338 research outputs found
Enlarging and cooling the N\'eel state in an optical lattice
We propose an experimental scheme to favor both the realization and the
detection of the N\'eel state in a two-component gas of ultracold fermions in a
three-dimensional simple-cubic optical lattice. By adding three compensating
Gaussian laser beams to the standard three pairs of retroreflected lattice
beams, and adjusting the relative waists and intensities of the beams, one can
significantly enhance the size of the N\'eel state in the trap, thus increasing
the signal of optical Bragg scattering. Furthermore, the additional beams
provide for adjustment of the local chemical potential and the possibility to
evaporatively cool the gas while in the lattice. Our proposals are relevant to
other attempts to realize many-body quantum phases in optical lattices.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures (significantly revised text and figures
Galactosylsphingamides : new Îą-GalCer analogues to probe the Fâ-pocket of CD1d
Invariant Natural Killer T-cells (iNKT-cells) are an attractive target for immune response modulation, as upon CD1d-mediated stimulation with KRN7000, a synthetic alpha-galactosylceramide, they produce a vast amount of cytokines. Here we present a synthesis that allows swift modification of the phytosphingosine side chain by amidation of an advanced methyl ester precursor. The resulting KRN7000 derivatives, termed alpha-galactosylsphingamides, were evaluated for their capacity to stimulate iNKT-cells. While introduction of the amide-motif in the phytosphingosine chain is tolerated for CD1d binding and TCR recognition, the studied alpha-galactosylsphingamides showed compromised antigenic properties
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Controllability Modulates the Anticipatory Response in the Human Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex
Research has consistently shown that control is critical to psychological functioning, with perceived lack of control considered to play a crucial role in the manifestation of symptoms in psychiatric disorders. In a model of behavioral control based on non-human animal work, Maier et al. (2006) posited that the presence of control activates areas of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), which in turn inhibit the normative stress response in the dorsal raphe nucleus and amygdala. To test Maierâs model in humans, we investigated the effects of control over potent aversive stimuli by presenting video clips of snakes to 21 snake phobics who were otherwise healthy with no comorbid psychopathologies. Based on prior research documenting that disrupted neural processing during the anticipation of adverse events can be influenced by different forms of cognitive processing such as perceptions of control, analyses focused on the anticipatory activity preceding the videos. We found that phobics exhibited greater vmPFC activity during the anticipation of snake videos when they had control over whether the videos were presented as compared to when they had no control over the presentation of the videos. In addition, observed functional connectivity between the vmPFC and the amygdala is consistent with previous work documenting vmPFC inhibition of the amygdala. Our results provide evidence to support the extension of Maierâs model of behavioral control to include anticipatory function in humans
Protective activity of propofol, Diprivan and intralipid against active oxygen species.
We separately studied the antioxidant properties of propofol (PPF), Diprivan (the commercial form of PPF) and intralipid (IL) (the vehicle solution of PPF in Diprivan) on active oxygen species produced by phorbol myristate acetate (10(-6) M)-stimulated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN: 5 x 10(5) cells/assay), human endothelial cells (5 x 10(5) cells/assay) or cell-free systems (NaOCl or H2O2/peroxidase systems), using luminol (10(-4) M)-enhanced chemiluminescence (CL). We also studied the protective effects of Diprivan on endothelial cells submitted to an oxidant stress induced by H2O2/MPO system: cytotoxicity was assessed by the release of preincorporated 51Cr. Propofol inhibited the CL produced by stimulated PMN in a dose dependent manner (until 5 x 10(-5) M, a clinically relevant concentration), while Diprivan and IL were not dose-dependent inhibitors. The CL produced by endothelial cells was dose-dependently inhibited by Diprivan and PPF, and weakly by IL (not dose-dependent). In cell free systems, dose-dependent inhibitions were obtained for the three products with a lower effect for IL. Diprivan efficaciously protected endothelial cells submitted to an oxidant stress, while IL was ineffective. By HPLC, we demonstrated that PPF was not incorporated into the cells. The drug thus acted by scavenging the active oxygen species released in the extracellular medium. IL acted in the same manner, but was a less powerful antioxidant
