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31.
The lipid composition of plasma membrane (PM) and the corresponding detergent-insoluble membrane (DIM) fraction were analyzed with a specific focus on highly polar sphingolipids, so-called glycosyl inositol phosphorylceramides (GIPCs). Using tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) ‘Bright Yellow 2’ cell suspension and leaves, evidence is provided that GIPCs represent up to 40 mol % of the PM lipids. Comparative analysis of DIMs with the PM showed an enrichment of 2-hydroxylated very-long-chain fatty acid-containing GIPCs and polyglycosylated GIPCs in the DIMs. Purified antibodies raised against these GIPCs were further used for immunogold-electron microscopy strategy, revealing the distribution of polyglycosylated GIPCs in domains of 35 ± 7 nm in the plane of the PM. Biophysical studies also showed strong interactions between GIPCs and sterols and suggested a role for very-long-chain fatty acids in the interdigitation between the two PM-composing monolayers. The ins and outs of lipid asymmetry, raft formation, and interdigitation in plant membrane biology are finally discussed.Eukaryotic plasma membranes (PMs) are composed of three main classes of lipids, glycerolipids, sphingolipids, and sterols, which may account for up to 100,000 different molecular species (Yetukuri et al., 2008; Shevchenko and Simons, 2010). Overall, all glycerolipids share the same molecular moieties in plants, animals, and fungi. By contrast, sterols and sphingolipids are different and specific to each kingdom. For instance, the plant PM contains an important number of sterols, among which β-sitosterol, stigmasterol, and campesterol predominate (Furt et al., 2011). In addition to free sterols, phytosterols can be conjugated to form steryl glycosides (SG) and acyl steryl glycosides (ASG) that represent up to approximately 15% of the tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) PM (Furt et al., 2010). As for sphingolipids, sphingomyelin, the major phosphosphingolipid in animals, which harbors a phosphocholine as a polar head, is not detected in plants. Glycosyl inositol phosphorylceramides (GIPCs) are the major class of sphingolipids in plants, but they are absent in animals (Sperling and Heinz, 2003; Pata et al., 2010). Sphingolipidomic approaches identified up to 200 plant sphingolipids (for review, see Pata et al., 2010; Cacas et al., 2013).Although GIPCs belong to one of the earliest classes of plant sphingolipids that were identified in the late 1950s (Carter et al., 1958), only a few GIPCs have been structurally characterized to date because of their high polarity and a limited solubility in typical lipid extraction solvents. For these reasons, they were systematically omitted from published plant PM lipid composition. GIPCs are formed by the addition of an inositol phosphate to the ceramide moiety, the inositol headgroup of which can then undergo several glycosylation steps. The dominant glycan structure, composed of a hexose-GlcA linked to the inositol, is called series A. Polar heads containing three to seven sugars, so-called series B to F, have been identified and appeared to be species specific (Buré et al., 2011; Cacas et al., 2013; Mortimer et al., 2013). The ceramide moiety of GIPCs consists of a long-chain base (LCB), mainly t18:0 (called phytosphingosine) or t18:1 compounds (for review, see Pata et al., 2010), to which is amidified a very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA), the latter of which is mostly 2-hydroxylated (hVLCFA) with an odd or even number of carbon atoms. In plants, little is known about the subcellular localization of GIPCs. It is assumed, however, that they would be highly represented in the PM (Worrall et al., 2003; Sperling et al., 2005), even if this remains to be experimentally proven. The main argument supporting such an assumption is the strong enrichment of trihydroxylated LCB (t18:n) in detergent-insoluble membrane (DIM) fractions (Borner et al., 2005; Lefebvre et al., 2007), LCB being known to be predominant in GIPC’s core structure as aforementioned.In addition to this chemical complexity, lipids are not evenly distributed within the PM. Sphingolipids and sterols can preferentially interact with each other and segregate to form microdomains dubbed the membrane raft (Simons and Toomre, 2000). The membrane raft hypothesis suggests that lipids play a regulatory role in mediating protein clustering within the bilayer by undergoing phase separation into liquid-disordered and liquid-ordered