Search results for " selection"

showing 10 items of 1271 documents

Inhalational or intravenous anesthetics for craniotomies? Pro inhalational.

2006

In neurosurgery, anesthesiologists and surgeons focus on the same target - the brain. The nature of anesthetics is to interact with brain physiology, leading to favorable and adverse effects. Research in neuroanesthesia over the last three decades has been dedicated to identifying the optimal anesthetic agent to maintain coupling between cerebral blood flow and metabolism, keep cerebrovascular autoregulation intact, and not increase cerebral blood volume and intracranial pressure.Sevoflurane is less vasoactive than halothane, enflurane, isoflurane, or desflurane. The context sensitive half-life is short and similar to that of desflurane, which translates into fast on and offset. Compared wi…

Methyl Ethersmedicine.medical_specialtyIntracranial PressureMEDLINESevofluraneCardiovascular Physiological PhenomenaSevofluraneMedicineHomeostasisHumansAdverse effectPropofolMonitoring PhysiologicEpilepsybusiness.industryPatient SelectionIntravenous AnestheticsBrainElectroencephalographyAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineNeuroprotective AgentsAnesthesiaCerebrovascular CirculationAnesthesia Recovery PeriodAnesthetics InhalationPostoperative Nausea and VomitingNeurosurgeryAnesthesia Recovery PeriodbusinessAnesthetics IntravenousCraniotomymedicine.drugCurrent opinion in anaesthesiology
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Genome characterisation of two Ljungan virus isolates from wild bank voles (Myodes glareolus) in Sweden

2015

Ljungan virus (LV) (family Picornaviridae, genus Parechovirus) is a suspected zoonotic pathogen with associations to human disease in Sweden. LV is a single-stranded RNA virus with a positive sense genome. There are five published Ljungan virus strains, three isolated from Sweden and two from America, and are classified into four genotypes. A further two strains described here were isolated from wild bank voles (Myodes glareolus) caught in Vastmanlands county, Sweden in 1994. These strains were sequenced using next generation pyrosequencing technology on the GS454flx platform. Genetic and phylogenetic analysis of the obtained genomes confirms isolates LV340 and LV342 as two new putative mem…

Microbiology (medical)Genes ViralGenotypeGS454ParechovirusGenome ViralMicrobiologyGenomeEvolution MolecularPhylogeneticsUntranslated Regionspositive selectionGenotypeevolutionMyodes glareolusGeneticsAnimalsSelection GeneticMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyGeneticsSwedenPicornaviridae InfectionsbiologyPhylogenetic treeArvicolinaeta1183RNA virusLjungan virusbiology.organism_classificationVirologyInfectious DiseasesLjungan virusArvicolinaeVP3ParechovirusNucleic Acid ConformationRNA Viralta1181Infection, Genetics and Evolution
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Slow and fast evolving endosymbiont lineages: positive correlation between the rates of synonymous and nonsynonymous substitution

2015

The availability of complete genome sequences of bacterial endosymbionts with strict vertical transmission to the host progeny opens the possibility to estimate molecular evolutionary rates in different lineages and understand the main biological mechanisms influencing these rates. We have compared the rates of evolution for non-synonymous and synonymous substitutions in nine bacterial endosymbiont lineages, belonging to four clades (Baumannia, Blochmannia, Portiera, and Sulcia). The main results are the observation of a positive correlation between both rates with differences among lineages of up to three orders of magnitude and that the substitution rates decrease over long endosymbioses.…

Microbiology (medical)GeneticsDNA ReplicationNatural selectionfood.ingredientGeneration timeendosymbiosisEndosymbiosisObligateDNA RepairDNA repair[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]BlochmanniaDNA replicationlcsh:QR1-502BiologyEvolutionary rateMicrobiologyGenomelcsh:MicrobiologyfoodGeneration timePerspectiveComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSnucleotide substitutionFrontiers in Microbiology
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r- and K-selection in experimental populations of vesicular stomatitis virus.

