scholarly journals Vernalizing cold is registered digitally at FLC

2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (13) ◽  
pp. 4146-4151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Angel ◽  
Jie Song ◽  
Hongchun Yang ◽  
Julia I. Questa ◽  
Caroline Dean ◽  
...  

A fundamental property of many organisms is an ability to sense, evaluate, and respond to environmental signals. In some situations, generation of an appropriate response requires long-term information storage. A classic example is vernalization, where plants quantitatively sense long-term cold and epigenetically store this cold-exposure information to regulate flowering time. In Arabidopsis thaliana, stable epigenetic memory of cold is digital: following long-term cold exposure, cells respond autonomously in an all-or-nothing fashion, with the fraction of cells that stably silence the floral repressor FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) increasing with the cold exposure duration. However, during cold exposure itself it is unknown whether vernalizing cold is registered at FLC in individual cells in an all-or-nothing (digital) manner or is continuously varying (analog). Using mathematical modeling, we found that analog registration of cold temperature is problematic due to impaired analog-to-digital conversion into stable memory. This disadvantage is particularly acute when responding to short cold periods, but is absent when cold temperatures are registered digitally at FLC. We tested this prediction experimentally, exposing plants to short periods of cold interrupted with even shorter warm breaks. For FLC expression, we found that the system responds similarly to both interrupted and uninterrupted cold, arguing for a digital mechanism integrating long-term temperature exposure.

Stroke ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 43 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shia T Kent ◽  
Leslie A McClure ◽  
Virginia J Howard ◽  
William L Crosson ◽  
Mohammad Z Al-Hamdan ◽  
...  

INTRODUCTION: Stroke incidence is higher during the winter, indicating that long and short-term sunlight exposure may contribute to stroke incidence. HYPOTHESIS: Reduced sunlight exposure and extreme temperatures are associated with increased stroke incidence. METHODS: Data were obtained from the REGARDS study, a national population-based cohort of 30,239 enrolled from 2003-2007 consisting of black and white participants, aged 45+. A centralized phone interview was used for medical history, in-home evaluation for physical measures, and a self-administered questionnaire for complete residential histories (city/state) from birth. The risk of stroke and sunlight exposure was studied in the 16,529 participants that were free of stroke and coronary artery disease at baseline and had lifetime residential histories available. Fifteen-year residential history merged with satellite and ground monitor data were used to determine sunlight and temperature exposure. Since long-term sunlight and temperature measures have not been extensively used in health studies, we performed exploratory analyses to determine which measures carried the strongest relationships with stroke. Fifteen, ten, five, two and one-year exposures were used to predict stroke incidence using Cox proportional hazard models. Potential demographic, behavioral, and medical confounders and mediators were included during model-building. RESULTS: Over an average follow-up period of 5.0 years, 351 had an incident stroke. Monthly average sunlight and maximum temperature exposures at residence exhibited the strongest relationships with stroke. It was determined that the shortest period of sunlight exposure, one year, exhibited the strongest relationship. After adjustment for other covariates, the previous year’s monthly average sunlight exposure below the median predicted increased risk of stroke (HR=1.61 (95% CI: 1.15, 2.26)). Temperature exhibited a J-shaped relationship with stroke incidence. CONCLUSION: This is the first report showing a relationship between sunlight and stroke. In addition, we confirmed earlier studies that both hot and cold temperatures are related to increased stroke incidence. The biological pathway of this relationship is not clear. Future research will show whether this finding stands, the pathway for this relationship, and if it is due to short or long-term exposures.


2022 ◽  
pp. 185-196
Author(s):  
Ryan Shook

In efforts to strengthen its digitization program, the University Libraries of University of Guam have assembled members from its Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Library and Micronesian Area Research Center to identify standards and frameworks to facilitate sustainable, long-term access and preservation of its indigenous and historic collections. Following the 2019 Pacific Islands Association of Libraries Annual Conference hosted at the University of Guam RFK Library and the unveiling of the Para Hulo' Strategic Plan, a greater institutional emphasis has been placed on the need for digitally accessible archives and remote access. University Libraries investigates the need to balance utilitarian functions of traditional librarianship with the democratic ideals inherent in the profession, as expressed through revisiting a range of literature to articulate the connections between digital librarianship, traditional librarianship, and analog to digital conversion.


