TY - JOUR A1 - Wuttke, Matthias A1 - Li, Yong A1 - Li, Man A1 - Sieber, Karsten B. A1 - Feitosa, Mary F. A1 - Gorski, Mathias A1 - Tin, Adrienne A1 - Wang, Lihua A1 - Chu, Audrey Y. A1 - Hoppmann, Anselm A1 - Kirsten, Holger A1 - Giri, Ayush A1 - Chai, Jin-Fang A1 - Sveinbjornsson, Gardar A1 - Tayo, Bamidele O. A1 - Nutile, Teresa A1 - Fuchsberger, Christian A1 - Marten, Jonathan A1 - Cocca, Massimiliano A1 - Ghasemi, Sahar A1 - Xu, Yizhe A1 - Horn, Katrin A1 - Noce, Damia A1 - Van der Most, Peter J. A1 - Sedaghat, Sanaz A1 - Yu, Zhi A1 - Akiyama, Masato A1 - Afaq, Saima A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer Singh A1 - Almgren, Peter A1 - Amin, Najaf A1 - Arnlov, Johan A1 - Bakker, Stephan J. L. A1 - Bansal, Nisha A1 - Baptista, Daniela A1 - Bergmann, Sven A1 - Biggs, Mary L. A1 - Biino, Ginevra A1 - Boehnke, Michael A1 - Boerwinkle, Eric A1 - Boissel, Mathilde A1 - Böttinger, Erwin A1 - Boutin, Thibaud S. A1 - Brenner, Hermann A1 - Brumat, Marco A1 - Burkhardt, Ralph A1 - Butterworth, Adam S. A1 - Campana, Eric A1 - Campbell, Archie A1 - Campbell, Harry A1 - Canouil, Mickael A1 - Carroll, Robert J. A1 - Catamo, Eulalia A1 - Chambers, John C. A1 - Chee, Miao-Ling A1 - Chee, Miao-Li A1 - Chen, Xu A1 - Cheng, Ching-Yu A1 - Cheng, Yurong A1 - Christensen, Kaare A1 - Cifkova, Renata A1 - Ciullo, Marina A1 - Concas, Maria Pina A1 - Cook, James P. A1 - Coresh, Josef A1 - Corre, Tanguy A1 - Sala, Cinzia Felicita A1 - Cusi, Daniele A1 - Danesh, John A1 - Daw, E. Warwick A1 - De Borst, Martin H. A1 - De Grandi, Alessandro A1 - De Mutsert, Renee A1 - De Vries, Aiko P. J. A1 - Degenhardt, Frauke A1 - Delgado, Graciela A1 - Demirkan, Ayse A1 - Di Angelantonio, Emanuele A1 - Dittrich, Katalin A1 - Divers, Jasmin A1 - Dorajoo, Rajkumar A1 - Eckardt, Kai-Uwe A1 - Ehret, Georg A1 - Elliott, Paul A1 - Endlich, Karlhans A1 - Evans, Michele K. A1 - Felix, Janine F. A1 - Foo, Valencia Hui Xian A1 - Franco, Oscar H. A1 - Franke, Andre A1 - Freedman, Barry I. A1 - Freitag-Wolf, Sandra A1 - Friedlander, Yechiel A1 - Froguel, Philippe A1 - Gansevoort, Ron T. A1 - Gao, He A1 - Gasparini, Paolo A1 - Gaziano, J. Michael A1 - Giedraitis, Vilmantas A1 - Gieger, Christian A1 - Girotto, Giorgia A1 - Giulianini, Franco A1 - Gogele, Martin A1 - Gordon, Scott D. A1 - Gudbjartsson, Daniel F. A1 - Gudnason, Vilmundur A1 - Haller, Toomas A1 - Hamet, Pavel A1 - Harris, Tamara B. A1 - Hartman, Catharina A. A1 - Hayward, Caroline A1 - Hellwege, Jacklyn N. A1 - Heng, Chew-Kiat A1 - Hicks, Andrew A. A1 - Hofer, Edith A1 - Huang, Wei A1 - Hutri-Kahonen, Nina A1 - Hwang, Shih-Jen A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Indridason, Olafur S. A1 - Ingelsson, Erik A1 - Ising, Marcus A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Jakobsdottir, Johanna A1 - Jonas, Jost B. A1 - Joshi, Peter K. A1 - Josyula, Navya Shilpa A1 - Jung, Bettina A1 - Kahonen, Mika A1 - Kamatani, Yoichiro A1 - Kammerer, Candace M. A1 - Kanai, Masahiro A1 - Kastarinen, Mika A1 - Kerr, Shona M. A1 - Khor, Chiea-Chuen A1 - Kiess, Wieland A1 - Kleber, Marcus E. A1 - Koenig, Wolfgang A1 - Kooner, Jaspal S. A1 - Korner, Antje A1 - Kovacs, Peter A1 - Kraja, Aldi T. A1 - Krajcoviechova, Alena A1 - Kramer, Holly A1 - Kramer, Bernhard K. A1 - Kronenberg, Florian A1 - Kubo, Michiaki A1 - Kuhnel, Brigitte A1 - Kuokkanen, Mikko A1 - Kuusisto, Johanna A1 - La Bianca, Martina A1 - Laakso, Markku A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Langefeld, Carl D. A1 - Lee, Jeannette Jen-Mai A1 - Lehne, Benjamin A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lieb, Wolfgang A1 - Lim, Su-Chi A1 - Lind, Lars A1 - Lindgren, Cecilia M. A1 - Liu, Jun A1 - Liu, Jianjun A1 - Loeffler, Markus A1 - Loos, Ruth J. F. A1 - Lucae, Susanne A1 - Lukas, Mary Ann A1 - Lyytikainen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Magi, Reedik A1 - Magnusson, Patrik K. E. A1 - Mahajan, Anubha A1 - Martin, Nicholas G. A1 - Martins, Jade A1 - Marz, Winfried A1 - Mascalzoni, Deborah A1 - Matsuda, Koichi A1 - Meisinger, Christa A1 - Meitinger, Thomas A1 - Melander, Olle A1 - Metspalu, Andres A1 - Mikaelsdottir, Evgenia K. A1 - Milaneschi, Yuri A1 - Miliku, Kozeta A1 - Mishra, Pashupati P. A1 - Program, V. A. Million Veteran A1 - Mohlke, Karen L. A1 - Mononen, Nina A1 - Montgomery, Grant W. A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - Mychaleckyj, Josyf C. A1 - Nadkarni, Girish N. A1 - Nalls, Mike A. A1 - Nauck, Matthias A1 - Nikus, Kjell A1 - Ning, Boting A1 - Nolte, Ilja M. A1 - Noordam, Raymond A1 - Olafsson, Isleifur A1 - Oldehinkel, Albertine J. A1 - Orho-Melander, Marju A1 - Ouwehand, Willem H. A1 - Padmanabhan, Sandosh A1 - Palmer, Nicholette D. A1 - Palsson, Runolfur A1 - Penninx, Brenda W. J. H. A1 - Perls, Thomas A1 - Perola, Markus A1 - Pirastu, Mario A1 - Pirastu, Nicola A1 - Pistis, Giorgio A1 - Podgornaia, Anna I. A1 - Polasek, Ozren A1 - Ponte, Belen A1 - Porteous, David J. A1 - Poulain, Tanja A1 - Pramstaller, Peter P. A1 - Preuss, Michael H. A1 - Prins, Bram P. A1 - Province, Michael A. A1 - Rabelink, Ton J. A1 - Raffield, Laura M. A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Reilly, Dermot F. A1 - Rettig, Rainer A1 - Rheinberger, Myriam A1 - Rice, Kenneth M. A1 - Ridker, Paul M. A1 - Rivadeneira, Fernando A1 - Rizzi, Federica A1 - Roberts, David J. A1 - Robino, Antonietta A1 - Rossing, Peter A1 - Rudan, Igor A1 - Rueedi, Rico A1 - Ruggiero, Daniela A1 - Ryan, Kathleen A. A1 - Saba, Yasaman A1 - Sabanayagam, Charumathi A1 - Salomaa, Veikko A1 - Salvi, Erika A1 - Saum, Kai-Uwe A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Ben Schottker, A1 - Schulz, Christina-Alexandra A1 - Schupf, Nicole A1 - Shaffer, Christian M. A1 - Shi, Yuan A1 - Smith, Albert V. A1 - Smith, Blair H. A1 - Soranzo, Nicole A1 - Spracklen, Cassandra N. A1 - Strauch, Konstantin A1 - Stringham, Heather M. A1 - Stumvoll, Michael A1 - Svensson, Per O. A1 - Szymczak, Silke A1 - Tai, E-Shyong A1 - Tajuddin, Salman M. A1 - Tan, Nicholas Y. Q. A1 - Taylor, Kent D. A1 - Teren, Andrej A1 - Tham, Yih-Chung A1 - Thiery, Joachim A1 - Thio, Chris H. L. A1 - Thomsen, Hauke A1 - Thorleifsson, Gudmar A1 - Toniolo, Daniela A1 - Tonjes, Anke A1 - Tremblay, Johanne A1 - Tzoulaki, Ioanna A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - Vaccargiu, Simona A1 - Van Dam, Rob M. A1 - Van der Harst, Pim A1 - Van Duijn, Cornelia M. A1 - Edward, Digna R. Velez A1 - Verweij, Niek A1 - Vogelezang, Suzanne A1 - Volker, Uwe A1 - Vollenweider, Peter A1 - Waeber, Gerard A1 - Waldenberger, Melanie A1 - Wallentin, Lars A1 - Wang, Ya Xing A1 - Wang, Chaolong A1 - Waterworth, Dawn M. A1 - Bin Wei, Wen A1 - White, Harvey A1 - Whitfield, John B. A1 - Wild, Sarah H. A1 - Wilson, James F. A1 - Wojczynski, Mary K. A1 - Wong, Charlene A1 - Wong, Tien-Yin A1 - Xu, Liang A1 - Yang, Qiong A1 - Yasuda, Masayuki A1 - Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M. A1 - Zhang, Weihua A1 - Zonderman, Alan B. A1 - Rotter, Jerome I. A1 - Bochud, Murielle A1 - Psaty, Bruce M. A1 - Vitart, Veronique A1 - Wilson, James G. A1 - Dehghan, Abbas A1 - Parsa, Afshin A1 - Chasman, Daniel I. A1 - Ho, Kevin A1 - Morris, Andrew P. A1 - Devuyst, Olivier A1 - Akilesh, Shreeram A1 - Pendergrass, Sarah A. A1 - Sim, Xueling A1 - Boger, Carsten A. A1 - Okada, Yukinori A1 - Edwards, Todd L. A1 - Snieder, Harold A1 - Stefansson, Kari A1 - Hung, Adriana M. A1 - Heid, Iris M. A1 - Scholz, Markus A1 - Teumer, Alexander A1 - Kottgen, Anna A1 - Pattaro, Cristian T1 - A catalog of genetic loci associated with kidney function from analyses of a million individuals JF - Nature genetics N2 - Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is responsible for a public health burden with multi-systemic complications. Through transancestry meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and independent replication (n = 1,046,070), we identified 264 associated loci (166 new). Of these,147 were likely to be relevant for kidney function on the basis of associations with the alternative kidney function marker blood urea nitrogen (n = 416,178). Pathway and enrichment analyses, including mouse models with renal phenotypes, support the kidney as the main target organ. A genetic risk score for lower eGFR was associated with clinically diagnosed CKD in 452,264 independent individuals. Colocalization analyses of associations with eGFR among 783,978 European-ancestry individuals and gene expression across 46 human tissues, including tubulo-interstitial and glomerular kidney compartments, identified 17 genes differentially expressed in kidney. Fine-mapping highlighted missense driver variants in 11 genes and kidney-specific regulatory variants. These results provide a comprehensive priority list of molecular targets for translational research. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-019-0407-x SN - 1061-4036 SN - 1546-1718 VL - 51 IS - 6 SP - 957 EP - + PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Abdo, A. A. A1 - Ackermann, Margit A1 - Ajello, M. A1 - Allafort, A. J. A1 - Baldini, L. A1 - Ballet, J. A1 - Barbiellini, G. A1 - Baring, M. G. A1 - Bastieri, D. A1 - Bechtol, K. C. A1 - Bellazzini, R. A1 - Berenji, B. A1 - Blandford, R. D. A1 - Bloom, E. D. A1 - Bonamente, E. A1 - Borgland, A. W. A1 - Bouvier, A. A1 - Brandt, T. J. A1 - Bregeon, Johan A1 - Brez, A. A1 - Brigida, M. A1 - Bruel, P. A1 - Buehler, R. A1 - Buson, S. A1 - Caliandro, G. A. A1 - Cameron, R. A. A1 - Cannon, A. A1 - Caraveo, P. A. A1 - Carrigan, Svenja A1 - Casandjian, J. M. A1 - Cavazzuti, E. A1 - Cecchi, C. A1 - Celik, O. A1 - Charles, E. A1 - Chekhtman, A. A1 - Cheung, C. C. A1 - Chiang, J. A1 - Ciprini, S. A1 - Claus, R. A1 - Cohen-Tanugi, J. A1 - Conrad, Jan A1 - Cutini, S. A1 - Dermer, C. D. A1 - de Palma, F. A1 - do Couto e Silva, E. A1 - Drell, P. S. A1 - Dubois, R. A1 - Dumora, D. A1 - Favuzzi, C. A1 - Fegan, S. J. A1 - Ferrara, E. C. A1 - Focke, W. B. A1 - Fortin, P. A1 - Frailis, M. A1 - Fuhrmann, L. A1 - Fukazawa, Y. A1 - Funk, S. A1 - Fusco, P. A1 - Gargano, F. A1 - Gasparrini, D. A1 - Gehrels, N. A1 - Germani, S. A1 - Giglietto, N. A1 - Giordano, F. A1 - Giroletti, M. A1 - Glanzman, T. A1 - Godfrey, G. A1 - Grenier, I. A. A1 - Guillemot, L. A1 - Guiriec, S. A1 - Hayashida, M. A1 - Hays, E. A1 - Horan, D. A1 - Hughes, R. E. A1 - Johannesson, G. A1 - Johnson, A. S. A1 - Johnson, W. N. A1 - Kadler, M. A1 - Kamae, T. A1 - Katagiri, H. A1 - Kataoka, J. A1 - Knoedlseder, J. A1 - Kuss, M. A1 - Lande, J. A1 - Latronico, L. A1 - Lee, S. -H. A1 - Lemoine-Goumard, M. A1 - Longo, F. A1 - Loparco, F. A1 - Lott, B. A1 - Lovellette, M. N. A1 - Lubrano, P. A1 - Madejski, G. M. A1 - Makeev, A. A1 - Max-Moerbeck, W. A1 - Mazziotta, Mario Nicola A1 - McEnery, J. E. A1 - Mehault, J. A1 - Michelson, P. F. A1 - Mitthumsiri, W. A1 - Mizuno, T. A1 - Moiseev, A. A. A1 - Monte, C. A1 - Monzani, M. E. A1 - Morselli, A. A1 - Moskalenko, I. V. A1 - Murgia, S. A1 - Naumann-Godo, M. A1 - Nishino, S. A1 - Nolan, P. L. A1 - Norris, J. P. A1 - Nuss, E. A1 - Ohsugi, T. A1 - Okumura, A. A1 - Omodei, N. A1 - Orlando, E. A1 - Ormes, J. F. A1 - Paneque, D. A1 - Panetta, J. H. A1 - Parent, D. A1 - Pavlidou, V. A1 - Pearson, T. J. A1 - Pelassa, V. A1 - Pepe, M. A1 - Pesce-Rollins, M. A1 - Piron, F. A1 - Porter, T. A. A1 - Raino, S. A1 - Rando, R. A1 - Razzano, M. A1 - Readhead, A. A1 - Reimer, A. A1 - Reimer, O. A1 - Richards, J. L. A1 - Ripken, J. A1 - Ritz, S. A1 - Roth, M. A1 - Sadrozinski, H. F. -W. A1 - Sanchez, D. A1 - Sander, A. A1 - Scargle, J. D. A1 - Sgro, C. A1 - Siskind, E. J. A1 - Smith, P. D. A1 - Spandre, G. A1 - Spinelli, P. A1 - Stawarz, L. A1 - Stevenson, M. A1 - Strickman, M. S. A1 - Sokolovsky, K. V. A1 - Suson, D. J. A1 - Takahashi, H. A1 - Takahashi, T. A1 - Tanaka, T. A1 - Thayer, J. B. A1 - Thayer, J. G. A1 - Thompson, D. J. A1 - Tibaldo, L. A1 - Torres, F. A1 - Tosti, G. A1 - Tramacere, A. A1 - Uchiyama, Y. A1 - Usher, T. L. A1 - Vandenbroucke, J. A1 - Vasileiou, V. A1 - Vilchez, N. A1 - Vitale, V. A1 - Waite, A. P. A1 - Wang, P. A1 - Wehrle, A. E. A1 - Winer, B. L. A1 - Wood, K. S. A1 - Yang, Z. A1 - Ylinen, T. A1 - Zensus, J. A. A1 - Ziegler, M. A1 - Aleksic, J. A1 - Antonelli, L. A. A1 - Antoranz, P. A1 - Backes, Michael A1 - Barrio, J. A. A1 - Gonzalez, J. Becerra A1 - Bednarek, W. A1 - Berdyugin, A. A1 - Berger, K. A1 - Bernardini, E. A1 - Biland, A. A1 - Blanch Bigas, O. A1 - Bock, R. K. A1 - Boller, A. A1 - Bonnoli, G. A1 - Bordas, Pol A1 - Tridon, D. Borla A1 - Bosch-Ramon, Valentin A1 - Bose, D. A1 - Braun, I. A1 - Bretz, T. A1 - Camara, M. A1 - Carmona, E. A1 - Carosi, A. A1 - Colin, P. A1 - Colombo, E. A1 - Contreras, J. L. A1 - Cortina, J. A1 - Covino, S. A1 - Dazzi, F. A1 - de Angelis, A. A1 - del Pozo, E. De Cea A1 - De Lotto, B. A1 - De Maria, M. A1 - De Sabata, F. A1 - Mendez, C. Delgado A1 - Ortega, A. Diago A1 - Doert, M. A1 - Dominguez, A. A1 - Prester, Dijana Dominis A1 - Dorner, D. A1 - Doro, M. A1 - Elsaesser, D. A1 - Ferenc, D. A1 - Fonseca, M. V. A1 - Font, L. A1 - Lopen, R. J. Garcia A1 - Garczarczyk, M. A1 - Gaug, M. A1 - Giavitto, G. A1 - Godinovi, N. A1 - Hadasch, D. A1 - Herrero, A. A1 - Hildebrand, D. A1 - Hoehne-Moench, D. A1 - Hose, J. A1 - Hrupec, D. A1 - Jogler, T. A1 - Klepser, S. A1 - Kraehenbuehl, T. A1 - Kranich, D. A1 - Krause, J. A1 - La Barbera, A. A1 - Leonardo, E. A1 - Lindfors, E. A1 - Lombardi, S. A1 - Lopez, M. A1 - Lorenz, E. A1 - Majumdar, P. A1 - Makariev, E. A1 - Maneva, G. A1 - Mankuzhiyil, N. A1 - Mannheim, K. A1 - Maraschi, L. A1 - Mariotti, M. A1 - Martinez, M. A1 - Mazin, D. A1 - Meucci, M. A1 - Miranda, J. M. A1 - Mirzoyan, R. A1 - Miyamoto, H. A1 - Moldon, J. A1 - Moralejo, A. A1 - Nieto, D. A1 - Nilsson, K. A1 - Orito, R. A1 - Oya, I. A1 - Paoletti, R. 