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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

<em>In Vivo</em> Regulation of Murine Cytomegalovirus Infections: The Role of Cell Surface Molecules and Mechanisms of Control by Natural Killer Cells: A Dissertation

Tay, Chin Hun 01 July 1997 (has links)
The overall aim of this thesis was to determine how natural killer (NK) cells regulate virus infections in vivo. Anti-viral mechanisms by which NK cells control murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) infection in the spleens and livers of adult C57BL/6 mice were first studied, revealing different mechanisms of control in different organs. Three days post-infection, MCMV titers in the spleens of perforin-deficient (perforin 0/0) mice were higher than in wild type controls, but no elevation of liver titers was found in perforin 0/0 mice. NK cell depletion in MCMV-infected perforin 0/0 mice resulted only in an increase in liver viral titers but not in spleen titers. Depletion of IFN-γ in adult C57BL/6 mice by injections with mAbs to IFN-γ resulted in an increase in viral titers in the liver but not in the spleen. Analyses using IFN-γ-receptor-deficient (IFN-γR0/0) mice, rendered chimeric with C57BL/6 bone marrow cells, indicated that even though the donor spleen cells could respond to IFN-γ, the depletion of NK cells in a recipient environment where the host cells could not respond to IFN-γ caused an increase in MCMV titers in the spleens but had little effect in the liver. IFN-γ has the ability to induce a variety of cells to produce nitric oxide (NO), and administrating the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor Nω-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMA) into MCMV-infected adult C57BL/6 mice resulted in MCMV titer increases in the liver but not in the spleen. These data indicate that in adult C57BL/6 mice, there is a dichotomy in the mechanisms utilized by NK cells in the regulation of MCMV in different organs. In the spleen NK cells exert their effects in a perforin-dependent manner, suggesting a cytotoxic mechanism, whereas in the liver the production of IFN-γ by NK cells may be a predominant mechanism in the regulation of MCMV synthesis. These results may explain why the Cmv-1r (Cmv-1-resistant) locus, which maps closely to genes regulating NK cell cytotoxic function, confers an NK cell-dependent resistance to MCMV infection in the spleen but not in the liver. The ability of adoptively transferred cells to protect suckling mice from MCMV was another model used to study the mechanisms utilized by NK cells in the regulation of MCMV. Adoptive transfers of 129, C57BL/6 and perforin 0/0 spleen cells or lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells into 4 - 6 day old MCMV-infected C57BL/6 suckling mice significantly lowered the splenic MCMV titers in these mice compared to the infected controls. Adoptive transfers of C57BL/6 spleen cells into MCMV-infected 129 suckling mice also decreased the amount of MCMV in the 129 suckling mice, but C57BL/6 spleen cells could not regulate MCMV synthesis when adoptively transferred into 129/IFN-γR0/0 suckling mice. These results suggest that, in the suckling mouse model, the regulation of MCMV by the adoptively transferred NK cells is via an IFN-γ-dependent, perforin-independent, Cmv-1-independent mechanism. The Cmv-1 gene locus resides within the NK gene complex, in close proximity to the Ly49 NK cell receptor family. Analyses were carried out to determine if any of the 4 known Ly49 NK cell receptors (Ly49A, C, D and G2) played a role in the control of MCMV synthesis by NK cells. Studies comparing the expression of the different Ly49 