Abstract Background. Respiratory motion may compromise the dose delivery accuracy in liver stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). Motion management can improve treatment delivery. However, external surrogate signal may be unstable and inaccurate. This study reports the first case of liver SBRT based on internal electromagnetic motion monitoring in China. Materials and Methods. The patient with a primary liver cancer was treated with respiratory-gated SBRT guided by three implanted electromagnetic transponders. The treatment was carried out in breath-hold end-exhale with beam-on when the centroid of the three transponders drifted within 5 mm (left-right (LR), anterior-posterior (AP) and cranio-caudal (CC) directions) from the planned position. The motion monitoring treatments were delivered in breath-hold end-exhale mode with the energy of 6 MV in FFF mode with 1200 monitor units (MU) per minute. For each fraction, QA results, intertransponder distances, geometric checks as well as tumor motion logs were explicitly recorded. Results. Comparing with the plan data, distance variances between each two transponders were -0.056±0.032 cm, 0.017±0.033 cm and -0.082±0.068 cm. Geometric residual, the pitch, roll and yaw angles were 0.048±0.021 cm (threshold 0.2 cm), 2.17°±1.85°(threshold 10°), -2.42°±1.51° (threshold 10°) and 1.67°±1.07° (threshold 10°), respectively. The delivery time of the five fields were 13.8 s, 13.1 s, 11.18 s, 11.57 s, 11.62 s with the average value of 12.254±1.13 s. Treatment duration of each fraction ranged from 6.22 minutes to 21.43 minutes, with the average value of 11.25±5.03 minutes. Conclusions. The first case of liver SBRT patient of China based on internal electromagnetic motion monitoring was performed. The system had a high tracking accuracy, and it did not delay the treatment time. In addition, the patient did not show any severe side effects except for I°myelotoxicity. The internal electromagnetic motion monitoring system provides a real-time and direct way to track liver tumor targets.
Identification of multiple histone acylations diversifies transcriptional control by metabolism, but their functions are incompletely defined. Here we report evidence of histone crotonylation in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans. We define the enzymes that regulate crotonylation and show its dynamic control by environmental signals: carbon sources, the short-chain fatty acids butyrate and crotonate, and cell wall stress. Crotonate regulates stress-responsive transcription and rescues C. albicans from cell wall stress, indicating broad impact on cell biology. The YEATS domain crotonylation readers Taf14 and Yaf9 are required for C. albicans virulence, and Taf14 controls gene expression, stress resistance, and invasive growth via its chromatin reader function. Blocking the Taf14 C terminus with a tag reduced virulence, suggesting that inhibiting Taf14 interactions with chromatin regulators impairs function. Our findings shed light on the regulation of histone crotonylation and the functions of the YEATS proteins in eukaryotic pathogen biology and fungal infections.
The NH3, N2O and CO2 emissions from farmland soil pose a great threat to the environment, and the application of organic fertilizer and other reasonable fertilization measures can reduce soil gas emissions. However, research into greenhouse gas emissions and environmental benefits under the combined measures of partial substitution of organic fertilizer and phased application of chemical fertilizer is limited. Herein, a field experiment involving soil gas emission monitoring was conducted to study the effects of chemical fertilizer application in stages on Mollisols’ gas emissions and environmental benefits based on the partial replacement of chemical fertilizer with organic fertilizer. Five treatments were set up, including conventional nitrogen application (CF); no nitrogen application (N0); and one-stage (N1), two-stage (N2) and three-stage (N3) application of chemical nitrogen based on 25% of chemical nitrogen being replaced with organic fertilizer. The results showed that N1 had the best emission reduction. Compared with CF, N1 reduced NH3 volatilization and N2O and CO2 emission accumulation by 27.64%, 12.09% and 15.48%, respectively. Compared with N2 and N3, N1 could better reduce the soil urease, nitrate reductase, catalase and β-glucosidase activities, reduce the rate of the conversion of urea and organic carbon, increase the content of NH4+-N in the soil and reduce the NH3 volatilization rate and N2O and CO2 emission rates. A comprehensive analysis showed that N1 showed the best effects in reducing the soil gas emission rate, and environmental cost.
Abstract The aggregate formation and stability are controlled by the dynamics of soil organic matters (SOM), but how it is related to SOM chemical composition within different‐sized aggregates is largely unknown during manure fertilization. In this study, the variations of intra‐aggregate organic carbon (OC), including intra‐particulate organic matter (iPOM) and mineral‐associated organic matter, were quantitatively and qualitatively analysed, and then, their effects on aggregate formation and stability were assessed under four treatments: control (CK), mineral fertilizer (NPK), reduced manure (30%M) and manure fertilizers (M). Manure application (M) significantly increased macroaggregate proportion, mean weight diameter (MWD), and OC contents within different‐sized aggregates compared to CK, NPK, and 30%M. The OC accumulation of macroaggregate in M was attributed to OC content increase in silt plus clay subfraction rather than iPOM with more labile organic groups; oppositely, in microaggregate it was located in the relatively stable fine iPOM. The macroaggregate formation and stability were controlled by the fine iPOM within macroaggregates, whose abundant polysaccharide‐C and aliphatic‐C after manure fertilization advanced the microbial growth except for Gram‐positive bacteria, which further promoted macroaggregate formation and stability. The free silt plus clay fraction also affected macroaggregate formation and stability, and its polysaccharide‐C derived from microorganisms or decomposing SOM was positively associated with MWD and macroaggregate proportion. Because polysaccharide‐C can be easily associated with mineral particles, further improving micro‐ or macroaggregation. We conclude that continuous manure fertilization could increase labile SOM accumulation within aggregates and then facilitate microbial growth, which collectively are responsible for aggregate formation and stabilization.
Plants experience dynamic light environments in the field, and the mechanisms for physiological and biochemical acclimation to fluctuating light (FL) vary among species. How soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) integrates multiple physiological changes to acclimate to FL remains unclear. This study evaluated the impact of FL conditions on soybean morphology and photosynthetic characteristics by analyzing changes in photosynthetic gas exchange parameters and chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence parameters under alternating high and low light conditions. Results showed that soybeans subjected to FL conditions had low dry matter mass, small and thin leaves, and a low Chl a to Chl b ratio, resembling the traits of soybeans grown in low-light environments. However, their photosynthetic gas exchange rates and photosynthetic capacity remained constant, which was not the case under consistent low-light conditions. The adaptation processes for fluctuating and lowlight conditions are distinct. Correlation analyses indicated that the drop in carbon assimilation under FL primarily resulted from two aspects: the speed of recovery in stomatal conductance when transitioning to bright light and the slow relief of nonphotochemical quenching as light levels decreased. Thus, the decrease in carbon assimilation under FL conditions cannot be ascribed to adjustments during low-light phases but is due to a lag in photosynthetic response.
This work addresses the problem of deriving fundamental trade-off bounds for a 1-relay and a 2-relay wireless network when multiple performance criteria are of interest. It proposes a simple MultiObjective (MO) performance evaluation framework composed of a broadcast and interference-limited network model; capacity, delay and energy performance metrics and an associated MO optimization problem. Pareto optimal performance bounds between end-to-end delay and energy for a capacity-achieving network are given for 1-relay and 2-relay topologies and assessed through simulations. Moreover, we also show in this paper that these bounds are tight since they can be reached by simple practical coding strategies performed by the source and the relays. Two different types of network coding strategies are investigated. Practical performance bounds for both strategies are compared to the theoretical upper bound. Results confirm that the proposed upper bound on delay and energy performance is tight and can be reached with the proposed combined source and network coding strategies.