1,065 research outputs found
Beraber (Linguistique)
La population berbérophone du Maroc se trouve essentiellement dans les zones montagneuses qui ont servi de refuge. Elle se partage en deux blocs : le bloc rifain au nord et le bloc formé par les Berabers et les Chleuhs du Maroc central et méridional. De ce fait le domaine des Berabers englobe le Moyen Atlas, les parties centrale et orientale du Haut-Atlas et le Djebel Sagho et ses environs. Les dialectes des Berabers sont désignés par les Berbères eux-mêmes sous le terme de tamaziγt. Les diff..
Beraber (Linguistique)
La population berbérophone du Maroc se trouve essentiellement dans les zones montagneuses qui ont servi de refuge. Elle se partage en deux blocs : le bloc rifain au nord et le bloc formé par les Berabers et les Chleuhs du Maroc central et méridional. De ce fait le domaine des Berabers englobe le Moyen Atlas, les parties centrale et orientale du Haut-Atlas et le Djebel Sagho et ses environs. Les dialectes des Berabers sont désignés par les Berbères eux-mêmes sous le terme de tamaziγt. Les diff..
Acidic microenvironment plays a key role in human melanoma progression through a sustained exosome mediated transfer of clinically relevant metastatic molecules
Background: Microenvironment cues involved in melanoma progression are largely unknown. Melanoma is highly influenced in its aggressive phenotype by the changes it determinates in its microenvironment, such as pH decrease, in turn influencing cancer cell invasiveness, progression and tissue remodelling through an abundant secretion of exosomes, dictating cancer strategy to the whole host. A role of exosomes in driving melanoma progression under microenvironmental acidity was never described. Methods: We studied four differently staged human melanoma lines, reflecting melanoma progression, under microenvironmental acidic pHs pressure ranging between pH 6.0-6.7. To estimate exosome secretion as a function of tumor stage and environmental pH, we applied a technique to generate native fluorescent exosomes characterized by vesicles integrity, size, density, markers expression, and quantifiable by direct FACS analysis. Functional roles of exosomes were tested in migration and invasion tests. Then we performed a comparative proteomic analysis of acid versus control exosomes to elucidate a specific signature involved in melanoma progression. Results: We found that metastatic melanoma secretes a higher exosome amount than primary melanoma, and that acidic pH increases exosome secretion when melanoma is in an intermediate stage, i.e. metastatic non-invasive. We were thus able to show that acidic pH influences the intercellular cross-talk mediated by exosomes. In fact when exposed to exosomes produced in an acidic medium, pH naïve melanoma cells acquire migratory and invasive capacities likely due to transfer of metastatic exosomal proteins, favoring cell motility and angiogenesis. A Prognoscan-based meta-analysis study of proteins enriched in acidic exosomes, identified 11 genes (HRAS, GANAB, CFL2, HSP90B1, HSP90AB1, GSN, HSPA1L, NRAS, HSPA5, TIMP3, HYOU1), significantly correlating with poor prognosis, whose high expression was in part confirmed in bioptic samples of lymph node metastases. Conclusions: A crucial step of melanoma progression does occur at melanoma intermediate -stage, when extracellular acidic pH induces an abundant release and intra-tumoral uptake of exosomes. Such exosomes are endowed with pro-invasive molecules of clinical relevance, which may provide a signature of melanoma advancement
Применение информационных технологий и этические нюансы в управлении массовым сознанием
This paper discusses the current value of information technology in our lives, as well as their application to control the mass consciousness
Two-color soliton meta-atoms and molecules
We present a detailed overview of the physics of two-color soliton molecules
in nonlinear waveguides, i.e. bound states of localized optical pulses which
are held together due to an incoherent interaction mechanism. The mutual
confinement, or trapping, of the subpulses, which leads to a stable propagation
of the pulse compound, is enabled by the nonlinear Kerr effect. Special
attention is paid to the description of the binding mechanism in terms of
attractive potential wells, induced by the refractive index changes of the
subpulses, exerted on one another through cross-phase modulation. Specifically,
we discuss nonlinear-photonics meta atoms, given by pulse compounds consisting
of a strong trapping pulse and a weak trapped pulse, for which trapped states
of low intensity are determined by a Schr\"odinger-type eigenproblem. We
discuss the rich dynamical behavior of such meta-atoms, demonstrating that an
increase of the group-velocity mismatch of both subpulses leads to an