NK cell subsets in the spleen and the peritoneal cavity revealed that there were differences in the distribution of the Ly49 receptors on NK1.1+ cells. Three days post-MCMV infection, the percentage of NK1.1+- Ly49+ NK cells in the spleen and the peritoneal cavity were different than in naive controls. Within the splenic NK1.1+ population, increases in NK1.1+ -Ly49A+ and NK1.1+-Ly49G2+ cells but decreases in NK1.1+-Ly49C+ and NK1.1+-Ly49D+ cells were observed. These changes in the spleen were accompanied by a concomitant decrease in NK1.1+ - Ly49A+ cells and increases in NK1.1+-Ly49C+, NK1.1+-Ly49D+ and NK1.1+-Ly49G2+ cells within the NK1.1+ population in the peritoneal cavity. These data suggest that 3 days post-MCMV infection, there may be movement of NK cells between the different organs. The role of Ly49 NK cell receptors in the regulation of MCMV was tested using adult C57BL/6 mice depleted of single or multiple Ly49 NK cell subsets. These in vivo depletions did not affect the ability of the residual NK cells to regulate MCMV synthesis. LAK cells sorted into the different Ly49 NK cell subsets and adoptively transferred into C57BL/6 suckling mice lowered the splenic MCMV titers in these mice. Together, these results indicate that even though there is a redistribution of the Ly49 NK cell subsets during MCMV infection, the presence or absence of anyone of the 4 tested Ly49 NK cell receptors does not affect the regulation of MCMV by NK cells. However, there remain a possibility that one of the undefined Ly49 receptors or an untested NK cell receptor may be important in the control ofMCMV. Most of the cloned NK cell receptors have been shown to bind to MHC class I molecules, and MHC class I antigens have been implicated as modulators of target cell sensitivity to NK cell-mediated lysis. The regulation of virus infections and the fate of NK cells and their natural targets was examined in β2-microglobulin-deficient mice [β2m (-/-)], which have defective MHC class I expression. Infections with either the NK cell-sensitive MCMV or the NK cell-resistant lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) significantly augmented NK cell activity in either C57BL/6 or β2m (-/-) mice. Depletion of NK cells in vivo with antiserum to asialo GM1 markedly enhanced the synthesis of MCMV but had no effect on the synthesis of LCMV in either strain of mouse. Adoptively transferred β2m (-/-) spleen cells lowered splenic MCMV titers in C57BL/6 suckling mice, not unlike adoptively transferred C57BL/6 spleen cells. Analysis of naturally NK cell-sensitive thymocyte targets from these virus-infected β2m (-/-) mice revealed no cell surface expression of class I MHC detectable by conformation-dependent or -independent antibodies, but the virus infections enhanced class I expression on thymocytes from C57BL/6 mice. The sensitivity of C57BL/6 thymocytes to NK cell-mediated lysis was markedly reduced after in vivo poly inosinic:cytidylic (poly I:C) treatment or viral infection; in contrast, the sensitivity of the β2m (-/-) thymocytes was significantly less affected by poly I:C or viral infection. These data indicate that the normal expression of MHC class I antigens on NK cells or their targets is not required for the anti-viral functions of NK cells against an NK-sensitive virus (MCMV) nor do they protect an NK-resistant virus (LCMV) from the anti-viral activity of NK cells. Together, the data presented in this thesis help to further our understanding of the mechanisms utilized by NK cells in the control ofMCMV in both adult and suckling mice, and also help clarify the roles played by Ly49 NK cell receptors and MHC class I molecules in the regulation of MCMV.
32

