47 research outputs found
The Acceleration and Storage of Radioactive Ions for a Beta-Beam Facility
The term beta-beam has been coined for the production of a pure beam of
electron neutrinos or their antiparticles through the decay of radioactive ions
circulating in a storage ring. This concept requires radioactive ions to be
accelerated to as high Lorentz gamma as 150. The neutrino source itself
consists of a storage ring for this energy range, with long straight sections
in line with the experiment(s). Such a decay ring does not exist at CERN today,
nor does a high-intensity proton source for the production of the radioactive
ions. Nevertheless, the existing CERN accelerator infrastructure could be used
as this would still represent an important saving for a beta-beam facility.Comment: beta-beam working group website at http://cern.ch/beta-bea
Protective effect of BDNF against beta-amyloid induced neurotoxicity in vitro and in vivo in rats
We examined the potential protective effect of BDNF against β-amyloid-induced neurotoxicity in vitro and in vivo in rats. In neuronal cultures, BDNF had specific and dose-response protective effects on neuronal toxicity induced by Aβ1-42 and Aβ25-35. It completely reversed the toxic action induced by Aβ1-42 and partially that induced by Aβ25-35. These effects involved TrkB receptor activation since they were inhibited by K252a. Catalytic BDNF receptors (TrkB.FL) were localized in vitro in cortical neurons (mRNA and protein). In in vivo experiments, Aβ25-35 was administered into the indusium griseum or the third ventricle and several parameters were measured 7 days later to evaluate potential Aβ25-35/BDNF interactions, i.e. local measurement of BDNF release, number of hippocampal hilar cells expressing SRIH mRNA and assessment of the corpus callosum damage (morphological examination, pyknotic nuclei counting and axon labeling with anti-MBP antibody). We conclude that BDNF possesses neuroprotective properties against toxic effects of Aβ peptides