30,369 results on '"Scott, G."'
Search Results
2. A Brg1-Rme1 circuit in Candida albicans hyphal gene regulation
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Kim, Min-Ju, Cravener, Max, Solis, Norma, Filler, Scott G, and Mitchell, Aaron P
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Microbiology ,Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Genetics ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Infection ,Candida albicans ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Fungal ,Fungal Proteins ,Hyphae ,Biofilms ,Transcription Factors ,DNA Helicases ,Virulence ,Mutation ,biofilms ,hyphal development ,hypoxia ,transcriptional regulation ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
Major Candida albicans virulence traits include its ability to make hyphae, to produce a biofilm, and to damage host cells. These traits depend upon expression of hypha-associated genes. A gene expression comparison among clinical isolates suggested that transcription factor Rme1, established by previous studies to be a positive regulator of chlamydospore formation, may also be a negative regulator of hypha-associated genes. Engineered RME1 overexpression supported this hypothesis, but no relevant rme1Δ/Δ mutant phenotype was detected. We reasoned that Rme1 may function within a specific regulatory pathway. This idea was supported by our finding that an rme1Δ/Δ mutation relieves the need for biofilm regulator Brg1 in biofilm formation. The impact of the rme1Δ/Δ mutation is most prominent under static or "biofilm-like" growth conditions. RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) of cells grown under biofilm-like conditions indicates that Brg1 activates hypha-associated genes indirectly via repression of RME1: hypha-associated gene expression levels are substantially reduced in a brg1Δ/Δ mutant and partially restored in a brg1Δ/Δ rme1Δ/Δ double mutant. An rme1Δ/Δ mutation does not simply bypass Brg1, because iron homeostasis genes depend upon Brg1 regardless of Rme1. Rme1 thus connects Brg1 to the targets relevant to hypha and biofilm formation under biofilm growth conditions.IMPORTANCECandida albicans is a major fungal pathogen of humans, and its ability to grow as a surface-associated biofilm on implanted devices is a common cause of infection. Here, we describe a new regulator of biofilm formation, RME1, whose activity is most prominent under biofilm-like growth conditions.
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- 2024
3. Homologous recombination promotes non-immunogenic mitotic cell death upon DNA damage
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Szmyd, Radoslaw, Casolin, Sienna, French, Lucy, Manjón, Anna G., Walter, Melanie, Cavalli, Léa, Nelson, Christopher B., Page, Scott G., Dhawan, Andrew, Hau, Eric, Pickett, Hilda A., Gee, Harriet E., and Cesare, Anthony J.
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- 2025
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4. Long Amplicon Nanopore Sequencing for Dual-Typing RdRp and VP1 Genes of Norovirus Genogroups I and II in Wastewater
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Scott, G., Ryder, D., Buckley, M., Hill, R., Treagus, S., Stapleton, T., Walker, D. I., Lowther, J., and Batista, F. M.
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- 2024
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5. Hedgehog: An Isolated Quiescent Dwarf Galaxy at 2.4 Mpc
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Li, Jiaxuan, Greene, Jenny E., Carlsten, Scott G., and Danieli, Shany
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
It is well-known that almost all isolated dwarf galaxies are actively forming stars. We report the discovery of dw1322m2053 (nicknamed Hedgehog), an isolated quiescent dwarf galaxy at a distance of $2.40\pm0.15$ Mpc with a stellar mass of $M_\star \approx 10^{5.8}\, M_\odot$. The distance is measured using surface brightness fluctuations with both Legacy Surveys and deep Magellan/IMACS imaging data. Hedgehog is 1.7~Mpc from the nearest galaxy group, Centaurus A, and has no neighboring galaxies within 1~Mpc, making it one of the most isolated quiescent dwarf galaxies at this stellar mass. It has a red optical color and early-type morphology and shows no UV emission. This indicates that Hedgehog has an old stellar population and no ongoing star formation. Compared with other quiescent dwarfs in the Local Group and Local Volume, Hedgehog appears smaller in size for its luminosity but is consistent with the mass--size relations. Hedgehog might be a backsplash galaxy from the Centaurus A group, but it could also have been quenched in the field by ram pressure stripping in the cosmic web, reionization, or internal processes such as supernova and stellar feedback. Future observations are needed to fully unveil its formation, history, and quenching mechanisms., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, ApJL published
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- 2024
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6. Erg251 has complex and pleiotropic effects on sterol composition, azole susceptibility, filamentation, and stress response phenotypes
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Zhou, Xin, Hilk, Audrey, Solis, Norma V, De, Nivea Pereira, Hogan, Bode M, Bierbaum, Tessa A, Del Poeta, Maurizio, Filler, Scott G, Burrack, Laura S, and Selmecki, Anna
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Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,Antimicrobial Resistance ,Infectious Diseases ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Infection ,Generic health relevance ,Candida albicans ,Antifungal Agents ,Mice ,Drug Resistance ,Fungal ,Fungal Proteins ,Animals ,Candidiasis ,Ergosterol ,Azoles ,Sterols ,Phenotype ,Stress ,Physiological ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Fluconazole ,Immunology ,Medical Microbiology ,Virology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
Ergosterol is essential for fungal cell membrane integrity and growth, and numerous antifungal drugs target ergosterol. Inactivation or modification of ergosterol biosynthetic genes can lead to changes in antifungal drug susceptibility, filamentation and stress response. Here, we found that the ergosterol biosynthesis gene ERG251 is a hotspot for point mutations during adaptation to antifungal drug stress within two distinct genetic backgrounds of Candida albicans. Heterozygous point mutations led to single allele dysfunction of ERG251 and resulted in azole tolerance in both genetic backgrounds. This is the first known example of point mutations causing azole tolerance in C. albicans. Importantly, single allele dysfunction of ERG251 in combination with recurrent chromosome aneuploidies resulted in bona fide azole resistance. Homozygous deletions of ERG251 caused increased fitness in low concentrations of fluconazole and decreased fitness in rich medium, especially at low initial cell density. Homozygous deletions of ERG251 resulted in accumulation of ergosterol intermediates consistent with the fitness defect in rich medium. Dysfunction of ERG251, together with FLC exposure, resulted in decreased accumulation of the toxic sterol (14-ɑ-methylergosta-8,24(28)-dien-3β,6α-diol) and increased accumulation of non-toxic alternative sterols. The altered sterol composition of the ERG251 mutants had pleiotropic effects on transcription, filamentation, and stress responses including cell membrane, osmotic and oxidative stress. Interestingly, while dysfunction of ERG251 resulted in azole tolerance, it also led to transcriptional upregulation of ZRT2, a membrane-bound Zinc transporter, in the presence of FLC, and overexpression of ZRT2 is sufficient to increase azole tolerance in wild-type C. albicans. Finally, in a murine model of systemic infection, homozygous deletion of ERG251 resulted in decreased virulence while the heterozygous deletion mutants maintain their pathogenicity. Overall, this study demonstrates that single allele dysfunction of ERG251 is a recurrent and effective mechanism of acquired azole tolerance. We propose that altered sterol composition resulting from ERG251 dysfunction mediates azole tolerance as well as pleiotropic effects on stress response, filamentation and virulence.
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- 2024
7. Ontogenetic scaling of disc width with total length in west African batoids
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Gayford, Joel H., Seamone, Scott G., and Seidu, Issah
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- 2024
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8. Neoadjuvant lutetium PSMA, the TIME and immune response in high-risk localized prostate cancer
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Eapen, Renu S., Williams, Scott G., Macdonald, Sean, Keam, Simon P., Lawrentschuk, Nathan, Au, Lewis, Hofman, Michael S., Murphy, Declan G., and Neeson, Paul J.
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- 2024
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9. Single-cell detection of copy number changes reveals dynamic mechanisms of adaptation to antifungals in Candida albicans
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Zhou, Xin, Hilk, Audrey, Solis, Norma V., Scott, Nancy, Beach, Annette, Soisangwan, Natthapon, Billings, Clara L., Burrack, Laura S., Filler, Scott G., and Selmecki, Anna
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- 2024
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10. The effect of tuberosity healing on functional outcomes after reverse shoulder arthroplasty for proximal humerus fractures: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Buchanan, Timothy R., Reddy, Akshay R., Bindi, Victoria E., Hones, Keegan M., Holt, Kara E., Wright, Thomas W., Schoch, Bradley S., Wright, Jonathan O., Kaar, Scott G., King, Joseph J., and Hao, Kevin A.
