Normal females developing at 25 degrees C produce their first population of oocytes at 132 +/- 2 hr post oviposition. Entrance of the oocytes into premeiotic interphase signals initiation of DNA replication which continues for 30 hr. Coincidentally, extensive SCs appear, averaging 50 microns (132 hr), peaking at 75 microns (144 hr), and continuing into early vitellarial stages. Recombinational response to heat, evidenced by enhancement or induction of exchange, is limited to the S-phase with a peak at 144 hr coinciding with maximal extension of the SC. Coincidence of synapsis and recombination response with S at premeiotic interphase is contrary to their conventional localization at meiotic prophase. The interrelationship between exchange and nondisjunction has been clarified by the Distributive Pairing Model of meiosis. Originally revealed through high frequencies of nonrandom assortment of nonhomologous chromosomes, distributive pairing has been shown to follow and to be noncompetitive with exchange, to be based on size-recognition, not homology, and as a raison d'etre, to provide a segregational mechanism for noncrossover homologs. Rearrangements, recombination mutants, and aneuploids may contribute noncrossover chromosomes to the distributive pool and so promote the nonhomologous associations responsible for nondisjunction of homologs and regular segregation of nonhomologs. Further information concerning early meiotic events and their relation to segregation has been revealed by studies of the ts rec-1(26) mutant. Application of the restrictive temperature (31 degrees C) at sequential times during development shows wild-type activity to be drastically reduced beginning at 126/132 hr, terminating at 162 hr, and so coinciding with S and the heat-sensitive period of the normal genome. EMs of serially sectioned oocyte nuclei maintained at the restrictive or control temperature reveal SCs to be indistinguishable, and implicate recombination rather than synapsis as the target of the mutant. Activity of rec-1(26) in the range 17 degrees to 31 degrees C reveals a sharp decline between 28+ degrees and 31 degrees C, typical of a denaturation curve. If denaturation of the rec protein by the restrictive temperature marks its active phase, it follows that recombination terminates at the end of S when the restrictive temperature becomes ineffective. The notion that synapsis ensures regular segregation (35) is invalidated by rec-1(26) whose normal synapsis at the restrictive temperature is followed by a 200-fold increase in nondisjunction at segregation, as compared to the control.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PLoS One
March 2025
Department of Physics, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon, United States of America.
The ability of microbial active motion, morphology, and optical properties to serve as biosignatures was investigated by in situ video microscopy in a wide range of extreme field sites where such imaging had not been performed previously. These sites allowed for sampling seawater, sea ice brines, cryopeg brines, hypersaline pools and seeps, hyperalkaline springs, and glaciovolcanic cave ice. In all samples except the cryopeg brine, active motion was observed without any sample treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces
March 2025
Institute of Chemistry, University of Tartu, Ravila 14a, 50411 Tartu, Estonia.
Strong confinement of hydrogen is important for adsorption-based hydrogen storage solutions, which are vital for the transition toward a hydrogen-based economy. The dynamics of hydrogen adsorbed in high-porosity TiC-derived carbon with relatively well-stacked graphenic layers for a carbide-derived carbon is investigated with inelastic and quasi-elastic neutron scattering methods. Both the para-ortho rotational transition and elastic incoherent scattering factor are investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Bioeng Biotechnol
February 2025
China Tobacco Technology Innovation Center for Cigar, China Tobacco Sichuan Industrial Co., Ltd., Chengdu, Sichuan, China.
Introduction: Microbiomes of cigar tobacco leaves play a pivotal role during the fermentation, and fermentation temperature is a key factor in shaping the structure and function of the microbial community. This study aimed to investigate the effects of different temperatures (30°C, 35°C, 40°C, 45°C, and 50°C) on the microbiomes of cigar tobacco leaves, providing insights into the complex interactions among temperature, microbes, and physicochemical metabolites.
Methods: Firstly, the physicochemical metabolites of cigar tobacco leaves under various fermentation temperatures were detected by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.
Front Epidemiol
February 2025
Department of Internal Medicine, Howard University, Washington, DC, United States.
Introduction: Dengue fever, traditionally a tropical disease, has shown a notable increase in incidence within the United States over recent decades. This paper focuses on the increase in dengue fever cases in Maryland during increasing temperature and humidity and the expanding geographical range of Aedes mosquitoes, the primary vectors for dengue virus transmission.
Methods: Electronic health data was used to identify patterns in dengue incidence from 2014 to 2024.
Epilepsia
March 2025
Department of Physiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Objective: Patients with uncontrolled epilepsy are at high risk for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), which likely results from a pathological, seizure-induced disruption of vital physiological systems. The objective of this study was to characterize seizure-induced physiological dysfunction leading to death in SS rats and determine the importance of time of day of seizures regarding mortality rates.
Methods: Male and female SS rats were surgically implanted with an arterial pressure telemeter and chronically housed in a custom plethysmograph.
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