766 research outputs found
Reticulospinal and corticospinal axon regeneration after complete spinal cord injury
Neuroprosthetic rehabilitation demonstrated that significant functional benefit could be
achieved with lumbosacral neuromodulation in both human and animal models of spinal
cord injury. It promoted the recovery of voluntary leg movements through the
reorganization of residual reticulospinal and propriospinal projections pathways.
However, in case of complete spinal cord injuries (SCI), which isolate the circuits under
the lesion from any supraspinal control, the outcome of neuroprosthetic rehabilitation is
still not sufficient. Indeed, it will require the restoration of robust regrowth and
sprouting of several types of axons across the injury. Axons fail to regrow across spinal
lesions because of different inhibitory mechanisms. It has been demonstrated that this
spontaneous axon regeneration failure can be reversed by i) stimulating the neuronal
intrinsic growth capacity using viral technology, ii) remodeling the lesion core with
growth factors, in order to create a more permissive environment, and iii) guiding axons
with chemo-attractive molecules across and beyond the SCI site. It was thus
demonstrated that propriospinal axons are able to regrow and build a robust
descending bridge across complete SCIs when the needed facilitators are provided.
However, this robust propriospinal bridging failed to promote functional recovery by
itself. It might be explained by an insufficient descending motor control partly
supported by other systems such as the reticulospinal tract (RtST) and the corticospinal
tract (CST). Therefore we wanted to study the regenerative potential of the RtST and
CST pathways. The RtST arises from the brainstem and reaches for the spinal cord
acting as relay for descending motor cortical commands. The CST is the main descending
motor cortical command arising from the primary motor cortex.
In the present study, we applied the same strategy to enhance sprouting and regrowth
of reticulospinal and corticospinal neurons across anatomically complete SCI. We first
activated the neuronal intrinsic growth capacity of both tracts using viral technology.
The lesion environment was then remodeled with growth factors, delivered using a
biocompatible hydrogel. Finally, we established chemical axon guidance using chemoattractant
molecules. These interventions were delivered with a spatiotemporal profile
corresponding to the axon growth sequence during development. We did not obtain any
CST regeneration, due to the severe crush injury model inducing extensive CST axons
degeneration probably caused by ischemic phenomenon. Regarding the RtST, we
obtained significant reticulospinal regeneration into the lesion core with some fibers
growing across the lesion reaching the healthy caudal tissue. This regeneration
remained limited though as compared with the propriospinal results indicating the
importance of identifying complementary strategies to increase the density of the
regenerated tract and to attract the axons in the healthy tissue below the SCI. Our
ultimate goal is to restore anatomical communications across complete SCI and promote
their functional integration using neuroprosthetic rehabilitation program
Effect of Measurement on the Periodicity of the Coulomb Staircase of a Superconducting Box
We report on the effect of the back-action of a Single Cooper Pair Transistor
electrometer (E) on the measurement of charge on the island of a
superconducting box (B). The charge is e-periodic in the gate bias of B when E
is operated near voltages 2Delta/e or 4Delta/e. We show that this is due to
quasiparticle poisoning of B at a rate proportional to the number of
quasiparticle tunneling events in E per second. We are able to eliminate this
back action and recover 2e charge periodicity using a new measurement method
based on switching current modulation of E.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, revised versio
The Inductive Single-Electron Transistor (L-SET)
We demonstrate a sensitive method of charge detection based on
radio-frequency readout of the Josephson inductance of a superconducting
single-electron transistor. Charge sensitivity ,
limited by preamplifier, is achieved in an operation mode which takes advantage
of the nonlinearity of the Josephson potential. Owing to reactive readout, our
setup has more than two orders of magnitude lower dissipation than the existing
method of radio-frequency electrometry. With an optimized sample, we expect
uncoupled energy sensitivity below in the same experimental scheme.Comment: 10 page
Photon mediated interaction between distant quantum dot circuits
Engineering the interaction between light and matter is an important goal in
the emerging field of quantum opto-electronics. Thanks to the use of cavity
quantum electrodynamics architectures, one can envision a fully hybrid
