1,707 research outputs found
What really happened to consumption inequality in the US?
This paper considers data quality issues for the analysis of consumption inequality exploiting two complementary datasets from the Consumer Expenditure Survey for the United States. The Interview sample follows survey households over four calendar quarters and consists of retrospectively collected information about monthly expenditures on durable and non-durable goods. The Diary sample interviews household for two consecutive weeks and includes detailed information about frequently purchased items (food, personal cares and household supplies). Most reliable information from each sample is exploited to derive a correction for the measurement error affecting observed measures of consumption inequality in the two surveys. We find that consumption inequality, as measured by the standard deviation of log non-durable consumption, has increased by roughly 5% points during the 1990s
E1-Like Activating Enzyme Atg7 Is Preferentially Sequestered into p62 Aggregates via Its Interaction with LC3-I
p62 is constitutively degraded by autophagy via its interaction with LC3. However, the interaction of p62 with LC3 species in the context of the LC3 lipidation process is not specified. Further, the p62-mediated protein aggregation's effect on autophagy is unclear. We systemically analyzed the interactions of p62 with all known Atg proteins involved in LC3 lipidation. We find that p62 does not interact with LC3 at the stages when it is being processed by Atg4B or when it is complexed or conjugated with Atg3. p62 does interact with LC3-I and LC3-I:Atg7 complex and is preferentially recruited by LC3-II species under autophagic stimulation. Given that Atg4B, Atg3 and LC3-Atg3 are indispensable for LC3-II conversion, our study reveals a protective mechanism for Atg4B, Atg3 and LC3-Atg3 conjugate from being inappropriately sequestered into p62 aggregates. Our findings imply that p62 could potentially impair autophagy by negatively affecting LC3 lipidation and contribute to the development of protein aggregate diseases. © 2013 Gao et al
Anatomy of three-body decay I. Schematic models
Sequential three-body decay proceeds via spatially confined quasi-stationary
two-body configurations. Direct three-body decay populates the three-body
continuum without intermediate steps. The relative importance of these decay
modes is discussed in a schematic model employing only Coulomb or centrifugal
barrier potentials. Decisive dimensionless charge, mass and energy ratios are
derived. Sequential decay is usually favored for charged particles. Small
charge and small mass of high energy is preferably emitted first. Without
Coulomb potential the sequential decay is favored except when both resonance
energy and intermediate two-body energy are large.Comment: To be published in Nuclear Physics
Chiral charge-density-waves
We discovered the chirality of charge density waves (CDW) in 1T-TiSe by
using scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and optical ellipsometry. We found
that the CDW intensity becomes , where (i =1, 2, 3) is the amplitude of the tunnelling current
contributed by the CDWs. There were two states, in which the three intensity
peaks of the CDW decrease \textit{clockwise} and \textit{anticlockwise} when we
index each nesting vector in order of intensity in the Fourier transformation
of the STM images. The chirality in CDW results in the three-fold symmetry
breaking. Macroscopically, two-fold symmetry was indeed observed in optical
measurement. We propose the new generalized CDW chirality H_{CDW} \equiv
{\boldmath q_1} \cdot ({\boldmath q_2}\times {\boldmath q_3}), where
{\boldmath q_i} are the nesting vectors, which is independent of the
symmetry of components. The nonzero - the triple-{\boldmath q}
vectors do not exist in an identical plane in the reciprocal space - should
induce a real-space chirality in CDW system.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Method of extending hyperfine coherence times in Pr^3+:Y_2SiO_5
In this letter we present a method for increasing the coherence time of
praseodymium hyperfine ground state transitions in Pr^3+:Y_2SiO_5 by the
application of a specific external magnetic field. The magnitude and angle of
the external field is applied such that the Zeeman splitting of a hyperfine
transition is at a critical point in three dimensions, making the first order
Zeeman shift vanishingly small for the transition. This reduces the influence
of the magnetic interactions between the praseodymium ions and the spins in the
host lattice on the transition frequency. Using this method a phase memory time
of 82ms was observed, a value two orders of magnitude greater than previously
reported. It is shown that the residual dephasing is amenable quantum error
correction
Multiple deleted regions on the long arm of chromosome 6 in astrocytic tumours
