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3920 Publications

Showing 2221-2230 of 3920 results
04/03/23 | Mitochondrial GTP Metabolism Regulates Reproductive Aging
Yi-Tang Lee , Marzia Savini , Tao Chen , Jin Yang , Qian Zhao , Lang Ding , Shihong Max Gao , Mumine Senturk , Jessica Sowa , Jue D. Wang , Meng C. Wang
bioRxiv. 2023 Apr 03:. doi: 10.1101/2023.04.02.535296

Healthy mitochondria are critical for reproduction. During aging, both reproductive fitness and mitochondrial homeostasis decline. Mitochondrial metabolism and dynamics are key factors in supporting mitochondrial homeostasis. However, how they are coupled to control reproductive health remains unclear. We report that mitochondrial GTP metabolism acts through mitochondrial dynamics factors to regulate reproductive aging. We discovered that germline-only inactivation of GTP- but not ATP-specific succinyl-CoA synthetase (SCS), promotes reproductive longevity in Caenorhabditis elegans. We further revealed an age-associated increase in mitochondrial clustering surrounding oocyte nuclei, which is attenuated by the GTP-specific SCS inactivation. Germline-only induction of mitochondrial fission factors sufficiently promotes mitochondrial dispersion and reproductive longevity. Moreover, we discovered that bacterial inputs affect mitochondrial GTP and dynamics factors to modulate reproductive aging. These results demonstrate the significance of mitochondrial GTP metabolism in regulating oocyte mitochondrial homeostasis and reproductive longevity and reveal mitochondrial fission induction as an effective strategy to improve reproductive health.

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11/06/15 | Mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM) binds to RNA containing 4-way junctions and mitochondrial tRNA.
Brown TA, Tkachuk AN, Clayton DA
PloS one. 2015 nov 6;10(11):e0142436. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0142436

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is maintained within nucleoprotein complexes known as nucleoids. These structures are highly condensed by the DNA packaging protein, mitochondrial Transcription Factor A (TFAM). Nucleoids also include RNA, RNA:DNA hybrids, and are associated with proteins involved with RNA processing and mitochondrial ribosome biogenesis. Here we characterize the ability of TFAM to bind various RNA containing substrates in order to determine their role in TFAM distribution and function within the nucleoid. We find that TFAM binds to RNA-containing 4-way junctions but does not bind appreciably to RNA hairpins, internal loops, or linear RNA:DNA hybrids. Therefore the RNA within nucleoids largely excludes TFAM, and its distribution is not grossly altered with removal of RNA. Within the cell, TFAM binds to mitochondrial tRNAs, consistent with our RNA 4-way junction data. Kinetic binding assays and RNase-insensitive TFAM distribution indicate that DNA remains the preferred substrate within the nucleoid. However, TFAM binds to tRNA with nanomolar affinity and these complexes are not rare. TFAM-immunoprecipitated tRNAs have processed ends, suggesting that binding is not specific to RNA precursors. The amount of each immunoprecipitated tRNA is not well correlated with tRNA celluar abundance, indicating unequal TFAM binding preferences. TFAM-mt-tRNA interaction suggests potentially new functions for this protein.

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03/01/98 | Mitochondrial transcription factor A is necessary for mtDNA maintenance and embryogenesis in mice.
Larsson NG, Wang J, Wilhelmsson H, Oldfors A, Rustin P, Lewandoski M, Barsh GS, Clayton DA
Nature Genetics. 1998 Mar;18(3):231-6. doi: 10.1038/ng0398-231

The regulation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) expression is crucial for mitochondrial biogenesis during development and differentiation. We have disrupted the mouse gene for mitochondrial transcription factor A (Tfam; formerly known as m-mtTFA) by gene targetting of loxP-sites followed by cre-mediated excision in vivo. Heterozygous knockout mice exhibit reduced mtDNA copy number and respiratory chain deficiency in heart. Homozygous knockout embryos exhibit a severe mtDNA depletion with abolished oxidative phosphorylation. Mutant embryos proceed through implantation and gastrulation, but die prior to embryonic day (E)10.5. Thus, Tfam is the first mammalian protein demonstrated to regulate mtDNA copy number in vivo and is essential for mitochondrial biogenesis and embryonic development.

