6,807 research outputs found

    Nanosecond electric pulses penetrate the nucleus and enhance speckle formation

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    Nanosecond electric pulses generate nanopores in the interior membranes of cells and modulate cellular functions. Here, we used confocal microscopy and flow cytometry to observe Smith antigen antibody (Y12) binding to nuclear speckles, known as small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) or intrachromatin granule clusters (IGCs), in Jurkat cells following one or five 10 ns, 150 kV/cm pulses. Using confocal microscopy and flow cytometry, we observed changes in nuclear speckle labeling that suggested a disruption of pre-messenger RNA splicing mechanisms. Pulse exposure increased the nuclear speckled substructures by 2.5-fold above basal levels while the propidium iodide (PI) uptake in pulsed cells was unchanged. The resulting nuclear speckle changes were also cell cycle dependent. These findings suggest that 10 ns pulses directly influenced nuclear processes, such as the changes in the nuclear RNA–protein complexes

    Lower Mississippian Cephalopods of Michigan. Part III. Ammonoids and Summary

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    113-173http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/48293/2/ID133.pd

    Lower Mississippian Cephalopods of Michigan. Part I. Orthoconic Nautiloids

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    159-192http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/48270/2/ID109.pd

    DAFS contribution: the influence of dislocation density and radiation on carbon activity and phase development in AISI 316. [LMFBR]

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    The objective of this effort is to identify the role of each major element in the microchemical evolution of AISI 316 and the dependence of that role on preirradiation treatment and parameters such as neutron energy and flux, temperature and stress

    Low-energy quenching of positronium by helium

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    Very low-energy scattering of orthopositronium by helium has been investigated for simultaneous study of elastic cross section and pick-off quenching rate using a model exchange potential. The present calculational scheme, while agrees with the measured cross section of Skalsey et al, reproduces successfully the parameter ^ 1Z_{\makebox{eff}}, the effective number of electrons per atom in a singlet state relative to the positron. Together with the fact that this model potential also leads to an agreement with measured medium energy cross sections of this system, this study seems to resolve the long-standing discrepancy at low energies among different theoretical calculations and experimental measurements.Comment: 4 latex pages, 3 postscript figure

    Collapse of Amphibian Communities Due to an Introduced Ranavirus

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    This work was supported by Natural Environment Research Council grant NE/G011885/1, the Systematics and Taxonomy (SynTax) research scheme administered by the Linnean Society of London, the FundaciĂłn General CSIC, Banco Santander, and European Research Council grant 260801-BIG-IDE
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