7,098 research outputs found
Assessment of the corneal collagen organization after chemical burn using second harmonic generation microscopy
The organization of the corneal stoma is modified due to different factors, including pathology, surgery or external damage. Here the changes in the organization of the corneal collagen fibers during natural healing after chemical burn are investigated using second harmonic generation (SHG) imaging. Moreover, the structure tensor (ST) was used as an objective tool for morphological analyses at different time points after burn (up to 6 months). Unlike control corneas that showed a regular distribution, the collagen pattern at 1 month of burn presented a non-organized arrangement. SHG signal levels noticeably decreased and individual fibers were hardly visible. Over time, the healing process led to a progressive re-organization of the fibers that could be quantified through the ST. At 6 months, the stroma distribution reached values similar to those of control eyes and a dominant direction of the fibers re-appeared. The present results show that SHG microscopy imaging combined with the ST method is able to objectively monitor the temporal regeneration of the corneal organization after chemical burn. Future implementations of this approach into clinically adapted devices would help to diagnose and quantify corneal changes, not only due to chemical damages, but also as a result of disease or surgical procedures
Wild meat hunting and use by sedentarised Baka Pygmies in southeastern Cameroon
As a result of sedentarisation many Baka Pygmies have changed their mobility patterns away from nomadic lifestyles to living in roadside villages. These settled groups are increasingly dependent on cultivated foods but still rely on forest resources. The level of dependence on hunting of wild animals for food and cash, as well as the hunting profiles of sedentarised Pygmy groups is little known. In this study we describe the use of wild meat in 10 Baka villages along the Djoum-Mintom road in southeastern Cameroon. From data collected from 1,946 hunting trips by 121 hunters, we show that most trips are of around 13 hours and a median of eight hours. A mean ± SD of 1.15 ± 1.11 animal carcasses are taken in a single trip; there was a positive correlation between duration of trips and carcasses. A total of 2,245 carcasses of 49 species of 24 animal families were taken in the study; species diversity was similar in all villages except one. Most hunted animals were mammals, with ungulates contributing the highest proportion. By species, just over half of the animal biomass extracted by all hunters in the studied villages was provided by four mammal species. Most animals were trapped (65.77% ± 16.63), followed by shot with guns (22.56% ± 17.72), other methods (8.69% ± 6.96) and with dogs (2.96% ± 4.49). A mean of 7,569.7 ± 6,103.4 kg yrâ1 (2,080.8â19,351.4) were extracted per village, giving 75,697 kg yrâ1 in total, which is equivalent to 123 UK dairy cattle. In all villages, 48.07% ± 17.58 of animals hunted were consumed by the hunter and his family, around 32.73% ± 12.55, were sold, followed by a lower percentage of carcasses partially sold and consumed (19.21% ± 17.02). Between 60% and 80% of carcasses belonged to the âleast concernâ category, followed by ânear threatenedâ, âvulnerableâ and, rarely âendangeredâ. The only endangered species hunted was the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes). We suggest that hunting is a critical activity that provides a vital source of food for our study communities. Measured wild meat extraction levels are likely to be sustainable if hunter densities do not increase
The D0 Run IIb Luminosity Measurement
An assessment of the recorded integrated luminosity is presented for data
collected with the D0 detector at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider from June 2006
to September 2011 (Run IIb). In addition, a measurement of the effective cross
section for inelastic interactions, also referred to as the luminosity
constant, is reported. This measurement incorporates new features that lead to
a substantial improvement in the precision of the result. A luminosity constant
of \sigma_{LM} = 48.3\pm1.9\pm0.6 mb is obtained, where the first uncertainty
is due to the accuracy of the inelastic cross section used by both CDF and D0,
and the second uncertainty is due to D0 sources. The recorded luminosity for
the highest E_T jet trigger is L_rec = 9.2 \pm 0.4 fb^{-1}, with a relative
uncertainty of 4.3%.Comment: 20 pages, 23 figure
Benchmarks for the Forward Observables at RHIC, the Tevatron-run II and the LHC
We present predictions on the total cross sections and on the ratio of the
real part to the imaginary part of the elastic amplitude (rho parameter) for
present and future pp and pbar p colliders, and on total cross sections for
gamma p -> hadrons at cosmic-ray energies and for gamma gamma-> hadrons up to
sqrt{s}=1 TeV. These predictions are based on an extensive study of possible
analytic parametrisations invoking the biggest hadronic dataset available at
t=0. The uncertainties on total cross sections, including the systematic errors
due to contradictory data points from FNAL, can reach 1.9% at RHIC, 3.1% at the
Tevatron, and 4.8% at the LHC, whereas those on the rho parameter are
respectively 5.4%, 5.2%, and 5.4%.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables, RevTeX
A New Strategy for Deep Wide-Field High Resolution Optical Imaging
We propose a new strategy for obtaining enhanced resolution (FWHM = 0.12
arcsec) deep optical images over a wide field of view. As is well known, this
type of image quality can be obtained in principle simply by fast guiding on a
small (D = 1.5m) telescope at a good site, but only for target objects which
lie within a limited angular distance of a suitably bright guide star. For high
altitude turbulence this 'isokinetic angle' is approximately 1 arcminute. With
a 1 degree field say one would need to track and correct the motions of
thousands of isokinetic patches, yet there are typically too few sufficiently
bright guide stars to provide the necessary guiding information. Our proposed
solution to these problems has two novel features. The first is to use
orthogonal transfer charge-coupled device (OTCCD) technology to effectively
implement a wide field 'rubber focal plane' detector composed of an array of
cells which can be guided independently. The second is to combine measured
motions of a set of guide stars made with an array of telescopes to provide the
extra information needed to fully determine the deflection field. We discuss
the performance, feasibility and design constraints on a system which would
provide the collecting area equivalent to a single 9m telescope, a 1 degree
square field and 0.12 arcsec FWHM image quality.Comment: 46 pages, 22 figures, submitted to PASP, a version with higher
resolution images and other supplementary material can be found at
http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~kaiser/wfhr
Site testing in summer at Dome C, Antarctica
We present summer site testing results based on DIMM data obtained at Dome C,
Antarctica. These data have been collected on the bright star Canopus during
two 3-months summer campaigns in 2003-2004 and 2004-2005. We performed
continuous monitoring of the seeing a nd the isoplanatic angle in the visible.
