This study was designed to investigate the mechanisms through which tumor necrosis factor (Tnf) modulates ozone (O(3))-induced pulmonary injury in susceptible C57BL/6J (B6) mice. B6 [wild-type (wt)] mice and B6 mice with targeted disruption (knockout) of the genes for the p55 TNF receptor [TNFR1(-/-)], the p75 TNF receptor [TNFR2(-/-)], or both receptors [TNFR1/TNFR2(-/-)] were exposed to 0.3 parts/million O(3) for 48 h (subacute), and lung responses were determined by bronchoalveolar lavage. All TNFR(-/-) mice had significantly less O(3)-induced inflammation and epithelial damage but not lung hyperpermeability than wt mice. Compared with air-exposed control mice, O(3) elicited upregulation of lung TNFR1 and TNFR2 mRNAs in wt mice and downregulated TNFR1 and TNFR2 mRNAs in TNFR2(-/-) and TNFR1(-/-) mice, respectively. Airway hyperreactivity induced by acute O(3) exposure (2 parts/million for 3 h) was diminished in knockout mice compared with that in wt mice, although lung inflammation and permeability remained elevated. Results suggested a critical role for TNFR signaling in subacute O(3)-induced pulmonary epithelial injury and inflammation and in acute O(3)-induced airway hyperreactivity.
A strong role for reactive oxygen species (ROS) has been proposed in the pathogenesis of a number of lung diseases. Hyperoxia (> 95% oxygen) generates ROS and extensive lung damage, and has been used as a model of oxidant injury. However, the precise mechanisms of hyperoxia-induced toxicity have not been completely clarified. This study was designed to identify hyperoxia susceptibility genes in C57BL/6J (susceptible) and C3H/HeJ (resistant) mice. The quantitative phenotypes used for this analysis were pulmonary inflammatory cell influx, epithelial cell sloughing, and hyperpermeability. Genome-wide linkage analyses of intercross (F2) and recombinant inbred cohorts identified significant and suggestive quantitative trait loci on chromosomes 2 (hyperoxia susceptibility locus 1 [Hsl1]) and 3 (Hsl2), respectively. Comparative mapping of Hsl1 identified a strong candidate gene, Nfe2l2 (nuclear factor, erythroid derived 2, like 2 or Nrf2) that encodes a transcription factor NRF2 which regulates antioxidant and phase 2 gene expression. Strain-specific variation in lung Nrf2 messenger RNA expression and a T --> C substitution in the B6 Nrf2 promoter that cosegregated with susceptibility phenotypes in F2 animals supported Nrf2 as a candidate gene. Results from this study have important implications for understanding the mechanisms through which oxidants mediate the pathogenesis of lung disease.
As brown energy costs grow, renewable energy becomes more widely used. Previous work focused on using immediately available green energy to supplement the nonrenewable, or brown energy at the cost of canceling and rescheduling jobs whenever the green energy availability is too low [16]. In this paper we design an adaptive data center job scheduler which utilizes short term prediction of solar and wind energy production. This enables us to scale the number of jobs to the expected energy availability, thus reducing the number of cancelled jobs by 4x and improving green energy usage efficiency by 3x over just utilizing the immediately available green energy.
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