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  • Dodson Sharp posted an update 1 week, 3 days ago

    Then, we identified the potential KIAA1429 regulating gene as c-Jun by mRNAs high-throughput sequencing and RIP assay. By luciferase assay, we verified that KIAA1429 regulated the expression of c-Jun in an m6A-independent manner. Finally, the overexpression of c-Jun rescued the inhibition of proliferation caused by KIAA1429 knockdown in gastric cancer cells. KIAA1429 could act as an oncogene in gastric cancer by stabilizing c-Jun mRNA in an m6A-independent manner. This highlights the functional role for KIAA1429 as a potential prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target in gastric cancer. © 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs) persist in the mammalian subventricular zone throughout life, where they can be activated in response to physiological and pathophysiological stimuli. A recent study indicates metabotropic glutamate receptor 4 (mGluR4) is involved in regulating NSPCs behaviors. Therefore, defining mGluR4 function in NSPCs is necessary for determining novel strategies to enhance the intrinsic potential for brain regeneration after injuries. In this study, mGluR4 was functionally expressed in SVZ-derived NSPCs from male Sprague-Dawley rats, in which the cyclic adenosine monophosphate concentration was reduced after treatment with the mGluR4-specific agonist VU0155041. Additionally, lateral ventricle injection of VU0155041 significantly decreased 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine (BrdU)+ and Ki67+ cells, while increased Doublecortin (DCX)/BrdU double-positive cells in SVZ. In cultured NSPCs, mGluR4 activation decreased the ratio of BrdU+ cells, G2/M-phase cells, and inhibited Cyclin D1 expression, whereas it increased neuron-specific class III β-tubulin (Tuj1) expression and the number of Tuj1, DCX, and PSA-NCAM-positive cells. However, pharmacological blocking mGluR4 with the antagonist MSOP or knockdown of mGluR4 abolished the effects of VU0155041 on NSPCs proliferation and neuronal differentiation. Further investigation demonstrated that VU0155041 treatment down-regulated AKT phosphorylation and up-regulated expression of the phosphatase and tensin homolog protein (PTEN) in NSPCs culture. Moreover VU0155041-induced proliferating inhibition and neuronal differentiating amplification in NSPCs were significantly hampered by VO-OHpic, a PTEN inhibitor. We conclude that activation of mGluR4 in SVZ-derived NSPCs suppresses proliferation and enhances their neuronal differentiation, and regulation of PTEN may be involved as a potential intracellular target of mGluR4 signal. © 2020 International Society for Neurochemistry.Environmentally transmitted parasites spend time in the abiotic environment, where they are subjected to a variety of stressors. Learning how they face this challenge is essential if we are to understand how host-parasite interactions may vary across environmental gradients. We used a zooplankton-bacteria host-parasite system where availability of sunlight (solar radiation) influences disease dynamics to look for evidence of parasite local adaptation to sunlight exposure. We also examined how variation in sunlight tolerance among parasite strains impacted host reproduction. Parasite strains collected from clearer lakes (with greater sunlight penetration) were most tolerant of the negative impacts of sunlight exposure, suggesting local adaptation to sunlight conditions. This adaptation came with both a cost and a benefit for parasites parasite strains from clearer lakes produced relatively fewer transmission stages (spores) but these strains were more infective. After experimental sunlight exposure, the most sunlight-tolerant parasite strains reduced host fecundity just as much as spores that were never exposed to sunlight. Sunlight availability varies greatly among lakes around the world. Our results suggest that the selective pressure sunlight exposure exerts on parasites may impact both parasite and host fitness, potentially driving variation in disease epidemics and host population dynamics across sunlight availability gradients. © 2020 The Authors. Evolution © 2020 The Society for the Study of Evolution.In this study, effects of different concentrations of riboflavin (0, 0.02, and 0.1 μmol/g protein) on myofibrillar protein (MP, Scomberomorus niphonius) gel were characterized. The gel structure and properties were studied with or without Ultraviolet A (UVA) irradiation. Electron spin resonance results showed that riboflavin produced ·OH under UVA irradiation, which subsequently oxidized the MP. Compared with the control group, the addition of riboflavin with UVA irradiation increased the strength of the MP gel. The rheological results showed that under UVA irradiation, addition of riboflavin facilitated the sol-gel transition between 45 and 52°C, indicating that oxidation led to significant structural changes which in turn resulted in a more compact and uniform gel network. The presence of riboflavin led to increased carbonyl content and decreased sulfhydryl and free amino groups, which decreased the protein solubility and promoted alpha-helical conformational loss in the secondary structure of the MP. These results all indicated that the MP has been oxidized. Electrophoresis revealed that myosin heavy chains were aggregated in the UVA-treated riboflavin-added MP gel, indicating that protein cross-linking has been induced. All the results indicated that the ·OH produced by riboflavin under UVA irradiation oxidized the MP, and improved protein crosslinking and gel properties. © 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.PREMISE Plant flowering time plays an important role in plant fitness and thus evolutionary processes. Soil microbial communities are diverse and have a large impact, both positive and negative, on the host plant. However, owing to few available studies, how the soil microbial community may influence the