2002

Here we explore the adaptation of vesicular stomatitis RNA virus to different population densities and the existence of a trade-off between r- and K-selection. Increasing population density represents a challenging special situation for viruses, since different selective pressures arise depending upon the number of available host cells per virus. Adaptation to low density represents a prototypical case of r-selection, where the optimal evolutionary solution should be a high replication rate. Adaptation to high density represents a case of K-selection. In this case, genotypes optimally exploiting the resources, instead of faster replicating ones, should be selected. Five independent populati…

Microbiology (medical)GeneticsExperimental evolutionbiologyr/K selection theoryRNA virusbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyPopulation densityBiological EvolutionVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusVesicular StomatitisInfectious DiseasesEffective population sizeVesicular stomatitis virusGeneticsAdaptationSelection GeneticMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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Immune evasion, immunopathology and the regulation of the immune system.

2013

21 pages; International audience; Costs and benefits of the immune response have attracted considerable attention in the last years among evolutionary biologists. Given the cost of parasitism, natural selection should favor individuals with the most effective immune defenses. Nevertheless, there exists huge variation in the expression of immune effectors among individuals. To explain this apparent paradox, it has been suggested that an over-reactive immune system might be too costly, both in terms of metabolic resources and risks of immune-mediated diseases, setting a limit to the investment into immune defenses. Here, we argue that this view neglects one important aspect of the interaction…

Microbiology (medical)medicine.medical_treatmentlcsh:MedicineReviewBiologymedicine.disease_causehygiene hypothesisAutoimmunity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune systemHygiene hypothesisImmunopathologymedicineImmunology and Allergy[ SDV.IMM ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Immunologymolecular mimicryMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyimmune evasion0303 health sciencesNatural selectionimmunosuppressionGeneral Immunology and Microbiologylcsh:Rautoimmunityimmune regulationImmunosuppressionbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionEvasion (ethics)Molecular mimicryInfectious DiseasesImmunology[SDV.IMM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/ImmunologyTreg cells030215 immunology
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Intersexual competition among humans: prosocial towards the opposite sex and proself towards the same sex?

2017

In a research conducted on a sample of participants from three countries (N = 256): Poland, Ukraine and Denmark, a hypothesis of the moderating impact of other person sex on the level of social value orientation of men and women was tested. The study applied the now rarely used method of measuring social value orientation: the Warsaw Method, which was expected to reveal more subtle differences between men and women than those observed in the studies using the most popular social value orientation measurement tools, such as decomposed games. The direction of the observed relationship proved to be compatible with the predictions resulting from the phenomenon of intrasexual competition for a p…

Microbiology (medical)sex differencessocial value orientationImmunologylcsh:BF1-990sex differences.lcsh:PsychologyProsocial behaviorSexual selectionSame sexImmunology and AllergyPsychologyintrasexual competitionSocial psychologyProblems of Psychology in the 21st Century
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Social evolution of innate immunity evasion in a virus

2019

Antiviral immunity has been studied extensively from the perspective of virus−cell interactions, yet the role of virus−virus interactions remains poorly addressed. Here, we demonstrate that viral escape from interferon (IFN)-based innate immunity is a social process in which IFN-stimulating viruses determine the fitness of neighbouring viruses. We propose a general and simple social evolution framework to analyse how natural selection acts on IFN shutdown and validate it in cell cultures and mice infected with vesicular stomatitis virus. Furthermore, we find that IFN shutdown is costly because it reduces short-term viral progeny production, thus fulfilling the definition of an altruistic tr…

