58 research outputs found

    Influence of temperature gradients on mono- and divalent ion transport in electrodialysis at limiting currents

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    Temperature gradients in electrodialysis (ED) stacks can potentially enhance the efficiency of charge separation and the selective transport of ions. We have previously investigated temperature gradients in the Ohmic regime but not in the limiting current regime, where diffusion of ions towards the membrane determines the transport rate and temperature gradients potentially have the largest influence. In this research, commercial ion exchange membranes (FAS and FKS, FUMATECH, Germany) are used for the investigation of temperature gradients in the limiting current regime. In contrast to the Ohmic regime, we find that heating the diluted stream increases the current obtained (at a constant applied potential) when compared to heating the concentrate stream in systems containing monovalent KCl and NaCl solutions. For mixtures of mono- and divalent ions, the temperature gradient has a larger influence on the selectivity of the separation. If the desalinated stream is heated, divalent Mg2+ ions show a higher transport than the monovalent K+ and Na+ ions. This is due to the enhanced competitive transport of the mono- and divalent ions under the application of a temperature gradient. These results show the potential application and relevance of temperature gradients to enhance the selective separation of mono- and divalent ions

    Folliculin interacts with p0071 (plakophilin-4) and deficiency is associated with disordered rhoa signalling, epithelial polarization and cytokinesis

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    Inherited mutations in the folliculin (FLCN) gene cause the Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome of familial hair follicle tumours (fibrofolliculomas), lung cysts and kidney tumours. Though folliculin has features of a tumour suppressor, the precise function of the FLCN gene product is not well characterized. We identified plakophilin-4 (p0071) as a potential novel folliculin interacting protein by yeast two-hybrid analysis. We confirmed the interaction of folliculin with p0071 by co-immunoprecipitation studies and, in view of previous studies linking p0071 to the regulation of rho-signalling, cytokinesis and intercellular junction formation, we investigated the effect of cell folliculin status on p0071-related functions. Folliculin and p0071 partially co-localized at cell junctions and in mitotic cells, at the midbody during cytokinesis. Previously, p0071 has been reported to regulate RhoA signalling during cytokinesis and we found that folliculin deficiency was associated with increased expression and activity of RhoA and evidence of disordered cytokinesis. Treatment of folliculin-deficient cells with a downstream inhibitor of RhoA signalling (the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632) reversed the increased cell migration phenotype observed in folliculin-deficient cells. Deficiency of folliculin and of p0071 resulted in tight junction defects and mislocalization of E-cadherin in mouse inner medullary collecting duct-3 renal tubular cells. These findings suggest that aspects of folliculin tumour suppressor function are linked to interaction with p0071 and the regulation of RhoA signalling

    Age-dependent effects of chronic fluoxetine treatment on the serotonergic system one week following treatment

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    Abstract Rationale Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as fluoxetine are increasingly used for the treatment of depression in children. Limited data are, however, available on their effects on brain development and their efficacy remains debated. Moreover, previous experimental studies are seriously hampered in their clinical relevance. Objectives The aim of the present study was to investigate putative age-related effects of a chronic treatment with fluoxetine (5 mg/kg, either orally or i.p. for 3 weeks, 1 week washout) using conventional methods (behavioral testing and binding assay using [ 123 I]β-CIT) and a novel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) approach. Methods Behavior was assessed, as well as serotonin transporter (SERT) availability and function through ex vivo binding assays and in vivo pharmacological MRI (phMRI) with an acute fluoxetine challenge (10 mg/kg oral or 5 mg/kg i.v.) in adolescent and adult rats. Results Fluoxetine caused an increase in anxiety-like behavior in treated adult, but not adolescent, rats. On the binding assays, we observed increased SERT densities in most cortical brain regions and hypothalamus in adolescent, but not adult, treated rats. Finally, reductions in brain activation were observed with phMRI following treatment, in both adult and adolescent treated animals. Conclusion Collectively, our data indicate that the shortterm effects of fluoxetine on the 5-HT system may be agedependent. These findings could reflect structural and functional rearrangements in the developing brain that do not occur in the matured rat brain. phMRI possibly will be well suited to study this important issue in the pediatric population

    Increased response to a 5-HT challenge after discontinuation of chronic serotonin uptake inhibition in the adult and adolescent rat brain

