Search results for " redundancy"

showing 10 items of 25 documents

High microbial diversity promotes soil ecosystem functioning

2018

ABSTRACT In soil, the link between microbial diversity and carbon transformations is challenged by the concept of functional redundancy. Here, we hypothesized that functional redundancy may decrease with increasing carbon source recalcitrance and that coupling of diversity with C cycling may change accordingly. We manipulated microbial diversity to examine how diversity decrease affects the decomposition of easily degradable (i.e., allochthonous plant residues) versus recalcitrant (i.e., autochthonous organic matter) C sources. We found that a decrease in microbial diversity (i) affected the decomposition of both autochthonous and allochthonous carbon sources, thereby reducing global CO 2 e…

0301 basic medicineMicrobial diversitySoil biodiversity[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]carbon mineralizationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyEcosystem servicesNutrient[ SDV.MP ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyEnvironmental MicrobiologySoil Microbiology2. Zero hungerchemistry.chemical_classificationEcologyEcologyredundancyMicrobiota04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesrespiratory systemfunctional redundancy[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyBiotechnologypriming effect[ SDV.SA.SDS ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil studyContext (language use)[SDV.BID]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity[SDV.SA.SDS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil studyCarbon cycle03 medical and health sciencessoil organic matterOrganic matterEcosystem14. Life underwaterEcosystem[ SDV.BID ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/BiodiversityBacteria[ SDV ] Life Sciences [q-bio]Soil organic matterFungi15. Life on landCarbonfunctional030104 developmental biologychemistry13. Climate actionmicrobial diversity040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental sciencehuman activitiesFood Science
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Functional Redundancy-Induced Stability of Gut Microbiota Subjected to Disturbance.

2016

The microbiota should be considered as just another component of the human epigenetic landscape. Thus, health is also a reflection of the diversity and composition of gut microbiota and its metabolic status. In defining host health, it remains unclear whether diversity is paramount, or whether greater weight is held by gut microbiota composition or mono- or multiple-functional capacity of the different taxa and the mechanisms involved. A network-biology approach may shed light on the key gut players acting to protect against, or promote, disorders or diseases. This could be achieved by integrating data on total and active species, proteins and molecules, and their association with host resp…

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)Gastrointestinal Diseases030106 microbiologyHost responseGut floradigestive systemMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesVirologymedicineAnimalsHumansEpigeneticsbiologyEcologyFunctional redundancyGastrointestinal MicrobiomeBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseBiotaGastrointestinal MicrobiomeGastrointestinal Tract030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesDisturbance (ecology)Evolutionary biologyDysbiosisTrends in microbiology
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Engineered Functional Redundancy Relaxes Selective Constraints upon Endogenous Genes in Viral RNA Genomes

2018

Functional redundancy, understood as the functional overlap of different genes, is a double-edge sword. At the one side, it is thought to serve as a robustness mechanism that buffers the deleterious effect of mutations hitting one of the redundant copies, thus resulting in pseudogenization. At the other side, it is considered as a source of genetic and functional innovation. In any case, genetically redundant genes are expected to show an acceleration in the rate of molecular evolution. Here, we tackle the role of functional redundancy in viral RNA genomes. To this end, we have evaluated the rates of compensatory evolution for deleterious mutations affecting an essential function, the suppr…

0301 basic medicinePotyvirusEndogenyComputational biologyGenome ViralGenomeExperimental virus evolutionViral suppressors of RNA silencingEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsRNA VirusesViral rnaGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCompensatory evolutionPlant DiseasesbiologyTobacco etch virusFunctional redundancyMultifunctional proteinsPlantsbiology.organism_classificationGenetic redundancyTobacco etch virus030104 developmental biologyMutationGenetic redundancyRNA ViralRNA InterferencePseudogenesResearch Article
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Genome Mutational and Transcriptional Hotspots Are Traps for Duplicated Genes and Sources of Adaptations

