99 research outputs found

    An analysis of fast-response pressure probes dynamics for ORC power systems

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    Abstract The dynamic response of line-cavity systems in ideal and non-ideal compressible-fluid conditions is investigated numerically using the SU2 open-source suite for multi-physics simulations. The response of the system is studied for small but finite pressure perturbations, to predict the behaviour of fast-response pressure probes in turbomachinery for gas and ORC power systems. The probe step-response is found to present significant damping due to non-linear wave propagation. Non-idealities in the close proximity of the liquid-vapour curve increase the signal damping due to non-monotone variations of the speed of sound. A simplified approach is proposed to predict the probe dynamic characteristics in ideal regime. The estimation of the probe dynamics in non-ideal regime is found to be very critical and to strongly depend on the thermodynamic state of the fluid. The present results provides a guideline for the design of fast-response pressure probes to be used e.g. past the rotor stage of ORC turbine vanes

    Comparison of regeneration capacity and Agrobacterium-mediated cell transformation efficiency of different cultivars and rootstocks of Vitis spp. via organogenesis.

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    The success of in vitro plant regeneration and the competence of genetic transformation greatly depends on the genotype of the species of interest. In previous work, we developed a method for the efficient Agrobacterium-mediated genetic transformation via organogenesis of V. vinifera cultivar Thompson Seedless, by using meristematic bulk (MB) as starting tissue. In this study, we applied this method for the regeneration and transformation of MBs obtained from the Italian cultivar Ciliegiolo and two of the commonly used Vitis rootstocks, 110 Richter and Kober 5BB, in comparison with Thompson Seedless. The A. tumefaciens strain EHA105, harbouring pK7WG2 binary vector, was used for the transformation trials, which allowed selection through the enhanced-green fluorescent protein (eGFP) and the neomycin phosphotransferase (nptII) gene. Putative transformed tissues and/or shoots were identified by either a screening based on the eGFP expression alone or its use in combination with kanamycin in the medium. MBs obtained from Thompson Seedless showed the highest regeneration and transformation cell competence, which subsequently allowed the recovery of stably transformed plants. Ciliegiolo, 110 Richter, and Kober 5BB, produced actively growing transgenic calli showing eGFP fluorescence, more consistently on selective media, but had no regenerative competence

    po 126 survival probability of human breast carcinoma cells to radiation treatment role of cell fusion and of a syncytin1 homologous protein

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    Introduction The success of radiotherapy depends on the ability to inhibit tumour growth, and relapse after therapy is determined by cells that retain their clonogenic potential. The radiation sensitivity of isolated tumour cell clones in vitro is routinely determined with clonogenic assays. In solid tumours, however, clonogenic cells are not isolated and we carried out experiments to measure the influences of cell-cell contact on their proliferative potential. To this end we developed a new experimental approach to measure the effects of radiation on tumour cell populations. The observations can be understood with the help of a novel stochastic model with a well-defined biological basis. Material and methods T47D cells (human breast carcinoma) were grown at various concentrations in F(flat)-bottom and V-bottom wells of 96-well culture plates. The spheroid outgrowth method was also used to obtain densely-packed tissue cell cultures. A Gammacell40 irradiator equipped with a 137Cs source was used to treat cell cultures. Cell fusion was assessed by confocal microscopy. Syncytin 1 expression was assessed by RT-PCR and by flow cytometry using an anti-HERV antibody (clone ab7115, Abcam). Results and discussions The probability of cell survival after 8 Gy radiation treatment increased ~4.7 times when the cells were grown in V-bottom wells as compared to cells grown in F-bottom wells (p(survival)=0.0113 and 0.0024, respectively). Microscopic inspections of tissue-like cultures showed that after treatment cell populations were mostly composed of giant cells with multiple nuclei. Cytoplasmic bridges joining different cells were clearly visible. Giant cells and cytoplasmic bridges disappeared at later times (>600 hours) when the cells displayed normal morphology and started to proliferate again. Sequence analysis of cloned RT-PCR products showed that cells expressed a Syncytin 1 homologous protein (Sp). Flow cytometry assays confirmed cytoplasmic expression of Sp and revealed that Sp translocated to the cell surface of irradiated cells committed to death. The fraction of cells surviving 8 Gy treatment was significantly reduced in cultures treated with anti-Sp antibodies. Conclusion Our experimental findings indicate that recovery of breast tumours from radiation is very likely to involve complex pathways that act at the cell population level and that include events of cell fusion mediated by a protein homologous to Syncytin 1