Author(s):  
Neha Jain ◽  
Nir Shlezinger ◽  
Yonina C. Eldar ◽  
Anubha Gupta ◽  
Vivek Ashok Bohara

Author(s):  
O. Semenenko ◽  
O. Vodchyts ◽  
V. Koverga ◽  
R. Lukash ◽  
O. Lutsenko

The introduction and active use of information transmission and storage systems in the Ministry of Defense (MoD) of Ukraine form the need to develop ways of guaranteed removal of data from media after their use or long-term storage. Such a task is an essential component of the functioning of any information security system. The article analyzes the problems of guaranteed destruction of information on magnetic media. An overview of approaches to the guaranteed destruction of information on magnetic media of different types is presented, and partial estimates of the effectiveness of their application are given by some generally accepted indicators of performance evaluation. The article also describes the classification of methods of destruction of information depending on the influence on its medium. The results of the analysis revealed the main problems of application of software methods and methods of demagnetization of the information carrier. The issue of guaranteed destruction of information from modern SSD devices, which are actively used in the formation of new systems of information accumulation and processing, became particularly relevant in the article. In today's conditions of development of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, methods of mechanical and thermal destruction are more commonly used today. In the medium term, the vector of the use of information elimination methods will change towards the methods of physical impact by the pulsed magnetic field and the software methods that allow to store the information storage device, but this today requires specialists to develop new ways of protecting information in order to avoid its leakage.


2021 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruo-Shi Dong ◽  
Lei Zhao ◽  
Jia-Jun Qin ◽  
Wen-Tao Zhong ◽  
Yi-Chun Fan ◽  
...  

1993 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 408 ◽  
Author(s):  
James R. Matey ◽  
M.J. Lauterbach

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evgenii S. Kolodeznyi ◽  
Innokenty I. Novikov ◽  
Andrey V. Babichev ◽  
Alexander S. Kurochkin ◽  
Andrey G. Gladyshev ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 3696-3705 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chin-Hung Cheng ◽  
David Tai-Wai Yew ◽  
Hiu-Yee Kwan ◽  
Qing Zhou ◽  
Yu Huang ◽  
...  

CNG channels are cyclic nucleotide-gated Ca2+-permeable channels that are suggested to be involved in the activity-dependent alterations of synaptic strength that are thought to underlie information storage in the CNS. In this study, we isolated an endogenous RNA transcript antisense to CNGα1 mRNA. This transcript was capable of down-regulating the expression of sense CNGα1 in theXenopus oocyte expression system. RT-PCR, Northern blot, and in situ hybridization analyses showed that the transcript was coexpressed with CNGα1 mRNA in many regions of human brain, notably in those regions that were involved in long-term potentiation and long-term depression, such as hippocampal CA1 and CA3, dentate gyrus, and cerebellar Purkinje layer. Comparison of expression patterns between adult and fetal cerebral cortex revealed that there were concurrent developmental changes in the expression levels of anti-CNG1 and CNGα1. Treatment of human glioma cell T98 with thyroid hormone T3 caused a significant increase in anti-CNG1 expression and a parallel decrease in sense CNGα1 expression. These data suggest that the suppression of CNGα1 expression by anti-CNG1 may play an important role in neuronal functions, especially in synaptic plasticity and cortical development. Endogenous antisense RNA-mediated regulation may represent a new mechanism through which the activity of ion channels can be regulated in the human CNS.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Polina Lipaeva ◽  
Kseniya Vereshchagina ◽  
Polina Drozdova ◽  
Lena Jakob ◽  
Elizaveta Kondrateva ◽  
...  

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