3 resultados para Okinawa

em QUB Research Portal - Research Directory and Institutional Repository for Queen's University Belfast


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Introduction: The 'scaly-foot gastropod' (Chrysomallon squamiferum Chen et al., 2015) from deep-sea hydrothermal vent ecosystems of the Indian Ocean is an active mobile gastropod occurring in locally high densities, and it is distinctive for the dermal scales covering the exterior surface of its foot. These iron-sulfide coated sclerites, and its nutritional dependence on endosymbiotic bacteria, are both noted as adaptations to the extreme environment in the flow of hydrogen sulfide. We present evidence for other adaptations of the 'scaly-foot gastropod' to life in an extreme environment, investigated through dissection and 3D tomographic reconstruction of the internal anatomy.

Results: Our anatomical investigations of juvenile and adult specimens reveal a large unganglionated nervous system, a simple and reduced digestive system, and that the animal is a simultaneous hermaphrodite. We show that Chrysomallon squamiferum relies on endosymbiotic bacteria throughout post-larval life. Of particular interest is the circulatory system: Chrysomallon has a very large ctenidium supported by extensive blood sinuses filled with haemocoel. The ctenidium provides oxygen for the host but the circulatory system is enlarged beyond the scope of other similar vent gastropods. At the posterior of the ctenidium is a remarkably large and well-developed heart. Based on the volume of the auricle and ventricle, the heart complex represents approximately 4 % of the body volume. This proportionally giant heart primarily sucks blood through the ctenidium and supplies the highly vascularised oesophageal gland. Thus we infer the elaborate cardiovascular system most likely evolved to oxygenate the endosymbionts in an oxygen poor environment and/or to supply hydrogen sulfide to the endosymbionts.

Conclusions: This study exemplifies how understanding the autecology of an organism can be enhanced by detailed investigation of internal anatomy. This gastropod is a large and active species that is abundant in its hydrothermal vent field ecosystem. Yet all of its remarkable features-protective dermal sclerites, circulatory system, high fecundity-can be viewed as adaptations beneficial to its endosymbiont microbes. We interpret these results to show that, as a result of specialisation to resolve energetic needs in an extreme chemosynthetic environment, this dramatic dragon-like species has become a carrying vessel for its bacteria.

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Homomorphic encryption offers potential for secure cloud computing. However due to the complexity of homomorphic encryption schemes, performance of implemented schemes to date have been unpractical. This work investigates the use of hardware, specifically Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) technology, for implementing the building blocks involved in somewhat and fully homomorphic encryption schemes in order to assess the practicality of such schemes. We concentrate on the selection of a suitable multiplication algorithm and hardware architecture for large integer multiplication, one of the main bottlenecks in many homomorphic encryption schemes. We focus on the encryption step of an integer-based fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) scheme. We target the DSP48E1 slices available on Xilinx Virtex 7 FPGAs to ascertain whether the large integer multiplier within the encryption step of a FHE scheme could fit on a single FPGA device. We find that, for toy size parameters for the FHE encryption step, the large integer multiplier fits comfortably within the DSP48E1 slices, greatly improving the practicality of the encryption step compared to a software implementation. As multiplication is an important operation in other FHE schemes, a hardware implementation using this multiplier could also be used to improve performance of these schemes.