Analysis of RNA Interference in <em>C. elegans</em>: A Dissertation

Grishok, Alla 27 September 2001 (has links)
RNA interference (RNAi) in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is a type of homology-dependent post-transcriptional gene silencing induced by dsRNA. This dissertation describes the genetic analysis of the RNA interference pathway and inheritance properties associated with this phenomenon. We demonstrate that the RNAi effect can be observed in the progeny of the injected animal for at least two generations. Transmission of the interference effect occurs through a dominant extragenic agent. The wild-type activities of the RNAi pathway genes rde-l and rde-4 are required for the formation of this interfering agent but are not needed for interference thereafter. In contrast, the rde-2 and mut-7 genes are required downstream for interference. These findings provide evidence for germline transmission of an extragenic sequence-specific silencing factor and implicate rde-l and rde-4in the formation of the inherited agent. Other forms of homology-dependent silencing in C. elegansinclude co-suppression and transcriptional silencing of transgenes in the germline. We demonstrate that silencing of a germline transgene can be initiated by injected dsRNA, via the RNAi pathway, and then maintained on a different level. This observation indicates that post-transcriptional and transcriptional silencing of homologous genes could be connected. This dissertation also describes the connection between RNAi and developmental pathways of gene regulation in C. elegans. We show that inactivation of genes related to RNAi pathway genes, a homolog of Drosophila Dicer (dcr-l), and two homologs of rde-1 (alg-l and alg-2) cause heterochronic phenotypes similar to lin-4 and let-7 mutations. Further we show that dcr-l, alg-l, and alg-2 are necessary for the maturation and activity of the lin-4 and let-7small temporal RNAs that regulate stage-specific development. Our findings suggest that a common processing machinery generates guide RNAs that mediate both RNAi and endogenous gene regulation. Finally, this study illustrates the detection of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs), intermediates in the RNAi process, and describes requirements for their accumulation. We show that, in the course of RNAi induced by feeding dsRNA, C. elegans accumulate only siRNAs complementary to the target gene. This accumulation depends on the presence of the target sequence and requires activities of several RNAi-pathway genes. We show that selective retention or amplification of RNAi-active molecules can create a reservoir of memory antisense siRNAs that prevent future expression of the genes with complementary sequence. This suggests a parallel at the molecular level with the clonal selection of antibody forming cells and in the vertebrate immune system.
33

Molecular Determinants of GLUT1: Structure and Function: A Dissertation

Zottola, Ralph J. 01 June 1994 (has links)
Hebert and Carruthers (1992) showed that the human erythrocyte glucose transporter is an allosteric complex of four GLUT1 proteins whose structure and substrate binding properties are stabilized by reductant-sensitive noncovalent subunit interactions. The GLUT1 tetramer dissociates into dimers upon exposure to reductant but subunits are not associated via disulfide bridges. Each subunit of SDS-denatured tetrameric GLUT1 exposes only two thiols while reduced denatured GLUT1 exposes all six sulfhydryl groups. They hypothesized that glucose transporter oligomeric structure and cooperative catalytic function resulted from noncovalent subunit interactions promoted or stabilized by intramolecular disulfide bridges. These interactions give rise to an antiparallel arrangement of substrate binding sites within the transporter complex. In the present studies, we tested aspects of this model. Specifically, we wanted 1) to understand why the native, noncovalent, homotetrameric GLUT1 complex is sensitive to reductant, 2) to determine whether the tetramer is more catalytically efficient than the dimer in situ, and 3) to test the hypothesis that it is the antiparallel arrangement of substrate binding sites between subunits that provides the transporter with its catalytic advantage. We used biochemical and molecular biological approaches to isolate specific determinants of transporter oligomeric structure and/or transport function in purified isolated transporter preparations, in intact red cells and in CHO cells. We have also examined the hypothesis that net sugar transport in the human erythrocyte is rate limited by reduced cytosolic diffusion of sugars and/or by reversible sugar association with intracellular macromolecules. Our findings support the hypothesis that each subunit of the parental glucose transporter contains a single intramolecular disulfide bridge located between cysteine residues 347 and 421. This disulfide seems to be necessary for GLUT1 tetramerization. Our findings suggest that GLUT1 N-terminal residues 1 through 199 provide contact surfaces for subunit dimerization but are insufficient for subunit tetramerization. Our studies also show that in situ disulfide disruption by cell impermeant reductants results in the loss of cooperative subunit interactions and a 3 to 15-fold reduction in the transport efficiency of the transporter. We further find that in situ GLUT1 is susceptible to exofacial proteolysis. Exofacial trypsin cleavage eliminates cooperativity between subunits but does not affect transporter oligomeric structure or transport activity. Thus catalytic efficiency does not derive directly from cooperative interactions between substrate binding sites on adjacent subunits. We have confirmed that 30MG transport in human erythrocytes is a diffusion limited process. We find that steady-state sugar uptake in red cells and K562 cells measures two processes - sugar translocation and intracellular sugar binding. We propose a model for native GLUT1 structure and function.
34

