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- Creator:
- King, Katelyn, Fujisaki-Manome, Ayumi, Brant, Cory, and Alofs, Karen
- Description:
- Ice cover on the Great Lakes plays an important role in regional climate, supports tourism and recreation, and provides ecological habitat. As the climate warms, ice cover in the Great Lakes is expected to decline, which in turn will create more lake effect precipitation, reduce ice cover for recreation, and alter habitat for fishes. Therefore, it is important to understand historical ice patterns to better understand and predict future ice cover on the lakes. However, Great Lakes ice cover data prior to 1973 is scarce, due to the limited routine satellite observations. Our dataset aims to fill this gap by providing historical spatial ice duration layers to be used for modeling species distributions. and ArcGIS Pro ( https://www.esri.com/en-us/arcgis/products/arcgis-pro/overview), QGIS ( https://qgis.org/) or other spatial data software will be required to view this dataset.
- Keyword:
- ice, Great Lakes, Superior, Michigan, Ontario, Erie, Huron, and historical
- Citation to related publication:
- King, K., Fujisaki-Manome, A., Brant, C., Cohn, D., Peng, I., Alofs, K., Reconstructing Great Lakes air temperature and ice dynamics data back to 1897. Under Review
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Patil, Crystal
- Description:
- We conducted a hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial at seven clinics in Blantyre District, Malawi, comparing outcomes for 1887 pregnant women randomly assigned to Group ANC or Individual ANC. The seven study clinics were selected in consultation with the Blantyre District health team to represent a diversity of clinics and communities served. The catchment areas and populations served by the clinics differ socioeconomically. Three clinics serve the urban population of Blantyre city, the rapidly-growing second largest city in Malawi. Two clinics serve the peri-urban communities adjacent to metropolitan Blantyre, and two clinics primarily serve a rural and predominately agricultural community. The clinics varied in volume and number of working midwives. , To be eligible to participate in this study, participants had to be pregnant, over the age of 14, have a gestational age of less than 24 weeks, and be capable of making an informed choice about participation. Those aged 15-17 assented with consent from a legal guardian. Those who did not meet all criteria were excluded. All pregnant women presenting for their first antenatal visit received the same standard individual intake visit that included a health assessment with the midwife, laboratory tests, and HIV testing. , and After completing the intake visit, midwives directed clients to study team members so that eligibility could be assessed. Interested women then learned the information needed to give informed consent and sign a consent form. They then completed the baseline self-report survey using Audio Computer-Assisted Self-Interview software. The study statistician determined the randomization order list for each site before recruitment, and assignments were placed in order in sealed envelopes. After completing the baseline survey, the woman selected the next sealed envelope in that clinic’s box to reveal the type of ANC assignment, Group ANC or Individual ANC. Seven individual-level demographic and socioeconomic variables were treated as covariates in all analyses. Two clinic-level variables were also included as covariates, catchment area (rural, peri-urban, or urban) and midwife ANC workloads. Midwife ANC workloads were captured by a ratio of the average number of new ANC clients served each month divided by the number of midwives, with a higher ratio indicating a higher workload. The ratio was highest in two rural-serving clinics and substantially lower in peri-urban and urban communities.
- Keyword:
- Group antenatal care, Malawi, pregnancy, and woman-centered
- Citation to related publication:
- Group antenatal care positively transforms the care experience: Results of an effectiveness trial in Malawi Crystal L. Patil, Kathleen F. Norr, Esnath Kapito, Li C. Liu, Xiaohan Mei, Elizabeth T. Abrams, Elizabeth Chodzaza, Genesis Chorwe-Sungani, Ursula Kafulafula, Allissa Desloge, Ashley Gresh, Rohan D. Jeremiah, Dhruvi R. Patel, Anne Batchelder, Heidy Wang, Jocelyn Faydenko, Sharon S. Rising, Ellen Chirwa medRxiv 2024.12.25.24319635; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.12.25.24319635
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
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- Creator:
- Stringer, Kathleen A.
- Description:
- These data were produced from the survival analysis of the pre-treatment metabolomics data generated from the Phase II clinical trial of L-carnitine treatment for septic shock (the RACE trial - see https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01665092). The results based on respective acetylcarnitine or valine concentration are presented (pdf). The csv files contain the at risk numbers from the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. These findings described in our manuscript: Pharmacometabolomics Identifies Candidate Predictor Metabolites of an L-carnitine Treatment Mortality Benefit in Septic Shock. and All of the metabolomics data are available at the NIH Common Fund's National Metabolomics Data Repository (NMDR) website, the Metabolomics Workbench, https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org which is supported by NIH grant U2C-DK119886 and where it has been assigned Project ID (accession number ST001319). The data can be accessed directly via its Project DOIs: (DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.21228/M8VX0Z).
