28 research outputs found

    Shedding Light on the Galaxy Luminosity Function

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    From as early as the 1930s, astronomers have tried to quantify the statistical nature of the evolution and large-scale structure of galaxies by studying their luminosity distribution as a function of redshift - known as the galaxy luminosity function (LF). Accurately constructing the LF remains a popular and yet tricky pursuit in modern observational cosmology where the presence of observational selection effects due to e.g. detection thresholds in apparent magnitude, colour, surface brightness or some combination thereof can render any given galaxy survey incomplete and thus introduce bias into the LF. Over the last seventy years there have been numerous sophisticated statistical approaches devised to tackle these issues; all have advantages -- but not one is perfect. This review takes a broad historical look at the key statistical tools that have been developed over this period, discussing their relative merits and highlighting any significant extensions and modifications. In addition, the more generalised methods that have emerged within the last few years are examined. These methods propose a more rigorous statistical framework within which to determine the LF compared to some of the more traditional methods. I also look at how photometric redshift estimations are being incorporated into the LF methodology as well as considering the construction of bivariate LFs. Finally, I review the ongoing development of completeness estimators which test some of the fundamental assumptions going into LF estimators and can be powerful probes of any residual systematic effects inherent magnitude-redshift data.Comment: 95 pages, 23 figures, 3 tables. Now published in The Astronomy & Astrophysics Review. This version: bring in line with A&AR format requirements, also minor typo corrections made, additional citations and higher rez images adde

    Synthesis of isomerically pure carboxylate- and sulfonate-substituted xanthene fluorophores

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    Xanthene-based fluorophores such as fluorescein and rhodamine are typically prepared by acid-catalyzed condensation of the appropriate resorcinol or 3-aminophenol with phthalic anhydride. Condensation of substituted phthalic anhydride species results in functionalized fluorophores that are formed as mixed isomers. Crystallization approaches to isomer separation have been reported elsewhere for symmetric fluorescein carboxylates. We describe crystallization-based separation of protected fluorescein sulfonates and coupling conditions to form sulfonamides, precursors for carboxylate-substituted rhodamines, and precursors for asymmetrically substituted fluoresceins and rhodafluors.close232

    Selective inhibition of Monoamine Oxidase B by aminoethyl substituted benzyl ethers

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    Aminoethyl 3-chlorobenzyl ether was shown previously (Ding, C.Z. and Silverman, R.B. (1993). Bioorg. Meal. Chern. Lett., 3, 2077-2078) to be a potent and selective time-dependent, but reversible inhibitor of monoamine oxidase B (MAO B). Based on this result, a series of novel aminoethyl substituted benzyl ethers was synthesized and the compounds were examined as potential inhibitors of both isozymic forms of MAO. Each compound in the series inhibits both MAO A and MAO B competitively, and IC50 values for each compound were determined. In general, the B isozyme is much more sensitive to these inhibitors than the A isozyme (except for the o- and p-substituted nitro analogues), in some cases by more than two orders of magnitude. The selectivity in favor of MAO B inhibition is relatively high for all of the meta-substituted analogues and quite low for all of the ortho-substituted analogues. Having the substituent at the ortho-position is most favorable for MAO A inhibition. With MAO B the meta-analogues were, in general, more potent than the corresponding ortho- and para-analogues with respect to their reversible binding constants. The meta-iodo analogue is the most potent analogue.</p

    Selective inhibition of Monoamine Oxidase B by aminoethyl substituted benzyl ethers

    No full text
    Aminoethyl 3-chlorobenzyl ether was shown previously (Ding, C.Z. and Silverman, R.B. (1993). Bioorg. Meal. Chern. Lett., 3, 2077-2078) to be a potent and selective time-dependent, but reversible inhibitor of monoamine oxidase B (MAO B). Based on this result, a series of novel aminoethyl substituted benzyl ethers was synthesized and the compounds were examined as potential inhibitors of both isozymic forms of MAO. Each compound in the series inhibits both MAO A and MAO B competitively, and IC50 values for each compound were determined. In general, the B isozyme is much more sensitive to these inhibitors than the A isozyme (except for the o- and p-substituted nitro analogues), in some cases by more than two orders of magnitude. The selectivity in favor of MAO B inhibition is relatively high for all of the meta-substituted analogues and quite low for all of the ortho-substituted analogues. Having the substituent at the ortho-position is most favorable for MAO A inhibition. With MAO B the meta-analogues were, in general, more potent than the corresponding ortho- and para-analogues with respect to their reversible binding constants. The meta-iodo analogue is the most potent analogue.</p

    A synthetic luciferin improves bioluminescence imaging in live mice

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    Firefly luciferase is the most widely used optical reporter for noninvasive bioluminescence imaging (BLI) in rodents. BLI relies on the ability of the injected luciferase substrate D-luciferin to access luciferase-expressing cells and tissues within the animal. Here we show that injection of mice with a synthetic luciferin, CycLuc1, improves BLI from existing luciferase reporters and enables imaging in the brain that could not be achieved with D-luciferin

    Novel mutations in SLC30A2 involved in the pathogenesis of transient neonatal zinc deficiency

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    BACKGROUND: Infants are vulnerable to zinc deficiency. Thus, abnormally low breast milk zinc levels cause transient neonatal zinc deficiency (TNZD) in breast-fed infants. TNZD has been considered to be rare because of a paucity of citations in the published literature. However, recent studies of affected mothers identified four missense mutations in the solute carrier family 30 member 2 gene (SLC30A2), which encodes the zinc transporter, ZnT2. METHODS: Genetic analyses of SLC30A2/ZnT2 in three Japanese mothers secreting low-zinc milk (whose infants developed TNZD) were performed. The effects of identified mutations were examined in a cell-based assay. Furthermore, 31 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in SLC30A2/ZnT2 were evaluated for their potential involvement in low-zinc levels in milk. RESULTS: Each mother had a different novel heterozygous mutation in SLC30A2/ZnT2. One mutation reduced splicing efficiency of the SLC30A2/ZnT2 transcript, and all ZnT2 mutants were defective in zinc transport and were unstable in cells. Moreover, four SNPs caused a significant loss of zinc-transport activity, similar to that in disease-causing ZnT2 mutants. CONCLUSION: Our results indicate that many SLC30A2/ZnT2 mutations cause or potentially cause TNZD. Genetic information concerning TNZD pathogenesis is limited, and our results suggest that the TNZD frequency may be higher than previously thought
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