4,043 research outputs found
Natural killer cell responses to Plasmodium falciparum-infected red blood cells.
NK cells are known to respond in vitro to P. falciparum-infected red blood cells (iRBCs),
although responses are highly heterogeneous between donors. Although their role during
malaria infection is not fully understood, they may play a role in cytokine production during
early infection, and furthermore may interact with and kill iRBCs. The work described in
this thesis examines the role of NK cell receptors in determining the functional outcomes
of NK cell activation by iRBCs, focusing on NK cell responses to exogenous cytokines
and the phenotypic and functional profiles of NK cells from malaria naive (LSHTM) and
malaria exposed (Ugandan) subjects.
In a model of early activation of NK cells by accessory cell-derived cytokines, I have shown
a key role for IL-18 in mediating NK cell responses during both primary and secondary
immune responses as IL-18 synergises with cytokines from the common gamma chain family.
NK cells from LSHTM donors showed low background expression of IFN- and CD25, but
responded to iRBCs by secretion of IFN-, which was potentiated by exogenous IL-15.
By contrast, NK cells from Ugandan donors showed higher background CD25 expression
and signs of in vivo/ex vivo preactivation and enhanced responsiveness to IL-15, but did
not make any appreciable response to iRBCs. Potential explanations for these findings are
explored and discussed. KIR genotype and KIR expression also varied between LSHTM
and Ugandan donors. Specifically, expansions of KIR2DL1+ CD57+ NKG2C+ NK cell
populations (possibly driven by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection) were observed
in the Ugandan donors. Conversely, percentages of KIR2DL3+ and 2DS4+ NK cells were
higher among LSHTM donors, indicating that HLA genotype or allelic KIR polymorphisms
may influence KIR expression.
Finally, the formation of NK-iRBC conjugates, which may be a precursor to NK cellmediated
killing of iRBCs, was observed in cells from nearly all donors, but did not correlate
with other functional responses. Analysis of KIR expression and NK cell functional
responses indicated that donors expressing inhibitory KIR2DL5 had reduced numbers of
conjugates. Further experiments indicated that KIR2DL5 might be specifically upregulated
after incubation with iRBCs, and that individuals carrying a normally non-expressed
KIR2DL5 gene may be able to express this gene under certain circumstances. This tentatively
suggests a role for KIR2DL5 during NK cell responses to malaria infection, and
suggests a possible function for a common but frequently non-expressed gene.
In summary, my work suggests that NK cell responses are strongly influenced by cytokine
receptor and KIR expression, which in turn depend on NK cell maturation status. KIR expression
patterns may in part explain differential NK responses to iRBCs between LSHTM
and Ugandan donors. I also propose a possible role for KIR2DL5 in malaria infection, and
a reason for the low expression of this gene in African populations
A mixed reality telepresence system for collaborative space operation
This paper presents a Mixed Reality system that results from the integration of a telepresence system and an application to improve collaborative space exploration. The system combines free viewpoint video with immersive projection technology to support non-verbal communication, including eye gaze, inter-personal distance and facial expression. Importantly, these can be interpreted together as people move around the simulation, maintaining natural social distance. The application is a simulation of Mars, within which the collaborators must come to agreement over, for example, where the Rover should land and go.
