263 research outputs found

    Can murine diabetic nephropathy be separated from superimposed acute renal failure?

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    Can murine diabetic nephropathy be separated from superimposed acute renal failure?BackgroundStreptozotocin (STZ) is commonly used to induce diabetes in experimental animal models, but not without accompanying cytotoxic effects. This study was undertaken to (1) determine an optimal dose and administration route of STZ to induce diabetic nephropathy in wild-type mice but without the concurrent acute renal injury resulting from cytotoxic effects of STZ and (2) evaluate the pattern of tubular injury and interstitial inflammation in this model.MethodsMale Balb/c mice received either (1) STZ (225mg/kg by intraperitoneal injection.); or (2) two doses of STZ 5 days apart (150mg/150mg/kg; 75mg/150mg/kg; 75mg/75mg/kg; and 100mg/100mg/kg by intravenous injection). Another strain of mice, C57BL/6J, also received STZ (200mg/kg intravenously or intraperitoneally). Renal function and histology were examined at weeks 1, 2, 4, and 8 after induction of diabetes. In initial optimization studies, animals were sacrificed at week 1 or week 2 and histology examined for acute renal injury.ResultsFollowing a single intraperitoneal injection of 225mg/kg of STZ, only two thirds of animals developed hyperglycemia, yet the model was associated with focal areas of acute tubular necrosis (ATN) at week 2. ATN was also observed in C57BL/6J mice given a single intravenous or intraperitoneal dose of STZ (200mg/kg), at week 2 post-diabetes. At an optimal diabetogenic dose and route (75mg/150mg/kg by intravenous injection 5 days apart), all mice developed diabetes and no ATN was observed histologically. However, even with this regimen, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was significantly impaired from week 2. This regimen was accompanied by progressive histologic changes, including tubular and glomerular hypertrophy, mesangial area expansion, as well as interstitial macrophage, CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell accumulation.ConclusionBy careful optimization of STZ dose, a stable and reproducible diabetic murine model was established. However, even in this optimized model, renal functional impairment was observed. The frequency of ATN and functional impairment casts doubt on conclusions about experimental diabetic nephropathy drawn from reports in which ATN has not been excluded rigorously

    Resonance structures in the multichannel quantum defect theory for the photofragmentation processes involving one closed and many open channels

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    The transformation introduced by Giusti-Suzor and Fano and extended by Lecomte and Ueda for the study of resonance structures in the multichannel quantum defect theory (MQDT) is used to reformulate MQDT into the forms having one-to-one correspondence with those in Fano's configuration mixing (CM) theory of resonance for the photofragmentation processes involving one closed and many open channels. The reformulation thus allows MQDT to have the full power of the CM theory, still keeping its own strengths such as the fundamental description of resonance phenomena without an assumption of the presence of a discrete state as in CM.Comment: 7 page

    Accounting for Slow J/psi from B Decay

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    A slow J/psi excess exists in the inclusive B -> J/psi+X spectrum, and is indicative of some hadronic effect. From color octet nature of c cbar pair in b-> c cbar s decay, one such possibility would be B -> J/psi+ K_g decay, where K_g is a hybrid resonance with sbar g q constituents. We show that a K_g resonance of ~ 2 GeV mass and suitably broad width could be behind the excess.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.

    Symmetric Textures in SO(10) and LMA Solution for Solar Neutrinos

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    We analyze a model based on SUSY SO(10) combined with SU(2) family symmetry and symmetric mass matrices constructed by the authors recently. Previously, only the parameter space for the LOW and vacuum oscillation (VO) solutions was investigated. We indicate in this note the parameter space which leads to large mixing angle (LMA) solution to the solar neutrino problem with a slightly modified effective neutrino mass matrix. The symmetric mass textures arising from the left-right symmetry breaking and the SU(2) symmetry breaking give rise to very good predictions for the quark and lepton masses and mixing angles. The prediction of our model for the |U_{e\nu_{3}}| element in the Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata (MNS) matrix is close to the sensitivity of current experiments; thus the validity of our model can be tested in the near future. We also investigate the correlation between the |U_{e\nu_{3}}| element and \tan^{2}\theta_{\odot} in a general two-zero neutrino mass texture.Comment: RevTeX4; 9 pages; 1 figur