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A1 - Rovero, A. C. A1 - Schroedter, M. A1 - Sembroski, G. H. A1 - Senturk, G. D. A1 - Steele, D. A1 - Swordy, S. P. A1 - Tesic, G. A1 - Theiling, M. A1 - Thibadeau, S. A1 - Varlotta, A. A1 - Vincent, S. A1 - Wakely, S. P. A1 - Ward, J. E. A1 - Weekes, T. C. A1 - Weinstein, A. A1 - Weisgarber, T. A1 - Williams, D. A. A1 - Wood, M. A1 - Zitzer, B. A1 - Villata, M. A1 - Raiteri, C. M. A1 - Aller, H. D. A1 - Aller, M. F. A1 - Arkharov, A. A. A1 - Blinov, D. A. A1 - Calcidese, P. A1 - Chen, W. P. A1 - Efimova, N. V. A1 - Kimeridze, G. A1 - Konstantinova, T. S. A1 - Kopatskaya, E. N. A1 - Koptelova, E. A1 - Kurtanidze, O. M. A1 - Kurtanidze, S. O. A1 - Lahteenmaki, A. A1 - Larionov, V. M. A1 - Larionova, E. G. A1 - Larionova, L. V. A1 - Ligustri, R. A1 - Morozova, D. A. A1 - Nikolashvili, M. G. A1 - Sigua, L. A. A1 - Troitsky, I. S. A1 - Angelakis, E. A1 - Capalbi, M. A1 - Carraminana, A. A1 - Carrasco, L. A1 - Cassaro, P. A1 - de la Fuente, E. A1 - Gurwell, M. A. A1 - Kovalev, Y. Y. A1 - Kovalev, Yu. A. A1 - Krichbaum, T. P. A1 - Krimm, H. A. A1 - Leto, Paolo A1 - Lister, M. L. A1 - Maccaferri, G. A1 - Moody, J. W. A1 - Mori, Y. A1 - Nestoras, I. A1 - Orlati, A. A1 - Pagani, C. A1 - Pace, C. A1 - Pearson, R. A1 - Perri, M. A1 - Piner, B. G. A1 - Pushkarev, A. B. A1 - Ros, E. A1 - Sadun, A. C. A1 - Sakamoto, T. A1 - Tornikoski, M. A1 - Yatsu, Y. A1 - Zook, A. T1 - Insights into the high-energy gamma-Ray emission of markarian 501 fromextensive multifrequency observations in the fermi era JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - We report on the gamma-ray activity of the blazar Mrk 501 during the first 480 days of Fermi operation. We find that the average Large Area Telescope (LAT) gamma-ray spectrum of Mrk 501 can be well described by a single power-law function with a photon index of 1.78 +/- 0.03. While we observe relatively mild flux variations with the Fermi-LAT (within less than a factor of two), we detect remarkable spectral variability where the hardest observed spectral index within the LAT energy range is 1.52 +/- 0.14, and the softest one is 2.51 +/- 0.20. These unexpected spectral changes do not correlate with the measured flux variations above 0.3 GeV. In this paper, we also present the first results from the 4.5 month long multifrequency campaign (2009 March 15-August 1) on Mrk 501, which included the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), Swift, RXTE, MAGIC, and VERITAS, the F-GAMMA, GASP-WEBT, and other collaborations and instruments which provided excellent temporal and energy coverage of the source throughout the entire campaign. The extensive radio to TeV data set from this campaign provides us with the most detailed spectral energy distribution yet collected for this source during its relatively low activity. The average spectral energy distribution of Mrk 501 is well described by the standard one-zone synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) model. In the framework of this model, we find that the dominant emission region is characterized by a size less than or similar to 0.1 pc (comparable within a factor of few to the size of the partially resolved VLBA core at 15-43 GHz), and that the total jet power (similar or equal to 10(44) erg s(-1)) constitutes only a small fraction (similar to 10(-3)) of the Eddington luminosity. The energy distribution of the freshly accelerated radiating electrons required to fit the time-averaged data has a broken power-law form in the energy range 0.3 GeV-10 TeV, with spectral indices 2.2 and 2.7 below and above the break energy of 20 GeV. We argue that such a form is consistent with a scenario in which the bulk of the energy dissipation within the dominant emission zone of Mrk 501 is due to relativistic, proton-mediated shocks. We find that the ultrarelativistic electrons and mildly relativistic protons within the blazar zone, if comparable in number, are in approximate energy equipartition, with their energy dominating the jet magnetic field energy by about two orders of magnitude. KW - acceleration of particles KW - BL Lacertae objects: general KW - BL Lacertae objects: individual (Mrk 501) KW - galaxies: active KW - gamma rays: general KW - radiation mechanisms: non-thermal Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/727/2/129 SN - 0004-637X VL - 727 IS - 2 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ackermann, Margit A1 - Ajello, M. A1 - Allafort, A. J. A1 - Baldini, L. A1 - Ballet, J. A1 - Barbiellini, G. A1 - Bastieri, D. A1 - Belfiore, A. A1 - Bellazzini, R. A1 - Berenji, B. A1 - Blandford, R. D. A1 - Bloom, E. D. A1 - Bonamente, E. A1 - Borgland, A. W. A1 - Bottacini, E. A1 - Brigida, M. A1 - Bruel, P. A1 - Buehler, R. A1 - Buson, S. A1 - Caliandro, G. A. A1 - Cameron, R. A. A1 - Caraveo, P. A. A1 - Casandjian, J. M. A1 - Cecchi, C. A1 - Chekhtman, A. A1 - Cheung, C. C. A1 - Chiang, J. A1 - Ciprini, S. A1 - Claus, R. A1 - Cohen-Tanugi, J. A1 - de Angelis, A. A1 - de Palma, F. A1 - Dermer, C. D. A1 - do Couto e Silva, E. A1 - Drell, P. S. A1 - Dumora, D. A1 - Favuzzi, C. A1 - Fegan, S. J. A1 - Focke, W. B. A1 - Fortin, P. A1 - Fukazawa, Y. A1 - Fusco, P. A1 - Gargano, F. A1 - Germani, S. A1 - Giglietto, N. A1 - Giordano, F. A1 - Giroletti, M. A1 - Glanzman, T. A1 - Godfrey, G. A1 - Grenier, I. A. A1 - Guillemot, L. A1 - Guiriec, S. A1 - Hadasch, D. A1 - Hanabata, Y. A1 - Harding, A. K. A1 - Hayashida, M. A1 - Hayashi, K. A1 - Hays, E. A1 - Johannesson, G. A1 - Johnson, A. S. A1 - Kamae, T. A1 - Katagiri, H. A1 - Kataoka, J. A1 - Kerr, M. A1 - Knoedlseder, J. A1 - Kuss, M. A1 - Lande, J. A1 - Latronico, L. A1 - Lee, S. -H. A1 - Longo, F. A1 - Loparco, F. A1 - Lott, B. A1 - Lovellette, M. N. A1 - Lubrano, P. A1 - Martin, P. A1 - Mazziotta, Mario Nicola A1 - McEnery, J. E. A1 - Mehault, J. A1 - Michelson, P. F. A1 - Mitthumsiri, W. A1 - Mizuno, T. A1 - Monte, C. A1 - Monzani, M. E. A1 - Morselli, A. A1 - Moskalenko, I. V. A1 - Murgia, S. A1 - Naumann-Godo, M. A1 - Nolan, P. L. A1 - Norris, J. P. A1 - Nuss, E. A1 - Ohsugi, T. A1 - Okumura, A. A1 - Orlando, E. A1 - Ormes, J. F. A1 - Ozaki, M. A1 - Paneque, D. A1 - Parent, D. A1 - Pesce-Rollins, M. A1 - Pierbattista, M. A1 - Piron, F. A1 - Pohl, Martin A1 - Prokhorov, D. A1 - Raino, S. A1 - Rando, R. A1 - Razzano, M. A1 - Reposeur, T. A1 - Ritz, S. A1 - Parkinson, P. M. Saz A1 - Sgro, C. A1 - Siskind, E. J. A1 - Smith, P. D. A1 - Spinelli, P. A1 - Strong, A. W. A1 - Takahashi, H. A1 - Tanaka, T. A1 - Thayer, J. G. A1 - Thayer, J. B. A1 - Thompson, D. J. A1 - Tibaldo, L. A1 - Torres, D. F. A1 - Tosti, G. A1 - Tramacere, A. A1 - Troja, E. A1 - Uchiyama, Y. A1 - Vandenbroucke, J. A1 - Vasileiou, V. A1 - Vianello, G. A1 - Vitale, V. A1 - Waite, A. P. A1 - Wang, P. A1 - Winer, B. L. A1 - Wood, K. S. A1 - Yang, Z. A1 - Zimmer, S. A1 - Bontemps, S. T1 - A cocoon of freshly accelerated cosmic rays detected by fermi in the cygnus superbubble JF - Science N2 - The origin of Galactic cosmic rays is a century-long puzzle. Indirect evidence points to their acceleration by supernova shockwaves, but we know little of their escape from the shock and their evolution through the turbulent medium surrounding massive stars. Gamma rays can probe their spreading through the ambient gas and radiation fields. The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) has observed the star-forming region of Cygnus X. The 1- to 100-gigaelectronvolt images reveal a 50-parsec-wide cocoon of freshly accelerated cosmic rays that flood the cavities carved by the stellar winds and ionization fronts from young stellar clusters. It provides an example to study the youth of cosmic rays in a superbubble environment before they merge into the older Galactic population. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1210311 SN - 0036-8075 VL - 334 IS - 6059 SP - 1103 EP - 1107 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Abdo, A. A. A1 - Ackermann, Margit A1 - Ajello, M. A1 - Allafort, A. J. A1 - Baldini, L. A1 - Ballet, J. A1 - Barbiellini, G. A1 - Baring, M. G. A1 - Bastieri, D. A1 - Bellazzini, R. A1 - Berenji, B. A1 - Blandford, R. D. A1 - Bloom, E. D. A1 - Bonamente, E. A1 - Borgland, A. W. A1 - Bouvier, A. A1 - Brandt, T. J. A1 - Bregeon, Johan A1 - Brigida, M. A1 - Bruel, P. A1 - Buehler, R. A1 - Buson, S. A1 - Caliandro, G. A. A1 - Cameron, R. A. A1 - Caraveo, P. A. A1 - Casandjian, J. M. A1 - Cecchi, C. A1 - Chaty, S. A1 - Chekhtman, A. A1 - Cheung, C. C. A1 - Chiang, J. A1 - Cillis, A. N. A1 - Ciprini, S. A1 - Claus, R. A1 - Cohen-Tanugi, J. A1 - Conrad, Jan A1 - Corbel, S. A1 - Cutini, S. A1 - de Angelis, A. A1 - de Palma, F. A1 - Dermer, C. D. A1 - Digel, S. W. A1 - do Couto e Silva, E. A1 - Drell, P. S. A1 - Drlica-Wagner, A. A1 - Dubois, R. A1 - Dumora, D. A1 - Favuzzi, C. A1 - Ferrara, E. C. A1 - Fortin, P. A1 - Frailis, M. A1 - Fukazawa, Y. A1 - Fukui, Y. A1 - Funk, S. A1 - Fusco, P. A1 - Gargano, F. A1 - Gasparrini, D. A1 - Gehrels, N. A1 - Germani, S. A1 - Giglietto, N. A1 - Giordano, F. A1 - Giroletti, M. A1 - Glanzman, T. A1 - Godfrey, G. A1 - Grenier, I. A. A1 - Grondin, M. -H. A1 - Guiriec, S. A1 - Hadasch, D. A1 - Hanabata, Y. A1 - Harding, A. K. A1 - Hayashida, M. A1 - Hayashi, K. A1 - Hays, E. A1 - Horan, D. A1 - Jackson, M. S. A1 - Johannesson, G. A1 - Johnson, A. S. A1 - Kamae, T. A1 - Katagiri, H. A1 - Kataoka, J. A1 - Kerr, M. A1 - Knoedlseder, J. A1 - Kuss, M. A1 - Lande, J. A1 - Latronico, L. A1 - Lee, S. -H. A1 - Lemoine-Goumard, M. A1 - Longo, F. A1 - Loparco, F. A1 - Lovellette, M. N. A1 - Lubrano, P. A1 - Madejski, G. M. A1 - Makeev, A. A1 - Mazziotta, Mario Nicola A1 - McEnery, J. E. A1 - Michelson, P. F. A1 - Mignani, R. P. A1 - Mitthumsiri, W. A1 - Mizuno, T. A1 - Moiseev, A. A. A1 - Monte, C. A1 - Monzani, M. E. A1 - Morselli, A. A1 - Moskalenko, I. V. A1 - Murgia, S. A1 - Naumann-Godo, M. A1 - Nolan, P. L. A1 - Norris, J. P. A1 - Nuss, E. A1 - Ohsugi, T. A1 - Okumura, A. A1 - Orlando, E. A1 - Ormes, J. F. A1 - Paneque, D. A1 - Parent, D. A1 - Pelassa, V. A1 - Pesce-Rollins, M. A1 - Pierbattista, M. A1 - Piron, F. A1 - Pohl, Martin A1 - Porter, T. A. A1 - Raino, S. A1 - Rando, R. A1 - Razzano, M. A1 - Reimer, O. A1 - Reposeur, T. A1 - Ritz, S. A1 - Romani, R. W. A1 - Roth, M. A1 - Sadrozinski, H. F. -W. A1 - Parkinson, P. M. Saz A1 - Sgro, C. A1 - Smith, D. A. A1 - Smith, P. D. A1 - Spandre, G. A1 - Spinelli, P. A1 - Strickman, M. S. A1 - Tajima, H. A1 - Takahashi, H. A1 - Takahashi, T. A1 - Tanaka, T. A1 - Thayer, J. G. A1 - Thayer, J. B. A1 - Thompson, D. J. A1 - Tibaldo, L. A1 - Tibolla, O. A1 - Torres, D. F. A1 - Tosti, G. A1 - Tramacere, A. A1 - Troja, E. A1 - Uchiyama, Y. A1 - Vandenbroucke, J. A1 - Vasileiou, V. A1 - Vianello, G. A1 - Vilchez, N. A1 - Vitale, V. A1 - Waite, A. P. A1 - Wang, P. A1 - Winer, B. L. A1 - Wood, K. S. A1 - Yamamoto, H. A1 - Yamazaki, R. A1 - Yang, Z. A1 - Ziegler, M. T1 - Observations of the young supernova remnant RX J1713.7-3946 with the fermi large area telescope JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - We present observations of the young supernova remnant (SNR) RX J1713.7-3946 with the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT). We clearly detect a source positionally coincident with the SNR. The source is extended with a best-fit extension of 0 degrees.55 +/- 0 degrees.04 matching the size of the non-thermal X-ray and TeV gamma-ray emission from the remnant. The positional coincidence and the matching extended emission allow us to identify the LAT source with SNR RX J1713.7-3946. The spectrum of the source can be described by a very hard power law with a photon index of Gamma = 1.5 +/- 0.1 that coincides in normalization with the steeper H. E. S. S.-detected gamma-ray spectrum at higher energies. The broadband gamma-ray emission is consistent with a leptonic origin as the dominant mechanism for the gamma-ray emission. KW - acceleration of particles KW - gamma rays: general KW - gamma rays: ISM KW - ISM: individual objects (RX J1713.7-3946) KW - ISM: supernova remnants KW - radiation mechanisms: non-thermal Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/734/1/28 SN - 0004-637X VL - 734 IS - 1 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - De Angelis, A. A1 - Tatischeff, V. A1 - Grenier, I. A. A1 - McEnery, J. A1 - Mallamaci, Manuela A1 - Tavani, M. A1 - Oberlack, U. A1 - Hanlon, L. A1 - Walter, R. A1 - Argan, A. A1 - Von Ballmoos, P. A1 - Bulgarelli, A. A1 - Bykov, A. A1 - Hernanz, M. A1 - Kanbach, G. A1 - Kuvvetli, I. A1 - Pearce, M. A1 - Zdziarski, A. A1 - Conrad, J. A1 - Ghisellini, G. A1 - Harding, A. A1 - Isern, J. A1 - Leising, M. A1 - Longo, F. A1 - Madejski, G. A1 - Martinez, M. A1 - Mazziotta, Mario Nicola A1 - Paredes, J. M. A1 - Pohl, Martin A1 - Rando, R. A1 - Razzano, M. A1 - Aboudan, A. A1 - Ackermann, M. A1 - Addazi, A. A1 - Ajello, M. A1 - Albertus, C. A1 - Alvarez, J. M. A1 - Ambrosi, G. A1 - Anton, S. A1 - Antonelli, L. A. A1 - Babic, A. A1 - Baibussinov, B. A1 - Balbom, M. A1 - Baldini, L. A1 - Balman, S. A1 - Bambi, C. A1 - Barres de Almeida, U. A1 - Barrio, J. A. A1 - Bartels, R. A1 - Bastieri, D. A1 - Bednarek, W. A1 - Bernard, D. A1 - Bernardini, E. A1 - Bernasconi, T. A1 - Bertucci, B. A1 - Biland, A. A1 - Bissaldi, E. A1 - Boettcher, M. A1 - Bonvicini, V. A1 - Bosch-Ramon, V. A1 - Bottacini, E. A1 - Bozhilov, V. A1 - Bretz, T. A1 - Branchesi, M. A1 - Brdar, V. A1 - Bringmann, T. A1 - Brogna, A. A1 - Jorgensen, C. Budtz A1 - Busetto, G. A1 - Buson, S. A1 - Busso, M. A1 - Caccianiga, A. A1 - Camera, S. A1 - Campana, R. A1 - Caraveo, P. A1 - Cardillo, M. A1 - Carlson, P. A1 - Celestin, S. A1 - Cermeno, M. A1 - Chen, A. A1 - Cheung, C. C. A1 - Churazov, E. A1 - Ciprini, S. A1 - Coc, A. A1 - Colafrancesco, S. A1 - Coleiro, A. A1 - Collmar, W. A1 - Coppi, P. A1 - Curado da Silva, R. A1 - Cutini, S. A1 - De Lotto, B. A1 - de Martino, D. A1 - De Rosa, A. A1 - Del Santo, M. A1 - Delgado, L. A1 - Diehl, R. A1 - Dietrich, S. A1 - Dolgov, A. D. A1 - Dominguez, A. A1 - Prester, D. Dominis A1 - Donnarumma, I. A1 - Dorner, D. A1 - Doro, M. A1 - Dutra, M. A1 - Elsaesser, D. A1 - Fabrizio, M. A1 - Fernandez-Barral, A. A1 - Fioretti, V. A1 - Foffano, L. A1 - Formato, V. A1 - Fornengo, N. A1 - Foschini, L. A1 - Franceschini, A. A1 - Franckowiak, A. A1 - Funk, S. A1 - Fuschino, F. A1 - Gaggero, D. A1 - Galanti, G. A1 - Gargano, F. A1 - Gasparrini, D. A1 - Gehrz, R. A1 - Giammaria, P. A1 - Giglietto, N. A1 - Giommi, P. A1 - Giordano, F. A1 - Giroletti, M. A1 - Ghirlanda, G. A1 - Godinovic, N. 