12,554 research outputs found
A definability theorem for first order logic
For any first order theory T we construct a Boolean valued model M, in which
precisely the T--provable formulas hold, and in which every (Boolean valued)
subset which is invariant under all automorphisms of M is definable by a first
order formula. Our presentation is entirely selfcontained, and only requires
familiarity with the most elementary properties of model theory
Short Time Existence for the Curve Diffusion Flow with a Contact Angle
We show short-time existence for curves driven by curve diffusion flow with a
prescribed contact angle : The evolving curve has free
boundary points, which are supported on a line and it satisfies a no-flux
condition. The initial data are suitable curves of class with
. For the proof the evolving curve is represented
by a height function over a reference curve: The local well-posedness of the
resulting quasilinear, parabolic, fourth-order PDE for the height function is
proven with the help of contraction mapping principle. Difficulties arise due
to the low regularity of the initial curve. To this end, we have to establish
suitable product estimates in time weighted anisotropic -Sobolev spaces of
low regularity for proving that the non-linearities are well-defined and
contractive for small times.Comment: 38 page
Characterization of mutations and loss of heterozygosity of p53 and K-\u3ci\u3eras\u3c/i\u3e2 in pancreatic cancer cell lines by immobilized polymerase chain reaction
Background
The identification of known mutations in a cell population is important for clinical applications and basic cancer research. In this work an immobilized form of the polymerase chain reaction, referred to as polony technology, was used to detect mutations as well as gene deletions, resulting in loss of heterozygosity (LOH), in cancer cell lines. Specifically, the mutational hotspots in p53, namely codons 175, 245, 248, 249, 273, and 282, and K-ras2, codons 12, 13 and 61, were genotyped in the pancreatic cell line, Panc-1. In addition LOH analysis was also performed for these same two genes in Panc-1 by quantifying the relative gene copy number of p53 and K-ras2.
Results
Using polony technology, Panc-1 was determined to possess only one copy of p53, which possessed a mutation in codon 273, and two copies of K-ras2, one wildtype and one with a mutation in codon 12. To further demonstrate the general approach of this method, polonies were also used to detect K-ras2 mutations in the pancreatic cell lines, AsPc-1 and CAPAN-1.
Conclusions
In conclusion, we have developed an assay that can detect mutations in hotspots of p53 and K-ras2 as well as diagnose LOH in these same genes
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