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04/30/24 | Mitochondrially-associated actin waves maintain organelle homeostasis and equitable inheritance.
Coscia SM, Moore AS, Wong YC, Holzbaur EL
Curr Opin Cell Biol. 2024 Apr 30;88:102364. doi: 10.1016/j.ceb.2024.102364

First identified in dividing cells as revolving clusters of actin filaments, these are now understood as mitochondrially-associated actin waves that are active throughout the cell cycle. These waves are formed from the polymerization of actin onto a subset of mitochondria. Within minutes, this F-actin depolymerizes while newly formed actin filaments assemble onto neighboring mitochondria. In interphase, actin waves locally fragment the mitochondrial network, enhancing mitochondrial content mixing to maintain organelle homeostasis. In dividing cells actin waves spatially mix mitochondria in the mother cell to ensure equitable partitioning of these organelles between daughter cells. Progress has been made in understanding the consequences of actin cycling as well as the underlying molecular mechanisms, but many questions remain, and here we review these elements. Also, we draw parallels between mitochondrially-associated actin cycling and cortical actin waves. These dynamic systems highlight the remarkable plasticity of the actin cytoskeleton.

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Freeman Lab
04/01/16 | MLlib: Machine learning in Apache Spark.
Meng X, Bradley J, Yavus B, Sparks E, Venkataraman S, Liu D, Freeman J, Tsai DB, Amde M, Owen S, Xin D, Franklin MJ, Zadeh R, Zaharia M, Talwalkar A
Journal of Machine Learning Research. 2016 Apr 01;17:1-7

Apache Spark is a popular open-source platform for large-scale data processing that is well-suited for iterative machine learning tasks. In this paper we present MLlib, Spark’s open-source distributed machine learning library. MLlib provides efficient functionality for a wide range of learning settings and includes several underlying statistical, optimization, and linear algebra primitives. Shipped with Spark, MLlib supports several languages and provides a high-level API that leverages Spark’s rich ecosystem to simplify the development of end-to-end machine learning pipelines. MLlib has experienced a rapid growth due to its vibrant open-source community of over 140 contributors, and includes extensive documentation to support further growth and to let users quickly get up to speed. 

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07/01/96 | Modal aproximation for the electromagnetic field of a near-field optical probe.
Grober RD, Rutherford T, Harris TD
Applied Optics. 1996 Jul 1;35(19):3488-95. doi: 10.1364/AO.35.003488

A formalism is given in which the optical field generated by a near-field optical aperture is described as an analytic expansion over a complete set of optical modes. This vectoral solution preserves the divergent behavior of the near field and the dipolar nature of the far field. Numerical calculation of the fields requires only evaluation of a well behaved, one-dimensional integral. The formalism is directly applicable to experiments in near-field scanning optical microscopy when relatively flat samples are evaluated.

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Kainmueller Lab
09/24/10 | Model-based auto-segmentation of knee bones and cartilage in MRI data.
Seim H, Kainmueller D, Lamecker H, Bindernagel M, Malinowski J, Zachow S
Medical Image Analysis for the Clinic - A Grand Challenge, MICCAI 2010, the 13th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention. 2010 Sep 24:

We present a method for fully automatic segmentation of the bones and cartilages of the human knee from MRI data. Based on statistical shape models and graph-based optimization, first the femoral and tibial bone surfaces are reconstructed. Starting from the bone sur- faces the cartilages are segmented simultaneously with a multi object technique using prior knowledge on the variation of cartilage thickness. We validate our method on 40 clinical MRI datasets acquired before knee replacement. 