    Four Light Neutrinos in Singular Seesaw Mechanism with Abelian Flavor Symmetry

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    The four light neutrino scenario, which explains the atmosphere, solar and LSND neutrino experiments, is studied in the framework of the seesaw mechanism. By taking both the Dirac and Majorana mass matrix of neutrinos to be singular, the four neutrino mass spectrum consisting of two almost degenerate pairs separated by a mass gap 1\sim 1 eV is naturally generated. Moreover the right-handed neutrino Majorana mass can be at 1014\sim 10^{14} GeV scale unlike in the usual singular seesaw mechanism. Abelian flavor symmetry is used to produce the required neutrino mass pattern. A specific example of the flavor charge assignment is provided to show that maximal mixings between the νμντ\nu_\mu-\nu_\tau and νeνs\nu_e-\nu_s are respectively attributed to the atmosphere and solar neutrino anomalies while small mixing between two pairs to the LSND results. The implication in the other fermion masses is also discussed.Comment: Firnal version to appear in PR

    Finite element and experimental analyses of closure and contact bonding of pores during hot rolling of steel

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    The closure and contact bonding behavior of internal pores in steel slabs during hot rolling was studied using experiments and the finite element method (FEM). Effects of pore size and shape were investigated, and three different cases of pore closure results were observed: no closure, partial closure, and full closure. The FEM results well reproduced various closure events. Bonding strengths of unsuccessfully closed pores, measured by tensile tests, showed critical effects. Also, there was a difference in bonding strengths of several fully closed pores. Fracture surfaces showed that welded regions could be divided into three (not, partially, and perfectly) welded regions. The pressure-time curves obtained from the FEM results indicate that pore surface contact time and deformed surface length are important parameters in pore welding. Pore size, pore shape, time of pressure contact, and deformed surface length should be considered to completely eliminate pores in final products.ope

    Collider signals from slow decays in supersymmetric models with an intermediate-scale solution to the mu problem

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    The problem of the origin of the mu parameter in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model can be solved by introducing singlet supermultiplets with non-renormalizable couplings to the ordinary Higgs supermultiplets. The Peccei-Quinn symmetry is broken at a scale which is the geometric mean between the weak scale and the Planck scale, yielding a mu term of the right order of magnitude and an invisible axion. These models also predict one or more singlet fermions which have electroweak-scale masses and suppressed couplings to MSSM states. I consider the case that such a singlet fermion, containing the axino as an admixture, is the lightest supersymmetric particle. I work out the relevant couplings in several of the simplest models of this type, and compute the partial decay widths of the next-to-lightest supersymmetric particle involving leptons or jets. Although these decays will have an average proper decay length which is most likely much larger than a typical collider detector, they can occasionally occur within the detector, providing a striking signal. With a large sample of supersymmetric events, there will be an opportunity to observe these decays, and so gain direct information about physics at very high energy scales.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX, 4 figure

    Charge asymmetry ratio as a probe of quark flavour couplings of resonant particles at the LHC

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    We show how a precise knowledge of parton distribution functions, in particular those of the u and d quarks, can be used to constrain a certain class of New Physics models in which new heavy charged resonances couple to quarks and leptons. We illustrate the method by considering a left-right symmetric model with a W' from a SU(2)_R gauge sector produced in quark-antiquark annihilation and decaying into a charged lepton and a heavy Majorana neutrino. We discuss a number of quark and lepton mixing scenarios, and simulate both signals and backgrounds in order to determine the size of the expected charge asymmetry. We show that various quark-W' mixing scenarios can indeed be constrained by charge asymmetry measurements at the LHC, particularly at 14 TeV centre of mass energy.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure

    Charmless Two-body Baryonic B Decays

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    We study charmless two-body baryonic B decays in a diagramatic approach. Relations on decay amplitudes are obtained. In general there are more than one tree and more than one penguin amplitudes. The number of independent amplitudes can be reduced in the large m_B limit. It leads to more predictive results. Some prominent modes for experimental searches are pointed out.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.

    A weakly stable algorithm for general Toeplitz systems

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    We show that a fast algorithm for the QR factorization of a Toeplitz or Hankel matrix A is weakly stable in the sense that R^T.R is close to A^T.A. Thus, when the algorithm is used to solve the semi-normal equations R^T.Rx = A^Tb, we obtain a weakly stable method for the solution of a nonsingular Toeplitz or Hankel linear system Ax = b. The algorithm also applies to the solution of the full-rank Toeplitz or Hankel least squares problem.Comment: 17 pages. An old Technical Report with postscript added. For further details, see http://wwwmaths.anu.edu.au/~brent/pub/pub143.htm
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