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1.
Biol Lett ; 19(11): 20230253, 2023 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37935370

ABSTRACT

Animals frequently make adaptive decisions about what to prioritize when faced with multiple, competing demands simultaneously. However, the proximate mechanisms of decision-making in the face of competing demands are not well understood. We explored this question using brain transcriptomics in a classic model system: threespined sticklebacks, where males face conflict between courtship and territorial defence. We characterized the behaviour and brain gene expression profiles of males confronted by a trade-off between courtship and territorial defence by comparing them to males not confronted by this trade-off. When faced with the trade-off, males behaviourally prioritized defence over courtship, and this decision was reflected in their brain gene expression profiles. A distinct set of genes and biological processes was recruited in the brain when males faced a trade-off and these responses were largely non-overlapping across two brain regions. Combined, these results raise new questions about the interplay between the neural and molecular mechanisms involved in decision-making.


Subject(s)
Smegmamorpha , Animals , Male , Smegmamorpha/genetics , Territoriality , Gene Expression Profiling
2.
Animal ; 16(7): 100544, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35777298

ABSTRACT

Resilience can be defined as the ability of an animal to remain productive in the face of diverse environmental challenges. Several factors contribute to an animal's resilience including its ability to resist disease, cope with climatic extremes and respond to stressors. Immune competence, a proxy trait for general disease resistance, is expected to contribute to an animal's resilience. This research aimed to develop a practical method to assess immune competence in Merino sheep which would not restrict the future sale of tested animals, and to estimate genetic parameters associated with the novel trait. We also aimed to explore associations between immune competence and other industry-relevant disease resistance and fitness-related traits and to assess the ability of immune competence phenotypes to predict health outcomes. Here, the ability of Merino wethers (n = 1 339) to mount both an antibody-mediated and cell-mediated immune response was used to define their immune competence phenotype. For that purpose, antigens in a commercial vaccine were administered at the commencement of weaning and their responses were assessed. Univariate sire models were used to estimate variance components and heritabilities for immune competence and its component traits. Bivariate sire models were used to estimate genetic correlations between immune competence and a range of disease resistance and fitness-related traits. The heritability of immune competence and its component traits, antibody-mediated immune response and cell-mediated immune response were estimated at 0.49 ±â€¯0.14, 0.52 ±â€¯0.14 and 0.36 ±â€¯0.11, respectively. Immune competence was favourably genetically correlated with breech flystrike incidence (-0.44 ±â€¯0.39), worm egg count (-0.19 ±â€¯0.23), dag score (-0.26 ±â€¯0.31) and fitness compromise (-0.35 ±â€¯0.24) but not fleece rot (0.17 ±â€¯0.23). Results suggest that selection for immune competence has the potential to improve the resilience of Merino sheep; however, due to the large standard errors associated with correlation estimates reported here, further studies will be required in larger populations to validate associations between immune competence and disease resistance and fitness traits in Australian Merino sheep.


Subject(s)
Disease Resistance , Animals , Australia , Phenotype , Weaning
3.
J Mater Chem A Mater ; 6(13): 5443-5451, 2018 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29682289

ABSTRACT

In situ Raman spectroscopy shows the simultaneous incorporation of small amounts of Bi3+ and Yb3+ into the lattice of BaTiO3 to break the average symmetry inferred from X-ray powder diffraction analysis and permittivity measurements. In particular, Bi3+ with a stereochemically active lone-pair of electrons induces severe lattice strain and the coexistence of different local crystal symmetries over a wide temperature range, effectively controlling the physical properties, such as the temperature dependence of the permittivity and the Curie temperature. These results show that compositional gradients based in small variations of these two dopants could successfully explain the enhanced thermal stability of the permittivity in core-shell type ceramics, whereas the lower capacitance of the shell can also cap the maximum permittivity at the Curie temperature.