- Keyword:
- sepsis, septic shock, survival, mortality, metabolomics, and pharmacometabolomics
- Citation to related publication:
- Puskarich, M. A., Jennaro, T. S., Gillies, C. E., Evans, C. R., Karnovsky, A., McHugh, C. E., Flott, T. L., Jones, A. E., Stringer, K. A., & Investigators, O. behalf of the R. T. (2021). Pharmacometabolomics Identifies Candidate Predictor Metabolites of an L-carnitine Treatment Mortality Benefit in Septic Shock. (Preprint) https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.01.28.21250687 and Puskarich MA, Jennaro TS, Gillies CE, et al; the RACE Trial Investigators. Pharmacometabolomics identifies candidate predictor metabolites of an L-carnitine treatment mortality benefit in septic shock. Clin Transl Sci. 2021; 14: 2288–2299. https://doi.org/10.1111/cts.13088
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
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- Creator:
- Ludlow, Andrew
- Description:
- Single molecule long read RNA/cDNA sequencing of TERT revealed 45 TERT mRNA variants including 13 known and 32 novel variants. Among the variants, TERT Delta 2-4, which lacks exons 2-4 but retains the original open reading frame, was selected for further study. Induced pluripotent stem cells and cancer cells express higher levels of TERT Delta 2-4 compared to primary human bronchial epithelial cells. Overexpression of TERT Delta 2-4 enhanced clonogenicity and resistance to cisplatin-induced apoptosis. Knockdown of endogenous TERT Delta 2-4 in Calu-6 cells reduced clonogenicity and resistance to cisplatin. Our results suggest that TERT Delta 2-4 enhances cancer cells’ resistance to intrinsic apoptosis. RNA sequencing following knockdown of Delta 2-4 TERT indicates that translation is downregulated and that mitochondrial related proteins are upregulated compared to controls.
- Keyword:
- TERT, Alternative splicing, Telomere, and Telomerase
- Citation to related publication:
- Kim, J.J., Ahn, A., Ying, J.Y. et al. Discovery and characterization of a novel telomerase alternative splicing isoform that protects lung cancer cells from chemotherapy induced cell death. Sci Rep 15, 6787 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-90639-3
- Discipline:
- Science
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- Creator:
- Ludlow, Andrew and Kim, Jeongjin
- Description:
- Part of the regulation of telomerase activity includes the alternative splicing (AS) of the catalytic subunit telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT). Although a therapeutic window for telomerase/TERT inhibition exists between cancer cells and somatic cells, stem cells express TERT and rely on telomerase activity for physiological replacement of cells. Therefore, identifying differences in TERT regulation between stem cells and cancer cells is essential for developing telomerase inhibition-based cancer therapies that reduce damage to stem cells. In this study, we measured TERT splice variant expression and telomerase activity in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), neural progenitor cells (NPCs), and non-small cell lung cancer cells (NSCLC, Calu-6 cells). We observed that a NOVA1-PTBP1-PTBP2 axis regulates TERT alternative splicing (AS) in iPSCs and their differentiation into NPCs. We also found that splice-switching of TERT, which regulates telomerase activity, is induced by different cell densities in stem cells but not cancer cells. Lastly, we identified cell type-specific splicing factors that regulate TERT AS. Overall, our findings represent an important step forward in understanding the regulation of TERT AS in stem cells and cancer cells. These data and subsequent studies may reveal a splicing factor(s) or their binding site(s) that could be targeted with small molecule drugs or antisense oligonucleotides, respectively, to reduce telomerase activity in cancer cells and promote durable cancer remissions.
- Keyword:
- Telomere, telomerase, TERT, alternative RNA splicing
- Citation to related publication:
- Kim JJ, Sayed ME, Ahn A, Slusher AL, Ying JY, et al. (2023) Dynamics of TERT regulation via alternative splicing in stem cells and cancer cells. PLOS ONE 18(8): e0289327. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0289327
- Discipline:
- Science
-
Great Lakes Historical Ice Dynamics
User Collection- Creator:
- King, Katelyn B., Fujisaki-Manome, Ayumi, Brant, Cory, and Alofs, Karen
- Description:
- This collection includes raster layers (as a geodatabase) with ice metrics for each of the Great Lakes representing the historical time period of 1898-1960. One metric is spatial mean ice duration (the number of days per year when the lake was frozen) and the other is coefficient of variation of ice duration (variability across years).
