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1.
Cell ; 2024 Sep 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39276776

RESUMEN

A comprehensive understanding of physio-pathological processes necessitates non-invasive intravital three-dimensional (3D) imaging over varying spatial and temporal scales. However, huge data throughput, optical heterogeneity, surface irregularity, and phototoxicity pose great challenges, leading to an inevitable trade-off between volume size, resolution, speed, sample health, and system complexity. Here, we introduce a compact real-time, ultra-large-scale, high-resolution 3D mesoscope (RUSH3D), achieving uniform resolutions of 2.6 × 2.6 × 6 µm3 across a volume of 8,000 × 6,000 × 400 µm3 at 20 Hz with low phototoxicity. Through the integration of multiple computational imaging techniques, RUSH3D facilitates a 13-fold improvement in data throughput and an orders-of-magnitude reduction in system size and cost. With these advantages, we observed premovement neural activity and cross-day visual representational drift across the mouse cortex, the formation and progression of multiple germinal centers in mouse inguinal lymph nodes, and heterogeneous immune responses following traumatic brain injury-all at single-cell resolution, opening up a horizon for intravital mesoscale study of large-scale intercellular interactions at the organ level.

2.
Cell ; 181(2): 362-381.e28, 2020 04 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32220312

RESUMEN

During human evolution, the knee adapted to the biomechanical demands of bipedalism by altering chondrocyte developmental programs. This adaptive process was likely not without deleterious consequences to health. Today, osteoarthritis occurs in 250 million people, with risk variants enriched in non-coding sequences near chondrocyte genes, loci that likely became optimized during knee evolution. We explore this relationship by epigenetically profiling joint chondrocytes, revealing ancient selection and recent constraint and drift on knee regulatory elements, which also overlap osteoarthritis variants that contribute to disease heritability by tending to modify constrained functional sequence. We propose a model whereby genetic violations to regulatory constraint, tolerated during knee development, lead to adult pathology. In support, we discover a causal enhancer variant (rs6060369) present in billions of people at a risk locus (GDF5-UQCC1), showing how it impacts mouse knee-shape and osteoarthritis. Overall, our methods link an evolutionarily novel aspect of human anatomy to its pathogenesis.


Asunto(s)
Condrocitos/fisiología , Articulación de la Rodilla/fisiología , Osteoartritis/genética , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Condrocitos/metabolismo , Evolución Molecular , Predisposición Genética a la Enfermedad/genética , Factor 5 de Diferenciación de Crecimiento/genética , Factor 5 de Diferenciación de Crecimiento/metabolismo , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Rodilla/fisiología , Ratones , Células 3T3 NIH , Secuencias Reguladoras de Ácidos Nucleicos/genética , Factores de Riesgo
3.
Cell ; 173(4): 894-905.e13, 2018 05 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29706545

RESUMEN

Perceptual decisions require the accumulation of sensory information to a response criterion. Most accounts of how the brain performs this process of temporal integration have focused on evolving patterns of spiking activity. We report that subthreshold changes in membrane voltage can represent accumulating evidence before a choice. αß core Kenyon cells (αßc KCs) in the mushroom bodies of fruit flies integrate odor-evoked synaptic inputs to action potential threshold at timescales matching the speed of olfactory discrimination. The forkhead box P transcription factor (FoxP) sets neuronal integration and behavioral decision times by controlling the abundance of the voltage-gated potassium channel Shal (KV4) in αßc KC dendrites. αßc KCs thus tailor, through a particular constellation of biophysical properties, the generic process of synaptic integration to the demands of sequential sampling.