We found a median seeing of 0.54 \arcsec and a median isoplanatic angle of 6.8
\arcsec. The seeing appears to have a deep minimum around 0.4 \arcsec almost
every day in late afternoon
Perspectivas literarias: traducciĂłn e intertextualidad
En este libro hemos reunido un conjunto de trabajos que exploran temas relacionados con la traducciĂłn literaria y con los estudios literarios desde una perspectiva mĂșltiple y comparada, pues creemos que, en estos tiempos, es valioso detenerse a analizar experiencias complejas con respecto a las prĂĄcticas literarias que permiten la comunicaciĂłn intercultural, ya que Ă©sta es una vĂa para cuestionar visiones nacionalistas que, en ocasiones, tienden a achatar el panorama en lugar de reconocer la hibridez y la heterogeneidad de los discursos literarios. Se trata de analizar estos temas desde distintos ĂĄngulos, tales como la traducciĂłn, las intertextualidades temĂĄticas, la formaciĂłn de traductores, la perspectiva de los lectores, la construcciĂłn del canon por distintas instancias culturales y los estudios comparados
Elliptic and hyperelliptic magnetohydrodynamic equilibria
The present study is a continuation of a previous one on "hyperelliptic"
axisymmetric equilibria started in [Tasso and Throumoulopoulos, Phys. Plasmas
5, 2378 (1998)].
Specifically, some equilibria with incompressible flow nonaligned with the
magnetic field and restricted by appropriate side conditions like "isothermal"
magnetic surfaces, "isodynamicity" or P + B^2/2 constant on magnetic surfaces
are found to be reducible to elliptic integrals. The third class recovers
recent equilibria found in [Schief, Phys. Plasmas 10, 2677 (2003)]. In contrast
to field aligned flows, all solutions found here have nonzero toroidal magnetic
field on and elliptic surfaces near the magnetic axis.Comment: 9 page
Functional proteomics of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: mitochondrial proteins as targets of S-adenosylmethionine
Recent work shows that S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) helps maintain normal liver function as chronic hepatic deficiency results in spontaneous development of steatohepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The mechanisms by which these nontraditional functions of AdoMet occur are unknown. Here, we use knockout mice deficient in hepatic AdoMet synthesis (MAT1A(-/-)) to study the proteome of the liver during the development of steatohepatitis. One hundred and seventeen protein spots, differentially expressed during the development of steatohepatitis, were selected and identified by peptide mass fingerprinting. Among them, 12 proteins were found to be affected from birth, when MAT1A(-/-) expression is switched on in WT mouse liver, to the rise of histological lesions, which occurs at approximately 8 months. Of the 12 proteins, 4 [prohibitin 1 (PHB1), cytochrome c oxidase I and II, and ATPase beta-subunit] have known roles in mitochondrial function. We show that the alteration in expression of PHB1 correlates with a loss of mitochondrial function. Experiments in isolated rat hepatocytes indicate that AdoMet regulates PHB1 content, thus suggesting ways by which steatohepatitis may be induced. Importantly, we found the expression of these mitochondrial proteins was abnormal in obob mice and obese patients who are at risk for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
Methionine adenosyltransferase II beta subunit gene expression provides a proliferative advantage in human hepatoma
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Of the 2 genes (MAT1A, MAT2A) encoding methionine adenosyltransferase, the enzyme that synthesizes S-adenosylmethionine, MAT1A, is expressed in liver, whereas MAT2A is expressed in extrahepatic tissues. In liver, MAT2A expression associates with growth, dedifferentiation, and cancer. Here, we identified the beta subunit as a regulator of proliferation in human hepatoma cell lines. The beta subunit has been cloned and shown to lower the K(m) of methionine adenosyltransferase II alpha2 (the MAT2A product) for methionine and to render the enzyme more susceptible to S-adenosylmethionine inhibition.
METHODS: Methionine adenosyltransferase II alpha2 and beta subunit expression was analyzed in human and rat liver and hepatoma cell lines and their interaction studied in HuH7 cells. beta Subunit expression was up- and down-regulated in human hepatoma cell lines and the effect on DNA synthesis determined.
RESULTS: We found that beta subunit is expressed in rat extrahepatic tissues but not in normal liver. In human liver, beta subunit expression associates with cirrhosis and hepatoma. beta Subunit is expressed in most (HepG2, PLC, and Hep3B) but not all (HuH7) hepatoma cell lines. Transfection of beta subunit reduced S-adenosylmethionine content and stimulated DNA synthesis in HuH7 cells, whereas down-regulation of beta subunit expression diminished DNA synthesis in HepG2. The interaction between methionine adenosyltransferase II alpha2 and beta subunit was demonstrated in HuH7 cells.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that beta subunit associates with cirrhosis and cancer providing a proliferative advantage in hepatoma cells through its interaction with methionine adenosyltransferase II alpha2 and down-regulation of S-adenosylmethionine levels
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