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Gradual Accumulation (gradual + accumulation)
Selected AbstractsOne-year longitudinal evaluation of sensorimotor functions in APP751SL transgenic miceGENES, BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, Issue 2008C. Le Cudennec Intracerebral amyloid-beta (A,) peptide deposition is considered to play a key role in Alzheimer's disease and is designated as a principal therapeutic target. The relationship between brain A, levels and clinical deficits remains, however, unclear, both in human patients and in animal models of the disease. The purpose of the present study was to investigate, in a transgenic mouse model of brain amyloidosis, the consequences of A, deposition on basic neurological functions using a longitudinal approach. Animals were phenotyped at different ages corresponding to graded neuropathological stages (from no extracellular A, deposition to high amyloid loads). Sensory functions were evaluated by assessing visual and olfactory abilities and did not show any effects of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) transgene. Motor functions were assessed using multiple experimental paradigms. Results showed that motor strength was considerably reduced in APP transgenic mice compared with control animals. No deficit was noted in a motor coordination test although APP transgenic mice displayed decreased locomotion on a stationary beam. Hypolocomotion was also observed in the standard open-field test. Measures of anxiety obtained in the elevated plus-maze show some evidence of hyperanxiety in 15-month-old transgenic mice. Some of the neurological impairments showed by APP mice had an early onset and worsened with progressive aging, in parallel to gradual accumulation of A, in brain parenchyma. Relationships between neuropathologically assessed amyloid loads and behavioral deficits were further explored, and it was observed that motor strength deficits were correlated with cortical amyloid burden. [source] Depositional history and evolution of the Paso del Indio site, Vega Baja, Puerto RicoGEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 6 2003Jeffrey J. Clark Potshards discovered during excavation of bridge pilasters for a major expressway over the Rio Indio floodplain, a stream incised within the karsts of north-central Puerto Rico, required large-scale archaeological excavation. Five-meter-deep bridge pilaster excavations in the alluvial valley provide a 4500-year history of deposition. Stratigraphic analysis of the exposed pilaster walls in combination with textural and organic carbon analyses of sediment cores obtained over a much broader area suggest a fluvial system dominated by overbank deposition. Six sequences of alternating light and dark layers of sediment were identified. The darker layers are largely composed of silts and clays, whereas the lighter layers are rich in sand-sized sediment. Archaeological evidence indicates the organic-rich dark layers, believed to be buried A horizons, coincide with pre-historic occupation by Cedrosan Saladoid, Elenan Ostionoid, and Chican Ostionoid, extending from A.D. 450 to A.D. 1500. Lighter layers below the dark soil horizons are interpreted as overbank deposits from large magnitude flood events. The floodplain aggraded discontinuously with rapid deposition of sand followed by gradual accumulation of silt, clay, and organic material. An approximately 1-m-thick layer of coarse sand and gravel halfway up the stratigraphic column represents an episode of more frequent and severe floods. Based on radiocarbon ages, this layer aggraded between A.D. 1000 and A.D. 1100, which is well within the Elenan Ostionoid era (A.D. 900,1200). Rates of sedimentation during this period were approximately 8 mm per year, ten times greater than the estimates of sedimentation rates before and after this flood sequence. The cause for the change in deposition is unknown. Nonetheless the Elenan Ostionoid would have had to endure frequent loss of habitation structures and crops during these events. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] Effects of density and ontogeny on size and growth ranks of three competing tree speciesJOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2009Suzanne B. Boyden Summary 1Rank reversals in species performance are theoretically important for structuring communities, maintaining diversity and determining the course of forest succession. Species growth ranks can change with ontogeny or in different microenvironments, but interactions between ontogeny and the environment are not well-understood because of the lack of long-term forest competition studies. While early differences in growth among species may reflect intrinsic differences in shade-tolerance and physiology, ontogenetic trends in growth and variation in neighbourhood density and composition may change or even reverse early patterns of growth rankings. 2We experimentally studied spatial and temporal patterns of species interactions and growth for three northern tree species: Larix laricina, Picea mariana and Pinus strobus. We compared species size and growth rankings over an 11-year period, for different species mixtures planted at four density levels in north-eastern Minnesota, USA. 3The benefits of different growth strategies changed with ontogeny and density leading to reversals in the size rank of competing species over time and space. High-density stands promoted dominance and resource pre-emption by L. laricina, whereas lower-density stands favoured gradual accumulation of biomass and eventual dominance by P. strobus. In the absence of strong neighbour competition, ontogenetic trends in growth had greater influence on growth patterns. 