The Capacitance of Graphene: From Model Systems to Large‐Scale Devices

2019 ◽  
pp. 33-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pawin Iamprasertkun ◽  
Robert A.W. Dryfe
Keyword(s):  
2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (42) ◽  
pp. E6409-E6417 ◽  
Author(s):  
David G. McFadden ◽  
Katerina Politi ◽  
Arjun Bhutkar ◽  
Frances K. Chen ◽  
Xiaoling Song ◽  
...  

Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) of cancer are increasingly being used to assess putative driver mutations identified by large-scale sequencing of human cancer genomes. To accurately interpret experiments that introduce additional mutations, an understanding of the somatic genetic profile and evolution of GEMM tumors is necessary. Here, we performed whole-exome sequencing of tumors from three GEMMs of lung adenocarcinoma driven by mutant epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), mutant Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (Kras), or overexpression of MYC proto-oncogene. Tumors from EGFR- and Kras-driven models exhibited, respectively, 0.02 and 0.07 nonsynonymous mutations per megabase, a dramatically lower average mutational frequency than observed in human lung adenocarcinomas. Tumors from models driven by strong cancer drivers (mutant EGFR and Kras) harbored few mutations in known cancer genes, whereas tumors driven by MYC, a weaker initiating oncogene in the murine lung, acquired recurrent clonal oncogenic Kras mutations. In addition, although EGFR- and Kras-driven models both exhibited recurrent whole-chromosome DNA copy number alterations, the specific chromosomes altered by gain or loss were different in each model. These data demonstrate that GEMM tumors exhibit relatively simple somatic genotypes compared with human cancers of a similar type, making these autochthonous model systems useful for additive engineering approaches to assess the potential of novel mutations on tumorigenesis, cancer progression, and drug sensitivity.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Sin-Chan ◽  
Nehal Gosalia ◽  
Chuan Gao ◽  
Cristopher V. Van Hout ◽  
Bin Ye ◽  
...  

SUMMARYAging is characterized by degeneration in cellular and organismal functions leading to increased disease susceptibility and death. Although our understanding of aging biology in model systems has increased dramatically, large-scale sequencing studies to understand human aging are now just beginning. We applied exome sequencing and association analyses (ExWAS) to identify age-related variants on 58,470 participants of the DiscovEHR cohort. Linear Mixed Model regression analyses of age at last encounter revealed variants in genes known to be linked with clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential, which are associated with myelodysplastic syndromes, as top signals in our analysis, suggestive of age-related somatic mutation accumulation in hematopoietic cells despite patients lacking clinical diagnoses. In addition to APOE, we identified rare DISP2 rs183775254 (p = 7.40×10−10) and ZYG11A rs74227999 (p = 2.50×10−08) variants that were negatively associated with age in either both sexes combined and females, respectively, which were replicated with directional consistency in two independent cohorts. Epigenetic mapping showed these variants are located within cell-type-specific enhancers, suggestive of important transcriptional regulatory functions. To discover variants associated with extreme age, we performed exome-sequencing on persons of Ashkenazi Jewish descent ascertained for extensive lifespans. Case-Control analyses in 525 Ashkenazi Jews cases (Males ≥ 92 years, Females ≥ 95years) were compared to 482 controls. Our results showed variants in APOE (rs429358, rs6857), and TMTC2 (rs7976168) passed Bonferroni-adjusted p-value, as well as several nominally-associated population-specific variants. Collectively, our Age-ExWAS, the largest performed to date, confirmed and identified previously unreported candidate variants associated with human age.


2001 ◽  
pp. 315-325
Author(s):  
Anrew Daly ◽  
Otto Anker Nielsen

2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (48) ◽  
pp. 30670-30678
Author(s):  
Olivera Grbovic-Huezo ◽  
Kenneth L. Pitter ◽  
Nicolas Lecomte ◽  
Joseph Saglimbeni ◽  
Gokce Askan ◽  
...  