4.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 30(10): 105704, 2018 03 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29451867

ABSTRACT

Lanthanide orthoferrites have wide-ranging industrial uses including solar, catalytic and electronic applications. Here a series of lanthanide orthoferrite perovskites, LnFeO3 (Ln = La; Nd; Sm; Eu; Gd), prepared through a standard stoichiometric wet ball milling route using oxide precursors, has been studied. Characterisation through x-ray diffraction and x-ray fluorescence confirmed the synthesis of phase-pure or near-pure LnFeO3 compounds. 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy was performed over a temperature range of 10 K-293 K to observe hyperfine structure and to enable calculation of the recoil-free fraction and Debye temperature (θ D) of each orthoferrite. Debye temperatures (Ln = La 474 K; Nd 459 K; Sm 457 K; Eu 452 K; Gd 473 K) and recoil-free fractions (Ln = La 0.827; Nd 0.817; Sm 0.816; Eu 0.812; Gd 0.826) were approximated through minimising the difference in the temperature dependent experimental centre shift and theoretical isomer shift, by allowing the Debye temperature and isomer shift values to vary. This method of minimising the difference between theoretical and actual values yields Debye temperatures consistent with results from other studies determined through thermal analysis methods. This displays the ability of variable-temperature Mössbauer spectroscopy to approximate Debye temperatures and recoil-free fractions, whilst observing temperature induced transitions over the temperature range observed. X-ray diffraction and Rietveld refinement show an inverse relationship between FeO6 octahedral volume and approximated Debye temperatures. Raman spectroscopy show an increase in the band positions attributed to soft modes of Ag symmetry, Ag(3) and Ag(5) from La to GdFeO3 corresponding to octahedral rotations and tilts in the [0 1 0] and [1 0 1] planes respectively.

5.
J Fish Biol ; 90(1): 443-450, 2017 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27766651

ABSTRACT

A method for quantifying consistent individual differences in schooling behaviour is presented. This method, which utilizes a school of models, improves on previous methods by removing the unwanted variation that is introduced by live stimulus fish while still providing the physiological experience of schooling to the focal fish. Three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus observed in the model school assay exhibited consistent individual differences in schooling behaviour.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Smegmamorpha/physiology , Social Behavior , Animals , Models, Biological
6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 113(21): 217203, 2014 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25479519

ABSTRACT

SmFeO3 has attracted considerable attention very recently due to its reported multiferroic properties above room temperature. We have performed powder and single crystal neutron diffraction as well as complementary polarization dependent soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements on floating-zone grown SmFeO3 single crystals in order to determine its magnetic structure. We found a k=0 G-type collinear antiferromagnetic structure that is not compatible with inverse Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction driven ferroelectricity. While the structural data reveal a clear sign for magneto-elastic coupling at the Néel-temperature of ∼675 K, the dielectric measurements remain silent as far as ferroelectricity is concerned.

7.
Psychol Med ; 44(12): 2579-92, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25055175

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The US Army suicide rate has increased sharply in recent years. Identifying significant predictors of Army suicides in Army and Department of Defense (DoD) administrative records might help focus prevention efforts and guide intervention content. Previous studies of administrative data, although documenting significant predictors, were based on limited samples and models. A career history perspective is used here to develop more textured models. METHOD: The analysis was carried out as part of the Historical Administrative Data Study (HADS) of the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS). De-identified data were combined across numerous Army and DoD administrative data systems for all Regular Army soldiers on active duty in 2004-2009. Multivariate associations of sociodemographics and Army career variables with suicide were examined in subgroups defined by time in service, rank and deployment history. RESULTS: Several novel results were found that could have intervention implications. The most notable of these were significantly elevated suicide rates (69.6-80.0 suicides per 100 000 person-years compared with 18.5 suicides per 100 000 person-years in the total Army) among enlisted soldiers deployed either during their first year of service or with less than expected (based on time in service) junior enlisted rank; a substantially greater rise in suicide among women than men during deployment; and a protective effect of marriage against suicide only during deployment. CONCLUSIONS: A career history approach produces several actionable insights missed in less textured analyses of administrative data predictors. Expansion of analyses to a richer set of predictors might help refine understanding of intervention implications.


