582 results on '"Wallace, B. P."'
Search Results
2. Estimates of primary ciliary dyskinesia prevalence: a scoping review
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Wallace B. Wee, Dvir Gatt, Elias Seidl, Giles Santyr, Teresa To, and Sharon D. Dell
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Medicine - Abstract
Background Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare multisystem genetic disease caused by dysfunctional motile cilia. Despite PCD being the second most common inherited airway disease after cystic fibrosis, PCD continues to be under-recognised globally owing to nonspecific clinical features and the lack of a gold standard diagnostic test. Commonly repeated prevalence estimates range from one in 10 000 to one in 20 000, based on regional epidemiological studies with known limitations. The purpose of this scoping review was to appraise the PCD literature, to determine the best available global PCD prevalence estimate and to inform the reader about the potential unmet health service needs in PCD. The primary objective of the present study was to systematically review the literature about PCD prevalence estimates. Methods A scoping review was conducted following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR) methodology. Included studies estimated PCD prevalence and used cohort, clinical or genomic data. Case reports, conference abstracts, review articles, animal studies or non-English articles were excluded. Results A literature review identified 3484 unique abstracts; 34 underwent full-text review and eight met the inclusion/exclusion criteria. Seven articles were based on epidemiological studies of specific geographical regions and provided prevalence estimates that ranged from approximately one to 44.1 in 100 000. Only one study estimated global prevalence, using two large genomic databases, and calculated it to be ∼13.2 in 100 000 (based on pathogenic variants in 29 disease-causing genes). Conclusions A population-based genomic approach for estimating global prevalence has found that PCD is much more prevalent than previously cited in the literature. This highlights the potential unmet health service needs of people living with PCD.
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- 2024
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3. The 1.28 GHz MeerKAT Galactic Center Mosaic
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Heywood, I., Rammala, I., Camilo, F., Cotton, W. D., Yusef-Zadeh, F., Abbott, T. D., Adam, R. M., Adams, G., Aldera, M. A., Asad, K. M. B., Bauermeister, E. F., Bennett, T. G. H., Bester, H. L., Bode, W. A., Botha, D. H., Botha, A. G., Brederode, L. R. S., Buchner, S., Burger, J. P., Cheetham, T., de Villiers, D. I. L., Dikgale-Mahlakoana, M. A., Toit, L. J. du, Esterhuyse, S. W. P., Fanaroff, B. L., February, S., Fourie, D. J., Frank, B. S., Gamatham, R. R. G., Geyer, M., Goedhart, S., Gouws, M., Gumede, S. C., Hlakola, M. J., Hokwana, A., Hoosen, S. W., Horrell, J. M. G., Hugo, B., Isaacson, A. I., Józsa, G. I. G., Jonas, J. L., Joubert, A. F., Julie, R. P. M., Kapp, F. B., Kenyon, J. S., Kotzé, P. P. A., Kriek, N., Kriel, H., Krishnan, V. K., Lehmensiek, R., Liebenberg, D., Lord, R. T., Lunsky, B. M., Madisa, K., Magnus, L. G., Mahgoub, O., Makhaba, A., Makhathini, S., Malan, J. A., Manley, J. R., Marais, S. J., Martens, A., Mauch, T., Merry, B. C., Millenaar, R. P., Mnyandu, N., Mokone, O. J., Monama, T. E., Mphego, M. C., New, W. S., Ngcebetsha, B., Ngoasheng, K. J., Ockards, M. T., Oozeer, N., Otto, A. J., Passmoor, S. S., Patel, A. A., Peens-Hough, A., Perkins, S. J., Ramaila, A. J. T., Ramanujam, N. M. R., Ramudzuli, Z. R., Ratcliffe, S. M., Robyntjies, A., Salie, S., Sambu, N., Schollar, C. T. G., Schwardt, L. C., Schwartz, R. L., Serylak, M., Siebrits, R., Sirothia, S. K., Slabber, M., Smirnov, O. M., Sofeya, L., Taljaard, B., Tasse, C., Tiplady, A. J., Toruvanda, O., Twum, S. N., van Balla, T. J., van der Byl, A., van der Merwe, C., Van Tonder, V., Van Wyk, R., Venter, A. J., Venter, M., Wallace, B. H., Welz, M. G., Williams, L. P., and Xaia, B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The inner $\sim$200 pc region of the Galaxy contains a 4 million M$_{\odot}$ supermassive black hole (SMBH), significant quantities of molecular gas, and star formation and cosmic ray energy densities that are roughly two orders of magnitude higher than the corresponding levels in the Galactic disk. At a distance of only 8.2 kpc, the region presents astronomers with a unique opportunity to study a diverse range of energetic astrophysical phenomena, from stellar objects in extreme environments, to the SMBH and star-formation driven feedback processes that are known to influence the evolution of galaxies as a whole. We present a new survey of the Galactic center conducted with the South African MeerKAT radio telescope. Radio imaging offers a view that is unaffected by the large quantities of dust that obscure the region at other wavelengths, and a scene of striking complexity is revealed. We produce total intensity and spectral index mosaics of the region from 20 pointings (144 hours on-target in total), covering 6.5 square degrees with an angular resolution of 4$"$,at a central frequency of 1.28 GHz. Many new features are revealed for the first time due to a combination of MeerKAT's high sensitivity, exceptional $u,v$-plane coverage, and geographical vantage point. We highlight some initial survey results, including new supernova remnant candidates, many new non-thermal filament complexes, and enhanced views of the Radio Arc Bubble, Sgr A and Sgr B regions. This project is a SARAO public legacy survey, and the image products are made available with this article., Comment: 29 pages, 15 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in the The Astrophysical Journal. Replacement arXiv version with higher quality figures
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- 2022
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4. DichroIDP: a method for analyses of intrinsically disordered proteins using circular dichroism spectroscopy
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Miles, Andrew J., Drew, Elliot D., and Wallace, B. A.
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- 2023
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5. Photoreceptor Cell Calcium Dysregulation and Calpain Activation Promote Pathogenic Photoreceptor Oxidative Stress and Inflammation in Prodromal Diabetic Retinopathy.
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Saadane, Aicha, Du, Yunpeng, Thoreson, Wallace B, Miyagi, Masaru, Lessieur, Emma M, Kiser, Jianying, Wen, Xiangyi, Berkowitz, Bruce A, and Kern, Timothy S
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Retina ,Cell Line ,Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Mice ,Knockout ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Inflammation ,Superoxides ,Calcium ,Calpain ,Glycoproteins ,Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 ,Proteome ,Severity of Illness Index ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Up-Regulation ,Gene Deletion ,Enzyme Activation ,Oxidative Stress ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Photoreceptor Cells ,Vision ,Ocular ,WW Domain-Containing Oxidoreductase ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Neurosciences ,Diabetes ,Prevention ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Eye ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Pathology - Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that diabetes promotes a greater than normal cytosolic calcium level in rod cells that activates a Ca2+-sensitive protease, calpain, resulting in oxidative stress and inflammation, two pathogenic factors of early diabetic retinopathy. Nondiabetic and 2-month diabetic C57Bl/6J and calpain1 knockout (Capn1-/-) mice were studied; subgroups were treated with a calpain inhibitor (CI). Ca2+ content was measured in photoreceptors using Fura-2. Retinal calpain expression was studied by quantitative RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry. Superoxide and expression of inflammatory proteins were measured using published methods. Proteomic analysis was conducted on photoreceptors isolated from untreated diabetic mice or treated daily with CI for 2 months. Cytosolic Ca2+ content was increased twofold in photoreceptors of diabetic mice as compared with nondiabetic mice. Capn1 expression increased fivefold in photoreceptor outer segments of diabetic mice. Pharmacologic inhibition or genetic deletion of Capn1 significantly suppressed diabetes-induced oxidative stress and expression of proinflammatory proteins in retina. Proteomics identified a protein (WW domain-containing oxidoreductase [WWOX]) whose expression was significantly increased in photoreceptors from mice diabetic for 2 months and was inhibited with CI. Knockdown of Wwox using specific siRNA in vitro inhibited increase in superoxide caused by the high glucose. These results suggest that reducing Ca2+ accumulation, suppressing calpain activation, and/or reducing Wwox up-regulation are novel targets for treating early diabetic retinopathy.
