): K. Naganjaneyulu
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
    Description: The dihedral angle formed at junctions between two plagioclase grains and a grain of augite is only very rarely in textural equilibrium in gabbros from kilometre-scale crustal layered intrusions. The median of a population of these disequilibrium angles, cpp , varies systematically within a single layered intrusion, remaining constant over large stretches of stratigraphy with significant increases and decreases associated with the addition or reduction respectively of the number of phases on the liquidus of the bulk magma. The stepwise changes in cpp are present in the Upper Zone of the Bushveld Complex, the Megacyclic Unit I of the Sept Iles Intrusion, and the Layered Series of the Skaergaard intrusion. The plagioclase-bearing cumulates of Rum have a bimodal distribution of cpp , dependent on whether the cumulus assemblage includes clinopyroxene. The presence of the stepwise changes is independent of the order of arrival of cumulus phases and of the composition of either the cumulus phases or the inferred composition of the interstitial liquid. The only parameter that behaves in an exactly analogous manner to cpp is the rate of change in enthalpy with temperature ( H / T ) during crystallization. Both H / T and cpp increase with the addition of a liquidus phase, and decrease with the removal of a liquidus phase. The replacement of one phase by another has little effect on H / T and no discernible effect on cpp . An increase of H / T results in an increase in the fraction of the total enthalpy budget that is the latent heat of crystallization (the fractional latent heat). It also increases the mass crystallized in each incremental temperature drop (the crystal productivity). These increases of both fractional latent heat and crystal productivity are likely to cause an increase in the time taken to form three-grain junctions in the mush via thermal buffering of a thickened mushy layer. We suggest these are the underlying causes of stepwise increases in cpp . Stepwise changes in the geometry of three-grain junctions in fully solidified gabbros thus provide a clear microstructural marker for the progress of fractionation down the liquid line of descent in layered intrusions.
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
    Description: High-resolution sampling in monogenetic fields has the potential to reveal fine-scale heterogeneity of the mantle, a feature that may be overwhelmed by larger fluxes of magma, or missed by under-sampling. The Quaternary Auckland Volcanic Field (AVF) in northern New Zealand is a basaltic field of 51 small-volume volcanic centres, and is one of the best-sampled examples of a monogenetic volcanic field. We present data for 12 centres in the volcanic field. These show the large compositional variations between volcanoes as well as through single eruptive sequences. Whole-rock compositions range from subalkaline basalt in the larger centres, through alkali basalt to nephelinite in the smallest centres. Fractional crystallization has had a limited effect in many of the centres, but high-pressure clinopyroxene crystallization may have occurred in others. Three end-members are observed in Pb isotope space, indicating that distinct mantle source components are involved in the petrogenesis of the magmas. Whole-rock multi-element patterns show that the larger centres have prominent positive Sr anomalies and lack K anomalies, whereas the smaller centres have prominent negative K anomalies and lack Sr anomalies. The melting parameters and compositions of the sources involved are modelled using trace element ratios and multi-element patterns, and three components are characterized: (1) fertile peridotite with a Pb-isotope composition similar to Pacific mid-ocean ridge basalt; (2) eclogite domains with a HIMU-like isotope composition dispersed within the fertile peridotite; (3) slightly depleted subduction-metasomatized peridotitic lithospheric mantle (containing c . 3% subduction fluids). Modelling shows that melting in the AVF begins in garnet-bearing fertile asthenosphere (with preferential melting of eclogite domains) and that melts are variably diluted by melts of the lithospheric source. The U–Th isotope compositions of the end-members in the AVF show 230 Th excess [( 230 Th/ 232 Th) ratios of 1·11–1·38], with the samples of lower ( 230 Th/ 232 Th) exhibiting higher ( 238 U/ 232 Th), which we attribute to the dilution effect of the melts from the lithospheric mantle source. Modelling reveals a correlation between melting in the asthenosphere, the degree of melting and incorporation of the metasomatized lithospheric mantle source, and the resultant size of the volcanic centre. This suggests that the scale of the eruption may essentially be controlled by asthenospheric mantle dynamics.
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  • 90
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
    Description: The origin of mafic and ultramafic sills exhibiting different whole-rock compositional profiles (e.g. I-, C-, D-, M- and S-shaped profiles) remains controversial. We have addressed this issue by revisiting three ~100 m thick Siberian dolerite sills (Vavukansky, Kuz’movsky and Vilyuysky) that display remarkable internal differentiation. The Vavukansky sill has an M-shaped profile with prominent basal and top reversals showing inward increases in whole-rock MgO, Mg-number [100Mg/(Mg + Fe)] and normative An content [100An/(An + Ab)], followed by the Layered and Upper Border Series with inward decreases in these indices. The Kuz’movsky and Vilyuysky sills both show S-shaped profiles similar to the Vavukansky sill, but lack a top reversal. These whole-rock M- and S-shaped profiles are accompanied by similar profiles in mineral compositions. Plagioclase and, to a lesser extent, olivine show systematic inward increases in An content and Mg-number, respectively, across basal and top reversals. These compositional trends are followed by inward decreases in these ratios in the interiors of the Vavukansky and Kuz’movsky sills. Currently accepted models attribute whole-rock M- and S-shaped compositional profiles to crystal settling, compositional convection or compaction operating in closed systems. Our observations challenge these traditional interpretations because variations in mineral compositions observed in marginal reversals cannot result from closed-system fractionation. We suggest instead that initially the sills evolved as open systems that were slowly inflated by magmas that became gradually more primitive with time. The inflation was accompanied by in situ crystallization that preserved the preceding fractionation history of the injected magmas by forming basal and top reversals with minerals becoming more primitive inwards. This process culminated with rapid inflation of the sills to their current size owing to a major influx of primitive magma. Subsequently, magma flow through the sills ceased and they evolved as closed systems by fractional crystallization. This resulted in the Layered and Upper Border Series with minerals becoming more evolved inwards. This model can be extended to explain other compositional profiles and petrological features in mafic and ultramafic sills.
