728 research outputs found
An ultrastable silicon cavity in a continuously operating closed-cycle cryostat at 4 K
We report on a laser locked to a silicon cavity operating continuously at 4 K
with instability and a median linewidth of 17 mHz at 1542
nm. This is a ten-fold improvement in short-term instability, and a
improvement in linewidth, over previous sub-10 K systems. Operating at low
temperatures reduces the thermal noise floor, and thus is advantageous toward
reaching an instability of , a long-sought goal of the optical clock
community. The performance of this system demonstrates the technical readiness
for the development of the next generation of ultrastable lasers that operate
with ultranarrow linewidth and long-term stability without user intervention.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
HyperMagNet: A Magnetic Laplacian based Hypergraph Neural Network
In data science, hypergraphs are natural models for data exhibiting multi-way
relations, whereas graphs only capture pairwise. Nonetheless, many proposed
hypergraph neural networks effectively reduce hypergraphs to undirected graphs
via symmetrized matrix representations, potentially losing important
information. We propose an alternative approach to hypergraph neural networks
in which the hypergraph is represented as a non-reversible Markov chain. We use
this Markov chain to construct a complex Hermitian Laplacian matrix - the
magnetic Laplacian - which serves as the input to our proposed hypergraph
neural network. We study HyperMagNet for the task of node classification, and
demonstrate its effectiveness over graph-reduction based hypergraph neural
networks.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Hepatic Cytochrome P-450. A Proton Magnetic Relaxation Study of Microsomal, Solubilized and Partially Reconstituted Enzyme System
The longitudiJ:ial proton magnetic relaxation times, Ti, were
measured from -5 to 40 °c for microsomal, solubilized and reconstituted
cytochrome P-450 obtained from phenobarbital-induced rat
livers. The paramagnetic contribution to the rates was derived by
subtraction of the rates measured on dithionite-CO-reduced samples.
The same values were obtained for microsomal P-450 on
reduction with NADPH. PMR titratio.n by KCN yielded a dissociation
constant of about 30 mM. This is three orders of magnitude larger
than for metmyoglobin. It is concluded that the measured PMR
rates are most likely due to the P-450 (and P-420) haem-iron while
the 300/o non-haem iron found in both the microsomal and s olubilized
P-450 is .ineffective for the PMR rates. These rates increase
several times on isotopic dilution (D20 for H20) with the microsomes
and diminish for the solubilized samples. Microsomes show 170/o
residual, encaged, H20. Most of their paramagnetic PMR rate is due
to the parama.gnetic iron located on the outside of microsomes.
This is demonstrated by measurements with deuterated samples to
which 190/o H20 had been added. Hence, the solubilized P-450 is
homogeneous regarding PMR, but the microsomes are not
A new, potent poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor improves cardiac and vascular dysfunction associated with advanced aging
Increased production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species has recently been implicated in the pathogenesis of cardiac and endothelial dysfunction associated with atherosclerosis, hypertension, and aging. Oxidant-induced cell injury triggers the activation of nuclear enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), which in turn contributes to cardiac and vascular dysfunction in various pathophysiological conditions including diabetes, reperfusion injury, circulatory shock, and aging. Here, we investigated the effect of a new PARP inhibitor, INO-1001, on cardiac and endothelial dysfunction associated with advanced aging using Millar's new Aria pressure-volume conductance system and isolated aortic rings. Young adult (3 months old) and aging (24 months old) Fischer rats were treated for 2 months with vehicle, or the potent PARP inhibitor INO-1001. In the vehicle-treated aging animals, there was a marked reduction of both systolic and diastolic cardiac function and loss of endothelial relaxant responsiveness of aortic rings to acetylcholine. Treatment with INO-1001 improved cardiac performance in aging animals and also acetylcholine-induced, nitric oxide-mediated vascular relaxation. Thus, pharmacological inhibition of PARP may represent a novel approach to improve cardiac and vascular dysfunction associated with aging
Antagonistic interaction of HIV-1 Vpr with Hsf-mediated cellular heat shock response and Hsp16 in fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces pombe)
BACKGROUND: Expression of the HIV-1 vpr gene in human and fission yeast cells displays multiple highly conserved activities, which include induction of cell cycle G2 arrest and cell death. We have previously characterized a yeast heat shock protein 16 (Hsp16) that suppresses the Vpr activities when it is overproduced in fission yeast. Similar suppressive effects were observed when the fission yeast hsp16 gene was overexpressed in human cells or in the context of viral infection. In this study, we further characterized molecular actions underlying the suppressive effect of Hsp16 on the Vpr activities. RESULTS: We show that the suppressive effect of Hsp16 on Vpr-dependent viral replication in proliferating T-lymphocytes is mediated through its C-terminal end. In addition, we show that Hsp16 inhibits viral infection in macrophages in a dose-dependent manner. Mechanistically, Hsp16 suppresses Vpr activities in a way that resembles the cellular heat shock response. In particular, Hsp16 activation is mediated by a heat shock factor (Hsf)-dependent mechanism. Interestingly, vpr gene expression elicits a moderate increase of endogenous Hsp16 but prevents its elevation when cells are grown under heat shock conditions that normally stimulate Hsp16 production. Similar responsive to Vpr elevation of Hsp and counteraction of this elevation by Vpr were also observed in our parallel mammalian studies. Since Hsf-mediated elevation of small Hsps occurs in all eukaryotes, this finding suggests that the anti-Vpr activity of Hsps is a conserved feature of these proteins. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that fission yeast could be used as a model to further delineate the potential dynamic and antagonistic interactions between HIV-1 Vpr and cellular heat shock responses involving Hsps
- …