Subject(s)
Military Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Mortality , Suicide/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mortality/trends , Risk Factors , Suicide/trends , United States/epidemiology , Young Adult
8.
J Evol Biol ; 24(5): 943-53, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21375647

ABSTRACT

Predation has an important influence on life history traits in many organisms, especially when they are young. When cues of trout were present, juvenile sticklebacks grew faster. The increase in body size as a result of exposure to cues of predators was adaptive because larger individuals were more likely to survive predation. However, sticklebacks that had been exposed to cues of predators were smaller at adulthood. This result is consistent with some life history theory. However, these results prompt an alternative hypothesis, which is that the decreased size at adulthood reflects a deferred cost of early rapid growth. Compared to males, females were more likely to survive predation, but female size at adulthood was more affected by cues of predators than male size at adulthood, suggesting that size at adulthood might be more important to male fitness than to female fitness.


Subject(s)
Body Size , Predatory Behavior , Smegmamorpha/growth & development , Animals , Female , Male , Sex Characteristics , Trout
9.
Acta Crystallogr B ; 66(Pt 1): 51-9, 2010 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20101083

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of a hydrothermally synthesized leucite analogue Cs(2)CuSi(5)O(12) has been determined and refined using the Rietveld method from high-resolution synchrotron X-ray and neutron powder diffraction data. This structure is based on the topology and cation-ordering scheme of the Pbca leucite structure of Cs(2)CdSi(5)O(12), and exhibits five ordered Si sites and one ordered Cu tetrahedrally coordinated (T) site. This structure for Cs(2)CuSi(5)O(12) is topologically identical to other known leucite structures and is different from that originally proposed by Heinrich & Baerlocher [(1991), Acta Cryst. C47, 237-241] in the tetragonal space group P4(1)2(1)2. The crystal structure of a dry-synthesized leucite analogue Cs(2)CuSi(5)O(12) has also been refined; this has the Ia3d cubic pollucite structure with disordered T sites.

10.
Acta Crystallogr B ; 65(Pt 4): 435-44, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19617678

ABSTRACT

The crystal structures of the leucite analogues Cs(2)MgSi(5)O(12), Cs(2)ZnSi(5)O(12) and Rb(2)MgSi(5)O(12) have been determined by synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction using Rietveld refinement in conjunction with (29)Si MAS NMR spectroscopy. These leucites are framework structures with distinct tetrahedral sites (T sites) occupied by Si and a divalent cation (either Mg or Zn in these samples); there is also a monovalent extra-framework cation (either Cs or Rb in these samples). The refined crystal structures were based on the Pbca leucite structure of Cs(2)CdSi(5)O(12), thus a framework with five ordered Si T sites and one ordered Cd T site was used as the starting model for refinement. (29)Si MAS NMR shows five distinct Si T sites for Cs(2)MgSi(5)O(12) and Rb(2)MgSi(5)O(12), but six Si T sites for Cs(2)ZnSi(5)O(12). The refined structures for Cs(2)MgSi(5)O(12) and Rb(2)MgSi(5)O(12) were determined with complete T-site ordering, but the refined structure for Cs(2)ZnSi(5)O(12) was determined with partial disorder of Mg and Si over two of the T sites.

11.
J Clin Apher ; 22(1): 15-6, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17111419

ABSTRACT

We report a case of severe citrate toxicity during volunteer donor apheresis platelet collection. The donor was a 40-year-old female, first-time apheresis platelet donor. Past medical history was remarkable for hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and depression. Reported medications included bumetanide, pravastatin, and paroxetine. Thirty minutes from the start of the procedure, the donor noted tingling around the mouth, hands, and feet. She then very rapidly developed acute onset of severe facial and extremity tetany. Empirical treatment with intravenous calcium gluconate was initiated, and muscle contractions slowly subsided over approximately 10 to 15 minutes. The events are consistent with a severe reaction to calcium chelation by sodium citrate anticoagulant resulting in symptomatic systemic hypocalcemia. Upon additional retrospective analysis, it was noted that bumetanide is a loop diuretic that may cause significant hypocalcemia. We conclude that careful screening for medications and underlying conditions predisposing to hypocalcemia is recommended to help prevent severe reactions due to citrate toxicity. Laboratory measurement of pre-procedure serum calcium levels in selected donors may identify cases requiring heightened vigilance. The case also illustrates the importance of maintaining preparedness for managing rare but serious reactions in volunteer apheresis blood donors.


