1,130 research outputs found
Production of a T cell hybridoma that expresses the T cell receptor gamma/delta heterodimer.
We have produced a T cell hybridoma line by fusion of an IL-2-dependent, long-term T cell receptor (TCR) gamma/delta+ Thy-1+, bone marrow-derived, dendritic epidermal cell line to the BW5147 tumor line. The resultant hybridoma was rapidly growing, lymphokine independent, and expressed T3 in association with the TCR gamma/delta heterodimer. Several subclones of the hybridoma line produced easily detectable levels of IL-2 after stimulation by anti-T3 or Con A. The availability of these cloned cell lines should greatly facilitate further functional, biochemical, and molecular studies of the TCR delta chain
In Vitro Complement-Binding on Cytoplasmic Structures in Normal Human Skin: I. Immunofluorescence Studies
Incubation of cryostat sections of normal human skin with normal human serum (NHS) at 37°C followed by fluorescein isothiocyanate labeled rabbit antihuman C3 (FITC-R/Hu-C3) yields cytoplasmic staining of various cell types including keratinocytes of the upper epidermal layers, melanocytes, fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, and cells lining vascular structures.Deposition of C3 on the respective cytoplasmic structures is most likely due to activation of the classical complement (C) cascade on these structures since no fluorescent staining is observed when serum of patients with hereditary C4-deficiency is used instead of NHS or when incubation with NHS is performed in the presence of EDTA or EGTA in concentrations known to inhibit classical C pathway activation. Further evidence suggesting the involvement of the classical C pathway comes from the finding that incubation of cryostat skin sections with NHS followed by FITC labeled rabbit antihuman Clq (FITC-R/Hu-Clq) results in a fluorescent staining pattern remarkably similar to that seen after exposure of cryostat skin sections to NHS and FITC-R/ Hu-C3.Although formal proof is lacking, our investigations strongly indicate that binding to and activation of C components on cytoplasmic structures occur independently of the presence of circulating antibodies. This assumption is based on the finding that in 17 out of 20 NHS we were not able to detect any skin reactive antibodies by indirect immunofluorescence (IF) techniques. More conclusive evidence for a direct, antibody-independent interaction between C components and cytoplasmic structures is provided by the observation that incubation of the substrate with purified Clq followed by FITC-R/ Hu-Clq results in cytoplasmic staining of some of the skin cell populations described above.The phenomenon of C-binding adn activation on cytoplasmic structures of normal human skin cells may be a critical event in the initiation of complement mediated pathopysiological reactions of the skin
The Gluon Propagator on a Large Volume, at
We present the results of a high statistics lattice study of the gluon
propagator, in the Landau gauge, at . As suggested by previous
studies, we find that, in momentum space, the propagator is well described by
the expression .
By comparing on different volumes, we obtain a precise determination
of the exponent , and verify that does not vanish in the
infinite volume limit. The behaviour of and in the continuum limit
is not known, and can only be studied by increasing the value of .Comment: 21 pages, uuencoded LATEX plus 5 postscript figures. ROME prep.
94/1042, SHEP prep. 93/94-3
Divergent nematic susceptibility in an iron arsenide superconductor
Within the Landau paradigm of continuous phase transitions, ordered states of
matter are characterized by a broken symmetry. Although the broken symmetry is
usually evident, determining the driving force behind the phase transition is
often a more subtle matter due to coupling between otherwise distinct order
parameters. In this paper we show how measurement of the divergent nematic
susceptibility of an iron pnictide superconductor unambiguously distinguishes
an electronic nematic phase transition from a simple ferroelastic distortion.
These measurements also reveal an electronic nematic quantum phase transition
at the composition with optimal superconducting transition temperature.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
A Systematic Extended Iterative Solution for QCD
An outline is given of an extended perturbative solution of Euclidean QCD
which systematically accounts for a class of nonperturbative effects, while
allowing renormalization by the perturbative counterterms. Proper vertices
Gamma are approximated by a double sequence Gamma[r,p], with r the degree of
rational approximation w.r.t. the QCD mass scale Lambda, nonanalytic in the
coupling g, and p the order of perturbative corrections in g-squared,
calculated from Gamma[r,0] - rather than from the perturbative Feynman rules
Gamma(0)(pert) - as a starting point. The mechanism allowing the
nonperturbative terms to reproduce themselves in the Dyson-Schwinger equations
preserves perturbative renormalizability and is tied to the divergence
structure of the theory. As a result, it restricts the self-consistency problem
for the Gamma[r,0] rigorously - i.e. without decoupling approximations - to the
superficially divergent vertices. An interesting aspect of the scheme is that
rational-function sequences for the propagators allow subsequences describing
short-lived excitations. The method is calculational, in that it allows known
techniques of loop computation to be used while dealing with integrands of
truly nonperturbative content.Comment: 48 pages (figures included). Scope of replacement: correction of a
technical defect; no changes in conten
Three-Nucleon Force and the -Mechanism for Pion Production and Pion Absorption
The description of the three-nucleon system in terms of nucleon and
degrees of freedom is extended to allow for explicit pion production
(absorption) from single dynamic de-excitation (excitation) processes.