Asunto(s)
Dendritas/metabolismo , Proteínas de Drosophila/metabolismo , Drosophila/fisiología , Potenciales de Acción/efectos de los fármacos , Animales , Bario/farmacología , Conducta Animal/efectos de los fármacos , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Encéfalo/patología , Ciclohexanoles/farmacología , Proteínas de Drosophila/genética , Femenino , Factores de Transcripción Forkhead/genética , Factores de Transcripción Forkhead/metabolismo , Masculino , Neuronas/citología , Neuronas/metabolismo , Técnicas de Placa-Clamp , Receptores Odorantes/metabolismo , Canales de Potasio Shal/genética , Canales de Potasio Shal/metabolismo , Olfato , Sinapsis/metabolismo
4.
Development ; 151(17)2024 Sep 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39119717

RESUMEN

Developing long bones alter their shape while maintaining uniform cortical thickness via coordinated activity of bone-forming osteoblasts and bone-resorbing osteoclasts at periosteal and endosteal surfaces, a process we designate trans-pairing. Two types of trans-pairing shift cortical bone in opposite orientations: peri-forming trans-pairing (peri-t-p) increases bone marrow space and endo-forming trans-pairing (endo-t-p) decreases it, via paired activity of bone resorption and formation across the cortex. Here, we focused on endo-t-p in growing bones. Analysis of endo-t-p activity in the cortex of mouse fibulae revealed osteoclasts under the periosteum compressed by muscles, and expression of RANKL in periosteal cells of the cambium layer. Furthermore, mature osteoblasts were localized on the endosteum, while preosteoblasts were at the periosteum and within cortical canals. X-ray tomographic microscopy revealed the presence of cortical canals more closely associated with endo- than with peri-t-p. Sciatic nerve transection followed by muscle atrophy and unloading induced circumferential endo-t-p with concomitant spread of cortical canals. Such canals likely supply the endosteum with preosteoblasts from the periosteum under endo-t-p, allowing bone shape to change in response to mechanical stress or nerve injury.


Asunto(s)
Osteoblastos , Osteoclastos , Periostio , Animales , Osteoblastos/metabolismo , Osteoblastos/citología , Periostio/citología , Periostio/metabolismo , Osteoclastos/metabolismo , Osteoclastos/citología , Ratones , Desarrollo Óseo , Osteogénesis/fisiología , Resorción Ósea/patología , Hueso Cortical , Ligando RANK/metabolismo , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(30): e2401830121, 2024 Jul 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39012826

RESUMEN

As cells age, they undergo a remarkable global change: In transcriptional drift, hundreds of genes become overexpressed while hundreds of others become underexpressed. Using archetype modeling and Gene Ontology analysis on data from aging Caenorhabditis elegans worms, we find that the up-regulated genes code for sensory proteins upstream of stress responses and down-regulated genes are growth- and metabolism-related. We observe similar trends within human fibroblasts, suggesting that this process is conserved in higher organisms. We propose a simple mechanistic model for how such global coordination of multiprotein expression levels may be achieved by the binding of a single factor that concentrates with age in C. elegans. A key implication is that a cell's own responses are part of its aging process, so unlike wear-and-tear processes, intervention might be able to modulate these effects.


Asunto(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans , Senescencia Celular , Caenorhabditis elegans/genética , Animales , Humanos , Senescencia Celular/genética , Proteínas de Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolismo , Proteínas de Caenorhabditis elegans/genética , Transcripción Genética , Envejecimiento/genética , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Fibroblastos/metabolismo
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(7): e2319840121, 2024 Feb 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38315855

RESUMEN

"Complex multicellularity," conventionally defined as large organisms with many specialized cell types, has evolved five times independently in eukaryotes, but never within prokaryotes. A number of hypotheses have been proposed to explain this phenomenon, most of which posit that eukaryotes evolved key traits (e.g., dynamic cytoskeletons, alternative mechanisms of gene regulation, or subcellular compartments) which were a necessary prerequisite for the evolution of complex multicellularity. Here, we propose an alternative, nonadaptive hypothesis for this broad macroevolutionary pattern. By binning cells into groups with finite genetic bottlenecks between generations, the evolution of multicellularity greatly reduces the effective population size (Ne) of cellular populations, increasing the role of genetic drift in evolutionary change. While both prokaryotes and eukaryotes experience this phenomenon, they have opposite responses to drift: eukaryotes tend to undergo genomic expansion, providing additional raw genetic material for subsequent multicellular innovation, while prokaryotes generally face genomic erosion. Taken together, we hypothesize that these idiosyncratic lineage-specific evolutionary dynamics play a fundamental role in the long-term divergent evolution of complex multicellularity across the tree of life.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Flujo Genético , Eucariontes/genética , Genoma , Regulación de la Expresión Génica
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(27): e2311805121, 2024 Jul 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38913896