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is typically diagnosed at an advanced stage, which limits surgical options and portends a dismal prognosis. Current oncologic PDAC therapies confer marginal benefit and, thus, a significant unmet clinical need exists for new therapeutic strategies. To identify effective PDAC therapies, we leveraged a syngeneic orthotopic PDAC transplant mouse model to perform a large-scale, in vivo screen of 16 single-agent and 41 two-drug targeted therapy combinations in mice. Among 57 drug conditions screened, combined inhibition of heat shock protein (Hsp)-90 and MEK was found to produce robust suppression of tumor growth, leading to an 80% increase in the survival of PDAC-bearing mice with no significant toxicity. Mechanistically, we observed that single-agent MEK inhibition led to compensatory activation of resistance pathways, including components of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling axis, which was overcome with the addition of HSP90 inhibition. The combination of HSP90(i) + MEK(i) was also active in vitro in established human PDAC cell lines and in vivo in patient-derived organoid PDAC transplant models. These findings encourage the clinical development of HSP90(i) + MEK(i) combination therapy and highlight the power of clinically relevant in vivo model systems for identifying cancer therapies.


2013 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 321
Author(s):  
Lars Bolund

Chronic, dysregulatory disease processes are becoming a major medical problem in the aging populations of our world. Metabolic syndrome (obesity, diabetes, atherosclerosis, and hypertension), cardiovascular diseases, neurodegeneration (e.g. Alzheimer syndrome), inflammatory diseases, and cancers affect a rapidly increasing number of people. The sequencing of the human genome should help in disease prevention by allowing mapping and characterisation of “illness” and “wellness” gene variants that convey susceptibility or resistance to the dysregulatory and degenerative disease processes. Common chronic disorders are genetically very heterogeneous with some subtypes showing Mendelian inheritance with quite high penetrance. Finding such monogenetic causes will allow truly personalized prevention and treatment. However, genetics is just the first step – functional studies in model systems will be necessary. The pig is an excellent model for medical research as well as for testing of new methods and drugs for disease prevention and treatment. Its size and longevity makes it especially useful for the study of chronic disease processes that can be monitored and repeatedly biopsied for long periods with and without intervention. The genome of different pig breeds have been sequenced, revealing that the pig is genetically more similar to man than conventional laboratory animals – in agreement with the similarities in organ development, physiology and metabolism. Genetically designed minipigs (Göttingen and Yucatan) are obtained by genetic engineering of somatic cells and animal cloning by somatic cell nuclear transfer. Primary minipig fibroblasts are genetically modified in culture by transposon-based transgenesis and/or homologous recombination with AAV-transduced constructs. The designed pig cells are electro-fused with enucleated oocytes (from normal slaughtered pigs) and the reconstructed oocytes develop in vitro into blastocysts that are transferred to surrogate production sows giving birth to clones of the designed pigs. Our HMC (hand made cloning) technology is very cost-efficient and allows large-scale production, without a need for micromanipulation. Thus, minipigs have been produced that should be prone to develop disease processes such as neurodegeneration (dominant negative human AAP and/or PS1 expression), atherosclerosis (human gain-of-function PCSK9 expression, ApoE knockout, LDL-R knockout), inflammation (ectopic expression of human α2 and β1 integrins in suprabasal epidermis), and cancer (BRCA1 knockout). Interesting phenotypes are observed in many of these minipigs. The Yucatan pigs with liver-specific expression of gain-of-function PCSK9, for example, display reduced hepatic LDL-R levels, impaired LDL clearance, severe hypercholesterolemia with accumulation of ApoB100-containing lipoproteins, and spontaneous development of progressive atherosclerotic lesions in multiple vascular beds. The genetic load can be further increased or modulated by breeding or cross-breeding of the different model pigs. We can also produce clones of pigs, some disease prone and some fluorescing, to perform experiments in regenerative medicine where the fate of healthy fluorescent cells can be followed in the, basically identical, disease prone animals. It is also our hope that our pig models can contribute to the digital revolution in medicine, combining detailed genomic sequencing and analysis with the introduction of wireless biosensors and advanced imaging methods. “Digitalized” pigs should teach us how to apply these fantastic new possibilities clinically. We envisage that this will become one of the biggest shake-ups in the history of medicine.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 191951 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vitaly Voloshin ◽  
Christian Kröner ◽  
Chandrabhan Seniya ◽  
Gregory P. D. Murray ◽  
Amy Guy ◽  
...  