Chromosome 6 deletions are common in human neoplasms including gliomas. In order to study the frequency and identify commonly deleted regions of chromosome 6 in astrocytomas, 159 tumours (106 glioblastomas, 39 anaplastic astrocytomas and 14 astrocytomas malignancy grade II) were analysed using 31 microsatellite markers that span the chromosome. Ninety-five per cent of cases with allelic losses had losses affecting 6q. Allelic losses were infrequent in astrocytomas malignancy grade II (14%) but more usual in anaplastic astrocytomas (38%) and glioblastomas (37%). Evidence for clonal heterogeneity in the astrocytomas and anaplastic astrocytomas was frequently observed (i.e. co-existence of subpopulations with and without chromosome 6 deletions). Clonal heterogeneity was less common in glioblastomas. Five commonly deleted regions were identified on 6q. These observations suggest that a number of tumour suppressor genes are located on 6q and that these genes may be involved in the progression of astrocytic tumours. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
Theory of the beta-type Organic Superconductivity under Uniaxial Compression
We study theoretically the shift of the superconducting transition
temperature (Tc) under uniaxial compression in beta-type organic
superconductors, beta-(BEDT-TTF)2I3 and beta-(BDA-TTP)2X[X=SbF6,AsF6], in order
to clarify the electron correlation, the spin frustration and the effect of
dimerization. The transfer integrals are calculated by the extended Huckel
method assuming the uniaxial strain and the superconducting state mediated by
the spin fluctuation is solved using Eliashberg's equation with the
fluctuation-exchange approximation. The calculation is carried out on both the
dimerized (one-band) and nondimerized (two-band) Hubbard models. We have found
that (i) the behavior of Tc in beta-(BEDT-TTF)2I3 with a stronger dimerization
is well reproduced by the dimer model, while that in weakly dimerized
beta-BDA-TTP salts is rather well reproduced by the two-band model, and (ii)
the competition between the spin frustration and the effect induced by the
fluctuation is important in these materials, which causes nonmonotonic shift of
Tc against uniaxial compression.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, 2 tabl
Distorted wave impulse approximation analysis for spin observables in nucleon quasi-elastic scattering and enhancement of the spin-longitudinal response
We present a formalism of distorted wave impulse approximation (DWIA) for
analyzing spin observables in nucleon inelastic and charge exchange reactions
leading to the continuum. It utilizes response functions calculated by the
continuum random phase approximation (RPA), which include the effective mass,
the spreading widths and the \Delta degrees of freedom. The Fermi motion is
treated by the optimal factorization, and the non-locality of the
nucleon-nucleon t-matrix by an averaged reaction plane approximation. By using
the formalism we calculated the spin-longitudinal and the spin-transverse cross
sections, ID_q and ID_p, of 12C, 40Ca (\vec{p},\vec{n}) at 494 and 346 MeV. The
calculation reasonably reproduced the observed ID_q, which is consistent with
the predicted enhancement of the spin-longitudinal response function R_L.
However, the observed ID_p is much larger than the calculated one, which was
consistent with neither the predicted quenching nor the spin-transverse
response function R_T obtained by the (e,e') scattering. The Landau-Migdal
parameter g'_N\Delta for the N\Delta transition interaction and the effective
mass at the nuclear center m^*(r=0) are treated as adjustable parameters. The
present analysis indicates that the smaller g'_{N\Delta}(\approx 0.3) and
m^*(0) \approx 0.7 m are preferable. We also investigate the validity of the
plane wave impulse approximation (PWIA) with the effective nucleon number
approximation for the absorption, by means of which R_L and R_T have
conventionally been extracted.Comment: RevTex 3, 29 pages, 2 tables, 8 figure
Functional Blockade of E-Selectin in Tumor-Associated Vessels Enhances Anti-Tumor Effect of Doxorubicin in Breast Cancer
Chemotherapy is a mainstay of treatment for solid tumors. However, little is known about how therapy-induced immune cell infiltration may affect therapy response. We found substantial CD45+ immune cell density adjacent to E-selectin expressing inflamed vessels in doxorubicin (DOX)-treated residual human breast tumors. While CD45 level was significantly elevated in DOX-treated wildtype mice, it remained unchanged in DOX-treated tumors from E-selectin null mice. Similarly, intravenous administration of anti-E-selectin aptamer (ESTA) resulted in a significant reduction in CD45+ immune cell density in DOX-treated residual tumors, which coincided with a delay in tumor growth and lung metastasis in MMTV-pyMT mice. Additionally, both tumor infiltrating T-lymphocytes and tumor associated-macrophages were skewed towards TH2 in DOX-treated residual breast tumors; however, ESTA suppressed these changes. This study suggests that DOX treatment instigates de novo intratumoral infiltration of immune cells through E-selectin, and functional blockade of E-selectin may reduce residual tumor burden as well as metastasis through suppression of TH2 shift
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