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- 2021
6. Bronchodilator responsiveness in children with primary ciliary dyskinesia
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Elias Seidl, Dvir Gatt, Wallace B. Wee, David Wilson, Felix Ratjen, and Hartmut Grasemann
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Medicine - Abstract
Background Reversible airway obstruction is common in children with primary ciliary dyskinesia. However, the diagnostic value of adding bronchodilator (BD) response testing to routine spirometry is unclear. Methods This is a retrospective analysis of pulmonary function test results obtained from children with primary ciliary dyskinesia seen as outpatients at the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto. Spirometry results were collected for every appointment with BD response testing (“Visit”, with pre-BD and post-BD measurements) as well as for the previous (“Baseline”) and following (“Follow-up”) encounters. Results A positive BD response was seen in 86 out of 474 (18.1%) of the pulmonary function tests from 82 children with primary ciliary dyskinesia. BD responsiveness was associated with a significant absolute change (±sd) in % predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) from Baseline to Visit pre-BD (−6.5±10.3%, p
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- 2024
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7. The 1.28 GHz MeerKAT DEEP2 Image
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Mauch, T., Cotton, W. D., Condon, J. J., Matthews, A. M., Abbott, T. D., Adam, R. M., Aldera, M. A., Asad, K. M. B., Bauermeister, E. F., Bennett, T. G. H., Bester, H., Botha, D. H., Brederode, L. R. S., Brits, Z. B., Buchner, S. J., Burger, J. P., Camilo, F., Chalmers, J. M., Cheetham, T., de Villiers, D., de Villiers, M. S., Dikgale-Mahlakoana, M. A., Toit, L. J. du, Esterhuyse, S. W. P., Fadana, G., Fanaroff, B. L., Fataar, S., February, S., Frank, B. S., Gamatham, R. R. G., Geyer, M., Goedhart, S., Gounden, S., Gumede, S. C., Heywood, I., Hlakola, M. J., Horrell, J. M. G., Hugo, B., Isaacson, A. R., Józsa, G. I. G., Jonas, J. L., Julie, R. P. M., Kapp, F. B., Kasper, V. A., Kenyon, J. S., Kotzé, P. P. A., Kriek, N., Kriel, H., Kusel, T. W., Lehmensiek, R., Loots, A., Lord, R. T., Lunsky, B. M., Madisa, K., Magnus, L. G., Main, J. P. L., Malan, J. A., Manley, J. R., Marais, S. J., Martens, A., Merry, B., Millenaar, R., Mnyandu, N., Moeng, I. P. T., Mokone, O. J., Monama, T. E., Mphego, M. C., New, W. S., Ngcebetsha, B., Ngoasheng, K. J., Ockards, M. T. O., Oozeer, N., Otto, A. J., Patel, A. A., Peens-Hough, A., Perkins, S. J., Ramaila, A. J. T., Ramudzuli, Z. R., Renil, R., Richter, L. L., Robyntjies, A., Salie, S., Schollar, C. T. G., Schwardt, L. C., Serylak, M., Siebrits, R., Sirothia, S. K., Smirnov, O. M., Sofeya, L., Stone, G., Taljaard, B., Tasse, C., Theron, I. P., Tiplady, A. J., Toruvanda, O., Twum, S. N., van Balla, T. J., van der Byl, A., van der Merwe, C., Van Tonder, V., Wallace, B. H., Welz, M. G., Williams, L. P., and Xaia, B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the confusion-limited 1.28 GHz MeerKAT DEEP2 image covering one $\approx 68'$ FWHM primary beam area with $7.6''$ FWHM resolution and $0.55 \pm 0.01$ $\mu$Jy/beam rms noise. Its J2000 center position $\alpha=04^h 13^m 26.4^s$, $\delta=-80^\circ 00' 00''$ was selected to minimize artifacts caused by bright sources. We introduce the new 64-element MeerKAT array and describe commissioning observations to measure the primary beam attenuation pattern, estimate telescope pointing errors, and pinpoint $(u,v)$ coordinate errors caused by offsets in frequency or time. We constructed a 1.4 GHz differential source count by combining a power-law count fit to the DEEP2 confusion $P(D)$ distribution from $0.25$ to $10$ $\mu$Jy with counts of individual DEEP2 sources between $10$ $\mu$Jy and $2.5$ mJy. Most sources fainter than $S \sim 100$ $\mu$Jy are distant star-forming galaxies obeying the FIR/radio correlation, and sources stronger than $0.25$ $\mu$Jy account for $\sim93\%$ of the radio background produced by star-forming galaxies. For the first time, the DEEP2 source count has reached the depth needed to reveal the majority of the star formation history of the universe. A pure luminosity evolution of the 1.4 GHz local luminosity function consistent with the Madau & Dickinson (2014) model for the evolution of star-forming galaxies based on UV and infrared data underpredicts our 1.4 GHz source count in the range $-5 \lesssim \log[S(\mathrm{Jy})] \lesssim -4$., Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2019
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8. Properties of multi-vesicular release from mouse rod photoreceptors support transmission of single photon responses
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Hays, Cassandra L, Sladek, Asia L, Field, Greg D, and Thoreson, Wallace B
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Animals ,Female ,Male ,Membrane Potentials ,Mice ,Photons ,Retinal Rod Photoreceptor Cells ,Synaptic Vesicles ,mouse ,neuroscience ,rod photoreceptor cell ,scotopic vision ,synaptic vesicle release ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Vision under starlight requires rod photoreceptors to transduce and transmit single-photon responses to the visual system. Small single-photon voltage changes must therefore cause detectable reductions in glutamate release. We found that rods achieve this by employing mechanisms that enhance release regularity and its sensitivity to small voltage changes. At the resting membrane potential in darkness, mouse rods exhibit coordinated and regularly timed multivesicular release events, each consisting of ~17 vesicles and occurring two to three times more regularly than predicted by Poisson statistics. Hyperpolarizing rods to mimic the voltage change produced by a single photon abruptly reduced the probability of multivesicular release nearly to zero with a rebound increase at stimulus offset. Simulations of these release dynamics indicate that this regularly timed, multivesicular release promotes transmission of single-photon responses to post-synaptic rod-bipolar cells. Furthermore, the mechanism is efficient, requiring lower overall release rates than uniquantal release governed by Poisson statistics.