Robust imaging techniques for tracking insects have been essential tools in numerous laboratory and field studies on pests, beneficial insects and model systems. Recent innovations in optical imaging systems and associated signal processing have enabled detailed characterization of nocturnal mosquito behaviour around bednets and improvements in bednet design, a global essential for protecting populations against malaria. Nonetheless, there remain challenges around ease of use for large-scale in situ recordings and extracting data reliably in the critical areas of the bednet where the optical signal is attenuated. Here, we introduce a retro-reflective screen at the back of the measurement volume, which can simultaneously provide diffuse illumination, and remove optical alignment issues while requiring only one-sided access to the measurement space. The illumination becomes significantly more uniform, although noise removal algorithms are needed to reduce the effects of shot noise, particularly across low-intensity bednet regions. By systematically introducing mosquitoes in front of and behind the bednet in laboratory experiments, we are able to demonstrate robust tracking in these challenging areas. Overall, the retro-reflective imaging set-up delivers mosquito segmentation rates in excess of 90% compared to less than 70% with backlit systems.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2920-2920
Author(s):  
Venkata D Yellapantula ◽  
David K Edwards ◽  
Kristi Allen ◽  
Jessica Albanese ◽  
Kimberly Babos ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2920 Human myeloma cell lines (HMCL) provide both a discovery and validation platform to improve our understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of multiple myeloma. We have completed a project to characterize the underlying genetics of all commercially available HMCL with a primary goal of identifying appropriate model systems for findings from large scale patient studies like the multiple myeloma genomics initiative (MMGI). We first purchased all 33 commercially available HMCL from DSMZ, JCRB, ECACC, and ATCC. Subsequently each HMCL was thawed and cultured under strict parameters, which yielded cells for analysis, by Agilent 400k CGH, whole exome sequencing (Agilent 70Mb Exon+UTR), and mRNA sequencing. The combination of these three assays provides a detailed map of the genetic complexity underlying this deadly disease. For variant discovery, alignment was done using BWA followed by indel realignment, quality recalibration and duplicate removal. High quality calls were identified from the intersection of variants called by both Samtools and GATK. This identified a median of 32691 high confidence variants per sample with upper and lower quartile values of 34307.75 and 32241.25, respectively. To identify likely somatic mutations, we removed variants found in the 1000 genomes project and the NHLBI Exome Sequencing project. In addition, we removed variants present in dbSNP unless these mutations were also present in the COSMIC database. After these filtering steps a median of 702 potential mutations remained. From these lists we identified a median of 209.5 non-synonymous variants per sample and in genes which are typically expressed in the cohort, a median of 91 variants were found. Overall, these steps identified 2678 variants in 1978 genes. The primary goal was to identify appropriate models for novel findings from studies like the MMGI. For instance we identified HMCL with mutations in FAM46C and DIS3 among others. Secondarily, we focused on attempting to identify potential oncogenes and tumor suppressors through the integration of our three data types and data from published studies (Chapman et al. and Walker et al.). To identify potential oncogenes we focused on mutations that occurred at the same position in the genome or altered the same amino acid at a minimum. This identified 23 genes; including expected genes like KRAS (n=11) and, NRAS (n=7) but it also identified potentially activating mutations in IKBKB, SOX2, KDM4C, CD81, OSBP, NOTCH2, WDR92 and UBR2. To identify potential tumor suppressors we focused on genes that are typically expressed, which showed bi-allelic inactivation in two or more samples by either a homozygous deletion event, a deletion plus mutation, or two independent mutations. This identified 116 genes; including expected genes like TP53, CDKN2C, RB1, BIRC2/3, TRAF3, KDM6A, CDKN1B, FAM46C, and DIS3. Outside of the expected genes we identified recurrent inactivation in ANKRD11, ATP6AP1, ATXN1, BCL2L11, CDK8, RNF7, STS, TSPAN7, and TBL1XR1. These studies have highlighted the value in studying HMCL as most novel genes reported from recent studies were independently identified in this small cohort of samples. This is in large part because HMCL provide an unlimited DNA and RNA resource that allowed for multiple independent assays to be performed on each sample. Ultimately this study will provide the myeloma community with a detailed resource from which they can acquire appropriate model systems for their research goals from the various cell line repositories around the world. Disclosures: Keats: Tgen: Employment.