RESUMEN

Humans and animals excel at generalizing from limited data, a capability yet to be fully replicated in artificial intelligence. This perspective investigates generalization in biological and artificial deep neural networks (DNNs), in both in-distribution and out-of-distribution contexts. We introduce two hypotheses: First, the geometric properties of the neural manifolds associated with discrete cognitive entities, such as objects, words, and concepts, are powerful order parameters. They link the neural substrate to the generalization capabilities and provide a unified methodology bridging gaps between neuroscience, machine learning, and cognitive science. We overview recent progress in studying the geometry of neural manifolds, particularly in visual object recognition, and discuss theories connecting manifold dimension and radius to generalization capacity. Second, we suggest that the theory of learning in wide DNNs, especially in the thermodynamic limit, provides mechanistic insights into the learning processes generating desired neural representational geometries and generalization. This includes the role of weight norm regularization, network architecture, and hyper-parameters. We will explore recent advances in this theory and ongoing challenges. We also discuss the dynamics of learning and its relevance to the issue of representational drift in the brain.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Encéfalo/fisiología , Humanos , Animales , Inteligencia Artificial , Modelos Neurológicos , Generalización Psicológica/fisiología , Cognición/fisiología
8.
Trends Genet ; 39(5): 358-380, 2023 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36842901

RESUMEN

Clonal selection and drift drive both normal tissue and cancer development. However, the biological mechanisms and environmental conditions underpinning these processes remain to be elucidated. Clonal selection models are centered in Darwinian evolutionary theory, where some clones with the fittest features are selected and populate the tissue or tumor. We suggest that different subclasses of stem cells, each of which is responsible for a distinct feature of the selection process, share common features between normal and cancer conditions. While active stem cells populate the tissue, dormant cells account for tissue replenishment/regeneration in both normal and cancerous tissues. We also discuss potential mechanisms that drive clonal drift, their interactions with clonal selection, and their similarities during normal and cancer tissue development.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias , Humanos , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/patología , Células Madre , Evolución Biológica , Células Clonales/patología
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(2): e2207295120, 2023 01 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36598949

RESUMEN

How the growth rate of a microbial population responds to the environmental availability of chemical nutrients and other resources is a fundamental question in microbiology. Models of this response, such as the widely used Monod model, are generally characterized by a maximum growth rate and a half-saturation concentration of the resource. What values should we expect for these half-saturation concentrations, and how should they depend on the environmental concentration of the resource? We survey growth response data across a wide range of organisms and resources. We find that the half-saturation concentrations vary across orders of magnitude, even for the same organism and resource. To explain this variation, we develop an evolutionary model to show that demographic fluctuations (genetic drift) can constrain the adaptation of half-saturation concentrations. We find that this effect fundamentally differs depending on the type of population dynamics: Populations undergoing periodic bottlenecks of fixed size will adapt their half-saturation concentrations in proportion to the environmental resource concentrations, but populations undergoing periodic dilutions of fixed size will evolve half-saturation concentrations that are largely decoupled from the environmental concentrations. Our model not only provides testable predictions for laboratory evolution experiments, but it also reveals how an evolved half-saturation concentration may not reflect the organism's environment. In particular, this explains how organisms in resource-rich environments can still evolve fast growth at low resource concentrations. Altogether, our results demonstrate the critical role of population dynamics in shaping fundamental ecological traits.


