5,046 research outputs found
An Unobscured type II quasar candidate: SDSS J012032.19-005501.9
We report the finding of an unobscured type II Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN)
candidate, SDSS J012032.19-005501.9 at a relatively high redshift of
0.601,which shows a number of unusual properties. It varies significantly on
timescales of years as typical type I AGNs and marginally on timescales of
weeks. The color-magnitude relation and the structure function are also
consistent with that of type I AGNs, which imply that its variability likely
originates from the black hole accretion system .However, no broad emission
line is detected in the SDSS spectrum, and the upper limit of the equivalent
width of the H broad emission line is much less than that of type I
AGNs. These properties suggest that SDSS J012032.19-005501.9 may be an
unobscured quasar without broad emission lines intrinsically, namely an
unobscured type II AGN or "true" type II AGN. Furthermore, its continuum
luminosity is at least one order of magnitude fainter than the average value of
thepast century expected from the [OIII] emission line. It indicates that SDSS
J012032.19-005501.9 may be switching off. Additional possible scenarios to
explain this intriguing source are also discussed. Future deep observations at
multi-wavelengths are needed to reveal the nature of this peculiar and
intriguing AGN.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journa
Mesomeric Acceleration Counters Slow Initiation of Ruthenium-CAAC Catalysts for Olefin Metathesis (CAAC = Cyclic (Alkyl)(Amino) Carbene)
Ruthenium catalysts bearing cyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene (CAAC) ligands can attain very high productivities in olefin metathesis, owing to their resistance to unimolecular decomposition. Because the propagating methylidene species RuCl2(CAAC)(âCH2) is extremely susceptible to bimolecular decomposition, however, turnover numbers in the metathesis of terminal olefins are highly sensitive to catalyst concentration, and hence loadings. Understanding how, why, and how rapidly the CAAC complexes partition between the precatalyst and the active species is thus critical. Examined in a dual experimentalâcomputational study are the rates and basis of initiation for phosphine-free catalysts containing the leading CAAC ligand C1Ph, in which a CMePh group α to the carbene carbon helps retard degradation. The Hoveyda-class complex HC1Ph (RuCl2(L)(âCHAr), where L = C1Ph, Ar = C6H3-2-OiPr-5-R; R = H) is compared with its nitro-Grela analogue (nG-C1Ph; R = NO2) and the classic Hoveyda catalyst HII (L = H2IMes; R = H). t-Butyl vinyl ether (tBuVE) was employed as substrate, to probe the reactivity of these catalysts toward olefins of realistic bulk. Initiation is ca. 100Ă slower for HC1Ph than HII in C6D6, or 44Ă slower in CDCl3. The rate-limiting step for the CAAC catalyst is cycloaddition; for HII, it is tBuVE binding. Initiation is 10â13Ă faster for nG-C1Ph than HC1Ph in either solvent. DFT analysis reveals that this rate acceleration originates in an overlooked role of the nitro group. Rather than weakening the Ruâether bond, as widely presumed, the NO2 group accelerates the ensuing, rate-limiting cycloaddition step. Faster reaction is caused by long-range mesomeric effects that modulate key bond orders and Ru-ligand distances, and thereby reduce the trans effect between the carbene and the trans-bound alkene in the transition state for cycloaddition. Mesomeric acceleration may plausibly be introduced via any of the ligands present, and hence offers a powerful, tunable control element for catalyst design.publishedVersio
Macrophage-specific expression of IL-37 in hyperlipidemic mice attenuates atherosclerosis
Copyright © 2017 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc. inflammation, as well as the formation of lipid-laden macrophage foam cells within the vessel wall. IL-37 is recognized as an important anti-inflammatory cytokine expressed especially by immune cells. This study was undertaken to elucidate the role of macrophage-expressed IL-37 in reducing the production and effects of proinflammatory cytokines, preventing foam cell formation, and reducing the development of atherosclerosis. Expression of human IL-37 was achieved with a macrophage-specific overexpression system, using the CD68 promoter in mouse primary bone marrow-derived macrophages via retroviral transduction. Macrophage IL-37 expression in vitro resulted in decreased mRNA (e.g., IL-1B, IL-6, and IL-12) and secreted protein production (e.g., IL-6, M-CSF, and