Publications by authors named "J M Comte"

Article Synopsis
  • Climate change and human activities are making weather events like droughts and floods more extreme in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Researchers studied the Limpopo River to understand why floods have been getting stronger since the 1970s, finding several big floods in specific years.
  • They discovered that floods are now less connected to natural weather patterns like La Niña, showing how climate change and human actions are changing how rivers behave.
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Article Synopsis
  • Smoking can make asthma and other lung problems worse, and it changes how our DNA works.
  • Scientists studied the lungs of mice to see how smoking changes DNA patterns and compared them to what happens in humans.
  • They found new DNA changes linked to smoking that could affect health issues like lung function and cancer, showing we need to look closely at lungs to understand smoking's effects better.
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With the increasing occurrence and severity of cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (cHAB) at the global scale, there is an urgent need for rapid, accurate, accessible, and cost-effective detection tools. Here, we detail the RosHAB workflow, an innovative, in-the-field applicable genomics approach for real-time, early detection of cHAB outbreaks. We present how the proposed workflow offers consistent taxonomic identification of water samples in comparison to traditional microscopic analyses in a few hours and discuss how the generated data can be used to deepen our understanding on cyanobacteria ecology and forecast HABs events.

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Naphthenic acids (NAs) are a complex mixture of organic compounds released during bitumen extraction from mined oil sands that are important contaminants of oil sands process-affected water (OSPW). NAs can be toxic to aquatic organisms and, therefore, are a main target compound for OSPW. The ability of microorganisms to degrade NAs can be exploited for bioremediation of OSPW using constructed wetland treatment systems (CWTS), which represent a possible low energy and low-cost option for scalable in situ NA removal.

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Prenatal and early-life exposure to cigarette smoke (CS) has repeatedly been shown to induce stable, long-term changes in DNA methylation (DNAm) in offspring. It has been hypothesized that these changes might be functionally related to the known outcomes of prenatal and early-life CS exposure, which include impaired lung development, altered lung function, and increased risk of asthma and wheeze. However, to date, few studies have examined DNAm changes induced by prenatal CS in tissues of the lung, and even fewer have attempted to examine the specific influences of prenatal versus early postnatal exposures.

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