Asunto(s)
Aclimatación , Evolución Biológica , Dinámica Poblacional , Adaptación Fisiológica , Nutrientes
10.
J Neurosci ; 44(2)2024 Jan 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37985180

RESUMEN

The necessity of conscious awareness in human learning has been a long-standing topic in psychology and neuroscience. Previous research on non-conscious associative learning is limited by the low signal-to-noise ratio of the subliminal stimulus, and the evidence remains controversial, including failures to replicate. Using functional MRI decoded neurofeedback, we guided participants from both sexes to generate neural patterns akin to those observed when visually perceiving real-world entities (e.g., dogs). Importantly, participants remained unaware of the actual content represented by these patterns. We utilized an associative DecNef approach to imbue perceptual meaning (e.g., dogs) into Japanese hiragana characters that held no inherent meaning for our participants, bypassing a conscious link between the characters and the dogs concept. Despite their lack of awareness regarding the neurofeedback objective, participants successfully learned to activate the target perceptual representations in the bilateral fusiform. The behavioral significance of our training was evaluated in a visual search task. DecNef and control participants searched for dogs or scissors targets that were pre-cued by the hiragana used during DecNef training or by a control hiragana. The DecNef hiragana did not prime search for its associated target but, strikingly, participants were impaired at searching for the targeted perceptual category. Hence, conscious awareness may function to support higher-order associative learning. Meanwhile, lower-level forms of re-learning, modification, or plasticity in existing neural representations can occur unconsciously, with behavioral consequences outside the original training context. The work also provides an account of DecNef effects in terms of neural representational drift.


Asunto(s)
Neurorretroalimentación , Masculino , Femenino , Humanos , Animales , Perros , Aprendizaje , Inconsciencia , Estado de Conciencia , Condicionamiento Clásico , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética
11.
J Neurosci ; 44(13)2024 Mar 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38360748

RESUMEN

A prominent account of decision-making assumes that information is accumulated until a fixed response threshold is crossed. However, many decisions require weighting of information appropriately against time. Collapsing response thresholds are a mathematically optimal solution to this decision problem. However, our understanding of the neurocomputational mechanisms underlying dynamic response thresholds remains significantly incomplete. To investigate this issue, we used a multistage drift-diffusion model (DDM) and also analyzed EEG ß power lateralization (BPL). The latter served as a neural proxy for decision signals. We analyzed a large dataset (n = 863; 434 females and 429 males) from a speeded flanker task and data from an independent confirmation sample (n = 119; 70 females and 49 males). We showed that a DDM with collapsing decision thresholds, a process wherein the decision boundary reduces over time, captured participants' time-dependent decision policy more accurately than a model with fixed thresholds. Previous research suggests that BPL over motor cortices reflects features of a decision signal and that its peak, coinciding with the motor response, may serve as a neural proxy for the decision threshold. We show that BPL around the response decreased with increasing RTs. Together, our findings offer compelling evidence for the existence of collapsing decision thresholds in decision-making processes.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones , Masculino , Femenino , Humanos , Toma de Decisiones/fisiología , Tiempo de Reacción/fisiología
12.
J Neurosci ; 44(20)2024 May 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38569923

RESUMEN

Our prior research has identified neural correlates of cognitive control in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), leading us to hypothesize that the ACC is necessary for increasing attention as rats flexibly learn new contingencies during a complex reward-guided decision-making task. Here, we tested this hypothesis by using optogenetics to transiently inhibit the ACC, while rats of either sex performed the same two-choice task. ACC inhibition had a profound impact on behavior that extended beyond deficits in attention during learning when expected outcomes were uncertain. We found that ACC inactivation slowed and reduced the number of trials rats initiated and impaired both their accuracy and their ability to complete sessions. Furthermore, drift-diffusion model analysis suggested that free-choice performance and evidence accumulation (i.e., reduced drift rates) were degraded during initial learning-leading to weaker associations that were more easily overridden in later trial blocks (i.e., stronger bias). Together, these results suggest that in addition to attention-related functions, the ACC contributes to the ability to initiate trials and generally stay on task.


