142 research outputs found
Immunoexpression of constitutive and inducible cyclo-oxygenase isoforms in the rat foetal and maternal digestive tract
Cyclo-oxygenase (COX), which catalyses the conversion of arachidonic acid
to prostaglandin endoperoxide and prostanoids, is widely expressed in mammalian
organs. The aim of the study was to evaluate the immunoexpression
of the constitutive and inducible cyclo-oxygenase isoforms (COX-1 and COX-2
respectively) in the oesophagus, stomach and the small and large bowels of
untreated rat dams and foetuses on gestational day 21. The localisation of
the COX isoforms was similar in the maternal and foetal organs, although
the intensity of the reaction for COX-2 was stronger in the foetuses. Cytoplasmic
COX-1 immunostaining was found in myocytes of the muscularis
propria, muscularis mucosae and the blood vessels. It was also positive in
the endothelial cells, scattered stromal cells of the lamina propria and the
ganglion cells of the nerve plexus in the bowels. Apart from the keratinised
layer, a strong reaction was revealed in the stratified squamous epithelium
of the oesophagus and forestomach. Negative or weakly positive staining
was found in the mucus-secreting cells covering the surface, gastric pits
and pyloric glands, as well as in the parietal cells and the chief cells. Weakly
positive COX-1 immunostaining was observed in epithelial cells of the small
intestine crypts, but in some cases enterocytes and goblet cells covering
villi were also positive. In the colonic mucosa weak COX-1 staining was
typical of the absorptive, and goblet cells. The COX-2 immunostaining was
nuclear and/or cytoplasmic. An inconsistent positive reaction was seen in
the muscle of the muscularis mucosae, muscularis propria and the blood
vessels. Positive staining was also found in scattered stromal cells of the
lamina propria and adventitia and the ganglion cells. Weak nuclear staining
was found in the stratified squamous epithelium of the oesophagus and
forestomach. Unlike the strong foetal reactivity in the epithelial cells of the
glandular stomach, a negative or weakly positive reaction was seen in the
maternal parietal and/or mucous-secreting surface stomach cells. Some epithelial
cells of the crypts both in the small and large bowel were also COX-2
positive. In conclusion, constitutive and inducible COX isoforms were detected in the digestive tract of pregnant female and in foetuses. COX-1
was the predominant isoform in both the adult and foetal organs. (Folia
Morphol 2008; 67: 24-31)
Predicate Abstraction for Linked Data Structures
We present Alias Refinement Types (ART), a new approach to the verification
of correctness properties of linked data structures. While there are many
techniques for checking that a heap-manipulating program adheres to its
specification, they often require that the programmer annotate the behavior of
each procedure, for example, in the form of loop invariants and pre- and
post-conditions. Predicate abstraction would be an attractive abstract domain
for performing invariant inference, existing techniques are not able to reason
about the heap with enough precision to verify functional properties of data
structure manipulating programs. In this paper, we propose a technique that
lifts predicate abstraction to the heap by factoring the analysis of data
structures into two orthogonal components: (1) Alias Types, which reason about
the physical shape of heap structures, and (2) Refinement Types, which use
simple predicates from an SMT decidable theory to capture the logical or
semantic properties of the structures. We prove ART sound by translating types
into separation logic assertions, thus translating typing derivations in ART
into separation logic proofs. We evaluate ART by implementing a tool that
performs type inference for an imperative language, and empirically show, using
a suite of data-structure benchmarks, that ART requires only 21% of the
annotations needed by other state-of-the-art verification techniques
Early postnatal development of the lumbar vertebrae in male Wistar rats: double staining and digital radiological studies
The aim of the study was to evaluate the physiological developmental changes of male ratsâ lumbar vertebrae during the first 22 days after birth. Morphology and mineralisation of lumbar vertebrae were evaluated using double-staining and digital radiography system, which allowed vertebral width and optical density to be determined. Pup weight, crown-rump length, body mass index and vertebral width increased during postnatal period and significantly correlated with their age. Bone mineralisation, as measured by optical density, did not show any significant differences. The complete fusion of the primary ossification centres had a cranio- -caudal direction and started on day 19 after parturition but was incomplete by day 22. It could be concluded that, unlike significant age-related increase of vertebral size, mineralisation was only slightly elevated during evaluated postnatal period. The method described is supplementary to alizarin red S staining as it provides both qualitative and quantitative data on mineralisation in a similar manner to micro computed tomography but does not allow 3 dimensional and microarchitecture examination
4-1BBL-containing leukemic extracellular vesicles promote immunosuppressive effector regulatory T cells
Chronic and acute myeloid leukemia evade immune system surveillance and induce immunosuppression by expanding proleukemic Foxp31 regulatory T cells (Tregs). High levels of immunosuppressive Tregs predict inferior response to chemotherapy, leukemia relapse, and shorter survival. However, mechanisms that promote Tregs in myeloid leukemias remain largely unexplored. Here, we identify leukemic extracellular vesicles (EVs) as drivers of effector proleukemic Tregs. Using mouse model of leukemia-like disease, we found that Rab27adependent secretion of leukemic EVs promoted leukemia engraftment, which was associated with higher abundance of activated, immunosuppressive Tregs. Leukemic EVs attenuated mTOR-S6 and activated STAT5 signaling, as well as evoked significant transcriptomic changes in Tregs. We further identified specific effector signature of Tregs promoted by leukemic EVs. Leukemic EVs-driven Tregs were characterized by elevated expression of effector/tumor Treg markers CD39, CCR8, CD30, TNFR2, CCR4, TIGIT, and IL21R and included 2 distinct effector Treg (eTreg) subsets: CD301CCR8hiTNFR2hi eTreg1 and CD391TIGIThi eTreg2. Finally, we showed that costimulatory ligand 4-1BBL/CD137L, shuttled by leukemic EVs, promoted suppressive activity and effector phenotype of Tregs by regulating expression of receptors such as CD30 and TNFR2. Collectively, our work highlights the role of leukemic extracellular vesicles in stimulation of immunosuppressive Tregs and leukemia growth. We postulate that targeting of Rab27a-dependent secretion of leukemic EVs may be a viable therapeutic approach in myeloid neoplasms