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  • 92
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
    Description: The genomes of related species contain valuable information on the history of the considered taxa. Great apes in particular exhibit variation of evolutionary patterns along their genomes. However, the great ape data also bring new challenges, such as the presence of incomplete lineage sorting and ancestral shared polymorphisms. Previous methods for genome-scale analysis are restricted to very few individuals or cannot disentangle the contribution of mutation rates and fixation biases. This represents a limitation both for the understanding of these forces as well as for the detection of regions affected by selection. Here, we present a new model designed to estimate mutation rates and fixation biases from genetic variation within and between species. We relax the assumption of instantaneous substitutions, modeling substitutions as mutational events followed by a gradual fixation. Hence, we straightforwardly account for shared ancestral polymorphisms and incomplete lineage sorting. We analyze genome-wide synonymous site alignments of human, chimpanzee, and two orangutan species. From each taxon, we include data from several individuals. We estimate mutation rates and GC-biased gene conversion intensity. We find that both mutation rates and biased gene conversion vary with GC content. We also find lineage-specific differences, with weaker fixation biases in orangutan species, suggesting a reduced historical effective population size. Finally, our results are consistent with directional selection acting on coding sequences in relation to exonic splicing enhancers.
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
    Description: Genetic control of male or female gonad development displays between different groups of organisms a remarkable diversity of "master sex-determining genes" at the top of the genetic hierarchies, whereas downstream components surprisingly appear to be evolutionarily more conserved. Without much further studies, conservation of sequence has been equalized to conservation of function. We have used the medaka fish to investigate the generality of this paradigm. In medaka, the master male sex-determining gene is dmrt1bY , a highly conserved downstream regulator of sex determination in vertebrates. To understand its function in orchestrating the complex gene regulatory network, we have identified targets genes and regulated pathways of Dmrt1bY. Monitoring gene expression and interactions by transgenic fluorescent reporter fish lines, in vivo tissue-chromatin immunoprecipitation and in vitro gene regulation assays revealed concordance but also major discrepancies between mammals and medaka, notably amongst spatial, temporal expression patterns and regulations of the canonical Hedgehog and R-spondin/Wnt/Follistatin signaling pathways. Examination of Foxl2 protein distribution in the medaka ovary defined a new subpopulation of theca cells, where ovarian-type aromatase transcriptional regulation appears to be independent of Foxl2. In summary, these data show that the regulation of the downstream regulatory network of sex determination is less conserved than previously thought.
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2013-09-16
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2013-09-17
    Description: We present measurements of higher order clustering of galaxies in the latest release of the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey (CFHTLS)-Wide. We construct a series of volume-limited sample of galaxies containing more than one million galaxies over the redshift range 0.2 〈  z  〈 1 in the four independent fields of the CFHTLS-Wide. Using a counts-in-cells technique we measure the variance ${\bar{\xi }}_2$ and the hierarchical moments $S_{n}= {{\bar{\xi }}_n / {\bar{\xi }}_2^{n-1}}$ (3 ≤  n  ≤ 5) as a function of redshift and angular scale. We find that the measured field-to-field scatter in our estimators is in excellent agreement with analytical predictions. At small scales, corresponding to the highly non-linear regime, we find tentative evidence at the 1 level that the hierarchical moments increase with redshift. At large scales, corresponding to the weakly non-linear regime, our measurements are marginally consistent with perturbation theory predictions for standard cold dark matter cosmology using a simple linear bias. The predictions of perturbation theory tend to slightly overestimate our measurements, which may be a signature of non-linear bias.
