4,611 research outputs found
Use of a cAMP BRET Sensor to Characterize a Novel Regulation of cAMP by the Sphingosine 1-Phosphate/G13 Pathway
Regulation of intracellular cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) is integral in mediating cell growth, cell differentiation, and immune responses in hematopoietic cells. To facilitate studies of cAMP regulation we developed a BRET (bioluminescence resonance energy transfer) sensor for cAMP, CAMYEL (cAMP sensor using YFP-Epac-RLuc), which can quantitatively and rapidly monitor intracellular concentrations of cAMP in vivo. This sensor was used to characterize three distinct pathways for modulation of cAMP synthesis stimulated by presumed Gs-dependent receptors for isoproterenol and prostaglandin E2. Whereas two ligands, uridine 5'-diphosphate and complement C5a, appear to use known mechanisms for augmentation of cAMP via Gq/calcium and Gi, the action of sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) is novel. In these cells, S1P, a biologically active lysophospholipid, greatly enhances increases in intracellular cAMP triggered by the ligands for Gs-coupled receptors while having only a minimal effect by itself. The enhancement of cAMP by S1P is resistant to pertussis toxin and independent of intracellular calcium. Studies with RNAi and chemical perturbations demonstrate that the effect of S1P is mediated by the S1P2 receptor and the heterotrimeric G13 protein. Thus in these macrophage cells, all four major classes of G proteins can regulate intracellular cAMP
Time-Shift in the OPERA set-up: proof against superluminal neutrinos without the need of knowing the CERN-LNGS distance and Reminiscences on the origin of the Gran Sasso Lab, of the 3rd neutrino and of the "Teramo Anomaly"
The LVD time stability allows to establish a time-shift in the OPERA
experiment, thus providing the first proof against Superluminal neutrinos,
using the horizontal muons of the "Teramo Anomaly". This proof is particularly
interesting since does not need the knowledge of the distance between the place
where the neutrinos are produced (CERN) and the place where they are detected
(LNGS). Since the Superluminal neutrinos generated in the physics community a
vivid interest in good and bad behaviour in physics research, the author
thought it was appropriate to recall the origin of the Gran Sasso Lab, of the
3rd neutrino, of the horizontal muons due to the "Teramo Anomaly" and of the
oscillation between leptonic flavours, when the CERN-Gran Sasso neutrino beam
was included in the project for the most powerful underground Laboratory in the
world.Comment: 35 pages, 25 Figures, Invited paper at the Gran Sasso mini-Workshop
on LNGS results on the neutrino velocity topic, Gran Sasso, Italy, 28 March
201
Lepton flavor conserving Z -> l^+ l^-$ decays in the general two Higgs doublet model
We calculate the new physics effects to the branching ratios of the lepton
flavor conserving decays Z -> l^+ l^- in the framework of the general two Higgs
Doublet model. We predict the upper limits for the couplings
|\bar{\xi}^{D}_{N,\mu\tau}| and |\bar{\xi}^{D}_{N,\tau\tau}| as 3\times 10^2
GeV and 1\times 10^2 GeV, respectively.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Method for Flavor Tagging in Neutral B Meson Decays
A method is proposed for tagging the flavor of neutral mesons in the
study of CP-violating decay asymmetries. The method makes use of a possible
difference in interactions in or systems with isospins 1/2
and 3/2, and would be particularly clean if the systems can be
detected as ``'' resonances.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. D. 11 pages, LaTeX, Technion-PH-92-40 / PITHA
92/39 / EFI 92-5
Predicting the birth of a spoken word
Children learn words through an accumulation of interactions grounded in context. Although many factors in the learning environment have been shown to contribute to word learning in individual studies, no empirical synthesis connects across factors. We introduce a new ultradense corpus of audio and video recordings of a single child’s life that allows us to measure the child’s experience of each word in his vocabulary. This corpus provides the first direct comparison, to our knowledge, between different predictors of the child’s production of individual words. We develop a series of new measures of the distinctiveness of the spatial, temporal, and linguistic contexts in which a word appears, and show that these measures are stronger predictors of learning than frequency of use and that, unlike frequency, they play a consistent role across different syntactic categories. Our findings provide a concrete instantiation of classic ideas about the role of coherent activities in word learning and demonstrate the value of multimodal data in understanding children’s language acquisition
Leptoquark production in ultrahigh-energy neutrino interactions revisited
The prospects for producing leptoquarks (LQs) in ultrahigh-energy (UHE)
neutrino nucleon collisions are re-examined in the light of recent
interpretations of HERA data in terms of leptoquark production. We update
predictions for cross-sections for the production of first- and
second-generation leptoquarks in UHE nu-N and nubar-N collisions including
(i) recent experimental limits on masses and couplings from the LEP and
TEVATRON colliders as well as rare processes,
(ii) modern parton distributions, and
(iii) radiative corrections to single leptoquark production.