4Species interactions affected the productivity of mixed stands vs. monocultures. Species generally grew more in monoculture than when planted with P. strobus at low density, or with L. laricina at high density. Only L. laricina and P. mariana showed potential for greater overall productivity, or over-yielding, when planted together than alone, probably because of improved resource uptake by the highly stratified canopy. 5Synthesis. Density predictably determined whether size-asymmetric growth or ontogenetic growth trends would drive early establishment and growth patterns. Variation in vertical and horizontal structure that results from early competitive dynamics can influence the successional trajectory or character of the mature forest. This study extends previous efforts to identify the causes of rank reversals in communities and understand the importance of temporal changes beyond the early years of seedling establishment. [source] Gadolinium inhibits group III but not group IV muscle afferent responses to dynamic exerciseTHE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 4 2009Shawn G. Hayes Dynamic exercise has been shown to stimulate rapidly both group III and IV muscle afferents. The often rapid (i.e. 2 s) onset latencies of the group IV afferents is particularly surprising because these unmyelinated afferents are thought to respond to the gradual accumulation of metabolites signalling a mismatch between blood/oxygen demand and supply in exercising muscles. One explanation for the rapid onset to exercise by group IV afferents is that they are mechanosensitive, a concept that has been supported by the finding that these afferents were stimulated by vasodilatation induced by injection of vasoactive drugs. We therefore examined in decerebrated cats the effect of gadolinium, a blocker of mechanogated channels, on the responses of group III and IV muscle afferents to dynamic exercise induced by electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region. We found that gadolinium (10 mm; 1 ml) injected into the abdominal aorta had no significant effect (P > 0.05) on the responses of 11 group IV afferents to dynamic exercise. In contrast, gadolinium markedly attenuated the responses of 11 group III afferents to exercise (P < 0.05). Our findings suggest that group IV afferents are not responding to a mechanical stimulus during exercise. Instead their rapid response to dynamic exercise might be caused by a chemical substance whose concentration is directly proportional to blood flow, which increases in the skeletal muscles when they are dynamically exercising. [source] Immortalization of human urothelial cells by human papillomavirus type 16 E6 and E7 genes in a defined serum-free systemCELL PROLIFERATION, Issue 2 2007N. Carmean In previous studies, urothelial cell cultures were immortalized using retroviral transformation with human papillomavirus type 16 E6 and E7 genes, in undefined culture systems containing serum or bovine pituitary extract. Objective: Due to the variability of results in such systems, we instead developed a procedure for the immortalization of urothelial cells using a defined, serum-free culture system. Method and results: Immortalization through retroviral transformation with human papillomavirus type 16 E6 and E7 was successful, and transformation of urothelial cells conferred an extended over normal lifespan and restored telomerase activity. Transformed cells retained typical morphology and exhibited a similar growth rate, cytokeratin immunoreactivity pattern, and response to growth factors as observed in untransformed cells. Karyotype analysis revealed a gradual accumulation of genetic mutations that are consistent with previously reported mutations in epithelial cells transformed with human papillomavirus type 16 E6 and E7. Conclusion: The ability to extend the in vitro lifespan of cells holds the potential to reduce the continuous need for tissue samples and to enable complete investigations with one cell line. [source] Direct Associations or Internal Transformations?COGNITIVE SCIENCE - A MULTIDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL, Issue 1 2010Exploring the Mechanisms Underlying Sequential Learning Behavior Abstract We evaluate two broad classes of cognitive mechanisms that might support the learning of sequential patterns. According to the first, learning is based on the gradual accumulation of direct associations between events based on simple conditioning principles. The other view describes learning as the process of inducing the transformational structure that defines the material. Each of these learning mechanisms predicts differences in the rate of acquisition for differently organized sequences. Across a set of empirical studies, we compare the predictions of each class of model with the behavior of human subjects. We find that learning mechanisms based on transformations of an internal state, such as recurrent network architectures (e.g., Elman, 1990), have difficulty accounting for the pattern of human results relative to a simpler (but more limited) learning mechanism based on learning direct associations. Our results suggest new constraints on the cognitive mechanisms supporting sequential learning behavior. [source] |