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- 2021
9. Inflation of 430-parsec bipolar radio bubbles in the Galactic Centre by an energetic event
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Heywood, I., Camilo, F., Cotton, W. D., Yusef-Zadeh, F., Abbott, T. D., Adam, R. M., Aldera, M. A., Bauermeister, E. F., Booth, R. S., Botha, A. G., Botha, D. H., Brederode, L. R. S., Brits, Z. B., Buchner, S. J., Burger, J. P., Chalmers, J. M., Cheetham, T., de Villiers, D., Dikgale-Mahlakoana, M. A., Toit, L. J. du, Esterhuyse, S. W. P., Fanaroff, B. L., Foley, A. R., Fourie, D. J., Gamatham, R. R. G., Goedhart, S., Gounden, S., Hlakola, M. J., Hoek, C. J., Hokwana, A., Horn, D. M., Horrell, J. M. G., Hugo, B., Isaacson, A. R., Jonas, J. L., Jordaan, J. D. B. L., Joubert, A. F., Józsa, G. I. G., Julie, R. P. M., Kapp, F. B., Kenyon, J. S., Kotzé, P. P. A., Kriel, H., Kusel, T. W., Lehmensiek, R., Liebenberg, D., Loots, A., Lord, R. T., Lunsky, B. M., Macfarlane, P. S., Magnus, L. G., Magozore, C. M., Mahgoub, O., Main, J. P. L., Malan, J. A., Malgas, R. D., Manley, J. R., Maree, M. D. J., Merry, B., Millenaar, R., Mnyandu, N., Moeng, I. P. T., Monama, T. E., Mphego, M. C., New, W. S., Ngcebetsha, B., Oozeer, N., Otto, A. J., Passmoor, S. S., Pate, A. A., Peens-Hough, A., Perkins, S. J., Ratcliffe, S. M., Renil, R., Rust, A., Salie, S., Schwardt, L. C., Serylak, M., Siebrits, R., Sirothia, S. K., Smirnov, O. M., Sofeya, L., Swart, P. S., Tasse, C., Taylor, D. T., Theron, I. P., Thorat, K., Tiplad, A. J., Tshongweni, S., van Balla, T. J., van der Byl, A., van der Merwe, C., van Dyk, C. L., Van Rooyen, R., Van Tonder, V., Van Wyk, R., Wallace, B. H., Welz, M. G., and Williams, L. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Galactic Centre contains a supermassive black hole with a mass of 4 million suns within an environment that differs markedly from that of the Galactic disk. While the black hole is essentially quiescent in the broader context of active galactic nuclei, X-ray observations have provided evidence for energetic outbursts from its surroundings. Also, while the levels of star formation in the Galactic Centre have been approximately constant over the last few hundred Myr, there is evidence of elevated short-duration bursts, strongly influenced by interaction of the black hole with the enhanced gas density present within the ring-like Central Molecular Zone at Galactic longitude |l| < 0.7 degrees and latitude |b| < 0.2 degrees. The inner 200 pc region is characterized by large amounts of warm molecular gas, a high cosmic ray ionization rate, unusual gas chemistry, enhanced synchrotron emission, and a multitude of radio-emitting magnetised filaments, the origin of which has not been established. Here we report radio imaging that reveals bipolar bubbles spanning 1 degree x 3 degrees (140 parsecs x 430 parsecs), extending above and below the Galactic plane and apparently associated with the Galactic Centre. The structure is edge-brightened and bounded, with symmetry implying creation by an energetic event in the Galactic Centre. We estimate the age of the bubbles to be a few million years, with a total energy of 7 x 10^52 ergs. We postulate that the progenitor event was a major contributor to the increased cosmic-ray density in the Galactic Centre, and is in turn the principal source of the relativistic particles required to power the synchrotron emission of the radio filaments within and in the vicinity of the bubble cavities., Comment: 25 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables, authors' version of a Letter published in Nature on 11 September 2019
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- 2019
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10. Revival of the magnetar PSR J1622-4950: observations with MeerKAT, Parkes, XMM-Newton, Swift, Chandra, and NuSTAR
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Camilo, F., Scholz, P., Serylak, M., Buchner, S., Merryfield, M., Kaspi, V. M., Archibald, R. F., Bailes, M., Jameson, A., van Straten, W., Sarkissian, J., Reynolds, J. E., Johnston, S., Hobbs, G., Abbott, T. D., Adam, R. M., Adams, G. B., Alberts, T., Andreas, R., Asad, K. M. B., Baker, D. E., Baloyi, T., Bauermeister, E. F., Baxana, T., Bennett, T. G. H., Bernardi, G., Booisen, D., Booth, R. S., Botha, D. H., Boyana, L., Brederode, L. R. S., Burger, J. P., Cheetham, T., Conradie, J., Conradie, J. P., Davidson, D. B., de Bruin, G., de Swardt, B., de Villiers, C., de Villiers, D. I. L., de Villiers, M. S., de Villiers, W., de Waal, C., Dikgale, M. A., Toit, G. du, Toit, L. J. du, Esterhuyse, S. W. P., Fanaroff, B., Fataar, S., Foley, A. R., Foster, G., Fourie, D., Gamatham, R., Gatsi, T., Geschke, R., Goedhart, S., Grobler, T. L., Gumede, S. C., Hlakola, M. J., Hokwana, A., Hoorn, D. H., Horn, D., Horrell, J., Hugo, B., Isaacson, A., Jacobs, O., van Rensburg, J. P. Jansen, Jonas, J. L., Jordaan, B., Joubert, A., Joubert, F., Jozsa, G. I. G., Julie, R., Julius, C. C., Kapp, F., Karastergiou, A., Karels, F., Kariseb, M., Karuppusamy, R., Kasper, V., Knox-Davies, E. C., Koch, D., Kotze, P. P. A., Krebs, A., Kriek, N., Kriel, H., Kusel, T., Lamoor, S., Lehmensiek, R., Liebenberg, D., Liebenberg, I., Lord, R. T., Lunsky, B., Mabombo, N., Macdonald, T., Macfarlane, P., Madisa, K., Mafhungo, L., Magnus, L. G., Magozore, C., Mahgoub, O., Main, J. P. L., Makhathini, S., Malan, J. A., Malgas, P., Manley, J. R., Manzini, M., Marais, L., Marais, N., Marais, S. J., Maree, M., Martens, A., Matshawule, S. D., Matthysen, N., Mauch, T., Nally, L. D. Mc, Merry, B., Millenaar, R. P., Mjikelo, C., Mkhabela, N., Mnyandu, N., Moeng, I. T., Mokone, O. J., Monama, T. E., Montshiwa, K., Moss, V., Mphego, M., New, W., Ngcebetsha, B., Ngoasheng, K., Niehaus, H., Ntuli, P., Nzama, A., Obies, F., Obrocka, M., Ockards, M. T., Olyn, C., Oozeer, N., Otto, A. J., Padayachee, Y., Passmoor, S., Patel, A. A., Paula, S., Peens-Hough, A., Pholoholo, B., Prozesky, P., Rakoma, S., Ramaila, A. J. T., Rammala, I., Ramudzuli, Z. R., Rasivhaga, M., Ratcliffe, S., Reader, H. C., Renil, R., Richter, L., Robyntjies, A., Rosekrans, D., Rust, A., Salie, S., Sambu, N., Schollar, C. T. G., Schwardt, L., Seranyane, S., Sethosa, G., Sharpe, C., Siebrits, R., Sirothia, S. K., Slabber, M. J., Smirnov, O., Smith, S., Sofeya, L., Songqumase, N., Spann, R., Stappers, B., Steyn, D., Steyn, T. J., Strong, R., Struthers, A., Stuart, C., Sunnylall, P., Swart, P. S., Taljaard, B., Tasse, C., Taylor, G., Theron, I. P., Thondikulam, V., Thorat, K., Tiplady, A., Toruvanda, O., van Aardt, J., van Balla, T., Heever, L. van den, van der Byl, A., van der Merwe, C., van der Merwe, P., van Niekerk, P. C., van Rooyen, R., van Staden, J. P., van Tonder, V., van Wyk, R., Wait, I., Walker, A. L., Wallace, B., Welz, M., Williams, L. P., Xaia, B., Young, N., and Zitha, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
New radio (MeerKAT and Parkes) and X-ray (XMM-Newton, Swift, Chandra, and NuSTAR) observations of PSR J1622-4950 indicate that the magnetar, in a quiescent state since at least early 2015, reactivated between 2017 March 19 and April 5. The radio flux density, while variable, is approximately 100x larger than during its dormant state. The X-ray flux one month after reactivation was at least 800x larger than during quiescence, and has been decaying exponentially on a 111+/-19 day timescale. This high-flux state, together with a radio-derived rotational ephemeris, enabled for the first time the detection of X-ray pulsations for this magnetar. At 5%, the 0.3-6 keV pulsed fraction is comparable to the smallest observed for magnetars. The overall pulsar geometry inferred from polarized radio emission appears to be broadly consistent with that determined 6-8 years earlier. However, rotating vector model fits suggest that we are now seeing radio emission from a different location in the magnetosphere than previously. This indicates a novel way in which radio emission from magnetars can differ from that of ordinary pulsars. The torque on the neutron star is varying rapidly and unsteadily, as is common for magnetars following outburst, having changed by a factor of 7 within six months of reactivation., Comment: Published in ApJ (2018 April 5); 13 pages, 4 figures
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- 2018
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11. Using optogenetics to dissect rod inputs to OFF ganglion cells in the mouse retina
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Asia L. Sladek and Wallace B. Thoreson
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rods ,cones ,optogenetics ,retina ,synaptotagmin ,rod pathways ,Medicine - Abstract
IntroductionLight responses of rod photoreceptor cells traverse the retina through three pathways. The primary pathway involves synapses from rods to ON-type rod bipolar cells with OFF signals reaching retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) via sign-inverting glycinergic synapses. Secondly, rod signals can enter cones through gap junctions. Finally, rods can synapse directly onto cone OFF bipolar cells.MethodsTo analyze these pathways, we obtained whole cell recordings from OFF-type α RGCs in mouse retinas while expressing channelrhodopsin-2 in rods and/or cones.ResultsOptogenetic stimulation of rods or cones evoked large fast currents in OFF RGCs. Blocking the primary rod pathway with L-AP4 and/or strychnine reduced rod-driven optogenetic currents in OFF RGCs by ~1/3. Blocking kainate receptors of OFF cone bipolar cells suppressed both rod- and cone-driven optogenetic currents in OFF RGCs. Inhibiting gap junctions between rods and cones with mecloflenamic acid or quinpirole reduced rod-driven responses in OFF RGCs. Eliminating the exocytotic Ca2+ sensor, synaptotagmin 1 (Syt1), from cones abolished cone-driven optogenetic responses in RGCs. Rod-driven currents were not significantly reduced after isolating the secondary pathway by eliminating Syt1 and synaptotagmin 7 (Syt7) to block synaptic release from rods. Eliminating Syt1 from both rods and cones abolished responses to optogenetic stimulation. In Cx36 KO retinas lacking rod-cone gap junctions, optogenetic activation of rods evoked small and slow responses in most OFF RGCs suggesting rod signals reached them through an indirect pathway. Two OFF cells showed faster responses consistent with more direct input from cone OFF bipolar cells.DiscussionThese data show that the secondary rod pathway supports robust inputs into OFF α RGCs and suggests the tertiary pathway recruits both direct and indirect inputs.
