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1.
Environ Sci Technol ; 2024 Feb 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38314689

RESUMEN

Most jurisdictions around the globe use leak detection and repair (LDAR) programs to find and fix methane leaks from oil and gas operations. In this work, we empirically evaluate the efficacy of LDAR programs using a large-scale, bottom-up, randomized controlled field experiment across ∼200 oil and gas sites in Red Deer, Canada. We find that tanks are the single largest source of emissions, contributing to nearly 60% of the total emissions. The average number of leaks at treatment sites that underwent repair reduced by ∼50% compared to the control sites. Although control sites did not see a reduction in the number of leaks, emissions reduced by approximately 36%, suggesting potential impact of routine maintenance activities to find and fix large leaks. By tracking tags on leaking equipment over time, we find a high degree of persistence; leaks that are repaired remain fixed in follow-up surveys, while non-repaired leaks remain emitting at a similar rate, suggesting that any increase in observed leak emissions following LDAR surveys are likely from new leaks. Our results show that a focus on equipment and sites that are prone to high emissions, such as tanks and oil sites, is key to cost-effective mitigation.

2.
Brain Commun ; 5(6): fcad283, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38425576

RESUMEN

Voltage-gated sodium channel ß1 subunits are essential proteins that regulate excitability. They modulate sodium and potassium currents, function as cell adhesion molecules and regulate gene transcription following regulated intramembrane proteolysis. Biallelic pathogenic variants in SCN1B, encoding ß1, are linked to developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 52, with clinical features overlapping Dravet syndrome. A recessive variant, SCN1B-c.265C>T, predicting SCN1B-p.R89C, was homozygous in two children of a non-consanguineous family. One child was diagnosed with Dravet syndrome, while the other had a milder phenotype. We identified an unrelated biallelic SCN1B-c.265C>T patient with a clinically more severe phenotype than Dravet syndrome. We used CRISPR/Cas9 to knock-in SCN1B-p.R89C to the mouse Scn1b locus (Scn1bR89/C89). We then rederived the line on the C57BL/6J background to allow comparisons between Scn1bR89/R89 and Scn1bC89/C89 littermates with Scn1b+/+ and Scn1b-/- mice, which are congenic on C57BL/6J, to determine whether the SCN1B-c.265C>T variant results in loss-of-function. Scn1bC89/C89 mice have normal body weights and ∼20% premature mortality, compared with severely reduced body weight and 100% mortality in Scn1b-/- mice. ß1-p.R89C polypeptides are expressed in brain at comparable levels to wild type. In heterologous cells, ß1-p.R89C localizes to the plasma membrane and undergoes regulated intramembrane proteolysis similar to wild type. Heterologous expression of ß1-p.R89C results in sodium channel α subunit subtype specific effects on sodium current. mRNA abundance of Scn2a, Scn3a, Scn5a and Scn1b was increased in Scn1bC89/C89 somatosensory cortex, with no changes in Scn1a. In contrast, Scn1b-/- mouse somatosensory cortex is haploinsufficient for Scn1a, suggesting an additive mechanism for the severity of the null model via disrupted regulation of another Dravet syndrome gene. Scn1bC89/C89 mice are more susceptible to hyperthermia-induced seizures at post-natal Day 15 compared with Scn1bR89/R89 littermates. EEG recordings detected epileptic discharges in young adult Scn1bC89/C89 mice that coincided with convulsive seizures and myoclonic jerks. We compared seizure frequency and duration in a subset of adult Scn1bC89/C89 mice that had been exposed to hyperthermia at post-natal Day 15 versus a subset that were not hyperthermia exposed. No differences in spontaneous seizures were detected between groups. For both groups, the spontaneous seizure pattern was diurnal, occurring with higher frequency during the dark cycle. This work suggests that the SCN1B-c.265C>T variant does not result in complete loss-of-function. Scn1bC89/C89 mice more accurately model SCN1B-linked variants with incomplete loss-of-function compared with Scn1b-/- mice, which model complete loss-of-function, and thus add to our understanding of disease mechanisms as well as our ability to develop new therapeutic strategies.

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