phases. The liquid-ordered phase, termed the membrane raft, was described as enriched in sterol and saturated sphingolipids and is characterized by tight lipid packing. Proteins, which have differential affinities for each phase, may become enriched in, or excluded from, the liquid-ordered phase domains to optimize the rate of protein-protein interactions and maximize signaling processes. In animals, rafts have been implicated in a huge range of cellular processes, such as hormone signaling, membrane trafficking in polarized epithelial cells, T cell activation, cell migration, and the life cycle of influenza and human immunodeficiency viruses (Simons and Ikonen, 1997; Simons and Gerl, 2010). In plants, evidence is increasing that rafts are also involved in signal transduction processes and membrane trafficking (for review, see Mongrand et al., 2010; Simon-Plas et al., 2011; Cacas et al., 2012a).Moreover, lipids are not evenly distributed between the two leaflets of the PM. Within the PM of eukaryotic cells, sphingolipids are primarily located in the outer monolayer, whereas unsaturated phospholipids are predominantly exposed on the cytosolic leaflet. This asymmetrical distribution has been well established in human red blood cells, in which the outer leaflet contains sphingomyelin, phosphatidylcholine, and a variety of glycolipids like gangliosides. By contrast, the cytoplasmic leaflet is composed mostly of phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol, and their phosphorylated derivatives (Devaux and Morris, 2004). With regard to sphingolipids and glycerolipids, the asymmetry of the former is established during their biosynthesis and that of the latter requires ATPases such as the aminophospholipid translocase that transports lipids from the outer to the inner leaflet as well as multiple drug resistance proteins that transport phosphatidylcholine in the opposite direction (Devaux and Morris, 2004). This ubiquitous scheme encountered in animal cells could apply in plant cells as proposed (Tjellstrom et al., 2010). Indeed, the authors showed that there is a pronounced transverse lipid asymmetry in root at the PM. Phospholipids and galactolipids dominate the cytosolic leaflet, whereas the apoplastic leaflet is enriched in sphingolipids and sterols.From such a high diversity of the plant PM thus arises the question of the respective contribution of lipids to membrane suborganization. Our group recently tackled this aspect by characterizing the order level of liposomes prepared from various plant lipids and labeled with the environment-sensitive probe di-4-ANEPPDHQ (Grosjean et al., 2015). Fluorescence spectroscopy experiments showed that, among phytosterols, campesterol exhibits the strongest ability to order model membranes. In agreement with these data, spatial analysis of the membrane organization through multispectral confocal microscopy pointed to the strong ability of campesterol to promote liquid-ordered domain formation and organize their spatial distribution at the membrane surface. Conjugated sterols also exhibit a striking ability to order membranes. In addition, GIPCs enhance the sterol-induced ordering effect by emphasizing the formation and increasing the size of sterol-dependent ordered domains.The aim of this study was to reinvestigate the lipid composition and organization of the PM with a particular focus on GIPCs using tobacco leaves and cv Bright Yellow 2 (BY-2) cell cultures as models. Analyzing all membrane lipid classes at once, including sphingolipids, is challenging because they all display dramatically different chemical polarity, from very apolar (like free sterols) to highly polar (like polyglycosylated GIPCs) molecules. Most lipid extraction techniques published thus far use a chloroform/methanol mixture and phase partition to remove contaminants, resulting in the loss GIPCs, which remain in the aqueous phase, unextracted in the insoluble pellet, or at the interphase (Markham et al., 2006). In order to gain access to both glycerolipid and sphingolipid species at a glance, we developed a protocol whereby the esterifed or amidified fatty acids were hydrolyzed from the glycerol backbone (glycerolipids) or the LCB (sphingolipids) of membrane lipids, respectively. Fatty acids were then analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) with appropriate internal standards for quantification. We further proposed that the use of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) ensures the extraction of all classes of plant polar lipids. Our results