multiplexing of quantum conductors. Here, we use such an architecture to couple
two quantum dot circuits . Our quantum dots are separated by 200 times their
own size, with no direct tunnel and electrostatic couplings between them. We
demonstrate their interaction, mediated by the cavity photons. This could be
used to scale up quantum bit architectures based on quantum dot circuits or
simulate on-chip phonon-mediated interactions between strongly correlated
electrons
Chemical analysis and aqueous solution properties of Charged Amphiphilic Block Copolymers PBA-b-PAA synthesized by MADIX
We have linked the structural and dynamic properties in aqueous solution of
amphiphilic charged diblock copolymers poly(butyl acrylate)-b-poly(acrylic
acid), PBA-b-PAA, synthesized by controlled radical polymerization, with the
physico-chemical characteristics of the samples. Despite product imperfections,
the samples self-assemble in melt and aqueous solutions as predicted by
monodisperse microphase separation theory. However, the PBA core are abnormally
large; the swelling of PBA cores is not due to AA (the Flory parameter
chiPBA/PAA, determined at 0.25, means strong segregation), but to h-PBA
homopolymers (content determined by Liquid Chromatography at the Point of
Exclusion and Adsorption Transition LC-PEAT). Beside the dominant population of
micelles detected by scattering experiments, capillary electrophoresis CE
analysis permitted detection of two other populations, one of h-PAA, and the
other of free PBA-b-PAA chains, that have very short PBA blocks and never
self-assemble. Despite the presence of these free unimers, the self-assembly in
solution was found out of equilibrium: the aggregation state is history
dependant and no unimer exchange between micelles occurs over months
(time-evolution SANS). The high PBA/water interfacial tension, measured at 20
mN/m, prohibits unimer exchange between micelles. PBA-b-PAA solution systems
are neither at thermal equilibrium nor completely frozen systems: internal
fractionation of individual aggregates can occur.Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures and 4 tables submitted to Journal of Interface
and Colloidal Scienc
Variable Selection and Model Averaging in Semiparametric Overdispersed Generalized Linear Models
We express the mean and variance terms in a double exponential regression
model as additive functions of the predictors and use Bayesian variable
selection to determine which predictors enter the model, and whether they enter
linearly or flexibly. When the variance term is null we obtain a generalized
additive model, which becomes a generalized linear model if the predictors
enter the mean linearly. The model is estimated using Markov chain Monte Carlo
simulation and the methodology is illustrated using real and simulated data
sets.Comment: 8 graphs 35 page
Coherent coupling of a single spin to microwave cavity photons
Electron spins and photons are complementary quantum-mechanical objects that
can be used to carry, manipulate and transform quantum information. To combine
these resources, it is desirable to achieve the coherent coupling of a single
spin to photons stored in a superconducting resonator. Using a circuit design
based on a nanoscale spin-valve, we coherently hybridize the individual spin
and charge states of a double quantum dot while preserving spin coherence. This
scheme allows us to achieve spin-photon coupling up to the MHz range at the
single spin level. The cooperativity is found to reach 2.3, and the spin
coherence time is about 60ns. We thereby demonstrate a mesoscopic device
suitable for non-destructive spin read-out and distant spin coupling.Comment: minor differences with published versio
Simulation laser d'impacts de particules de très grande vitesse
Le laser au néodyme du GRECO I.L.M. délivrant des impulsions de l'ordre de 100 J en quelques ns, nous a permis de simuler des impacts de micrométéorites silicatées de quelques dixièmes de μg, de vitesse comprise entre 5 et 45 km/s, sur une cible d'aluminium. Les cratères produits dans la cible sont hémisphériques, et le rapport Km, de la masse éjectée sur la masse de la particule incidente simulée, varie avec la vitesse d'impact Vp selon la loi Km = 1,17 V 1,52p
Conserved spin and orbital phase along carbon nanotubes connected with multiple ferromagnetic contacts
We report on spin dependent transport measurements in carbon nanotubes based
multi-terminal circuits. We observe a gate-controlled spin signal in non-local
voltages and an anomalous conductance spin signal, which reveal that both the
spin and the orbital phase can be conserved along carbon nanotubes with
multiple ferromagnetic contacts. This paves the way for spintronics devices
exploiting both these quantum mechanical degrees of freedom on the same
footing.Comment: 8 pages - minor differences with published versio
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