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- 2023
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12. EHD2 overexpression promotes tumorigenesis and metastasis in triple-negative breast cancer by regulating store-operated calcium entry
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Haitao Luan, Timothy A Bielecki, Bhopal C Mohapatra, Namista Islam, Insha Mushtaq, Aaqib M Bhat, Sameer Mirza, Sukanya Chakraborty, Mohsin Raza, Matthew D Storck, Michael S Toss, Jane L Meza, Wallace B Thoreson, Donald W Coulter, Emad A Rakha, Vimla Band, and Hamid Band
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triple negative breast cancer ,EHD2 ,SOCE ,caveolae ,caveolin-1 ,caveolin-2 ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
With nearly all cancer deaths a result of metastasis, elucidating novel pro-metastatic cellular adaptations could provide new therapeutic targets. Here, we show that overexpression of the EPS15-Homology Domain-containing 2 (EHD2) protein in a large subset of breast cancers (BCs), especially the triple-negative (TNBC) and HER2+ subtypes, correlates with shorter patient survival. The mRNAs for EHD2 and Caveolin-1/2, structural components of caveolae, show co-overexpression across breast tumors, predicting shorter survival in basal-like BC. EHD2 shRNA knockdown and CRISPR-Cas9 knockout with mouse Ehd2 rescue, in TNBC cell line models demonstrate a major positive role of EHD2 in promoting tumorigenesis and metastasis. Mechanistically, we link these roles of EHD2 to store-operated calcium entry (SOCE), with EHD2-dependent stabilization of plasma membrane caveolae ensuring high cell surface expression of the SOCE-linked calcium channel Orai1. The novel EHD2-SOCE oncogenic axis represents a potential therapeutic target in EHD2- and CAV1/2-overexpressing BC.
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- 2023
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13. COPA Syndrome (Ala239Pro) Presenting with Isolated Follicular Bronchiolitis in Early Childhood: Case Report
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Psarianos, Pamela, Kwan, Jennifer Yin Yee, Dell, Sharon, Wee, Wallace B., Rey-McIntyre, Katrina, Chen, Haiying, Dissanayake, Dilan, Laxer, Ronald M., Shum, Anthony, Liu, Fei-Fei, and Yip, Kenneth W.
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- 2021
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14. Transmission at rod and cone ribbon synapses in the retina
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Thoreson, Wallace B.
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- 2021
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15. Nr2e3 is a genetic modifier that rescues retinal degeneration and promotes homeostasis in multiple models of retinitis pigmentosa
- Author
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Li, Sujun, Datta, Shyamtanu, Brabbit, Emily, Love, Zoe, Woytowicz, Victoria, Flattery, Kyle, Capri, Jessica, Yao, Katie, Wu, Siqi, Imboden, Michael, Upadhyay, Arun, Arumugham, Rasappa, Thoreson, Wallace B., DeAngelis, Margaret M., and Haider, Neena B.
- Published
- 2021
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16. Survey of the POSNA Membership Reveals Variability in Use of Tibialis Anterior Tendon Transfer for Recurrent Clubfoot.
- Author
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Grissom, Helyn E., Sala, Debra A., Litrenta, Jody, Lehman, Wallace B., and Chu, Alice
- Published
- 2024
17. Correction: Mesnard et al. Eliminating Synaptic Ribbons from Rods and Cones Halves the Releasable Vesicle Pool and Slows Down Replenishment. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 6429
- Author
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Chris S. Mesnard, Cody L. Barta, Asia L. Sladek, David Zenisek, and Wallace B. Thoreson
- Subjects
n/a ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The authors wish to make the following corrections to this paper [...]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Population decline in tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) linked to climate change and inclement weather on the breeding ground
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Cox, Amelia R., Robertson, Raleigh J., Rendell, Wallace B., and Bonier, Frances
- Published
- 2020
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19. Bayesian Inference in Model-Based Machine Vision
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Binford, Thomas O., Levitt, Tod S., and Mann, Wallace B.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
This is a preliminary version of visual interpretation integrating multiple sensors in SUCCESSOR, an intelligent, model-based vision system. We pursue a thorough integration of hierarchical Bayesian inference with comprehensive physical representation of objects and their relations in a system for reasoning with geometry, surface materials and sensor models in machine vision. Bayesian inference provides a framework for accruing_ probabilities to rank order hypotheses., Comment: Appears in Proceedings of the Third Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI1987)
- Published
- 2013
20. Eliminating Synaptic Ribbons from Rods and Cones Halves the Releasable Vesicle Pool and Slows Down Replenishment
- Author
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Chris S. Mesnard, Cody L. Barta, Asia L. Sladek, David Zenisek, and Wallace B. Thoreson
- Subjects
rods ,cones ,electroretinogram ,exocytosis ,mouse ,retina ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Glutamate release from rod and cone photoreceptor cells involves presynaptic ribbons composed largely of the protein RIBEYE. To examine roles of ribbons in rods and cones, we studied mice in which GCamP3 replaced the B-domain of RIBEYE. We discovered that ribbons were absent from rods and cones of both knock-in mice possessing GCamP3 and conditional RIBEYE knockout mice. The mice lacking ribbons showed reduced temporal resolution and contrast sensitivity assessed with optomotor reflexes. ERG recordings showed 50% reduction in scotopic and photopic b-waves. The readily releasable pool (RRP) of vesicles in rods and cones measured using glutamate transporter anion currents (IA(glu)) was also halved. We also studied the release from cones by stimulating them optogenetically with ChannelRhodopsin2 (ChR2) while recording postsynaptic currents in horizontal cells. Recovery of the release from paired pulse depression was twofold slower in the rods and cones lacking ribbons. The release from rods at −40 mV in darkness involves regularly spaced multivesicular fusion events. While the regular pattern of release remained in the rods lacking ribbons, the number of vesicles comprising each multivesicular event was halved. Our results support conclusions that synaptic ribbons in rods and cones expand the RRP, speed up vesicle replenishment, and augment some forms of multivesicular release. Slower replenishment and a smaller RRP in photoreceptors lacking ribbons may contribute to diminished temporal frequency responses and weaker contrast sensitivity.