indicate that GIPCs represent up to 40 mol % of total tobacco PM lipids. Interestingly, polyglycolyslated GIPCs are 5-fold enriched in DIMs of BY-2 cells when compared with the PM. Further investigation led us to develop a preparative purification procedure that allowed us to obtain enough material to raise antibodies against GIPCs. Using immunogold labeling on PM vesicles, it was found that polyglycosylated GIPCs cluster in membrane nanodomains, strengthening the idea that lateral nanosegregation of sphingolipids takes place at the PM in plants. Multispectral confocal microscopy was performed on vesicles prepared using GIPCs, phospholipids, and sterols and labeled with the environment-sensitive probe di-4-ANEPPDHQ. Our results show that, despite different fatty acid and polar head compositions, GIPCs extracted from tobacco leaves and BY-2 cells have a similar intrinsic propensity of enhancing vesicle global order together with sterols. Assuming that GIPCs are mostly present in the outer leaflet of the PM, interactions between sterols and sphingolipids were finally studied by the Langmuir monolayer technique, and the area of a single molecule of GIPC, or in interaction with phytosterols, was calculated. Using the calculation docking method, the energy of interaction between GIPCs and phytosterols was determined. A model was proposed in which GIPCs and phytosterols interact together to form liquid-ordered domains and in which the VLCFAs of GIPCs promote the interdigitation of the two membrane leaflets. The implications of domain formation and the asymmetrical distribution of lipids at the PM in plants are also discussed. Finally, we propose a model that reconsiders the intricate organization of the plant PM bilayer.  相似文献   
32.
Rising global temperature and CO2 levels may sustain late-season net photosynthesis of evergreen conifers but could also impair the development of cold hardiness. Our study investigated how elevated temperature, and the combination of elevated temperature with elevated CO2, affected photosynthetic rates, leaf carbohydrates, freezing tolerance, and proteins involved in photosynthesis and cold hardening in Eastern white pine (Pinus strobus). We designed an experiment where control seedlings were acclimated to long photoperiod (day/night 14/10 h), warm temperature (22°C/15°C), and either ambient (400 μL L−1) or elevated (800 μmol mol−1) CO2, and then shifted seedlings to growth conditions with short photoperiod (8/16 h) and low temperature/ambient CO2 (LTAC), elevated temperature/ambient CO2 (ETAC), or elevated temperature/elevated CO2 (ETEC). Exposure to LTAC induced down-regulation of photosynthesis, development of sustained nonphotochemical quenching, accumulation of soluble carbohydrates, expression of a 16-kD dehydrin absent under long photoperiod, and increased freezing tolerance. In ETAC seedlings, photosynthesis was not down-regulated, while accumulation of soluble carbohydrates, dehydrin expression, and freezing tolerance were impaired. ETEC seedlings revealed increased photosynthesis and improved water use efficiency but impaired dehydrin expression and freezing tolerance similar to ETAC seedlings. Sixteen-kilodalton dehydrin expression strongly correlated with increases in freezing tolerance, suggesting its involvement in the development of cold hardiness in P. strobus. Our findings suggest that exposure to elevated temperature and CO2 during autumn can delay down-regulation of photosynthesis and stimulate late-season net photosynthesis in P. strobus seedlings. However, this comes at the cost of impaired freezing tolerance. Elevated temperature and CO2 also impaired freezing tolerance. However, unless the frequency and timing of extreme low-temperature events changes, this is unlikely to increase risk of freezing damage in P. strobus seedlings.Land surface temperature is increasing, particularly in the northern hemisphere (IPCC, 2014), which is dominated by boreal and temperate forests. At higher latitudes, trees rely on temperature and photoperiod cues to detect changing seasons and to trigger cessation of growth and cold hardening during the autumn (Ensminger et al., 2015). For boreal and temperate evergreen conifers, cold hardening involves changes in carbohydrate metabolism, down-regulation of photosynthesis, accumulation of cryoprotective metabolites, and development of freezing tolerance (Crosatti et al., 2013; Ensminger et al., 2015). These processes minimize freezing damage and enable conifers to endure winter stresses. However, rising temperatures result in