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A1 - Patricelli, B. A1 - Perez-Garcia, M. A. A1 - Persic, M. A1 - Piano, G. A1 - Pichel, A. A1 - Pimenta, M. A1 - Pittori, C. A1 - Porter, T. A1 - Poutanen, J. A1 - Prandini, E. A1 - Prantzos, N. A1 - Produit, N. A1 - Profumo, S. A1 - Queiroz, F. S. A1 - Raino, S. A1 - Raklev, A. A1 - Regis, M. A1 - Reichardt, I. A1 - Rephaeli, Y. A1 - Rico, J. A1 - Rodejohann, W. A1 - Fernandez, G. Rodriguez A1 - Roncadelli, M. A1 - Roso, L. A1 - Rovero, A. A1 - Ruffini, R. A1 - Sala, G. A1 - Sanchez-Conde, M. A. A1 - Santangelo, Andrea A1 - Parkinson, P. Saz A1 - Sbarrato, T. A1 - Shearer, A. A1 - Shellard, R. A1 - Short, K. A1 - Siegert, T. A1 - Siqueira, C. A1 - Spinelli, P. A1 - Stamerra, A. A1 - Starrfield, S. A1 - Strong, A. A1 - Strumke, I. A1 - Tavecchio, F. A1 - Taverna, R. A1 - Terzic, T. A1 - Thompson, D. J. A1 - Tibolla, O. A1 - Torres, D. F. A1 - Turolla, R. A1 - Ulyanov, A. A1 - Ursi, A. A1 - Vacchi, A. A1 - Van den Abeele, J. A1 - Vankova-Kirilovai, G. A1 - Venter, C. A1 - Verrecchia, F. A1 - Vincent, P. A1 - Wang, X. A1 - Weniger, C. A1 - Wu, X. A1 - Zaharijas, G. A1 - Zampieri, L. A1 - Zane, S. A1 - Zimmer, S. A1 - Zoglauer, A. T1 - Science with e-ASTROGAM A space mission for MeV-GeV gamma-ray astrophysics JF - Journal of High Energy Astrophysics Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jheap.2018.07.001 SN - 2214-4048 SN - 2214-4056 VL - 19 SP - 1 EP - 106 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Middeldorp, Christel M. A1 - Mahajan, Anubha A1 - Horikoshi, Momoko A1 - Robertson, Neil R. A1 - Beaumont, Robin N. A1 - Bradfield, Jonathan P. A1 - Bustamante, Mariona A1 - Cousminer, Diana L. A1 - Day, Felix R. A1 - De Silva, N. Maneka A1 - Guxens, Monica A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - St Pourcain, Beate A1 - Warrington, Nicole M. A1 - Adair, Linda S. A1 - Ahlqvist, Emma A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer Singh A1 - Almgren, Peter A1 - Ang, Wei A1 - Atalay, Mustafa A1 - Auvinen, Juha A1 - Bartels, Meike A1 - Beckmann, Jacques S. A1 - Bilbao, Jose Ramon A1 - Bond, Tom A1 - Borja, Judith B. A1 - Cavadino, Alana A1 - Charoen, Pimphen A1 - Chen, Zhanghua A1 - Coin, Lachlan A1 - Cooper, Cyrus A1 - Curtin, John A. A1 - Custovic, Adnan A1 - Das, Shikta A1 - Davies, Gareth E. A1 - Dedoussis, George V. A1 - Duijts, Liesbeth A1 - Eastwood, Peter R. A1 - Eliasen, Anders U. A1 - Elliott, Paul A1 - Eriksson, Johan G. A1 - Estivill, Xavier A1 - Fadista, Joao A1 - Fedko, Iryna O. A1 - Frayling, Timothy M. A1 - Gaillard, Romy A1 - Gauderman, W. James A1 - Geller, Frank A1 - Gilliland, Frank A1 - Gilsanz, Vincente A1 - Granell, Raquel A1 - Grarup, Niels A1 - Groop, Leif A1 - Hadley, Dexter A1 - Hakonarson, Hakon A1 - Hansen, Torben A1 - Hartman, Catharina A. A1 - Hattersley, Andrew T. A1 - Hayes, M. Geoffrey A1 - Hebebrand, Johannes A1 - Heinrich, Joachim A1 - Helgeland, Oyvind A1 - Henders, Anjali K. A1 - Henderson, John A1 - Henriksen, Tine B. A1 - Hirschhorn, Joel N. A1 - Hivert, Marie-France A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Holloway, John W. A1 - Holt, Patrick A1 - Hottenga, Jouke-Jan A1 - Hypponen, Elina A1 - Iniguez, Carmen A1 - Johansson, Stefan A1 - Jugessur, Astanand A1 - Kahonen, Mika A1 - Kalkwarf, Heidi J. A1 - Kaprio, Jaakko A1 - Karhunen, Ville A1 - Kemp, John P. A1 - Kerkhof, Marjan A1 - Koppelman, Gerard H. A1 - Korner, Antje A1 - Kotecha, Sailesh A1 - Kreiner-Moller, Eskil A1 - Kulohoma, Benard A1 - Kumar, Ashish A1 - Kutalik, Zoltan A1 - Lahti, Jari A1 - Lappe, Joan M. A1 - Larsson, Henrik A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lewin, Alexandra M. A1 - Li, Jin A1 - Lichtenstein, Paul A1 - Lindgren, Cecilia M. A1 - Lindi, Virpi A1 - Linneberg, Allan A1 - Liu, Xueping A1 - Liu, Jun A1 - Lowe, William L. A1 - Lundstrom, Sebastian A1 - Lyytikainen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Ma, Ronald C. W. A1 - Mace, Aurelien A1 - Magi, Reedik A1 - Magnus, Per A1 - Mamun, Abdullah A. A1 - Mannikko, Minna A1 - Martin, Nicholas G. A1 - Mbarek, Hamdi A1 - McCarthy, Nina S. A1 - Medland, Sarah E. A1 - Melbye, Mads A1 - Melen, Erik A1 - Mohlke, Karen L. A1 - Monnereau, Claire A1 - Morgen, Camilla S. A1 - Morris, Andrew P. A1 - Murray, Jeffrey C. A1 - Myhre, Ronny A1 - Najman, Jackob M. A1 - Nivard, Michel G. A1 - Nohr, Ellen A. A1 - Nolte, Ilja M. A1 - Ntalla, Ioanna A1 - Oberfield, Sharon E. A1 - Oken, Emily A1 - Oldehinkel, Albertine J. A1 - Pahkala, Katja A1 - Palviainen, Teemu A1 - Panoutsopoulou, Kalliope A1 - Pedersen, Oluf A1 - Pennell, Craig E. A1 - Pershagen, Goran A1 - Pitkanen, Niina A1 - Plomin, Robert A1 - Power, Christine A1 - Prasad, Rashmi B. A1 - Prokopenko, Inga A1 - Pulkkinen, Lea A1 - Raikkonen, Katri A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Reynolds, Rebecca M. A1 - Richmond, Rebecca C. A1 - Rivadeneira, Fernando A1 - Rodriguez, Alina A1 - Rose, Richard J. A1 - Salem, Rany A1 - Santa-Marina, Loreto A1 - Saw, Seang-Mei A1 - Schnurr, Theresia M. A1 - Scott, James G. A1 - Selzam, Saskia A1 - Shepherd, John A. A1 - Simpson, Angela A1 - Skotte, Line A1 - Sleiman, Patrick M. A. A1 - Snieder, Harold A1 - Sorensen, Thorkild I. A. A1 - Standl, Marie A1 - Steegers, Eric A. P. A1 - Strachan, David P. A1 - Straker, Leon A1 - Strandberg, Timo A1 - Taylor, Michelle A1 - Teo, Yik-Ying A1 - Thiering, Elisabeth A1 - Torrent, Maties A1 - Tyrrell, Jessica A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - van Beijsterveldt, Toos A1 - van der Most, Peter J. A1 - van Duijn, Cornelia M. A1 - Viikari, Jorma A1 - Vilor-Tejedor, Natalia A1 - Vogelezang, Suzanne A1 - Vonk, Judith M. A1 - Vrijkotte, Tanja G. M. A1 - Vuoksimaa, Eero A1 - Wang, Carol A. A1 - Watkins, William J. A1 - Wichmann, H-Erich A1 - Willemsen, Gonneke A1 - Williams, Gail M. A1 - Wilson, James F. A1 - Wray, Naomi R. A1 - Xu, Shujing A1 - Xu, Cheng-Jian A1 - Yaghootkar, Hanieh A1 - Yi, Lu A1 - Zafarmand, Mohammad Hadi A1 - Zeggini, Eleftheria A1 - Zemel, Babette S. A1 - Hinney, Anke A1 - Lakka, Timo A. A1 - Whitehouse, Andrew J. O. A1 - Sunyer, Jordi A1 - Widen, Elisabeth E. A1 - Feenstra, Bjarke A1 - Sebert, Sylvain A1 - Jacobsson, Bo A1 - Njolstad, Pal R. A1 - Stoltenberg, Camilla A1 - Smith, George Davey A1 - Lawlor, Debbie A. A1 - Paternoster, Lavinia A1 - Timpson, Nicholas J. A1 - Ong, Ken K. A1 - Bisgaard, Hans A1 - Bonnelykke, Klaus A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Tiemeier, Henning A1 - Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta A1 - Evans, David M. A1 - Perry, John R. B. A1 - Grant, Struan F. A. A1 - Boomsma, Dorret I. A1 - Freathy, Rachel M. A1 - McCarthy, Mark I. A1 - Felix, Janine F. T1 - The Early Growth Genetics (EGG) and EArly Genetics and Lifecourse Epidemiology (EAGLE) consortia BT - design, results and future prospects JF - European journal of epidemiology N2 - The impact of many unfavorable childhood traits or diseases, such as low birth weight and mental disorders, is not limited to childhood and adolescence, as they are also associated with poor outcomes in adulthood, such as cardiovascular disease. Insight into the genetic etiology of childhood and adolescent traits and disorders may therefore provide new perspectives, not only on how to improve wellbeing during childhood, but also how to prevent later adverse outcomes. To achieve the sample sizes required for genetic research, the Early Growth Genetics (EGG) and EArly Genetics and Lifecourse Epidemiology (EAGLE) consortia were established. The majority of the participating cohorts are longitudinal population-based samples, but other cohorts with data on early childhood phenotypes are also involved. Cohorts often have a broad focus and collect(ed) data on various somatic and psychiatric traits as well as environmental factors. Genetic variants have been successfully identified for multiple traits, for example, birth weight, atopic dermatitis, childhood BMI, allergic sensitization, and pubertal growth. Furthermore, the results have shown that genetic factors also partly underlie the association with adult traits. As sample sizes are still increasing, it is expected that future analyses will identify additional variants. This, in combination with the development of innovative statistical methods, will provide detailed insight on the mechanisms underlying the transition from childhood to adult disorders. Both consortia welcome new collaborations. Policies and contact details are available from the corresponding authors of this manuscript and/or the consortium websites. KW - Genetics KW - Consortium KW - Childhood traits and disorders KW - Longitudinal Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10654-019-00502-9 SN - 0393-2990 SN - 1573-7284 VL - 34 IS - 3 SP - 279 EP - 300 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wolf, Thomas J. A. A1 - Sanchez, David M. A1 - Yang, J. A1 - Parrish, R. M. A1 - Nunes, J. P. F. A1 - Centurion, M. A1 - Coffee, R. A1 - Cryan, J. P. A1 - Gühr, Markus A1 - Hegazy, Kareem A1 - Kirrander, Adam A1 - Li, R. K. A1 - Ruddock, J. A1 - Shen, Xiaozhe A1 - Vecchione, T. A1 - Weathersby, S. P. A1 - Weber, Peter M. A1 - Wilkin, K. A1 - Yong, Haiwang A1 - Zheng, Q. A1 - Wang, X. J. A1 - Minitti, Michael P. A1 - Martinez, Todd J. T1 - The photochemical ring-opening of 1,3-cyclohexadiene imaged by ultrafast electron diffraction JF - Nature chemistry N2 - The ultrafast photoinduced ring-opening of 1,3-cyclohexadiene constitutes a textbook example of electrocyclic reactions in organic chemistry and a model for photobiological reactions in vitamin D synthesis. Although the relaxation from the photoexcited electronic state during the ring-opening has been investigated in numerous studies, the accompanying changes in atomic distance have not been resolved. Here we present a direct and unambiguous observation of the ring-opening reaction path on the femtosecond timescale and subangstrom length scale using megaelectronvolt ultrafast electron diffraction. We followed the carbon-carbon bond dissociation and the structural opening of the 1,3-cyclohexadiene ring by the direct measurement of time-dependent changes in the distribution of interatomic distances. We observed a substantial acceleration of the ring-opening motion after internal conversion to the ground state due to a steepening of the electronic potential gradient towards the product minima. The ring-opening motion transforms into rotation of the terminal ethylene groups in the photoproduct 1,3,5-hexatriene on the subpicosecond timescale. KW - Organic chemistry KW - Photochemistry KW - Physical chemistry KW - Theoretical chemistry Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41557-019-0252-7 SN - 1755-4330 SN - 1755-4349 VL - 11 IS - 6 SP - 504 EP - 509 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ran, Niva A. A1 - Love, John A. A1 - Heiber, Michael C. A1 - Jiao, Xuechen A1 - Hughes, Michael P. A1 - Karki, Akchheta A1 - Wang, Ming A1 - Brus, Viktor V. A1 - Wang, Hengbin A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Ade, Harald A1 - Bazan, Guillermo C. A1 - Thuc-Quyen Nguyen, T1 - Charge generation and recombination in an organic solar cell with low energetic offsets JF - dvanced energy materials N2 - Organic bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells require energetic offsets between the donor and acceptor to obtain high short-circuit currents (J(SC)) and fill factors (FF). However, it is necessary to reduce the energetic offsets to achieve high open-circuit voltages (V-OC). Recently, reports have highlighted BHJ blends that are pushing at the accepted limits of energetic offsets necessary for high efficiency. Unfortunately, most of these BHJs have modest FF values. How the energetic offset impacts the solar cell characteristics thus remains poorly understood. Here, a comprehensive characterization of the losses in a polymer:fullerene BHJ blend, PIPCP:phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PC61BM), that achieves a high V-OC (0.9 V) with very low energy losses (E-loss = 0.52 eV) from the energy of absorbed photons, a respectable J(SC) (13 mA cm(-2)), but a limited FF (54%) is reported. Despite the low energetic offset, the system does not suffer from field-dependent generation and instead it is characterized by very fast nongeminate recombination and the presence of shallow traps. The charge-carrier losses are attributed to suboptimal morphology due to high miscibility between PIPCP and PC61BM. These results hold promise that given the appropriate morphology, the J(SC), V-OC, and FF can all be improved, even with very low energetic offsets. KW - energetic offset KW - fill factor KW - morphology KW - organic solar cells KW - recombination Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/aenm.201701073 SN - 1614-6832 SN - 1614-6840 VL - 8 IS - 5 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Warrington, Nicole A1 - Beaumont, Robin A1 - Horikoshi, Momoko