Despite the efficacy of highly active antiretroviral therapy in reducing viral burden, neurologic disease associated with HIV-1 infection of the CNS has not decreased in prevalence. HIV-1 does not induce disease by direct infection of neurons, although extensive data suggest that intra-CNS viral burden correlates with both the severity of virally induced neurologic disease, and with the generation of neurotoxic metabolites. Many of these molecules are capable of inducing neuronal apoptosis in vitro, but neuronal apoptosis in vivo does not correlate with CNS dysfunction, thus prompting us to investigate cellular and synaptic events occurring before cell death that may contribute to HIV-1-associated neurologic disease. We now report that the HIV-1 regulatory protein transactivator of transcription protein (Tat) increased oxidative stress, ATP levels, and mitochondrial membrane potential in primary rodent cortical neurons. Additionally, a proinflammatory cellular metabolite up-regulated by Tat, platelet-activating factor, also induced oxidative stress and mitochondrial hyperpolarization in neurons, suggesting that this type of metabolic dysfunction may occur on a chronic basis during HIV-1 infection of the CNS. Tat-induced mitochondrial hyperpolarization could be blocked with a low dose of the protonophore FCCP, or the mitochondrial KATP channel antagonist, tolbutamide. Importantly, blocking the mitochondrial hyperpolarization attenuated Tat-induced neuronal apoptosis, suggesting that increased mitochondrial membrane potential may be a causal event in precipitating neuronal apoptosis in cell culture. Finally, Tat and platelet-activating factor also increased neuronal vesicular release, which may be related to increased mitochondrial bioenergetics and serve as a biomarker for early damage to neurons.
A two-dimensional (2-D) correlation optimized warping (COW) algorithm has been developed to align 2-D gas chromatography coupled with time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC x GC/TOF-MS) data. By partitioning raw chromatographic profiles and warping the grid points simultaneously along the first and second dimensions on the basis of applying a one-dimensional COW algorithm to characteristic vectors, nongrid points can be interpolatively warped. This 2-D algorithm was directly applied to total ion counts (TIC) chromatographic profiles of homogeneous chemical samples, i.e., samples including mostly identical compounds. For heterogeneous chemical samples, the 2-D algorithm is first applied to certain selected ion counts chromatographic profiles, and the resultant warping parameters are then used to warp the corresponding TIC chromatographic profiles. The developed 2-D COW algorithm can also be applied to align other 2-D separation images, e.g., LC x LC data, LC x GC data, GC x GC data, LC x CE data, and CE x CE data.
We developed a classification approach to multiple quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping built upon a Bayesian framework that incorporates the important prior information that most genotypic markers are not cotransmitted with a QTL or their QTL effects are negligible. The genetic effect of each marker is modeled using a three-component mixture prior with a class for markers having negligible effects and separate classes for markers having positive or negative effects on the trait. The posterior probability of a marker's classification provides a natural statistic for evaluating credibility of identified QTL. This approach performs well, especially with a large number of markers but a relatively small sample size. A heat map to visualize the results is proposed so as to allow investigators to be more or less conservative when identifying QTL. We validated the method using a well-characterized data set for barley heading values from the North American Barley Genome Mapping Project. Application of the method to a new data set revealed sex-specific QTL underlying differences in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme activity between two Drosophila species. A simulation study demonstrated the power of this approach across levels of trait heritability and when marker data were sparse.T HE fact that we can map variation in complex phetion (Doebley and Stec 1991). As such, QTL mapping is not simply a gene-finding tool. QTL mapping provides notypes to chromosomal regions by exploiting the linkage between random genetic markers and causal critical information regarding quantitative evolutionary genetic processes. genetic variants in related individuals has long been understood. Since the formalization of statistical apTraditional approaches to QTL mapping primarily involve multiple regression models and maximum-likeliproaches to this type of inference by Lander and Botstein (1989) and the advent of high-throughput hood estimation and are powerful for detecting QTL of moderate to large effect. However, detecting multiple methodologies for constructing genetic maps with high marker density, quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping smaller genetic effects that may modify or interact with larger effects is necessary and remains a challenge. in organisms from crops to mice has provided a rich These smaller effects are important, as they can potenknowledge of genes underlying important socioecotially enhance crop breeding and further our undernomic traits. It also has provided a better understanding standing of genetic background effects on complex disof the genetic architecture of complex traits both within ease. Quantifying the abundance of these types of effects and between species. QTL mapping promises the imfor any given trait also fills a gap in our knowledge provement of crops of international importance, such regarding the distribution of genetic effects. as drought-resistant rice (for review see Price andThe most popular approach for QTL mapping is inCourtois 1999; Price et al. 2002), and the advancement terval...
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