Subject(s)
Blood Donors , Citric Acid/toxicity , Hypocalcemia/chemically induced , Plateletpheresis/adverse effects , Adult , Bumetanide/adverse effects , Female , Humans , Hypertension/drug therapy , Tetany/chemically induced , Tetany/drug therapy
12.
Int Endod J ; 38(4): 230-7, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15810973

ABSTRACT

AIM: To investigate ex vivo the fracture resistance and failure mode of direct resin composite complete crowns with and without various root canal posts made on maxillary premolars. METHODOLOGY: The clinical crowns of 40 human extracted single-rooted maxillary premolars were sectioned at the cemento-enamel junction. The canals were prepared with Gates Glidden drills up to size 4. Thirty samples were provided with standardized post spaces in the palatal canal and all roots were embedded in acrylic. Minimal standardized preparations in the canal entrances were made. Groups of 10 samples were treated with (i) prefabricated metal posts, (ii) prefabricated glass fibre posts, (iii) custom-made glass fibre posts, and (iv) no posts (control). Posts were cemented with resin cement and resin composite complete crowns were made. All specimens were thermocycled (6000x, 5-55 degrees C). Static load until fracture was applied using a universal loading device (crosshead speed 5 mm min(-1)) at a loading angle of 30 degrees . Failure modes were categorized as favourable and unfavourable failures. RESULTS: No significant difference was observed between the mean failure loads (group 1: 1386 N, group 2: 1276 N, group 3: 1281 N, and group 4: 1717 N, P > 0.05), nor between frequencies of failure modes (P > 0.05). All failures were fractures of the resin composite crown in combination with tooth material (cohesive failures). CONCLUSIONS: Within the limits of this laboratory investigation it is concluded that severely damaged and root filled maxillary premolars, restored with direct resin composite complete crowns without posts have similar fracture resistances and failure modes compared to those with various posts, which suggest that posts are not necessarily required.


Subject(s)
Composite Resins , Crowns , Dental Restoration Failure , Post and Core Technique , Bicuspid , Chi-Square Distribution , Dental Stress Analysis , Glass , Humans , Materials Testing , Maxilla , Metals , Tooth, Nonvital
13.
J Evol Biol ; 18(2): 464-73, 2005 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15715852

ABSTRACT

Behavioural syndromes are correlations between behaviours in different functional contexts. Behavioural syndromes are attracting the attention of evolutionary biologists because they mean that different behaviours might not be free to evolve independently of one another. In a landmark study, Huntingford (1976) showed that individual stickleback which were bold toward predators were also aggressive toward conspecifics and active in an unfamiliar environment. Here, I revisited the activity-aggression-boldness syndrome in stickleback and tested the hypothesis that correlations between behaviours might act as evolutionary constraints. I measured a suite of behaviours on wild-caught individuals and their offspring from two different populations and calculated heritabilities and genetic correlations between the different behaviours. I found that these behaviours were phenotypically and genetically correlated in one population but not another. On average, boldness and aggression were negatively related to each other across the populations. These results suggest that behavioural syndromes don't always act as evolutionary constraints.


Subject(s)
Aggression/physiology , Biological Evolution , Environment , Motor Activity/physiology , Quantitative Trait, Heritable , Smegmamorpha/physiology , Animals , Body Weights and Measures , California , Fresh Water , Observation , Principal Component Analysis
14.
J Small Anim Pract ; 43(5): 213-6, 2002 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12038854

ABSTRACT

A two-year-old cat was involved in a road traffic accident. Survey abdominal radiographs and urinary function were considered unremarkable. Six weeks later the cat presented with a palpable dorsal abdominal mass. Radiography revealed a soft tissue opacity mass caudal to the right kidney. Ultrasonography revealed a cyst-like structure with moderately echogenic contents, and right-sided hydronephrosis. There was no excretion of contrast medium from the right kidney after intravenous urography. Surgery revealed a disrupted right ureter adherent to the retroperitoneal mass. The mass contained serosanguineous fluid consistent with extravasated urine. Ureteronephrectomy was performed. The majority of the mass was excised and the cavity ablated. Histopathology of the excised tissue revealed a thick fibrous wall with no epithelial lining, consistent with a urinoma, which is thought to have developed as a consequence of ureteral trauma. The cat was clinically well three months postoperatively.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases/pathology , Cysts/veterinary , Nephrectomy/veterinary , Ureter/injuries , Ureteral Diseases/veterinary , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/veterinary , Animals , Cat Diseases/etiology , Cats , Cysts/etiology , Cysts/surgery , Female , Ureter/surgery , Ureteral Diseases/etiology , Ureteral Diseases/surgery , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/complications
15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 123(31): 7610-5, 2001 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11480982

