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2.
Am J Trop Med Hyg ; 95(3): 502-504, 2016 09 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27352875

ABSTRACT

Substantial investment has been made into the once "neglected" tropical disease, soil-transmitted helminthiasis, and into control programs that operate within a framework of mapping baseline disease distribution, measuring the effectiveness of applied interventions, establishing when to cease drug administration, and for posttreatment evaluations. However, critical to each of these stages is the determination of helminth infection. The limitations of traditional microscope-based fecal egg diagnostics have not provided quality assurance in the monitoring of parasite disease and suboptimal treatment regimes provide for the potential development of parasite resistance to anthelmintic drugs. Improved diagnostic and surveillance tools are required to protect therapeutic effectiveness and to maintain funder confidence. Such tools may be on the horizon with emergent technologies that offer potential for enhanced visualization and quality-assured quantitation of helminth eggs.


Subject(s)
Helminthiasis/diagnosis , Parasite Egg Count/standards , Quality Assurance, Health Care/methods , Feces/parasitology , Helminthiasis/transmission , Humans , Parasite Egg Count/methods , Soil/parasitology
3.
Am J Trop Med Hyg ; 94(1): 227-230, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26572870

ABSTRACT

A Nokia Lumia 1020 cellular phone (Microsoft Corp., Auckland, New Zealand) was configured to image the ova of Ascaris lumbricoides converged into a single field of view but on different focal planes. The phone was programmed to acquire images at different distances and, using public domain computer software, composite images were created that brought all the eggs into sharp focus. This proof of concept informs a framework for field-deployable, point of care monitoring of soil-transmitted helminths.


Subject(s)
Ascaris lumbricoides , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Microscopy/instrumentation , Ovum/cytology , Smartphone , Animals , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Microscopy/methods , Ovum/classification
4.
Biosystems ; 71(3): 297-303, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14563569

ABSTRACT

Before Darwin many biologists considered organic forms to be immutable natural forms or types which like inorganic forms such as atoms or crystals are part of a changeless world order and determined by physical law. Adaptations were viewed as secondary modifications of these 'crystal like' abstract afunctional 'givens of physics.' We argue here that much of the emerging picture of biological order in the subcellular realm resembles closely the pre-Darwinian conception of nature. We point out that in the subcellular realm, between nano and micrometers, physical law necessarily plays a far more significant role in organizing matter than in the familiar 'Darwinian world' between millimeters and meters (where matter can be arranged into almost any contingent artifactual arrangement we choose, as witness Lego toys, watches or jumbo jets). Consequently, when deploying matter into complex structures in the subcellular realm the cell must necessarily make extensive use of natural forms-such as the protein and RNA folds, microtubular forms and tensegrity structures-which like atoms or crystals self-organize under the direction of physical law into what are essentially 'pre-Darwinian' afunctional abstract molecular architectures in which adaptations are trivial secondary modifications of what are evidently primary givens of physics.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Variation/genetics , Origin of Life , Proteins/metabolism , RNA/metabolism , Selection, Genetic , Biological Evolution , Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Nanotechnology/methods , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Protein Folding , Proteins/chemistry , RNA/chemistry , Structure-Activity Relationship , Subcellular Fractions/chemistry , Subcellular Fractions/metabolism
5.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 32(1): 35-46, 2002 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11889916

ABSTRACT

Scanning tunneling microscopy and chromatography experiments exploring the potential templating properties of nucleic acid bases adsorbed to the surface of crystalline graphite, revealed that the interactions of amino acids with the bare crystal surface are significantly modulated by the prior adsorption of adenine and hypoxanthine. These bases are the coding elements of a putative purine-only genetic alphabet and the observed effects are different for each of the bases. Such mapping between bases and amino acids provides a coding mechanism. These observations demonstrate that a simple pre-RNA amino acid discrimination mechanism could have existed on the prebiotic Earth providing critical functionality for the origin of life.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/genetics , Purines/chemistry , Adenine/chemistry , Adsorption , Chromatography , Crystallization , Evolution, Chemical , Genetic Code , Graphite/chemistry , Hypoxanthine/chemistry , Microscopy, Scanning Tunneling , Templates, Genetic
6.
Astrobiology ; 2(3): 231-9, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12530234

ABSTRACT

The hypothesis that life originated and evolved from linear informational molecules capable of facilitating their own catalytic replication is deeply entrenched. However, widespread acceptance of this paradigm seems oblivious to a lack of direct experimental support. Here, we outline the fundamental objections to the de novo appearance of linear, self-replicating polymers and examine an alternative hypothesis of template-directed coding of peptide catalysts by adsorbed purine bases. The bases (which encode biological information in modern nucleic acids) spontaneously self-organize into two-dimensional molecular solids adsorbed to the uncharged surfaces of crystalline minerals; their molecular arrangement is specified by hydrogen bonding rules between adjacent molecules and can possess the aperiodic complexity to encode putative protobiological information. The persistence of such information through self-reproduction, together with the capacity of adsorbed bases to exhibit enantiomorphism and effect amino acid discrimination, would seem to provide the necessary machinery for a primitive genetic coding mechanism.


Subject(s)
Exobiology , Origin of Life , RNA
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