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- 2024
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11. Sulfated glycosaminoglycans are host epithelial cell targets of the Candida albicans toxin candidalysin
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Lin, Jianfeng, Miao, Jian, Schaefer, Katherine G., Russell, Charles M., Pyron, Robert J., Zhang, Fuming, Phan, Quynh T., Solis, Norma V., Liu, Hong, Tashiro, Masato, Dordick, Jonathan S., Linhardt, Robert J., Yeaman, Michael R., King, Gavin M., Barrera, Francisco N., Peters, Brian M., and Filler, Scott G.
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- 2024
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12. Aspergillus fumigatus conidial surface-associated proteome reveals factors for fungal evasion and host immunity modulation
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Pinzan, Camila Figueiredo, Valero, Clara, de Castro, Patrícia Alves, da Silva, Jefferson Luiz, Earle, Kayleigh, Liu, Hong, Horta, Maria Augusta Crivelente, Kniemeyer, Olaf, Krüger, Thomas, Pschibul, Annica, Cömert, Derya Nur, Heinekamp, Thorsten, Brakhage, Axel A., Steenwyk, Jacob L., Mead, Matthew E., Hermsdorf, Nico, Filler, Scott G., da Rosa-Garzon, Nathalia Gonsales, Delbaje, Endrews, Bromley, Michael J., Cabral, Hamilton, Diehl, Camila, Angeli, Claudia B., Palmisano, Giuseppe, Ibrahim, Ashraf S., Rinker, David C., Sauters, Thomas J. C., Steffen, Karin, Gumilang, Adiyantara, Rokas, Antonis, Gago, Sara, dos Reis, Thaila F., and Goldman, Gustavo H.
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- 2024
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13. Changing CO Bands in Near-IR Spectra of CP Cephei
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Call, Scott G., Hintz, Eric G., Ardern, Steve, Scowcroft, Victoria, and Morrell, Timothy D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present time-series near-infrared spectra for the classical Cepheid, CP Cephei, from the Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5-m telescope and near-infrared spectrograph, TripleSpec, at Apache Point Observatory, NM, USA. Spectral observations were made at nine points through the minimum and partway up the ascending portion of the optical light curve for the star. Carbon monoxide (CO) was detected in absorption in the 2.3-$\mu$m region for each observation. We measured the strength of CO absorption using the 2-0 band head in the feature for each observation and confirm that the CO varies with pulsation. We show that these measurements follow the $(J-K)$ colour curve, confirming that temperature drives the destruction of CO. By obtaining convolved filter magnitudes from the spectral data we found that the effect of the CO feature on $K$ magnitudes is small, unlike the CO feature in the mid-infrared at 4.5-$\mu$m. The dissociation of CO in the near-infrared spectra tracks with the effect seen in the mid-infrared photometric measurements of a similar Galactic Cepheid. Confirmation of the varying CO feature illustrates the need for further investigations into the related mid-infrared period-colour-metallicity relation in order to address the impact of Cepheid metallicities on the Hubble tension., Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures; Accepted in MNRAS
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- 2024
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14. Tensor modeling of MRSA bacteremia cytokine and transcriptional patterns reveals coordinated, outcome-associated immunological programs
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Chin, Jackson L, Tan, Zhixin Cyrillus, Chan, Liana C, Ruffin, Felicia, Parmar, Rajesh, Ahn, Richard, Taylor, Scott D, Bayer, Arnold S, Hoffmann, Alexander, Fowler, Vance G, Reed, Elaine F, Yeaman, Michael R, Meyer, Aaron S, Rajesh, Parmar, Chan, Liana, Chang, Yu-Ling, Filler, Scott G, Gjertson, David, Medie, Felix, Mitchell, Simon, Rossetti, Maura, Qin, Yan, Sharma, Batu, Sheu, Katherine, Thaden, Joshua, Waring, Alan J, Xiong, Yan Q, and Zheng, Ying
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Hematology ,Infectious Diseases ,Antimicrobial Resistance ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Biodefense ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Sepsis ,Vaccine Related ,Prevention ,Clinical Research - Abstract
Abstract: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteremia is a common and life-threatening infection that imposes up to 30% mortality even when appropriate therapy is used. Despite in vitro efficacy determined by minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) breakpoints, antibiotics often fail to resolve these infections in vivo, resulting in persistent MRSA bacteremia. Recently, several genetic, epigenetic, and proteomic correlates of persistent outcomes have been identified. However, the extent to which single variables or their composite patterns operate as independent predictors of outcome or reflect shared underlying mechanisms of persistence is unknown. To explore this question, we employed a tensor-based integration of host transcriptional and cytokine datasets across a well-characterized cohort of patients with persistent or resolving MRSA bacteremia outcomes. This method yielded high correlative accuracy with outcomes and immunologic signatures united by transcriptomic and cytokine datasets. Results reveal that patients with persistent MRSA bacteremia exhibit signals of granulocyte dysfunction, suppressed antigen presentation, and deviated lymphocyte polarization. In contrast, patients with resolving bacteremia heterogeneously exhibit correlates of robust antigen-presenting cell trafficking and enhanced neutrophil maturation corresponding to appropriate T lymphocyte polarization and B lymphocyte response. These results suggest that transcriptional and cytokine correlates of persistent versus resolving bacteremia outcomes are complex and may not be disclosed by conventional modeling. In this respect, a tensor-based integration approach may help to reveal consensus molecular and cellular mechanisms and their biological interpretation.
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- 2024
15. Implementation and Evaluation of a Bystander Naloxone Training Course
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Weiner, Scott G., Goldberg, Scott A., Lang, Cheryl, Jarman, Molly, Miller, Cory J., Li, Sarah, Stanek, Ewelina W., and Goralnick, Eric
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Opioids ,opioid overdose ,naloxone - Abstract
Introduction: Bystander provision of naloxone is a key modality to reduce opioid overdose-related death. Naloxone training courses are available, but no standardized program exists. As part of a bystander empowerment course, we created and evaluated a brief naloxone training module.Methods: This was a retrospective evaluation of a naloxone training course, which was paired with Stop the Bleed training for hemorrhage control and was offered to administrative staff in an office building. Participants worked in an organization related to healthcare, but none were clinicians. The curriculum included the following topics: 1) background about the opioid epidemic; 2) how to recognize the signs of an opioid overdose; 3) actions not to take when encountering an overdose victim; 4) the correct steps to take when encountering an overdose victim; 5) an overview of naloxone products; and 6) Good Samaritan protection laws. The 20-minute didactic section was followed by a hands-on session with nasal naloxone kits and a simulation mannequin. The course was evaluated with the Opioid Overdose Knowledge (OOKS) and Opioid Overdose Attitudes (OOAS) scales for take-home naloxone training evaluation. We used the paired Wilcoxon signed-rank test to compare scores pre- and post-course.Results: Twenty-eight participants completed the course. The OOKS, measuring objective knowledge about opioid overdose and naloxone, had improved scores from a median of 73.2% (interquartile range [IQR] 68.3%–79.9%) to 91.5% (IQR 85.4%–95.1%), P < 0.001. The three domains on the OOAS score also showed statistically significant results. Competency to manage an overdose improved on a five-point scale from a median of 2.5 (IQR 2.4–2.9) to a median of 3.7 (IQR 3.5–4.1), P < 0.001. Concerns about managing an overdose decreased (improved) from a median of 2.3 (IQR 1.9–2.6) to median 1.8 (IQR 1.5–2.1), P < 0.001. Readiness to intervene in an opioid overdose improved from a median of 4 (IQR 3.8–4.2) to a median of 4.2 (IQR 4–4.2), P < 0.001.Conclusion: A brief course designed to teach bystanders about opioid overdose and naloxone was feasible and effective. We encourage hospitals and other organizations to use and promulgate this model. Furthermore, we suggest the convening of a national consortium to achieve consensus on program content and delivery.