This mechanism yields an energy dependent effective three-body hamiltonean. The
Faddeev equations for the trinucleon bound state are solved with a force model
that has already been tested in the two-nucleon system above pion-production
threshold. The binding energy and other bound state properties are calculated.
The contribution to the effective three-nucleon force arising from the pionic
degrees of freedom is evaluated. The validity of previous coupled-channel
calculations with explicit but stable isobar components in the
wavefunction is studied.Comment: 23 pages in Revtex 3.0, 9 figures (not included, available as
postscript files upon request), CEBAF-TH-93-0
The pion-three-nucleon problem with two-cluster connected-kernel equations
It is found that the coupled piNNN-NNN system breaks into fragments in a
nontrivial way. Assuming the particles as distinguishable, there are indeed
four modes of fragmentation into two clusters, while in the standard three-body
problem there are three possible two-cluster partitions and conversely the
four-body problem has seven different possibilities. It is shown how to
formulate the pion-three-nucleon collision problem through the
integral-equation approach by taking into account the proper fragmentation of
the system. The final result does not depend on the assumption of separability
of the two-body t-matrices. Then, the quasiparticle method a' la
Grassberger-Sandhas is applied and effective two-cluster connected-kernel
equations are obtained. The corresponding bound-state problem is also
formulated, and the resulting homogeneous equation provides a new approach
which generalizes the commonly used techniques to describe the three-nucleon
bound-state problem, where the meson degrees of freedom are usually suppressed.Comment: 20 pages, REVTeX, with 3 COLOR figures (PostScript
Infrared behavior of the gluon propagator in lattice Landau gauge: the three-dimensional case
We evaluate numerically the three-momentum-space gluon propagator in the
lattice Landau gauge, for three-dimensional pure-SU(2) lattice gauge theory
with periodic boundary conditions. Simulations are done for nine different
values of the coupling , from (strong coupling) to (in the scaling region), and for lattice sizes up to . In the
limit of large lattice volume we observe, in all cases, a gluon propagator
decreasing for momenta smaller than a constant value . From our data
we estimate MeV. The result of a gluon propagator
decreasing in the infrared limit has a straightforward interpretation as
resulting from the proximity of the so-called first Gribov horizon in the
infrared directions.Comment: 14 pages, BI-TP 99/03 preprint, correction in the Acknowledgments
section. To appear in Phys.Rev.
Asymptotic Scaling and Infrared Behavior of the Gluon Propagator
The Landau gauge gluon propagator for the pure gauge theory is evaluated on a
32^3x64 lattice with a physical volume of (3.35^3x6.7)fm^4. Comparison with two
smaller lattices at different lattice spacings allows an assessment of finite
volume and finite lattice spacing errors. Cuts on the data are imposed to
minimize these errors. Scaling of the gluon propagator is verified between
beta=6.0 and beta=6.2. The tensor structure is evaluated and found to be in
good agreement with the Landau gauge form, except at very small momentum
values, where some small finite volume errors persist. A number of functional
forms for the momentum dependence of the propagator are investigated. The form
D(q^2)=D_ir+D_uv, where D_ir(q^2) ~ (q^2+M^2)^-\eta and D_uv is an infrared
regulated one-loop asymptotic form, is found to provide an adequate description
of the data over the entire momentum region studied - thereby bridging the gap
between the infrared confinement region and the ultraviolet asymptotic region.
The best estimate for the exponent \eta is 3.2(+0.1/-0.2)(+0.2/-0.3), where the
first set of errors represents the uncertainty associated with varying the
fitting range, while the second set of errors reflects the variation arising
from different choices of infrared regulator in D_uv. Fixing the form of D_uv,
we find that the mass parameter M is (1020+/-100)MeV.Comment: 37 pages, RevTeX, 16 postscript figures, 7 gif figures. Revised
version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D. Model functions and
discussion of asymptotic behaviour modified; all model fits have been redone.
This paper, including postscript version of all figures, can be found at
http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/~jskuller/papers
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