66,581 research outputs found
Comparative effects of auxin and abscisic acid on growth, hydrogen ion efflux and gravitropism in primary roots of maize
In order to test the idea that auxin action on root growth may be mediated by H(+) movement, the correlation of auxin action on growth and H(+) movement in roots was examined along with changes in H(+) efflux patterns associated with the asymmetric growth which occurs during gravitropism. The effects of indoleacetic acid (IAA) and abscisic acid (AbA) on growth, H(+) secretion, and gravitropism in roots were compared. Results show a close correlation existent between H(+) efflux and growth in maize roots. In intact roots there is strong H(+) efflux from the elongation zone. Growth-promoting concentrations of IAA stimulate H(+) efflux. During gravitropism the H(+) efflux from the elongation zone becomes asymmetric; the evidence indicates that auxin redistribution contributes to the development of acid efflux asymmetry. That AbA stimulates root growth is reflected in its ability to stimulate H(+) efflux from apical root segments
Suppression of asymmetric acid efflux and gravitropism in maize roots treated with auxin transport inhibitors of sodium orthovanadate
In gravitropically stimulated roots of maize (Zea mays L., hybrid WF9 x 38MS), there is more acid efflux on the rapidly growing upper side than on the slowly growing lower side. In light of the Cholodny/Went hypothesis of gravitropism which states that gravitropic curvature results from lateral redistribution of auxin, the effects of auxin transport inhibitors on the development of acid efflux asymmetry and curvature in gravistimulated roots were examined. All the transport inhibitors tested prevented both gravitropism and the development of asymmetric acid efflux in gravistimulated roots. The results indicate that auxin redistribution may cause the asymmetry of acid efflux, a finding consistent with the Cholodny/Went hypothesis of gravitropism. As further evidence that auxin-induced acid efflux asymmetry may mediate gravitropic curvature, sodium orthovanadate, an inhibitor of auxin-induced H+ efflux was found to prevent both gravitropism and the development of asymmetric acid efflux in gravistimulated roots
Torsion pendulum measurements on viscoelastic materials during vacuum exposure
A torsional pendulum apparatus designed for testing in situ in vacuum, the dynamic mechanical properties of materials is described. The application of this apparatus to an experimental program to measure the effects of vacuum on the mechanical properties of two ablator materials (a foamed material and a filled elastomer) and a solid rocket propellant (a filled elastomer) is presented. Results from the program are discussed as to the effects of vacuum on the mechanical properties of these three materials. In addition, time-temperature-superposition, as a technique for accelerating vacuum induced changes in mechanical properties, is discussed with reference to the three materials tested in the subject program
Rules for transition rates in nonequilibrium steady states
Just as transition rates in a canonical ensemble must respect the principle
of detailed balance, constraints exist on transition rates in driven steady
states. I derive those constraints, by maximum information-entropy inference,
and apply them to the steady states of driven diffusion and a sheared lattice
fluid. The resulting ensemble can potentially explain nonequilibrium phase
behaviour and, for steady shear, gives rise to stress-mediated long-range
interactions.Comment: 4 pages. To appear in Physical Review Letter
Work probability distribution in single molecule experiments
We derive and solve a differential equation satisfied by the probability
distribution of the work done on a single biomolecule in a mechanical unzipping
experiment. The unzipping is described as a thermally activated escape process
in an energy landscape. The Jarzynski equality is recovered as an identity,
independent of the pulling protocol. This approach allows one to evaluate
easily, by numerical integration, the work distribution, once a few parameters
of the energy landscape are known.Comment: To appear on EP
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HLA-B27 Positivity: associated health implications
HLA-B27 positivity makes the onset of autoimmune diseases such as uveitis, ankylosing spondylitis and Crohn's disease more likely to occur. Ankylosing spondylitis and Crohn's disease are two types of HLA-B27 positive diseases that demonstrate a direct association with uveitis. Although the possession of HLA-B27 positivity is not mandatory for autoimmune diseases such as uveitis to occur, HLA-B27 positivity not only makes it more likely but may modify the clinical picture in which a patient presents. In relation to assessment and diagnosis it is imperative that the medical history of patients is thoroughly examined to ensure pathological sequelae are appropriately treated. Nurses play an important role in assessing patients that have uveitis and should suspect ankylosing spondylitis or Crohn's disease may be present
One-Loop Anomaly Mediated Scalar Masses and (g-2)_mu in Pure Gravity Mediation
We consider the effects of non-universalities among sfermion generations in
models of Pure Gravity Mediation (PGM). In PGM models and in many models with
strongly stabilized moduli, the gravitino mass may be O(100) TeV, whereas
gaugino masses, generated through anomalies at 1-loop, remain relatively light
O(1) TeV. In models with scalar mass universality, input scalar masses are
generally very heavy (m_0 \simeq m_{3/2}) resulting in a mass spectrum
resembling that in split supersymmetry. However, if one adopts a no-scale or
partial no-scale structure for the K\"ahler manifold, sfermion masses may
vanish at the tree level. It is usually assumed that the leading order anomaly
mediated contribution to scalar masses appears at 2-loops. However, there are
at least two possible sources for 1-loop scalar masses. These may arise if
Pauli-Villars fields are introduced as messengers of supersymmetry breaking. We
consider the consequences of a spectrum in which the scalar masses associated
with the third generation are heavy (order m_{3/2}) with 1-loop scalar masses
for the first two generations. A similar spectrum is expected to arise in GUT
models based on E_7/SO(10) where the first two generations of scalars act as
pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone bosons. Explicit breaking of this symmetry by the gauge
couplings then generates one-loop masses for the first two generations. In
particular, we show that it may be possible to reconcile the g_mu - 2
discrepancy with potentially observable scalars and gauginos at the LHC.Comment: 30 pages, 30 figure
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