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- 2024
16. Thermal exposure risk in different life stages of Chinook salmon in the Nechako River system, British Columbia
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Oyinlola, Muhammed A., Khorsandi, Mostafa, Mayer, Noa B., Butler, Natalie, Van Wert, Jacey C., Eliason, Erika J., Arsenault, Richard, Brauner, Colin J., Hinch, Scott G., and St-Hilaire, Andre
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- 2024
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17. Exploring dysfunctional barrier phenotypes associated with glaucoma using a human pluripotent stem cell-based model of the neurovascular unit
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Lavekar, Sailee S., Hughes, Jason M., Gomes, Cátia, Huang, Kang-Chieh, Harkin, Jade, Canfield, Scott G., and Meyer, Jason S.
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- 2024
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18. Low-frequency variants in genes involved in glutamic acid metabolism and γ-glutamyl cycle and risk of coronary artery disease in type 2 diabetes
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Giuffrida, Fernando M. A., Rai, Sharan K., Tang, Yaling, Mendonça, Christine, Frodsham, Scott G., Shah, Hetal S., Pezzolesi, Marcus G., Sun, Qi, and Doria, Alessandro
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- 2024
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19. Genome-guided isolation of the hyperthermophilic aerobe Fervidibacter sacchari reveals conserved polysaccharide metabolism in the Armatimonadota
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Nou, Nancy O., Covington, Jonathan K., Lai, Dengxun, Mayali, Xavier, Seymour, Cale O., Johnston, Juliet, Jiao, Jian-Yu, Buessecker, Steffen, Mosier, Damon, Muok, Alise R., Torosian, Nicole, Cook, Allison M., Briegel, Ariane, Woyke, Tanja, Eloe-Fadrosh, Emiley, Shapiro, Nicole, Bryan, Scott G., Sleezer, Savannah, Dimapilis, Joshua, Gonzalez, Cristina, Gonzalez, Lizett, Noriega, Marlene, Hess, Matthias, Carlson, Ross P., Liu, Lan, Li, Meng-Meng, Lian, Zheng-Han, Zhu, Siqi, Liu, Fan, Sun, Xian, Gao, Beile, Mewalal, Ritesh, Harmon-Smith, Miranda, Blaby, Ian K., Cheng, Jan-Fang, Weber, Peter K., Grigorean, Gabriela, Li, Wen-Jun, Dekas, Anne E., Pett-Ridge, Jennifer, Dodsworth, Jeremy A., Palmer, Marike, and Hedlund, Brian P.
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- 2024
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20. Prior-night sleep predicts next-day symptoms over ten days among military personnel with sleep problems
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Wickwire, Emerson M., Collen, Jacob, Capaldi, II, Vincent F., Zhao, Zhiwei, Williams, Scott G., Thomas, Connie L., Assefa, Samson Z., Albrecht, Jennifer S., and Chen, Shuo
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- 2024
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21. A genome-wide Association study of the Count of Codeine prescriptions
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Song, Wenyu, Lam, Max, Liu, Ruize, Simona, Aurélien, Weiner, Scott G., Urman, Richard D., Mukamal, Kenneth J., Wright, Adam, and Bates, David W.
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- 2024
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22. Tracing sources of inorganic suspended particulate matter in the Great Barrier Reef lagoon, Australia
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Bainbridge, Zoe T., Olley, Jon M., Lewis, Stephen E., Stevens, Thomas, and Smithers, Scott G.
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- 2024
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23. A human pluripotent stem cell-derived in vitro model of the blood–brain barrier in cerebral malaria
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Gopinadhan, Adnan, Hughes, Jason M., Conroy, Andrea L., John, Chandy C., Canfield, Scott G., and Datta, Dibyadyuti
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- 2024
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24. Chinook salmon depth distributions on the continental shelf are shaped by interactions between location, season, and individual condition
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Freshwater, Cameron, Anderson, Sean C., Huff, David D., Smith, Joseph M., Jackson, Doug, Hendriks, Brian, Hinch, Scott G., Johnston, Stephen, Trites, Andrew W., and King, Jackie
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- 2024
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25. Body mass index stratified meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of polycystic ovary syndrome in women of European ancestry
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Burns, Kharis, Mullin, Benjamin H., Moolhuijsen, Loes M. E., Laisk, Triin, Tyrmi, Jaakko S., Cui, Jinrui, Actkins, Ky’Era V., Louwers, Yvonne V., Davis, Lea K., Dudbridge, Frank, Azziz, Ricardo, Goodarzi, Mark O., Laivuori, Hannele, Mägi, Reedik, Visser, Jenny A., Laven, Joop S. E., Wilson, Scott G., Day, Felix R., and Stuckey, Bronwyn G. A.
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- 2024
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26. Multi-trait analysis characterizes the genetics of thyroid function and identifies causal associations with clinical implications
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Sterenborg, Rosalie B. T. M., Steinbrenner, Inga, Li, Yong, Bujnis, Melissa N., Naito, Tatsuhiko, Marouli, Eirini, Galesloot, Tessel E., Babajide, Oladapo, Andreasen, Laura, Astrup, Arne, Åsvold, Bjørn Olav, Bandinelli, Stefania, Beekman, Marian, Beilby, John P., Bork-Jensen, Jette, Boutin, Thibaud, Brody, Jennifer A., Brown, Suzanne J., Brumpton, Ben, Campbell, Purdey J., Cappola, Anne R., Ceresini, Graziano, Chaker, Layal, Chasman, Daniel I., Concas, Maria Pina, Coutinho de Almeida, Rodrigo, Cross, Simone M., Cucca, Francesco, Deary, Ian J., Kjaergaard, Alisa Devedzic, Echouffo Tcheugui, Justin B., Ellervik, Christina, Eriksson, Johan G., Ferrucci, Luigi, Freudenberg, Jan, Fuchsberger, Christian, Gieger, Christian, Giulianini, Franco, Gögele, Martin, Graham, Sarah E., Grarup, Niels, Gunjača, Ivana, Hansen, Torben, Harding, Barbara N., Harris, Sarah E., Haunsø, Stig, Hayward, Caroline, Hui, Jennie, Ittermann, Till, Jukema, J. Wouter, Kajantie, Eero, Kanters, Jørgen K., Kårhus, Line L., Kiemeney, Lambertus A. L. M., Kloppenburg, Margreet, Kühnel, Brigitte, Lahti, Jari, Langenberg, Claudia, Lapauw, Bruno, Leese, Graham, Li, Shuo, Liewald, David C. M., Linneberg, Allan, Lominchar, Jesus V. T., Luan, Jian’an, Martin, Nicholas G., Matana, Antonela, Meima, Marcel E., Meitinger, Thomas, Meulenbelt, Ingrid, Mitchell, Braxton D., Møllehave, Line T., Mora, Samia, Naitza, Silvia, Nauck, Matthias, Netea-Maier, Romana T., Noordam, Raymond, Nursyifa, Casia, Okada, Yukinori, Onano, Stefano, Papadopoulou, Areti, Palmer, Colin N. A., Pattaro, Cristian, Pedersen, Oluf, Peters, Annette, Pietzner, Maik, Polašek, Ozren, Pramstaller, Peter P., Psaty, Bruce M., Punda, Ante, Ray, Debashree, Redmond, Paul, Richards, J. Brent, Ridker, Paul M., Russ, Tom C., Ryan, Kathleen A., Olesen, Morten Salling, Schultheiss, Ulla T., Selvin, Elizabeth, Siddiqui, Moneeza K., Sidore, Carlo, Slagboom, P. Eline, Sørensen, Thorkild I. A., Soto-Pedre, Enrique, Spector, Tim D., Spedicati, Beatrice, Srinivasan, Sundararajan, Starr, John M., Stott, David J., Tanaka, Toshiko, Torlak, Vesela, Trompet, Stella, Tuhkanen, Johanna, Uitterlinden, André G., van den Akker, Erik B., van den Eynde, Tibbert, van der Klauw, Melanie M., van Heemst, Diana, Verroken, Charlotte, Visser, W. Edward, Vojinovic, Dina, Völzke, Henry, Waldenberger, Melanie, Walsh, John P., Wareham, Nicholas J., Weiss, Stefan, Willer, Cristen J., Wilson, Scott G., Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H. R., Wouters, Hanneke J. C. M., Wright, Margaret J., Yang, Qiong, Zemunik, Tatijana, Zhou, Wei, Zhu, Gu, Zöllner, Sebastian, Smit, Johannes W. A., Peeters, Robin P., Köttgen, Anna, Teumer, Alexander, and Medici, Marco
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- 2024
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27. Prevalence of dry eye and Meibomian gland dysfunction in Central and South America: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Chen, Hongan, McCann, Paul, Lien, Tiffany, Xiao, Mengli, Abraham, Alison G., Gregory, Darren G., Hauswirth, Scott G., Qureshi, Riaz, Liu, Su-Hsun, Saldanha, Ian J., and Li, Tianjing
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- 2024
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28. Fungal Als proteins hijack host death effector domains to promote inflammasome signaling
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Tingting Zhou, Norma V. Solis, Michaela Marshall, Qing Yao, Eric Pearlman, Scott G. Filler, and Haoping Liu
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Science - Abstract
Abstract High-damaging Candida albicans strains tend to form hyphae and exacerbate intestinal inflammation in ulcerative colitis patients through IL-1β-dependent mechanisms. Fungal agglutinin-like sequence (Als) proteins worsen DSS-induced colitis in mouse models. FADD and caspase-8 are important regulators of gut homeostasis and inflammation. However, whether they link directly to fungal proteins is not fully understood. Here, we report that Als proteins induce IL-1β release in immune cells. We show that hyphal Als3 is internalized in macrophages and interacts with caspase-8 and the inflammasome adaptor apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD (ASC). Caspase-8 is essential for Als3-mediated ASC oligomerization and IL-1β processing. In non-immune cells, Als3 is associated with cell death core components FADD and caspase-8. N-terminal Als3 (N-Als3) expressed in Jurkat cells partially inhibits apoptosis. Mechanistically, N-Als3 promotes oligomerization of FADD and caspase-8 through their death effector domains (DEDs). N-Als3 variants with a mutation in the peptide-binding cavity or amyloid-forming region are impaired in DED oligomerization. Together, these results demonstrate that DEDs are intracellular sensors of Als3. This study identifies additional potential targets to control hypha-induced inflammation.
