title: PeerJ description: Articles published in PeerJ link: https://peerj.com/articles/index.rss3?journal=peerj&page=1086 creator: info@peerj.com PeerJ errorsTo: info@peerj.com PeerJ language: en title: Effects of variation in forest fragment habitat on black howler monkey demography in the unprotected landscape around Palenque National Park, Mexico link: https://peerj.com/articles/9694 last-modified: 2020-08-10 description: Habitat loss and fragmentation are leading threats to biodiversity today, and primates are particularly vulnerable to anthropogenic habitat disturbance. However, few studies have examined how differential effects of variation in forest fragment characteristics on males and females in a primate population may affect demography and population persistence. We quantified the effects of variation in forest fragment characteristics on the within-fragment demography of black howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra) in forest fragments around Palenque National Park, Mexico, and how these effects differed between adult males and females. We quantified forest loss in the landscape between 2000 and 2017, and used a redundancy analysis to examine the effects of 15 variables quantifying fragment dimensions, forest composition and physical structure, and isolation on fragment population size and density, the proportion of adult males and females in the fragment population, and the mean number of adult males and females per group in 34 fragments (N = 393 monkeys). We hypothesized that (i) population size is positively correlated with fragment area, while population density is negatively correlated, and (ii) the composition of fragment populations results from differential effects of fragment variables on adult males and females. Forest cover decreased by 23.3% from 2000 to 2017. Our results showed a significant effect of fragment variables on population demography in fragments, accounting for 0.69 of the variance in the demographic response variables. Population size increased with fragment area and connectivity, while density decreased. Larger, less isolated fragments with better connectivity, characteristics indicative of abundant secondary growth, and those with more diverse vegetation but lower Simpson’s evenness indices tended to have more adult females per group and a higher proportion of adult females in the population. In contrast, fragments that were largely similar in characteristics of forest composition and structure, but that were more isolated from nearby fragments, had more adult males per group and a higher proportion of adult males. These results may stem from black howler females preferentially remaining in natal groups and fragments when possible, and dispersing shorter distances when they disperse, while males may be more likely to disperse between fragments, traveling longer distances through the matrix to more isolated fragments. These differential effects on males and females have important conservation implications: if females are more abundant in larger, less isolated fragments, while males are more abundant in more isolated fragments, then to effectively conserve this population, both landscape connectivity and fragment areas should be maintained and increased. creator: Keren Klass creator: Sarie Van Belle creator: Alvaro Campos-Villanueva creator: Fernando Mercado Malabet creator: Alejandro Estrada uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9694 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: © 2020 Klass et al. title: Anatomy and clinical relevance of sub occipital soft tissue connections with the dura mater in the upper cervical spine link: https://peerj.com/articles/9716 last-modified: 2020-08-10 description: BackgroundThe upper cervical region is a complex anatomical structure. Myodural bridges between posterior suboccipital muscles and the dura might be important explaining conditions associated with the upper cervical spine dysfunction such as cervicogenic headache. This cadaver study explored the upper cervical spine and evaluated the myodural bridges along with position of spinal cord in response to passive motion of upper cervical spine.MethodsA total of seven adult cadavers were used in this exploratory study. The suboccipital muscles and nuchal ligament were exposed. Connections between the Rectus Capitis Posterior major/minor and the Obliquus Capitis minor, the nuchal ligament, posterior aspect of the cervical spine, flavum ligament and the dura were explored and confirmed with histology. The position of the spinal cord was evaluated with passive motions of the upper cervical spine.OutcomesIn all cadavers connective tissues attaching the Rectus Capitis Posterior Major to the posterior atlanto-occipital membrane were identified. In the sagittal dissection we observed connection between the nuchal ligament and the dura. Histology revealed that the connection is collagenous in nature. The spinal cord moves within the spinal canal during passive movement.DiscussionThe presence of tissue connections between ligament, bone and muscles in the suboccipital region was confirmed. The nuchal ligament was continuous with the menigiovertebral ligament and the dura. Passive upper cervical motion results in spinal cord motion within the canal and possible tensioning of nerve and ligamentous connections. creator: Rob Sillevis creator: Russell Hogg uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9716 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: © 2020 Sillevis and Hogg title: The ability of the green peach aphid (Myzus persicae) to penetrate mesh crop covers used to protect potato crops against tomato potato psyllid (Bactericera cockerelli) link: https://peerj.com/articles/9317 last-modified: 2020-08-07 description: In Central and North America, Australia and New Zealand, potato (Solanum tuberosum) crops are attacked by Bactericera cockerelli, the tomato potato psyllid (TPP). ‘Mesh crop covers’ which are used in Europe and Israel to protect crops from insect pests, have been used experimentally in New Zealand for TPP control. While the covers have been effective for TPP management, the green peach aphid (GPA, Myzus persicae) has been found in large numbers under the mesh crop covers. This study investigated the ability of the GPA to penetrate different mesh hole sizes. Experiments using four sizes (0.15 × 0.15, 0.15 × 0.35, 0.3 × 0.3 and 0.6 × 0.6 mm) were carried out under laboratory conditions to investigate: (i) which mesh hole size provided the most effective barrier to GPA; (ii) which morph of adult aphids (apterous or alate) and/or their progeny could breach the mesh crop cover; (iii) would leaves touching the underside of the cover, as opposed to having a gap between leaf and the mesh, increase the number of aphids breaching the mesh; and (iv) could adults feed on leaves touching the cover by putting only their heads and/or stylets through it? No adult aphids, either alate or apterous, penetrated the mesh crop cover; only nymphs did this, the majority being the progeny of alate adults. Nymphs of the smaller alatae aphids penetrated the three coarsest mesh sizes; nymphs of the larger apterae penetrated the two coarsest sizes, but no nymphs penetrated the smallest mesh size. There was no statistical difference in the number of aphids breaching the mesh crop cover when the leaflets touched its underside compared to when there was a gap between leaf and mesh crop cover. Adults did not feed through the mesh crop cover, though they may have been able to sense the potato leaflet using visual and/or olfactory cues and produce nymphs as a result. As these covers are highly effective for managing TPP on field potatoes, modifications of this protocol are required to make it effective against aphids as well as TPP. creator: Howard London creator: David J. Saville creator: Charles N. Merfield creator: Oluwashola Olaniyan creator: Stephen D. Wratten uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9317 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: ©2020 London et al. title: Of power and despair in cetacean conservation: estimation and detection of trend in abundance with noisy and short time-series link: https://peerj.com/articles/9436 last-modified: 2020-08-07 description: Many conservation instruments rely on detecting and estimating a population decline in a target species to take action. Trend estimation is difficult because of small sample size and relatively large uncertainty in abundance/density estimates of many wild populations of animals. Focusing on cetaceans, we performed a prospective analysis to estimate power, type-I, sign (type-S) and magnitude (type-M) error rates of detecting a decline in short time-series of abundance estimates with different signal-to-noise ratio. We contrasted results from both unregularized (classical) and regularized approaches. The latter allows to incorporate prior information when estimating a trend. Power to detect a statistically significant estimates was in general lower than 80%, except for large declines. The unregularized approach (status quo) had inflated type-I error rates and gave biased (either over- or under-) estimates of a trend. The regularized approach with a weakly-informative prior offered the best trade-off in terms of bias, statistical power, type-I, type-S and type-M error rates and confidence interval coverage. To facilitate timely conservation decisions, we recommend to use the regularized approach with a weakly-informative prior in the detection and estimation of trend with short and noisy time-series of abundance estimates. creator: Matthieu Authier creator: Anders Galatius creator: Anita Gilles creator: Jérôme Spitz uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9436 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: © 2020 Authier et al. title: The photo-inhibition of camphor leaves (Cinnamomum camphora L.) by NaCl stress based on physiological, chloroplast structure and comparative proteomic analysis link: https://peerj.com/articles/9443 last-modified: 2020-08-07 description: BackgroundThe distribution and use of camphor (Cinnamomum camphora L.) trees are constrained by increasing soil salinity in south-eastern China along the Yangtze River. However, the response mechanism of this species to salinity, especially in team of photosynthesis, are unknown.MethodsHere, we analysed themorphological, physiological, ultrastructural, and proteomic traits of camphor seedlings under NaCl (103.45 mM) treatment in pot experiments for 80 days.ResultsThe growth was limited because of photosynthetic inhibition, with the most significant disturbance occurring within 50 days. Salinity caused severe reductions in the leaf photosynthetic rate (An), stomatal conductance (gs), maximal chlorophyll fluorescence (Fm), maximum quantum yield of PSII (Fv/Fm), non-photochemical quenching (NPQ), relative quantum efficiency of PSII photochemistry (ΦPSII), photochemical quenching coefficient (qP) and photo-pigment contents (chlorophyll a (Cha), chlorophyll b (Chb), total chlorophyll (Chl)); weakened the antioxidant effects, including those of malondialdehyde (MDA), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and peroxidase (POD); and injured chloroplasts. The physiologicalresults indicated that the main reason for photo-inhibition was oxidative factors induced by NaCl. The proteomic results based on isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ) further confirmedthat photosynthesis was the most significant disrupted process by salinity (P < 0.01) and there were 30 downregulated differentially expression proteins (DEPs) and one upregulated DEP related to restraint of the photosynthetic system, which affected photosystem I, photosystem II, the Cytochrome b6/f complex, ATP synthase and the light-harvesting chlorophyll protein complex. In addition, 57 DEPs were related to photo-inhibition by redox effect and 6 downregulated DEPs, including O2 evolving complex 33kD family protein (gi—224094610) and five other predicted proteins (gi—743921083, gi—743840443, gi—743885735, gi—743810316 and gi—743881832) were directly affected. This study provides new proteomic information and explains the possible mechanisms of photo-inhibition caused by salinity on C. camphor. creator: Jiammin Yue creator: Dawei Shi creator: Liang Zhang creator: Zihan Zhang creator: Zhiyuan Fu creator: Qiong Ren creator: Jinchi Zhang uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9443 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: ©2020 Yue et al. title: Silencing of the ARK5 gene reverses the drug resistance of multidrug-resistant SGC7901/DDP gastric cancer cells link: https://peerj.com/articles/9560 last-modified: 2020-08-07 description: For several years, the multidrug resistance (MDR) of gastric cancer cells has been a thorny issue worldwide regarding the chemotherapy process and needs to be solved. Here, we report that the ARK5 gene could promote the multidrug resistance of gastric cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. In this study, LV-ARK5-RNAi lentivirus was used to transfect the parental cell line SGC7901 and MDR cell line SGC7901/DDP to construct a stable model of ARK5 interference. Subsequently, the cells were treated with four chemotherapeutic drugs, cisplatin (DDP), adriamycin (ADR), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and docetaxel (DR) and were subjected to the CCK8, colony formation, adriamycin accumulation and retention, cell apoptosis and other assays. The study found that, in vitro, the expression of ARK5 in MDR gastric cancer cells was significantly higher than that in parental cells. Additionally, when treated with different chemotherapeutic drugs, compared with parental cells, MDR cells also had a higher cell survival rate, higher colony formation number, higher drug pump rate, and lower cell apoptosis rate. Additionally, in xenograft mouse models, MDR cells with high ARK5 expression showed higher resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs than parental cells. Overall, this study revealed that silencing the ARK5 gene can effectively reverse the drug resistance of MDR gastric cancer cells to chemotherapeutic drugs, providing insights into the mechanism of this process related to its inhibition of the active pump-out ability of MDR cells. creator: Hongtao Wan creator: Xiaowei Liu creator: Yanglin Chen creator: Ren Tang creator: Bo Yi creator: Dan Liu uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9560 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: ©2020 Wan et al. title: A note on the effects of epidemic forecasts on epidemic dynamics link: https://peerj.com/articles/9649 last-modified: 2020-08-07 description: The purpose of a forecast, in making an estimate about the future, is to give people information to act on. In the case of a coupled human system, a change in human behavior caused by the forecast can alter the course of events that were the subject of the forecast. In this context, the forecast is an integral part of the coupled human system, with two-way feedback between forecast output and human behavior. However, forecasting programs generally do not examine how the forecast might affect the system in question. This study examines how such a coupled system works using a model of viral infection—the susceptible-infected-removed (SIR) model—when the model is used in a forecasting context. Human behavior is modified by making the contact rate responsive to other dynamics, including forecasts, of the SIR system. This modification creates two-way feedback between the forecast and the infection dynamics. Results show that a faster rate of response by a population to system dynamics or forecasts leads to a significant decline in peak infections. Responding to a forecast leads to a lower infection peak than responding to current infection levels. Inaccurate forecasts can lead to either higher or lower peak infections depending on whether the forecast under-or over-estimates the peak. The direction of inaccuracy in a forecast determines whether the outcome is better or worse for the population. While work is still needed to constrain model functional forms, forecast feedback can be an important component of epidemic dynamics that should be considered in response planning. creator: Nicholas R. Record creator: Andrew Pershing uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9649 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: © 2020 Record and Pershing title: High antibody titres induced by protein subunit vaccines using Mycobacterium ulcerans antigens Hsp18 and MUL_3720 with a TLR-2 agonist fail to protect against Buruli ulcer in mice link: https://peerj.com/articles/9659 last-modified: 2020-08-07 description: BackgroundMycobacterium ulcerans is the causative agent of a debilitating skin and soft tissue infection known as Buruli ulcer (BU). There is no vaccine against BU. The purpose of this study was to investigate the vaccine potential of two previously described immunogenic M. ulcerans proteins, MUL_3720 and Hsp18, using a mouse tail infection