3 resultados para Specific inhalation challenge test
em Duke University
Resumo:
Cryptococcus neoformans is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that causes significant disease worldwide. Even though this fungus has not evolved specifically to cause human disease, it has a remarkable ability to adapt to many different environments within its infected host. C. neoformans adapts by utilizing conserved eukaryotic and fungal-specific signaling pathways to sense and respond to stresses within the host. Upon infection, two of the most significant environmental changes this organism experiences are elevated temperature and high pH.
Conserved Rho and Ras family GTPases are central regulators of thermotolerance in C. neoformans. Many GTPases require prenylation to associate with cellular membranes and function properly. Using molecular genetic techniques, microscopy, and infection models, I demonstrated that the prenyltransferase, geranylgeranyl transferase I (GGTase I) is required for thermotolerance and pathogenesis. Using fluorescence microscopy, I found that only a subset of conserved GGTase I substrates requires this enzyme for membrane localization. Therefore, the C. neoformans GGTase I may recognize its substrate in a slightly different manner than other eukaryotic organisms.
The alkaline response transcription factor, Rim101, is a central regulator of stress-response genes important for adapting to the host environment. In particular, Rim101 regulates cell surface alterations involved in immune avoidance. In other fungi, Rim101 is activated by alkaline pH through a conserved signaling pathway, but this pathway had yet been characterized in C. neoformans. Using molecular genetic techniques, I identified and analyzed the conserved members of the Rim pathway. I found that it was only partially conserved in C. neoformans, missing the components that sense pH and initiate pathway activation. Using a genetic screen, I identified a novel Rim pathway component named Rra1. Structural prediction and genetic epistasis experiments suggest that Rra1 may serve as the Rim pathway pH sensor in C. neoformans and other related basidiomycete fungi.
To explore the relevance of Rim pathway signaling in the interaction of C neoformans with its host, I characterized the Rim101-regulated cell wall changes that prevent immune detection. Using HPLC, enzymatic degradation, and cell wall stains, I found that the rim101Δ mutation resulted in increased cell wall chitin exposure. In vitro co-culture assays demonstrated that increased chitin exposure is associated with enhanced activation of macrophages and dendritic cells. To further test this association, I demonstrated that other mutant strains with increased chitin exposure induce macrophage and dendritic cell responses similar to rim101Δ. We used primary macrophages from mutant mouse lines to demonstrate that members of both the Toll-like receptor and C-type lectin receptor families are involved in detecting strains with increased chitin exposure. Finally, in vivo immunological experiments demonstrated that the rim101Δ strain induced a global inflammatory immune response in infected mouse lungs, expanding upon our previous in vivo rim101Δ studies. These results demonstrate that cell wall organization largely determines how fungal cells are detected by the immune system.
Resumo:
Highlights of Data Expedition: • Students explored daily observations of local climate data spanning the past 35 years. • Topological Data Analysis, or TDA for short, provides cutting-edge tools for studying the geometry of data in arbitrarily high dimensions. • Using TDA tools, students discovered intrinsic dynamical features of the data and learned how to quantify periodic phenomenon in a time-series. • Since nature invariably produces noisy data which rarely has exact periodicity, students also considered the theoretical basis of almost-periodicity and even invented and tested new mathematical definitions of almost-periodic functions. Summary The dataset we used for this data expedition comes from the Global Historical Climatology Network. “GHCN (Global Historical Climatology Network)-Daily is an integrated database of daily climate summaries from land surface stations across the globe.” Source: https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/ghcn-daily/ We focused on the daily maximum and minimum temperatures from January 1, 1980 to April 1, 2015 collected from RDU International Airport. Through a guided series of exercises designed to be performed in Matlab, students explore these time-series, initially by direct visualization and basic statistical techniques. Then students are guided through a special sliding-window construction which transforms a time-series into a high-dimensional geometric curve. These high-dimensional curves can be visualized by projecting down to lower dimensions as in the figure below (Figure 1), however, our focus here was to use persistent homology to directly study the high-dimensional embedding. The shape of these curves has meaningful information but how one describes the “shape” of data depends on which scale the data is being considered. However, choosing the appropriate scale is rarely an obvious choice. Persistent homology overcomes this obstacle by allowing us to quantitatively study geometric features of the data across multiple-scales. Through this data expedition, students are introduced to numerically computing persistent homology using the rips collapse algorithm and interpreting the results. In the specific context of sliding-window constructions, 1-dimensional persistent homology can reveal the nature of periodic structure in the original data. I created a special technique to study how these high-dimensional sliding-window curves form loops in order to quantify the periodicity. Students are guided through this construction and learn how to visualize and interpret this information. Climate data is extremely complex (as anyone who has suffered from a bad weather prediction can attest) and numerous variables play a role in determining our daily weather and temperatures. This complexity coupled with imperfections of measuring devices results in very noisy data. This causes the annual seasonal periodicity to be far from exact. To this end, I have students explore existing theoretical notions of almost-periodicity and test it on the data. They find that some existing definitions are also inadequate in this context. Hence I challenged them to invent new mathematics by proposing and testing their own definition. These students rose to the challenge and suggested a number of creative definitions. While autocorrelation and spectral methods based on Fourier analysis are often used to explore periodicity, the construction here provides an alternative paradigm to quantify periodic structure in almost-periodic signals using tools from topological data analysis.
Resumo:
The current era of American Christianity marks the transition from a Western, white-dominated U.S. Evangelicalism to an ethnically diverse demographic for evangelicalism. Despite this increasing diversity, U.S. Evangelicalism has demonstrated a stubborn inability to address the entrenched assumption of white supremacy. The 1970s witnessed the rise in prominence of Evangelicalism in the United States. At the same time, the era witnessed a burgeoning movement of African-American evangelicals, who often experienced marginalization from the larger movement. What factors prevented the integration between two seemingly theologically compatible movements? How do these factors impact the challenge of integration and reconciliation in the changing demographic reality of early twenty-first Evangelicalism?
The question is examined through the unpacking of the diseased theological imagination rooted in U.S. Evangelicalism. The theological categories of Creation, Anthropology, Christology, Soteriology, and Ecclesiology are discussed to determine specific deficiencies that lead to assumptions of white supremacy. The larger history of U.S. Evangelicalism and the larger story of the African-American church are explored to provide a context for the unique expression of African-American evangelicalism in the last third of the twentieth century. Through the use of primary sources — personal interviews, archival documents, writings by principals, and private collection documents — the specific history of African-American evangelicals in the 1960s and 1970s is described. The stories of the National Black Evangelical Association, Tom Skinner, John Perkins, and Circle Church provide historical snapshots that illuminate the relationship between the larger U.S. Evangelical movement and African-American evangelicals.
Various attempts at integration and shared leadership were made in the 1970s as African-American evangelicals engaged with white Evangelical institutions. However, the failure of these attempts point to the challenges to diversity for U.S. Evangelicalism and the failure of the Evangelical theological imagination. The diseased theological imagination of U.S. Evangelical Christianity prevented engagement with the needed challenge of African American evangelicalism, resulting in dysfunctional racial dynamics evident in twenty-first century Evangelical Christianity. The historical problem of situating African American evangelicals reveals the theological problem of white supremacy in U.S. Evangelicalism.