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- 2025
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29. Crystal structure of Au-pseudocarbyne(C6)
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Jun Wu, Pilarisetty Tarakeshwar, Scott G. Sayres, Moreno Meneghetti, Hyunsub Kim, Juan Barreto, and Peter R. Buseck
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Pseudocarbyne ,Carbyne ,sp hybridization ,Linear carbon chains ,Gold-carbon bond ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Carbyne-related materials permit exploring the potentially extraordinary properties of this long-sought but still elusive carbon allotrope. However, accurate understanding of these materials is challenging. Here we report the crystal structure of a Au-pseudocarbyne, a representative of a possible new family of materials consisting of sp-hybridized carbon chains and stabilizing metal atoms. Au-pseudocarbyne(C6), the representative pseudocarbyne containing six-membered carbon chains, has space group P6/mmm191 and unit-cell parameters a = b = 0.60 nm, c = 0.896 nm, α = β = 90°, γ = 120°. Its long-range structure can be understood as intimately intergrown bundles, each consisting of six parallel, infinite carbon chains surrounding a column of gold atoms. This compound, together with its eight-membered counterpart Au-pseudocarbyne(C8), shows that interesting new materials resembling the carbyne structure and sharing some of its properties can be designed and developed. The current work raises serious questions regarding recent reports of carbyne synthesis.
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- 2025
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30. Analyzing practice pattern in treating partial-thickness rotator cuff tears: a dual perspective from national database and American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons PARCIAL research group
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H. Mike Kim, MD, Emily Leary, PhD, Champ L. Baker, 3rd, MD, Leslie A. Barnes, MD, R. Alexander Creighton, MD, Frances Cuomo, MD, Matthew J. DiPaola, MD, Abdullah Foad, MD, James M. Gregory, MD, Brian F. Grogan, MD, Scott G. Kaar, MD, MBA, Eitan M. Kohan, MD, Sumant G. Krishnan, MD, Eddie Y. Lo, MD, John T. Moor, MD, Michael Nguyen, BS, Monica DiFiori, MD, Gabriel Masters, BA, Te Feng Arthur Chou, MD, Riccardo Raganato, MD, Lucas P. Bowen, BS, Jordan J. Harmon, BS, Tessa C. Griffin, BS, Alec E. Winzenried, MD, Evan M. Polce, BS, Cory J. Call, BS, Benjamin Nwadike, MD, Alvin Ouseph, MS, Monia Nazemi, MS, and Kyle McCall, BA
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Partial-thickness rotator cuff tear ,Rotator cuff repair ,Incidence ,Practice pattern ,National database ,Nationwide ambulatory surgery sample ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Background: Partial-thickness rotator cuff tears (PTRCTs), often considered less severe than full-thickness rotator cuff tears (FTRCTs), can be equally symptomatic. Despite the prevalence of PTRCTs, scholarly attention has predominantly focused on FTRCTs, resulting in a relative neglect of PTRCTs. This study aimed to assess the incidence of surgical repairs for PTRCTs in the United States (U.S.) using the Nationwide Ambulatory Surgery Sample (NASS) database and delineate practice patterns among a group of American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) members. Methods: The NASS database, representing approximately 67% of U.S. ambulatory surgical encounters, was queried to obtain the incidence of PTRCT and FTRCT repairs for the year 2019. Data on patient sex, hospital location, setting, teaching affiliation and size, and primary payor were also obtained. Separately, a retrospective chart review was conducted by 13 ASES research group members, collecting data on rotator cuff repairs performed from July 2021 to June 2022 at their individual institutions. Collected data included age, sex, extent and type of rotator cuff tears, duration of symptoms prior to surgical repair, and type and duration of nonoperative treatment. Results: The NASS database showed that PTRCT repairs accounted for at least 23% of the 187,787 rotator cuff repairs performed in 2019, with potential underestimation due to unspecified tear categorization. The retrospective chart review of the ASES research group revealed that PTRCT repairs constituted 27.8% of all rotator cuff repairs with substantial variability among institutions (8.6%-67.1%), that nonoperative measures were commonly employed, with a mean 12-month duration before surgical repair, and that the most common type of nonoperative treatment was supervised physical therapy combined with corticosteroid injection (37.7%). Discussion: This study revealed approximately one-fourth of all rotator cuff repairs conducted in the U.S. were attributed to PTRCTs with substantial variability in proportion of PTRCT repairs across individual orthopedic practices. The overall duration of nonoperative treatment was consistent with the existing literature. This study provides insights into the landscape of PTRCT repairs and associated practice patterns. Further investigation into factors influencing treatment decisions is warranted.
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- 2025
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31. Do Worn-In Tactical Boots Affect Lower-Extremity Biomechanics During Walking and Running?
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Tanner A. Thorsen, Paul T. Donahue, Shelby A. Peel, Lindsey G. Legg, and Scott G. Piland
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ground reaction force ,kinematics ,kinetics ,gait ,Mechanics of engineering. Applied mechanics ,TA349-359 ,Descriptive and experimental mechanics ,QC120-168.85 - Abstract
Background: Much of the research conducted on tactical-style boots has evaluated the biomechanical effect of boots in brand-new condition; however, the extent to which changes due to wear influence lower-extremity biomechanics remains uninvestigated. The purpose of this study was to compare lower-extremity biomechanics with worn-in boots and running shoes during both walking and running. Methods: Lower-extremity biomechanical parameters were evaluated during walking and running in 12 individuals with previous tactical experience. Participants were asked to complete one 5 min bout of walking and running at a self-selected pace in both self-selected athletic shoes and their own worn-in standard-issue tactical boots while lower-extremity spatiotemporal, joint kinematic, kinetic, and ground reaction force data were collected. Differences between conditions were evaluated using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Results: Spatiotemporal measures of gait, as well as ankle and hip kinematics, were different between shoes and boots during walking. During running, no spatiotemporal differences existed. However, significant differences were found for the ankle, knee, and hip kinematics between shoe and boot conditions during both walking and running. Conclusions: The worn-in boots in our sample performed similarly to running shoes during both walking and running tasks. Though there were several biomechanical differences between boots and shoes during both tasks, small mean differences suggest that these differences may not be large enough to create substantive or relevant changes in performance. This information could aid in developing future tactical boot design strategies to help aid in lower-extremity injury as well as allowing for optimal performance when wearing boots.