Microbiology (medical)virusesImmunologyBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyAntiviral AgentsModels BiologicalArticleVirusVesicular stomatitis Indiana virus03 medical and health sciencesMiceViral ProteinsInterferonImmunityGeneticsmedicineAnimals030304 developmental biologyImmune Evasion0303 health sciencesMice Inbred BALB CInnate immune systemNatural selection030306 microbiologyBrainCell BiologyDNA-Directed RNA Polymerasesbiology.organism_classificationAltruismVirologyBiological EvolutionImmunity Innate3. Good healthDisease Models AnimalVesicular stomatitis virusViral evolutionHost-Pathogen InteractionsFemaleInterferonsSocial evolutionmedicine.drugNature Microbiology
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Asset Markets and Equilibrium Selection in Public Goods Games with Provision Points: An Experimental Study

2001

This paper reports the experimental results of implicit pre-play communication on the equilibrium selection in threshold public goods game experiments. The existence of an asset market in which the right to participate in a public goods game with a provision point is auctioned off among a larger group in a first stage is found to enhance significantly the contribution to the provision of the public good in a subsequent second stage. Though, contributions declined on average in the repeated public goods game when subjects were endowed with the right to play, they increased when subjects purchased the right to play. Once reached the Pareto-dominant equilibrium in the second stage, the auction…

MicroeconomicsEntry costEquilibrium selectionPublic goods gameEconomicsAsset marketAsset (economics)Public goodRobustness (economics)Discount pointsSSRN Electronic Journal
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El componente de selección adversa de la horquilla de precios cotizada: una revisión de los modelos de estimación

2005

-Jose.E.Farinos@uv.es -Ana.M.Ibanez@uv.es Una de las principales preocupaciones en el área de la microestructura del mercado ha sido la estimación de los componentes no observables de la horquilla de precios a partir de las series de datos que proporcionan los mercados financieros, despertando quizá un mayor interés el de selección adversa por la implicaciones que supone la existencia del mismo. Esto ha provocado el desarrollo de numerosos modelos empíricos que, basándose en las propiedades estadísticas de las series de precios, proporcionan dichas estimaciones. La mayor disponibilidad de datos existentes en los mercados ha permitido el desarrollo en los últimos años de modelos basados en t…

Microestructura de los mercados financieros; Negociación informada; Horquilla de precios; Selección adversa; Costes de transacciónmarket microstructureselección adversajel:D82spreadinsider tradingFINANCIAL ECONOMICSadverse selection componentG12G34microestructura de los mercados financieros:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Economía sectorial::Finanzas y seguros [UNESCO]ECONOMICSORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENTBUSINESS AND INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENTUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Economía sectorial::Finanzas y segurosjel:G12jel:G34Costes de transacciónD82MICROECONOMICSmicroestructura de los mercados financieros negociación informada horquilla de precios selección adversa market microstructure insider trading spread adverse selection component transaction costtransaction costhorquilla de preciosINDUSTRIAL RELATIONS AND LABORSTRATEGY AND MANAGEMENTnegociación informada
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Fitness and life-history traits of the two major mitochondrial DNA haplotypes of Drosophila subobscura

2004

Mitochondrial DNA restriction site analyses on natural populations of Drosophila subobscura have proved the existence of two common, coexisting haplotypes (I and II), as well as a set of less frequent ones derived from them. To explain this distribution, experiments to date point practically to all possible genetic mechanisms being involved in the changes of gene frequencies (cytonuclear coadaptation, direct natural selection on mtDNA and genetic drift). In an attempt to find differences that help to understand the dynamics of these haplotypes and to detect the effect of selection, we measured certain fitness components and life-history traits (egg-larva and larva-adult viabilities and deve…

Mitochondrial DNAmedia_common.quotation_subjectLongevityRestriction MappingPopulationBiologyDNA MitochondrialPolymerase Chain ReactionQuantitative Trait HeritableGenetic driftGeneticsAnimalsSelection GeneticeducationGenetics (clinical)Selection (genetic algorithm)media_commonTissue SurvivalGeneticseducation.field_of_studyNatural selectionHaplotypeLongevityDrosophila subobscuraHaplotypesEvolutionary biologyLarvaDrosophilaWolbachiaHeredity
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