139 research outputs found
Histone Deacetylase-linked Repression and Metabolically-linked Derepression of Adenovirus Persistent Infection of Lymphocytes
Adenovirus (AdV) infection is ubiquitous in the human population and causes acute infection in the respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts. In addition to lytic infections in epithelial cells, AdV can persist in a latent form in mucosal lymphocytes, and nearly 80% of children contain viral DNA in the lymphocytes of their tonsils and adenoids. Reactivation of latent AdV is thought to be the source of deadly viremia in pediatric transplant patients. Adenovirus latency and reactivation in lymphocytes is not well-studied, though immune cell activation has been reported to promote productive infection from latency. In lymphocytes, programs of gene expression during both resting and activated states have been shown to be regulated in part by chromatin remodelers and co-repressors, including Class I and II histone deacetylases (HDACs), Class III HDACs (sirtuins), and the C-terminal Binding Protein Family (CtBPs). Because the adenovirus genome is chromatinized through rapid association with cellular histones upon entry into the host cell nucleus, viral gene expression is potentially regulated by these same cellular chromatin-modifying mechanisms and responsive to immunoactivation of the host lymphocyte. In this doctoral work, we show that enzymatic activity of Class I HDACs and sirtuins, but not Class II HDACs, contribute to the repression of viral early and late genes during persistent infection. We also show that modulation of cellular NAD+/NADH can de-repress adenovirus gene expression in persistently-infected lymphocytes. In contrast, disrupting the NAD-dependent CtBP repressor complex interaction with PxDLS-containing binding partners paradoxically alters AdV gene expression
Optimization of aeration schemes and motor and blower usage for wastewater treatment
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on March 28, 2011).The entire thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file; a non-technical public abstract appears in the public.pdf file.Thesis advisor: Dr. Enos Inniss.M.S. University of Missouri--Columbia 2010.This thesis discusses the control of aeration schemes on a lab sized sequencing batch reactor used for biological wastewater treatment. The focus was changing aeration schemes for two lab reactors and determining which might work best for full scale facilities. Several full scale facilities were visited to determine how the lab research related to the actual operation of full scale wastewater treatment.Includes bibliographical reference
Evidence for long-term Gamma-ray and X-ray variability from the unidentified TeV source HESS J0632+057
HESS J0632+057 is one of only two unidentified very-high-energy gamma-ray
sources which appear to be point-like within experimental resolution. It is
possibly associated with the massive Be star MWC 148 and has been suggested to
resemble known TeV binary systems like LS I +61 303 or LS 5039. HESS J0632+057
was observed by VERITAS for 31 hours in 2006, 2008 and 2009. During these
observations, no significant signal in gamma rays with energies above 1 TeV was
detected from the direction of HESS J0632+057. A flux upper limit corresponding
to 1.1% of the flux of the Crab Nebula has been derived from the VERITAS data.
The non-detection by VERITAS excludes with a probability of 99.993% that HESS
J0632+057 is a steady gamma-ray emitter. Contemporaneous X-ray observations
with Swift XRT reveal a factor of 1.8+-0.4 higher flux in the 1-10 keV range
than earlier X-ray observations of HESS J0632+057. The variability in the
gamma-ray and X-ray fluxes supports interpretation of the ob ject as a
gamma-ray emitting binary.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
A connection between star formation activity and cosmic rays in the starburst galaxy M 82
Although Galactic cosmic rays (protons and nuclei) are widely believed to be
dominantly accelerated by the winds and supernovae of massive stars, definitive
evidence of this origin remains elusive nearly a century after their discovery
[1]. The active regions of starburst galaxies have exceptionally high rates of
star formation, and their large size, more than 50 times the diameter of
similar Galactic regions, uniquely enables reliable calorimetric measurements
of their potentially high cosmic-ray density [2]. The cosmic rays produced in
the formation, life, and death of their massive stars are expected to
eventually produce diffuse gamma-ray emission via their interactions with
interstellar gas and radiation. M 82, the prototype small starburst galaxy, is
predicted to be the brightest starburst galaxy in gamma rays [3, 4]. Here we
report the detection of >700 GeV gamma rays from M 82. From these data we
determine a cosmic-ray density of 250 eV cm-3 in the starburst core of M 82, or
about 500 times the average Galactic density. This result strongly supports
that cosmic-ray acceleration is tied to star formation activity, and that
supernovae and massive-star winds are the dominant accelerators.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures; published in Nature; Version is prior to
Nature's in-house style editing (differences are minimal
Detection of Extended VHE Gamma Ray Emission from G106.3+2.7 with VERITAS
We report the detection of very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray emission from
supernova remnant (SNR) G106.3+2.7. Observations performed in 2008 with the
VERITAS atmospheric Cherenkov gamma-ray telescope resolve extended emission
overlapping the elongated radio SNR. The 7.3 sigma (pre-trials) detection has a
full angular extent of roughly 0.6deg by 0.4deg. Most notably, the centroid of
the VHE emission is centered near the peak of the coincident 12CO (J = 1-0)
emission, 0.4deg away from the pulsar PSR J2229+6114, situated at the northern
end of the SNR. Evidently the current-epoch particles from the pulsar wind
nebula are not participating in the gamma-ray production. The VHE energy