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- 2024
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32. The Milky Way Tomography with Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam. I. Halo substructures
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Suzuki, Yoshihisa, Chiba, Masashi, Komiyama, Yutaka, Hayashi, Kohei, Tanaka, Masayuki, Fukushima, Tetsuya, Carlsten, Scott G., Tokiwa, Akira, Qiu, Tian, and Takada, Masahiro
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyze the photometric data in the Wide layer of the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program (HSC-SSP) over $\sim 1,200$ deg$^{2}$ to uncover new halo substructures beyond the distance, $D_{\odot}\sim$ 30 kpc, from the Sun. For this purpose, we develop an isochrone filter for an old, metal-poor stellar system to extract the faint main-sequence stars at a range of distances. With this method, we detect, not only the previously discovered substructures such as the Orphan Stream, but also the new overdensity toward Bo\"otes at about $D_{\odot}\sim$ 60 kpc and the new stream-like feature toward Pisces at around $D_{\odot}\sim$ 60 kpc. It has been suggested that a small-scale overdensity exists in this direction of Pisces (the so-called Pisces Overdensity), but our results show that the overdensity is widely spread with a tidally elongated feature. Combining our results with the ongoing Hyper Suprime-Cam narrow-band survey and the near-future spectroscopic survey with Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) will allow us to place strong constraints on the origin of these halo substructures., Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in PASJ
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- 2023
33. Fronts under arrest II: analytical foundations
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von Brecht, James H., McCalla, Scott G., and Kim, Eun Heui
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,Nonlinear Sciences - Pattern Formation and Solitons ,35A99 - Abstract
We study a class of minimal geometric partial differential equations that serves as a framework to understand the evolution of boundaries between states in different pattern forming systems. The framework combines normal growth, curvature flow and nonlocal interaction terms to track the motion of these interfaces. This approach was first developed to understand arrested fronts in a bacterial system. These are fronts that become stationary as they grow into each other. This paper establishes analytic foundations and geometric insight for studying this class of equations. In so doing, an efficient numerical scheme is developed and employed to gain further insight into the dynamics of these general pattern forming systems., Comment: Code can be found at: https://github.com/scottgmccalla/AnalyticFoundations
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- 2023
34. Living with a Red Dwarf: X-ray, UV, and Ca II Activity-Age Relationships of M Dwarfs
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Engle, Scott G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The vast majority of stars in the nearby stellar neighborhood are M dwarfs. Their low masses and luminosities result in slow rates of nuclear evolution and minimal changes to the star's observable properties, even along astronomical timescales. However, they possess relatively powerful magnetic dynamos and resulting X-ray to UV activity, compared to their bolometric luminosities. This magnetic activity does undergo an observable decline over time, making it an important potential age determinant for M dwarfs. Observing this activity is important for studying the outer atmospheres of these stars, but also for comparing the behaviors of different spectral type subsets of M dwarfs, e.g., those with partially vs. fully convective interiors. Beyond stellar astrophysics, understanding the X-ray to UV activity of M dwarfs over time is also important for studying the atmospheres and habitability of any hosted exoplanets. Earth-sized exoplanets, in particular, are more commonly found orbiting M dwarfs than any other stellar type, and thermal escape (driven by the M dwarf X-ray to UV activity) is believed to be the dominant atmospheric loss mechanism for these planets. Utilizing recently calibrated M dwarf age-rotation relationships, also constructed as part of the $\textit{Living with a Red Dwarf}$ program (Engle & Guinan 2023), we have analyzed the evolution of M dwarf activity over time, in terms of coronal (X-ray), chromospheric (Lyman-$\alpha$, and Ca II), and overall X--UV (5--1700 Angstrom) emissions. The activity-age relationships presented here will be useful for studying exoplanet habitability and atmospheric loss, but also for studying the different dynamo and outer atmospheric heating mechanisms at work in M dwarfs., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
35. Step-wise evolution of azole resistance through copy number variation followed by KSR1 loss of heterozygosity in Candida albicans
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Zande, Pétra Vande, Gautier, Cécile, Kawar, Nora, Maufrais, Corinne, Metzner, Katura, Wash, Elizabeth, Beach, Annette K, Bracken, Ryan, Maciel, Eli Isael, de Sá, Nívea Pereira, Fernandes, Caroline Mota, Solis, Norma V, Del Poeta, Maurizio, Filler, Scott G, Berman, Judith, Ene, Iuliana V, and Selmecki, Anna
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical Sciences ,Medical Microbiology ,Antimicrobial Resistance ,Genetics ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Biodefense ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Infection ,Antifungal Agents ,Azoles ,Candida albicans ,Candidiasis ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,Drug Resistance ,Fungal ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Fluconazole ,Fungal Proteins ,Loss of Heterozygosity ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Immunology ,Virology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
Antimicrobial drug resistance poses a global health threat, requiring a deeper understanding of the evolutionary processes that lead to its emergence in pathogens. Complex evolutionary dynamics involve multiple mutations that can result in cooperative or competitive (clonal interference) effects. Candida albicans, a major fungal pathogen, displays high rates of copy number variation (CNV) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH). CNV and LOH events involve large numbers of genes and could synergize during evolutionary adaptation. Understanding the contributions of CNV and LOH to antifungal drug adaptation is challenging, especially in the context of whole-population genome sequencing. Here, we document the sequential evolution of fluconazole tolerance and then resistance in a C. albicans isolate involving an initial CNV on chromosome 4, followed by an LOH on chromosome R that involves KSR1. Similar LOH events involving KSR1, which encodes a reductase in the sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway, were also detected in independently evolved fluconazole resistant isolates. We dissect the specific KSR1 codons that affect fluconazole resistance and tolerance. The combination of the chromosome 4 CNV and KSR1 LOH results in a >500-fold decrease in azole susceptibility relative to the progenitor, illustrating a compelling example of rapid, yet step-wise, interplay between CNV and LOH in drug resistance evolution.
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- 2024
36. Biochemical characterization of Fsa16295Glu from “Fervidibacter sacchari,” the first hyperthermophilic GH50 with β-1,3-endoglucanase activity and founding member of the subfamily GH50_3
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Covington, Jonathan K, Torosian, Nicole, Cook, Allison M, Palmer, Marike, Bryan, Scott G, Nou, Nancy O, Mewalal, Ritesh, Harmon-Smith, Miranda, Blaby, Ian K, Cheng, Jan-Fang, Hess, Matthias, Brumm, Phillip J, Singh, Nitin K, Venkateswaran, Kasthuri, and Hedlund, Brian P
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Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,hyperthermophile ,carboxymethyl curdlan ,beta-Glucan ,beta-1 ,3-endoglucanase ,glycoside hydrolase ,GH50 ,CAZyme ,Armatimonadota ,β-1 ,3-endoglucanase ,β-Glucan ,Environmental Science and Management ,Soil Sciences ,Microbiology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
The aerobic hyperthermophile "Fervidibacter sacchari" catabolizes diverse polysaccharides and is the only cultivated member of the class "Fervidibacteria" within the phylum Armatimonadota. It encodes 117 putative glycoside hydrolases (GHs), including two from GH family 50 (GH50). In this study, we expressed, purified, and functionally characterized one of these GH50 enzymes, Fsa16295Glu. We show that Fsa16295Glu is a β-1,3-endoglucanase with optimal activity on carboxymethyl curdlan (CM-curdlan) and only weak agarase activity, despite most GH50 enzymes being described as β-agarases. The purified enzyme has a wide temperature range of 4-95°C (optimal 80°C), making it the first characterized hyperthermophilic representative of GH50. The enzyme is also active at a broad pH range of at least 5.5-11 (optimal 6.5-10). Fsa16295Glu possesses a relatively high kcat/KM of 1.82 × 107 s-1 M-1 with CM-curdlan and degrades CM-curdlan nearly completely to sugar monomers, indicating preferential hydrolysis of glucans containing β-1,3 linkages. Finally, a phylogenetic analysis of Fsa16295Glu and all other GH50 enzymes revealed that Fsa16295Glu is distant from other characterized enzymes but phylogenetically related to enzymes from thermophilic archaea that were likely acquired horizontally from "Fervidibacteria." Given its functional and phylogenetic novelty, we propose that Fsa16295Glu represents a new enzyme subfamily, GH50_3.