The first contribution is the creation of a Mixed Reality system supporting contextualization of non-verbal communication. Tw technological contributions are prototyping a technique to subtract a person from a background that may contain physical objects and/or moving images, and a light weight texturing method for multi-view rendering which provides balance in terms of visual and temporal quality. A practical contribution is the demonstration of pragmatic approaches to sharing space between display systems of distinct levels of immersion. A research tool contribution is a system that allows comparison of conventional authored and video based reconstructed avatars, within an environment that encourages exploration and social interaction. Aspects of system quality, including the communication of facial expression and end-to-end latency are reported
A generalization of the Entropy Power Inequality to Bosonic Quantum Systems
In most communication schemes information is transmitted via travelling modes
of electromagnetic radiation. These modes are unavoidably subject to
environmental noise along any physical transmission medium and the quality of
the communication channel strongly depends on the minimum noise achievable at
the output. For classical signals such noise can be rigorously quantified in
terms of the associated Shannon entropy and it is subject to a fundamental
lower bound called entropy power inequality. Electromagnetic fields are however
quantum mechanical systems and then, especially in low intensity signals, the
quantum nature of the information carrier cannot be neglected and many
important results derived within classical information theory require
non-trivial extensions to the quantum regime. Here we prove one possible
generalization of the Entropy Power Inequality to quantum bosonic systems. The
impact of this inequality in quantum information theory is potentially large
and some relevant implications are considered in this work
PCV13 induced IgG responses in serum associate with serotype-specific IgG in the lung
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine efficacy is lower for non-invasive pneumonia than invasive disease. In this study, participants were vaccinated with PCV13 or HepA (control). Bronchoalveolar lavage samples were taken between 2-6 months and serum at 4- and 7-weeks post vaccination. In the lung, anti-capsular IgG levels were higher in the PCV13 group compared to control for all serotypes, except 3 and 6B. Systemically, IgG levels were elevated in the PCV group at 4-weeks for all serotypes, except 3. IgG in BAL and serum positively correlated for nearly all serotypes. PCV13 shows poor immunogenicity to serotype 3, implying lack of protective efficacy.
Clinical trial registration with ISRCTN: 4534043
Population-level emergence of bedaquiline and clofazimine resistance-associated variants among patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis in southern Africa: a phenotypic and phylogenetic analysis
Background: Bedaquiline and clofazimine are important drugs in the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis and are commonly used across southern Africa, although drug susceptibility testing is not routinely performed. In this study, we did a genotypic and phenotypic analysis of drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from cohort studies in hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, to identify resistance-associated variants (RAVs) and assess the extent of clofazimine and bedaquiline cross-resistance. We also used a comprehensive dataset of whole-genome sequences to investigate the phylogenetic and geographical distribution of bedaquiline and clofazimine RAVs in southern Africa. Methods: In this study, we included M tuberculosis isolates reported from the PRAXIS study of patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis treated with bedaquiline (King Dinuzulu Hospital, Durban) and three other cohort studies of drug-resistant tuberculosis in other KwaZulu-Natal hospitals, and sequential isolates from six persistently culture-positive patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis at the KwaZulu-Natal provincial referral laboratory. Samples were collected between 2013 and 2019. Microbiological cultures were done as part of all parent studies. We sequenced whole genomes of included isolates and measured bedaquiline and clofazimine minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for isolates identified as carrying any Rv0678 variant or previously published atpE, pepQ, and Rv1979c RAVs, which were the subject of the phenotypic study. We combined all whole-genome sequences of M tuberculosis obtained in this study with publicly available sequence data from other tuberculosis studies in southern Africa (defined as the countries of the Southern African Development Community), including isolates with Rv0678 variants identified by screening public genomic databases. We used this extended dataset to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships across lineage 2 and 4 M tuberculosis isolates. Findings: We sequenced the whole genome of 648 isolates from 385 patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis recruited into cohort studies in KwaZulu-Natal, and 28 isolates from six patients from the KwaZulu-Natal referral laboratory. We identified 30 isolates with Rv0678 RAVs from 16 (4%) of 391 patients. We did not identify any atpE, pepQ, or Rv1979c RAVs. MICs were measured for 21 isolates with Rv0678 RAVs. MICs were above the critical concentration for bedaquiline resistance in nine (43%) of 21 isolates, in the intermediate category in nine (43%) isolates, and within the wild-type range in three (14%) isolates. Clofazimine MICs in genetically wild-type isolates ranged from 0·12-0·5 μg/mL, and in isolates with RAVs from 0·25-4·0 μg/mL. Phylogenetic analysis of the extended dataset including M tuberculosis isolates from southern Africa resolved multiple emergences of Rv0678 variants in lineages 2 and 4, documented two likely nosocomial transmission events, and identified the spread of a possibly bedaquiline and clofazimine cross-resistant clone in eSwatini. We also identified four patients with pepQ frameshift mutations that may confer resistance. Interpretation: Bedaquiline and clofazimine cross-resistance in southern Africa is emerging repeatedly, with evidence of onward transmission largely due to Rv0678 mutations in M tuberculosis. Roll-out of bedaquiline and clofazimine treatment in the setting of limited drug susceptibility testing could allow further spread of resistance. Designing strong regimens would help reduce the emergence of resistance. Drug susceptibility testing is required to identify where resistance does emerge. Funding: Wellcome Trust, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health