ABSTRACT

It is shown by magnetometry and microSR spectroscopy that short-range magnetic interactions between the Mn cations in the nonmetallic K(2)NiF(4)-like phase La(0.8)Sr(1.2)Mn(0.6)Rh(0.4)O(4) become significant below approximately 200 K. Negative magnetoresistance (rho/rho(0) approximately 0.5 in 14 T at 108 K) is apparent below this temperature. Neutron diffraction has shown that an applied magnetic field of 5 T is sufficient to induce saturated (3.38(7)mu(B) per Mn) long-range ferromagnetic ordering of the atomic moments at 2 K, and that the induced ordering persists up to a temperature of 50 K in 5 T. Spin glass behavior is observed below 20 K in the absence of an applied field. The induced magnetic ordering is attributed to the subtle changes in band structure brought about by the external field, and to the controlling influence of Rh(3+) over the relative strength of competing magnetic exchange interactions.

16.
Cell ; 103(3): 525-35, 2000 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11081638

ABSTRACT

The detection of osmotic stimuli is essential for all organisms, yet few osmoreceptive proteins are known, none of them in vertebrates. By employing a candidate-gene approach based on genes encoding members of the TRP superfamily of ion channels, we cloned cDNAs encoding the vanilloid receptor-related osmotically activated channel (VR-OAC) from the rat, mouse, human, and chicken. This novel cation-selective channel is gated by exposure to hypotonicity within the physiological range. In the central nervous system, the channel is expressed in neurons of the circumventricular organs, neurosensory cells responsive to systemic osmotic pressure. The channel also occurs in other neurosensory cells, including inner-ear hair cells, sensory neurons, and Merkel cells.


Subject(s)
Ion Channel Gating , Osmotic Pressure , Receptors, Drug/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Ankyrin Repeat/genetics , Ankyrin Repeat/physiology , Brain/cytology , Brain/metabolism , Brain/physiology , CHO Cells , Calcium Signaling , Cations/metabolism , Chickens/genetics , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 12/genetics , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17/genetics , Cloning, Molecular , Cricetinae , Electrophysiology , Gene Expression Profiling , Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner/chemistry , Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner/metabolism , Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner/physiology , Humans , Hypotonic Solutions , In Situ Hybridization , Merkel Cells/chemistry , Merkel Cells/metabolism , Mice , Molecular Sequence Data , Neurons, Afferent/chemistry , Neurons, Afferent/metabolism , Neurons, Afferent/physiology , Osmolar Concentration , Phylogeny , RNA, Messenger/analysis , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Radiation Hybrid Mapping , Rats , Receptors, Drug/chemistry , Receptors, Drug/genetics , Sequence Alignment
17.
Genomics ; 66(3): 242-8, 2000 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10873378

ABSTRACT

We have identified a novel cochlear gene, designated OTOR, from a comparative sequence analysis of over 4000 clones from a human fetal cochlear cDNA library. Northern blot analysis of human and chicken organs shows strong OTOR expression only in the cochlea; very low levels are detected in the chicken eye and spinal cord. Otor and Col2A1 are coexpressed in the cartilaginous plates of the neural and abneural limbs of the chicken cochlea, structures analogous to the mammalian spiral limbus, osseous spiral lamina, and spiral ligament, and not in any other tissues in head and body sections. The human OTOR gene localizes to chromosome 20 in bands p11.23-p12.1 and more precisely to STS marker WI-16380. We have isolated cDNAs orthologous to human OTOR in the mouse, chicken, and bullfrog. The encoded protein, designated otoraplin, has a predicted secretion signal peptide sequence and shows a high degree of cross-species conservation. Otoraplin is homologous to the protein encoded by CDRAP/MIA (cartilage-derived retinoic acid sensitive protein/melanoma inhibitory activity), which is expressed predominantly by chondrocytes, functions in cartilage development and maintenance, and has growth-inhibitory activity in melanoma cell lines.