asynchronous phasing of temperature and photoperiod characterized by delayed arrival of first frosts (McMahon et al., 2010), which may impact the onset and development of cold hardening during autumn.Short photoperiod induces the cessation of growth in many tree species (Downs and Borthwick, 1956; Heide, 1974; Repo et al., 2000; Böhlenius et al., 2006). As a consequence, carbon demand in sink tissue decreases toward the end of the growing season, and the bulk of photoassimilate is translocated from source tissues to storage tissues (Hansen and Beck, 1994; Oleksyn et al., 2000). In addition, cryoprotective soluble sugars, including sucrose, raffinose, and pinitol, accumulate in leaf tissues to enhance freezing tolerance (Strimbeck et al., 2008; Angelcheva et al., 2014). Thus, by winter, leaf nonstructural carbohydrates are mainly comprised of mono- and oligosaccharides, and only minimal levels of starch remain (Hansen and Beck, 1994; Strimbeck et al., 2008). The concurrent decrease of photoassimilate and demand for metabolites that occur during the cessation of growth also impacts the citric acid cycle that mediates between photosynthesis, respiration, and protein synthesis. The citric acid cycle generates NADH to fuel ATP synthesis via mitochondrial electron transport, as well as amino acid precursors (Shi et al., 2015). In C3 plants, the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) converts phosphoenolpyruvate to oxaloacetic acid in order to supplement the flow of metabolites to the citric acid cycle and thus controls the regulation of respiration and photosynthate partitioning (O’Leary et al., 2011).Cessation of growth, low temperature, and presumably short photoperiod decrease the metabolic sink for photoassimilates, resulting in harmful excess light energy (Öquist and Huner, 2003; Ensminger et al., 2006) and increased generation of reactive oxygen species (Adams et al., 2004). During autumn and the development of cold hardiness, conifers reconfigure the photosynthetic apparatus in order to avoid formation of excess light and reactive oxygen species. This involves a decrease in chlorophylls and PSII reaction center core protein D1 (Ottander et al., 1995; Ensminger et al., 2004; Verhoeven et al., 2009), as well as aggregation of light-harvesting complex proteins (Ottander et al., 1995; Busch et al., 2007). Additionally, photoprotective carotenoid pigments accumulate in leaves, especially the xanthophylls, zeaxanthin, and lutein that contribute to nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) via thermal dissipation of excess light energy (Busch et al., 2007; Verhoeven et al., 2009; Demmig-Adams et al., 2012). Prolonged exposure to low temperature induces sustained nonphotochemical quenching (NPQS), where zeaxanthin constitutively dissipates excess light energy (Ensminger et al., 2004; Demmig-Adams et al., 2012; Fréchette et al., 2015).In conifers, freezing tolerance is initiated during early autumn in response to decreasing photoperiod (Rostad et al., 2006; Chang et al., 2015) and continues to develop through late autumn in response to the combination of short photoperiod and low temperature (Strimbeck and Schaberg, 2009; Chang et al., 2015). In addition to changes in carbohydrate content, freezing tolerance also involves the expression of specific dehydrins (Close, 1997; Kjellsen et al., 2013). Members of the dehydrin protein family are involved in responses to osmotic, salt, and freezing stress (Close, 1996). Dehydrins have been associated with improved freezing tolerance in many species including spinach (Kaye et al., 1998), strawberry (Houde et al., 2004), cucumber (Yin et al., 2006), peach (Wisniewski et al., 1999), birch (Puhakainen et al., 2004), and spruce (Kjellsen et al., 2013). In angiosperms, a characteristic Lys-rich dehydrin motif known as the K-segment interacts with lipids to facilitate membrane binding (Koag et al., 2003; Eriksson et al., 2011). Several in vitro studies have demonstrated dehydrin functions including prevention of aggregation and unfolding of enzymes (using Vitis riparia; Hughes and Graether, 2011), radical scavenging (using Citrus unshiu; Hara et al., 2004), and suppression of ice crystal formation (using Prunus persica; Wisniewski et al., 1999). To date, dehydrin functions have not been demonstrated in planta.Rising temperatures since the mid-twentieth century have delayed the onset of autumn dormancy and increased length of the growing season in forests across the northern hemisphere (Boisvenue and Running, 2006; Piao et al., 2007; McMahon