2017

Gene duplication generatesnewgeneticmaterial,which has been shownto lead tomajor innovations in unicellular andmulticellular organisms.Awhole-genome duplication occurred in the ancestor of Saccharomyces yeast species but 92%of duplicates returned to single-copy genes shortly after duplication. The persisting duplicated genes in Saccharomyces led to the origin of major metabolic innovations, which have been the source of the unique biotechnological capabilities in the Baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. What factors have determined the fate of duplicated genes remains unknown. Here,we report the first demonstration that the local genome mutation and transcription rates determine the fate…

0301 basic medicineTranscription GeneticGene duplicationAdaptation BiologicalSaccharomyces cerevisiaeEnvironmental stressPhenotypic plasticityBiologyGenomeEnvironmental stressMutational genome hotspots03 medical and health sciencesMutation RateStress PhysiologicalGene duplicationGeneticsPromoter Regions GeneticEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsAdaptationsGenetic redundancyDuplicated genes030104 developmental biologyMutationGenetic redundancyExpression genome hotspotsResearch Article
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Categorizing the Role of Respiration in Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Variability Interactions

2022

Objective: Respiration disturbs cardiovascular and cerebrovascular controls but its role is not fully elucidated. Methods: Respiration can be classified as a confounder if its observation reduces the strength of the causal relationship from source to target. Respiration is a suppressor if the opposite situation holds. We prove that a confounding/suppression (C/S) test can be accomplished by evaluating the sign of net redundancy/synergy balance in the predictability framework based on multivariate autoregressive modelling. In addition, we suggest that, under the hypothesis of Gaussian processes, the C/S test can be given in the transfer entropy decomposition framework as well. Experimental p…

AdultMalePhysiologyBiomedical EngineeringsynergyBlood Pressurecardiac neural controlYoung Adulthead-up tiltHeart RateHumansArterial PressureAnesthesiaPropofolAgedMultivariate autoregressive modelredundancyRespirationcerebrovascular autoregulationautonomic nervous systemheart rate variabilityMediationtransfer entropyHeartIndexesMiddle Agedsuppressiongeneral anesthesiapredictability decompositionconfoundingCerebrovascular CirculationSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica e Informaticaautonomic nervous system; cardiac neural control; cerebrovascular autoregulation; confounding; general anesthesia; head-up tilt; heart rate variability; Multivariate autoregressive model; predictability decomposition; redundancy; suppression; synergy; transfer entropy;ProtocolsRegulation
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Predictability decomposition detects the impairment of brain-heart dynamical networks during sleep disorders and their recovery with treatment

2016

This work introduces a framework to study the network formed by the autonomic component of heart rate variability (cardiac process η ) and the amplitude of the different electroencephalographic waves (brain processes δ , θ , α , σ , β ) during sleep. The framework exploits multivariate linear models to decompose the predictability of any given target process into measures of self-, causal and interaction predictability reflecting respectively the information retained in the process and related to its physiological complexity, the information transferred from the other source processes, and the information modified during the transfer according to redundant or synergistic interaction betwee…

Autonomic nervous system; Brain-heart interactions; Delta sleep electroencephalogram; Granger causality; Heart rate variability; Synergy and redundancy; Mathematics (all); Engineering (all); Physics and Astronomy (all)General MathematicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyElectroencephalography01 natural sciencesSynergy and redundancy03 medical and health sciencesPhysics and Astronomy (all)0302 clinical medicineEngineering (all)0103 physical sciencesMedicineHeart rate variabilityAutonomic nervous systemMathematics (all)Predictability010306 general physicsHeart rate variabilityCardiac processmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryGeneral EngineeringHealthy subjectsBrainArticlesAutonomic nervous systemDelta sleep electroencephalogramSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaGranger causalityBrain-heart interactionSleep (system call)businessNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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The TileCal Optical Multiplexer Board 9U