- Keyword:
- Great Lakes, Ice , Ice duration, Ice variability, Historical , Huron, Ontario, Erie, Michigan, and Superior
- Discipline:
- Science
1Works -
- Creator:
- Bu, Xiangyun, Geng, Yihao, Yin, Siyuan, Luo, Liyan, Aubin, Cameron A., and Moore, Talia Y.
- Description:
- Suction is a useful strategy to grasp objects or anchor a body, especially when prolonged contact is desired. For passive suction cups, detachment requires manual delamination, which cannot occur autonomously. Active suction cups detach via equalizing pressure in the suction cavity with the surrounding environment, either by adding fluid (e.g., from a compressed air source) or reducing the cavity volume. While this detachment mechanism can be autonomous, it is inefficient, resulting in a net zero or loss of fluid. A more efficient detachment mechanism would enable multiple iterations of attachment and detachment without requiring additional fluid. To address this need, we designed a suction cup with a secondary release chamber embedded in the contact ring. The release chamber triggers delamination by deforming the shape of the contact ring. Through empirical testing, we found the optimal location and geometry of the release chamber. Our design allows for reliable detachment with a 5~mL decrease in release chamber volume, regardless of the adhesive suction force. Because the release chamber is a closed system, attachment and detachment results in net gain of fluid. Therefore, we propose a novel secondary benefit of adhesion via suction: harvesting fluid to power other pressure-driven soft robotic systems. and This ZIP archive includes CAD models for: The exploded view of the suction cup assembly and the molds of all suction cup configurations shown in Figure 4 of the paper: (b) Different release chamber locations (c) Different membrane thicknesses (d) Constant volume with varying release chamber areas (e) Constant area with varying release chamber heights (f) Constant height with varying release chamber areas
- Keyword:
- suction, adhesion, energy harvesting, and soft robotics
- Citation to related publication:
- Xiangyun Bu, Yihao Geng, Siyuan Yin, Liyan Luo, Cameron A. Aubin, Talia Y. Moore (2025) "Release Chamber Enables Suction Cup to Delaminate and Harvest Fluid" IEEE RoboSoft.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
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- Creator:
- King, Katelyn, Schell, Justin, Alofs, Karen, Thomer, Andrea, Wehrly, Kevin, Lenard, Michael , and Lopez-Fernandez, Hernan
- Description:
- Michigan lakes are an important resource, however, their ecosystems are declining and projected to continue to face further impacts under future land use and climate change. Understanding how lake ecosystems respond to environmental stressors and management actions is critical for identifying resilient lakes and developing adaptation strategies. However, the ability to manage lakes is hampered by a lack of historical information. Historical lake data in Michigan were originally archived as index cards at the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. All of the images of these cards are stored in this collection, Collections, Heterogeneous data, and Next Generation Ecological Studies (CHANGES) - Michigan Lake Surveys, and the images for this specific dataset are stored in the CHANGES Project- Fish Growth Analysis (GROW) dataset. The CHANGES project used a crowd sourcing platform called Zooniverse to transcribe at least basic information (i.e. dates, collected by) from all of these cards. Some of the card types, such as the one in this dataset, were prioritized to transcribe to produce a usable (i.e. machine-readable, uniform, and standardized) historical dataset. and Fish growth cards document fish that were aged and measured during fish surveys. The data that were transcribed from these cards and included in this dataset (grow_data.csv) are for each fish species: the number of fish measured in each age group, and the minimum, maximum, and average length of the fish for each age group. The final growth dataset includes length-at-age information for 36 different species (grow_species_table). For a description of all fields of this data table see grow_datadictionary.