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- 2024
37. X-ray emission from pre-main sequence stars with multipolar magnetic fields
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Stuart, Kieran A. and Gregory, Scott G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The large-scale magnetic fields of several pre-main sequence (PMS) stars have been observed to be simple and axisymmetric, dominated by tilted dipole and octupole components. The magnetic fields of other PMS stars are highly multipolar and dominantly non-axisymmetric. Observations suggest that the magnetic field complexity increases as PMS stars evolve from Hayashi to Henyey tracks in the Hertzsprung--Russell diagram. Independent observations have revealed that X-ray luminosity decreases with age during PMS evolution, with Henyey track PMS stars having lower fractional X-ray luminosities ($L_\textrm{X}/L_*$) compared to Hayashi track stars. We investigate how changes in the large-scale magnetic field topology of PMS stars influences coronal X-ray emission. We construct coronal models assuming pure axisymmetric multipole magnetic fields, and magnetic fields consisting of a dipole plus an octupole component only. We determine the closed coronal emitting volume, over which X-ray emitting plasma is confined, using a pressure balance argument. From the coronal volumes we determine X-ray luminosities. We find that $L_\textrm{X}$ decreases as the degree $\ell$ of the multipole field increases. For dipole plus octupole magnetic fields we find that $L_\textrm{X}$ tends to decrease as the octupole component becomes more dominant. By fixing the stellar parameters at values appropriate for a solar mass PMS star, varying the magnetic field topology results in two orders of magnitude variation in $L_\textrm{X}$. Our results support the idea that the decrease in $L_\textrm{X}$ as PMS stars age can be driven by an increase in the complexity of the large-scale magnetic field., Comment: 13 pages with 13 figures, plus 1 page with 1 figure in the appendix, accepted for publication in MNRAS 2023 August 04
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- 2023
38. Living With a Red Dwarf: The Rotation-Age Relationship of M Dwarfs
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Engle, Scott G. and Guinan, Edward F.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Age is a fundamental stellar property, yet for many stars it is difficult to reliably determine. For M dwarfs it has been notoriously so. Due to their lower masses, core hydrogen fusion proceeds at a much slower rate in M dwarfs than it does in more massive stars like the Sun. As a consequence, more customary age determination methods (e.g. isochrones and asteroseismology) are unreliable for M dwarfs. As these methods are unavailable, many have searched for reliable alternatives. M dwarfs comprise the overwhelming majority of the nearby stellar inventory, which makes the determination of their fundamental parameters even more important. Further, an ever-increasing number of exoplanets are being found to orbit M dwarfs and recent studies have suggested they may relatively higher number of low-mass planets than other spectral types. Determining the ages of M dwarfs then allows us to better study any hosted exoplanets, as well. Fortunately, M dwarfs possess magnetic activity and stellar winds like other cool dwarf stars. This causes them to undergo the spindown effect (rotate with longer periods) as they age. For this reason, stellar rotation rate has been considered a potentially powerful age determination parameter for over 50 years. Calibrating reliable age-rotation relationships for M dwarfs has been a lengthy process, but here we present the age-rotation relationships for ~M0-6.5 dwarfs, determined as part of the Living with a Red Dwarf program. These relationships should prove invaluable for a wide range of stellar astrophysics and exoplanetary science applications., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2023
39. Resilience and vulnerability: perspectives of key informants on the uncertain future of Pacific salmon in British Columbia
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Postma, Hannah G., Wang, Yovela, Berseth, Valerie, Young, Nathan, Cooke, Steven J., and Hinch, Scott G.
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- 2024
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40. The Candida albicans reference strain SC5314 contains a rare, dominant allele of the transcription factor Rob1 that modulates filamentation, biofilm formation, and oral commensalism
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Glazier, Virginia E, Kramara, Juraj, Ollinger, Tomye, Solis, Norma V, Zarnowski, Robert, Wakade, Rohan S, Kim, Min-Ju, Weigel, Gabriel J, Liang, Shen-Huan, Bennett, Richard J, Wellington, Melanie, Andes, David R, Stamnes, Mark A, Filler, Scott G, and Krysan, Damian J
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical Sciences ,Medical Microbiology ,Genetics ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Infectious Diseases ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Infection ,Humans ,Candida albicans ,Transcription Factors ,Alleles ,Symbiosis ,Biofilms ,Fungal Proteins ,Hyphae ,biofilms ,filamentation ,virulence ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
ImportanceCandida albicans is a commensal fungus that colonizes the human oral cavity and gastrointestinal tract but also causes mucosal as well as invasive disease. The expression of virulence traits in C. albicans clinical isolates is heterogeneous and the genetic basis of this heterogeneity is of high interest. The C. albicans reference strain SC5314 is highly invasive and expresses robust filamentation and biofilm formation relative to many other clinical isolates. Here, we show that SC5314 derivatives are heterozygous for the transcription factor Rob1 and contain an allele with a rare gain-of-function SNP that drives filamentation, biofilm formation, and virulence in a model of oropharyngeal candidiasis. These findings explain, in part, the outlier phenotype of the reference strain and highlight the role heterozygosity plays in the strain-to-strain variation of diploid fungal pathogens.
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- 2023
41. The New Small Wheel electronics
- Author
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Iakovidis, G., Levinson, L., Afik, Y., Alexa, C., Alexopoulos, T., Ameel, J., Amidei, D., Antrim, D., Badea, A., Bakalis, C., Boterenbrood, H., Brener, R. S., Chan, S., Chapman, J., Chatzianastasiou, G., Chen, H., Chu, M. C., Coliban, R. M., de Paiva, T. Costa, de Geronimo, G., Edgar, R., Felt, N., Francescato, S., Franklin, M., Geralis, T., Gigliotti, K., Giromini, P., Gkountoumis, P., Grayzman, I., Guan, L., da Costa, J. Guimaraes, Han, L., Hou, S., Hu, X., Hu, K., Huth, J., Ivanovici, M., Jin, G., Johns, K., Kajomovitz, E., Kehris, G., Kiskiras, I., Koulouris, A., Kyriakis, E., Lankford, A., Lee, L., Leung, H., Li, F., Liang, Y., Lu, H., Lupu, N., Martinez, V., Martoiu, S., Matakias, D., Mehalev, I., Mesolongitis, I., Miao, P., Mikenberg, G., Moleri, L., Moschovakos, P., Narevicius, J., Oliver, J., Pietreanu, D., Pinkham, R., Politis, E., Polychronakos, V., Popa, S., Prapa, M. M., Ravinovich, I., Roich, A., Caballero, R. A. Rojas, Rozen, Y., Schernau, M., Schwartz, T., Scott, G., Shaked, O., Solis, M., Sun, S., Taffard, A., Tang, S., Tarem, Z., Tse, W., Tu, Y., Tuna, A., Tzanis, P., Tzanos, S., Vari, R., Vasile, M., Vdovin, A., Vermeulen, J., Wang, J., Wang, X., Wang, A., Wang, R., Xiao, X., Yao, L., Yildiz, C., Zachariadou, K., Zhou, B., Zhu, J., Zimmermann, S. U., and Zormpa, O.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The increase in luminosity, and consequent higher backgrounds, of the LHC upgrades require improved rejection of fake tracks in the forward region of the ATLAS Muon Spectrometer. The New Small Wheel upgrade of the Muon Spectrometer aims to reduce the large background of fake triggers from track segments that are not originated from the interaction point. The New Small Wheel employs two detector technologies, the resistive strip Micromegas detectors and the "small" Thin Gap Chambers, with a total of 2.45 Million electrodes to be sensed. The two technologies require the design of a complex electronics system given that it consists of two different detector technologies and is required to provide both precision readout and a fast trigger. It will operate in a high background radiation region up to about 20 kHz/cm$^{2}$ at the expected HL-LHC luminosity of $\mathcal{L}$=7.5$\times10^{34}$cm$^{-2}$s$^{-1}$. The architecture of the system is strongly defined by the GBTx data aggregation ASIC, the newly-introduced FELIX data router and the software based data handler of the ATLAS detector. The electronics complex of this new detector was designed and developed in the last ten years and consists of multiple radiation tolerant Application Specific Integrated Circuits, multiple front-end boards, dense boards with FPGA's and purpose-built Trigger Processor boards within the ATCA standard. The New Small Wheel has been installed in 2021 and is undergoing integration within ATLAS for LHC Run 3. It should operate through the end of Run 4 (December 2032). In this manuscript, the overall design of the New Small Wheel electronics is presented., Comment: 61 pages
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- 2023
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42. Favourable outcome of Fusarium prosthetic valve endocarditis in a patient with an Ebstein anomaly
- Author
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Scott G. Lee-Jones, Stefan Van der Westhuizen, Johannes Taljaard, Nelesh P. Govender, and Rubina Razack
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endocarditis ,invasive fungi ,fusarium ,fusariosis ,ebstein anomaly ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Fungal endocarditis is rare, challenging to diagnose and treat and associated with high mortality. We describe a case of Fusarium solani endocarditis in a patient with Ebstein’s anomaly with a favourable outcome. Contribution: We emphasise that surgical intervention with source control of the infective vegetation is still the mainstay of treatment and highlight the importance of submitting infected source material for histology, culture and molecular testing to identify the causative organism.
