222 research outputs found

    Study of avian Acyl-CoA Cholesterol Acyltransferase

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    Acyl-CoA Cholesterol Acyltransferase (ACAT) (EC.2.3.1.26) catalyzes intracellular esterification of cholesterol with long chain fatty acyl-CoA. ACAT is an integral membrane protein of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane and plays a very important role in intracellular cholesterol homeostasis. Activity of ACAT is important for the production and secretion of lipoproteins and for intestinal absorption of dietary cholesterol. The involvement of ACAT activity in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and its related heart diseases leads to an extensive effort from both the pharmaceutical industry and the basic research community to study this protein and its catalytic mechanism. ACAT from yolk sac membranes of chicken eggs 16 days after fertilization has higher activity and better stability compared with the mammalian counterpart and plays a significant part in the supply of lipid nutrients as both structural components and energy source for developing embryos. ACAT of yolk sac membranes was studied in the current work and turned out to share many common features with its mammalian equivalent, including catalytically related histidine(s) and cysteine(s), detergent extractable activity, and possible cooperative interaction between cholesterol and ACAT. Differences in the properties of the enzyme exist between avian and mammalian sources and the most striking one is the lack of any effect of 25-hydroxycholesterol on the enzyme from yolk sac membrane. Redistribution of cholesterol within microsomal membranes accounts for the observed elevation of ACAT activity during storage at 4°C and factors in lipid bilayers may exist and restrict a complete random redistribution of cholesterol. The methyl ether of [beta]-cyclodextrin effectively extracts cholesterol from microsomal membranes upon repeated treatment, and it enhances cholesterol movement within microsomal fragments and between microsomal and liposomal vesicles, leading to enhanced activation of ACAT in microsomes and saturation of the activity when assayed with increasing concentration of cholesterol

    A combined method for gas-bearing layer identification in a complex sandstone reservoir

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    Langgu Depression is a mature oil and gas exploration area with complicated lithological and physical properties. The varying formation fluid, low-resistivity hydrocarbon-bearing reservoirs, and non-uniform logging series greatly increase the difficulty of gas reservoir identification. The Monte Carlo method is employed to simulate the neutron–gamma logging responses to gas saturation and the influential factors. According to the result, a new gas identification chart eliminating the influence of porosity and formation water salinity is proposed to identify gas reservoirs in the old wells. At the same time, a fluid factor extracted from array acoustic logging and core measurement data is sensitive to the development of gas-bearing layers and useful for the identification of gas reservoirs in the new wells with array acoustic logging. The field examples show that the new combined method greatly improves the ability to identify gas-bearing layers and works well in old well reexamination and new well interpretation

    Differential birefringence in Bragg gratings in multicore fiber under transverse stress

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    We present experimental measurements of the peak splitting of the reflection spectra of fiber Bragg gratings as a result of birefringence induced by transverse loading of a multicore fiber. Measurements show that the splitting is a function of the applied load and the direction of the load relative to the azimuth of the fiber. A model for calculating the stress in the fiber that is due to an applied load is in good agreement with our experimental observations

    Ground-Based Polarimetric Remote Sensing of Dust Aerosol Properties in Chinese Deserts near Hexi Corridor

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    One-year observation of dust aerosol properties near Hexi Corridor was obtained from polarimetric measurements by ground-based sunphotometer in the county of Minqin in northwestern China from March 2012 to February 2013. We observed an annual mean AOD of 0.22±0.22 at 0.50 μm and Ångström exponents of 0.1–1.0 fitting a bimode normal distribution centered at 0.18 and 0.50, respectively. The effective radii of fine (0.13–0.17 μm) and coarse (2.49–3.49 μm) modes were found stable at all seasons together with the appearance of a third mode of particle radius at 0.4–1.0 μm when AOD was larger than 0.6. It is noticeable that the real (1.5–1.7) and imaginary (0.0005 to 0.09) parts of complex refractive indices were higher than other studies performed in other desert regions of China, while single scattering albedo was relatively lower (~0.84–0.89) at wavelengths of 0.44, 0.67, 0.87, and 1.02 μm. This is partially due to calcite or hematite in the soil in Minqin or the influence of anthropogenic aerosols containing carbon. Moreover, from our novel polarimetric measurement, the scattering phase function (F11) and degree of linear polarization for incident unpolarized light (-F12/F11) of dust aerosols were also obtained within this deserted area

    Topology hierarchy of transition metal dichalcogenides built from quantum spin Hall layers

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    The evolution of the physical properties of two-dimensional material from monolayer limit to the bulk reveals unique consequences from dimension confinement and provides a distinct tuning knob for applications. Monolayer 1T'-phase transition metal dichalcogenides (1T'-TMDs) with ubiquitous quantum spin Hall (QSH) states are ideal two-dimensional building blocks of various three-dimensional topological phases. However, the stacking geometry was previously limited to the bulk 1T'-WTe2 type. Here, we introduce the novel 2M-TMDs consisting of translationally stacked 1T'-monolayers as promising material platforms with tunable inverted bandgaps and interlayer coupling. By performing advanced polarization-dependent angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy as well as first-principles calculations on the electronic structure of 2M-TMDs, we revealed a topology hierarchy: 2M-WSe2, MoS2, and MoSe2 are weak topological insulators (WTIs), whereas 2M-WS2 is a strong topological insulator (STI). Further demonstration of topological phase transitions by tunning interlayer distance indicates that band inversion amplitude and interlayer coupling jointly determine different topological states in 2M-TMDs. We propose that 2M-TMDs are parent compounds of various exotic phases including topological superconductors and promise great application potentials in quantum electronics due to their flexibility in patterning with two-dimensional materials

    Validation of the plasma-wall self-organization model for density limit in ECRH-assisted start-up of Ohmic discharges on J-TEXT

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    A recently developed plasma-wall self-organization (PWSO) model predicts a significantly enhanced density limit, which may be attainable in tokamaks with ECRH-assisted ohmic startup and sufficiently high initial neutral density. Experiments have been conducted on J-TEXT to validate such a density limit scenario based on this model. Experimental results demonstrate that increasing the pre-filled gas pressure or ECRH power during the startup phase can effectively enhance plasma purity and raise the density limit at the flat-top. Despite the dominant carbon fraction in the wall material, some discharges approach the edge of the density-free regime of the 1D model of PWSO.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figure

    T cell antigen discovery via trogocytosis

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    T cell receptor (TCR) ligand discovery is essential for understanding and manipulating immune responses to tumors. We developed a cell-based selection platform for TCR ligand discovery that exploits a membrane transfer phenomenon called trogocytosis. We discovered that T cell membrane proteins are transferred specifically to target cells that present cognate peptide–major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. Co-incubation of T cells expressing an orphan TCR with target cells collectively presenting a library of peptide–MHCs led to specific labeling of cognate target cells, enabling isolation of these target cells and sequencing of the cognate TCR ligand. We validated this method for two clinically employed TCRs and further used the platform to identify the cognate neoepitope for a subject-derived neoantigen-specific TCR. Thus, target cell trogocytosis is a robust tool for TCR ligand discovery that will be useful for studying basic tumor immunology and identifying new targets for immunotherapy
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