- Keyword:
- fish, lake, growth, length, and Michigan
- Citation to related publication:
- King, K.B.S., Schell, J, Wehrly, K.E., Lenard, M., Singer, R., López-Fernández, H., Thomer, A.K., & Alofs, K.M. Community science helps digitize 78 years of fish and habitat data for thousands of lakes in Michigan, USA. under review and Grabda, E.E., Flood, P.J., King, K.B.S., Breck, J.E., Wehrly, K.E., and Alofs, K.M. 2025. Mismatch between climate-based bioenergetics model of fish growth and long-term and regional-scale empirical data. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 82: 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2024-0266
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- King, Katelyn , Schell, Justin, Alofs, Karen, Thomer, Andrea, Wehrly, Kevin, Lenard, Michael , and Lopez-Fernandez, Hernan
- Description:
- Michigan lakes are an important resource, however, their ecosystems are declining and projected to continue to face further impacts under future land use and climate change. Understanding how lake ecosystems respond to environmental stressors and management actions is critical for identifying resilient lakes and developing adaptation strategies. However, the ability to manage lakes is hampered by a lack of historical information. Historical lake data in Michigan were originally archived as index cards at the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. All of the images of these cards are stored in this collection, Collections, Heterogeneous data, and Next Generation Ecological Studies (CHANGES) - Michigan Lake Surveys, and the images for this specific dataset are stored in the CHANGES Project- Lake Summary (SUMM) dataset. The CHANGES project used a crowd sourcing platform called Zooniverse to transcribe at least basic information (i.e. dates, collected by) from all of these cards. Some of the card types, such as the one in this dataset, were prioritized to transcribe to produce a usable (i.e. machine-readable, uniform, and standardized) historical dataset. and Lake summary cards that we transcribed and curated include habitat information for a lake as well as observed fish species (summ_data.csv). These variables include anthropogenic lake characteristics such as fishing intensity, shoreline structures, and dams; lake morphometric characteristics like depth and area; as well as in situ measures of temperature, dissolved oxygen, and Secchi depth. Many of the characteristics were listed as a range, and therefore, have a column for minimum and maximum in the data file (e.g. temp_surface_min_c and temp_surface_max_c). In addition, the lake summary cards listed the fish species present, so the csv file includes columns with the fish species common name (summ_species_table) and corresponding values are either a ‘1’ representing presence of a species or ‘0’ representing absence. For a full description of all the fields of this data table see summ_datadictionary.
- Keyword:
- lake, fish, Secchi, temperature, nutrients, oxygen, shoreline, habitat, dams, lake depth, lake area, and fishing intensity
- Citation to related publication:
- King, K.B.S., Schell, J, Wehrly, K.E., Lenard, M., Singer, R., López-Fernández, H., Thomer, A.K., & Alofs, K.M. Community science helps digitize 78 years of fish and habitat data for thousands of lakes in Michigan, USA. under review
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- King, Katelyn, Schell, Justin, Alofs, Karen, Thomer, Andrea, Wehrly, Kevin, Lenard, Michael, and Lopez-Fernandez, Hernan
- Description:
- Michigan lakes are an important resource, however, their ecosystems are declining and projected to continue to face further impacts under future land use and climate change. Understanding how lake ecosystems respond to environmental stressors and management actions is critical for identifying resilient lakes and developing adaptation strategies. However, the ability to manage lakes is hampered by a lack of historical information. Historical lake data in Michigan were originally archived as index cards at the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. All of the images of these cards are stored in this collection, Collections, Heterogeneous data, and Next Generation Ecological Studies (CHANGES) - Michigan Lake Surveys, and the images for this specific dataset are stored in the CHANGES Project- Fish Collection (FISHc) dataset. The CHANGES project used a crowd sourcing platform called Zooniverse to transcribe at least basic information (i.e. dates, collected by) from all of these cards. Some of the card types, such as the one in this dataset, were prioritized to transcribe to produce a usable (i.e. machine-readable, uniform, and standardized) historical dataset. and Fish collection card types include targeted and non-targeted fisheries surveys by the Department of Natural Resources and this information was transcribed and curated into a csv file (fishc_data.csv). These records include information on the gear types used, the area surveyed and the length and mesh size of nets fished. The number and common name of fish species caught were recorded as well and included in a species table (fishc_species_table). A description of all data fields can be found in the fishc_datadictionary.
- Keyword:
- lake , fish, gear, abundance, and Michigan
- Citation to related publication:
- King, K.B.S., Schell, J, Wehrly, K.E., Lenard, M., Singer, R., López-Fernández, H., Thomer, A.K., & Alofs, K.M. Community science helps digitize 78 years of fish and habitat data for thousands of lakes in Michigan, USA. under review and King, K.B.S, Giacomini, H.C., Wehrly, K., López-Fernández, H., Thomer, A.K., & Alofs, K.M. (2023). Using historical fish catch data to evaluate predicted changes in relative abundance in response to a warming climate. Ecography. 2023:8. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.06798
- Discipline:
- Science