A1 - Day, Felix R. A1 - Helgeland, Øyvind A1 - Laurin, Charles A1 - Bacelis, Jonas A1 - Peng, Shouneng A1 - Hao, Ke A1 - Feenstra, Bjarke A1 - Wood, Andrew R. A1 - Mahajan, Anubha A1 - Tyrrell, Jessica A1 - Robertson, Neil R. A1 - Rayner, N. William A1 - Qiao, Zhen A1 - Moen, Gunn-Helen A1 - Vaudel, Marc A1 - Marsit, Carmen A1 - Chen, Jia A1 - Nodzenski, Michael A1 - Schnurr, Theresia M. A1 - Zafarmand, Mohammad Hadi A1 - Bradfield, Jonathan P. A1 - Grarup, Niels A1 - Kooijman, Marjolein N. A1 - Li-Gao, Ruifang A1 - Geller, Frank A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer Singh A1 - Paternoster, Lavinia A1 - Rueedi, Rico A1 - Huikari, Ville A1 - Hottenga, Jouke-Jan A1 - Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Cavadino, Alana A1 - Metrustry, Sarah A1 - Cousminer, Diana L. A1 - Wu, Ying A1 - Thiering, Elisabeth Paula A1 - Wang, Carol A. A1 - Have, Christian Theil A1 - Vilor-Tejedor, Natalia A1 - Joshi, Peter K. A1 - Painter, Jodie N. A1 - Ntalla, Ioanna A1 - Myhre, Ronny A1 - Pitkänen, Niina A1 - van Leeuwen, Elisabeth M. A1 - Joro, Raimo A1 - Lagou, Vasiliki A1 - Richmond, Rebecca C. A1 - Espinosa, Ana A1 - Barton, Sheila J. A1 - Inskip, Hazel M. A1 - Holloway, John W. A1 - Santa-Marina, Loreto A1 - Estivill, Xavier A1 - Ang, Wei A1 - Marsh, Julie A. A1 - Reichetzeder, Christoph A1 - Marullo, Letizia A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Lunetta, Kathryn L. A1 - Murabito, Joanne M. A1 - Relton, Caroline L. A1 - Kogevinas, Manolis A1 - Chatzi, Leda A1 - Allard, Catherine A1 - Bouchard, Luigi A1 - Hivert, Marie-France A1 - Zhang, Ge A1 - Muglia, Louis J. A1 - Heikkinen, Jani A1 - Morgen, Camilla S. A1 - van Kampen, Antoine H. C. A1 - van Schaik, Barbera D. C. A1 - Mentch, Frank D. A1 - Langenberg, Claudia A1 - Scott, Robert A. A1 - Zhao, Jing Hua A1 - Hemani, Gibran A1 - Ring, Susan M. A1 - Bennett, Amanda J. A1 - Gaulton, Kyle J. A1 - Fernandez-Tajes, Juan A1 - van Zuydam, Natalie R. A1 - Medina-Gomez, Carolina A1 - de Haan, Hugoline G. A1 - Rosendaal, Frits R. A1 - Kutalik, Zoltán A1 - Marques-Vidal, Pedro A1 - Das, Shikta A1 - Willemsen, Gonneke A1 - Mbarek, Hamdi A1 - Müller-Nurasyid, Martina A1 - Standl, Marie A1 - Appel, Emil V. R. A1 - Fonvig, Cilius Esmann A1 - Trier, Caecilie A1 - van Beijsterveldt, Catharina E. M. A1 - Murcia, Mario A1 - Bustamante, Mariona A1 - Bonàs-Guarch, Sílvia A1 - Hougaard, David M. A1 - Mercader, Josep M. A1 - Linneberg, Allan A1 - Schraut, Katharina E. A1 - Lind, Penelope A. A1 - Medland, Sarah Elizabeth A1 - Shields, Beverley M. A1 - Knight, Bridget A. A1 - Chai, Jin-Fang A1 - Panoutsopoulou, Kalliope A1 - Bartels, Meike A1 - Sánchez, Friman A1 - Stokholm, Jakob A1 - Torrents, David A1 - Vinding, Rebecca K. A1 - Willems, Sara M. A1 - Atalay, Mustafa A1 - Chawes, Bo L. A1 - Kovacs, Peter A1 - Prokopenko, Inga A1 - Tuke, Marcus A. A1 - Yaghootkar, Hanieh A1 - Ruth, Katherine S. A1 - Jones, Samuel E. A1 - Loh, Po-Ru A1 - Murray, Anna A1 - Weedon, Michael N. A1 - Tönjes, Anke A1 - Stumvoll, Michael A1 - Michaelsen, Kim Fleischer A1 - Eloranta, Aino-Maija A1 - Lakka, Timo A. A1 - van Duijn, Cornelia M. A1 - Kiess, Wieland A1 - Koerner, Antje A1 - Niinikoski, Harri A1 - Pahkala, Katja A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Jacobsson, Bo A1 - Zeggini, Eleftheria A1 - Dedoussis, George V. A1 - Teo, Yik-Ying A1 - Saw, Seang-Mei A1 - Montgomery, Grant W. A1 - Campbell, Harry A1 - Wilson, James F. A1 - Vrijkotte, Tanja G. M. A1 - Vrijheid, Martine A1 - de Geus, Eco J. C. N. A1 - Hayes, M. Geoffrey A1 - Kadarmideen, Haja N. A1 - Holm, Jens-Christian A1 - Beilin, Lawrence J. A1 - Pennell, Craig E. A1 - Heinrich, Joachim A1 - Adair, Linda S. A1 - Borja, Judith B. A1 - Mohlke, Karen L. A1 - Eriksson, Johan G. A1 - Widen, Elisabeth E. A1 - Hattersley, Andrew T. A1 - Spector, Tim D. A1 - Kaehoenen, Mika A1 - Viikari, Jorma S. A1 - Lehtimaeki, Terho A1 - Boomsma, Dorret I. A1 - Sebert, Sylvain A1 - Vollenweider, Peter A1 - Sorensen, Thorkild I. A. A1 - Bisgaard, Hans A1 - Bonnelykke, Klaus A1 - Murray, Jeffrey C. A1 - Melbye, Mads A1 - Nohr, Ellen A. A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - Rivadeneira, Fernando A1 - Hofman, Albert A1 - Felix, Janine F. A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Hansen, Torben A1 - Pisinger, Charlotta A1 - Vaag, Allan A. A1 - Pedersen, Oluf A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta A1 - Power, Christine A1 - Hypponen, Elina A1 - Scholtens, Denise M. A1 - Lowe, William L. A1 - Smith, George Davey A1 - Timpson, Nicholas J. A1 - Morris, Andrew P. A1 - Wareham, Nicholas J. A1 - Hakonarson, Hakon A1 - Grant, Struan F. A. A1 - Frayling, Timothy M. A1 - Lawlor, Debbie A. A1 - Njolstad, Pal R. A1 - Johansson, Stefan A1 - Ong, Ken K. A1 - McCarthy, Mark I. A1 - Perry, John R. B. A1 - Evans, David M. A1 - Freathy, Rachel M. T1 - Maternal and fetal genetic effects on birth weight and their relevance to cardio-metabolic risk factors JF - Nature genetics N2 - Birth weight variation is influenced by fetal and maternal genetic and non-genetic factors, and has been reproducibly associated with future cardio-metabolic health outcomes. In expanded genome-wide association analyses of own birth weight (n = 321,223) and offspring birth weight (n = 230,069 mothers), we identified 190 independent association signals (129 of which are novel). We used structural equation modeling to decompose the contributions of direct fetal and indirect maternal genetic effects, then applied Mendelian randomization to illuminate causal pathways. For example, both indirect maternal and direct fetal genetic effects drive the observational relationship between lower birth weight and higher later blood pressure: maternal blood pressure-raising alleles reduce offspring birth weight, but only direct fetal effects of these alleles, once inherited, increase later offspring blood pressure. Using maternal birth weight-lowering genotypes to proxy for an adverse intrauterine environment provided no evidence that it causally raises offspring blood pressure, indicating that the inverse birth weight-blood pressure association is attributable to genetic effects, and not to intrauterine programming. Y1 - 2019 SN - 1061-4036 SN - 1546-1718 VL - 51 IS - 5 SP - 804 EP - + PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wang, E. A1 - Kirby, E. A1 - Furlong, K. P. A1 - van Soest, M. A1 - Xu, G. A1 - Shi, X. A1 - Kamp, P. J. J. A1 - Hodges, K. V. T1 - Two-phase growth of high topography in eastern Tibet during the Cenozoic JF - NATURE GEOSCIENCE N2 - High topography in eastern Tibet is thought to have formed when deep crust beneath the central Tibetan Plateau flowed towards the plateau margin, causing crustal thickening and surface uplift(1,2). Rapid exhumation starting about 10-15 million years ago is inferred to mark the onset of surface uplift and fluvial incision(3-6). Although geophysical data are consistent with weak crust capable of flow(7,8), it is unclear how the timing(9) and amount of deformation adjacent to the Sichuan Basin during the Cenozoic era can be explained in this way(10,11). Here we use thermochronology to measure the cooling histories of rocks exposed in a section that stretches vertically over 3 km adjacent to the Sichuan Basin. Our thermal models of exhumation-driven cooling show that these rocks, and hence the plateau margin, were subject to slow, steady exhumation during early Cenozoic time, followed by two pulses of rapid exhumation, one beginning 30-25 million years ago and a second 10-15 million years ago that continues to present. Our findings imply that significant topographic relief existed adjacent to the Sichuan Basin before the Indo-Asian collision. Furthermore, the onset of Cenozoic mountain building probably pre-dated development of the weak lower crust, implying that early topography was instead formed during thickening of the upper crust along faults. We suggest that episodes of mountain building may reflect distinct geodynamic mechanisms of crustal thickening. Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/NGEO1538 SN - 1752-0894 VL - 5 IS - 9 SP - 640 EP - 645 PB - NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP CY - NEW YORK ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wolf, T. J. A. A1 - Myhre, R. H. A1 - Cryan, J. P. A1 - Coriani, S. A1 - Squibb, R. J. A1 - Battistoni, A. A1 - Berrah, Nora A1 - Bostedt, Christoph A1 - Bucksbaum, Philip H. A1 - Coslovich, G. A1 - Feifel, R. A1 - Gaffney, K. J. A1 - Grilj, J. A1 - Martinez, T. J. A1 - Miyabe, S. A1 - Moeller, S. P. A1 - Mucke, M. A1 - Natan, A. A1 - Obaid, R. A1 - Osipov, T. A1 - Plekan, O. A1 - Wang, S. A1 - Koch, H. A1 - Guehr, Markus T1 - Probing ultrafast pi pi*/n pi* internal conversion in organic chromophores via K-edge resonant absorption JF - Nature Communications Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00069-7 SN - 2041-1723 VL - 8 SP - 14317 EP - 14322 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Townsley, Leisa K. A1 - Broos, Patrick S. A1 - Corcoran, Michael F. A1 - Feigelson, Eric D. A1 - Gagne, Marc A1 - Montmerle, Thierry A1 - Oey, M. S. A1 - Smith, Nathan A1 - Garmire, Gordon P. A1 - Getman, Konstantin V. A1 - Povich, Matthew S. A1 - Evans, Nancy Remage A1 - Naze, Yael A1 - Parkin, E. R. A1 - Preibisch, Thomas A1 - Wang, Junfeng A1 - Wou, Scott J. A1 - Chu, You-Hua A1 - Cohen, David H. A1 - Gruendl, Robert A. A1 - Hamaguchi, Kenji A1 - King, Robert R. A1 - Mac Low, Mordecai-Mark A1 - McCaughrean, Mark J. A1 - Moffat, Anthony F. J. A1 - Oskinova, Lida A1 - Pittard, Julian M. A1 - Stassun, Keivan G. A1 - Ud-Doula, Asif A1 - Walborn, Nolan R. A1 - Waldron, Wayne L. A1 - Churchwell, Ed A1 - Nictiols, J. S. A1 - Owocki, Stanley P. A1 - Schulz, Norbert S. T1 - An introduction to the chandra carina complex project JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics ; Supplement series N2 - The Great Nebula in Carina provides an exceptional view into the violent massive star formation and feedback that typifies giant H II regions and starburst galaxies. We have mapped the Carina star-forming complex in X-rays, using archival Chandra data and a mosaic of 20 new 60 ks pointings using the Chandra X-ray Observatory's Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer, as a testbed for understanding recent and ongoing star formation and to probe Carina's regions of bright diffuse X-ray emission. This study has yielded a catalog of properties of > 14,000 X-ray point sources;> 9800 of them have multiwavelength counterparts. Using Chandra's unsurpassed X-ray spatial resolution, we have separated these point sources from the extensive, spatially-complex diffuse emission that pervades the region; X-ray properties of this diffuse emission suggest that it traces feedback from Carina's massive stars. In this introductory paper, we motivate the survey design, describe the Chandra observations, and present some simple results, providing a foundation for the 15 papers that follow in this special issue and that present detailed catalogs, methods, and science results. KW - H II regions KW - stars: massive KW - stars: pre-main sequence KW - X-rays: individual (Carina) KW - X-rays: ISM KW - X-rays: stars Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/0067-0049/194/1/1 SN - 0067-0049 VL - 194 IS - 1 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Russell, C. M. P. A1 - Corcoran, M. F. A1 - Cuadra, J. A1 - Owocki, S. P. A1 - Wang, Q. D. A1 - Hamaguchi, K. A1 - Sugawara, Y. A1 - Pollock, A. M. T. A1 - Kallman, T. R. T1 - Hydrodynamic and radiative transfer modeling of X-ray emission from colliding WR winds BT - WR 140 & the Galactic center JF - Wolf-Rayet Stars : Proceedings of an International Workshop held in Potsdam, Germany, 1.–5. June 2015 N2 - Colliding Wolf-Rayet (WR) winds produce thermal X-ray emission widely observed by X-ray telescopes. In wide WR+O binaries, such as WR 140, the X-ray flux is tied to the orbital phase, and is a direct probe of the winds’ properties. In the Galactic center, ~30 WRs orbit the super massive black hole (SMBH) within ~10”, leading to a smorgasbord of wind-wind collisions. To model the X-ray emission of WR 140 and the Galactic center, we perform 3D hydrodynamic simulations to trace the complex gaseous flows, and then carry out 3D radiative transfer calculations to compute the variable X-ray spectra. The model WR 140 RXTE light curve matches the data well for all phases except the X-ray minimum associated with periastron, while the model spectra agree with the RXTE hardness ratio and the shape of the Suzaku observations throughout the orbit. The Galactic center model of the Chandra flux and spectral shape match well in the region r ≤ 3”, but the model flux falls off too rapidly beyond this radius. Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-88255 SP - 309 EP - 312 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Yang, Jie A1 - Zhu, Xiaolei A1 - Wolf, Thomas J. A. A1 - Li, Zheng A1 - Nunes, João Pedro Figueira A1 - Coffee, Ryan A1 - Cryan, James P. A1 - Gühr, Markus A1 - Hegazy, Kareem A1 - Heinz, Tony F. A1 - Jobe, Keith A1 - Li, Renkai A1 - Shen, Xiaozhe A1 - Veccione, Theodore A1 - Weathersby, Stephen A1 - Wilkin, Kyle J. A1 - Yoneda, Charles A1 - Zheng, Qiang A1 - Martinez, Todd J. A1 - Centurion, Martin A1 - Wang, Xijie T1 - Imaging CF3I conical intersection and photodissociation dynamics with ultrafast electron diffraction JF - Science N2 - Conical intersections play a critical role in excited-state dynamics of polyatomic molecules because they govern the reaction pathways of many nonadiabatic processes. However, ultrafast probes have lacked sufficient spatial resolution to image wave-packet trajectories through these intersections directly. Here, we present the simultaneous experimental characterization of one-photon and two-photon excitation channels in isolated CF3I molecules using ultrafast gas-phase electron diffraction. In the two-photon channel, we have mapped out the real-space trajectories of a coherent nuclear wave packet, which bifurcates onto two potential energy surfaces when passing through a conical intersection. In the one-photon channel, we have resolved excitation of both the umbrella and the breathing vibrational modes in the CF3 fragment in multiple nuclear dimensions. These findings benchmark and validate ab initio nonadiabatic dynamics calculations. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aat0049 SN - 0036-8075 SN - 1095-9203 VL - 361 IS - 6397 SP - 64 EP - 67 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hodgkins, Suzanne B. A1 - Richardson, Curtis J. A1 - Dommain, René A1 - Wang, Hongjun A1 - Glaser, Paul H. A1 - Verbeke, Brittany A1 - Winkler, B. Rose A1 - Cobb, Alexander R. A1 - Rich, Virginia I. A1 - Missilmani, Malak A1 - Flanagan, Neal A1 - Ho, Mengchi A1 - Hoyt, Alison M. A1 - Harvey, Charles F. A1 - Vining, S. Rose A1 - Hough, Moira A. A1 - Moore, Tim R. A1 - Richard, Pierre J. H. A1 - De La Cruz, Florentino B. A1 - Toufaily, Joumana A1 - Hamdan, Rasha A1 - Cooper, William T. A1 - Chanton, Jeffrey P. T1 - Tropical peatland carbon storage linked to global latitudinal trends in peat recalcitrance T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Peatlands represent large terrestrial carbon banks. Given that most peat accumulates in boreal regions, where low temperatures and water saturation preserve organic matter, the existence of peat in (sub)tropical regions remains enigmatic. Here we examined peat and plant chemistry across a latitudinal transect from the Arctic to the tropics. Near-surface low-latitude peat has lower carbohydrate and greater aromatic content than near-surface high-latitude peat, creating a reduced oxidation state and resulting recalcitrance. This recalcitrance allows peat to persist in the (sub)tropics despite warm temperatures. Because we observed similar declines in carbohydrate content with depth in high-latitude peat, our data explain recent field-scale deep peat warming experiments in which catotelm (deeper) peat remained stable despite temperature increases up to 9 degrees C. We suggest that high-latitude deep peat reservoirs may be stabilized in the face of climate change by their ultimately lower carbohydrate and higher aromatic composition, similar to tropical peats. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1125 KW - dissolved organic matter KW - greenhouse gas fluxes KW - permafrost thaw KW - Northern Minnesota KW - FTIR spectroscopy KW - lignin content KW - brown rot KW - decomposition KW - chemistry KW - dynamics Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-459658 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1125 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hodgkins, Suzanne B. A1 - Richardson, Curtis J. A1 - Dommain, Rene A1 - Wang, Hongjun A1 - Glaser, Paul H. A1 - Verbeke, Brittany A1 - Winkler, B. Rose A1 - Cobb, Alexander R. A1 - Rich, Virginia I. A1 - Missilmani, Malak A1 - Flanagan, Neal A1 - Ho, Mengchi A1 - Hoyt, Alison M. A1 - Harvey, Charles F. A1 - Vining, S. Rose A1 - Hough, Moira A. A1 - Moore, Tim R. A1 - Richard, Pierre J. H. A1 - De la Cruz, Florentino B. A1 - Toufaily, Joumana A1 - Hamdan, Rasha A1 - Cooper, William T. A1 - Chanton, Jeffrey P. T1 - Tropical peatland carbon storage linked to global latitudinal trends in peat recalcitrance JF - Nature Communications N2 - Peatlands represent large terrestrial carbon banks. Given that most peat accumulates in boreal regions, where low temperatures and water saturation preserve organic matter, the existence of peat in (sub)tropical regions remains enigmatic. Here we examined peat and plant chemistry across a latitudinal transect from the Arctic to the tropics. Near-surface low-latitude peat has lower carbohydrate and greater aromatic content than near-surface high-latitude peat, creating a reduced oxidation state and resulting recalcitrance. This recalcitrance allows peat to persist in the (sub)tropics despite warm temperatures. Because we observed similar declines in carbohydrate content with depth in high-latitude peat, our data explain recent field-scale deep peat warming experiments in which catotelm (deeper) peat remained stable despite temperature increases up to 9 degrees C. We suggest that high-latitude deep peat reservoirs may be stabilized in the face of climate change by their ultimately lower carbohydrate and higher aromatic composition, similar to tropical peats. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06050-2 SN - 2041-1723 VL - 9 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dengler, Jürgen A1 - Wagner, Viktoria A1 - Dembicz, Iwona A1 - Garcia-Mijangos, Itziar A1 - Naqinezhad, Alireza A1 - Boch, Steffen A1 - Chiarucci, Alessandro A1 - Conradi, Timo A1 - Filibeck, Goffredo A1 - Guarino, Riccardo A1 - Janisova, Monika A1 - Steinbauer, Manuel J. A1 - Acic, Svetlana A1 - Acosta, Alicia T. R. A1 - Akasaka, Munemitsu A1 - Allers, Marc-Andre A1 - Apostolova, Iva A1 - Axmanova, Irena A1 - Bakan, Branko A1 - Baranova, Alina A1 - Bardy-Durchhalter, Manfred A1 - Bartha, Sandor A1 - Baumann, Esther A1 - Becker, Thomas A1 - Becker, Ute A1 - Belonovskaya, Elena A1 - Bengtsson, Karin A1 - Benito Alonso, Jose Luis A1 - Berastegi, Asun A1 - Bergamini, Ariel A1 - Bonini, Ilaria A1 - Bruun, Hans Henrik A1 - Budzhak, Vasyl A1 - Bueno, Alvaro A1 - Antonio Campos, Juan A1 - Cancellieri, Laura A1 - Carboni, Marta A1 - Chocarro, Cristina A1 - Conti, Luisa A1 - Czarniecka-Wiera, Marta A1 - De Frenne, Pieter A1 - Deak, Balazs A1 - Didukh, Yakiv P. A1 - Diekmann, Martin A1 - Dolnik, Christian A1 - Dupre, Cecilia A1 - Ecker, Klaus A1 - Ermakov, Nikolai A1 - Erschbamer, Brigitta A1 - Escudero, Adrian A1 - Etayo, Javier A1 - Fajmonova, Zuzana A1 - Felde, Vivian A. A1 - Fernandez Calzado, Maria Rosa A1 - Finckh, Manfred A1 - Fotiadis, Georgios A1 - Fracchiolla, Mariano A1 - Ganeva, Anna A1 - Garcia-Magro, Daniel A1 - Gavilan, Rosario G. A1 - Germany, Markus A1 - Giladi, Itamar A1 - Gillet, Francois A1 - Giusso del Galdo, Gian Pietro A1 - Gonzalez, Jose M. A1 - Grytnes, John-Arvid A1 - Hajek, Michal A1 - Hajkova, Petra A1 - Helm, Aveliina A1 - Herrera, Mercedes A1 - Hettenbergerova, Eva A1 - Hobohm, Carsten A1 - Huellbusch, Elisabeth M. A1 - Ingerpuu, Nele A1 - Jandt, Ute A1 - Jeltsch, Florian A1 - Jensen, Kai A1 - Jentsch, Anke A1 - Jeschke, Michael A1 - Jimenez-Alfaro, Borja A1 - Kacki, Zygmunt A1 - Kakinuma, Kaoru A1 - Kapfer, Jutta A1 - Kavgaci, Ali A1 - Kelemen, Andras A1 - Kiehl, Kathrin A1 - Koyama, Asuka A1 - Koyanagi, Tomoyo F. A1 - Kozub, Lukasz A1 - Kuzemko, Anna A1 - Kyrkjeeide, Magni Olsen A1 - Landi, Sara A1 - Langer, Nancy A1 - Lastrucci, Lorenzo A1 - Lazzaro, Lorenzo A1 - Lelli, Chiara A1 - Leps, Jan A1 - Loebel, Swantje A1 - Luzuriaga, Arantzazu L. A1 - Maccherini, Simona A1 - Magnes, Martin A1 - Malicki, Marek A1 - Marceno, Corrado A1 - Mardari, Constantin A1 - Mauchamp, Leslie A1 - May, Felix A1 - Michelsen, Ottar A1 - Mesa, Joaquin Molero A1 - Molnar, Zsolt A1 - Moysiyenko, Ivan Y. A1 - Nakaga, Yuko K. A1 - Natcheva, Rayna A1 - Noroozi, Jalil A1 - Pakeman, Robin J. A1 - Palpurina, Salza A1 - Partel, Meelis A1 - Paetsch, Ricarda A1 - Pauli, Harald A1 - Pedashenko, Hristo A1 - Peet, Robert K. A1 - Pielech, Remigiusz A1 - Pipenbaher, Natasa A1 - Pirini, Chrisoula A1 - Pleskova, Zuzana A1 - Polyakova, Mariya A. A1 - Prentice, Honor C. A1 - Reinecke, Jennifer A1 - Reitalu, Triin A1 - Pilar Rodriguez-Rojo, Maria A1 - Rolecek, Jan A1 - Ronkin, Vladimir A1 - Rosati, Leonardo A1 - Rosen, Ejvind A1 - Ruprecht, Eszter A1 - Rusina, Solvita A1 - Sabovljevic, Marko A1 - Maria Sanchez, Ana A1 - Savchenko, Galina A1 - Schuhmacher, Oliver A1 - Skornik, Sonja A1 - Sperandii, Marta Gaia A1 - Staniaszek-Kik, Monika A1 - Stevanovic-Dajic, Zora A1 - Stock, Marin A1 - Suchrow, Sigrid A1 - Sutcliffe, Laura M. E. A1 - Swacha, Grzegorz A1 - Sykes, Martin A1 - Szabo, Anna A1 - Talebi, Amir A1 - Tanase, Catalin A1 - Terzi, Massimo A1 - Tolgyesi, Csaba A1 - Torca, Marta A1 - Torok, Peter A1 - Tothmeresz, Bela A1 - Tsarevskaya, Nadezda A1 - Tsiripidis, Ioannis A1 - Tzonev, Rossen A1 - Ushimaru, Atushi A1 - Valko, Orsolya A1 - van der Maarel, Eddy A1 - Vanneste, Thomas A1 - Vashenyak, Iuliia A1 - Vassilev, Kiril A1 - Viciani, Daniele A1 - Villar, Luis A1 - Virtanen, Risto A1 - Kosic, Ivana Vitasovic A1 - Wang, Yun A1 - Weiser, Frank A1 - Went, Julia A1 - Wesche, Karsten A1 - White, Hannah A1 - Winkler, Manuela A1 - Zaniewski, Piotr T. A1 - Zhang, Hui A1 - Ziv, Yaron A1 - Znamenskiy, Sergey A1 - Biurrun, Idoia T1 - GrassPlot - a database of multi-scale plant diversity in Palaearctic grasslands JF - Phytocoenologia N2 - GrassPlot is a collaborative vegetation-plot database organised by the Eurasian Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) and listed in the Global Index of Vegetation-Plot Databases (GIVD ID EU-00-003). GrassPlot collects plot records (releves) from grasslands and other open habitats of the Palaearctic biogeographic realm. It focuses on precisely delimited plots of eight standard grain sizes (0.0001; 0.001;... 1,000 m(2)) and on nested-plot series with at least four different grain sizes. The usage of GrassPlot is regulated through Bylaws that intend to balance the interests of data contributors and data users. The current version (v. 1.00) contains data for approximately 170,000 plots of different sizes and 2,800 nested-plot series. The key components are richness data and metadata. However, most included datasets also encompass compositional data. About 14,000 plots have near-complete records of terricolous bryophytes and lichens in addition to vascular plants. At present, GrassPlot contains data from 36 countries throughout the Palaearctic, spread across elevational gradients and major grassland types. GrassPlot with its multi-scale and multi-taxon focus complements the larger international vegetationplot databases, such as the European Vegetation Archive (EVA) and the global database " sPlot". Its main aim is to facilitate studies on the scale-and taxon-dependency of biodiversity patterns and drivers along macroecological gradients. GrassPlot is a dynamic database and will expand through new data collection coordinated by the elected Governing Board. We invite researchers with suitable data to join GrassPlot. Researchers with project ideas addressable with GrassPlot data are welcome to submit proposals to the Governing Board. KW - biodiversity KW - European Vegetation Archive (EVA) KW - Eurasian Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) KW - grassland vegetation KW - GrassPlot KW - macroecology KW - multi-taxon KW - nested plot KW - scale-dependence KW - species-area relationship (SAR) KW - sPlot KW - vegetation-plot database Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1127/phyto/2018/0267 SN - 0340-269X VL - 48 IS - 3 SP - 331 EP - 347 PB - Cramer CY - Stuttgart ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tang, Alan T. A1 - Sullivan, Katie Rose A1 - Hong, Courtney C. A1 - Goddard, Lauren M. A1 - Mahadevan, Aparna A1 - Ren, Aileen A1 - Pardo, Heidy A1 - Peiper, Amy A1 - Griffin, Erin A1 - Tanes, Ceylan A1 - Mattei, Lisa M. A1 - Yang, Jisheng A1 - Li, Li A1 - Mericko-Ishizuka, Patricia A1 - Shen, Le A1 - Hobson, Nicholas A1 - Girard, Romuald A1 - Lightle, Rhonda A1 - Moore, Thomas A1 - Shenkar, Robert A1 - Polster, Sean P. A1 - Roedel, Claudia Jasmin A1 - Li, Ning A1 - Zhu, Qin A1 - Whitehead, Kevin J. A1 - Zheng, Xiangjian A1 - Akers, Amy A1 - Morrison, Leslie A1 - Kim, Helen A1 - Bittinger, Kyle A1 - Lengner, Christopher J. A1 - Schwaninger, Markus A1 - Velcich, Anna A1 - Augenlicht, Leonard A1 - Abdelilah-Seyfried, Salim A1 - Min, Wang A1 - Marchuk, Douglas A. A1 - Awad, Issam A. A1 - Kahn, Mark L. T1 - Distinct cellular roles for PDCD10 define a gut-brain axis in cerebral cavernous malformation JF - Science Translational Medicine N2 - Cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) is a genetic, cerebrovascular disease. Familial CCM is caused by genetic mutations in KRIT1, CCM2, or PDCD10. Disease onset is earlier and more severe in individuals with PDCD10 mutations. Recent studies have shown that lesions arise from excess mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 3 (MEKK3) signaling downstream of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) stimulation by lipopolysaccharide derived from the gut microbiome. These findings suggest a gut-brain CCM disease axis but fail to define it or explain the poor prognosis of patients with PDCD10 mutations. Here, we demonstrate that the gut barrier is a primary determinant of CCM disease course, independent of microbiome configuration, that explains the increased severity of CCM disease associated with PDCD10 deficiency. Chemical disruption of the gut barrier with dextran sulfate sodium augments CCM formation in a mouse model, as does genetic loss of Pdcd10, but not Krit1, in gut epithelial cells. Loss of gut epithelial Pdcd10 results in disruption of the colonic mucosal barrier. Accordingly, loss of Mucin-2 or exposure to dietary emulsifiers that reduce the mucus barrier increases CCM burden analogous to loss of Pdcd10 in the gut epithelium. Last, we show that treatment with dexamethasone potently inhibits CCM formation in mice because of the combined effect of action at both brain endothelial cells and gut epithelial cells. These studies define a gut-brain disease axis in an experimental model of CCM in which a single gene is required for two critical components: gut epithelial function and brain endothelial signaling. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aaw3521 SN - 1946-6234 SN - 1946-6242 VL - 11 IS - 520 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sigman, Daniel M. A1 - DiFiore, Peter J. A1 - Hain, Mathis P. A1 - Deutsch, Curtis A1 - Wang, Yi A1 - Karl, David M. A1 - Knapp, Angela N. A1 - Lehmann, Moritz F. A1 - Pantoja, Silvio T1 - The dual isotopes of deep nitrate as a constraint on the cycle and budget of oceanic fixed nitrogen N2 - We compare the output of an 18-box geochemical model of the ocean with measurements to investigate the controls on both the mean values and variation of nitrate delta N-15 and delta O-18 in the ocean interior. The delta O-18 of nitrate is our focus because it has been explored less in previous work. Denitrification raises the delta N-15 and delta O-18 of mean ocean nitrate by equal amounts above their input values for N-2 fixation (for delta N-15) and nitrification (for delta O-18), generating parallel gradients in the delta N-15 and delta O-18 of deep ocean nitrate. Partial nitrate assimilation in the photic zone also causes equivalent increases in the delta N-15 and delta O-18 of the residual nitrate that can be transported into the interior. However, the regeneration and nitrification of sinking N can be said to decouple the N and O isotopes of deep ocean nitrate, especially when the sinking N is produced in a low latitude region, where nitrate consumption is effectively complete. The delta N-15 of the regenerated nitrate is equivalent to that originally consumed, whereas the regeneration replaces nitrate previously elevated in delta O-18 due to denitrification or nitrate assimilation with nitrate having the delta O-18 of nitrification. This lowers the delta O-18 of mean ocean nitrate and weakens nitrate delta O-18 gradients in the interior relative to those in delta N-15. This decoupling is characterized and quantified in the box model, and agreement with data shows its clear importance in the real ocean. At the same time, the model appears to generate overly strong gradients in both delta O-18 and delta N-15 within the ocean interior and a mean ocean nitrate delta O-18 that is higher than measured. This may be due to, in the model, too strong an impact of partial nitrate assimilation in the Southern Ocean on the delta N-15 and delta O-18 of preformed nitrate and/or too little cycling of intermediate-depth nitrate through the low latitude photic zone. Y1 - 2009 UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/09670637 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2009.04.007 SN - 0967-0637 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rössle, Matthias A1 - Wang, C. N. A1 - Marsik, P. A1 - Yazdi-Rizi, Meghdad A1 - Kim, K. W. A1 - Dubroka, Adam A1 - Marozau, Ivan A1 - Schneider, C. W. A1 - Humlicek, J. A1 - Baeriswyl, D. A1 - Bernhard, C. T1 - Optical probe of ferroelectric order in bulk and thin-film perovskite titanates JF - Physical review : B, Condensed matter and materials physics N2 - We have measured the temperature dependence of the direct band gap Eg in SrTiO3 and BaTiO3 and related materials with quantum-paraelectric and ferroelectric properties using optical spectroscopy. We show that Eg exhibits an anomalous temperature dependence with pronounced changes in the vicinity of the ferroelectric transition that can be accounted for in terms of the Frohlich electron-phonon interaction with an optical phonon mode, the so-called soft mode. In addition, we demonstrate that these characteristic changes of Eg can be readily detected even in very thin films of SrTiO3 with a strain-induced ferroelectric order. Optical spectroscopy thus can be used as a rather sensitive probe of ferroelectric order in very thin films of these titanates and probably also in subsequent multilayers and devices. Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.88.104110 SN - 1098-0121 VL - 88 IS - 10 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cheng, Shifeng A1 - van den Bergh, Erik A1 - Zeng, Peng A1 - Zhong, Xiao A1 - Xu, Jiajia A1 - Liu, Xin A1 - Hofberger, Johannes A1 - de Bruijn, Suzanne A1 - Bhide, Amey S. A1 - Kuelahoglu, Canan A1 - Bian, Chao A1 - Chen, Jing A1 - Fan, Guangyi A1 - Kaufmann, Kerstin A1 - Hall, Jocelyn C. A1 - Becker, Annette A1 - Bräutigam, Andrea A1 - Weber, Andreas P. M. A1 - Shi, Chengcheng A1 - Zheng, Zhijun A1 - Li, Wujiao A1 - Lv, Mingju A1 - Tao, Yimin A1 - Wang, Junyi A1 - Zou, Hongfeng A1 - Quan, Zhiwu A1 - Hibberd, Julian M. A1 - Zhang, Gengyun A1 - Zhu, Xin-Guang A1 - Xu, Xun A1 - Schranz, M. Eric T1 - The Tarenaya hassleriana Genome Provides insight Into Reproductive Trait and Genome Evolution of Crucifers JF - The plant cell N2 - The Brassicaceae, including Arabidopsis thaliana and Brassica crops, is unmatched among plants in its wealth of genomic and functional molecular data and has long served as a model for understanding gene, genome, and trait evolution. However, genome information from a phylogenetic outgroup that is essential for inferring directionality of evolutionary change has been lacking. We therefore sequenced the genome of the spider flower (Tarenaya hassleriana) from the Brassicaceae sister family, the Cleomaceae. By comparative analysis of the two lineages, we show that genome evolution following ancient polyploidy and gene duplication events affect reproductively important traits. We found an ancient genome triplication in Tarenaya (Th-alpha) that is independent of the Brassicaceae-specific duplication (At-alpha) and nested Brassica (Br-a) triplication. To showcase the potential of sister lineage genome analysis, we investigated the state of floral developmental genes and show Brassica retains twice as many floral MADS (for MINICHROMOSOME MAINTENANCE1, AGAMOUS, DEFICIENS and SERUM RESPONSE FACTOR) genes as Tarenaya that likely contribute to morphological diversity in Brassica. We also performed synteny analysis of gene families that confer self-incompatibility in Brassicaceae and found that the critical SERINE RECEPTOR KINASE receptor gene is derived from a lineage-specific tandem duplication. The T. hassleriana genome will facilitate future research toward elucidating the evolutionary history of Brassicaceae genomes. Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.113.113480 SN - 1040-4651 VL - 25 IS - 8 SP - 2813 EP - 2830 PB - American Society of Plant Physiologists CY - Rockville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sangoro, Joshia R. A1 - Iacob, C. A1 - Agapov, A. L. A1 - Wang, Yangyang A1 - Berdzinski, Stefan A1 - Rexhausen, Hans A1 - Strehmel, Veronika A1 - Friedrich, C. A1 - Sokolov, A. P. A1 - Kremer, F. T1 - Decoupling of ionic conductivity from structural dynamics in polymerized ionic liquids JF - Soft matter N2 - Charge transport and structural dynamics in low molecular weight and polymerized 1-vinyl-3-pentylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl) imide ionic liquids (ILs) are investigated by a combination of broadband dielectric spectroscopy, dynamic mechanical spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry. While the dc conductivity and fluidity exhibit practically identical temperature dependence for the non-polymerized IL, a significant decoupling of ionic conduction from structural dynamics is observed for the polymerized IL. In addition, the dc conductivity of the polymerized IL exceeds that of its molecular counterpart by four orders of magnitude at their respective calorimetric glass transition temperatures. This is attributed to the unusually high mobility of the anions especially at lower temperatures when the structural dynamics is significantly slowed down. A simple physical explanation of the possible origin of the remarkable decoupling of ionic conductivity from structural dynamics is proposed. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c3sm53202j SN - 1744-683X SN - 1744-6848 VL - 10 IS - 20 SP - 3536 EP - 3540 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Le Friant, A. A1 - Ishizuka, O. A1 - Boudon, G. A1 - Palmer, M. R. A1 - Talling, P. J. A1 - Villemant, B. A1 - Adachi, T. A1 - Aljahdali, M. A1 - Breitkreuz, C. A1 - Brunet, M. A1 - Caron, B. A1 - Coussens, M. A1 - Deplus, C. A1 - Endo, D. A1 - Feuillet, N. A1 - Fraas, A. J. A1 - Fujinawa, A. A1 - Hart, M. B. A1 - Hatfield, R. G. A1 - Hornbach, M. A1 - Jutzeler, M. A1 - Kataoka, K. S. A1 - Komorowski, J. -C. A1 - Lebas, E. A1 - Lafuerza, S. A1 - Maeno, F. A1 - Manga, M. A1 - Martinez-Colon, M. A1 - McCanta, M. A1 - Morgan, S. A1 - Saito, T. A1 - Slagle, A. A1 - Sparks, S. A1 - Stinton, A. A1 - Stroncik, Nicole A1 - Subramanyam, K. S. V. A1 - Tamura, Yui A1 - Trofimovs, J. A1 - Voight, B. A1 - Wall-Palmer, D. A1 - Wang, F. A1 - Watt, S. F. L. T1 - Submarine record of volcanic island construction and collapse in the Lesser Antilles arc: First scientific drilling of submarine volcanic island landslides by IODP Expedition 340 JF - Geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems N2 - IODP Expedition 340 successfully drilled a series of sites offshore Montserrat, Martinique and Dominica in the Lesser Antilles from March to April 2012. These are among the few drill sites gathered around volcanic islands, and the first scientific drilling of large and likely tsunamigenic volcanic island-arc landslide deposits. These cores provide evidence and tests of previous hypotheses for the composition and origin of those deposits. Sites U1394, U1399, and U1400 that penetrated landslide deposits recovered exclusively seafloor sediment, comprising mainly turbidites and hemipelagic deposits, and lacked debris avalanche deposits. This supports the concepts that i/ volcanic debris avalanches tend to stop at the slope break, and ii/ widespread and voluminous failures of preexisting low-gradient seafloor sediment can be triggered by initial emplacement of material from the volcano. Offshore Martinique (U1399 and 1400), the landslide deposits comprised blocks of parallel strata that were tilted or microfaulted, sometimes separated by intervals of homogenized sediment (intense shearing), while Site U1394 offshore Montserrat penetrated a flat-lying block of intact strata. The most likely mechanism for generating these large-scale seafloor sediment failures appears to be propagation of a decollement from proximal areas loaded and incised by a volcanic debris avalanche. These results have implications for the magnitude of tsunami generation. Under some conditions, volcanic island landslide deposits composed of mainly seafloor sediment will tend to form smaller magnitude tsunamis than equivalent volumes of subaerial block-rich mass flows rapidly entering water. Expedition 340 also successfully drilled sites to access the undisturbed record of eruption fallout layers intercalated with marine sediment which provide an outstanding high-resolution data set to analyze eruption and landslides cycles, improve understanding of magmatic evolution as well as offshore sedimentation processes. KW - landslide KW - volcanic island KW - debris avalanche KW - seafloor sediment failure KW - tsunami KW - IODP Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GC005652 SN - 1525-2027 VL - 16 IS - 2 SP - 420 EP - 442 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Duan, Hongbo A1 - Zhou, Sheng A1 - Jiang, Kejun A1 - Bertram, Christoph A1 - Harmsen, Mathijs A1 - Kriegler, Elmar A1 - van Vuuren, Detlef P. A1 - Wang, Shouyang A1 - Fujimori, Shinichiro A1 - Tavoni, Massimo A1 - Ming, Xi A1 - Keramidas, Kimon A1 - Iyer, Gokul A1 - Edmonds, James T1 - Assessing China’s efforts to pursue the 1.5°C warming limit JF - Science N2 - Given the increasing interest in keeping global warming below 1.5°C, a key question is what this would mean for China’s emission pathway, energy restructuring, and decarbonization. By conducting a multimodel study, we find that the 1.5°C-consistent goal would require China to reduce its carbon emissions and energy consumption by more than 90 and 39%, respectively, compared with the “no policy” case. Negative emission technologies play an important role in achieving near-zero emissions, with captured carbon accounting on average for 20% of the total reductions in 2050. Our multimodel comparisons reveal large differences in necessary emission reductions across sectors, whereas what is consistent is that the power sector is required to achieve full decarbonization by 2050. The cross-model averages indicate that China’s accumulated policy costs may amount to 2.8 to 5.7% of its gross domestic product by 2050, given the 1.5°C warming limit. Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aba8767 SN - 1095-9203 SN - 0036-8075 VL - 372 IS - 6540 SP - 378 EP - 385 PB - American Association for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington, DC ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Juang, Linda P. A1 - Shen, Yishan A1 - Kim, Su Yeong A1 - Wang, Yijie T1 - Development of an Asian American Parental Racial-Ethnic Socialization Scale JF - Learning and individual differences N2 - Objective: To develop a measure of parental racial-ethnic socialization that is appropriate for Asian American families. Method: To test the reliability and validity of this new measure, we surveyed 575 Asian American emerging adults (49% female, 79% U.S. born). Results: Using exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses, the results show 7 reliable subscales: maintenance of heritage culture, becoming American, awareness of discrimination, avoidance of other groups, minimization of race, promotion of equality, and cultural pluralism. Tests of factorial invariance show that overall, the subscales demonstrate, at minimum, partial metric invariance across gender, age, nativity, educational attainment, parent educational attainment, geographic region of residence, and Asian-heritage region. Thus, the relations among the subscales with other variables can be compared across these different subgroups. The subscales also correlated with ethnic identity, ethnic centrality, perceptions of discrimination, and pluralistic orientation, demonstrating construct validity. Conclusion: In an increasingly complex and diverse social world, our scale will be useful for gaining a better understanding of how Asian American parents socialize their children regarding issues of race, discrimination, culture, and diversity. KW - Asian American KW - parental racial-ethnic socialization KW - scale development Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1037/cdp0000083 SN - 1099-9809 SN - 1939-0106 VL - 22 SP - 417 EP - 431 PB - American Psychological Association CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Atsawawaranunt, Kamolphat A1 - Comas-Bru, Laia A1 - Mozhdehi, Sahar Amirnezhad A1 - Deininger, Michael A1 - Harrison, Sandy P. A1 - Baker, Andy A1 - Boyd, Meighan A1 - Kaushal, Nikita A1 - Ahmad, Syed Masood A1 - Brahim, Yassine Ait A1 - Arienzo, Monica A1 - Bajo, Petra A1 - Braun, Kerstin A1 - Burstyn, Yuval A1 - Chawchai, Sakonvan A1 - Duan, Wuhui A1 - Hatvani, Istvan Gabor A1 - Hu, Jun A1 - Kern, Zoltan A1 - Labuhn, Inga A1 - Lachniet, Matthew A1 - Lechleitner, Franziska A. A1 - Lorrey, Andrew A1 - Perez-Mejias, Carlos A1 - Pickering, Robyn A1 - Scroxton, Nick A1 - Atkinson, Tim A1 - Ayalon, Avner A1 - Baldini, James A1 - Bar-Matthews, Miriam A1 - Pablo Bernal, Juan A1 - Breitenbach, Sebastian Franz Martin A1 - Boch, Ronny A1 - Borsato, Andrea A1 - Cai, Yanjun A1 - Carolin, Stacy A1 - Cheng, Hai A1 - Columbu, Andrea A1 - Couchoud, Isabelle A1 - Cruz, Francisco A1 - Demeny, Attila A1 - Dominguez-Villar, David A1 - Dragusin, Virgil A1 - Drysdale, Russell A1 - Ersek, Vasile A1 - Finne, Martin A1 - Fleitmann, Dominik A1 - Fohlmeister, Jens Bernd A1 - Frappier, Amy A1 - Genty, Dominique A1 - Holzkamper, Steffen A1 - Hopley, Philip A1 - Kathayat, Gayatri A1 - Keenan-Jones, Duncan A1 - Koltai, Gabriella A1 - Luetscher, Marc A1 - Li, Ting-Yong A1 - Lone, Mahjoor Ahmad A1 - Markowska, Monika A1 - Mattey, Dave A1 - McDermott, Frank A1 - Moreno, Ana A1 - Moseley, Gina A1 - Nehme, Carole A1 - Novello, Valdir F. A1 - Psomiadis, David A1 - Rehfeld, Kira A1 - Ruan, Jiaoyang A1 - Sekhon, Natasha A1 - Sha, Lijuan A1 - Sholz, Denis A1 - Shopov, Yavor A1 - Smith, Andrew A1 - Strikis, Nicolas A1 - Treble, Pauline A1 - Unal-Imer, Ezgi A1 - Vaks, Anton A1 - Vansteenberge, Stef A1 - Veiga-Pires, Cristina A1 - Voarintsoa, Ny Riavo A1 - Wang, Xianfeng A1 - Wong, Corinne A1 - Wortham, Barbara A1 - Wurtzel, Jennifer A1 - Zong, Baoyun T1 - The SISAL database BT - a global resource to document oxygen and carbon isotope records from speleothems JF - Earth System Science Data N2 - Stable isotope records from speleothems provide information on past climate changes, most particularly information that can be used to reconstruct past changes in precipitation and atmospheric circulation. These records are increasingly being used to provide "out-of-sample" evaluations of isotope-enabled climate models. SISAL (Speleothem Isotope Synthesis and Analysis) is an international working group of the Past Global Changes (PAGES) project. The working group aims to provide a comprehensive compilation of speleothem isotope records for climate reconstruction and model evaluation. The SISAL database contains data for individual speleothems, grouped by cave system. Stable isotopes of oxygen and carbon (delta O-18, delta C-13) measurements are referenced by distance from the top or bottom of the speleothem. Additional tables provide information on dating, including information on the dates used to construct the original age model and sufficient information to assess the quality of each data set and to erect a standardized chronology across different speleothems. The metadata table provides location information, information on the full range of measurements carried out on each speleothem and information on the cave system that is relevant to the interpretation of the records, as well as citations for both publications and archived data. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-10-1687-2018 SN - 1866-3508 SN - 1866-3516 VL - 10 IS - 3 SP - 1687 EP - 1713 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Comas-Bru, Laia A1 - Harrison, Sandy P. A1 - Werner, Martin A1 - Rehfeld, Kira A1 - Scroxton, Nick A1 - Veiga-Pires, Cristina A1 - Ahmad, Syed Masood A1 - Brahim, Yassine Ait A1 - Mozhdehi, Sahar Amirnezhad A1 - Arienzo, Monica A1 - Atsawawaranunt, Kamolphat A1 - Baker, Andy A1 - Braun, Kerstin A1 - Breitenbach, Sebastian Franz Martin A1 - Burstyn, Yuval A1 - Chawchai, Sakonvan A1 - Columbu, Andrea A1 - Deininger, Michael A1 - Demeny, Attila A1 - Dixon, Bronwyn A1 - Hatvani, Istvan Gabor A1 - Hu, Jun A1 - Kaushal, Nikita A1 - Kern, Zoltan A1 - Labuhn, Inga A1 - Lachniet, Matthew S. A1 - Lechleitner, Franziska A. A1 - Lorrey, Andrew A1 - Markowska, Monika A1 - Nehme, Carole A1 - Novello, Valdir F. A1 - Oster, Jessica A1 - Perez-Mejias, Carlos A1 - Pickering, Robyn A1 - Sekhon, Natasha A1 - Wang, Xianfeng A1 - Warken, Sophie A1 - Atkinson, Tim A1 - Ayalon, Avner A1 - Baldini, James A1 - Bar-Matthews, Miryam A1 - Bernal, Juan Pablo A1 - Boch, Ronny A1 - Borsato, Andrea A1 - Boyd, Meighan A1 - Brierley, Chris A1 - Cai, Yanjun A1 - Carolin, Stacy A1 - Cheng, Hai A1 - Constantin, Silviu A1 - Couchoud, Isabelle A1 - Cruz, Francisco A1 - Denniston, Rhawn A1 - Dragusin, Virgil A1 - Duan, Wuhui A1 - Ersek, Vasile A1 - Finne, Martin A1 - Fleitmann, Dominik A1 - Fohlmeister, Jens Bernd A1 - Frappier, Amy A1 - Genty, Dominique A1 - Holzkamper, Steffen A1 - Hopley, Philip A1 - Johnston, Vanessa A1 - Kathayat, Gayatri A1 - Keenan-Jones, Duncan A1 - Koltai, Gabriella A1 - Li, Ting-Yong A1 - Lone, Mahjoor Ahmad A1 - Luetscher, Marc A1 - Mattey, Dave A1 - Moreno, Ana A1 - Moseley, Gina A1 - Psomiadis, David A1 - Ruan, Jiaoyang A1 - Scholz, Denis A1 - Sha, Lijuan A1 - Smith, Andrew Christopher A1 - Strikis, Nicolas A1 - Treble, Pauline A1 - Unal-Imer, Ezgi A1 - Vaks, Anton A1 - Vansteenberge, Stef A1 - Voarintsoa, Ny Riavo G. A1 - Wong, Corinne A1 - Wortham, Barbara A1 - Wurtzel, Jennifer A1 - Zhang, Haiwei T1 - Evaluating model outputs using integrated global speleothem records of climate change since the last glacial JF - Climate of the past : an interactive open access journal of the European Geosciences Union N2 - Although quantitative isotope data from speleothems has been used to evaluate isotope-enabled model simulations, currently no consensus exists regarding the most appropriate methodology through which to achieve this. A number of modelling groups will be running isotope-enabled palaeoclimate simulations in the framework of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6, so it is timely to evaluate different approaches to using the speleothem data for data–model comparisons. Here, we illustrate this using 456 globally distributed speleothem δ18O records from an updated version of the Speleothem Isotopes Synthesis and Analysis (SISAL) database and palaeoclimate simulations generated using the ECHAM5-wiso isotope-enabled atmospheric circulation model. We show that the SISAL records reproduce the first-order spatial patterns of isotopic variability in the modern day, strongly supporting the application of this dataset for evaluating model-derived isotope variability into the past. However, the discontinuous nature of many speleothem records complicates the process of procuring large numbers of records if data–model comparisons are made using the traditional approach of comparing anomalies between a control period and a given palaeoclimate experiment. To circumvent this issue, we illustrate techniques through which the absolute isotope values during any time period could be used for model evaluation. Specifically, we show that speleothem isotope records allow an assessment of a model's ability to simulate spatial isotopic trends. Our analyses provide a protocol for using speleothem isotope data for model evaluation, including screening the observations to take into account the impact of speleothem mineralogy on δ18O values, the optimum period for the modern observational baseline and the selection of an appropriate time window for creating means of the isotope data for palaeo-time-slices. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-15-1557-2019 SN - 1814-9324 SN - 1814-9332 VL - 15 IS - 4 SP - 1557 EP - 1579 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tiegs, Scott D. A1 - Costello, David M. A1 - Isken, Mark W. A1 - Woodward, Guy A1 - McIntyre, Peter B. A1 - Gessner, Mark O. A1 - Chauvet, Eric A1 - Griffiths, Natalie A. A1 - Flecker, Alex S. A1 - Acuna, Vicenc A1 - Albarino, Ricardo A1 - Allen, Daniel C. A1 - Alonso, Cecilia A1 - Andino, Patricio A1 - Arango, Clay A1 - Aroviita, Jukka A1 - Barbosa, Marcus V. M. A1 - Barmuta, Leon A. A1 - Baxter, Colden V. A1 - Bell, Thomas D. C. A1 - Bellinger, Brent A1 - Boyero, Luz A1 - Brown, Lee E. A1 - Bruder, Andreas A1 - Bruesewitz, Denise A. A1 - Burdon, Francis J. A1 - Callisto, Marcos A1 - Canhoto, Cristina A1 - Capps, Krista A. A1 - Castillo, Maria M. A1 - Clapcott, Joanne A1 - Colas, Fanny A1 - Colon-Gaud, Checo A1 - Cornut, Julien A1 - Crespo-Perez, Veronica A1 - Cross, Wyatt F. A1 - Culp, Joseph M. A1 - Danger, Michael A1 - Dangles, Olivier A1 - de Eyto, Elvira A1 - Derry, Alison M. A1 - Diaz Villanueva, Veronica A1 - Douglas, Michael M. A1 - Elosegi, Arturo A1 - Encalada, Andrea C. A1 - Entrekin, Sally A1 - Espinosa, Rodrigo A1 - Ethaiya, Diana A1 - Ferreira, Veronica A1 - Ferriol, Carmen A1 - Flanagan, Kyla M. A1 - Fleituch, Tadeusz A1 - Shah, Jennifer J. Follstad A1 - Frainer, Andre A1 - Friberg, Nikolai A1 - Frost, Paul C. A1 - Garcia, Erica A. A1 - Lago, Liliana Garcia A1 - Garcia Soto, Pavel Ernesto A1 - Ghate, Sudeep A1 - Giling, Darren P. A1 - Gilmer, Alan A1 - Goncalves, Jose Francisco A1 - Gonzales, Rosario Karina A1 - Graca, Manuel A. S. A1 - Grace, Mike A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Guerold, Francois A1 - Gulis, Vlad A1 - Hepp, Luiz U. A1 - Higgins, Scott A1 - Hishi, Takuo A1 - Huddart, Joseph A1 - Hudson, John A1 - Imberger, Samantha A1 - Iniguez-Armijos, Carlos A1 - Iwata, Tomoya A1 - Janetski, David J. A1 - Jennings, Eleanor A1 - Kirkwood, Andrea E. A1 - Koning, Aaron A. A1 - Kosten, Sarian A1 - Kuehn, Kevin A. A1 - Laudon, Hjalmar A1 - Leavitt, Peter R. A1 - Lemes da Silva, Aurea L. A1 - Leroux, Shawn J. A1 - Leroy, Carri J. A1 - Lisi, Peter J. A1 - MacKenzie, Richard A1 - Marcarelli, Amy M. A1 - Masese, Frank O. A1 - Mckie, Brendan G. A1 - Oliveira Medeiros, Adriana A1 - Meissner, Kristian A1 - Milisa, Marko A1 - Mishra, Shailendra A1 - Miyake, Yo A1 - Moerke, Ashley A1 - Mombrikotb, Shorok A1 - Mooney, Rob A1 - Moulton, Tim A1 - Muotka, Timo A1 - Negishi, Junjiro N. A1 - Neres-Lima, Vinicius A1 - Nieminen, Mika L. A1 - Nimptsch, Jorge A1 - Ondruch, Jakub A1 - Paavola, Riku A1 - Pardo, Isabel A1 - Patrick, Christopher J. A1 - Peeters, Edwin T. H. M. A1 - Pozo, Jesus A1 - Pringle, Catherine A1 - Prussian, Aaron A1 - Quenta, Estefania A1 - Quesada, Antonio A1 - Reid, Brian A1 - Richardson, John S. A1 - Rigosi, Anna A1 - Rincon, Jose A1 - Risnoveanu, Geta A1 - Robinson, Christopher T. A1 - Rodriguez-Gallego, Lorena A1 - Royer, Todd V. A1 - Rusak, James A. A1 - Santamans, Anna C. A1 - Selmeczy, Geza B. A1 - Simiyu, Gelas A1 - Skuja, Agnija A1 - Smykla, Jerzy A1 - Sridhar, Kandikere R. A1 - Sponseller, Ryan A1 - Stoler, Aaron A1 - Swan, Christopher M. A1 - Szlag, David A1 - Teixeira-de Mello, Franco A1 - Tonkin, Jonathan D. A1 - Uusheimo, Sari A1 - Veach, Allison M. A1 - Vilbaste, Sirje A1 - Vought, Lena B. M. A1 - Wang, Chiao-Ping A1 - Webster, Jackson R. A1 - Wilson, Paul B. A1 - Woelfl, Stefan A1 - Xenopoulos, Marguerite A. A1 - Yates, Adam G. A1 - Yoshimura, Chihiro A1 - Yule, Catherine M. A1 - Zhang, Yixin X. A1 - Zwart, Jacob A. T1 - Global patterns and drivers of ecosystem functioning in rivers and riparian zones JF - Science Advances N2 - River ecosystems receive and process vast quantities of terrestrial organic carbon, the fate of which depends strongly on microbial activity. Variation in and controls of processing rates, however, are poorly characterized at the global scale. In response, we used a peer-sourced research network and a highly standardized carbon processing assay to conduct a global-scale field experiment in greater than 1000 river and riparian sites. We found that Earth’s biomes have distinct carbon processing signatures. Slow processing is evident across latitudes, whereas rapid rates are restricted to lower latitudes. Both the mean rate and variability decline with latitude, suggesting temperature constraints toward the poles and greater roles for other environmental drivers (e.g., nutrient loading) toward the equator. These results and data set the stage for unprecedented “next-generation biomonitoring” by establishing baselines to help quantify environmental impacts to the functioning of ecosystems at a global scale. