1,265 research outputs found
La résistance induite : une nouvelle stratégie de défense des plantes contre les agents pathogènes
Tout au long de leur co-évolution, les plantes et les microorganismes pathogènes ont développé des relations complexes résultant d'un échange constant d'informations moléculaires. Les agents pathogènes ont élaboré toute une gamme de stratégies offensives pour parasiter les plantes et en contrepartie, les plantes ont déployé un arsenal défensif similaire à bien des égards aux défenses immunitaires animales. Les percées récentes en biologie moléculaire et en transformation des végétaux ont démontré que sensibiliser une plante à répondre plus rapidement à l'infection pouvait lui conférer une protection accrue contre des microorganismes virulents. Un aspect important dans la mise en évidence du rôle joué par les molécules de défense au niveau de l'expression de la résistance est une connaissance exacte de leur localisation spatio-temporelle dans les tissus en état de stress. Afin de cerner le processus associé à l'induction de résistance chez les plantes, l'effet d'éliciteurs biologiques, microbiens et chimiques sur la réponse cellulaire des plantes envers une attaque pathogène a fait l'objet d'investigations et les mécanismes impliqués dans le phénomène ont été étudiés. Dans tous les cas, il a été montré qu'une corrélation existait entre la réponse globale de la plante et des changements dans la biochimie et la physiologie des cellules, lesquels étaient accompagnés de modifications structurales incluant la formation d'appositions pariétales riches en callose et l'infiltration de composés phénoliques aux sites de pénétration potentielle par l'agent pathogène. L'activation du sentier des phénylpropanoïdes est un phénomème crucial dans la restriction de la croissance de l'agent pathogène et dans la survie des cellules-hôtes en conditions de stress. Bien qu'il n'existe que peu d'exemples d'application pratique de la résistance induite en tant que méthode de lutte contre les maladies des plantes, les résultats obtenus à partir de quelques expériences menées en plein champ et en serre sont encourageants et indiquent que cette approche a le potentiel de devenir une stratégie de lutte efficace et durable contre toute une gamme d'agents pathogènes.During the course of their coevolution, plants and pathogens have evolved an intricate relationship resulting from a continuous exchange of molecular information. Pathogens have developed an array of offensive strategies to parasitize plants and, in turn, plants have deployed a wide range of defense mechanisms similar in some respects to the immune defenses produced in animais. The recent advances in molecular biology and plant transformation have provided evidence that sensitizing a plant to respond more rapidly to infection could confer increased protection against virulent pathogens. One important facet in ascertaining the significance of defense molecules in plant disease resistance isthe exact knowledgeof their spatio-temporal distribution in stressed plant tissues. In an effort to understand the process associated with the induction of plant disease resistance, the effect of biological, microbial and chemical elicitors on the plant cell response during attack by fungal pathogens was investigated and the mechanisms underlying the expression of resistance studied. Evidence was provided that, in all cases, disease-resistance reactions correlated with changes in cell biochemistry and physiology that were accompanied by structural modifications including the formation of callose-enriched wall appositions and the infiltration of phenolic compounds at sites of potential pathogen penetration. Activation of the phenylpropanoid pathway appeared to be a crucial phenomenon involved in pathogen growth restriction and host cell survival under stress conditions. Although examples of practical use of induced resistance as a method of plant disease control are few, a number of field and greenhouse experiments are encouraging and indicate that this approach has the potential to become a powerful strategy against an array of pathogens in a persistent manner
Surface-mediated attraction between colloids
We investigate the equilibrium properties of a colloidal solution in contact
with a soft interface. As a result of symmetry breaking, surface effects are
generally prevailing in confined colloidal systems. In this Letter, particular
emphasis is given to surface fluctuations and their consequences on the local
(re)organization of the suspension. It is shown that particles experience a
significant effective interaction in the vicinity of the interface. This
potential of mean force is always attractive, with range controlled by the
surface correlation length. We suggest that, under some circumstances,
surface-induced attraction may have a strong influence on the local particle
distribution
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Pricing Discretely Monitored Asian Options by Maturity Randomization
We present methodologies to price discretely monitored Asian options when the underlying evolves according to a generic Levy process. For geometric Asian options we provide closed-form solutions in terms of the Fourier transform and we study in particular these formulas in the Levy-stable case. For arithmetic Asian options we solve the valuation problem by recursive integration and derive a recursive theoretical formula for the moments to check the accuracy of the results. We compare the implementation of our method to Monte Carlo simulation implemented with control variates and using different parametric Levy processes. We also discuss model-risk issues
Coping with spatial heterogeneity and temporal variability in resources and risks: Adaptive movement behaviour by a large grazing herbivore.
