7,263 results match your criteria: "University of Colorado - Boulder[Affiliation]"

Sanitation programs typically measure latrine access, which does not equate to use. We aimed to objectively measure latrine use with sensors among households enrolled in the sanitation and control groups of a randomized controlled trial (WASH Benefits) in Bangladesh. The intervention provided upgraded latrines and behavioral promotion.

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Objective: To assess how medical complexity and neighborhood opportunity jointly affect cognitive, motor, and language Bayley's Scales of Infant Development. Secondary objectives involved identifying the factors contributing to developmental disparities across diverse racial and ethnic groups.

Study Design: Electronic health records from a Southern California high-risk infant follow-up clinic were analyzed for 440 infants from 2014 through 2023 who had either had neonatal intensive care unit stays, prematurity, very low birthweight, or developmental delay risk.

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Regulation of human interferon signaling by transposon exonization.

Cell

December 2024

BioFrontiers Institute and Department of Molecular, Cellular & Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA; Crnic Institute Boulder Branch, BioFrontiers Institute, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80303, USA. Electronic address:

Innate immune signaling is essential for clearing pathogens and damaged cells and must be tightly regulated to avoid excessive inflammation or autoimmunity. Here, we found that the alternative splicing of exons derived from transposable elements is a key mechanism controlling immune signaling in human cells. By analyzing long-read transcriptome datasets, we identified numerous transposon exonization events predicted to generate functional protein variants of immune genes, including the type I interferon receptor IFNAR2.

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Purpose: To determine the pathogenicity and frequency of copy-number variants (CNV) in the 81 secondary finding (SFv3.2) genes recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG).

Methods: Review of published evidence on pathogenicity of partial or complete copy-number losses or gains in ACMG SFv3.

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UV LED wastewater disinfection: The future is upon us.

Water Res X

September 2024

Centre for Water Resources Studies, Dalhousie University Halifax, 1360 Barrington Street, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada.

The world's first full-scale, 280 nm UV LED reactor for wastewater disinfection was tested at flows of 545 and 817 m day. The system achieved > 3 average log reduction of total coliform at 545 m day and the 817 m day flow rate achieved over > 2.5 average log reduction for all operational conditions.

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Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) exist in multiple, transcriptionally distinct states and serve as powerful models for studying human development. Despite their significance, the molecular determinants and pathways governing these pluripotent states remain incompletely understood. Here, we demonstrate that transposable elements act as sensitive indicators of distinct pluripotent cell states.

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Sun-like stars produce superflares roughly once per century.

Science

December 2024

Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung, Göttingen, Germany.

Stellar superflares are energetic outbursts of electromagnetic radiation that are similar to solar flares but release more energy, up to 10 erg on main-sequence stars. It is unknown whether the Sun can generate superflares and, if so, how often they might occur. We used photometry from the Kepler space observatory to investigate superflares on other stars with Sun-like fundamental parameters.

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Standardized monitoring strategies are often used to study spatial and temporal ecological patterns and trends. Such approaches are applied for many study taxa, including bats (Mammalia, Chiroptera). However, local characteristics of individual field sites, including species assemblages, terrain, climatic factors, and presence or lack of landscape features, may affect the efficacy of these standardized surveys.

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We investigated the influence of childhood poverty on financial decision making under threat by replicating the findings of Griskevicius et al. (2011b), which found that individuals from lower socioeconomic backgrounds tend to make riskier financial decisions and prefer immediate over delayed gratification when exposed to mortality cues. Following an extension of life history theory to individual behaviors, the original research argued that these behaviors reflect a faster and riskier strategy to cope with survival threats.

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ConspectusSynthetic extracellular matrix (ECM) engineering is a highly interdisciplinary field integrating materials and polymer science and engineering, chemistry, cell biology, and medicine to develop innovative strategies to investigate and control cell-matrix interactions. Cellular microenvironments are complex and highly dynamic, changing in response to injury and disease. To capture some of these critical dynamics , biomaterial matrices have been developed with tailorable properties that can be modulated in the presence of cells.

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During translation initiation, mRNA molecules must be identified and activated for loading into a ribosome. In this rate-limiting step, the heterotrimeric protein eukaryotic initiation factor eIF4F must recognize and productively interact with the 7-methylguanosine cap at the 5' end of the mRNA and subsequently activate the message. Despite its fundamental, regulatory role in gene expression, the molecular events underlying cap recognition and mRNA activation remain unclear.

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Climate change driven land use evolution and soil heavy metal release effects in lakes on the Qinghai Tibet Plateau.

Sci Total Environ

January 2025

State Key Laboratory of Environmental Criteria and Risk Assessment, National Engineering Laboratory for Lake Pollution Control and Ecological Restoration, State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory for Lake Pollution Control, Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences, Beijing 100012, China; College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China. Electronic address:

In recent decades, global warming has intensified hydrological cycles, raising concerns about the impacts of climate change on hydrological processes, water quality, and water resources across various temporal and spatial scales. These changes significantly affect water resource management and environmental protection policies and may also influence the ecological health and socio-economic well-being of lake regions. Qinghai Lake, the largest inland lake and a major water source reservoir in China, plays a crucial role in the ecological security of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.

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Diverse and inclusive teams are not merely a moral imperative but also a catalyst for scientific excellence in robotics. Drawing from literature, a comprehensive citation analysis, and expert interviews, we derive seven main benefits of diversity and inclusion and propose a leadership guide for roboticists to reap these benefits.