Human T Cell Responses to Dengue Virus Infections: CD8+CTL and Acute Immunosuppression: a Dissertation

Mathew, Anuja 01 January 1999 (has links)
There are four serotypes of dengue virus designated dengue 1, 2, 3 and 4 (D1, D2, D3 and D4) and epidemiological studies indicate that a severe complication of dengue virus infection - dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) is more likely to occur following a secondary infection. DHF is hypothesized to be immunologically mediated and may be triggered by virus-specific T cells. It is also likely that dengue virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are important for recovery from dengue virus infections. An analysis of the immune response during acute illness and when the patient has recovered from the infection (immune state) is therefore important as it will provide insights into the immunopathological nature of the disease. This thesis initially examines the CD8+CTL responses in volunteers who have received live attenuated dengue vaccines and then investigates acute and immune T cell responses in children following natural infection with dengue. When this project was initiated, there was little available information on the human CD8+ T cell responses to dengue viruses. PBMC from one donor had generated memory CD8+CTL to the nonstructural protein NS3 of dengue virus. Memory CD8+CTL responses were therefore analyzed to determine the diversity of the T cell response to dengue virus and to identify immunodominant proteins using PBMC from eight healthy adult American volunteers who had received monovalent live-attenuated candidate vaccines of the 4 dengue serotypes. All the donors had specific T cell proliferation to dengue viruses and to other flaviviruses that we tested. CTLs were generated from the stimulated PBMC of all donors and in the seven donors tested, dengue virus-specific CD8+CTL activity was demonstrated. The nonstructural proteins NS3 and NS1.2a and the structural protein E were recognized by CD8+CTLs from six, five and three donors respectively. All donors recognized either NS3 or NS 1.2a. In a donor who received a dengue 4 vaccine, CTL killing was seen in bulk culture against the premembrane protein (prM). This is the first demonstration of a CTL response against the prM protein. The CTL responses using PBMC of two donors were serotype-specific whereas all other donors had serotype-cross reactive responses. For one donor, CTLs specific for E, NSl.2a and NS3 proteins were all HLA-B44 restricted. For the three other donors tested the potential restricting alleles for recognition of NS3 were HLA-B38, A24 and/or B62 and B35. These results indicate that the CD8+CTL responses of humans after immunization with a single serotype of dengue virus are diverse and directed against a variety of proteins. The nonstructural proteins NS3 and NSl.2a appear to be immunodominant and should be considered when designing subunit vaccines for dengue. Previously T cell responses had not been examined in people who have had natural infections with dengue. The HLA diversity between North American Caucasians and populations where dengue is a serious health problem, calls for the analysis of immune responses in people who have been infected with natural circulating strains of the virus. We examined the memory cytotoxic T lymphocytic (CTL) responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained from patients in Thailand 12 months after natural symptomatic secondary dengue infections. In all four patients analyzed, CTLs were detected in bulk culture PBMC against nonstructural dengue proteins. Numerous CD4+ and CD8+ CTL lines were generated from the bulk cultures of two patients, KPP94-037 and KPP94-024, which were specific for the NSl.2a and NS3 proteins respectively. All CTL lines derived from both patients were crossreactive with other serotypes of dengue virus. The CD8+ NS1.2a specific lines from patient KPP94-037 were HLA-B57 restricted and the CD8+ NS3 specific lines from patient KPP94-024 were HLA-B7 restricted. The CD4+ CTL lines from patient KPP94-037 were HLA-DR7 restricted. A majority of the CD8+CTLs isolated from patient KPP94-024 were found to recognize a.a. 221-232 on NS3. These results demonstrate that after symptomatic secondary natural dengue infections in Thai patients, CTLs are mainly directed against nonstructural proteins and are broadly crossreactive. The data correlate with our observations that nonstructural proteins are immunodominant proteins in volunteers who received dengue vaccines. We were interested in examining CTL responses in children during their acute illness and comparing them to memory CTLs obtained from the same children a year or more after the infection. A detailed analysis on samples from nine patients during their acute illness failed to generate any dengue virus-specific CTL responses. We therefore decided to determine if cell mediated responses are altered during acute dengue infection. Decreased proliferative responses to mitogens and recall antigens have been observed in PBMC obtained during several acute human viral infections. All responses of PBMC during acute illness were compared to the same patients PBMC obtained at least 6 months after their infection. Proliferative responses to PHA, anti-CD3, tetanus toxoid and dengue antigens were significantly decreased in PBMC obtained during the acute infection. The proliferative responses to PHA were restored by the addition of gamma-irradiated autologous immune or allogeneic PBMC. Cell contact with the irradiated PBMC was necessary to restore proliferation. Non-T cells from the acute PBMC of dengue patients did not support proliferation of T cells from control donors in response to PHA, but T cells from the PBMC of patients with acute dengue proliferated if accessory cells from a control donor were present. Addition of anti-CD28 antibodies restored anti-CD3-induced proliferation of the PBMC of some patients. The percentage of monocytes was reduced in the acute sample of PBMC of the dengue patients. Addition of IL-2 or IL-7, but not IL-4 or IL-12 also restored proliferation of acute PBMC stimulated with anti-CD3. The results demonstrate that both quantitative and qualitative defects in the accessory cell population during acute dengue illness result in a depression of in vitro T cell proliferation. The data generated from this project shed light on the nature of the immune responses during acute natural dengue infections. It strengthens the existing data on the human memory CD8+CTL responses to dengue viruses and validates the observations by examining memory CTL responses after natural dengue infection in patients from Thailand. In addition, we demonstrate a profound defect in lymphoproliferative responses during dengue illness.
35