Movement is a key mean for mobile species to cope with heterogeneous environments. While in herbivorous mammals large-scale migration has been widely investigated, finescale movement responses to local variations in resources and predation risk remain much less studied, especially in savannah environments. We developed a novel approach based on complementary movement metrics (residence time, frequency of visits and regularity of visits) to relate movement patterns of a savannah grazer, the blue wildebeest Connochaetes taurinus , to fine-scale variations in food availability, predation risk and water availability in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Wildebeests spent more time in grazing lawns where the grass is of higher quality but shorter than in seep zones, where the grass is of lower quality but more abundant. Although the daily distances moved were longer during the wet season compared to the dry season, the daily net displacement was lower, and the residence time higher, indicating a more frequent occurrence of area-concentred searching. In contrast, during the late dry season the foraging sessions were more fragmented and wildebeests moved more frequently between foraging areas. Surprisingly, predation risk appeared to be the second factor, after water availability, influencing movement during the dry season, when resources are limiting and thus expected to influence movement more. Our approach, using complementary analyses of different movement metrics, provided an integrated view of changes in individual movement with varying environmental conditions and predation risk. It makes it possible to highlight the adaptive behavioral decisions made by wildebeest to cope with unpredictable environmental variations and provides insights for population conservation
q-Breathers in Discrete Nonlinear Schroedinger arrays with weak disorder
Nonlinearity and disorder are key players in vibrational lattice dynamics,
responsible for localization and delocalization phenomena. -Breathers --
periodic orbits in nonlinear lattices, exponentially localized in the
reciprocal linear mode space -- is a fundamental class of nonlinear oscillatory
modes, currently found in disorder-free systems. In this paper we generalize
the concept of -breathers to the case of weak disorder, taking the Discrete
Nonlinear Schr\"{o}dinger chain as an example. We show that -breathers
retain exponential localization near the central mode, provided that disorder
is sufficiently small. We analyze statistical properties of the instability
threshold and uncover its sensitive dependence on a particular realization.
Remarkably, the threshold can be intentionally increased or decreased by
specifically arranged inhomogeneities. This effect allows us to formulate an
approach to controlling the energy flow between the modes. The relevance to
other model arrays and experiments with miniature mechanical lattices, light
and matter waves propagation in optical potentials is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Casimir force in critical ternary polymer solutions
Consider a mixture of two incompatible polymers A and B in a common good solvent, confined between two parallel plates separated by a finite distance L. We assume that these plates strongly attract one of the two
polymers close to the consolute point (critical adsorption). The plates then experience an effective force resulting from strong fluctuations of the composition. To simplify, we suppose that either plates have the same preference
to attract one component (symmetric plates) or they have an opposed preference (asymmetric plates). The force is attractive for symmetric plates and repulsive for asymmetric ones. We first exactly compute the force using
the blob model, and find that the attractive and repulsive forces decay similarly to L⁻⁴. To go beyond the blob model that is a mean-field theory, and in order to get a correct induced force, we apply the Renormalization-Group to a φ⁴ -field theory ( φ is the composition fluctuation), with two suitable boundary conditions at the surfaces. The main result is that the expected force is the sum of two contributions. The first one is the mean-field contribution decaying as L⁻⁴, and the second one is the force deviation originating from strong fluctuations of the composition that decreases rather as L⁻³. This implies the existence of some cross-over distance L* ∼ aNφ¹/² ( a is the monomer size, N is the polymerization degree of chains and φ is the monomer volumic fraction), which separates two distance-regimes.
