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Our results suggest that, within a social group, individuals may weight others' opinions through indirect reciprocity, highlighting the emergence of normative distortions in the process of information transmission among humans.The myeloid inhibitory receptor CLEC12A negatively regulates inflammation. Reduced CLEC12A expression enhances inflammation in CLEC12A knock-out mice with collagen antibody-induced arthritis. Moreover, CLEC12A internalisation augments human neutrophil activation. We thus postulated that CLEC12A expression on circulating myeloid cells of rheumatoid arthritis patients is associated with disease manifestations. Cell-surface, CLEC12A receptor expression was determined on circulating neutrophils and monocytes of eRA patients and of healthy donors. SKF38393 Generalized estimating equations model, Student's t-test and Spearman's correlations were performed to compare CLEC12A expression between groups and test its association with disease activity and clinical parameters. Plasma cytokines were measured by multiplex immunoassay. Patients with reduced neutrophil or monocyte CLEC12A expression at baseline and at 3 months have an increased simple disease activity index. Low baseline CLEC12A expression also correlates with a higher SDAI at 6 months. In contrast, positive correlations were observed between baseline CLEC12A expression and several cytokines. Moreover, neutrophil and monocyte CLEC12A expression is significantly higher in early rheumatoid arthritis patients at baseline than healthy controls. Circulating neutrophil and monocyte CLEC12A expression correlates with disease activity at baseline and is predictive of SDAI at later stages of the disease indicative of a regulatory role for CLEC12A in RA.Rhodolith beds built by free-living coralline algae are important ecosystems for marine biodiversity and carbonate production. Yet, our mechanistic understanding regarding rhodolith physiology and its drivers is still limited. Using three rhodolith species with different branching morphologies, we investigated the role of morphology in species' physiology and the implications for their susceptibility to ocean acidification (OA). For this, we determined the effects of thallus topography on diffusive boundary layer (DBL) thickness, the associated microscale oxygen and pH dynamics and their relationship with species' metabolic and light and dark calcification rates, as well as species' responses to short-term OA exposure. Our results show that rhodolith branching creates low-flow microenvironments that exhibit increasing DBL thickness with increasing branch length. This, together with species' metabolic rates, determined the light-dependent pH dynamics at the algal surface, which in turn dictated species' calcification rates. While these differences did not translate in species-specific responses to short-term OA exposure, the differences in the magnitude of diurnal pH fluctuations (~ 0.1-1.2 pH units) between species suggest potential differences in phenotypic plasticity to OA that may result in different susceptibilities to long-term OA exposure, supporting the general view that species' ecomechanical characteristics must be considered for predicting OA responses.Mycoplasma genitalium (M. genitalium) is a recently recognised and important sexually transmitted infection among men who have sex with men (MSM). The role of oral sex, rimming, and kissing on M. genitalium transmission in MSM is unclear. We created four deterministic susceptible-infectious-susceptible epidemic models to examine the role that different sexual behaviours play in transmitting M. genitalium at the oropharynx, urethra anorectum among men who have sex with men in Australia. Our results suggest that oral and anal sex without other sexual practices (model 1) replicate well single site infection at the oropharynx, urethra and anorectum and also multi-site infection. If kissing or rimming are added to model 1 (i.e., model 2-4) no substantial improvements in the calibration of the models occur. Model 1 estimates that 3.4% of infections occur at the oropharynx, 34.8% at the urethra and 61.8% at the anorectum. Model 1 also estimates that the proportion of incident M. genitalium transmitted by anal sex was 82.4%, and by oral sex was about 17.6%. Our findings could provide an enhanced understanding of M. genitalium transmission in MSM, thus providing insights into what sexual practices contribute most to transmission.Plankton live in dynamic fluid environments. Their ability to change in response to different hydrodynamic cues is critical to their energy allocation and resource uptake. This study used a microfluidic device to evaluate the rheotactic behaviors of a model dinoflagellate species, Karlodinium veneficum, in different flow conditions. Although dinoflagellates experienced forced alignment in strong shear (i.e. "trapping"), fluid straining did not play a decisive role in their rheotactic movements. Moderate hydrodynamic magnitude (20  less then  |uf|  less then  40 µm s-1) was found to induce an orientation heading towards an oncoming current (positive rheotaxis), as dinoflagellates switched to cross-flow swimming when flow speed exceeded 50 µm s-1. Near the sidewalls of the main channel, the steric mechanism enabled dinoflagellates to adapt upstream orientation through vertical migration. Under oscillatory flow, however, positive rheotaxis dominated with occasional diversion. The varying flow facilitated upstream exploration with directional controlling, through which dinoflagellates exhibited avoidance of both large-amplitude perturbance and very stagnant zones. In the mixed layer where water is not steady, these rheotactic responses could lead to spatial heterogeneity of dinoflagellates. The outcome of this study helps clarify the interaction between swimming behaviors of dinoflagellates and the hydrodynamic environment they reside in.The worldwide emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance is accelerated by irrational administration and use of empiric antibiotics. A key point to the crisis is a lack of rapid diagnostic protocols for antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST), which is crucial for a timely and rational antibiotic prescription. Here, a recombinant bacteriophage tail fiber protein (TFP) was functionalized on magnetic particles to specifically capture Pseudomonas aeruginosa, while fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled-magainin II was utilized as the indicator. For solving the magnetic particles' blocking effects, a reverse assaying protocol based on TFP recognition was developed to investigate the feasibility of detection and AST of P. aeruginosa. P. aeruginosa can be rapidly, sensitively and specifically detected within 1.5 h with a linear range of 1.0 × 102 to 1.0 × 106 colony forming units (CFU)⋅mL-1 and a detection limit of 3.3 × 10 CFU⋅mL-1. Subsequently, AST results, which were consistent with broth dilution results, can be obtained within 3.

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