1979 ◽  
Vol 205 (1158) ◽  
pp. 111-120 ◽  

Epidemiology can pick out large-scale determinants of human cancer, such as smoking. Also, epidemiology can pick out carcinogens such as asbestos to which groups of perhaps a few hundred or a few thousand workers have been heavily exposed for decades. However, if highly exposed groups cannot be studied then epidemiology cannot recognize carcinogens which, although perhaps widely distributed, produce only a small percentage increase in particular cancers. Almost all of the environmental pollutants that can affect human cancer incidence will do so only to a very minor extent, at the levels to which we are currently exposed. For this reason, and also because it is often difficult to define an exposed and an unexposed group which do not differ in other ways as well, it will almost always be impossible to do anything epidemiologically except to set a very crude upper limit on their likely hazards. The only way, therefore, to get any direct estimate of these hazards is by laboratory studies of the effects of high doses on various model systems. For this and for other reasons, it would be highly desirable to have good laboratory models for human carcinogenesis. The characteristics required of satisfactory laboratory systems are reviewed, and it is argued that systematic errors may arise unless one studies epithelial cells from large, long-lived species under conditions of chronic, low-dose exposure to noxious test agents in conjunction with standard chronic doses of agents which may be synergistic with the test agents. (Carcinogenic mutagens may be synergistic with carcinogenic non-mutagens.) For reasons of expense and speed, such studies must be done in vitro . If such in-vitro systems can be developed, either by using tissue explants or cell cultures, an important criterion which they will have to satisfy to be trusted will be that under chronic exposure the rate of transformation should be proportional to something like the fourth power of exposure duration. This paper chiefly reviews the reasons for choosing these specifications for a trustworthy in-vitro model for human carcinogenesis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Romain Bulteau ◽  
Mirko Francesconi

AbstractGenome-wide gene expression profiling is a powerful tool for exploratory analyses, providing a high dimensional picture of the state of a biological system. However, uncontrolled variation among samples can obscure and confound the effect of variables of interest. Uncontrolled developmental variation is often a major source of unknown expression variation in developmental systems. Existing methods to sort samples from transcriptomes require many samples to infer developmental trajectories and only provide a relative pseudo-time.Here we present RAPToR (Real Age Prediction from Transcriptome staging on Reference), a simple computational method to estimate the absolute developmental age of even a single sample from its gene expression with up to minutes precision. We achieve this by staging samples on high-resolution reference developmental expression profiles we build from existing time series data. We implemented RAPToR for the most common animal model systems: nematode, fruit fly, zebrafish, and mouse, and demonstrate application for non-model organisms. We show how developmental variation discovered by RAPToR can be exploited to increase power to detect differential expression and to untangle the signal of perturbations of interest even when it is completely confounded with development. We anticipate our RAPToR post-profiling staging strategy will be especially useful in large scale single organism profiling because it eliminates the need for synchronization or for a tedious and potentially difficult step of accurate staging before profiling.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vitaly Voloshin ◽  
Christian Kröner ◽  
Chandrabhan Seniya ◽  
Gregory P. D. Murray ◽  
Amy Guy ◽  
...  

AbstractRobust imaging techniques for tracking insects have been essential tools in numerous laboratory and field studies on pests, beneficial insects and model systems. Recent innovations in optical imaging systems and associated signal processing have enabled detailed characterisation of nocturnal mosquito behaviour around bednets and improvements in bednet design, a global essential for protecting populations against malaria. Nonetheless, there remain challenges around ease of use for large scale in situ recordings and extracting data reliably in the critical areas of the bednet where the optical signal is attenuated. Here we introduce a retro-reflective screen at the back of the measurement volume, which can simultaneously provide diffuse illumination, and remove optical alignment issues whilst requiring only one-sided access to the measurement space. The illumination becomes significantly more uniform, although, noise removal algorithms are needed to reduce the effects of shot noise particularly across low intensity bednet regions. By systematically introducing mosquitoes in front and behind the bednet in lab experiments we are able to demonstrate robust tracking in these challenging areas. Overall, the retro-reflective imaging setup delivers mosquito segmentation rates in excess of 90% compared to less than 70% with back-lit systems.


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