246 research outputs found
Neurocalcin-delta: a potential memory-related factor in hippocampus of obese rats induced by high-fat diet.
Introduction: Aberrant protein expression within the hippocampus has recently been implicated in the pathogenesis of obesity- induced memory impairment.Objectives: The objective of the current study was to search for specific memory-related factors in the hippocampus in obese rats.Methods: Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were fed either a high-fat (HF) diet or normal-fat (NF) diet for 10 weeks to obtain the control (CON), diet-induced obese rats (DIO) and diet-resistant (DR) rats. D-galactose was injected subcutaneously for 10 weeks to establish model (MOD) rats with learning and memory impairment. After the hippocampus of the rats sampling, the proteome analysis was conducted using two-dimensional get electrophoresis (2-DE) combined with peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF).Results: We found 15 differential proteins that expressed in the hippocampus in rats induced by HF diet from the 2-DE map. In addition, Neurocalcin-delta (NCALD) was nearly down-regulated in the DR rats compared with CON rats and MOD rats, which was further confirmed by Western blot, real-time PCR and ELISA results.Conclusion: Our data demonstrates that the differential memory-related proteins were a reflection of the HF diet, but not potential factors in obesity proneness or obesity resistance. Furthermore, NCALD is proved to be a potential hippocampus-memory related factor related to obesity.Keywords: Diet-induced obesity; diet-resistant; high fat diet; neurocalcin-delta; proteom
Suppressing nano-scale stick-slip motion by feedback
When a micro cantilever with a nano-scale tip is manipulated on a substrate
with atomic-scale roughness, the periodic lateral frictional force and
stochastic fluctuations may induce stick-slip motion of the cantilever tip,
which greatly decreases the precision of the nano manipulation. This unwanted
motion cannot be reduced by open-loop control especially when there exist
parameter uncertainties in the system model, and thus needs to introduce
feedback control. However, real-time feedback cannot be realized by the
existing virtual reality virtual feedback techniques based on the position
sensing capacity of the atomic force microscopy (AFM). To solve this problem,
we propose a new method to design real-time feedback control based on the force
sensing approach to compensate for the disturbances and thus reduce the
stick-slip motion of the cantilever tip. Theoretical analysis and numerical
simulations show that the controlled motion of the cantilever tip tracks the
desired trajectory with much higher precision. Further investigation shows that
our proposal is robust under various parameter uncertainties. Our study opens
up new perspectives of real-time nano manipulation.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure
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A regulatory mutant on TRIM26 conferring the risk of nasopharyngeal carcinoma by inducing low immune response.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is most closely associated with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), but the complexity of its genome structure has proven challenging for the discovery of causal MHC loci or genes. We conducted a targeted MHC sequencing in 40 Cantonese NPC patients followed by a two-stage replication in 1065 NPC cases and 2137 controls of Southern Chinese descendent. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis (qRT-PCR) was used to detect gene expression status in 108 NPC and 43 noncancerous nasopharyngeal (NP) samples. Luciferase reporter assay and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) were used to assess the transcription factor binding site. We discovered that a novel SNP rs117565607_A at TRIM26 displayed the strongest association (OR = 1.909, Pcombined = 2.750 × 10-19 ). We also observed that TRIM26 was significantly downregulated in NPC tissue samples with genotype AA/AT than TT. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) test also found the TRIM26 protein expression in NPC tissue samples with the genotype AA/AT was lower than TT. According to computational prediction, rs117565607 locus was a binding site for the transcription factor Yin Yang 1 (YY1). We observed that the luciferase activity of YY1 which is binding to the A allele of rs117565607 was suppressed. ChIP data showed that YY1 was binding with T not A allele. Significance analysis of microarray suggested that TRIM26 downregulation was related to low immune response in NPC. We have identified a novel gene TRIM26 and a novel SNP rs117565607_A associated with NPC risk by regulating transcriptional process and established a new functional link between TRIM26 downregulation and low immune response in NPC
A Comprehensive Analysis of Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Data: III. Energy-Dependent T90 Distributions of GBM GRBs and Instrumental Selection Effect on Duration Classification
The durations (T90) of 315 GRBs detected with Fermi/GBM (8-1000 keV) by 2011
September are calculated using the Bayesian Block method. We compare the T90
distributions between this sample and those derived from previous/current GRB
missions. We show that the T90 distribution of this GRB sample is bimodal, with
a statistical significance level being comparable to those derived from the
BeppoSAX/GRBM sample and the Swift/BAT sample, but lower than that derived from
the CGRO/BATSE sample. The short-to-long GRB number ratio is also much lower
than that derived from the BATSE sample, i.e., 1:6.5 vs 1:3. We measure T90 in
several bands, i.e., 8-15, 15-25, 25-50, 50-100, 100-350, and 350-1000 keV, to
investigate the energy-dependence effect of the bimodal T90 distribution. It is
found that the bimodal feature is well observed in the 50-100 and 100-350 keV
bands, but is only marginally acceptable in the 25-50 keV and 350-1000 keV
bands. The hypothesis of the bimodality is confidently rejected in the 8-15 and
15-25 keV bands. The T90 distributions in these bands are roughly consistent
with those observed by missions with similar energy bands. The parameter T90 as
a function of energy follows \bar T90 \propto E^{-0.20\pm 0.02} for long GRBs.
Considering the erratic X-ray and optical flares, the duration of a burst would
be even much longer for most GRBs. Our results, together with the observed
extended emission of some short GRBs, indicate that the central engine activity
time scale would be much longer than T90} for both long and short GRBs and the
observed bimodal T90 distribution may be due to an instrumental selection
effect.Comment: 29 pages, 2 tables, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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