Asunto(s)
Giro del Cíngulo , Optogenética , Ratas Long-Evans , Animales , Giro del Cíngulo/fisiología , Masculino , Ratas , Femenino , Atención/fisiología , Recompensa , Conducta de Elección/fisiología , Toma de Decisiones/fisiología , Inhibición Neural/fisiología
13.
J Neurosci ; 44(41)2024 Oct 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39214705

RESUMEN

As evidence mounts that the cardiac-sympathetic nervous system reacts to challenging cognitive settings, we ask if these responses are epiphenomenal companions or if there is evidence suggesting a more intertwined role of this system with cognitive function. Healthy male and female human participants performed an approach-avoidance paradigm, trading off monetary reward for painful electric shock, while we recorded simultaneous electroencephalographic and cardiac-sympathetic signals. Participants were reward sensitive but also experienced approach-avoidance "conflict" when the subjective appeal of the reward was near equivalent to the revulsion of the cost. Drift-diffusion model parameters suggested that participants managed conflict in part by integrating larger volumes of evidence into choices (wider decision boundaries). Late alpha-band (neural) dynamics were consistent with widening decision boundaries serving to combat reward sensitivity and spread attention more fairly to all dimensions of available information. Independently, wider boundaries were also associated with cardiac "contractility" (an index of sympathetically mediated positive inotropy). We also saw evidence of conflict-specific "collaboration" between the neural and cardiac-sympathetic signals. In states of high conflict, the alignment (i.e., product) of alpha dynamics and contractility were associated with a further widening of the boundary, independent of either signal's singular association. Cross-trial coherence analyses provided additional evidence that the autonomic systems controlling cardiac-sympathetics might influence the assessment of information streams during conflict by disrupting or overriding reward processing. We conclude that cardiac-sympathetic control might play a critical role, in collaboration with cognitive processes, during the approach-avoidance conflict in humans.


Asunto(s)
Ritmo alfa , Conflicto Psicológico , Humanos , Masculino , Femenino , Ritmo alfa/fisiología , Adulto , Adulto Joven , Reacción de Prevención/fisiología , Recompensa , Electroencefalografía , Contracción Miocárdica/fisiología , Sistema Nervioso Simpático/fisiología , Corazón/fisiología , Frecuencia Cardíaca/fisiología
14.
J Cell Sci ; 136(4)2023 02 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36727532

RESUMEN

Unwanted sample drift is a common issue that plagues microscopy experiments, preventing accurate temporal visualization and quantification of biological processes. Although multiple methods and tools exist to correct images post acquisition, performing drift correction of three-dimensional (3D) videos using open-source solutions remains challenging and time consuming. Here, we present a new tool developed for ImageJ or Fiji called Fast4DReg that can quickly correct axial and lateral drift in 3D video-microscopy datasets. Fast4DReg works by creating intensity projections along multiple axes and estimating the drift between frames using two-dimensional cross-correlations. Using synthetic and acquired datasets, we demonstrate that Fast4DReg can perform better than other state-of-the-art open-source drift-correction tools and significantly outperforms them in speed. We also demonstrate that Fast4DReg can be used to register misaligned channels in 3D using either calibration slides or misaligned images directly. Altogether, Fast4DReg provides a quick and easy-to-use method to correct 3D imaging data before further visualization and analysis.


Asunto(s)
Imagenología Tridimensional , Microscopía , Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Microscopía por Video
15.
Development ; 149(21)2022 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36196618

