318 research outputs found
Purification and analytical characterization of an anti- CD4 monoclonal antibody for human therapy
A purification process for the monclonal anti-CD4 antibody MAX.16H5 was developed on an analytical scale using (NH&SO,
precipitation, anion-exchange chromatography on MonoQ or Q-Sepharose, hydrophobic interaction chromatography on phenyl-
Sepharose and gel filtration chromatography on Superdex 200. The purification schedule was scaled up and gram amounts of
MAX.16H5 were produced on corresponding BioPilot columns. Studies of the identity, purity and possible contamination by a
broad range of methods showed that the product was highly purified and free from contaminants such as mouse DNA, viruses,
pyrogens and irritants. Overall, the analytical data confirm that the monoclonal antibody MAX.16H5 prepared by this protocol is
suitable for human therapy
Semiclassical Time Evolution and Trace Formula for Relativistic Spin-1/2 Particles
We investigate the Dirac equation in the semiclassical limit \hbar --> 0. A
semiclassical propagator and a trace formula are derived and are shown to be
determined by the classical orbits of a relativistic point particle. In
addition, two phase factors enter, one of which can be calculated from the
Thomas precession of a classical spin transported along the particle orbits.
For the second factor we provide an interpretation in terms of dynamical and
geometric phases.Comment: 8 pages, no figure
Recommended from our members
Assessing the Effects of Cytoprotectants on Selective Neuronal Loss, Sensorimotor Deficit and Microglial Activation after Temporary Middle Cerebral Occlusion.
Although early reperfusion after stroke salvages the still-viable ischemic tissue, peri-infarct selective neuronal loss (SNL) can cause sensorimotor deficits (SMD). We designed a longitudinal protocol to assess the effects of cytoprotectants on SMD, microglial activation (MA) and SNL, and specifically tested whether the KCa3.1-blocker TRAM-34 would prevent SNL. Spontaneously hypertensive rats underwent 15 min middle-cerebral artery occlusion and were randomized into control or treatment group, which received TRAM-34 intraperitoneally for 4 weeks starting 12 h after reperfusion. SMD was assessed longitudinally using the sticky-label test. MA was quantified at day 14 using in vivo [11C]-PK111195 positron emission tomography (PET), and again across the same regions-of-interest template by immunofluorescence together with SNL at day 28. SMD recovered significantly faster in the treated group (p = 0.004). On PET, MA was present in 5/6 rats in each group, with no significant between-group difference. On immunofluorescence, both SNL and MA were present in 5/6 control rats and 4/6 TRAM-34 rats, with a non-significantly lower degree of MA but a significantly (p = 0.009) lower degree of SNL in the treated group. These findings document the utility of our longitudinal protocol and suggest that TRAM-34 reduces SNL and hastens behavioural recovery without marked MA blocking at the assessed time-points
Semiclassical approximations for Hamiltonians with operator-valued symbols
We consider the semiclassical limit of quantum systems with a Hamiltonian
given by the Weyl quantization of an operator valued symbol. Systems composed
of slow and fast degrees of freedom are of this form. Typically a small
dimensionless parameter controls the separation of time
scales and the limit corresponds to an adiabatic limit, in
which the slow and fast degrees of freedom decouple. At the same time
is the semiclassical limit for the slow degrees of freedom.
In this paper we show that the -dependent classical flow for the
slow degrees of freedom first discovered by Littlejohn and Flynn, coming from
an \epsi-dependent classical Hamilton function and an -dependent
symplectic form, has a concrete mathematical and physical meaning: Based on
this flow we prove a formula for equilibrium expectations, an Egorov theorem
and transport of Wigner functions, thereby approximating properties of the
quantum system up to errors of order . In the context of Bloch
electrons formal use of this classical system has triggered considerable
progress in solid state physics. Hence we discuss in some detail the
application of the general results to the Hofstadter model, which describes a
two-dimensional gas of non-interacting electrons in a constant magnetic field
in the tight-binding approximation.Comment: Final version to appear in Commun. Math. Phys. Results have been
strengthened with only minor changes to the proofs. A section on the
Hofstadter model as an application of the general theory was added and the
previous section on other applications was remove
Zitterbewegung and semiclassical observables for the Dirac equation
In a semiclassical context we investigate the Zitterbewegung of relativistic
particles with spin 1/2 moving in external fields. It is shown that the
analogue of Zitterbewegung for general observables can be removed to arbitrary
order in \hbar by projecting to dynamically almost invariant subspaces of the
quantum mechanical Hilbert space which are associated with particles and
anti-particles. This not only allows to identify observables with a
semiclassical meaning, but also to recover combined classical dynamics for the
translational and spin degrees of freedom. Finally, we discuss properties of
eigenspinors of a Dirac-Hamiltonian when these are projected to the almost
invariant subspaces, including the phenomenon of quantum ergodicity
Gauging and symplectic blowing up in nonlinear sigma-models: I. point singularities
In this paper a two dimensional non-linear sigma model with a general
symplectic manifold with isometry as target space is used to study symplectic
blowing up of a point singularity on the zero level set of the moment map
associated with a quasi-free Hamiltonian action. We discuss in general the
relation between symplectic reduction and gauging of the symplectic isometries
of the sigma model action. In the case of singular reduction, gauging has the
same effect as blowing up the singular point by a small amount. Using the
exponential mapping of the underlying metric, we are able to construct
symplectic diffeomorphisms needed to glue the blow-up to the global reduced
space which is regular, thus providing a transition from one symplectic sigma
model to another one free of singularities.Comment: 32 pages, LaTex, THEP 93/24 (corrected and expanded(about 5 pages)
version
- …