49,363 research outputs found
Cell surface localization of tissue transglutaminase is dependent on a fibronectin-binding site in its N-terminal beta-sandwich domain
Increasing evidence indicates that tissue transglutaminase (tTG) plays a role in the assembly and remodeling of extracellular matrices and promotes cell adhesion. Using an inducible system we have previously shown that tTG associates with the extracellular matrix deposited by stably transfected 3T3 fibroblasts overexpressing the enzyme. We now show by confocal microscopy that tTG colocalizes with pericellular fibronectin in these cells, and by immunogold electron microscopy that the two proteins are found in clusters at the cell surface. Expression vectors encoding the full-length tTG or a N-terminal truncated tTG lacking the proposed fibronectin-binding site (fused to the bacterial reporter enzyme β-galactosidase) were generated to characterize the role of fibronectin in sequestration of tTG in the pericellular matrix. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay style procedures using extracts of transiently transfected COS-7 cells and immobilized fibronectin showed that the truncation abolished fibronectin binding. Similarly, the association of tTG with the pericellular matrix of cells in suspension or with the extracellular matrix deposited by cell monolayers was prevented by the truncation. These results demonstrate that tTG binds to the pericellular fibronectin coat of cells via its N-terminal β-sandwich domain and that this interaction is crucial for cell surface association of tTG
A Bayesian Analogue of Gleason's Theorem
We introduce a novel notion of probability within quantum history theories
and give a Gleasonesque proof for these assignments. This involves introducing
a tentative novel axiom of probability. We also discuss how we are to interpret
these generalised probabilities as partially ordered notions of preference and
we introduce a tentative generalised notion of Shannon entropy. A Bayesian
approach to probability theory is adopted throughout, thus the axioms we use
will be minimal criteria of rationality rather than ad hoc mathematical axioms.Comment: 14 pages, v2: minor stylistic changes, v3: changes made in-line with
to-be-published versio
New Features of the Morphotropic Phase Boundary in the PbZr(1-x)TixO3 System
Recently a new monoclinic phase in the PbZr(1-x)TixO3 ceramic system has been
reported by Noheda et al. for the composition x= 0.48. In the present work,
samples with Ti contents of x= 0.47 and 0.50, which are both tetragonal below
their Curie points, have been investigated. In the sample with x= 0.50, the
tetragonal phase was found to transform to a monoclinic phase at about 200 K as
the temperature was lowered. The sample with x= 0.47 showed a complicated
region of phase coexistence between 440-320 K, becoming rhombohedral at around
300 K. No further symmetry change was found down to 20 K. Dielectric
measurements for these two samples are also reported. On the basis of these
results, a preliminary phase diagram is presented. Optimum compositional
homogeneity is needed to properly characterize the new monoclinic region.Comment: 5 pages, 7 PS figures embedded. RevTeX and epsf macros. Presented at
the 9th. European Meeting on Ferroelectricity, Prague, July 1999. To be
published in "Ferroelectrics
Reply to ``Comment on `Insulating Behavior of -DNA on the Micron Scale' "
In our experiment, we found that the resistance of vacuum-dried -DNA
exceeds at 295 K. Bechhoefer and Sen have raised a number of
objections to our conclusion. We provide counter arguments to support our
original conclusion.Comment: 1 page reply to comment, 1 figur
Relaxation oscillations, stability, and cavity feedback in a superradiant Raman laser
We experimentally study the relaxation oscillations and amplitude stability
properties of an optical laser operating deep into the bad-cavity regime using
a laser-cooled Rb Raman laser. By combining measurements of the laser
light field with nondemolition measurements of the atomic populations, we infer
the response of the gain medium represented by a collective atomic Bloch
vector. The results are qualitatively explained with a simple model.
Measurements and theory are extended to include the effect of intermediate
repumping states on the closed-loop stability of the oscillator and the role of
cavity feedback on stabilizing or enhancing relaxation oscillations. This
experimental study of the stability of an optical laser operating deep into the
bad-cavity regime will guide future development of superradiant lasers with
ultranarrow linewidths.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
ISOCAM spectro-imaging of the H2 rotational lines in the supernova remnant IC443
We report spectro-imaging observations of the bright western ridge of the
supernova remnant IC 443 obtained with the ISOCAM circular variable filter
(CVF) on board the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). This ridge corresponds to
a location where the interaction between the blast wave of the supernova and
ambient molecular gas is amongst the strongest. The CVF data show that the 5 to
14 micron spectrum is dominated by the pure rotational lines of molecular
hydrogen (v = 0--0, S(2) to S(8) transitions). At all positions along the
ridge, the H2 rotational lines are very strong with typical line fluxes of
10^{-4} to 10^{-3} erg/sec/cm2/sr. We compare the data to a new time-dependent
shock model; the rotational line fluxes in IC 443 are reproduced within factors
of 2 for evolutionary times between 1,000 and 2,000 years with a shock velocity
of 30 km/sec and a pre-shock density of 10^4 /cm3.Comment: To appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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