130 research outputs found

    Proteins That Promote Filopodia Stability, but Not Number, Lead to More Axonal-Dendritic Contacts

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    Dendritic filopodia are dynamic protrusions that are thought to play an active role in synaptogenesis and serve as precursors to spine synapses. However, this hypothesis is largely based on a temporal correlation between filopodia formation and synaptogenesis. We investigated the role of filopodia in synapse formation by contrasting the roles of molecules that affect filopodia elaboration and motility, versus those that impact synapse induction and maturation. We used a filopodia inducing motif that is found in GAP-43, as a molecular tool, and found this palmitoylated motif enhanced filopodia number and motility, but reduced the probability of forming a stable axon-dendrite contact. Conversely, expression of neuroligin-1 (NLG-1), a synapse inducing cell adhesion molecule, resulted in a decrease in filopodia motility, but an increase in the number of stable axonal contacts. Moreover, RNAi knockdown of NLG-1 reduced the number of presynaptic contacts formed. Postsynaptic scaffolding proteins such as Shank1b, a protein that induces the maturation of spine synapses, increased the rate at which filopodia transformed into spines by stabilization of the initial contact with axons. Taken together, these results suggest that increased filopodia stability and not density, may be the rate-limiting step for synapse formation

    Purification of molybdenum oxide, growth and characterization of medium size zinc molybdate crystals for the LUMINEU program

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    The LUMINEU program aims at performing a pilot experiment on neutrinoless double beta decay of 100Mo using radiopure ZnMoO4 crystals operated as scintillating bolometers. Growth of high quality radiopure crystals is a complex task, since there are no commercially available molybdenum compounds with the required levels of purity and radioactive contamination. This paper discusses approaches to purify molybdenum and synthesize compound for high quality radiopure ZnMoO4 crystal growth. A combination of a double sublimation (with addition of zinc molybdate) with subsequent recrystallization in aqueous solutions (using zinc molybdate as a collector) was used. Zinc molybdate crystals up to 1.5 kg were grown by the low-thermal-gradient Czochralski technique, their optical, luminescent, diamagnetic, thermal and bolometric properties were tested.Comment: Contribution to Proc. of Int. Workshop on Radiopure Scintillators RPSCINT 2013, 17-20 September 2013, Kyiv, Ukraine; to be published in EPJ Web of Conferences; expected to be online in January 2014; 6 pages, 6 figures, and 3 table

    Scintillating bolometers based on ZnMoO4 and Zn100MoO4 crystals to search for 0ν2β decay of 100Mo (LUMINEU project): first tests at the Modane Underground Laboratory

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    The technology of scintillating bolometers based on zinc molybdate (ZnMoO4) crystals is under development within the LUMINEU project to search for decay of 100Mo with the goal to set the basis for large scale experiments capable to explore the inverted hierarchy region of the neutrino mass pattern. Advanced ZnMoO4 crystal scintillators with mass of ∼0.3 kg were developed and Zn100MoO4 crystal from enriched 100Mo was produced for the first time by using the low-thermal-gradient Czochralski technique. One ZnMoO4 scintillator and two samples (59 g and 63 g) cut from the enriched boule were tested aboveground at milli-Kelvin temperature as scintillating bolometers showing a high detection performance. The first results of the low background measurements with three ZnMoO4 and two enriched detectors installed in the EDELWEISS set-up at the Modane Underground Laboratory (France) are presented

    La pollution soufrée limite-t-elle le développement de la maladie de l'écorce du hêtre ? (Cryptococcus fagi, Nectria coccinea)

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    Des comptages d’arbres malades en zone plus ou moins polluée et en zone témoin montrent que la maladie de l’écorce du hêtre se développe d’autant moins que la pollution est plus forte. Le développement des deux agents de la maladie est perturbé. Le Nectria est nettement freiné. La répartition des pullulations de Cryptococcus est modifiée de façon plus complexe. Différentes hypothèses sont suggérées pour expliquer ces faits. Leur vérification nécessite de nouvelles recherches.Observations of affected trees in more or less severely polluted areas and in a non-polluted control area have shown that the development of Beech barkdisease decreases with increasing pollution levels. The development of both disease agents is modified. Nectria development is clearly slowed down. The distribution of Cryptococcus outbreak is modified in a more complex manner. Several hypotheses are suggested to explain these observations ; further research is necessary for their confirmation

    Rat prostatic binding protein: the complete sequence of the C2 gene and its flanking regions.

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    The complete sequence (2879 bp) of the androgen-controlled rat prostatic binding protein C2 gene and 1023 bp of the 5'- and 2127 bp of the 3'-flanking regions have been determined. The gene contains three exons (93, 203 and 147 bp) and two introns (1630 and 806 bp). It is flanked by two homopurine-homopyrimidine stretches of 55 and 131 nucleotides respectively, located at positions -405 and 4151. These sequences are remarkably sensitive towards S1-nuclease, indicating an altered DNA conformation under superhelical stress. Several palindromes and dyad structures are observed in the 5'-upstream region of the gene and at position -457, and 80% homology to the consensus sequence of a glucocorticoid receptor binding site is found
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