102 research outputs found

    HERG potassium channels are more frequently expressed in human endometrial cancer as compared to non-cancerous endometrium

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    HERG K+channels, besides contributing to regulate cardiac and neuronal excitability, are preferentially expressed in tumour cell lines of different histogenesis, where their role in the development and maintenance of the neoplastic phenotype is under study. We show here that both herg gene and HERG protein are expressed with high frequency in primary human endometrial cancers, as compared to normal and hyperplastic endometrium. RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry, using specific anti-HERG antibodies developed in our laboratory, were applied to tissue specimens obtained from 18 endometrial cancers and 11 non-cancerous endometrial tissues. herg RNA and HERG protein are expressed in 67% and 82%, respectively, of cancerous, while in only 18% of non-cancerous tissues. In particular, no expression was found in endometrial hyperplasia. Moreover, electrophysiological experiments confirmed the presence of functioning HERG channels on the plasma membrane of tumour cells. On the whole, these data are the first demonstration of the presence of HERG channels in primary human neoplasias, and could candidate HERG as a potential tool capable of marking cancerous versus hyperplastic endometrial growth. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.co

    In situ polymerisation of isoeugenol as a green consolidation method for waterlogged archaeological wood

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    Waterlogged archaeological wood is often in need of consolidation prior to drying to prevent shrinkage and cracking of the object. There is a need for new greener materials (than for example polyethylene glycol) and methods for consolidation to be developed. The use of wood-based components could provide good interaction between the consolidant and the remaining wood structure and would also support a shift away from fossil fuel-based materials to those with more sustainable sources. Based on this, lignin-like structures have been investigated for their ability to consolidate waterlogged archaeological wood. The in situ formation of a lignin-like material has been carried out using isoeugenol polymerised by horse radish peroxidase in aqueous solution. The formation of the oligomeric/polymeric materials within the wood following this reaction has been determined by Attenuated Total Reflectance Fourier Transform Infra Red (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy. The oligomers remaining in solution have been characterised by ATR-FTIR and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy as well as analytical ultracentrifugation, showing that they have a weight average Mw of 0.4–0.9 kDa and a lignin-like structure rich in the ÎČ-5â€Č moiety. Therefore, this approach is proposed as a basis to further develop a green consolidation method for waterlogged archaeological wood

    First finds of Prunus domestica L. in Italy from the Phoenician and Punic periods (6th-2nd centuries BC)

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    Abstract During the archaeological excavations in the Phoenician and Punic settlement of Santa Giusta (Oristano, Sardinia, Italy), dating back to the 6th–2nd centuries bc, several Prunus fruitstones (endocarps) inside amphorae were recovered. The exceptional state of preservation of the waterlogged remains allowed morphometric measurements to be done by image analysis and statistical comparisons made with modern cultivated and wild Prunus samples collected in Sardinia. Digital images of modern and archaeological Prunus fruitstones were acquired with a flatbed scanner and analysed by applying image analysis techniques to measure 26 morphometric features. By applying stepwise linear discriminant analysis, a morphometric comparison was made between the archaeological fruitstones of Prunus and the modern ones collected in Sardinia. These analyses allowed identification of 53 archaeological fruitstones as P. spinosa and 11 as P. domestica. Moreover, the archaeological samples of P. spinosa showed morphometric similarities in 92.5% of the cases with the modern P. spinosa samples currently growing near the Phoenician and Punic site. Likewise, the archaeological fruitstones identified as P. domestica showed similarities with the modern variety of P. domestica called Sanguigna di Bosa which is currently cultivated near the village of Bosa. Currently, these findings represent the first evidence of P. domestica in Italy during the Phoenician and Punic periods. Keywords Archaeobotany · Image analysis · Morphometric features · Prunus · Sardini

    Wind Effects on Tension Leg Platforms

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    Documenti del Dipartimento di Ingegneria Aerospazial

    Centrifugal compressors Diffuser Rotating Stall Deep Insight

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    In this work the numerical analysis of a small flow coefficient stage vaneless diffuser is described. The main purpose of this analysis is to go inside the rotating stall physics with particular attention to the onset of the rotating cells and their properties. The diffuser aspect ratio (width divided radial extension) is low (0.03) and the effect of the wall (hub and shroud boundary layers) cannot be neglected. For this reason the model is a 3D model including the hub, the shroud walls and the downstream 180° cross- over bend. The numerical analysis has been carried out using an incompressible, viscous, unsteady commercial solver. Radial and tangential typical velocity profiles as produced by a hypotetical upstream impeller have been applied as boundary conditions and they have been changed in time to simulate the actual throttling valve closure as it is done during a test. Under these circumstances a rotating phenomenon is found to exist similar to what is found experimentally on similar geometries. The instability starts as a complex 3D flow involving both hub-to-shroud flow pulsations as well as radial non-uniformities and it stabilizes in the form of four rotating cells
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