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Introduction: The aims of this study were to determine (1) whether endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) inhibition stimulates endothelial microvesicles (EMVs) release and (2) the effect of EMVs derived from eNOS-inhibited cells on endothelial cell eNOS, inflammation, apoptosis, and tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA).

Methods: Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were treated with the eNOS inhibitor (NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester [L-NAME], 300 µM) for 24 h. EMVs from untreated and L-NAME-treated cells were isolated, quantified, and exposed to HUVECs for 24 h.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers developed a method to create living microlenses using engineered bacteria that produce a silica biomineralization enzyme, allowing for advanced control over their structure.
  • These bacteria form a shell of polysilicate, enabling them to focus light into intense nanojets that are significantly brighter than unmodified bacteria.
  • This innovative approach presents a cost-effective and durable solution for producing photonic components with unique optical properties, showcasing the potential of synthetic biology in the field.
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Small bodies are capable of delivering essential prerequisites for the development of life, such as volatiles and organics, to the terrestrial planets. For example, empirical evidence suggests that water was delivered to the Earth by hydrated planetesimals from distant regions of the Solar System. Recently, several morphologically inactive near-Earth objects were reported to experience significant nongravitational accelerations inconsistent with radiation-based effects, and possibly explained by volatile-driven outgassing.

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Movements are performed by motoneurons transforming synaptic inputs into an activation signal that controls muscle force. The control signal emerges from interactions between ionotropic and neuromodulatory inputs to motoneurons. Critically, these interactions vary across motoneuron pools and differ between muscles.

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Article Synopsis
  • The CMS experiment conducted a search for charge-parity violation in decays using proton-proton collision data from 2018, analyzing around 10 billion events with b hadrons decaying into charm hadrons.
  • The flavor of the neutral D meson was determined through the charge of pions in the reconstructed decays, and an asymmetry measurement in the decays was reported, taking into account various uncertainties.
  • This research marks the first asymmetry measurement by the CMS in the charm sector and the first to use a fully hadronic final state in such analyses.
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The power of lived experience in optimizing US policymakers' engagement with substance use research: A series of rapid-cycle randomized controlled trials.

Drug Alcohol Depend Rep

December 2024

Evidence-to-Impact Collaborative, Pennsylvania State University, 404 Health and Human Development Building,  University Park, PA 16802, USA.

Background: Research can inform policies on substance use/substance use disorders (SU/SUDs), yet there is limited experimental investigation into strategies for optimizing policymakers' engagement with SU/SUD research. This study tested the use of narratives to boost policymakers' research engagement.

Methods: In five rapid-cycle randomized controlled trials, SU/SUD research fact sheets were emailed to US legislative policymakers.

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Despite disproportionate rates of childbearing among youth with child welfare involvement, few studies have examined whether this population receives contraceptive information and knows how to access services. This longitudinal study examines responses from 245 youth with child welfare involvement (i.e.

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The Simons Observatory (SO) is a cosmic microwave background instrumentation suite in the Atacama Desert of Chile. More than 65,000 polarization-sensitive transition-edge sensor (TES) bolometers will be fielded in the frequency range spanning 27 to 280 GHz, with three separate dichroic designs. The mid-frequency 90/150 GHz and ultra-high-frequency 220/280 GHz detector arrays, fabricated at NIST, account for 39 of 49 total detector modules and implement the feedhorn-fed orthomode transducer-coupled TES bolometer architecture.

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Covalent hydrogel networks suffer from a stiffness-toughness conflict, where increased crosslinking density enhances the modulus of the material but also leads to embrittlement and diminished extensibility. Recently, strategies have been developed to form highly entangled hydrogels, colloquially referred to as tanglemers, by optimizing polymerization conditions to maximize the density and length of polymer chains and minimize the crosslinker concentration. It is challenging to assess entanglements in crosslinked networks beyond approximating their theoretical contribution to mechanical properties; thus, in this work, we synthesize and characterize polyacrylamide tanglemers using a photolabile crosslinker, which allows for direct assessment of covalent trapping of entanglements under tension.

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Phages gain the upper hand in the metabolic arms race for NAD.

Mol Cell

December 2024

Department of Biochemistry, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA. Electronic address:

Bacteria often defend against phage infection by deploying NADase effectors to degrade cellular NAD, thereby halting both bacterial growth and phage replication. In a recent article in Nature, Osterman et al. identify phage-encoded counterdefense pathways that reconstitute NAD during infection, enabling phages to combat multiple unrelated antiphage systems.

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Article Synopsis
  • The lncRNA Crossfirre is an X-linked gene that is transcribed opposite to another lncRNA called Firre, and together with Dxz4, they form significant chromatin structures specific to inactive X chromosomes.
  • Researchers carried out large-scale knockout studies of Crossfirre, Firre, and Dxz4 to understand their in vivo roles, finding that although these loci have unique epigenetic traits, they are not crucial for X chromosome inactivation processes.
  • The study reveals that Crossfirre influences the regulation of autosomal genes, but only in conjunction with Firre, and includes a phenotyping analysis that highlights various knockout and sex-specific outcomes.
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G3BP1 promotes intermolecular RNA-RNA interactions during RNA condensation.

Mol Cell

November 2024

Department of Biochemistry, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA; Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA. Electronic address:

Ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granules are biomolecular condensates requiring RNA and proteins to assemble. Stress granules are RNP granules formed upon increases in non-translating messenger ribonucleoprotein particles (mRNPs) during stress. G3BP1 and G3BP2 proteins are proposed to assemble stress granules through multivalent crosslinking of RNPs.

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