1,810 research outputs found
Transmural gradient of glycogen metabolism in the normal rat left ventricle.
The changes of glycogen metabolism with the location of tissue within the
ventricle wall have been explored in the rat myocardium. The hearts were cut in
100 microns thick serial sections and all sections were analyzed for their
content in glycogen, glucose-6-phosphate, UDPG and glycogen enzymes and for
glucose incorporation into glycogen and for the 2-deoxyglucose uptake after the
intravenous injection of the 14C-labelled sugars. The rate of glycogen turnover
was significantly higher in the subendocardial myocardium (P less than 0.01) and
the levels of glucose-6-phosphate and the total (i.e. a + b) activity of glycogen
phosphorylase were significantly higher in the subepicardial tissue (P less than
0.01 in both instances). No significant transmural gradient of UDPG was found and
transmural changes of total (i.e. I + D) synthase activity were barely
significant. These changes in glycogen metabolism may be related to regional
differences in the cardiac work load and to a differentiation of the
subendocardial and subepicardial heart fibers
BRESEX: On board supervision, basic architecture and preliminary aspects for payload and space shuttle interface
Data relative to the on board supervision subsystem are presented which were considered in a conference between INPE and NASA personnel, with the purpose of initiating a joint effort leading to the implementation of the Brazilian remote sensing experiment - (BRESEX). The BRESEX should consist, basically, of a multispectral camera for Earth observation, to be tested in a future space shuttle flight
Analysis of the entanglement between two individual atoms using global Raman rotations
Making use of the Rydberg blockade, we generate entanglement between two
atoms individually trapped in two optical tweezers. In this paper we detail the
analysis of the data and show that we can determine the amount of entanglement
between the atoms in the presence of atom losses during the entangling
sequence. Our model takes into account states outside the qubit basis and
allows us to perform a partial reconstruction of the density matrix describing
the two atom state. With this method we extract the amount of entanglement
between pairs of atoms still trapped after the entangling sequence and measure
the fidelity with respect to the expected Bell state. We find a fidelity
for the 62% of atom pairs remaining in the traps at
the end of the entangling sequence
Deterministic single-atom excitation via adiabatic passage and Rydberg blockade
We propose to use adiabatic rapid passage with a chirped laser pulse in the
strong dipole blockade regime to deterministically excite only one Rydberg atom
from randomly loaded optical dipole traps or optical lattices. The chirped
laser excitation is shown to be insensitive to the random number \textit{N} of
the atoms in the traps. Our method overcomes the problem of the
dependence of the collective Rabi frequency, which was the main obstacle for
deterministic single-atom excitation in the ensembles with unknown \textit{N},
and can be applied for single-atom loading of dipole traps and optical
lattices.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Version 5 is expanded and submitted to PRA. Typo
in Fig.4 corrected in Version 2. Version 3 and 4 are duplicates of V
Coherent imaging of extended objects
When used with coherent light, optical imaging systems, even
diffraction-limited, are inherently unable to reproduce both the amplitude and
the phase of a two-dimensional field distribution because their impulse
response function varies slowly from point to point (a property known as
non-isoplanatism). For sufficiently small objects, this usually results in a
phase distortion and has no impact on the measured intensity. Here, we show
that the intensity distribution can also be dramatically distorted when objects
of large extension or of special shapes are imaged. We illustrate the problem
using two simple examples: the pinhole camera and the aberration-free thin
lens. The effects predicted by our theorical analysis are also confirmed by
experimental observations.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Optics Communication
Sublattice addressing and spin-dependent motion of atoms in a double-well lattice
We load atoms into every site of an optical lattice and selectively spin flip
atoms in a sublattice consisting of every other site. These selected atoms are
separated from their unselected neighbors by less than an optical wavelength.