RESUMEN

Endoderm specification in Caenorhabditis elegans occurs through a network in which maternally provided SKN-1/Nrf, with additional input from POP-1/TCF, activates the GATA factor cascade MED-1,2→END-1,3→ELT-2,7. Orthologues of the MED, END and ELT-7 factors are found only among nematodes closely related to C. elegans, raising the question of how gut is specified in their absence in more distant species in the genus. We find that the C. angaria, C. portoensis and C. monodelphis orthologues of the GATA factor gene elt-3 are expressed in the early E lineage, just before their elt-2 orthologues. In C. angaria, Can-pop-1(RNAi), Can-elt-3(RNAi) and a Can-elt-3 null mutation result in a penetrant 'gutless' phenotype. Can-pop-1 is necessary for Can-elt-3 activation, showing that it acts upstream. Forced early E lineage expression of Can-elt-3 in C. elegans can direct the expression of a Can-elt-2 transgene and rescue an elt-7 end-1 end-3; elt-2 quadruple mutant strain to viability. Our results demonstrate an ancestral mechanism for gut specification and differentiation in Caenorhabditis involving a simpler POP-1→ELT-3→ELT-2 gene network.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Caenorhabditis elegans , Caenorhabditis , Animales , Endodermo/metabolismo , Caenorhabditis elegans/genética , Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolismo , Proteínas de Caenorhabditis elegans/genética , Proteínas de Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolismo , Caenorhabditis/genética , Caenorhabditis/metabolismo , Factores de Transcripción GATA/genética , Factores de Transcripción GATA/metabolismo , Redes Reguladoras de Genes
16.
J Virol ; 98(9): e0076624, 2024 Sep 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39194245

RESUMEN

Antibody responses to influenza vaccines tend to be focused on epitopes encountered during prior influenza exposures, with little production of de novo responses to novel epitopes. To examine the contribution of circulating antibodies to this phenomenon, we passively transferred a hemagglutinin (HA)-specific monoclonal antibody (mAb) into mice before immunizing with whole inactivated virions. The HA mAb inhibited de novo HA-specific antibodies, plasmablasts, germinal center B cells, and memory B cells, while responses to a second antigen in the vaccine, neuraminidase (NA), were uninhibited. The HA mAb potently inhibited de novo antibody responses against epitopes near the HA mAb binding site. The HA mAb also promoted IgG1 class switching, an effect that, unlike the inhibition of HA responses, relied on signaling through Fc-gamma receptors. These studies suggest that circulating antibodies inhibit de novo B cell responses in an antigen-specific manner, which likely contributes to differences in antibody specificities elicited during primary and secondary influenza virus exposures.IMPORTANCEMost humans are exposed to influenza viruses in childhood and then subsequently exposed to antigenically drifted influenza variants later in life. It is unclear if antibodies elicited by earlier influenza virus exposures impact immunity against new influenza virus strains. Here, we used a mouse model to investigate how an anti-hemagglutinin (HA) monoclonal antibody (mAb) affects de novo B cell and antibody responses to the protein targeted by the monoclonal antibody (HA) and a second protein not targeted by the monoclonal antibody [neuraminidase (NA)]. Collectively, our studies suggest that circulating anti-influenza virus antibodies can potently modulate the magnitude and specificity of antibody responses elicited by secondary influenza virus exposures.


Asunto(s)
Anticuerpos Monoclonales , Anticuerpos Antivirales , Linfocitos B , Glicoproteínas Hemaglutininas del Virus de la Influenza , Vacunas contra la Influenza , Animales , Ratones , Anticuerpos Antivirales/inmunología , Anticuerpos Monoclonales/inmunología , Glicoproteínas Hemaglutininas del Virus de la Influenza/inmunología , Linfocitos B/inmunología , Vacunas contra la Influenza/inmunología , Infecciones por Orthomyxoviridae/inmunología , Femenino , Neuraminidasa/inmunología , Ratones Endogámicos BALB C , Inmunoglobulina G/inmunología , Epítopos/inmunología , Formación de Anticuerpos/inmunología
17.
Brief Bioinform ; 24(1)2023 01 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36464485

RESUMEN

Due to the increasing importance of graphs and graph streams in data representation in today's era, concept drift detection in graph streaming scenarios is more important than ever. Contributions to concept drift detection in graph streams are minimal and practically non-existent in the field of toxicology. This paper applied the discriminative subgraph-based drift detector (DSDD) to graph streams generated from real-world toxicology datasets. We used four toxicology datasets, each of which yielded two graph streams - one with abrupt drift points and one with gradual drift points. We used DSDD both with the standard minimum description length (MDL) heuristic and after replacing MDL with a much simpler heuristic SIZE (number of vertices + number of edges), and applied it to all generated graph streams containing abrupt drift points and gradual drift points for varying window sizes. Following that, we compared and analyzed the results. Finally, we applied a long short-term memory based graph stream classification model to all the generated streams and compared the difference in the performances obtained with and without detecting drift using DSDD. We believe that the results and analysis presented in this paper will provide insight into the task of concept drift detection in the toxicology domain and aid in the application of DSDD in a variety of scenarios.