ionization-like trapping-to-escape transition. We further demonstrate that if
both constituent pulses are of similar amplitude, molecule-like bound-states
are formed. We show that z-periodic amplitude variations permit a coupling of
these pulse compound to dispersive waves, resulting in the resonant emission of
Kushi-comb-like multi-frequency radiation
Crossover from two-frequency pulse compounds to escaping solitons
The nonlinear interaction of copropagating optical solitons enables a large variety of intriguing bound-states of light. We here investigate the interaction dynamics of two initially superimposed fundamental solitons at distinctly different frequencies. Both pulses are located in distinct domains of anomalous dispersion, separated by an interjacent domain of normal dispersion, so that group velocity matching can be achieved despite a vast frequency gap. We demonstrate the existence of two regions with different dynamical behavior. For small velocity mismatch we observe a domain in which a single heteronuclear pulse compound is formed, which is distinct from the usual concept of soliton molecules. The binding mechanism is realized by the mutual cross phase modulation of the interacting pulses. For large velocity mismatch both pulses escape their mutual binding and move away from each other. The crossover phase between these two cases exhibits two localized states with different velocity, consisting of a strong trapping pulse and weak trapped pulse. We detail a simplified theoretical approach which accurately estimates the parameter range in which compound states are formed. This trapping-to-escape transition allows to study the limits of pulse-bonding as a fundamental phenomenon in nonlinear optics, opening up new perspectives for the all-optical manipulation of light by light
(Invited) Two-color soliton meta-atoms and molecules
We present a detailed overview of the physics of two-color soliton molecules in nonlinear waveguides, i.e. bound states of localized optical pulses which are held together due to an incoherent interaction mechanism. The mutual confinement, or trapping, of the subpulses, which leads to a stable propagation of the pulse compound, is enabled by the nonlinear Kerr effect. Special attention is paid to the description of the binding mechanism in terms of attractive potential wells, induced by the refractive index changes of the subpulses, exerted on one another through cross-phase modulation. Specifically, we discuss nonlinear-photonics meta atoms, given by pulse compounds consisting of a strong trapping pulse and a weak trapped pulse, for which trapped states of low intensity are determined by a Schrödinger-type eigenproblem. We discuss the rich dynamical behavior of such meta-atoms, demonstrating that an increase of the group-velocity mismatch of both subpulses leads to an ionization-like trapping-to-escape transition. We further demonstrate that if both constituent pulses are of similar amplitude, molecule-like bound-states are formed. We show that -periodic amplitude variations permit a coupling of these pulse compound to dispersive waves, resulting in the resonant emission of Kushi-comb-like multi-frequency radiation
Effect of Test Weight on the Feed Value of Corn to Feedlot Lambs
The objective of this trial was to evaluate the feeding value of corn with differing test weight in a growth study with lambs fed a finishing diet ab libitum
Resonant Kushi-comb-like multi-frequency radiation of oscillating two-color soliton molecules
Nonlinear waveguides with two distinct domains of anomalous dispersion can support the formation of molecule-like two-color pulse compounds. They consist of two tightly bound subpulses with frequency loci separated by a vast frequency gap. Perturbing such a two-color pulse compound triggers periodic amplitude and width variations, reminiscent of molecular vibrations. With increasing strength of perturbation, the dynamics of the pulse compound changes from harmonic to nonlinear oscillations. The periodic amplitude variations enable coupling of the pulse compound to dispersive waves, resulting in the resonant emission of multi-frequency radiation. We demonstrate that the location of the resonances can be precisely predicted by phase-matching conditions. If the pulse compound consists of a pair of identical subpulses, inherent symmetries lead to degeneracies in the resonance spectrum. Weak perturbations lift existing degeneracies and cause a splitting of the resonance lines into multiple lines. Strong perturbations result in more complex emission spectra, characterized by well separated spectral bands caused by resonant Cherenkov radiation and additional four-wave mixing processes
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