- Published
- 2022
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21. Properties of multivesicular release from mouse rod photoreceptors support transmission of single-photon responses
- Author
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Cassandra L Hays, Asia L Sladek, Greg D Field, and Wallace B Thoreson
- Subjects
scotopic vision ,rod photoreceptor cell ,synaptic vesicle release ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Vision under starlight requires rod photoreceptors to transduce and transmit single-photon responses to the visual system. Small single-photon voltage changes must therefore cause detectable reductions in glutamate release. We found that rods achieve this by employing mechanisms that enhance release regularity and its sensitivity to small voltage changes. At the resting membrane potential in darkness, mouse rods exhibit coordinated and regularly timed multivesicular release events, each consisting of ~17 vesicles and occurring two to three times more regularly than predicted by Poisson statistics. Hyperpolarizing rods to mimic the voltage change produced by a single photon abruptly reduced the probability of multivesicular release nearly to zero with a rebound increase at stimulus offset. Simulations of these release dynamics indicate that this regularly timed, multivesicular release promotes transmission of single-photon responses to post-synaptic rod-bipolar cells. Furthermore, the mechanism is efficient, requiring lower overall release rates than uniquantal release governed by Poisson statistics.
- Published
- 2021
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22. A Multi-Frequency Radio Study of Supernova Remnant G292.0+1.8 and its Pulsar Wind Nebula
- Author
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Gaensler, B. M. and Wallace, B. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) We present a detailed radio study of the young supernova remnant (SNR) G292.0+1.8 and its associated pulsar PSR J1124-5916, using the Australia Telescope Compact Array at observing wavelengths of 20, 13 and 6 cm. We find that the radio morphology of the source consists of three main components: a polarized flat-spectrum central core coincident with the pulsar J1124-5916, a surrounding circular steep-spectrum plateau with sharp outer edges and, superimposed on the plateau, a series of radial filaments with spectra significantly flatter than their surroundings. HI absorption argues for a lower limit on the distance to the system of 6 kpc. The core clearly corresponds to radio emission from a pulsar wind nebula powered by PSR J1124-5916, while the plateau represents the surrounding SNR shell. The plateau's sharp outer rim delineates the SNR's forward shock, while the thickness of the plateau region demonstrates that the forward and reverse shocks are well-separated. Assuming a distance of 6 kpc and an age for the source of 2500 yr, we infer an expansion velocity for the SNR of ~1200 km/s and an ambient density ~0.9 cm^-3. We interpret the flat-spectrum radial filaments superimposed on the steeper-spectrum plateau as Rayleigh-Taylor unstable regions between the forward and reverse shocks of the SNR. The flat radio spectrum seen for these features results from efficient second-order Fermi acceleration in strongly amplified magnetic fields., Comment: 11 pages of text, plus 7 embedded EPS figures. Accepted to ApJ. Added missing units on x-axis of Fig 7
- Published
- 2003
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23. Unveiling the binding and orientation of the antimicrobial peptide Plantaricin 149 in zwitterionic and negatively charged membranes
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Kumagai, Patricia S., Sousa, Victor K., Donato, Maressa, Itri, Rosangela, Beltramini, Leila M., Araujo, Ana P. U., Buerck, Jochen, Wallace, B. A., and Lopes, Jose L. S.
- Published
- 2019
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24. Intensive training induces longitudinal changes in meditation state-related EEG oscillatory activity
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Saggar, Manish, King, Brandon G, Zanesco, Anthony P, MacLean, Katherine A, Aichele, Stephen R, Jacobs, Tonya L, Bridwell, David A, Shaver, Phillip R, Rosenberg, Erika L, Sahdra, Baljinder K, Ferrer, Emilio, Tang, Akaysha C, Mangun, George R, Wallace, B Alan, Miikkulainen, Risto, and Saron, Clifford D
- Subjects
Medical Physiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mental Health ,Mind and Body ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Neurosciences ,training ,attention ,meditation ,beta ,individual alpha frequency ,EEG ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
The capacity to focus one's attention for an extended period of time can be increased through training in contemplative practices. However, the cognitive processes engaged during meditation that support trait changes in cognition are not well characterized. We conducted a longitudinal wait-list controlled study of intensive meditation training. Retreat participants practiced focused attention (FA) meditation techniques for three months during an initial retreat. Wait-list participants later undertook formally identical training during a second retreat. Dense-array scalp-recorded electroencephalogram (EEG) data were collected during 6 min of mindfulness of breathing meditation at three assessment points during each retreat. Second-order blind source separation, along with a novel semi-automatic artifact removal tool (SMART), was used for data preprocessing. We observed replicable reductions in meditative state-related beta-band power bilaterally over anteriocentral and posterior scalp regions. In addition, individual alpha frequency (IAF) decreased across both retreats and in direct relation to the amount of meditative practice. These findings provide evidence for replicable longitudinal changes in brain oscillatory activity during meditation and increase our understanding of the cortical processes engaged during meditation that may support long-term improvements in cognition.
- Published
- 2012
25. We Are All Related: A Model for Successful Collaboration in American Indian Education.
- Author
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Appelson, Wallace B.
- Abstract
In an effort to improve the high school graduation rate and increase college application and retention rates of high risk American Indian students in Chicago, Truman College (TC) maintains a number of cooperative programs with the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), Native American Educational Services (NAES) College, the Chicago Public Schools, and community based organizations. The Institute for Native American Development (INAD) at TC offers assessment and placement activities for the college's 65 programs and provides students with individual counseling, goal setting, career exploration, financial aid, tutorial, and cultural group support services. NAES College is the only private American Indian four-year college located in an urban area, and many of its students are INAD program transfers wanting to concentrate their studies in community development or other areas. Similarly, the Native American Support Program at UIC enrolled one INAD employee, one INAD graduate, and a Truman Middle College teacher in Master's programs in fall 1993, and established a summer math and science camp for American Indian youth with INAD. In addition, over the past three years, INAD has worked closely with the American Indian Center to provide a wide variety of educational and social activities for young American Indians in Chicago. The Center's courses, funded by INAD through a state drop-out prevention program, provides opportunities to attend dances, pow-wows, films, sporting events, and field trips. (MAB)