Effects of sphingosine and sphingosine analogues on the free radical production by stimulated neutrophils: ESR and chemiluminescence studies
Sphingolipids inhibit the activation of the neutrophil (PMN) NADPH oxidase by protein kinase C pathway. By electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR) and chemiluminescence (CL), we studied the effects of sphingosine (SPN) and ceramide analogues on phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA, 5 Ă 10-7M) stimulated PMN (6 Ă 106 cells). By ESR with spin trapping (100 mM DMPO: 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-Noxide), we showed that SPN (5 to 8 Ă 10-6M), C2-ceramide (N-acetyl SPN) and C6-ceramide (N-hexanoyl SPN) at the final concentration of 2 Ă 10-5 and 2 Ă 10-4M inhibit the production of free radicals by stimulated PMN. The ESR spectrum of stimulated PMN was that of DMPO-superoxide anion spin adduct. Inhibition by 5 Ă 10-6M SPN was equivalent to that of 30 U/ml SOD. SPN (5 to 8 Ă 10-6M) has no effect
on in vitro systems generating superoxide anion (xanthine 50 mM/xanthine oxidase 110 mU/ml) or hydroxyl radical (Fenton reaction: 88 mM H2O2, 0.01 mM Fe2+ and 0.01 mM EDTA). SPN and N-acetyl SPN also inhibited the CL of PMA stimulated PMN in a dose dependent manner (from 2 Ă 10-6 to 10-5M), but N-hexanoyl SPN was less active (from 2 Ă 10-5 to 2 Ă 10-4M). These effects were compared with those of known PMN inhibitors, superoxide dismutase, catalase and azide. SPN was a better inhibitor compared with these agents. The complete inhibition by SPN of ESR signal and CL of stimulated PMN confirms that this compound or one of its metabolites act at the level of NADPH-oxidase, the key enzyme responsible for production of oxygen-derived free radicals
Inactivation of Îą2-Macroglobulin by Activated Human Polymorphonuclear Leukocytes
The proteolytic activity of trypsin releases the dye Remazol
Brilliant Blue from its high molecular weight substrate, the skin
powder (Hide Powder Azure, Sigma), with an increase in absorbance at
595 nm. Active Îą2- macroglobulin (80 Îźg/ml) totally inhibits the
proteolytic activity of trypsin (14 Îźg/ml) by trapping this
protease. But after a 20 min incubation of ι2-macroglobulin at 37°C
with 2 Ă 106 human polymorphonuclear leukocytes activated by
N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine
(10â7 M) and cytochalasin B (10â8 M), 100% of trypsin
activity was recovered, indicating a total inactivation of
Îą2-macroglobuHn. Incubation with granulocyte myeloperoxidase also
inactivates Îą2-macroglobulin. Hypochlorous acid, a by-product of
myeloperoxidase activity, at a concentration of 10â7 M also
inactivates Îą2-macroglobulin, which indicates that an important
cause of Îą2-macroglobulin inactivation by activated
polymorphonuclear leukocytes could be the activity of myeloperoxidase
Fast privacy-preserving network function outsourcing
In this paper, we present the design and implementation of SplitBox, a system for privacy-preserving processing of network functions outsourced to cloud middleboxesâi.e., without revealing the policies governing these functions. SplitBox is built to provide privacy for a generic network function that abstracts the functionality of a variety of network functions and associated policies, including firewalls, virtual LANs, network address translators (NATs), deep packet inspection, and load balancers. We present a scalable design aiming to provide high throughput and low latency, by distributing functionalities to a few virtual machines (VMs), while providing provably secure guarantees. We implement SplitBox inside FastClick, an extension of the Click modular router, using Intel's DPDK to handle packet I/O. We evaluate our prototype experimentally to find its bottlenecks and stress-test its different components, vis-Ă -vis two widely used network functions, i.e., firewall and VLAN tagging. Our evaluation shows that, on commodity hardware, SplitBox can process packets close to line rate (i.e., 8.9Gbps) with up to 50 traversed policies
GRIDKIT: Pluggable overlay networks for Grid computing
A `second generation' approach to the provision of Grid middleware is now emerging which is built on service-oriented architecture and web services standards and technologies. However, advanced Grid applications have significant demands that are not addressed by present-day web services platforms. As one prime example, current platforms do not support the rich diversity of communication `interaction types' that are demanded by advanced applications (e.g. publish-subscribe, media streaming, peer-to-peer interaction). In the paper we describe the Gridkit middleware which augments the basic service-oriented architecture to address this particular deficiency. We particularly focus on the communications infrastructure support required to support multiple interaction types in a unified, principled and extensible manner-which we present in terms of the novel concept of pluggable overlay networks
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