2011

Abstract TileCal is the hadronic calorimeter of the ATLAS experiment at LHC/CERN. The system contains roughly 10,000 channels of read-out electronics, whose signals are gathered and digitized in the front-end electronics and then transmitted to the counting room through two redundant optical links. Then, the data is received in the back-end system by the Optical Multiplexer Board (OMB) 9U which performs a CRC check to the redundant data to avoid Single Event Upsets errors. A real-time decision is taken on the event-to-event basis to transmit single data to the Read-Out Drivers (RODs) for processing. Due to the low dose level expected during the first years of operations in ATLAS it was deci…

CalorimeterLarge Hadron Colliderbusiness.industryComputer scienceDetectorATLAS experimentPhysics and Astronomy(all)ATLASMultiplexerCRCData acquisitionSoftwareCyclic redundancy checkLHCElectronicsDetectors and Experimental TechniquesbusinessSingle Event UpsetsFPGAComputer hardwarePhysics Procedia
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A novel cell model to study the function of the adrenoleukodystrophy-related protein

2006

X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) is a neurodegenerative disorder due to mutations in the ABCD1 (ALD) gene. ALDRP, the closest homolog of ALDP, has been shown to have partial functional redundancy with ALDP and, when overexpressed, can compensate for the loss-of-function of ALDP. In order to characterize the function of ALDRP and to understand the phenomenon of gene redundancy, we have developed a novel system that allows the controlled expression of the ALDRP-EGFP fusion protein (normal or non-functional mutated ALDRP) using the Tet-On system in H4IIEC3 rat hepatoma cells. The generated stable cell lines express negligible levels of endogenous ALDRP and doxycycline dosage-dependent lev…

Carcinoma Hepatocellularendocrine system diseasesRecombinant Fusion ProteinsBiophysicsGene redundancyATP-binding cassette transporterContext (language use)BiologyATP Binding Cassette Transporter Subfamily DProtein EngineeringTransfectionBiochemistryCell Line TumormedicineAnimalsAdrenoleukodystrophyMolecular BiologyGeneCell BiologyPeroxisomemedicine.diseaseFusion proteinRatsCell biologyDisease Models AnimalBiochemistryATP-Binding Cassette TransportersAdrenoleukodystrophyFunction (biology)
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Local Feature Selection with Dynamic Integration of Classifiers

2000

Multidimensional data is often feature space heterogeneous so that individual features have unequal importance in different sub areas of the feature space. This motivates to search for a technique that provides a strategic splitting of the instance space being able to identify the best subset of features for each instance to be classified. Our technique applies the wrapper approach where a classification algorithm is used as an evaluation function to differentiate between different feature subsets. In order to make the feature selection local, we apply the recent technique for dynamic integration of classifiers. This allows to determine which classifier and which feature subset should be us…

Computer sciencebusiness.industryDimensionality reductionFeature vectorDecision treeFeature selectionPattern recognitionEvaluation functionMachine learningcomputer.software_genreFeature modelk-nearest neighbors algorithmMinimum redundancy feature selectionArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputer
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2015

The manner in which populations of inhibitory (INH) and excitatory (EXC) neocortical neurons collectively encode stimulus-related information is a fundamental, yet still unresolved question. Here we address this question by simultaneously recording with large-scale multi-electrode arrays (of up to 128 channels) the activity of cell ensembles (of up to 74 neurons) distributed along all layers of 3–4 neighboring cortical columns in the anesthetized adult rat somatosensory barrel cortex in vivo. Using two different whisker stimulus modalities (location and frequency) we show that individual INH neurons – classified as such according to their distinct extracellular spike waveforms – discriminat…

Ecologybusiness.industrySensory systemBarrel cortexBiologyStimulus (physiology)Somatosensory systemInhibitory postsynaptic potentialMachine learningcomputer.software_genreCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceComputational Theory and MathematicsModeling and SimulationNeuronal tuningGeneticsExcitatory postsynaptic potentialArtificial intelligencebusinessMolecular BiologyNeurosciencecomputerEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInformation redundancyPLOS Computational Biology
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