For small distances (L L*) the fluctuation force is more important.Розглядається суміш двох несумісних полімерів A і B , що добре розчиняються в спільному розчиннику, вміщена між двома паралельними пластинами, розділеними скінченною відстанню L. Ми вважаємо, що поблизу точки розчинення вони сильно притягають один з двох полімерів (критична адсорбція). При цьому пластини знаходяться під впливом ефективної сили, породженої сильними флуктуаціями суміші. Для спрощення ми припускаємо, що або обидві пластини притягають той самий компонент (симетричні пластини) або вони віддають перевагу різним компонентам (асиметричні пластини). Симетричним пластинам відповідає сила притягання, асиметричним – відштовхування. Спершу ми точно розрахували цю силу, використовуючи краплинну модель, і встановили, що сили притягання і відштовхування загасають подібним чином як L⁻⁴. Щоб вийти поза межі краплинної моделі, яка відповідає наближенню середнього поля, і з метою отримати правильний вигляд індукованої сили, ми застосували ренорм-груповий підхід до теорії поля φ⁴ ( φ – флуктуація суміші) з двома відповідними граничними умовами на поверхнях. У результаті встановлено, що шукана сила є сумою двох вкладів. Перший з них – це вклад середнього поля, що загасає якL⁻⁴, а другий – відхилення, викликане сильними флуктуаціями суміші, що зменшується радше як L⁻³. Це означає, що існує певна відстань кроссоверу L* ∼ aNφ¹/² ( a – розмір мономера, N – ступінь полімеризації ланцюжків і φ – об’ємна частка мономера), що розділяє характерні відстані двох згаданих режимів. На малих відстанях (L L*) більш важливим стає флуктуаційний вклад
Combining Glucose Monitoring and Insulin Infusion in an Integrated Device: A Narrative Review of Challenges and Proposed Solutions.
The introduction of automated insulin delivery (AID) systems has enabled increasing numbers of individuals with type 1 diabetes (T1D) to improve their glycemic control largely. However, use of AID systems is limited due to their complexity and costs associated. The user must wear both a continuously monitoring glucose system and an insulin infusion pump. The glucose sensor and the insulin catheter must be inserted at two different body sites using different insertion devices. In addition, the user must pair and manage the different systems. These communicate with the AID software implemented on the pump or on a third device such as a dedicated display device or smart phone application. These components might be developed and commercialized by different manufacturers, which in turn can cause difficulties for patients seeking technical support. A possible solution to these challenges would be to integrate the glucose sensor and insulin catheter into a single device. This would allow the glucose sensor and insulin catheter to be inserted simultaneously, eliminating the need for pairing, and simplifying system management. In recent years, different technologies have been developed and evaluated in clinical investigations that combine the glucose sensor and the insulin catheter in one platform. The consistent finding of all these studies is that integration has no adverse effect on insulin infusion and glucose measurements provided that certain conditions are met. In this review, we discuss the perceived challenges of such an approach and discuss possible solutions that have been proposed
Electrical, morphology and structural properties of biodegradable nanocomposite polyvinyl-acetate/ cellulose nanocrystals
In this work, the dielectric properties and the electrical conductivity of polyvinyl acetate (PVAc) polymer doped with cellulose nanocrystals (CNC), extracted from the date palm rachis, are reported. We investigate the filler effect on the molecular mobility of the PVAc polymer chains and the charge transport properties of this material. PVAc/CNC films structure was characterized by powder X-Ray diffraction (XRD), showing the crystalline behavior of the cellulose filler. The dielectric properties were investigated using impedance spectroscopy, in the frequency range of 102–106 Hz and temperatures from 200 to 350 K. A β relaxation, assigned to the motions of the -OCOCH3 side groups, and α relaxation, associated with the glass transition of the PVAc matrix, can be detected.publishe
Surface critical behavior of driven diffusive systems with open boundaries
Using field theoretic renormalization group methods we study the critical
behavior of a driven diffusive system near a boundary perpendicular to the
driving force. The boundary acts as a particle reservoir which is necessary to
maintain the critical particle density in the bulk. The scaling behavior of
correlation and response functions is governed by a new exponent eta_1 which is
related to the anomalous scaling dimension of the chemical potential of the
boundary. The new exponent and a universal amplitude ratio for the density
profile are calculated at first order in epsilon = 5-d. Some of our results are
checked by computer simulations.Comment: 10 pages ReVTeX, 6 figures include
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