- Published
- 1994
26. Accreditation Factors Unique to Tribal Colleges.
- Author
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Appelson, Wallace B. and McLeod, Martha
- Abstract
Almost 30 independent tribally-controlled colleges are chartered in a dozen states and Canada. It is essential that tribal college evaluators develop the cultural sensitivity to accept and respect the tribal college environment and develop an appreciation for the uniqueness of these institutions. Tribal colleges have unique missions, which include providing for the individualized occupational and education needs of their communities, preserving tribal language and culture, and providing successful learning experiences for a population without a traditional educational background. Through education, the tribes attempt to expand their economic base and increase the employability of members. Moreover, many students enter college needing remediation and most take longer than two years to finish an associate degree. Curricula also tend to focus on indigenous Native American philosophy and concepts, as well as tribal values and culture. The tribal tongue is frequently a major curriculum component. Other characteristics include the generally small size and enrollment of tribal institutions, the strong role of tribal policies and politics in college governance, and low levels of funding matched with creative ways of augmenting resources. Finally, most tribal colleges are located within the confines of a reservation serving geographically isolated and dispersed populations. This results in unusual facilities, site locations, and teaching methods. (KP)
- Published
- 1994
27. The Interstellar Environment of Filled-Center Supernova Remnants III: The Crab Nebula
- Author
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Wallace, B. J., Landecker, T. L., Kalberla, P. M. W., and Taylor, A. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The HI environment of the Crab Nebula is investigated using 2.75' and 9' resolution data from (respectively) the DRAO Synthesis, and Effelsberg 100 m, radio telescopes. No clear evidence for an interaction between the Crab and the surrounding HI is found; the Crab probably lies within the boundaries of a large scale, low-density void in the HI distribution. The presence of a wind-blown HI bubble near the Crab is confirmed, and it is suggested that the unidentified star which powers this bubble is responsible for the stellar wind material detected along the line of sight towards the Crab., Comment: 16 pages text + 12 pages of figures. Postscript versions of the figures can be found at http://www.drao.nrc.ca/~bwallace/crab_figs/ . Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series
- Published
- 1999
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28. Corrigendum: Synaptic Ribbon Active Zones in Cone Photoreceptors Operate Independently From One Another
- Author
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Justin J. Grassmeyer and Wallace B. Thoreson
- Subjects
ribbon synapse ,retina ,exocytosis ,calcium imaging ,cone photoreceptor ,active zone ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Published
- 2019
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29. A computational approach to understanding the longitudinal changes in cortical activity associated with intensive meditation training
- Author
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Saggar, Manish, Aichele, Stephen R, Jacobs, Tonya L, Zanesco, Anthony P, Bridwell, David A, Maclean, Katherine A, King, Brandon G, Sahdra, Baljinder K, Rosenberg, Erika L, Shaver, Phillip R, Ferrer, Emilio, Wallace, B Alan, Mangun, George R, Saron, Clifford D, and Miikkulainen, Risto
- Published
- 2010
30. Southeast Colloquium of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Proceedings (17th, Stone Mountain, Georgia, March 26-28, 1992).
- Author
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Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication., Lisby, Gregory C., and Eberhard, Wallace B.
- Abstract
This record of proceedings presents papers and abstracts of papers from the newspaper, law, and history divisions of the Southeast Colloquium of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. The two papers in the history division are: "Southern Editors Say 'No' to 'Lo the Poor Indian'" (Kenneth Rystrom); and "'Got No Souls...': Racism in Southern Reconstruction Newspapers" (Donna L. Dickerson). The law division is represented by "The Buckley Amendment and Campus Police Reports" (Ellen M. Bush). "Measuring Mass Media Orientation" (Dorothea Howe and Gerald Stone); and "Making the Best of a Tough Job: Pulitzer Prize Winning Correspondent Eddy Gilmore" (Maury M. Breecher) are the newspaper division's contributions to the full-text portion of this record. The proceedings also presents 67 abstracts of papers, and a list of 8 papers for which abstracts were not available. (RS)
- Published
- 1992
31. Non-vector-borne transmission of lumpy skin disease virus
- Author
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Aleksandr, Kononov, Olga, Byadovskaya, David, Wallace B., Pavel, Prutnikov, Yana, Pestova, Svetlana, Kononova, Alexander, Nesterov, Vladimir, Rusaleev, Dmitriy, Lozovoy, and Alexander, Sprygin
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
32. G55.0+0.3: A Highly Evolved Supernova Remnant
- Author
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Matthews, B. C., Wallace, B. J., and Taylor, A. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Multi-frequency analysis has revealed the presence of a new supernova remnant, G55.0+0.3, in the Galactic plane. A kinematic distance of 14 kpc has been measured from HI spectral line data. The faint, clumpy half-shell is non-thermal and has a physical radius of 70 pc. Using an evolutionary model, the age of the remnant is estimated to be on the order of one million years, which exceeds conventional limits by a factor of five. The remnant may be associated with the nearby pulsar J1932+2020, which has a spin-down age of 1.1 million years. This work implies that the radiative lifetimes of remnants could be much longer than previously suggested., Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures in 9 files (figures 1 and 2 require 2 files each), Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (Jan. 20, 1998 volume)
- Published
- 1997
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33. The Interstellar Environment of Filled-Center Supernova Remnants: II. G63.7+1.1
- Author
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Wallace, B. J., Landecker, T. L., and Taylor, A. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
A multi-wavelength investigation of the candidate supernova remnant G63.7+1.1 and its surrounding interstellar medium is presented. On the basis of radio continuum data we conclude that the object is a filled-center supernova remnant, perhaps in the course of becoming a composite remnant. The morphology of the remnant, along with HI, 12CO and high resolution IRAS data, suggest that G63.7+1.1 is interacting directly with the ISM, and does not lie in a low density region of the ISM. This in turn strongly suggests that the detected nebula is not surrounded by an invisible halo of supernova ejecta. The association between the SNR and HI and CO features near the tangent point implies a kinematic distance for G63.7+1.1 of 3.8 +/- 1.5 kpc., Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures in 10 files (figure 5 covers two pages), Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal
- Published
- 1997
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34. “Just too busy living in the moment and surviving”: barriers to accessing health care for structurally vulnerable populations at end-of-life
- Author
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Stajduhar, K. I., Mollison, A., Giesbrecht, M., McNeil, R., Pauly, B., Reimer-Kirkham, S., Dosani, N., Wallace, B., Showler, G., Meagher, C., Kvakic, K., Gleave, D., Teal, T., Rose, C., Showler, C., and Rounds, K.
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
35. Characterization of esterase activity from an Acetomicrobium hydrogeniformans enzyme with high structural stability in extreme conditions
- Author
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Kumagai, Patricia S., Gutierrez, Raissa F., Lopes, Jose L. S., Martins, Julia M., Jameson, David M., Castro, Aline M., Martins, Luiz F., DeMarco, Ricardo, Bossolan, Nelma R. S., Wallace, B. A., and Araujo, Ana P. U.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Easi-CRISPR: a robust method for one-step generation of mice carrying conditional and insertion alleles using long ssDNA donors and CRISPR ribonucleoproteins
- Author
-
Rolen M. Quadros, Hiromi Miura, Donald W. Harms, Hisako Akatsuka, Takehito Sato, Tomomi Aida, Ronald Redder, Guy P. Richardson, Yutaka Inagaki, Daisuke Sakai, Shannon M. Buckley, Parthasarathy Seshacharyulu, Surinder K. Batra, Mark A. Behlke, Sarah A. Zeiner, Ashley M. Jacobi, Yayoi Izu, Wallace B. Thoreson, Lisa D. Urness, Suzanne L. Mansour, Masato Ohtsuka, and Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy
- Subjects