evolutionary response of plant populations is not well understood. Here we sought to uncover whether belowground microbial communities act as an agent of selection on flowering and growth traits in the common morning glory, Ipomoea purpurea. METHODS We performed a controlled greenhouse experiment in which genetic lines of I. purpurea were planted into either sterilized soils or in soils that were sterilized and inoculated with the microbial community from original field soil. We could thus directly test the influence of alterations to the microbial community on plant growth, flowering, and fitness and assess patterns of selection in both soil microbial environments. RESULTS A more complex soil microbial community resulted in larger plants that produced more flowers. Selection strongly favored earlier flowering when plants were grown in the complex microbial environment than compared to sterilized soil. We also uncovered a pattern of negative correlational selection on growth rate and flowering time, indicating that selection favored different combinations of growth and flowering traits in the simplified versus complex soil community. CONCLUSIONS Together, these results suggest the soil microbial community is a selective agent on flowering time and ultimately that soil microbial community influences important plant evolutionary processes. © 2020 The Authors. American Journal of Botany published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Botanical Society of America.After their successful introduction during the 2007-2009 financial crisis, central bank stress tests were adopted as a fixture of international banking supervision. However, in recent years a new normal has emerged where banks are expected to pass the tests, raising questions about the tests’ usefulness and legitimacy. Combining a dramaturgical interpretation of regulatory science with the idea of performativity in the sociology of finance, this article understands stress tests as a sociotechnical Goffmanian performance. With a focus on the Bank of England’s program, the paper argues that the Bank’s decision to make their tests “predictable” is an attempt to shore up central bank legitimacy by constraining regulatory discretion. This is accomplished through the use of calculative and procedural stage management techniques which allow the Bank to control the contingency of the testing process while demonstrating its objectivity. Nevertheless, the conclusion suggests that in the context of low levels of trust in central banks, routine declarations of “all clear” may undermine public confidence in the tests’ credibility and necessity. The study draws on 20 interviews with high-level regulators, financial practitioners and other stakeholders in the Bank of England’s stress tests. © 2020 London School of Economics and Political Science.AIM To describe the cognitive development of children with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) and plexiform neurofibromas, and identify predictors of cognitive development. METHOD Participants included 88 children with NF1 and plexiform neurofibromas (50 males, 38 females, aged 6-18y, mean=12y, SD=3y 7mo) on a natural history study at the National Cancer Institute. Neuropsychological assessments (e.g. IQ, academic achievement, attention, and executive functioning) were administered three times over 6 years. RESULTS Relative to normative peers, the total sample of children with NF1 and plexiform neurofibromas demonstrated significantly lower scores in most cognitive domains and decreasing z-scores over time in math, writing, inhibitory control, and working memory. Children who had parents with (vs without) NF1 were more likely to experience decreased z-scores in performance IQ, reading, writing, attention, and working memory. Higher (vs lower) parental education was related to higher levels of IQ, math, reading, and cognitive flexibility and a slower decrease in math z-scores. Children’s sex and the number of NF1 disease-related complications were not related to most cognitive outcomes. INTERPRETATION Children with NF1 and plexiform neurofibromas are at high risk for cognitive difficulties and declining z-scores in various domains of cognitive functioning over time. The findings highlight the need for a better understanding of the within-group differences in these children and their need for individualized educational plans. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS Math, writing, inhibitory control, and working memory scores decreased over time. The proportion of children with clinically significant cognitive deficits increased over time. Parental neurofibromatosis type 1 and low education were related to greater cognitive difficulties in children. Published 2020. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.PREMISE Spiny pollen has evolved independently in multiple entomophilous lineages. Sexual selection may act on exine traits that facilitate male mating success by influencing the transfer of pollen from the anther to the body of the pollinator, while natural selection acts to increase pollen survival. We postulated that relative to sexual congeners, apomictic dandelions undergo relaxed selection on traits associated with male mating success. METHODS We explored sexual selection on exine traits by measuring the propensity for Taraxacum spp. pollen to attach to hairs of flower-visiting bumblebees (Bombus spp.) or flies (Diptera Syrphidae and Muscoidea) and assessed natural selection by testing whether pollen traits defend against consumption. Heptadecanoic acid nmr RESULTS Pollen picked up by bumblebees exhibited a narrower subset of spine-spacing phenotypes, consistent with stabilizing selection. Flies picked up larger pollen from flowers than expected at random. Surveys of corbiculae (pollen basket) contents from foraging bumblebees and feces of flies showed that pollen grains consumed by both kinds of visitors are similar in spine characteristics and size to those produced by the donor.