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- 2025
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43. Comparison of Anaerobic Culture Methods for Detecting Clostridioides difficile in Bovine Faeces
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Laurel E. Redding, Scott G. Daniel, Alexander Smith, Orlaith Keenan, Denise Barnhart, and Joseph P. Zackular
- Subjects
anerobic bacteria ,bacterial species ,diagnosis ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Background The study of the epidemiology of Clostridioides difficile in populations is greatly facilitated by the ability to isolate and further characterize individual organisms, which requires effective culture protocols. In cattle, where little is known about the epidemiology of C. difficile, no studies have assessed or compared the performance of different assays for detecting C. difficile. Objectives This study compared two culture protocols for detecting C. difficile in bovine faeces from 121 gestating cows and 70 of their neonatal calves, while situating results obtained with each protocol relative to those obtained with shotgun metagenomic sequencing. Methods Protocol 1 involved direct plating enrichment onto taurocholine‐cycloserine‐cefoxitin‐fructose agar (TCCFA), while Protocol 2 included an ethanol shock step before plating on CCFA/ChromID agar. For both protocols, one aliquot underwent broth enrichment prior to plating, while the other aliquot did not. Results Clostridioides difficile was detected following broth enrichment in two of the same calf samples using both protocols, and an additional cow sample was found to be positive with Protocol 2, though the difference in detection rates was not statistically significant (p = 1.0). Conclusions The detection of C. difficile in a much high number of these samples by shotgun metagenomics, albeit at low levels of relative abundance, suggests that neither of these culture protocols is sensitive when levels of abundance are low.
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- 2025
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44. Real-time evaluation: past and potential
- Author
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Chaplowe, Scott G., primary
- Published
- 2024
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45. Epidermal growth factor receptor signaling governs the host inflammatory response to invasive aspergillosis
- Author
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Hong Liu, Jianfeng Lin, Quynh T. Phan, Vincent M. Bruno, and Scott G. Filler
- Subjects
Aspergillus fumigatus ,alveolar epithelial cell ,small-airway epithelial cell ,endocytosis ,epidermal growth factor receptor ,cytokine ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has been identified as an epithelial cell receptor for Mucorales fungi and Candida albicans. Blocking EGFR with small molecule inhibitors reduces disease severity in mouse models of mucormycosis and oropharyngeal candidiasis. In contrast, cases of invasive aspergillosis have been reported in cancer patients who were treated with EGFR inhibitors, suggesting that EGFR signaling may play a protective role in the host defense against this infection. Here, we analyzed transcriptomic data from the lungs of mice with invasive aspergillosis and found evidence that Aspergillus fumigatus infection activates multiple genes that are predicted to function in the EGFR signaling pathway. We also found that A. fumigatus infection activates EGFR in both a human small-airway epithelial (HSAE) cell line and in the lungs of immunosuppressed mice. EGFR signaling in HSAE cells is required for maximal endocytosis of A. fumigatus and for fungal-induced proinflammatory cytokine and chemokine production. In a corticosteroid immunosuppressed mouse model of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis, inhibition of EGFR with gefitinib decreased whole-lung cytokine and chemokine levels and reduced accumulation of phagocytes in the lung, leading to a decrease in fungal killing, an increase in pulmonary fungal burden, and accelerated mortality. Thus, EGFR signaling is required for pulmonary epithelial cells to orchestrate the host innate immune defense against invasive aspergillosis in immunosuppressed hosts.IMPORTANCEWhen A. fumigatus infects the lungs, it invades epithelial cells that line the airways. During this process, the fungus interacts with epithelial cell receptors. This interaction stimulates epithelial cells to endocytose the fungus. It also induces these cells to secrete proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines that recruit phagocytes to the site of infection where they can kill the fungus. Here, we show that in small-airway epithelial cells, the EGFR acts as a sensor for A. fumigatus that triggers the production of chemokines in response to fungal infection. In corticosteroid-immunosuppressed mice, blocking EGFR with the kinase inhibitor gefitinib reduces chemokine production in the lungs. This leads to decreased accumulation of neutrophils and dendritic cells in the lungs, reduced A. fumigatus killing, and increased mortality. These results provide a potential explanation as to why some cancer patients who are treated with EGFR inhibitors develop invasive aspergillosis.
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- 2024
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46. Depletion of Extracellular Chemokines by Aspergillus Melanin
- Author
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Graf, Karen T, Liu, Hong, Filler, Scott G, and Bruno, Vincent M
- Subjects
Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Infection ,Humans ,Melanins ,Aspergillus fumigatus ,Aspergillosis ,Chemokines ,Spores ,Fungal ,airway epithelial cells ,chemokines ,CXCL10 ,CCL20 ,melanin ,Microbiology - Abstract
Aspergillus fumigatus is an environmental fungus that can cause life-threatening pulmonary disease. Infections initiate when conidia are inhaled and land deep inside the small airways and alveoli of the lungs, where they interact with epithelial cells. These cells provide a physical barrier and secrete chemokines to attract innate immune cells to the site of infection. Melanin, a key constituent of the conidial cell wall, is required for the establishment of invasive infection due to its ability to inhibit the function of innate immune cells recruited to clear the infection. Here, we provide evidence for an additional mechanism by which A. fumigatus can alter host innate immune responses. In vitro infection of a normal human small airway epithelial cell line (HSAEC1-KT) caused a decrease in extracellular protein levels of CXCL10 and CCL20, two proinflammatory chemokines that are required for the host defense against aspergillosis, despite a dramatic increase in the levels of each mRNA. A. fumigatus depleted recombinant human CXCL10 and CCL20 from medium in the absence of host cells, suggesting that the block in accumulation is downstream of protein translation and secretion. Melanin is both necessary and sufficient for this chemokine-depleting activity because a dihydroxynaphthalene (DHN)-melanin-deficient strain of A. fumigatus is defective in depleting chemokines and purified melanin ghosts retain potent depletion activity. We propose that A. fumigatus, through the action of melanin, depletes important chemokines, thereby dampening the innate immune response to promote infection. IMPORTANCE Aspergillus fumigatus is the major airborne fungal pathogen that affects humans. In order to cause an invasive infection, inhaled spores must avoid killing by innate immune cells that are recruited to the site of infection. Understanding how A. fumigatus achieves immune evasion is important for the development of novel therapeutics. We provide evidence that melanin, a pigment contained in the spore cell wall, can remove certain chemokines from the extracellular space to suppress the host inflammatory response that is responsible for clearing fungal infection.