CRISPR/Cas9 ,Homology directed repair ,Easi-CRISPR ,long ssDNA donors ,CRISPR ribonucleoproteins ,Cre-LoxP ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background Conditional knockout mice and transgenic mice expressing recombinases, reporters, and inducible transcriptional activators are key for many genetic studies and comprise over 90% of mouse models created. Conditional knockout mice are generated using labor-intensive methods of homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells and are available for only ~25% of all mouse genes. Transgenic mice generated by random genomic insertion approaches pose problems of unreliable expression, and thus there is a need for targeted-insertion models. Although CRISPR-based strategies were reported to create conditional and targeted-insertion alleles via one-step delivery of targeting components directly to zygotes, these strategies are quite inefficient. Results Here we describe Easi-CRISPR (Efficient additions with ssDNA inserts-CRISPR), a targeting strategy in which long single-stranded DNA donors are injected with pre-assembled crRNA + tracrRNA + Cas9 ribonucleoprotein (ctRNP) complexes into mouse zygotes. We show for over a dozen loci that Easi-CRISPR generates correctly targeted conditional and insertion alleles in 8.5–100% of the resulting live offspring. Conclusions Easi-CRISPR solves the major problem of animal genome engineering, namely the inefficiency of targeted DNA cassette insertion. The approach is robust, succeeding for all tested loci. It is versatile, generating both conditional and targeted insertion alleles. Finally, it is highly efficient, as treating an average of only 50 zygotes is sufficient to produce a correctly targeted allele in up to 100% of live offspring. Thus, Easi-CRISPR offers a comprehensive means of building large-scale Cre-LoxP animal resources.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Ca2+ sensor synaptotagmin-1 mediates exocytosis in mammalian photoreceptors
- Author
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Justin J Grassmeyer, Asia L Cahill, Cassandra L Hays, Cody Barta, Rolen M Quadros, Channabasavaiah B Gurumurthy, and Wallace B Thoreson
- Subjects
retina ,ribbon synapse ,rods ,cones ,exocytosis ,electroretinogram ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
To encode light-dependent changes in membrane potential, rod and cone photoreceptors utilize synaptic ribbons to sustain continuous exocytosis while making rapid, fine adjustments to release rate. Release kinetics are shaped by vesicle delivery down ribbons and by properties of exocytotic Ca2+ sensors. We tested the role for synaptotagmin-1 (Syt1) in photoreceptor exocytosis by using novel mouse lines in which Syt1 was conditionally removed from rods or cones. Photoreceptors lacking Syt1 exhibited marked reductions in exocytosis as measured by electroretinography and single-cell recordings. Syt1 mediated all evoked release in cones, whereas rods appeared capable of some slow Syt1-independent release. Spontaneous release frequency was unchanged in cones but increased in rods lacking Syt1. Loss of Syt1 did not alter synaptic anatomy or reduce Ca2+ currents. These results suggest that Syt1 mediates both phasic and tonic release at photoreceptor synapses, revealing unexpected flexibility in the ability of Syt1 to regulate Ca2+-dependent synaptic transmission.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Traumatic brain injury and vestibulo-ocular function: current challenges and future prospects
- Author
-
Wallace B and Lifshitz J
- Subjects
Traumatic brain injury ,concussion ,vestibular ,ocular motor ,dizziness ,balance ,symptoms ,Ophthalmology ,RE1-994 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Bridgett Wallace,1–4 Jonathan Lifshitz4–8 1360 Balance and Hearing, Department of Physical Therapy, Austin, TX, 2Concussion Health, Department of Clinical Education, Austin, TX, 3Conquering Concussions, Scottsdale, AZ, 4Barrow Neurological Institute at Phoenix Children’s Hospital, Phoenix, AZ, 5Department of Child Health, University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix, Phoenix, AZ, 6The CACTIS Foundation, Scottsdale, 7Phoenix VA Healthcare System, Phoenix, AZ, 8Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA Abstract: Normal function of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) coordinates eye movement with head movement, in order to provide clear vision during motion and maintain balance. VOR is generated within the semicircular canals of the inner ear to elicit compensatory eye movements, which maintain stability of images on the fovea during brief, rapid head motion, otherwise known as gaze stability. Normal VOR function is necessary in carrying out activities of daily living (eg, walking and riding in a car) and is of particular importance in higher demand activities (eg, sports-related activities). Disruption or damage in the VOR can result in symptoms such as movement-related dizziness, blurry vision, difficulty maintaining balance with head movements, and even nausea. Dizziness is one of the most common symptoms following traumatic brain injury (TBI) and is considered a risk factor for a prolonged recovery. Assessment of the vestibular system is of particular importance following TBI, in conjunction with oculomotor control, due to the intrinsic neural circuitry that exists between the ocular and vestibular systems. The purpose of this article is to review the physiology of the VOR and the visual-vestibular symptoms associated with TBI and to discuss assessment and treatment guidelines for TBI. Current challenges and future prospects will also be addressed. Keywords: traumatic brain injury, concussion, vestibular, ocular motor, symptoms
- Published
- 2016
39. Voltage-gated sodium channels as targets for pyrethroid insecticides
- Author
-
Field, Linda M., Emyr Davies, T. G., O’Reilly, Andrias O., Williamson, Martin S., and Wallace, B. A.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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40. Mutagenesis of the NaChBac sodium channel discloses a functional role for a conserved S6 asparagine
- Author
-
O’Reilly, Andrias O., Lattrell, Anja, Miles, Andrew J., Klinger, Alexandra B., Nau, Carla, Wallace, B. A., and Lampert, Angelika
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Neuroimaging Data From a Single Participant Before and After a Meditation Retreat: a Proof of Concept Study
- Author
-
Sato, João R., Kozasa, Elisa H., Wallace, B. Alan, and Amaro, Jr, Edson
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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42. Preclinical Evaluation of the Short-Term Toxicity of 4-(N)-Docosahexaenoyl 2´, 2´- Difluorodeoxycytidine (DHA-dFdC)
- Author
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Valdes, Solange, Naguib, Youssef W., Finch, Rick A., Baze, Wallace B., Jolly, Christopher A., and Cui, Zhengrong
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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43. Square Kilometre Array: The radio telescope of the XXI century
- Author
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Grainge, K., Alachkar, B., Amy, Shaun, Barbosa, D., Bommineni, M., Boven, P., Braddock, R., Davis, J., Diwakar, P., Francis, V., Gabrielczyk, R., Gamatham, R., Garrington, S., Gibbon, T., Gozzard, D., Gregory, S., Guo, Y., Gupta, Y., Hammond, J., Hindley, D., Horn, U., Hughes-Jones, R., Hussey, M., Lloyd, S., Mammen, S., Miteff, S., Mohile, V., Muller, J., Natarajan, S., Nicholls, J., Oberland, R., Pearson, M., Rayner, T., Schediwy, S., Schilizzi, R., Sharma, S., Stobie, S., Tearle, M., Wang, B., Wallace, B., Wang, L., Warange, R., Whitaker, R., Wilkinson, A., and Wingfield, N.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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44. Teixobactin Provides Protection against Inhalation Anthrax in the Rabbit Model
- Author
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William S. Lawrence, Jennifer E. Peel, Satheesh K. Sivasubramani, Wallace B. Baze, Elbert B. Whorton, David W. C. Beasley, Jason E. Comer, Dallas E. Hughes, Losee L. Ling, and Johnny W. Peterson
- Subjects
Bacillus anthracis ,anthrax ,inhalation ,infection ,antibiotic ,rabbit model ,Medicine - Abstract
The use of antibiotics is a vital means of treating infections caused by the bacteria Bacillus (B.) anthracis. Importantly, with the potential future use of multidrug-resistant strains of B. anthracis as bioweapons, new antibiotics are needed as alternative therapeutics. In this blinded study, we assessed the protective efficacy of teixobactin, a recently discovered antibiotic, against inhalation anthrax infection in the adult rabbit model. New Zealand White rabbits were infected with a lethal dose of B. anthracis Ames spores via the inhalation route, and blood samples were collected at various times to assess antigenemia, bacteremia, tissue bacterial load, and antibody production. Treatments were administered upon detection of B. anthracis protective antigen in the animals’ sera. For comparison, a fully protective dose of levofloxacin was used as a positive control. Rabbits treated with teixobactin showed 100% survival following infection, and the bacteremia was completely resolved by 24–48 h post-treatment. In addition, the bacterial/spore loads in tissues of the animals treated with teixobactin were either zero or dramatically less relative to that of the negative control animals. Moreover, microscopic evaluation of the tissues revealed decreased pathology following treatment with teixobactin. Overall, these results show that teixobactin was protective against inhalation anthrax infection in the rabbit model, and they indicate the potential of teixobactin as a therapeutic for the disease.
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
45. Structure of the C-terminal domain of the prokaryotic sodium channel orthologue NsvBa
- Author
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Miller, W. C., Miles, A. J., and Wallace, B. A.