    Combined antiretroviral therapy reduces hyperimmunoglobulinemia in HIV-1 infected children

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    Objective: To evaluate the effect of combined antiretroviral therapy on serum immunoglobulin (Ig) levels in HIV-1 perinatally infected children. Methods: Data from 1250 children recorded by the Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children from 1985 to 2002 were analysed. Since Ig levels physiologically vary with age, differences at different age periods were evaluated as differences in z-scores calculated using means and standard deviations of normal population for each age period. Combined antiretroviral therapy has become widespread in Italy since 1996, thus differences in Ig z-scores between the periods 1985-1995 and 1996-2002 were analysed. Data according to type of therapeutic regimen were also analysed. Results: Between the two periods 1985-1995 and 1996-2002, significant (P < 0.0001) decreases in IgG (6.29 ± 4.72 versus 4.44 ± 4.33), IgM (9.25 ± 13.32 versus 5.61 ± 7.93), and IgA (10.25 ± 15.68 versus 6.48 ± 11.56) z-scores, together with a parallel significant (P < 0.0001) increase in CD4 T-lymphocyte percentages, were found. These decreases were confirmed regardless of whether the children were receiving intravenous Ig or not. Ig z-scores were significantly higher in children receiving mono-therapy than in those receiving double-combined therapy (IgC, P < 0.0001; IgM, P = 0.003; IgA, P = 0.031) and in the latter children than in those receiving three or more drugs (P < 0.0001 for all z-scores). Ig z-scores correlated inversely with CD4 T-lymphocyte percentages and, directly, with viral loads. Conclusions: Our data show that in HIV-1 infected children combined antiretroviral therapy leads to reduction of hyperimmunoglobulinemia which parallels restoration of CD4 T-lymphocyte percentage and viral load decrease, which it turn probably reflects improved B-lymphocyte functions. © 2004 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

    Is biotechnology (more) acceptable when it enables a reduction in phytosanitary treatments? A European comparison of the acceptability of transgenesis and cisgenesis

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    Reduced pesticide use is one of the reasons given by Europeans for accepting new genetic engineering techniques. According to the advocates of these techniques, consumers are likely to embrace the application of cisgenesis to apple trees. In order to verify the acceptability of these techniques, we estimate a Bayesian multilevel structural equation model, which takes into account the multidimensional nature of acceptability and individual, national, and European effects, using data from the Eurobarometer 2010 73.1 on science. The results underline the persistence of clear differences between European countries and whilst showing considerable defiance, a relatively wider acceptability of vertical gene transfer as a means of reducing phytosanitary treatments, compared to horizontal transfer

    Towards model-driven communications

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    In modern distributed software systems, the issue of communication among composing parts represents a critical point, but the idea of extending conventional programming languages with general purpose communication constructs seems difficult to realize. As a consequence, there is a (growing) gap between the abstraction level required by distributed applications and the concepts provided by platforms that enable communication. This work intends to discuss how the Model Driven Software Development approach can be considered as a mature technology to generate in automatic way the schematic part of applications related to communication, by providing at the same time high level specialized languages useful in all the phases of software production. To achieve the goal, a stack of languages (meta-metamodels) has been introduced in order to describe \u2013 at different levels of abstraction \u2013 the collaborative behavior of generic entities in terms of communication actions related to a taxonomy of messages. Finally, the generation of platforms for communication is viewed as a form of specification of language semantics, that provides executable models of applications together with model-checking supports and effective runtime environment
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