Subject(s)
Cochlea/metabolism , Conserved Sequence/genetics , Physical Chromosome Mapping , Proteins/genetics , Animals , Blotting, Northern , Chickens , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 20/genetics , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Expressed Sequence Tags , Extracellular Matrix Proteins , Gene Expression , Humans , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Mice , Molecular Sequence Data , Neoplasm Proteins , Organ Specificity , Protein Biosynthesis , Protein Sorting Signals/genetics , RNA, Messenger/biosynthesis , Rana catesbeiana , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 97(9): 4908-13, 2000 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10758152

ABSTRACT

Extensive biochemical characterization of cells in the inner ear has been hampered by a lack of tools with which to identify inner-ear proteins. By using a single-chain antibody fragment isolated from a bacteriophage-displayed library, we have identified a cytokeratin that is abundant in nonsensory cells of the frog inner ear. Although the progenitors of hair cells exhibit strong immunoreactivity to this cytokeratin, the signal declines in immature hair cells and vanishes as the cells mature. The correlation between diminished immunoreactivity and hair-cell differentiation indicates that the cytokeratin is down-regulated during the transition from a nonsensory to a sensory cell and suggests that the marker is an early index of hair-cell differentiation.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Ear, Inner/cytology , Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner/cytology , Keratins/analysis , Keratins/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Antibodies , Base Sequence , Biomarkers/analysis , Ear, Inner/physiology , Epitopes/analysis , Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner/physiology , Keratins/chemistry , Microscopy, Confocal , Molecular Sequence Data , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides , Organ Specificity , Peptide Library , Rana catesbeiana , Recombinant Proteins , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
19.
Hum Mol Genet ; 7(2): 285-90, 1998 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9425236

ABSTRACT

Among white adults otosclerosis is the single most common cause of hearing impairment. Although the genetics of this disease are controversial, the majority of studies indicate autosomal dominant inheritance with reduced penetrance. We studied a large multi-generational family in which otosclerosis has been inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern. Five of16 affected persons have surgically confirmed otosclerosis; the remaining nine have a conductive hearing loss but have not undergone corrective surgery. To locate the disease-causing gene we completed genetic linkage analysis using short tandem repeat polymorphisms (STRPs) distributed over the entire genome. Multipoint linkage analysis showed that only one genomic region, on chromosome 15q, generated a lod score >2.0. Additional STRPs were typed in this area, resulting in a lod score of 3.4. STRPs FES (centromeric) and D15S657 (telomeric) flank the 14. 5 cM region that contains an otosclerosis gene.


Subject(s)
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 15/genetics , Genes, Dominant , Otosclerosis/genetics , Adult , Chromosome Mapping , Female , Genetic Linkage , Haplotypes/genetics , Hearing Loss, Conductive/genetics , Humans , Male , Pedigree , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid
20.
Med J Aust ; 166(4): 197-9, 1997 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9066549

ABSTRACT

Two simultaneous human cases of fatal melioidosis in temperate south-eastern Queensland involved patients who had had pre-existing multisystem illnesses, had sustained cutaneous lesions before illness onset, and died from overwhelming sepsis. Onset of disease was preceded by unseasonably heavy rainfall. These and other features of these cases suggest that the source of infection was local, in which case the endemicity of Burkholderia pseudomallei in temperate regional Australia may be broader than is currently recognised, and melioidosis may need to be considered in at-risk patients in these areas, as well as in tropical and subtropical areas, who present with severe pneumonia and septicaemia.


Subject(s)
Bacteremia/microbiology , Melioidosis/microbiology , Pneumonia, Bacterial/microbiology , Acute Disease , Adult , Aged , Fatal Outcome , Humans , Male , Queensland , Rain , Risk Factors , Seasons , Soil Microbiology , Water Microbiology
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