- Published
- 2016
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46. Elevated Pressure Increases Ca2+ Influx Through AMPA Receptors in Select Populations of Retinal Ganglion Cells
- Author
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Xiangyi Wen, Asia L. Cahill, Cody Barta, Wallace B. Thoreson, and Scott Nawy
- Subjects
AMPA receptor ,ganglion cell ,retina ,receptor plasticity ,Ca2+ imaging ,patch clamp ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The predominate type of AMPA receptor expressed in the CNS is impermeable to Ca2+ (CI-AMPAR). However, some AMPA receptors are permeable to Ca2+ (CP-AMPAR) and play important roles in development, plasticity and disease. In the retina, ganglion cells (RGCs) are targets of disease including glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy, but there are many types of RGCs and not all types are targeted equally. In the present study, we sought to determine if there are differences in expression of AMPARs amongst RGC subtypes, and if these differences might contribute to differential vulnerability in a model of stress. Using cultured RGCs we first show that acute exposure to elevated pressure increased expression of Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors (CP-AMPARs) in some, but not all classes of RGCs. When RGCs were sampled without regard to subtype, AMPA currents, measured using patch clamp recording, were blocked by the CP-AMPAR blocker PhTX-74 to a greater extent in pressure-treated RGCs vs. control. Furthermore, imaging experiments revealed an increase in Ca2+ influx during AMPA application in pressure-treated RGCs. However, examination of specific RGC subtypes using reporter lines revealed striking differences in both baseline AMPAR composition and modulation of this baseline composition by stress. Notably, ON alpha RGCs identified using the Opn4 mouse line and immunohistochemistry, had low expression of CP-AMPARs. Conversely, an ON-OFF direction selective RGC and putative OFF alpha RGC each expressed high levels of CP-AMPARs. These differences between RGC subtypes were also observed in RGCs from whole retina. Elevated pressure further lowered expression of CP-AMPARs in ON alpha RGCs, but raised expression in ON-OFF and OFF RGCs. Changes in CP-AMPAR expression following challenge with elevated pressure were correlated with RGC survival: ON alpha RGCs were unaffected by application of pressure, while the number of putative OFF alpha RGCs declined by approximately 50% following challenge with pressure. Differences in expression of CP-AMPARs between RGC subtypes may form the underpinnings for subtype-specific synaptic plasticity. Furthermore, the differential responses of these RGC subtypes to elevated pressure may contribute to the reported resistance of ON alpha, and susceptibility of OFF and ON-OFF RGCs to injury in models of glaucoma.
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- 2018
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47. Kiss-and-Run Is a Significant Contributor to Synaptic Exocytosis and Endocytosis in Photoreceptors
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Xiangyi Wen, Grant W. Saltzgaber, and Wallace B. Thoreson
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kiss-and-run ,endocytosis ,exocytosis ,photoreceptor cells ,vertebrate ,ribbon synapses ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Accompanying sustained release in darkness, rod and cone photoreceptors exhibit rapid endocytosis of synaptic vesicles. Membrane capacitance measurements indicated that rapid endocytosis retrieves at least 70% of the exocytotic membrane increase. One mechanism for rapid endocytosis is kiss-and-run fusion where vesicles briefly contact the plasma membrane through a small fusion pore. Release can also occur by full-collapse in which vesicles merge completely with the plasma membrane. We assessed relative contributions of full-collapse and kiss-and-run in salamander photoreceptors using optical techniques to measure endocytosis and exocytosis of large vs. small dye molecules. Incubation with small dyes (SR101, 1 nm; 3-kDa dextran-conjugated Texas Red, 2.3 nm) loaded rod and cone synaptic terminals much more readily than larger dyes (10-kDa Texas Red, 4.6 nm; 10-kDa pHrodo, 4.6 nm; 70-kDa Texas Red, 12 nm) consistent with significant uptake through 2.3–4.6 nm fusion pores. By using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM) to image individual vesicles, when rods were incubated simultaneously with Texas Red and AlexaFluor-488 dyes conjugated to either 3-kDa or 10-kDa dextran, more vesicles loaded small molecules than large molecules. Using TIRFM to detect release by the disappearance of dye-loaded vesicles, we found that SR101 and 3-kDa Texas Red were released from individual vesicles more readily than 10-kDa and 70-kDa Texas Red. Although 10-kDa pHrodo was endocytosed poorly like other large dyes, the fraction of release events was similar to SR101 and 3-kDa Texas Red. We hypothesize that while 10-kDa pHrodo may not exit through a fusion pore, release of intravesicular protons can promote detection of fusion events by rapidly quenching fluorescence of this pH-sensitive dye. Assuming that large molecules can only be released by full-collapse whereas small molecules can be released by both modes, our results indicate that 50%–70% of release from rods involves kiss-and-run with 2.3–4.6 nm fusion pores. Rapid retrieval of vesicles by kiss-and-run may limit membrane disruption of release site function during ongoing release at photoreceptor ribbon synapses.
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- 2017
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48. Synaptic Ribbon Active Zones in Cone Photoreceptors Operate Independently from One Another
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Justin J. Grassmeyer and Wallace B. Thoreson
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ribbon synapse ,retina ,exocytosis ,calcium imaging ,cone photoreceptor ,active zone ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Cone photoreceptors depolarize in darkness to release glutamate-laden synaptic vesicles. Essential to release is the synaptic ribbon, a structure that helps organize active zones by clustering vesicles near proteins that mediate exocytosis, including voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. Cone terminals have many ribbon-style active zones at which second-order neurons receive input. We asked whether there are functionally significant differences in local Ca2+ influx among ribbons in individual cones. We combined confocal Ca2+ imaging to measure Ca2+ influx at individual ribbons and patch clamp recordings to record whole-cell ICa in salamander cones. We found that the voltage for half-maximal activation (V50) of whole cell ICa in cones averaged −38.1 mV ± 3.05 mV (standard deviation [SD]), close to the cone membrane potential in darkness of ca. −40 mV. Ca2+ signals at individual ribbons varied in amplitude from one another and showed greater variability in V50 values than whole-cell ICa, suggesting that Ca2+ signals can differ significantly among ribbons within cones. After accounting for potential sources of technical variability in measurements of Ca2+ signals and for contributions from cone-to-cone differences in ICa, we found that the variability in V50 values for ribbon Ca2+ signals within individual cones showed a SD of 2.5 mV. Simulating local differences in Ca2+ channel activity at two ribbons by shifting the V50 value of ICa by ±2.5 mV (1 SD) about the mean suggests that when the membrane depolarizes to −40 mV, two ribbons could experience differences in Ca2+ influx of >45%. Further evidence that local Ca2+ changes at ribbons can be regulated independently was obtained in experiments showing that activation of inhibitory feedback from horizontal cells (HCs) to cones in paired recordings changed both amplitude and V50 of Ca2+ signals at individual ribbons. By varying the strength of synaptic output, differences in voltage dependence and amplitude of Ca2+ signals at individual ribbons shape the information transmitted from cones to downstream neurons in vision.
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- 2017
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49. Easi-CRISPR: a robust method for one-step generation of mice carrying conditional and insertion alleles using long ssDNA donors and CRISPR ribonucleoproteins
- Author
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Quadros, Rolen M., Miura, Hiromi, Harms, Donald W., Akatsuka, Hisako, Sato, Takehito, Aida, Tomomi, Redder, Ronald, Richardson, Guy P., Inagaki, Yutaka, Sakai, Daisuke, Buckley, Shannon M., Seshacharyulu, Parthasarathy, Batra, Surinder K., Behlke, Mark A., Zeiner, Sarah A., Jacobi, Ashley M., Izu, Yayoi, Thoreson, Wallace B., Urness, Lisa D., Mansour, Suzanne L., Ohtsuka, Masato, and Gurumurthy, Channabasavaiah B.
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- 2017
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50. Effects of a 9-Day Shamatha Buddhist Meditation Retreat on Attention, Mindfulness and Self-Compassion in Participants with a Broad Range of Meditation Experience
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Kozasa, Elisa H., Lacerda, Shirley S., Menezes, Carolina, Wallace, B. Alan, Radvany, João, Mello, Luiz E. A. M., and Sato, João R.
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- 2015
- Full Text
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