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Institution

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

EducationCharlotte, North Carolina, United States
About: University of North Carolina at Charlotte is a education organization based out in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 8772 authors who have published 22239 publications receiving 562529 citations. The organization is also known as: UNC Charlotte & UNCC.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate changes in gene expression of a marine mollusc, the eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica, associated with the physico-chemical conditions and the levels of metals and other contaminants in their environment.
Abstract: Understanding the mechanisms by which organisms adapt to environmental conditions is a fundamental question for ecology and evolution. In this study, we evaluate changes in gene expression of a marine mollusc, the eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica, associated with the physico-chemical conditions and the levels of metals and other contaminants in their environment. The results indicate that transcript signatures can effectively disentangle the complex interactive gene expression responses to the environment and are also capable of disentangling the complex dynamic effects of environmental factors on gene expression. In this context, the mapping of environment to gene and gene to environment is reciprocal and mutually reinforcing. In general, the response of transcripts to the environment is driven by major factors known to affect oyster physiology such as temperature, pH, salinity, and dissolved oxygen, with pollutant levels playing a relatively small role, at least within the range of concentrations found in the studied oyster habitats. Further, the two environmental factors that dominate these effects (temperature and pH) interact in a dynamic and nonlinear fashion to impact gene expression. Transcriptomic data obtained in our study provide insights into the mechanisms of physiological responses to temperature and pH in oysters that are consistent with the known effects of these factors on physiological functions of ectotherms and indicate important linkages between transcriptomics and physiological outcomes. Should these linkages hold in further studies and in other organisms, they may provide a novel integrated approach for assessing the impacts of climate change, ocean acidification and anthropogenic contaminants on aquatic organisms via relatively inexpensive microarray platforms.

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Nov 2020
TL;DR: The role of IoT-based technologies in COVID-19 is surveyed and the state-of-the-art architectures, platforms, applications, and industrial IoT- based solutions combating CO VID-19 in three main phases, including early diagnosis, quarantine time, and after recovery are reviewed.
Abstract: In recent years, the Internet of Things (IoT) has gained convincing research ground as a new research topic in a wide variety of academic and industrial disciplines, especially in healthcare. The IoT revolution is reshaping modern healthcare systems by incorporating technological, economic, and social prospects. It is evolving healthcare systems from conventional to more personalized healthcare systems through which patients can be diagnosed, treated, and monitored more easily. The current global challenge of the pandemic caused by the novel severe respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 presents the greatest global public health crisis since the pandemic influenza outbreak of 1918. At the time this paper was written, the number of diagnosed COVID-19 cases around the world had reached more than 31 million. Since the pandemic started, there has been a rapid effort in different research communities to exploit a wide variety of technologies to combat this worldwide threat, and IoT technology is one of the pioneers in this area. In the context of COVID-19, IoT-enabled/linked devices/applications are utilized to lower the possible spread of COVID-19 to others by early diagnosis, monitoring patients, and practicing defined protocols after patient recovery. This paper surveys the role of IoT-based technologies in COVID-19 and reviews the state-of-the-art architectures, platforms, applications, and industrial IoT-based solutions combating COVID-19 in three main phases, including early diagnosis, quarantine time, and after recovery.

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that family management is positively related to profitability at later generational stages, when a decreased need for socioemotional wealth preservation induces family managers to focus more on increasing financial wealth.

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Elevated circulating levels of LBP and constitutively higher cell surface expression of TLR4 and CD14 on macrophages in males could result in the observed sexual dimorphism in LPS-induced inflammatory mediator production and the greater susceptibility of males to bacterial sepsis.

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of this study agree with those of previous studies which suggested that there is a transition in morphology from rods to cocci as culturability is lost, but the morphological distribution of cells did not change asculturability was lost in the environment.
Abstract: The mode by which Helicobacter pylori, the causative agent of most gastric ulcers, is transmitted remains undetermined. Epidemiological evidence suggests these organisms are waterborne; however, H. pylori has rarely been grown from potential water sources. This may be due to the ability of this organism to rapidly enter the viable but nonculturable (VBNC) state. Our investigation examines the entrance of H. pylori into this state in laboratory cultures and a natural freshwater environment as well as the relationship between morphology and culturability. To this end, membrane diffusion chambers were utilized to expose the cells to the natural fluctuations of a freshwater stream. In both the laboratory and environment, samples were assayed for culturability using plate counts and stained using a LIVE/DEAD BacLight assay for viability and morphological determinations. Additionally, water samples were collected, six environmental parameters were measured, and resuscitation conditions were examined. H. pylori was observed to lose culturability in the laboratory and stream, although viability was maintained. While the results of our study agree with those of previous studies which suggested that there is a transition in morphology from rods to cocci as culturability is lost, the morphological distribution of cells did not change as culturability was lost in the environment. The majority of cells in the VBNC state in the laboratory are cocci; however, all morphological forms were present in the environment. The results of these studies suggest that H. pylori persists in laboratory cultures and the environment in the VBNC state and that cells in this state represent a public health hazard.

155 citations


Authors

Showing all 8936 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Chao Zhang127311984711
E. Magnus Ohman12462268976
Staffan Kjelleberg11442544414
Kenneth L. Davis11362261120
David Wilson10275749388
Michael Bauer100105256841
David A. B. Miller9670238717
Ashutosh Chilkoti9541432241
Chi-Wang Shu9352956205
Gang Li9348668181
Tiefu Zhao9059336856
Juan Carlos García-Pagán9034825573
Denise C. Park8826733158
Santosh Kumar80119629391
Chen Chen7685324974
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202361
2022231
20211,471
20201,561
20191,489
20181,318