spectrum measured with VERITAS is well characterized by a power law dN/dE =
N_0(E/3 TeV)^{-G} with a differential index of G = 2.29 +/- 0.33stat +/-
0.30sys and a flux of N_0 = (1.15 +/- 0.27stat +/- 0.35sys)x 10^{-13} cm^{-2}
s^{-1} TeV^{-1}. The integral flux above 1 TeV corresponds to ~5 percent of the
steady Crab Nebula emission above the same energy. We describe the observations
and analysis of the object and briefly discuss the implications of the
detection in a multiwavelength context.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Discovery of Very High-Energy Gamma-Ray Radiation from the BL Lac 1ES 0806+524
The high-frequency-peaked BL-Lacertae object \objectname{1ES 0806+524}, at
redshift z=0.138, was observed in the very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray regime
by VERITAS between November 2006 and April 2008. These data encompass the two-,
and three-telescope commissioning phases, as well as observations with the full
four-telescope array. \objectname{1ES 0806+524} is detected with a statistical
significance of 6.3 standard deviations from 245 excess events. Little or no
measurable variability on monthly time scales is found. The photon spectrum for
the period November 2007 to April 2008 can be characterized by a power law with
photon index between
300 GeV and 700 GeV. The integral flux above 300 GeV is
which corresponds to 1.8% of the Crab Nebula flux. Non contemporaneous
multiwavelength observations are combined with the VHE data to produce a
broadband spectral energy distribution that can be reasonably described using a
synchrotron-self Compton model.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted to APJ
Multiwavelength Observations of LS I +61 303 with VERITAS, Swift and RXTE
We present results from a long-term monitoring campaign on the TeV binary LSI
+61 303 with VERITAS at energies above 500 GeV, and in the 2-10 keV hard X-ray
bands with RXTE and Swift, sampling nine 26.5 day orbital cycles between
September 2006 and February 2008. The binary was observed by VERITAS to be
variable, with all integrated observations resulting in a detection at the 8.8
sigma (2006/2007) and 7.3 sigma (2007/2008) significance level for emission
above 500 GeV. The source was detected during active periods with flux values
ranging from 5 to 20% of the Crab Nebula, varying over the course of a single
orbital cycle. Additionally, the observations conducted in the 2007-2008
observing season show marginal evidence (at the 3.6 sigma significance level)
for TeV emission outside of the apastron passage of the compact object around
the Be star. Contemporaneous hard X-ray observations with RXTE and Swift show
large variability with flux values typically varying between 0.5 and 3.0*10^-11
ergs cm^-2 s^-1 over a single orbital cycle. The contemporaneous X-ray and TeV
data are examined and it is shown that the TeV sampling is not dense enough to
detect a correlation between the two bands.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, 2 table, Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
VERITAS Search for VHE Gamma-ray Emission from Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies
Indirect dark matter searches with ground-based gamma-ray observatories
provide an alternative for identifying the particle nature of dark matter that
is complementary to that of direct search or accelerator production
experiments. We present the results of observations of the dwarf spheroidal
galaxies Draco, Ursa Minor, Bootes 1, and Willman 1 conducted by VERITAS. These
galaxies are nearby dark matter dominated objects located at a typical distance
of several tens of kiloparsecs for which there are good measurements of the
dark matter density profile from stellar velocity measurements. Since the
conventional astrophysical background of very high energy gamma rays from these
objects appears to be negligible, they are good targets to search for the
secondary gamma-ray photons produced by interacting or decaying dark matter
particles. No significant gamma-ray flux above 200 GeV was detected from these
four dwarf galaxies for a typical exposure of ~20 hours. The 95% confidence
upper limits on the integral gamma-ray flux are in the range 0.4-2.2x10^-12
photons cm^-2s^-1. We interpret this limiting flux in the context of pair
annihilation of weakly interacting massive particles and derive constraints on
the thermally averaged product of the total self-annihilation cross section and
the relative velocity of the WIMPs. The limits are obtained under conservative
assumptions regarding the dark matter distribution in dwarf galaxies and are
approximately three orders of magnitude above the generic theoretical
prediction for WIMPs in the minimal supersymmetric standard model framework.
However significant uncertainty exists in the dark matter distribution as well
as the neutralino cross sections which under favorable assumptions could
further lower the limits.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures, updated to reflect version published in ApJ.
NOTE: M.D. Wood added as autho
VERITAS Upper Limit on the VHE Emission from the Radio Galaxy NGC 1275
The recent detection by the Fermi gamma-ray space telescope of high-energy
gamma-rays from the radio galaxy NGC 1275 makes the observation of the very
high energy (VHE: E > 100 GeV) part of its broadband spectrum particularly
interesting, especially for the understanding of active galactic nuclei (AGN)
with misaligned multi-structured jets. The radio galaxy NGC 1275 was recently
observed by VERITAS at energies above 100 GeV for about 8 hours. No VHE
gamma-ray emission was detected by VERITAS from NGC 1275. A 99% confidence
level upper limit of 2.1% of the Crab Nebula flux level is obtained at the
decorrelation energy of approximately 340 GeV, corresponding to 19% of the
power-law extrapolation of the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) result.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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