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aav0486 SN - 2375-2548 VL - 5 IS - 1 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wischnewski, Juliane A1 - Herzschuh, Ulrike A1 - Ruehland, Kathleen M. A1 - Braeuning, Achim A1 - Mischke, Steffen A1 - Smol, John P. A1 - Wang, Lily T1 - Recent ecological responses to climate variability and human impacts in the Nianbaoyeze Mountains (eastern Tibetan Plateau) inferred from pollen, diatom and tree-ring data JF - Journal of paleolimnolog N2 - The Tibetan Plateau is a region that is highly sensitive to recent global warming, but the complexity and heterogeneity of its mountainous landscape can result in variable responses. In addition, the scarcity and brevity of regional instrumental and palaeoecological records still hamper our understanding of past and present patterns of environmental change. To investigate how the remote, high-alpine environments of the Nianbaoyeze Mountains, eastern Tibetan Plateau, are affected by climate change and human activity over the last similar to 600 years, we compared regional tree-ring studies with pollen and diatom remains archived in the dated sediments of Dongerwuka Lake (33.22A degrees N, 101.12A degrees E, 4,307 m a.s.l.). In agreement with previous studies from the eastern Tibetan Plateau, a strong coherence between our two juniper-based tree-ring chronologies from the Nianbaoyeze and the Anemaqin Mountains was observed, with pronounced cyclical variations in summer temperature reconstructions. A positive directional trend to warmer summer temperatures in the most recent decades, was, however, not observed in the tree-ring record. Likewise, our pollen and diatom spectra showed minimal change over the investigated time period. Although modest, the most notable change in the diatom relative abundances was a subtle decrease in the dominant planktonic Cyclotella ocellata and a concurrent increase in small, benthic fragilarioid taxa in the similar to 1820s, suggesting higher ecosystem variability. The pollen record subtly indicates three periods of increased cattle grazing activity (similar to 1400-1480 AD, similar to 1630-1760 AD, after 1850 AD), but shows generally no significant vegetation changes during past similar to 600 years. The minimal changes observed in the tree-ring, diatom and pollen records are consistent with the presence of localised cooling centres that are evident in instrumental and tree-ring data within the southeastern and eastern Tibetan Plateau. Given the minor changes in regional temperature records, our complacent palaeoecological profiles suggest that climatically induced ecological thresholds have not yet been crossed in the Nianbaoyeze Mountains region. KW - Tibetan Plateau KW - Nianbaoyeze Mountains KW - Pollen KW - Diatoms KW - Tree-ring KW - Climate change KW - Human impact Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-013-9747-1 SN - 0921-2728 SN - 1573-0417 VL - 51 IS - 2 SP - 287 EP - 302 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - GEN A1 - Gorski, Mathias A1 - Jung, Bettina A1 - Li, Yong A1 - Matias-Garcia, Pamela R. A1 - Wuttke, Matthias A1 - Coassin, Stefan A1 - Thio, Chris H. L. A1 - Kleber, Marcus E. A1 - Winkler, Thomas W. A1 - Wanner, Veronika A1 - Chai, Jin-Fang A1 - Chu, Audrey Y. A1 - Cocca, Massimiliano A1 - Feitosa, Mary F. A1 - Ghasemi, Sahar A1 - Hoppmann, Anselm A1 - Horn, Katrin A1 - Li, Man A1 - Nutile, Teresa A1 - Scholz, Markus A1 - Sieber, Karsten B. A1 - Teumer, Alexander A1 - Tin, Adrienne A1 - Wang, Judy A1 - Tayo, Bamidele O. A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S. A1 - Almgren, Peter A1 - Bakker, Stephan J. L. A1 - Banas, Bernhard A1 - Bansal, Nisha A1 - Biggs, Mary L. A1 - Boerwinkle, Eric A1 - Böttinger, Erwin A1 - Brenner, Hermann A1 - Carroll, Robert J. A1 - Chalmers, John A1 - Chee, Miao-Li A1 - Chee, Miao-Ling A1 - Cheng, Ching-Yu A1 - Coresh, Josef A1 - de Borst, Martin H. A1 - Degenhardt, Frauke A1 - Eckardt, Kai-Uwe A1 - Endlich, Karlhans A1 - Franke, Andre A1 - Freitag-Wolf, Sandra A1 - Gampawar, Piyush A1 - Gansevoort, Ron T. A1 - Ghanbari, Mohsen A1 - Gieger, Christian A1 - Hamet, Pavel A1 - Ho, Kevin A1 - Hofer, Edith A1 - Holleczek, Bernd A1 - Foo, Valencia Hui Xian A1 - Hutri-Kahonen, Nina A1 - Hwang, Shih-Jen A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Josyula, Navya Shilpa A1 - Kahonen, Mika A1 - Khor, Chiea-Chuen A1 - Koenig, Wolfgang A1 - Kramer, Holly A1 - Kraemer, Bernhard K. A1 - Kuehnel, Brigitte A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lieb, Wolfgang A1 - Loos, Ruth J. F. A1 - Lukas, Mary Ann A1 - Lyytikainen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Meisinger, Christa A1 - Meitinger, Thomas A1 - Melander, Olle A1 - Milaneschi, Yuri A1 - Mishra, Pashupati P. A1 - Mononen, Nina A1 - Mychaleckyj, Josyf C. A1 - Nadkarni, Girish N. A1 - Nauck, Matthias A1 - Nikus, Kjell A1 - Ning, Boting A1 - Nolte, Ilja M. A1 - O'Donoghue, Michelle L. A1 - Orho-Melander, Marju A1 - Pendergrass, Sarah A. A1 - Penninx, Brenda W. J. H. A1 - Preuss, Michael H. A1 - Psaty, Bruce M. A1 - Raffield, Laura M. A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Rettig, Rainer A1 - Rheinberger, Myriam A1 - Rice, Kenneth M. A1 - Rosenkranz, Alexander R. A1 - Rossing, Peter A1 - Rotter, Jerome A1 - Sabanayagam, Charumathi A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Schoettker, Ben A1 - Schulz, Christina-Alexandra A1 - Sedaghat, Sanaz A1 - Shaffer, Christian M. A1 - Strauch, Konstantin A1 - Szymczak, Silke A1 - Taylor, Kent D. A1 - Tremblay, Johanne A1 - Chaker, Layal A1 - van der Harst, Pim A1 - van der Most, Peter J. A1 - Verweij, Niek A1 - Voelker, Uwe A1 - Waldenberger, Melanie A1 - Wallentin, Lars A1 - Waterworth, Dawn M. A1 - White, Harvey D. A1 - Wilson, James G. A1 - Wong, Tien-Yin A1 - Woodward, Mark A1 - Yang, Qiong A1 - Yasuda, Masayuki A1 - Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M. A1 - Zhang, Yan A1 - Snieder, Harold A1 - Wanner, Christoph A1 - Boger, Carsten A. A1 - Kottgen, Anna A1 - Kronenberg, Florian A1 - Pattaro, Cristian A1 - Heid, Iris M. T1 - Meta-analysis uncovers genome-wide significant variants for rapid kidney function decline T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Reihe der Digital Engineering Fakultät N2 - Rapid decline of glomerular filtration rate estimated from creatinine (eGFRcrea) is associated with severe clinical endpoints. In contrast to cross-sectionally assessed eGFRcrea, the genetic basis for rapid eGFRcrea decline is largely unknown. To help define this, we meta-analyzed 42 genome-wide association studies from the Chronic Kidney Diseases Genetics Consortium and United Kingdom Biobank to identify genetic loci for rapid eGFRcrea decline. Two definitions of eGFRcrea decline were used: 3 mL/min/1.73m(2)/year or more ("Rapid3"; encompassing 34,874 cases, 107,090 controls) and eGFRcrea decline 25% or more and eGFRcrea under 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) at follow-up among those with eGFRcrea 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) or more at baseline ("CKDi25"; encompassing 19,901 cases, 175,244 controls). Seven independent variants were identified across six loci for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25: consisting of five variants at four loci with genome-wide significance (near UMOD-PDILT (2), PRKAG2, WDR72, OR2S2) and two variants among 265 known eGFRcrea variants (near GATM, LARP4B). All these loci were novel for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25 and our bioinformatic follow-up prioritized variants and genes underneath these loci. The OR2S2 locus is novel for any eGFRcrea trait including interesting candidates. For the five genome-wide significant lead variants, we found supporting effects for annual change in blood urea nitrogen or cystatin-based eGFR, but not for GATM or (LARP4B). Individuals at high compared to those at low genetic risk (8-14 vs. 0-5 adverse alleles) had a 1.20-fold increased risk of acute kidney injury (95% confidence interval 1.08-1.33). Thus, our identified loci for rapid kidney function decline may help prioritize therapeutic targets and identify mechanisms and individuals at risk for sustained deterioration of kidney function. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Reihe der Digital Engineering Fakultät - 19 KW - acute kidney injury KW - end-stage kidney disease KW - genome-wide association KW - study KW - rapid eGFRcrea decline Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-565379 IS - 19 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gorski, Mathias A1 - Jung, Bettina A1 - Li, Yong A1 - Matias-Garcia, Pamela R. A1 - Wuttke, Matthias A1 - Coassin, Stefan A1 - Thio, Chris H. L. A1 - Kleber, Marcus E. A1 - Winkler, Thomas W. A1 - Wanner, Veronika A1 - Chai, Jin-Fang A1 - Chu, Audrey Y. A1 - Cocca, Massimiliano A1 - Feitosa, Mary F. A1 - Ghasemi, Sahar A1 - Hoppmann, Anselm A1 - Horn, Katrin A1 - Li, Man A1 - Nutile, Teresa A1 - Scholz, Markus A1 - Sieber, Karsten B. A1 - Teumer, Alexander A1 - Tin, Adrienne A1 - Wang, Judy A1 - Tayo, Bamidele O. A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S. A1 - Almgren, Peter A1 - Bakker, Stephan J. L. A1 - Banas, Bernhard A1 - Bansal, Nisha A1 - Biggs, Mary L. A1 - Boerwinkle, Eric A1 - Böttinger, Erwin A1 - Brenner, Hermann A1 - Carroll, Robert J. A1 - Chalmers, John A1 - Chee, Miao-Li A1 - Chee, Miao-Ling A1 - Cheng, Ching-Yu A1 - Coresh, Josef A1 - de Borst, Martin H. A1 - Degenhardt, Frauke A1 - Eckardt, Kai-Uwe A1 - Endlich, Karlhans A1 - Franke, Andre A1 - Freitag-Wolf, Sandra A1 - Gampawar, Piyush A1 - Gansevoort, Ron T. A1 - Ghanbari, Mohsen A1 - Gieger, Christian A1 - Hamet, Pavel A1 - Ho, Kevin A1 - Hofer, Edith A1 - Holleczek, Bernd A1 - Foo, Valencia Hui Xian A1 - Hutri-Kahonen, Nina A1 - Hwang, Shih-Jen A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Josyula, Navya Shilpa A1 - Kahonen, Mika A1 - Khor, Chiea-Chuen A1 - Koenig, Wolfgang A1 - Kramer, Holly A1 - Kraemer, Bernhard K. A1 - Kuehnel, Brigitte A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lieb, Wolfgang A1 - Loos, Ruth J. F. A1 - Lukas, Mary Ann A1 - Lyytikainen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Meisinger, Christa A1 - Meitinger, Thomas A1 - Melander, Olle A1 - Milaneschi, Yuri A1 - Mishra, Pashupati P. A1 - Mononen, Nina A1 - Mychaleckyj, Josyf C. A1 - Nadkarni, Girish N. A1 - Nauck, Matthias A1 - Nikus, Kjell A1 - Ning, Boting A1 - Nolte, Ilja M. A1 - O'Donoghue, Michelle L. A1 - Orho-Melander, Marju A1 - Pendergrass, Sarah A. A1 - Penninx, Brenda W. J. H. A1 - Preuss, Michael H. A1 - Psaty, Bruce M. A1 - Raffield, Laura M. A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Rettig, Rainer A1 - Rheinberger, Myriam A1 - Rice, Kenneth M. A1 - Rosenkranz, Alexander R. A1 - Rossing, Peter A1 - Rotter, Jerome A1 - Sabanayagam, Charumathi A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Schoettker, Ben A1 - Schulz, Christina-Alexandra A1 - Sedaghat, Sanaz A1 - Shaffer, Christian M. A1 - Strauch, Konstantin A1 - Szymczak, Silke A1 - Taylor, Kent D. A1 - Tremblay, Johanne A1 - Chaker, Layal A1 - van der Harst, Pim A1 - van der Most, Peter J. A1 - Verweij, Niek A1 - Voelker, Uwe A1 - Waldenberger, Melanie A1 - Wallentin, Lars A1 - Waterworth, Dawn M. A1 - White, Harvey D. A1 - Wilson, James G. A1 - Wong, Tien-Yin A1 - Woodward, Mark A1 - Yang, Qiong A1 - Yasuda, Masayuki A1 - Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M. A1 - Zhang, Yan A1 - Snieder, Harold A1 - Wanner, Christoph A1 - Boger, Carsten A. A1 - Kottgen, Anna A1 - Kronenberg, Florian A1 - Pattaro, Cristian A1 - Heid, Iris M. T1 - Meta-analysis uncovers genome-wide significant variants for rapid kidney function decline JF - Kidney international : official journal of the International Society of Nephrology N2 - Rapid decline of glomerular filtration rate estimated from creatinine (eGFRcrea) is associated with severe clinical endpoints. In contrast to cross-sectionally assessed eGFRcrea, the genetic basis for rapid eGFRcrea decline is largely unknown. To help define this, we meta-analyzed 42 genome-wide association studies from the Chronic Kidney Diseases Genetics Consortium and United Kingdom Biobank to identify genetic loci for rapid eGFRcrea decline. Two definitions of eGFRcrea decline were used: 3 mL/min/1.73m(2)/year or more ("Rapid3"; encompassing 34,874 cases, 107,090 controls) and eGFRcrea decline 25% or more and eGFRcrea under 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) at follow-up among those with eGFRcrea 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) or more at baseline ("CKDi25"; encompassing 19,901 cases, 175,244 controls). Seven independent variants were identified across six loci for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25: consisting of five variants at four loci with genome-wide significance (near UMOD-PDILT (2), PRKAG2, WDR72, OR2S2) and two variants among 265 known eGFRcrea variants (near GATM, LARP4B). All these loci were novel for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25 and our bioinformatic follow-up prioritized variants and genes underneath these loci. The OR2S2 locus is novel for any eGFRcrea trait including interesting candidates. For the five genome-wide significant lead variants, we found supporting effects for annual change in blood urea nitrogen or cystatin-based eGFR, but not for GATM or (LARP4B). Individuals at high compared to those at low genetic risk (8-14 vs. 0-5 adverse alleles) had a 1.20-fold increased risk of acute kidney injury (95% confidence interval 1.08-1.33). Thus, our identified loci for rapid kidney function decline may help prioritize therapeutic targets and identify mechanisms and individuals at risk for sustained deterioration of kidney function. KW - acute kidney injury KW - end-stage kidney disease KW - genome-wide association KW - study KW - rapid eGFRcrea decline Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2020.09.030 SN - 0085-2538 SN - 1523-1755 VL - 99 IS - 4 SP - 926 EP - 939 PB - Elsevier CY - New York ER -