ICAM-1) of key inflammatory mediators. IL-37 expression also inhibited macrophage proliferation, apoptosis, and transmigration, as well as reduced lipid uptake, compared with controls in vitro. The in vivo effects of macrophage-expressed IL-37 were investigated through bone marrow transplantation of transduced hematopoietic stem cells into irradiated atherosclerosis-prone Ldlr2/2 mice. After 10 wk on a high-fat/high-cholesterol diet, mice with IL-37-expressing macrophages showed reduced disease pathogenesis, which was demonstrated by significantly less arterial plaque development and systemic inflammation compared with control mice. The athero-protective effect of macrophage-expressed IL-37 has implications for development of future therapies to treat atherosclerosis, as well as other chronic inflammatory diseases
MicroRNA 302a is a novel modulator of cholesterol homeostasis and atherosclerosis
© 2014 American Heart Association, Inc. OBJECTIVE - : Macrophage foam cell formation is a key feature of atherosclerosis. Recent studies have shown that specific microRNAs (miRs) are regulated in modified low-density lipoprotein-treated macrophages, which can affect the cellular cholesterol homeostasis. Undertaking a genome-wide screen of miRs regulated in primary macrophages by modified low-density lipoprotein, miR-302a emerged as a potential candidate that may play a key role in macrophage cholesterol homeostasis. APPROACH AND RESULTS - : The objective of this study was to assess the involvement of miR-302a in macrophage lipid homeostasis and if it can influence circulating lipid levels and atherosclerotic development when it is inhibited in a murine atherosclerosis model. We found that transfection of primary macrophages with either miR-302a or anti-miR-302a regulated the expression of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter ABCA1 mRNA and protein. Luciferase reporter assays showed that miR-302a repressed the 3âČ untranslated regions (UTR) activity of mouse Abca1 by 48% and human ABCA1 by 45%. In addition, transfection of murine macrophages with miR-302a attenuated cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein A-1 (apoA-1) by 38%. Long-term in vivo administration of anti-miR-302a to mice with low-density lipoprotein receptor deficiency (Ldlr) fed an atherogenic diet led to an increase in ABCA1 in the liver and aorta as well as an increase in circulating plasma high-density lipoprotein levels by 35% compared with that of control mice. The anti-miR-302a-treated mice also displayed reduced atherosclerotic plaque size by â25% and a more stable plaque morphology with reduced signs of inflammation. CONCLUSIONS - : These studies identify miR-302a as a novel modulator of cholesterol efflux and a potential therapeutic target for suppressing atherosclerosis
Characterization of G protein coupling mediated by the conserved D1343.49 of DRY motif, M2416.34, and F2516.44 residues on human CXCR1
© 2015 The Authors. CXCR1, a receptor for interleukin-8 (IL-8), plays an important role in defending against pathogen invasion during neutrophil-mediated innate immune response. Human CXCR1 is a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) with its characteristic seven transmembrane domains (TMs). Functional and structural analyses of several GPCRs have revealed that conserved residues on TM3 (including the highly conserved Asp-Arg-Tyr (DRY) motif) and TM6 near intracellular loops contain domains critical for G protein coupling as well as GPCR activation. The objective of this study was to elucidate the role of critical amino acid residues on TM3 near intracellular loop 2 (i2) and TM6 near intracellular loop 3 (i3), including S1323.47 (Baldwin location), D1343.49, M2416.34, and F2516.44, in G protein coupling and CXCR1 activation. The results demonstrate that mutations of D1343.49 at DRY motif of CXCR1 (D134N and D134V) completely abolished the ligand binding and functional response of the receptor. Additionally, point mutations at positions 241 and 251 between TM6 and i3 loop generated mutant receptors with modest constitutive activity via Gα15 signaling activation. Our results show that D1343.49 on the highly conserved DRY motif has a distinct role for CXCR1 compared to its homologues (CXCR2 and KSHV-GPCR) in G protein coupling and receptor activation. In addition, M2416.34 and F2516.44 along with our previously identified V2476.40 on TM6 are spatially located in a "hot spot" likely essential for CXCR1 activation. Identification of these amino acid residues may be useful for elucidating mechanism of CXCR1 activation and designing specific antagonists for the treatment of CXCR1-mediated diseases
