Architecture

Gene Mapping Reveals Architecture That Controls Expression of …

May 18th, 2012

Now, an international team led by RIKEN researchers has mapped the genomic architecture of the odorant receptor repertoire in mice, revealing the start points and promoter regions involved in controlling the expression of the vast majority of these genes. “Our study shows that these promoter sequences are strikingly similar between all the olfactory receptors,” says Charles Plessy of the RIKEN Omics Science Center in Yokohama, who led the study.

To chart all the promoters, Plessy and colleagues first had to devise an appropriate technique. Plessy’s collaborator, Piero Carninci also from the RIKEN Omics Science Center, had previously developed a method called cap-analysis gene expression (CAGE) that determines the location of transcription start sites across the whole genome. But CAGE requires large quantities of RNA, which are not always obtainable from particular types of tissues, including the olfactory epithelium. The researchers therefore modified CAGE to nanoCAGE, which requires as little as 10 nanograms of RNA of biological material per sample.

Both CAGE and nanoCAGE work by taking all the messenger RNA transcripts in a given sample, converting them into DNA tags and then comparing the output against a reference genome to find all the transcription start sites. The investigators can then decipher the conserved DNA regulatory sequences in the immediate vicinity of the starting points that form the core promoters.

Using this approach on the minute quantities of RNA found in the olfactory epithelium of mice, Plessy’s team plotted the promoters of almost 90% of the mouse olfactory receptor genes, as well as the expression of many non-coding regulatory RNAs (Fig. 1). Further bioinformatic analysis of the DNA surrounding the mapped promoters revealed a number of candidate transcription factor binding sites that help control gene expression, some of which the researchers also validated in mouse experiments.

Plessy and colleagues are now adapting the CAGE technique for even smaller biological samples: single cells. “Such a method would have wide applications in biology and medicine, and, of course, in the biology of olfactory receptors,” says Plessy. “With a single-cell technology we will have the potential to make a significant contribution to the field.”

More information: Plessy, C., et al. Promoter architecture of mouse olfactory receptor genes. Genome Research advance online publication, 22 December 2011 (doi: 10.1101/gr.126201.111).

Shiraki, T., et al. Cap analysis gene expression for high-throughput analysis of transcriptional starting point and identification of promoter usage. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 100, 15776–15781 (2003).

Plessy, C., et al. Linking promoters to functional transcripts in small samples with nanoCAGE and CAGEscan. Nature Methods 7, 528–534 (2010).

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Genome Research
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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New Whitepaper: NVIDIA's Next-Gen CUDA Compute Architecture …

May 18th, 2012

If you still looking for more details on the new Kepler GPUs, Nvidia has stepped up with a new GK110 Architecture whitepaper for you.

Comprising 7.1 billion transistors, Kepler GK110 is not only the fastest, but also the most architecturally complex microprocessor ever built. Adding many new innovative features focused on compute performance, GK110 was designed to be a parallel processing powerhouse for Tesla and the HPC market. Kepler GK110 will provide over 1 TFlop of double precision throughput with greater than 80% DGEMM efficiency versus 60‐65% on the prior Fermi architecture. In addition to greatly improved performance, the Kepler architecture offers a huge leap forward in power efficiency, delivering up to 3x the performance per watt of Fermi.  

Is the news all good? Blogger Paul Caheny writes that the K10 in particular continues a disturbing downward trend on memory capacity per FLOPs.

A couple of high level observations on how this fits into general HPC architecture trends. Firstly the ratio of memory capacity and memory bandwidth to compute is likely to continue to decrease, signifying the increasing necessity to make use of strong scaling in applications rather than the previously rich seam of weak scaling. K10 represents a more than 60% fall in Bytes/FLOPs (memory capacity per FLOPs) compared to M2090 and a reduction of 50% in Bytes/sec/FLOPs (memory bandwidth per FLOPs) compared to M2090 (both using SP FLOPs as per K10′s target market). It will be interesting to see what the corresponding numbers are for the upcoming K20.

Download the whitepaper (PDF).

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NVidia Kepler GK110 Architecture Whitepaper | VizWorld.com

May 18th, 2012

If you're interested in the new Kepler GK110 processor from NVidia, then definitely check out this new architecture whitepaper they've released. Comprising.

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Our Daily Challenge Architecture: Diffusion Style | Flickr – Photo …

May 13th, 2012

Our Daily Challenge Architecture: Diffusion Style. (19136) · Quick Backyard Walk: Neighbours Yard Over The Fence · Diffused Flower · Our Daily Challenge Architecture: Diffusion Style · New 8 Star Filter For Mother's Day

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Is Modern Architecture a Disaster for Japan? (And How Can …

May 13th, 2012


AJ your way: headlines | front page | classic | previous days | rss

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Our Daily Challenge – Architecture | Flickr – Photo Sharing!

May 13th, 2012

Awesome John. ★. reintjedevos [catch-up soon] added this photo to her favorites. (4 hours ago). reintjedevos [catch-up soon] (4 hours ago | reply). This is so beautiful… (Hope you don't mind me saying – I am a big fan of yours.

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Green Architecture in Islam

May 8th, 2012

From luxury architecture in Mecca to the blinged-out buildings of Dubai, it seems that Islamic architecture is all about opulence and grandeur.

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World Architecture Festival 2012 | ArchDaily

May 8th, 2012

Now in its fourth year, the World Architecture Festival moves from Spain to Singapore (October 3rd-5th). And for this year, we are happy to announce ArchDaily as a media partner, and as part of the jury!