Uso de detectores de dimensões variáveis aplicados na detecção de anomalias através de sistemas imunológicos artificiais. / Use of varying lengths implemented in detecting anomalies by artificial immunological detection systems.

Daniel dos Santos Morim 15 July 2009 (has links)
O presente trabalho investiga um método de detecção de anomalias baseado em sistemas imunológicos artificiais, especificamente em uma técnica de reconhecimento próprio/não-próprio chamada algoritmo de seleção negativa (NSA). Foi utilizado um esquema de representação baseado em hiperesferas com centros e raios variáveis e um modelo capaz de gerar detectores, com esta representação, de forma eficiente. Tal modelo utiliza algoritmos genéticos onde cada gene do cromossomo contém um índice para um ponto de uma distribuição quasi-aleatória que servirá como centro do detector e uma função decodificadora responsável por determinar os raios apropriados. A aptidão do cromossomo é dada por uma estimativa do volume coberto através uma integral de Monte Carlo. Este algoritmo teve seu desempenho verificado em diferentes dimensões e suas limitações levantadas. Com isso, pode-se focar as melhorias no algoritmo, feitas através da implementação de operadores genéticos mais adequados para a representação utilizada, de técnicas de redução do número de pontos do conjunto próprio e de um método de pré-processamento baseado em bitmaps de séries temporais. Avaliações com dados sintéticos e experimentos com dados reais demonstram o bom desempenho do algoritmo proposto e a diminuição do tempo de execução. / This work investigates a novel detection method based on Artificial Immune Systems, specifically on a self/non-self recognition technique called negative selection algorithm (NSA). A representation scheme based on hyperspheres with variable center and radius and a model that is able to generate detectors, based on that representation scheme, have been used. This model employs Genetic Algorithms where each chromosome gene represents an index to a point in a quasi-random distribution, which serves as a detector center, and a decoder function that determines the appropriate radius. The chromosome fitness is given by an estimation of the covered volume, which is calculated through a Monte Carlo integral. This algorithm had its performance evaluated for different dimensions, and more suitable genetic operators for the used representation, techniques of reducing self-points number and a preprocessing method based on bitmap time series have been therefore implemented. Evaluations with synthetic data and experiments with real data demonstrate the performance of the proposed algorithm and the decrease in execution time.
36