Relaxational dynamics in 3D randomly diluted Ising models
We study the purely relaxational dynamics (model A) at criticality in
three-dimensional disordered Ising systems whose static critical behaviour
belongs to the randomly diluted Ising universality class. We consider the
site-diluted and bond-diluted Ising models, and the +- J Ising model along the
paramagnetic-ferromagnetic transition line. We perform Monte Carlo simulations
at the critical point using the Metropolis algorithm and study the dynamic
behaviour in equilibrium at various values of the disorder parameter. The
results provide a robust evidence of the existence of a unique model-A dynamic
universality class which describes the relaxational critical dynamics in all
considered models. In particular, the analysis of the size-dependence of
suitably defined autocorrelation times at the critical point provides the
estimate z=2.35(2) for the universal dynamic critical exponent. We also study
the off-equilibrium relaxational dynamics following a quench from T=\infty to
T=T_c. In agreement with the field-theory scenario, the analysis of the
off-equilibrium dynamic critical behavior gives an estimate of z that is
perfectly consistent with the equilibrium estimate z=2.35(2).Comment: 38 page
Photoluminescence and Electron Spin Resonance of ilicon Dioxide Crystal with Rutile Structure (Stishovite)
This work was supported by ERANET MYND. Also, financial support provided by Scientific Research Project for Students and Young Researchers Nr. SJZ/2017/2 realized at the Institute of Solid State Physics, University of Latvia is greatly acknowledged. The authors express our gratitude to R.I. Mashkovtsev for help in ESR signal interpretation. The authors are appreciative to T.I. Dyuzheva, L.M. Lityagina, N.A. Bendeliani for stishovite single crystals and to K. Hubner and H.-J. Fitting for stishovite powder of Barringer Meteor Crater.An electron spin resonance (ESR) and photoluminescence signal is observed in the as grown single crystal of stishovite indicating the presence of defects in the nonâirradiated sample. The photoluminescence of the as received stishovite single crystals exhibits two main bands â a blue at 3 eV and an UV at 4.75 eV. Luminescence is excited in the range of optical transparency of stishovite (below 8.75 eV) and, therefore, is ascribed to defects. A wide range of decay kinetics under a pulsed excitation is observed. For the blue band besides the exponential decay with a time constant of about 18 ÎŒs an additional ms component is revealed. For the UV band besides the fast component with a time constant of 1â3 ns a component with a decay in tens ÎŒs is obtained. The main components (18 ÎŒs and 1â3 ns) possess a typical intraâcenter transition intensity thermal quenching. The effect of the additional slow component is related to the presence of OH groups and/or carbon molecular defects modifying the luminescence center. The additional slow components exhibit waveâlike thermal dependences. Photoâthermally stimulated creationâdestruction of the complex comprising host defect and interstitial modifiers explains the slow luminescence waveâlike thermal dependences.ERANET MYND; ISSP UL Nr. SJZ/2017/2 ; Institute of Solid State Physics, University of Latvia as the Center of Excellence has received funding from the European Unionâs Horizon 2020 Framework Programme H2020-WIDESPREAD-01-2016-2017-TeamingPhase2 under grant agreement No. 739508, project CAMART
Marginal dimensions of the Potts model with invisible states
We reconsider the mean-field Potts model with interacting and
non-interacting (invisible) states. The model was recently introduced to
explain discrepancies between theoretical predictions and experimental
observations of phase transitions in some systems where the -symmetry is
spontaneously broken. We analyse the marginal dimensions of the model, i.e.,
the value of at which the order of the phase transition changes. In the
case, we determine that value to be ; there is a
second-order phase transition there when and a first-order one at
. We also analyse the region and show that the change from
second to first order there is manifest through a new mechanism involving
{\emph{two}} marginal values of . The limit gives bond percolation and
some intermediary values also have known physical realisations. Above the lower
value , the order parameters exhibit discontinuities at temperature
below a critical value . But, provided is small
enough, this discontinuity does not appear at the phase transition, which is
continuous and takes place at . The larger value marks the point
at which the phase transition at changes from second to first order.
Thus, for , the transition at remains second order
while the order parameter has a discontinuity at . As increases
further, increases, bringing the discontinuity closer to .
Finally, when exceeds coincides with and the
phase transition becomes first order. This new mechanism indicates how the
discontinuity characteristic of first order phase transitions emerges.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
A review of the distribution of particulate trace elements in urban terrestrial environments and its application to considerations of risk
We review the evolution, state of the art and future lines of research on the sources, transport pathways, and sinks of particulate trace elements in urban terrestrial environments to include the atmosphere, soils, and street and indoor dusts. Such studies reveal reductions in the emissions of some elements of historical concern such as Pb, with interest consequently focusing on other toxic trace elements such as As, Cd, Hg, Zn, and Cu. While establishment of levels of these elements is important in assessing the potential impacts of human society on the urban environment, it is also necessary to apply this knowledge in conjunction with information on the toxicity of those trace elements and the degree of exposure of human receptors to an assessment of whether such contamination represents a real risk to the cityâs inhabitants and therefore how this risk can be addressed
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