The architecturally intense event includes the awards and a festival gallery, with more than 700 entries from around the world in 30 categories, accompanied by live presentations from the finalists, a seminar and keynotes with renowned international architects. In these, and other activities (full summary), you will be able to exchange ideas with over 2000 architects representing more than 65 countries, broaden your horizons and your contacts book.

Learn more about the conference rates, and details on how to submit your projects.

More details about the WAF after the break.

The WAF

is the world’s largest, live, truly inclusive and interactive global architectural awards programme. It is a unique meeting point for architects, suppliers and clients, attracting hundreds of entries and visitors from all over the world.

WAF has nearly 30 diverse categories including completed buildings, landscapes, future and small projects.

Details about submissions for the awards can be found here.

See past winners here.

Festival gallery

Experience the breadth of international architectural excellence in the Gallery, 700+ entries from 59 countries.

Live presentations

Be inspired by the world’s greatest architects, every shortlisted architect, in 2011 there were over 400, will present their award entry in front of their peers and the international judging panel.

Thematic exhibition

A curated exhibition showcasing some of the most exciting new projects from around the world.

Seminar and keynote programme

Be inspired by some of the most influential and innovative voices practicing today. 2011’s speakers included David van der Leer, Assistant Curator, Architecture and Urban Studies, BMW Guggenheim Lab; David Mackay, Partner, MBM Arquitectes; Vincent Guallart, Chief Architect and Director of Urban Habitat, Barcelona City Council; Benedetta Tagliabue, Founding Principal, EMBT; James Timberlake, Principal, KieranTimberlake and Tim Duggan, Architect and Community Planner, Make it Right Foundation.

Focussed sector and city forums

Be briefed on all you need to know on the sectors and cities you work or want to work in, while making connections with potential partners and clients.

Festival hall

Enables architects and clients to engage face to face with leading suppliers and manufacturers from around the world.

Product showcases

Experience the latest in product innovation to inform your future projects.

Opening night reception

Network with the WAF community – architects, clients, judges, sponsors and the world’s media all within the festival hall, celebrating the start of WAF.

WAF fringe

Site visits, parties, receptions and dinners enable you to make contacts, exchange, learn and get ahead at WAF.

Architects

Over 1400 of them! Meet, share, collaborate, make friends and stay in touch using our online portals – Festival Connect, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.

Media partners

From over 60 countries, meet the leading critics, documenters and list makers of the international industry.

Awards ceremony

The Festival comes together and culminates with a prestigious awards ceremony celebrating the winners of each category, the student competition and overall awards.

World Buildings Directory

www.worldbuildingsdirectory.com is fast becoming the largest library of international projects – every single entry to the WAF Awards is kept online for future reference.

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New York History: Ulster County Architecture Focus of May 14th Event

May 8th, 2012

Monday, May 14th the Gardiner Historical Society will host their annual meeting with the Historical Society of Shawangunk and Gardiner at 7 pm at the Gardiner Town Hall. The event is open to the public and is free of charge, refreshments will be served.

Author William B. Rhoads will share his book Ulster County, New York, The
Architectural History & Guide, A Historical guide to 325 sites in
all 20 Ulster County townships and the city of Kingston.
The sites explored in the book show the variety and changing architectural styles that have appeared over nearly 300 years in the Hudson River Valley and Catskill Mountains, from 17th century Dutch limestone houses of the colonial era, through the Federal and Victorian periods, up to the Modernist architecture of the mid-1950’s.

The architecture reflects the history, tracing the evolution of one of the first regions in today’s New York State to be settled by Europeans. Dutch and French Huguenot villages and homesteads of the 1600s form the core of today’s Kingston, New Paltz, and Hurley, surrounded by the structures built by their descendants and later immigrants – the English, Irish, Italians and scores of other ethnic and national groups – as Ulster county rose from the American Revolution and became an important commercial center, with bustling ports on the Hudson River, the booming 19th century “Empire State’s” first superhighway. Everywhere one looks in Ulster County there are vestiges of the past – abandoned cement mines, locks of the old D&H Canal, idle railroad depots, the ghostly shell of a grand old hotel that never opened to the public. And there is the “living history” as well, the structures built by previous generations that are still vital today, like the Mohonk Mountain House and the hundreds of other historic buildings representing nearly every American architectural style from 1660 to 1950 that remain private homes, libraries, schools, houses of worship or have been converted into museums.

William B. Rhoads is a professor emeritus of art history at SUNY New Paltz, where he taught from 1970 to 2005. His publications include studies of Colonial Revival architecture and Franklin Roosevelt’s sponsorship of architecture and art. Rhoads’s Kingston, New York: The Architectural History & Guide was published by Black Dome Press in 2003.

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Desert Utopia: Mid Century Architecture in Palm Springs — Must …

May 3rd, 2012

Desert Utopia: Mid-Century Architecture in Palm Springs is a 58-minute long film which traces the history of modern architecture in Palm Springs from the first bold forays into modernist design to the preservation challenges facing the region today. Director Jake Gorst’s film features rare archival images and footage as well as interviews with historians, homeowners, and the architects who helped create this mecca of modernism. Check out this DVD today.

Related posts:

  1. Local Politics in Palm Springs Means Home Tours for You and Me – October 2011
  2. Modernism Week in Palm Springs 2012 — Don’t Miss Out On the Sunshine & MCM Fun!
  3. Palm Springs Modernism Week Begins – 2011

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