Cytotoxic Lymphocytes in Viral Hepatitis: a Thesis

McIntyre, Kim W. 01 April 1987 (has links)
The immunological mechanisms involved in virus-induced hepatitis were examined by measuring the cytotoxic capabilities and the morphological and antigenic phenotypes of leukocytes isolated from the livers of virus-infected mice. Large granular lymphocytes (LGL) of both natural killer (NK) cell and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) phenoytpes [phenotypes] accumulated in livers of mice infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) of either the nonhepatotropic Armstrong strain (LCMV-ARM) or the hepatotropic WE strain (LCMV-WE). NK cell activity and LGL number increased 3- to 4-fold between days 1 and 5 postinfection (p.i.). These LGL were characterized as NK cells on the basis of cell surface antigens, kinetics of appearance, target cell range, and morphology. By day 7 p.i., virus-specific, H-2-restricted, Thy-1+, Lyt-2+CTL activity was present in the liver, and its appearance correlated with a second wave of LGL accumulation. Total CTL activity, leukocyte numbers, and CTL/LGL numbers were at least 5-fold higher in the livers of LCMV-WE-infected mice than in the livers of LCMV-ARM-infected mice. Mice infected with the cytopathic viruses, mouse hepatitis virus and murine cytomegalovirus, experienced greater increases in NK/LGL by day 3 p.i. than did mice either infected with LCMV or injected with poly I:C. The early and late accumulations of LGL in the virus-infected liver were associated with the appearance of two waves of LGL with blast cell morphology expressing the phenotypes of NK cells and CTL, respectively. Thus, the organ-associated accumulation, blastogenesis, and in situ proliferation of cytotoxic LGL provide a means for the localization and site-specific augmentation of a host's cell-mediated antiviral defenses. The mechanism of inhibition of virus synthesis in vivo by immune splenocytes containing virus-specific CTL was examined in mice dually infected with two different viruses and then adoptively immunized with spleen cells immune to one of the two viruses. Only the titer of the virus to which the splenocytes were immune was reduced in titer, and no nonspecific antiviral effect was seen on the titer of the 'bystander' heterologous virus. These data are consistent with an in vivo mechanism of CTL-mediated antiviral resistance involving direct cytotoxicity rather than release and dissemination of antigen-nonspecific antiviral factors, such as interferon, following recognition of appropriate viral antigen.
37

Algoritmos bio-inspirados aplicados a otimização dinamica / Bio-inspired algorithms applied to dynamic optimization

França, Fabricio Olivetti de 12 January 2005 (has links)
Orientadores: Fernando Jose Von Zuben, Leandro Nunes de Castro / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Eletrica e de Computação / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-14T19:14:33Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Franca_FabricioOlivettide_M.pdf: 2824607 bytes, checksum: 3de6277fbb2c8c3460d62b4d81d14f73 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2005 / Resumo: Esta dissertação propõe algoritmos bio-inspirados para a solução de problemas de otimização dinâmica, ou seja, problemas em que a superfície de otimização no espaço de busca sofre variações diversas ao longo do tempo. Com a variação, no tempo, de número, posição e qualidade dos ótimos locais, as técnicas de programação matemática tendem a apresentar uma acentuada degradação de desempenho, pois geralmente foram concebidas para tratar do caso estático. Algoritmos populacionais, controle dinâmico do número de indivíduos na população, estratégias de busca local e uso eficaz de memória são requisitos desejados para o sucesso da otimização dinâmica, sendo contemplados nas propostas de solução implementadas nesta dissertação. Os algoritmos a serem apresentados e comparados com alternativas competitivas presentes na literatura são baseados em funcionalidades e estruturas de processamento de sistemas imunológicos e de colônias de formigas. Pelo fato de considerarem todos os requisitos para uma busca eficaz em ambientes dinâmicos, o desempenho dos algoritmos imuno-inspirados se mostrou superior em todos os critérios considerados para comparação dos resultados dos experimentos. / Abstract: This dissertation proposes bio-inspired algorithms to solve dynamic optimization problems, i.e., problems for which the optimization surface on the search space suffers several changes over time. With such variation of number, position and quality of local optima, mathematical programming techniques may present degradation of performance, because they were usually conceived to deal with static problems. Population-based algorithms, dynamic control of the population size, local search strategies and an efficient memory usage are desirable requirements to a proper treatment of dynamic optimization problems, thus being incorporated into the solution strategies implemented here. The algorithms to be presented, and compared with competitive alternatives available in the literature, are based on functionalities and processing structures of immune systems and ant colonies. Due to the capability of incorporating all the requirements for an efficient search on dynamic environments, the immune-inspired approaches overcome the others in all the performance criteria adopted to evaluate the experimental results. / Mestrado / Engenharia de Computação / Mestre em Engenharia Elétrica
38