18.
Annu Rev Microbiol ; 74: 815-834, 2020 09 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32692614

RESUMEN

The genomes of bacteria contain fewer genes and substantially less noncoding DNA than those of eukaryotes, and as a result, they have much less raw material to invent new traits. Yet, bacteria are vastly more taxonomically diverse, numerically abundant, and globally successful in colonizing new habitats compared to eukaryotes. Although bacterial genomes are generally considered to be optimized for efficient growth and rapid adaptation, nonadaptive processes have played a major role in shaping the size, contents, and compact organization of bacterial genomes and have allowed the establishment of deleterious traits that serve as the raw materials for genetic innovation.


Asunto(s)
Bacterias/genética , Evolución Molecular , Genoma Bacteriano , Bacterias/clasificación , Cromosomas Bacterianos/genética , Eucariontes/genética , Flujo Genético
19.
EMBO Rep ; 24(10): e57561, 2023 Oct 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37615267

RESUMEN

Owing to advances in genome sequencing, genome stability has become one of the most scrutinized cellular traits across the Tree of Life. Despite its centrality to all things biological, the mutation rate (per nucleotide site per generation) ranges over three orders of magnitude among species and several-fold within individual phylogenetic lineages. Within all major organismal groups, mutation rates scale negatively with the effective population size of a species and with the amount of functional DNA in the genome. This relationship is most parsimoniously explained by the drift-barrier hypothesis, which postulates that natural selection typically operates to reduce mutation rates until further improvement is thwarted by the power of random genetic drift. Despite this constraint, the molecular mechanisms underlying DNA replication fidelity and repair are free to wander, provided the performance of the entire system is maintained at the prevailing level. The evolutionary flexibility of the mutation rate bears on the resolution of several prior conundrums in phylogenetic and population-genetic analysis and raises challenges for future applications in these areas.


Asunto(s)
Flujo Genético , Tasa de Mutación , Filogenia , Evolución Biológica , Selección Genética , Mutación , Evolución Molecular
20.
Cereb Cortex ; 34(7)2024 Jul 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38970361

RESUMEN

Empathy toward suffering individuals serves as potent driver for prosocial behavior. However, it remains unclear whether prosociality induced by empathy for another person's pain persists once that person's suffering diminishes. To test this, participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while performing a binary social decision task that involved allocation of points to themselves and another person. In block one, participants completed the task after witnessing frequent painful stimulation of the other person, and in block two, after observing low frequency of painful stimulation. Drift-diffusion modeling revealed an increased initial bias toward making prosocial decisions in the first block compared with baseline that persisted in the second block. These results were replicated in an independent behavioral study. An additional control study showed that this effect may be specific to empathy as stability was not evident when prosocial decisions were driven by a social norm such as reciprocity. Increased neural activation in dorsomedial prefrontal cortex was linked to empathic concern after witnessing frequent pain and to a general prosocial decision bias after witnessing rare pain. Altogether, our findings show that empathy for pain elicits a stable inclination toward making prosocial decisions even as their suffering diminishes.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones , Empatía , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Humanos , Empatía/fisiología , Masculino , Femenino , Toma de Decisiones/fisiología , Adulto Joven , Adulto , Conducta Social , Dolor/psicología , Dolor/fisiopatología , Mapeo Encefálico , Corteza Prefrontal/fisiología , Corteza Prefrontal/diagnóstico por imagen , Encéfalo/fisiología , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen
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