et al., 2010). Studies have shown that elevated temperatures ranging from +4°C to +20°C above ambient can delay down-regulation of photosynthesis in several evergreen conifers. Consistent findings were apparent among climate-controlled chamber studies exposing Pinus strobus seedlings to a sudden shift in temperature and/or photoperiod (Fréchette et al., 2016), as well as chamber studies exposing Picea abies seedlings to simulated autumn conditions using a gradient of decreasing temperature and photoperiod (Stinziano et al., 2015). Similar findings were also demonstrated in open-top chamber experiments exposing mature Pinus sylvestris to a gradient of decreasing temperature and natural photoperiod (Wang, 1996). Elevated temperature (+4°C above ambient) also impaired cold hardening in Pseudotsuga menziesii seedlings (Guak et al., 1998) and mature P. sylvestris (Repo et al., 1996) exposed to a decreasing gradient of temperature and natural photoperiod using open-top chambers. In contrast, a recent study showed that smaller temperature increments (+1.5°C to +3°C) applied using infrared heaters did not delay down-regulation of photosynthesis or impair freezing tolerance in field-grown P. strobus seedlings that were acclimated to larger diurnal and seasonal temperature variations (Chang et al., 2015). For many tree species, photoperiod determines cessation of growth (Tanino et al., 2010; Petterle et al., 2013), length of the growing season (Bauerle et al., 2012), and development of cold hardiness (Welling et al., 1997; Li et al., 2003; Rostad et al., 2006). However, the effects of climate warming on tree phenology are complex and can be unpredictable due to species- and provenance-specific differences in sensitivity to photoperiod and temperature cues (Körner and Basler, 2010; Basler and Körner, 2012; Basler and Körner, 2014).The effect of elevated CO2 further increases uncertainties in the response of trees to warmer climate. Similar to warmer temperature, elevated CO2 may also delay the down-regulation of photosynthesis in evergreens and extend the length of the growing season, as demonstrated in mature P. sylvestris (Wang, 1996). Elevated CO2 increases carbon assimilation (Curtis and Wang, 1998; Ainsworth and Long, 2005) and biomass production (Ainsworth and Long, 2005) during the growing season. The effects could continue during the autumn if dormancy or growth cessation is delayed, which suggests that elevated CO2 may increase annual carbon uptake. However, long-term exposure to elevated CO2 can also down-regulate photosynthesis during the growing season (Ainsworth and Long, 2005). Prior studies that have attempted to determine the impact of a combination of elevated CO2 and/or temperature on cold hardening in evergreens have largely focused on freezing tolerance, with contrasting results. Open-top chamber experiments showed that a combination of elevated temperature and CO2 both delayed and impaired freezing tolerance of P. menziesii seedlings (Guak et al., 1998) and evergreen broadleaf Eucalyptus pauciflora seedlings (Loveys et al., 2006) but did not affect freezing tolerance of mature P. sylvestris (Repo et al., 1996). A recent field experiment examining mature trees revealed that Larix decidua, but not Pinus mugo, exhibited enhanced freezing damage following six years of exposure to combined soil warming and elevated CO2 (Rixen et al., 2012). In contrast, a climate-controlled study showed that exposure to elevated CO2 advanced the date of bud set and improved freezing tolerance in Picea mariana seedlings (Bigras and Bertrand, 2006). In a second study on similar seedlings conducted by the same authors, exposure of trees to elevated CO2 also enhanced freezing tolerance but impaired the accumulation of sucrose and raffinose (Bertrand and Bigras, 2006). These previous experiments used experimental conditions where temperature and photoperiod gradually decreased. While this approach aims to mimic natural conditions, it is difficult to distinguish specific responses to either photoperiod or temperature. Because of the contrasting findings from previous studies, we designed an experiment aiming to separate the effects of photoperiod, temperature, and CO2 on a wide range of parameters that are involved in cold hardening in conifers.Our study aimed to determine (1) how induction and development of the cold hardening process is affected by a shift from long to short photoperiod under warm conditions and (2) how the combination of warm air temperature and elevated CO2 affects photoperiod-induced cold