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- 2023
47. Random Feature Models for Learning Interacting Dynamical Systems
- Author
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Liu, Yuxuan, McCalla, Scott G., and Schaeffer, Hayden
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
Particle dynamics and multi-agent systems provide accurate dynamical models for studying and forecasting the behavior of complex interacting systems. They often take the form of a high-dimensional system of differential equations parameterized by an interaction kernel that models the underlying attractive or repulsive forces between agents. We consider the problem of constructing a data-based approximation of the interacting forces directly from noisy observations of the paths of the agents in time. The learned interaction kernels are then used to predict the agents behavior over a longer time interval. The approximation developed in this work uses a randomized feature algorithm and a sparse randomized feature approach. Sparsity-promoting regression provides a mechanism for pruning the randomly generated features which was observed to be beneficial when one has limited data, in particular, leading to less overfitting than other approaches. In addition, imposing sparsity reduces the kernel evaluation cost which significantly lowers the simulation cost for forecasting the multi-agent systems. Our method is applied to various examples, including first-order systems with homogeneous and heterogeneous interactions, second order homogeneous systems, and a new sheep swarming system.
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- 2022
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48. Candida albicans Oropharyngeal Infection Is an Exception to Iron-Based Nutritional Immunity
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Solis, Norma V, Wakade, Rohan S, Filler, Scott G, and Krysan, Damian J
- Subjects
Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical Sciences ,Medical Microbiology ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Genetics ,Nutrition ,Infectious Diseases ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Infection ,Animals ,Mice ,Humans ,Candida albicans ,Candidiasis ,Candidiasis ,Oral ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Transcription Factors ,Fungal Proteins ,iron response ,nutritional immunity ,oropharyngeal candidiasis ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
Candida albicans is a commensal of the human gastrointestinal tract and a common cause of human fungal disease, including mucosal infections, such as oropharyngeal candidiasis and disseminated infections of the bloodstream and deep organs. We directly compared the in vivo transcriptional profile of C. albicans during oral infection and disseminated infection of the kidney to identify niche specific features. Overall, 97 genes were differentially expressed between the 2 infection sites. Virulence-associated genes, such as hyphae-specific transcripts, were expressed similarly in the 2 sites. Genes expressed during growth in a poor carbon source (ACS1 and PCK1) were upregulated in oral tissue relative to kidney. Most strikingly, C. albicans in oral tissue shows the transcriptional hallmarks of an iron replete state while in the kidney it is in the expected iron starved state. Interestingly, C. albicans expresses genes associated with a low zinc environment in both niches. Consistent with these expression data, strains lacking transcription factors that regulate iron responsive genes (SEF1, HAP5) have no effect on virulence in a mouse model of oral candidiasis. During microbial infection, the host sequesters iron, zinc, and other metal nutrients to suppress growth of the pathogen in a process called nutritional immunity. Our results indicate that C. albicans is subject to iron and zinc nutritional immunity during disseminated infection but not to iron nutritional immunity during oral infection. IMPORTANCE Nutritional immunity is a response by which infected host tissue sequesters nutrients, such as iron, to prevent the microbe from efficiently replicating. Microbial pathogens subjected to iron nutritional immunity express specific genes to compensate for low iron availability. By comparing the gene expression profiles of the common human fungal pathogen Candida albicans in 2 infection sites, we found that C. albicans infecting the kidney has the transcriptional profile of iron starvation. By contrast, the C. albicans expression profile during oropharyngeal infection indicates the fungus is not iron starved. Two transcription factors that activate the transcriptional response to iron starvation are not required for C. albicans virulence during oral infection but are required for disseminated infection of the kidney. Thus, our results indicate that C. albicans is subject to nutritional iron immunity during disseminated infection but not during oropharyngeal infection, and highlight niche specific differences in the host-Candida albicans interaction.
- Published
- 2023
49. Hgc1 Independence of Biofilm Hyphae in Candida albicans
- Author
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Sharma, Anupam, Solis, Norma V, Huang, Manning Y, Lanni, Frederick, Filler, Scott G, and Mitchell, Aaron P
- Subjects
Infectious Diseases ,Genetics ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Infection ,Animals ,Mice ,Candida albicans ,Fungal Proteins ,Hyphae ,Cyclins ,Biofilms ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Molecular Chaperones ,biofilm ,Candida ,hyphae ,regulation ,virulence ,Microbiology - Abstract
Biofilm and hypha formation are central to virulence of the fungal pathogen Candida albicans. The G1 cyclin gene HGC1 is required for hypha formation under diverse in vitro and in vivo growth conditions. Hgc1 is required for disseminated infection and is a linchpin in the argument that hyphal morphogenesis itself is required for pathogenicity. We report here that HGC1 is dispensable for hypha formation during biofilm formation both in vitro, under strong inducing conditions, and in vivo, in a mouse oropharyngeal candidiasis model. These findings are validated with two or more C. albicans isolates. Systematic screening of overexpressed cyclin genes indicates that CCN1 and CLN3 can compensate partially for Hgc1 function during biofilm growth. This conclusion is also supported by the severity of the hgc1Δ/Δ ccn1Δ/Δ double mutant biofilm defect. Our results suggest that hypha formation in biofilm is accomplished by combined action of multiple cyclins, not solely by Hgc1. IMPORTANCE The HGC1 gene encodes a cyclin that is required for virulence of the fungal pathogen Candida albicans. It is required to produce the elongated hyphal filaments of free-living planktonic cells that are associated with virulence. Here, we show that HGC1 is not required to produce hyphae in the alternative growth form of a biofilm community. We observe Hgc1-independent hyphae in two infection-relevant situations, biofilm growth in vitro and biofilm-like oropharyngeal infection. Our analysis suggests that hypha formation in the biofilm state reflects combined action of multiple cyclins.
- Published
- 2023
50. Functional Dichotomy for a Hyphal Repressor in Candida albicans
- Author
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Mao, Yinhe, Solis, Norma V, Filler, Scott G, and Mitchell, Aaron P
- Subjects
Genetics ,Infectious Diseases ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,Candida albicans ,Hyphae ,Fungal Proteins ,Endothelial Cells ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Fungal ,gene regulation ,genetics ,hyphal development ,natural variation ,Microbiology - Abstract
Nrg1 is a repressor of hypha formation and hypha-associated gene expression in the fungal pathogen Candida albicans. It has been well studied in the genetic background of the type strain SC5314. Here, we tested Nrg1 function in four other diverse clinical isolates through an analysis of nrg1Δ/Δ mutants, with SC5314 included as a control. In three strains, nrg1Δ/Δ mutants unexpectedly produced aberrant hyphae under inducing conditions, as assayed by microscopic observation and endothelial cell damage. The nrg1Δ/Δ mutant of strain P57055 had the most severe defect. We examined gene expression features under hypha-inducing conditions by RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq) for the SC5314 and P57055 backgrounds. The SC5314 nrg1Δ/Δ mutant expressed six hypha-associated genes at reduced levels compared with wild-type SC5314. The P57055 nrg1Δ/Δ mutant expressed 17 hypha-associated genes at reduced levels compared with wild-type P57055, including IRF1, RAS2, and ECE1. These findings indicate that Nrg1 has a positive role in hypha-associated gene expression and that this role is magnified in strain P57055. Remarkably, the same hypha-associated genes affected by the nrg1Δ/Δ mutation in strain P57055 were also naturally expressed at lower levels in wild-type P57055 than those in wild-type SC5314. Our results suggest that strain P57055 is defective in a pathway that acts in parallel with Nrg1 to upregulate the expression of several hypha-associated genes. IMPORTANCE Hypha formation is a central virulence trait of the fungal pathogen Candida albicans. Control of hypha formation has been studied in detail in the type strain but not in other diverse C. albicans clinical isolates. Here, we show that the hyphal repressor Nrg1 has an unexpected positive role in hypha formation and hypha-associated gene expression, as revealed by the sensitized P57055 strain background. Our findings indicate that reliance on a single type strain limits understanding of gene function and illustrate that strain diversity is a valuable resource for C. albicans molecular genetic analysis.
- Published
- 2023
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