We also show spin-dependent transport, where atomic wave packets are coherently
separated into adjacent sites according to their internal state. These tools
should be useful for quantum information processing and quantum simulation of
lattice models with neutral atoms
Vitis vinifera L. germplasm diversity: a genetic and ampelometric study in ancient vineyards in the South of Basilicata region (Italy)
The evaluation of the existing grapevines biodiversity in several areas still unexplored in Basilicata region has been carried out. A four years survey in ancient vineyards of Potenza was performed to investigate grapevine biodiversity. 85 collected accessions were subjected to genetic characterization through nine microsatellite markers. A total of 42 genotypes were obtained. The comparison with national and international databases allowed the identification of 26 accessions corresponded to new autochthonous genotypes and minor/local cultivars, in addition 16 international and national cultivars commonly cultivated in several Italian regions were found (data not shown in this work). Results indicated that minor/local cultivars were mainly cultivated in the near regions. The genetic profile of 9 new autochthonous grapevines was described here for the first time. Comparison of the genotypes, allelic frequencies, allelic sizes and ampelometric traits on mature leaves are highlighted. Conservation of new autochthonous and minor/local cultivars in germoplasm collections has been carried out including them in the germoplasm collection of CREA-VE in Arezzo in order to save grapevine biodiversity and allows further agronomical and enological evaluation
Treatment of HER2+ metastatic salivary ductal carcinoma in a pregnant woman: a case report
Salivary duct carcinoma (SDC) is a rare and aggressive malignancy with a high mortality and poor response to treatment in the advanced setting. Human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2) can be amplified in a fraction of SDC. We describe the case of HER2+ metastatic SDC of the submandibular gland in a young pregnant woman treated by multimodal treatment (chemotherapy, radiotherapy and targeted therapy). During pregnancy, a 27-year-old woman developed SDC of the left submandibular gland with lung and bone metastases. Given the HER2 overexpression, she was treated with trastuzumab, paclitaxel and cisplatin. Since the tumor had arisen during pregnancy, triptorelin was administered after delivery. A complete remission was observed, and after eight cycles of chemotherapy, radiotherapy was started in association with trastuzumab and triptorelin. A prolonged disease control and complete visceral remission were observed. Multimodal therapy based on patient's tumor characteristics showed good clinical efficacy in the treatment of metastatic SDC
Environment and behavior: Neurochemical effects of different diets in the calf brain
open7noCalves reared for the production of white veal are subjected to stressful events due to the type of liquid diet they receive. Stress responses are mediated by three main stress-responsive cerebral regions: the prefrontal cortex, the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, and the nucleus of the solitary tract of the brainstem. In the present study, we have investigated the effects of different diets on these brain regions of ruminants using immunohistochemical methods. In this study, 15 calves were used and kept in group housing systems of five calves each. They were fed with three different diets: a control diet, a milk diet, and a weaned diet. Brain sections were immunostained to evaluate the distribution of neuronal nitric oxide synthase and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein immunoreactivity in the prefrontal cortex; the expression of oxytocin in the paraventricular nucleus; and the presence of c-Fos in the A2 group of the nucleus of the solitary tract. The main results obtained indicate that in weaned diet group the oxytocin activity is lower than in control diet and milk diet groups. In addition, weaning appears to stimulate myelination in the prefrontal cortex. In summary, this study supports the importance of maintaining a nutritional lifestyle similar to that occurring in natural conditions.openPeli A.; Grandis A.; Tassinari M.; Bergamini P.F.; Tagliavia C.; Roccaro M.; Bombardi C.Peli A.; Grandis A.; Tassinari M.; Bergamini P.F.; Tagliavia C.; Roccaro M.; Bombardi C
Bose-Einstein condensation in dark power-law laser traps
We investigate theoretically an original route to achieve Bose-Einstein
condensation using dark power-law laser traps. We propose to create such traps
with two crossing blue-detuned Laguerre-Gaussian optical beams. Controlling
their azimuthal order allows for the exploration of a multitude of
power-law trapping situations in one, two and three dimensions, ranging from
the usual harmonic trap to an almost square-well potential, in which a
quasi-homogeneous Bose gas can be formed. The usual cigar-shaped and
disk-shaped Bose-Einstein condensates obtained in a 1D or 2D harmonic trap take
the generic form of a "finger" or of a "hockey puck" in such Laguerre-Gaussian
traps. In addition, for a fixed atom number, higher transition temperatures are
obtained in such configurations when compared with a harmonic trap of same
volume. This effect, which results in a substantial acceleration of the
condensation dynamics, requires a better but still reasonable focusing of the
Laguerre-Gaussian beams
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