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Kainmueller Lab
09/07/08 | Model-based autosegmentation of the central brain of the honeybee, Apis mellifera, using active statistical shape models.
Singer J, Lienhard M, Seim H, Kainmueller D, Kuss A, Lamecker H, Zachow S, Menzel R, Rybak J
Neuroinformatics 2008. 2008 Sep 07:. doi: 10.3389/conf.neuro.11.2008.01.064

The Honeybee Brain Atlas serves as 3D database and communicative platform to accumulate structural data, i.e. reconstructed neurons, derived from confocal scans (Brandt et al., 2005) (www.neurobiologie.fu-berlin.de/beebrain/) (1). Transforming neurons into the atlas requires manual segmentation of neuropils within confocal images, a time-consuming task requiring expertise in identifying biological structures which can result in different outcomes from various segmenters.

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04/21/21 | Model-based Bayesian inference of neural activity and connectivity from all-optical interrogation of a neural circuit
Aitchison L, Russell L, Packer AM, Yan J, Castonguay P, Häusser M, Turaga SC, I. Guyon , U. V. Luxburg , S. Bengio , H. Wallach , R. Fergus , S. Vishwanathan , R. Garnett
Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems:

Population activity measurement by calcium imaging can be combined with cellular resolution optogenetic activity perturbations to enable the mapping of neural connectivity in vivo. This requires accurate inference of perturbed and unperturbed neural activity from calcium imaging measurements, which are noisy and indirect, and can also be contaminated by photostimulation artifacts. We have developed a new fully Bayesian approach to jointly inferring spiking activity and neural connectivity from in vivo all-optical perturbation experiments. In contrast to standard approaches that perform spike inference and analysis in two separate maximum-likelihood phases, our joint model is able to propagate uncertainty in spike inference to the inference of connectivity and vice versa. We use the framework of variational autoencoders to model spiking activity using discrete latent variables, low-dimensional latent common input, and sparse spike-and-slab generalized linear coupling between neurons. Additionally, we model two properties of the optogenetic perturbation: off-target photostimulation and photostimulation transients. Using this model, we were able to fit models on 30 minutes of data in just 10 minutes. We performed an all-optical circuit mapping experiment in primary visual cortex of the awake mouse, and use our approach to predict neural connectivity between excitatory neurons in layer 2/3. Predicted connectivity is sparse and consistent with known correlations with stimulus tuning, spontaneous correlation and distance.

 

 

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12/04/17 | Model-based Bayesian inference of neural activity and connectivity from all-optical interrogation of a neural circuit.
Aitchison L, Russell L, Packer AM, Yan J, Castonguaye P, Häusser M, Turaga SC
31st Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS 2017). 2017 Dec 04:

Population activity measurement by calcium imaging can be combined with cellular resolution optogenetic activity perturbations to enable the mapping of neural connectivity in vivo. This requires accurate inference of perturbed and unperturbed neural activity from calcium imaging measurements, which are noisy and indirect, and can also be contaminated by photostimulation artifacts. We have developed a new fully Bayesian approach to jointly inferring spiking activity and neural connectivity from in vivo all-optical perturbation experiments. In contrast to standard approaches that perform spike inference and analysis in two separate maximum-likelihood phases, our joint model is able to propagate uncertainty in spike inference to the inference of connectivity and vice versa. We use the framework of variational autoencoders to model spiking activity using discrete latent variables, low-dimensional latent common input, and sparse spike-and-slab generalized linear coupling between neurons. Additionally, we model two properties of the optogenetic perturbation: off-target photostimulation and photostimulation transients. Our joint model includes at least two sets of discrete random variables; to avoid the dramatic slowdown typically caused by being unable to differentiate such variables, we introduce two strategies that have not, to our knowledge, been used with variational autoencoders. Using this model, we were able to fit models on 30 minutes of data in just 10 minutes. We performed an all-optical circuit mapping experiment in primary visual cortex of the awake mouse, and use our approach to predict neural connectivity between excitatory neurons in layer 2/3. Predicted connectivity is sparse and consistent with known correlations with stimulus tuning, spontaneous correlation and distance.

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