hardening processes in Eastern white pine (P. strobus). To assess the development of cold hardening, we measured photosynthetic rates, changes in leaf carbohydrates, freezing tolerance, and proteins involved in photosynthesis and cold hardening over 36 d. Assuming that both low temperature and short photoperiod cues are required to induce cold hardening in conifers, we hypothesized that warm temperature and the combination of warm temperature and elevated CO2 would prevent seedlings growing under autumn photoperiod from down-regulating photosynthesis. We further hypothesized that warm temperature and the combination of warm temperature and elevated CO2 would impair the development of freezing tolerance, due to a lack of adequate phasing of the low temperature and short photoperiod signals.  相似文献   
33.
Behavior varies among individuals and is flexible within individuals. However, studies of behavioral syndromes and animal personality have demonstrated that animals can show consistency in their behavior and as such may be restricted in their behavioral responses. Like any other trait, including morphology, performance, or physiology, personality is now considered an important component of ecology and may have fitness consequences. Moreover, in some species personality correlates with other traits, as predicted in the context of a recent theoretical framework postulating that individual differences in growth and body size can affect behavior through effects on growth–mortality tradeoffs. This “pace of life” hypothesis predicts that animals that explore more should be larger and have higher growth rates than those that explore less. We tested for associations between morphology and a behavioral trait in a captive colony of gray mouse lemurs (Microcebus murinus). We used open-field tests to evaluate exploration behavior and measured a series of morphological traits in 72 individuals (32 males and 40 females). Our results show that the latency to start exploring correlates positively with adult body size and body weight at birth. These data provide evidence for a link between morphology and behavior in this species, thus supporting predictions of dispersal models but diverging from the predictions of the “pace of life” model.  相似文献   
34.
Individuals reporting persistent psychotic experiences (PEs) in the general population, but without a “need for care”, are a unique group of particular importance in identifying risk and protective factors for psychosis. We compared people with persistent PEs and no “need for care” (non‐clinical, N=92) with patients diagnosed with a psychotic disorder (clinical, N=84) and controls without PEs (N=83), in terms of their phenomenological, socio‐demographic and psychological features. The 259 participants were recruited from one urban and one rural area in the UK, as part of the UNIQUE (Unusual Experiences Enquiry) study. Results showed that the non‐clinical group experienced hallucinations in all modalities as well as first‐rank symptoms, with an earlier age of onset than in the clinical group. Somatic/tactile hallucinations were more frequent than in the clinical group, while commenting and conversing voices were rare. Participants in the non‐clinical group were differentiated from their clinical counterparts by being less paranoid and deluded, apart from ideas of reference, and having fewer cognitive difficulties and negative symptoms. Unlike the clinical group, they were characterized neither by low psychosocial functioning nor by social adversity. However, childhood trauma featured in both groups. They were similar to the controls in psychological characteristics: they did not report current emotional problems, had intact self‐esteem, displayed healthy schemas about the self and others, showed high life satisfaction and well‐being, and high mindfulness. These findings support biopsychosocial models postulating that environmental and psychological factors interact with biological processes in the aetiology of psychosis. While some PEs may be more malign than others, lower levels of social and environmental adversity, combined with protective factors such as intact IQ, spirituality, and psychological and emotional well‐being, may reduce the likelihood of persistent PEs leading to pathological outcomes. Future research should focus on protective factors and determinants of well‐being in the context of PEs, rather than exclusively on risk factors and biomarkers of disease states.  相似文献   