Algoritmo de detecção de falhas para sistemas telefonicos utilizando a teoria do perigo / Fault detection algorithm for telephone systems using the danger theory

Pinto, Jose Carlos Lima 27 September 2006 (has links)
Orientador: Fernando Jose Von Zuben / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Eletrica e de Computação / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-11T02:37:26Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Pinto_JoseCarlosLima_M.pdf: 2121571 bytes, checksum: 9c655f127eb2b45c71b750509a43c3a1 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 / Resumo: Essa dissertação apresenta um algoritmo de detecção de falhas composto de múltiplos módulos interconectados e operando de acordo com o paradigma suportado pela Teoria do Perigo em imunologia. Esse algoritmo busca atingir características significativas que um sistema de detecção de falhas deve expressar ao monitorar um sistema telefônico. Essas características seriam basicamente a adaptabilidade, devido à forte variação que esse sistema pode ter em seus parâmetros ao longo do tempo, e a diminuição no número de falsos positivos que podem ser gerados ao se classificar como falha toda anormalidade encontrada. Cenários simulados foram concebidos para validar a proposta, sendo que os resultados obtidos foram analisados e comparados com propostas alternativas / Abstract: Abstract This thesis presents a fault detection algorithm composed of multiple interconnected modules, and operating according to the paradigm supported by the Danger Theory in immunology. This algorithm attempts to achieve significant features that a fault detection system is supposed to express when monitoring a telephone system. These features would basically be adaptability, due to the strong variation that operational conditions may exhibit over time, and the decrease in the number of false positives, which can be generated when any abnormal behavior is erroneously classified as being a fault. Simulated scenarios have been conceived to validate the proposal, and the obtained results are then analyzed and compared with alternative proposals / Mestrado / Engenharia de Computação / Mestre em Engenharia Elétrica
39

Sistema imunologico artificial para otimização multiobjetivo / Artificial immune system for multiobjetive optimization

