Showing 8905–8918 of 9,575 results for "Gürsoy Ulvi Kahraman"

Journals 2017 EN

Determining lateral offsets of rocks along the eastern part of the North Anatolian Fault Zone (Turkey) using spectral classification of satellite images and field measurements

Önder Gürsoy · Ş. Kaya · Ziyadin Çakır +2 more

Fault displacements are being measured by geological observations using the method of detecting and evaluating marker rocks. Thus, the length of total displacement in a fault zone relates to position detection of marker rocks. Due to limits of human eye, we used remote sensing data and terrestrial spectral measurements at 229 locations for measuring the total offset along the Kelkit Valley segment of the North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ). We examined the lithology, especially ophiolites that are older than the fault zone and can be a good marker for detecting the total offset in the region. The Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer images are subjected to Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM) method. Principal component analysis, decorrelation stretching and geological map were used to compare the SAM results. Ophiolites on either side of the fault zone were clearly classified and identified with the SAM analysis. As a result of comparison of SAM with image enhancement methods and the geological map, we measured the total fault displacement on the NAFZ in the part of the Kelkit Valley. Along the fault zone to the north and south of the ophiolites providing a right lateral offset was measured as 90 ± 5 km.

Taylor & Francis
Journals 2017 EN

Salivary cytokine levels in early gingival inflammation

Daniel Belstrøm · Christian Damgaard · Eija Könönen +3 more

Salivary protein levels have been studied in periodontitis. However, there is lack of information on salivary cytokine levels in early gingival inflammation. The aim of this study was to determine salivary levels of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), interleukin (IL)-8, monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1, IL-1β, and IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) in gingival inflammation. Twenty-eight systemically and orally healthy nonsmokers abstained from oral hygiene protocols for 10 days. After that, self-performed cleaning was resumed for 14 days. Plaque and gingival indexes were measured, and saliva samples were collected at days 1, 4, 7, 10, and 24. Salivary cytokines were detected with Luminex®-xMAP™. Salivary IL-1β, IL-1Ra, and VEGF levels decreased after 10 days’ development of experimental gingivitis and reached baseline levels at the end of the 2-week resolution period. Salivary IL-8 levels decreased and remained low during development and resolution of experimental gingivitis. Initial inflammation in gingival tissues is associated with a decrease in inflammatory cytokines in saliva. Further studies are needed to evaluate if inflammatory cytokines bind to their functional receptors within the gingival tissue during early gingivitis, which may limits their spillover to the gingival crevice and ultimately saliva.

Taylor & Francis
Journals 2017 EN

Circulating LL37 targets plasma extracellular vesicles to immune cells and intensifies Behçet's disease severity

Kahraman Tamer · Gucluler Gozde · Simsek Ismail +9 more

Behçet's disease (BD) activity is characterised by sustained, over‐exuberant immune activation, yet the underlying mechanisms leading to active BD state are poorly defined. Herein, we show that the human cathelicidin derived antimicrobial peptide LL37 associates with and directs plasma extracellular vesicles (EV) to immune cells, thereby leading to enhanced immune activation aggravating BD pathology. Notably, disease activity was correlated with elevated levels of circulating LL37 and EV plasma concentration. Stimulation of healthy PBMC with active BD patient EVs induced heightened IL1β, IFNα, IL6 and IP10 secretion compared to healthy and inactive BD EVs. Remarkably, when mixed with LL37, healthy plasma‐EVs triggered a robust immune activation replicating the pathology inducing properties of BD EVs. The findings of this study could be of clinical interest in the management of BD, implicating LL37/EV association as one of the major contributors of BD pathogenesis. Abbreviations : BD: Behçet's disease; EV: extracellular vesicle; BB: binding buffer; AnV: annexin V; autologEV: autologous extracellular vesicles; alloEV: allogeneic extracellular vesicles

Taylor & Francis
Journals 2017 EN

TomoBank: a tomographic data repository for computational x-ray science

Francesco De Carlo · Doğa Gürsoy · Daniel J. Ching +8 more

There is a widening gap between the fast advancement of computational methods for tomographic reconstruction and their successful implementation in production software at various synchrotron facilities. This is due in part to the lack of readily available instrument datasets and phantoms representative of real materials for validation and comparison of new numerical methods. Recent advancements in detector technology have made sub-second and multi-energy tomographic data collection possible (Gibbs et al 2015 Sci. Rep. 5 11824), but have also increased the demand to develop new reconstruction methods able to handle in situ (Pelt and Batenburg 2013 IEEE Trans. Image Process. 22 5238-51) and dynamic systems (Mohan et al 2015 IEEE Trans. Comput. Imaging 1 96-111) that can be quickly incorporated in beamline production software (Gursoy et al 2014 J. Synchrotron Radiat. 21 1188-93). The x-ray tomography data bank, tomoBank, provides a repository of experimental and simulated datasets with the aim to foster collaboration among computational scientists, beamline scientists, and experimentalists and to accelerate the development and implementation of tomographic reconstruction methods for synchrotron facility production software by providing easy access to challenging datasets and their descriptors. (Less)

IOP Publishing
Journals 2017 EN

A high-resolution map of the human small non-coding transcriptome

Tobias Fehlmann · Christina Backes · Julia Alles +17 more

Although the amount of small non-coding RNA-sequencing data is continuously increasing, it is still unclear to which extent small RNAs are represented in the human genome.

Oxford University Press