Anisotropy of Growth of the Close-Packed Surfaces of Silver
The growth morphology of clean silver exhibits a profound anisotropy: The
growing surface of Ag(111) is typically very rough while that of Ag(100) is
smooth and flat. This serious and important difference is unexpected, not
understood, and hitherto not observed for any other metal. Using density
functional theory calculations of self-diffusion on flat and stepped Ag(100) we
find, for example, that at flat regions a hopping mechanism is favored, while
across step edges diffusion proceeds by an exchange process. The calculated
microscopic parameters explain the experimentally reported growth properties.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, 3 figures in uufiles form, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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Self-diffusion of adatoms, dimers, and vacancies on Cu(100)
We use ab initio static relaxation methods and semi-empirical
molecular-dynamics simulations to investigate the energetics and dynamics of
the diffusion of adatoms, dimers, and vacancies on Cu(100). It is found that
the dynamical energy barriers for diffusion are well approximated by the
static, 0 K barriers and that prefactors do not depend sensitively on the
species undergoing diffusion. The ab initio barriers are observed to be
significantly lower when calculated within the generalized-gradient
approximation (GGA) rather than in the local-density approximation (LDA). Our
calculations predict that surface diffusion should proceed primarily via the
diffusion of vacancies. Adatoms are found to migrate most easily via a jump
mechanism. This is the case, also, of dimers, even though the corresponding
barrier is slightly larger than it is for adatoms. We observe, further, that
dimers diffuse more readily than they can dissociate. Our results are discussed
in the context of recent submonolayer growth experiments of Cu(100).Comment: Submitted to the Physical Review B; 15 pages including postscript
figures; see also http://www.centrcn.umontreal.ca/~lewi
Electromigration-Induced Flow of Islands and Voids on the Cu(001) Surface
Electromigration-induced flow of islands and voids on the Cu(001) surface is
studied at the atomic scale. The basic drift mechanisms are identified using a
complete set of energy barriers for adatom hopping on the Cu(001) surface,
combined with kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. The energy barriers are
calculated by the embedded atom method, and parameterized using a simple model.
The dependence of the flow on the temperature, the size of the clusters, and
the strength of the applied field is obtained. For both islands and voids it is
found that edge diffusion is the dominant mass-transport mechanism. The rate
limiting steps are identified. For both islands and voids they involve
detachment of atoms from corners into the adjacent edge. The energy barriers
for these moves are found to be in good agreement with the activation energy
for island/void drift obtained from Arrhenius analysis of the simulation
results. The relevance of the results to other FCC(001) metal surfaces and
their experimental implications are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 13 ps figure
Cluster of differentiation 43 deficiency in leukocytes leads to reduced atherosclerosis - Brief report
© 2014 American Heart Association, Inc.OBJECTIVE - : The aim of this study was to investigate the role of cluster of differentiation 43 (CD43), an integral membrane glycoprotein with both proadhesive and antiadhesive activities, in atherosclerosis. APPROACH AND RESULTS - : Low-density lipoprotein receptor-deficient mice were lethally irradiated and reconstituted with either bone marrow from CD43 mice or from wild-type controls. We found that mice lacking the CD43 on their leukocytes had significantly less severe atherosclerosis and that, contrary to our expectation, macrophage infiltration into the vessel wall was not affected by the lack of CD43 in the leukocytes. However, we found that CD43 mediates cholesterol homeostasis in macrophages by facilitating cholesterol efflux. This resulted in a significant reduction in storage of cholesterol in the aorta of mice lacking CD43 in the leukocytes. CONCLUSIONS - : CD43 may be an important mediator of macrophage lipid homeostasis, thereby affecting macrophage foam cell formation and ultimately atherosclerotic plaque development
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