    Print ISSN: 0035-8711
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2966
    Topics: Physics
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2013-09-17
    Description: We estimate cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization power spectra and temperature–polarization cross-spectra, from the 9-year data of the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe ( WMAP ). Foreground cleaning is implemented using minimum variance linear combinations of the coefficients of needlet decompositions of sky maps for all WMAP channels, to produce maps for CMB temperature anisotropies ( T -mode) and polarization ( E and B -modes), for nine different years of observation. The final power spectra are computed from averages of all possible cross-year power spectra obtained using foreground-cleaned maps for the different years. Our analysis technique yields a measurement of the EE spectrum that is in excellent agreement with theoretical expectations from the current cosmological model. By comparison, the publicly available WMAP EE power spectrum is higher on average (and significantly higher than the predicted EE spectrum from the current best fit) at scales larger than about a degree, an excess that is not confirmed by our analysis. Our TE and TB measurements are in good agreement overall with the WMAP ones and are compatible with the theoretical expectations, although a few data points are off by a few standard deviations, and yield a reduced 2 somewhat above expectation. As predicted for a standard cosmological model with low tensor-to-scalar ratio, the EB and BB power spectra obtained in our analysis are compatible with zero.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2966
    Topics: Physics
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2013-09-17
    Description: We present optical integral field unit observations of two gas pillars surrounding the Galactic young massive star cluster NGC 3603. The high S/N and spectral resolution of these data have allowed us to accurately quantify the Hα, [N ii ] and [S ii ] emission line shapes, and we find a mixture of broad (FWHM ~ 70–100 km s –1 ) and narrow (〈50 km s –1 ) components. The broad components are found close to the edges of both pillars, suggesting that they originate in turbulent mixing layers (TMLs) driven by the effect of the star cluster wind. Both pillars exhibit surprisingly high ionized gas densities of 〉10 000 cm –3 . In one pillar we found that these high densities are only found in the narrow component, implying that they must originate from deeper within the pillar than the broad component. From this, together with our kinematical data, we conclude that the narrow component traces a photoevaporation flow, and that the TML forms at the interface with the hot wind. On the pillar surfaces, we find a consistent offset in radial velocity between the narrow (brighter) components of Hα and [N ii ] of ~5–8 km s –1 , for which we were unable to find a satisfactory explanation. We urge the theoretical community to simulate mechanical and radiative cloud interactions in more detail to address the many unanswered questions raised by this study.
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2013-09-17
    Description: By exploiting the data base of early-type galaxy (ETG) members of the WINGS survey of nearby clusters, we address here the long debated question of the origin and shape of the Fundamental Plane (FP). Our data suggest that different physical mechanisms concur in shaping and ‘tilting’ the FP with respect to the virial plane (VP) expectation. In particular, a ‘hybrid solution’ in which the structure of galaxies and their stellar population are the main contributors to the FP tilt seems to be favoured. We find that the bulk of the tilt should be attributed to structural non-homology, while stellar population effects play an important but less crucial role. In addition, our data indicate that the differential FP tilt between the V and K band is due to a sort of entanglement between structural and stellar population effects, for which the inward steepening of colour profiles ( V  –  K ) tends to increase at increasing the stellar mass of ETGs. The same kind of analysis applied to the ATLAS 3 D and Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data in common with WINGS ( WSDSS throughout the paper) confirms our results, the only remarkable difference being the less important role that our data attribute to the stellar mass-to-light-ratio (stellar populations) in determining the FP tilt . The ATLAS 3 D data also suggest that the FP tilt depends as well on the dark matter (DM) fraction and on the rotational contribution to the kinetic energy ( V rot /), thus again pointing towards the above-mentioned ‘hybrid solution’. We show that the global properties of the FP, i.e. its tilt and tightness, can be understood in terms of the underlying correlation among mass, structure and stellar population of ETGs, for which, at increasing the stellar mass, ETGs become (on average) ‘older’ and more centrally concentrated. Finally, we show that a Malmquist-like selection effect may mimic a differential evolution of the mass-to-light ratio for galaxies of different masses. This should be taken into account in the studies investigating the amount of the so-called ‘downsizing’ phenomenon.
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2013-09-17
    Description: I present a new algorithm, Curved-sky grAvitational Lensing for Cosmological Light conE simulatioNS ( calclens ), for efficiently computing weak gravitational lensing shear signals from large N -body light cone simulations over a curved sky. This new algorithm properly accounts for the sky curvature and boundary conditions, is able to produce redshift-dependent shear signals including corrections to the Born approximation by using multiple-plane ray tracing and properly computes the lensed images of source galaxies in the light cone. The key feature of this algorithm is a new, computationally efficient Poisson solver for the sphere that combines spherical harmonic transform and multigrid methods. As a result, large areas of sky (~10 000 square degrees) can be ray traced efficiently at high resolution using only a few hundred cores. Using this new algorithm and curved-sky calculations that only use a slower but more accurate spherical harmonic transform Poisson solver, I study the convergence, shear E-mode, shear B-mode and rotation mode power spectra. Employing full-sky E/B-mode decompositions, I confirm that the numerically computed shear B-mode and rotation mode power spectra are equal at high accuracy (1 per cent) as expected from perturbation theory up to second order. Coupled with realistic galaxy populations placed in large N -body light cone simulations, this new algorithm is ideally suited for the construction of synthetic weak lensing shear catalogues to be used to test for systematic effects in data analysis procedures for upcoming large-area sky surveys. The implementation presented in this work, written in c and employing widely available software libraries to maintain portability, is publicly available at http://code.google.com/p/calclens .
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