If the HERA events are due to an SU(2) doublet leptoquark which couples
mainly to (e+,q) states, we argue that there are likely other LQ states which
couple to neutrinos which are close in mass, due to constraints from precision
electroweak measurements.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, 3 separate postscript figures. Added 1 reference
plus discussion, updated another referenc
A Comprehensive Study of Leptoquark Bounds
We make a comprehensive study of indirect bounds on scalar leptoquarks that
couple chirally and diagonally to the first generation by examining available
data from low energy experiments as well as from high energy e+ e- and p pbar
accelerators. The strongest bounds turn out to arise from low energy data: For
leptoquarks that couple to right--handed quarks, the most stringent bound comes
from atomic parity violation. For leptoquarks that couple to left--handed
quarks, there are two mass regions: At low masses the bounds arise from atomic
parity violation or from universality in leptonic pi decays. At masses above a
few hundred GeV's, the dominant bounds come from the FCNC processes that are
unavoidable in these leptoquarks: The FCNC bound of the up sector, that arises
from D-Dbar mixing, combines with the FCNC bounds from the down sector, that
arise from rare K decays and K-Kbar mixing, to a bound on the flavour
CONSERVING coupling to the first generation.
The bounds restrict leptoquarks that couple with electromagnetic strength to
lie above 600 GeV or 630 GeV for leptoquarks that couple to RH quarks, and
above 1040 GeV, 440 GeV, and 750 GeV for the SU(2)_W scalar, doublet and
triplet leptoquarks that couple to LH quarks. These bounds are considerably
stronger than the first results from the direct searches at HERA. Our bounds
also already exclude large regions in the parameter space that could be
examined by various methods proposed for indirect leptoquark searches.Comment: 23 Pages (LaTeX), including 3 uufiled postscript figures.
WIS--93/90/Sept--PH. To appear in PRD. Changes: updated numbers ---> stronger
bound
Transverse Tau Polarization in Decays of the Top and Bottom Quarks in the Weinberg Model of CP Non-conservation
We show that the transverse polarization asymmetry of the -lepton in
the decay is extremely sensitive to CP violating
phases arising from the charged Higgs exchange in the Weinberg model of CP
non-conservation. Qualitatively, the polarization asymmetries are enhanced over
rate or energy asymmetries by a factor of . Thus for optimal values of the parameters the method requires top pairs to be observable rather than needed for rate or energy
asymmetries. We also examine polarization in b decays via and find that it can also be very effective in constraining the CP
violation parameters of the extended Higgs sector.Comment: 11,1 figure, SLAC-PUB-608
Probing impulsive strain propagation with x-ray pulses
Pump-probe time-resolved x-ray diffraction of allowed and nearly forbidden
reflections in InSb is used to follow the propagation of a coherent acoustic
pulse generated by ultrafast laser-excitation. The surface and bulk components
of the strain could be simultaneously measured due to the large x-ray
penetration depth. Comparison of the experimental data with dynamical
diffraction simulations suggests that the conventional model for impulsively
generated strain underestimates the partitioning of energy into coherent modes.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX, eps. Accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev. Lett. http://prl.aps.or
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