Gaussian bosonic synergy: quantum communication via realistic channels of zero quantum capacity
As with classical information, error-correcting codes enable reliable
transmission of quantum information through noisy or lossy channels. In
contrast to the classical theory, imperfect quantum channels exhibit a strong
kind of synergy: there exist pairs of discrete memoryless quantum channels,
each of zero quantum capacity, which acquire positive quantum capacity when
used together. Here we show that this "superactivation" phenomenon also occurs
in the more realistic setting of optical channels with attenuation and Gaussian
noise. This paves the way for its experimental realization and application in
real-world communications systems.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, one appendi
Contact Manifolds, Contact Instantons, and Twistor Geometry
Recently, Kallen and Zabzine computed the partition function of a twisted
supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on the five-dimensional sphere using
localisation techniques. Key to their construction is a five-dimensional
generalisation of the instanton equation to which they refer as the contact
instanton equation. Subject of this article is the twistor construction of this
equation when formulated on K-contact manifolds and the discussion of its
integrability properties. We also present certain extensions to higher
dimensions and supersymmetric generalisations.Comment: v3: 28 pages, clarifications and references added, version to appear
in JHE
Damagnetization cooling of a gas
We demonstrate demagnetization cooling of a gas of ultracold Cr atoms.
Demagnetization is driven by inelastic dipolar collisions which couple the
motional degrees of freedom to the spin degree. By that kinetic energy is
converted into magnetic work with a consequent temperature reduction of the
gas. Optical pumping is used to magnetize the system and drive continuous
demagnetization cooling. Applying this technique, we can increase the phase
space density of our sample by one order of magnitude, with nearly no atom
loss. This method can be in principle extended to every dipolar system and
could be used to achieve quantum degeneracy via optical means.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Micro-Electro-Mechanical-Systems (MEMS) and Fluid Flows
The micromachining technology that emerged in the late 1980s can provide micron-sized sensors and actuators. These micro transducers are able to be integrated with signal conditioning and processing circuitry to form micro-electro-mechanical-systems (MEMS) that can perform real-time distributed control. This capability opens up a new territory for flow control research. On the other hand, surface effects dominate the fluid flowing through these miniature mechanical devices because of the large surface-to-volume ratio in micron-scale configurations. We need to reexamine the surface forces in the momentum equation. Owing to their smallness, gas flows experience large Knudsen numbers, and therefore boundary conditions need to be modified. Besides being an enabling technology, MEMS also provide many challenges for fundamental flow-science research
Changing insurance company claims handling processes improves some outcomes for people injured in road traffic crashes
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Regaining good health and returning to work are important for people injured in road traffic crashes and for society. The handling of claims by insurance companies may play an important role in the rate at which health recovers and return to work is actually attained.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A novel approach towards claims handling for people injured in road traffic accidents was compared to the standard approach. The setting was a large insurance company (NRMA Insurance) in the state of New South Wales, Australia. The new approach involved communicating effectively with injured people, early intervention, screening for adverse prognostic factors and focusing on early return to work and usual activities. Demographic and injury data, health outcomes, return to work and usual activities were collected at baseline and 7 months post-injury.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Significant differences were found 7 months post-injury on 'caseness' of depression (<it>p </it>= 0.04), perceived health limitation on activities (<it>p </it>= 0.03), and self-reported return to usual activities (<it>p </it>= 0.01) with the intervention group scoring better. Baseline general health was a significant predictor for general health at 7 months (OR 11.6, 95% CI 2.7-49.4) and for return to usual activities (OR 4.6, 95% CI 2.3-9.3).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We found a few positive effects on health from a new claims handling method by a large insurance company. It may be most effective to target people who report low general health and low expectations for their health recovery when they file their claim.</p
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