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Proteomics strategies based on nanoflow (nano-) LC-MS/MS allow the identification of hundreds to thousands of proteins in complex mixtures. When combined with protein isotopic labeling, quantitative comparison of the proteome from different samples can be achieved using these approaches. However, bioinformatics analysis of the data remains a bottleneck in large scale quantitative proteomics studies. Here we present a new software named Mascot File Parsing and Quantification (MFPaQ) that easily processes the results of the Mascot search engine and performs protein quantification in the case of isotopic labeling experiments using either the ICAT or SILAC (stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture) method. This new tool provides a convenient interface to retrieve Mascot protein lists; sort them according to Mascot scoring or to user-defined criteria based on the number, the score, and the rank of identified peptides; and to validate the results. Moreover the software extracts quantitative data from raw files obtained by nano-LC-MS/MS, calculates peptide ratios, and generates a non-redundant list of proteins identified in a multisearch experiment with their calculated averaged and normalized ratio. Here we apply this software to the proteomics analysis of membrane proteins from primary human endothelial cells (ECs), a cell type involved in many physiological and pathological processes including chronic inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. We analyzed the EC membrane proteome and set up methods for quantitative analysis of this proteome by ICAT labeling. EC microsomal proteins were fractionated and analyzed by nano-LC-MS/MS, and database searches were performed with Mascot. Data validation and clustering of proteins were performed with MFPaQ, which allowed identification of more than 600 unique proteins. The software was also successfully used in a quantitative differential proteomics analysis of the EC membrane proteome after stimulation with a combination of proinflammatory mediators (tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interferon-gamma, and lymphotoxin alpha/beta) that resulted in the identification of a full spectrum of EC membrane proteins regulated by inflammation.  相似文献   
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Efficient task processing and data storage are still among the most important challenges in Autonomous Driving (AD). In-board processing units struggle to deal with the workload of AD tasks, especially for Artificial Intelligence (AI) based applications. Cloud and Fog computing represent good opportunities to overcome the limitation of in-board processing capacities. However, communication delays and task real-time constraints are the main issues to be considered during the task mapping. Also, a fair resources allocation is a miss-explored concept in the context of AD task offloading where the mobility increases its complexity. We propose a task offloading simulation tool and approaches based on intelligent agents. Agents at the edge and the fog communicate and exchange their knowledge and history. We show results and proof-of-concept scenarios that illustrate our multi-agent-based proposition and task offloading simulation tool. We also analyze the impact of communication delays and processing units constraints on AD task offloading issues.

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40.
Replication stress (RS) has a pivotal role in tumor initiation, progression, or therapeutic resistance. In this study, we depicted the mechanism of breast cancer stem cells’ (bCSCs) response to RS and its clinical implication. We demonstrated that bCSCs present a limited level of RS compared with non-bCSCs in patient samples. We described for the first time that the spatial nuclear location of BMI1 protein triggers RS response in breast cancers. Hence, in bCSCs, BMI1 is rapidly located to stalled replication forks to recruit RAD51 and activate homologous-recombination machinery, whereas in non-bCSCs BMI1 is trapped on demethylated 1q12 megasatellites precluding effective RS response. We further demonstrated that BMI1/RAD51 axis activation is necessary to prevent cisplatin-induced DNA damage and that treatment of patient-derived xenografts with a RAD51 inhibitor sensitizes tumor-initiating cells to cisplatin. The comprehensive view of replicative-stress response in bCSC has profound implications for understanding and improving therapeutic resistance.Subject terms: Breast cancer, Cancer stem cells  相似文献   
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