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    Little is known about the effects of chronic fluoxetine on 5-HT transmission in the adolescent brain, even though it is acknowledged that the neuroplasticity of the brain during childhood and adolescence might influence the neurobiological mechanisms underlying treatment response. Also, possible ongoing effects on monoamine function following drug discontinuation are unidentified. We therefore examined the chronic effects of fluoxetine on extracellular 5-HT and dopamine concentrations in the medial prefrontal cortex and studied their responsiveness to an acute 5-HT challenge after a one-week washout period, both in adolescent and adult rats. Noradrenaline was measured in adult animals only. Fluoxetine increased 5-HT to 200-300% of control and DA and NA to 150% of control. Although there were no lasting effects of chronic fluoxetine on basal monoamine levels, we observed a clear potentiating effect of previous treatment on the fluoxetine-induced increase in extracellular 5-HT and, to a lesser extent, extracellular DA. No differential effect was found for noradrenaline. Age-at-treatment did not influence these results. So, after cessation of chronic fluoxetine treatment 5-HT responsiveness remains heightened. This may be indicative of the continuing presence of 5-HT receptor desensitization, at least until one week after drug discontinuation in rats. No apparent age-at-treatment effects on extracellular monoamine concentrations in the medial prefrontal cortex were detected, but age-related differences in 5-HT transmission further down-stream or in the recovery processes cannot be ruled ou

    Building blocks for the long-term governance of B&C waste in Belgium

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    This report presents the overall findings of a three-tier study commissioned by ONDRAF/NIRAS, the Belgian radioactive waste management agency. It was conducted between June 2018 and December 2019 by a consortium consisting of the Universities of Antwerp, Liège and Maastricht. The research was conducted independently with an explicit focus on governance and process design. The central research question of the project is as follows: ‘HOW CAN A GOVERNANCE PROCESS BE DESIGNED THAT IS SUFFICIENTLY ROBUST AND FLEXIBLE TO GUARANTEE INTERGENERATIONAL STAKEHOLDER INVOLVEMENT AND THE SAFE MANAGEMENT OF B&C WASTE, BOTH NOW AND IN THE FUTURE?

    The effects of ecstasy (MDMA) on brain serotonin transporters are dependent on age-of-first exposure in recreational users and animals.

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    RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVE: Little is known on the effects of ecstasy (MDMA, a potent 5-HT-releaser and neurotoxin) exposure on brain development in teenagers. The objective of this study was to investigate whether in humans, like previous observations made in animals, the effects of MDMA on the 5-HT system are dependent on age-of-first exposure. METHODS: 5-HT transporter (SERT) densities in the frontal cortex and midbrain were assessed with [(123)I]β-CIT single photon emission computed tomography in 33 users of ecstasy. Subjects were stratified for early-exposed users (age-at-first exposure 14-18 years; developing brain), and late-exposed users (age-at-first exposure 18-36 years; mature brain). In parallel, we investigated the effects of age experimentally with MDMA in early-exposed (adolescent) rats and late-exposed (adult) rats using the same radioligand. RESULTS: On average, five years after first exposure, we found a strong inverse relationship, wherein age-at-first exposure predicted 79% of the midbrain SERT variability in early (developing brain) exposed ecstasy users, whereas this was only 0.3% in late (mature brain) exposed users (p=0.007). No such effect was observed in the frontal cortex. In rats, a significant age-BY-treatment effect (p<0.01) was observed as well, however only in the frontal cortex. CONCLUSIONS: These age-related effects most likely reflect differences in the maturational stage of the 5-HT projection fields at age-at-first exposure and enhanced outgrowth of the 5-HT system due to 5-HT's neurotrophic effects. Ultimately, our findings stress the need for more knowledge on the effects of pharmacotherapies that alter brain 5-HT levels in the pediatric population

    High-Level Radioactive Waste and Spent fuel as Matters of Care: Assembling Neglected Things for their Futures. Final Results of the ONDRAF/NIRAS project - ULiège, UA and UMaastricht

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    This project highlighted how the current assessment of B&C waste program and its future is not only a matter of facts, it is also a matter of concerns (Latour 2004) and for some actors, clearly matter of care (de la Bellacasa 2011). B&C waste and spent fuel have a social life: how to manage such radioactive materials is not only a matter of established facts but it is also a matter of interests, a ‘matter of concerns’. They are indeed intimately interrelated: ‘Matters of facts are processes of entangled concerns’ (De La Bellacasa, 2011, p.89). Concerns attach and hold together matters of fact and contribute to affirming their reality by adding further articulations’ (id.) ONDRAF/NIRAS, like each actor involved in the management program, produce ‘matters of concerns’ strongly entangled with its matter of facts. In some case, things can be more than interrelated matters of facts and concerns: they are ‘matters of care’. But what does it mean exactly? In any situation, if we ask yourselves: ‘is it a fact?’, ‘Am I concerned?’ or ‘do I care?’, our practices, our discourses and our engagement on an issue differ (de la Bellacasa 2011). Applied to B&C waste and spent fuel, it could be ‘waste are already here and it must be managed’ versus ‘I’m concerned by the faith of such radioactive materials’ versus ‘I care about the way to handle them’. Then, considering the B&C waste as matters of care changes the way we are engaged in the program and the way we frame it
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