Rampazzo, Priscila Cristina Berbert, 1984- 03 October 2008 (has links)
Orientador: Akebo Yamakami / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Eletrica e de Computação / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-11T03:11:24Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Rampazzo_PriscilaCristinaBerbert_M.pdf: 1295026 bytes, checksum: ad0738bc161445ec5b9f0db0db565f09 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008 / Resumo: O objetivo desta dissertação é explorar a utilização de um Sistema Imunológico Artificial, baseado no princípio de Seleção Clonal, na resolução de problemas de Otimização Multiobjetivo. Os Sistemas Imunológicos Artificiais apresentam, em sua estrutura elementar, as principais características requeridas para a resolução de problemas de Otimização Multiobjetivo: exploração, explotação, paralelismo, elitismo, memória, diversidade, mutação e clonagem proporcionais à afinidade e população dinâmica. A abordagem proposta utiliza o conceito de Pareto dominância e factibilidade para identificar os anticorpos (soluções) que devem ser clonados. Nos experimentos, foram consideradas algumas situações importantes que podem aparecer nos problemas reais: presença de restrições (lineares e não-lineares) e formato da Fronteira de Pareto (convexa, côncava, contínua, descontínua, discreta, não-uniforme). Na maioria dos problemas, o algoritmo obteve resultados bons e competitivos quando comparados com as propostas da literatura. Palavras-chave: Otimização Multiobjetivo, Algoritmos Bio-inspirados, Sistemas Imunológicos Artificiais, Seleção Clonal / Abstract: The aim of this work is to explore an Artificial Immune System, based on the Clonal Selection principle, in the solution of Multiobjective Optimization problems. Artificial Immune Systems have, in their elementary structure, the main characteristics required to solve Multiobjective Optimization problems: exploration, exploitation, paralelism, elitism, memory, diversity, mutation and proliferation proportional to the affinity, and dynamic repertorie. The proposed algorithm uses the Pareto dominance concept and feasibility to identify the antibodies (solutions) that must to be cloned. In the experiments, some important situations that occurs in real problems were considered: the presence of constraints (linear and non-linear) and Pareto Front format (convex, concave, continuous, discontinuous, discrete, non-uniforme). In the major part of the problems, the algorithm obtains good and competitive results when compared with approaches from the literature. Keywords: Multiobjective Optimization, Bio-inspired Algorithms, Artificial Immune Systems, Clonal Selection / Mestrado / Telecomunicações e Telemática / Mestre em Engenharia Elétrica
40

The Function of Innate γδ T Cell Subsets is Molecularly Programmed in the Thymus in Three Stages: A Dissertation

Narayan, Kavitha 11 March 2011 (has links)
The immune system generates discrete lineages of cells that are designed to respond optimally to environmental cues and infectious agents. Two distinct lineages of T cells, distinguished by expression of either an αβ or γδ T cell receptor (TCR), arise from a common progenitor in the thymus. The type of pathogen and the cytokine milieu directs effector differentiation of αβ T cells in the periphery through the induction of specific transcriptional networks. γδ T cell development is distinct from that of αβ T cells in its ordered rearrangement of TCR genes and the pairing of Vγ and Vδ chains to generate γδ T cell subsets that home to specific tissues. Unlike conventional αβ T cells, γδ T cells express a preactivated or memory phenotype prior to pathogen encounter, and recent evidence indicates that effector functions may be programmed during thymic development. To better understand the development and function of γδ T cells, we analyzed the gene expression profiles of subsets of γδ T cells segregated by TCR repertoire and maturation state in the thymus. We also determined the impact of TCR signaling and trans-conditioning on γδ T cell subset-specific gene signatures by analysis of Itk-/- and Tcrb-/- γδ T cell subsets. Our analysis has defined three stages of γδ T cell subset-specific differentiation, and indicates that γδ T cells may consist of at least two separate lineages, distinguished by the expression of a Vγ2 or Vγ1.1 TCR, that arise from different precursors during thymic development. Key transcriptional networks are established in immature γδ T cells during the first phase of development, independent of TCR signaling and trans-conditioning, with Vγ2+ cells expressing modulators of WNT signaling, and Vγ1.1+ cells expressing high levels of inhibitor of DNA binding 3 (ID3), which regulates E2A/HEB proteins. The second stage involves the further specification of the Vγ2+ subset specific gene signature, which is dependent upon ITK-mediated signals. In the third stage, terminal maturation of γδ T cell subsets occurs, dependent on both TCR and trans-conditioning signals. The expression patterns of Vγ1.1+ subsets that differ in Vδ usage diverge, and all subsets further elaborate and reinforce their effector programming by the distinct expression of chemokine and cytokine receptors. Alteration of WNT signaling or E2A/HEB activity results in subset specific defects in effector programming, indicating that the transcriptional networks established at the immature stage are crucial for the functional maturation of γδ T cells. These data provide a new picture of γδ T cell development, regulated by multiple checkpoints that shape the acquisition of subset-specific molecular signatures and effector functions.

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