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Plasma Corticotropin-Releasing Factor Receptors and B7-2⁺ Extracellular Vesicles in Blood Correlate with Irritable Bowel Syndrome Disease Severity.
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are composed of bilayer membranes that are released by different cell types and are present in bodily fluids, such as blood, urine, and bile. EVs are thought to play a key role in intracellular communication. Based on their size and density, EVs are classified into small, medium, or large EVs. Cargo composition in EVs reflects physiological changes in health and disease. Patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) exhibit visceral hypersensitivity and mood disorders. Stressful episodes often precede disease symptoms in IBS patients. Stress-induced symptoms include, but are not limited to, abdominal pain and mood swings. Perceived stress responses are mediated by two known G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), corticotropin-releasing factor receptor 1 and 2 (CRFRs). CRFRs belong to the Class B secretin receptor family of GPCRs. Here, we show that CRFRs were present in human and murine plasma, and in EVs purified from mouse serum. CRFRs were present in plasma from IBS patients and healthy controls. EVs secreted from immune cells influence both adaptive and innate immune responses via exchange of EVs between different immune cell types. B7-2 (CD86), a plasma membrane antigen-presenting protein, is present on EVs secreted from dendritic, B-, and mast cells, whereas CD9 is present on EVs secreted from dendritic and intestinal epithelial cells. We found that plasma CRFR levels positively correlated with B7-2+ EVs (R = 0.8597, p < 0.0001), but no association was seen with CD9+ EVs. Plasma CRFRs expression negatively correlated with IBS severity scores. Our data suggests that plasma EVs from immune cells carry CRFRs as cargos and influence cell-cell communication in health and disease
Atomic ionization by sterile-to-active neutrino conversion and constraints on dark matter sterile neutrinos with germanium detectors
The transition magnetic moment of a sterile-to-active neutrino conversion
gives rise to not only radiative decay of a sterile neutrino, but also its
non-standard interaction (NSI) with matter. For sterile neutrinos of keV-mass
as dark matter candidates, their decay signals are actively searched for in
cosmic X-ray spectra. In this work, we consider the NSI that leads to atomic
ionization, which can be detected by direct dark matter experiments. It is
found that this inelastic scattering process for a nonrelativistic sterile
neutrino has a pronounced enhancement in the differential cross section at
energy transfer about half of its mass, manifesting experimentally as peaks in
the measurable energy spectra. The enhancement effects gradually smear out as
the sterile neutrino becomes relativistic. Using data taken with germanium
detectors that have fine energy resolution in keV and sub-keV regimes,
constraints on sterile neutrino mass and its transition magnetic moment are
derived and compared with those from astrophysical observations
Translating Common English and Chinese Verb-Noun Pairs in Technical Documents with Collocational and Bilingual Information
Large Fermi Arcs in Unconventional Weyl Semimetal RhSi
The theoretical proposal of chiral fermions in topological semimetals has led
to a significant effort towards their experimental realization. In particular,
the Fermi surfaces of chiral semimetals carry quantized Chern numbers, making
them an attractive platform for the observation of exotic transport and optical
phenomena. While the simplest example of a chiral fermion in condensed matter
is a conventional Weyl fermion, recent theoretical works have proposed
a number of unconventional chiral fermions beyond the Standard Model which are
protected by unique combinations of topology and crystalline symmetries.
However, materials candidates for experimentally probing the transport and
response signatures of these unconventional fermions have thus far remained
elusive. In this paper, we propose the RhSi family in space group (SG) 198
as the ideal platform for the experimental examination of unconventional chiral
fermions. We find that RhSi is a filling-enforced semimetal that features near
its Fermi surface a chiral double six-fold-degenerate spin-1 Weyl node at
and a previously uncharacterized four-fold-degenerate chiral fermion at
. Each unconventional fermion displays Chern number at the Fermi
level. We also show that RhSi displays the largest possible momentum separation
of compensative chiral fermions, the largest proposed topologically nontrivial
energy window, and the longest possible Fermi arcs on its surface. We conclude
by proposing signatures of an exotic bulk photogalvanic response in RhSi.Comment: Submitted on 11th May 201
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