925 research outputs found
Enhancement of the immunoregulatory potency of mesenchymal stromal cells by treatment with immunosuppressive drugs
Background aims Multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are distinguished by their ability to differentiate into a number of stromal derivatives of interest for regenerative medicine, but they also have immunoregulatory properties that are being tested in a number of clinical settings. Methods We show that brief incubations with rapamycin, everolimus, FK506 or cyclosporine A increase the immunosuppressive potency of MSCs and other cell types. Results The treated MSCs are up to 5-fold more potent at inhibiting the induced proliferation of T lymphocytes in vitro. We show that this effect probably is due to adsorption of the drug by the MSCs during pre-treatment, with subsequent diffusion into co-cultures at concentrations sufficient to inhibit T-cell proliferation. MSCs contain measurable amounts of rapamycin after a 15-min exposure, and the potentiating effect is blocked by a neutralizing antibody to the drug. With the use of a pre-clinical model of acute graft-versus-host disease, we demonstrate that a low dose of rapamycin-treated but not untreated umbilical cord–derived MSCs significantly inhibit the onset of disease. Conclusions The use of treated MSCs may achieve clinical end points not reached with untreated MSCs and allow for infusion of fewer cells to reduce costs and minimize potential side effects
On vacuum gravitational collapse in nine dimensions
We consider the vacuum gravitational collapse for cohomogeneity-two solutions
of the nine dimensional Einstein equations. Using combined numerical and
analytical methods we give evidence that within this model the
Schwarzschild-Tangherlini black hole is asymptotically stable. In addition, we
briefly discuss the critical behavior at the threshold of black hole formation.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Quasinormal Modes, the Area Spectrum, and Black Hole Entropy
The results of canonical quantum gravity concerning geometric operators and
black hole entropy are beset by an ambiguity labelled by the Immirzi parameter.
We use a result from classical gravity concerning the quasinormal mode spectrum
of a black hole to fix this parameter in a new way. As a result we arrive at
the Bekenstein - Hawking expression of for the entropy of a black
hole and in addition see an indication that the appropriate gauge group of
quantum gravity is SO(3) and not its covering group SU(2).Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Stability of bicontinuous cubic phases in ternary amphiphilic systems with spontaneous curvature
We study the phase behavior of ternary amphiphilic systems in the framework
of a curvature model with non-vanishing spontaneous curvature. The amphiphilic
monolayers can arrange in different ways to form micellar, hexagonal, lamellar
and various bicontinuous cubic phases. For the latter case we consider both
single structures (one monolayer) and double structures (two monolayers). Their
interfaces are modeled by the triply periodic surfaces of constant mean
curvature of the families G, D, P, C(P), I-WP and F-RD. The stability of the
different bicontinuous cubic phases can be explained by the way in which their
universal geometrical properties conspire with the concentration constraints.
For vanishing saddle-splay modulus , almost every phase considered
has some region of stability in the Gibbs triangle. Although bicontinuous cubic
phases are suppressed by sufficiently negative values of the saddle-splay
modulus , we find that they can exist for considerably lower
values than obtained previously. The most stable bicontinuous cubic phases with
decreasing are the single and double gyroid structures since
they combine favorable topological properties with extreme volume fractions.Comment: Revtex, 23 pages with 10 Postscript files included, to appear in J.
Chem. Phys. 112 (6) (February 2000
Single polymer dynamics in elongational flow and the confluent Heun equation
We investigate the non-equilibrium dynamics of an isolated polymer in a
stationary elongational flow. We compute the relaxation time to the
steady-state configuration as a function of the Weissenberg number. A strong
increase of the relaxation time is found around the coil-stretch transition,
which is attributed to the large number of polymer configurations. The
relaxation dynamics of the polymer is solved analytically in terms of a central
two-point connection problem for the singly confluent Heun equation.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Unconventional Gravitational Excitation of a Schwarzschild Black Hole
Besides the well-known quasinormal modes, the gravitational spectrum of a
Schwarzschild black hole also has a continuum part on the negative imaginary
frequency axis. The latter is studied numerically for quadrupole waves. The
results show unexpected striking behavior near the algebraically special
frequency . This reveals a pair of unconventional damped modes very
near , confirmed analytically.Comment: REVTeX4, 4pp, 6 EPS figure files. N.B.: "Alec" is my first, and
"Maassen van den Brink" my family name. v2: better pole placement in Fig. 1.
v3: fixed Refs. [9,20]. v4: added context on "area quantum" research; trimmed
one Fig.; textual clarification
A note on quasinormal modes: A tale of two treatments
There is an apparent discrepancy in the literature with regard to the
quasinormal mode frequencies of Schwarzschild-de Sitter black holes in the
degenerate-horizon limit. On the one hand, a Poschl-Teller-inspired method
predicts that the real part of the frequencies will depend strongly on the
orbital angular momentum of the perturbation field whereas, on the other hand,
the degenerate limit of a monodromy-based calculation suggests there should be
no such dependence (at least, for the highly damped modes). In the current
paper, we provide a possible resolution by critically re-assessing the limiting
procedure used in the monodromy analysis.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex format; (v2) new addendum in response to reader
comments, also references, footnote and acknowledgments adde
Semi-analytic results for quasi-normal frequencies
The last decade has seen considerable interest in the quasi-normal
frequencies [QNFs] of black holes (and even wormholes), both asymptotically
flat and with cosmological horizons. There is wide agreement that the QNFs are
often of the form omega_n = (offset) + i n (gap), though some authors have
encountered situations where this behaviour seems to fail. To get a better
understanding of the general situation we consider a semi-analytic model based
on a piecewise Eckart (Poeschl-Teller) potential, allowing for different
heights and different rates of exponential falloff in the two asymptotic
directions. This model is sufficiently general to capture and display key
features of the black hole QNFs while simultaneously being analytically
tractable, at least for asymptotically large imaginary parts of the QNFs. We
shall derive an appropriate "quantization condition" for the asymptotic QNFs,
and extract as much analytic information as possible. In particular, we shall
explicitly verify that the (offset)+ i n (gap) behaviour is common but not
universal, with this behaviour failing unless the ratio of rates of exponential
falloff on the two sides of the potential is a rational number. (This is
"common but not universal" in the sense that the rational numbers are dense in
the reals.) We argue that this behaviour is likely to persist for black holes
with cosmological horizons.Comment: V1: 28 pages, no figures. V2: 3 references added, no physics changes.
V3: 29 pages, 9 references added, no physics changes; V4: reformatted, now 27
pages. Some clarifications, comparison with results obtained by monodromy
techniques. This version accepted for publication in JHEP. V5: Minor typos
fixed. Compatible with published versio
Quasinormal modes of a black hole surrounded by quintessence
Using the third-order WKB approximation, we evaluate the quasinormal
frequencies of massless scalar field perturbation around the black hole which
is surrounded by the static and spherically symmetric quintessence. Our result
shows that due to the presence of quintessence, the scalar field damps more
rapidly. Moreover, we also note that the quintessential state parameter
(the ratio of pressure to the energy density ) play an
important role for the quasinormal frequencies. As the state parameter
increases the real part increases and the absolute value of the
imaginary part decreases. This means that the scalar field decays more slowly
in the larger quintessence case.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
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