model of BU.MethodsRecombinant versions of the two proteins were each electrostatically coupled with a previously described lipopeptide adjuvant. Seven C57BL/6 and seven BALB/c mice were vaccinated and boosted with each of the formulations. Vaccinated mice were then challenged with M. ulcerans via subcutaneous tail inoculation. Vaccine performance was assessed by time-to-ulceration compared to unvaccinated mice.ResultsThe MUL_3720 and Hsp18 vaccines induced high titres of antigen-specific antibodies that were predominately subtype IgG1. However, all mice developed ulcers by day-40 post-M. ulcerans challenge. No significant difference was observed in the time-to-onset of ulceration between the experimental vaccine groups and unvaccinated animals.ConclusionsThese data align with previous vaccine experiments using Hsp18 and MUL_3720 that indicated these proteins may not be appropriate vaccine antigens. This work highlights the need to explore alternative vaccine targets and different approaches to understand the role antibodies might play in controlling BU. creator: Kirstie M. Mangas creator: Nicholas J. Tobias creator: Estelle Marion creator: Jérémie Babonneau creator: Laurent Marsollier creator: Jessica L. Porter creator: Sacha J. Pidot creator: Chinn Yi Wong creator: David C. Jackson creator: Brendon Y. Chua creator: Timothy P. Stinear uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9659 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: ©2020 Mangas et al. title: Dissecting molecular network structures using a network subgraph approach link: https://peerj.com/articles/9556 last-modified: 2020-08-06 description: Biological processes are based on molecular networks, which exhibit biological functions through interactions of genetic elements or proteins. This study presents a graph-based method to characterize molecular networks by decomposing the networks into directed multigraphs: network subgraphs. Spectral graph theory, reciprocity and complexity measures were used to quantify the network subgraphs. Graph energy, reciprocity and cyclomatic complexity can optimally specify network subgraphs with some degree of degeneracy. Seventy-one molecular networks were analyzed from three network types: cancer networks, signal transduction networks, and cellular processes. Molecular networks are built from a finite number of subgraph patterns and subgraphs with large graph energies are not present, which implies a graph energy cutoff. In addition, certain subgraph patterns are absent from the three network types. Thus, the Shannon entropy of the subgraph frequency distribution is not maximal. Furthermore, frequently-observed subgraphs are irreducible graphs. These novel findings warrant further investigation and may lead to important applications. Finally, we observed that cancer-related cellular processes are enriched with subgraph-associated driver genes. Our study provides a systematic approach for dissecting biological networks and supports the conclusion that there are organizational principles underlying molecular networks. creator: Chien-Hung Huang creator: Efendi Zaenudin creator: Jeffrey J.P. Tsai creator: Nilubon Kurubanjerdjit creator: Eskezeia Y. Dessie creator: Ka-Lok Ng uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9556 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: © 2020 Huang et al. title: Descriptive profile of risk factors for cardiovascular diseases using WHO STEP wise approach in Madhya Pradesh link: https://peerj.com/articles/9568 last-modified: 2020-08-06 description: BackgroundPeriodic information on risk factor distribution is critical for public health response for reduction in non-communicable disease (NCDs). For this purpose, the WHO has developed STEPs wise approach. State representative population-based STEPS survey was last conducted in 2007–08 in seven states of In India. Since then no such work has been reported from low ETL states. This survey was carried out to assess the prevalence of risk factors associated with NCDs and the prevalence of NCDs in the low ETL state of Madhya Pradesh using the WHO STEPs approach.MethodsA total of 5680 persons aged 18–69 years were selected from the state of Madhya Pradesh using multi-stage cluster random sampling. Using the WHO STEPs approach, details were collected on demographics, STEP 1 variables (tobacco consumption, alcohol consumption, physical activity, diet), STEP 2 variables (weight, height, waist circumference, blood pressure) and STEP 3 variables (fasting blood glucose, blood cholesterol).ResultsWe found that 9.4% individuals smoked tobacco, 15.3% were overweight/obese, 22.3% had hypertension, and 6.8% have diabetes mellitus. As compared to women, men were less likely to be overweight or obese, but more likely to smoke tobacco, and have diabetes mellitus. Hypertension was also more common in men. Overall, about a fourth of all adults had three or more risk factors for cardiovascular disease.ConclusionThe survey shows that a large section of the population from Madhya Pradesh is either suffering from NCDs or have risk factors which predispose them to acquire NCDs. This state representative survey provides benchmarking information for behavioural and biological risk factor distribution for recently scaled up National Programme for the Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases, and Stroke (NPCDCS). creator: Arun M. Kokane creator: Rajnish Joshi creator: Ashwin Kotnis creator: Anirban Chatterjee creator: Kriti Yadav creator: G Revadi creator: Ankur Joshi creator: Abhijit P. Pakhare uri: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9568 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ rights: ©2020 Kokane et al.