943 research outputs found
Obituary: In Memory of Myron Flint Beal, MD, November 6, 1950–June 12, 2021
Producción CientíficaNo abstract availabl
The Spectroscopic Age of 47 Tuc
High signal-to-noise integrated spectra of the metal-rich globular cluster 47
Tuc, spanning the H-gamma(HR) and Fe4668 line indices, have been obtained. The
combination of these indices has been suggested (Jones & Worthey 1995, ApJ,
446, L31) as the best available mechanism for cleanly separating the
age-metallicity degeneracy which hampers the dating of distant, unresolved,
elliptical galaxies. For the first time, we apply this technique to a nearby
spheroidal system, 47 Tuc, for which independent ages, based upon more
established methods, exist. Such an independent test of the technique's
suitability has not been attempted before, but is an essential one before its
application to more distant, unresolved, stellar populations can be considered
valid. Because of its weak series of Balmer lines, relative to model spectra,
our results imply a spectroscopic ``age'' for 47 Tuc well in excess of 20 Gyr,
at odds with the colour-magnitude diagram age of 14+/-1 Gyr. The derived metal
abundance, however, is consistent with the known value. Emission ``fill-in'' of
the H-gamma line as the source of the discrepancy cannot be entirely excluded
by existing data, although the observational constraints are restrictive.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX, accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journal, also available at
http://casa.colorado.edu/~bgibson/publications.htm
Scotland Registry for Ankylosing Spondylitis (SIRAS) – Protocol
Funding SIRAS was funded by unrestricted grants from Pfizer and AbbVie. The project was reviewed by both companies, during the award process, for Scientific merit, to ensure that the design did not compromise patient safety, and to assess the global regulatory implications and any impact on regulatory strategy.Publisher PD
Molecular Dynamics Simulation of Solvent-Polymer Interdiffusion. I. Fickian diffusion
The interdiffusion of a solvent into a polymer melt has been studied using
large scale molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulation techniques. The
solvent concentration profile and weight gain by the polymer have been measured
as a function of time. The weight gain is found to scale as t^{1/2}, which is
expected for Fickian type of diffusion. The concentration profiles are fit very
well assuming Fick's second law with a constant diffusivity. The diffusivity
found from fitting Fick's second law is found to be independent of time and
equal to the self diffusion constant in the dilute solvent limit. We separately
calculated the diffusivity as a function of concentration using the Darken
equation and found that the diffusivity is essentially constant for the
concentration range relevant for interdiffusion.Comment: 17 pages and 7 figure
Recommended from our members
Impacts of plant-based foods in ancestral hominin diets on the metabolism and function of gut microbiota in vitro
Ancestral human populations had diets containing more indigestible plant material than present-day diets in industrialized countries. One hypothesis for the rise in prevalence of obesity is that physiological mechanisms for controlling appetite evolved to match a diet with plant fiber content higher than that of present-day diets. We investigated how diet affects gut microbiota and colon cells by comparing human microbial communities with those from a primate that has an extreme plant-based diet, namely, the gelada baboon, which is a grazer. The effects of potato (high starch) versus grass (high lignin and cellulose) diets on human-derived versus gelada-derived fecal communities were compared in vitro. We especially focused on the production of short-chain fatty acids, which are hypothesized to be key metabolites influencing appetite regulation pathways. The results confirmed that diet has a major effect on bacterial numbers, short-chain fatty acid production, and the release of hormones involved in appetite suppression. The potato diet yielded greater production of short-chain fatty acids and hormone release than the grass diet, even in the gelada cultures, which we had expected should be better adapted to the grass diet. The strong effects of diet on hormone release could not be explained, however, solely by short-chain fatty acid concentrations. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy found changes in additional metabolites, including betaine and isoleucine, that might play key roles in inhibiting and stimulating appetite suppression pathways. Our study results indicate that a broader array of metabolites might be involved in triggering gut hormone release in humans than previously thought. IMPORTANCE: One theory for rising levels of obesity in western populations is that the body's mechanisms for controlling appetite evolved to match ancestral diets with more low-energy plant foods. We investigated this idea by comparing the effects of diet on appetite suppression pathways via the use of gut bacterial communities from humans and gelada baboons, which are modern-day primates with an extreme diet of low-energy plant food, namely, grass. We found that diet does play a major role in affecting gut bacteria and the production of a hormone that suppresses appetite but not in the direction predicted by the ancestral diet hypothesis. Also, bacterial products were correlated with hormone release that were different from those normally thought to play this role. By comparing microbiota and diets outside the natural range for modern humans, we found a relationship between diet and appetite pathways that was more complex than previously hypothesized on the basis of more-controlled studies of the effects of single compounds
High-Redshift SDSS Quasars with Weak Emission Lines
We identify a sample of 74 high-redshift quasars (z>3) with weak emission
lines from the Fifth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and present
infrared, optical, and radio observations of a subsample of four objects at
z>4. These weak emission-line quasars (WLQs) constitute a prominent tail of the
Lya+NV equivalent width distribution, and we compare them to quasars with more
typical emission-line properties and to low-redshift active galactic nuclei
with weak/absent emission lines, namely BL Lac objects. We find that WLQs
exhibit hot (T~1000 K) thermal dust emission and have rest-frame 0.1-5 micron
spectral energy distributions that are quite similar to those of normal
quasars. The variability, polarization, and radio properties of WLQs are also
different from those of BL Lacs, making continuum boosting by a relativistic
jet an unlikely physical interpretation. The most probable scenario for WLQs
involves broad-line region properties that are physically distinct from those
of normal quasars.Comment: Updated to match version published in ApJ. 20 pages, 12 figure
第665回 千葉医学会例会・第18回 佐藤外科例会 10.
Metabolic dysfunction is well-documented in Huntington's disease (HD). However, the link between the mutant huntingtin (mHTT) gene and the pathology is unknown. The tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle is the main metabolic pathway for the production of NADH for conversion to ATP via the electron transport chain (ETC). The objective of this study was to test for differences in enzyme activities, mRNAs and protein levels related to the TCA cycle between lymphoblasts from healthy subjects and from patients with HD. The experiments utilize the advantages of lymphoblasts to reveal new insights about HD. The large quantity of homogeneous cell populations permits multiple dynamic measures to be made on exactly comparable tissues. The activities of nine enzymes related to the TCA cycle and the expression of twenty-nine mRNAs encoding for these enzymes and enzyme complexes were measured. Cells were studied under baseline conditions and during metabolic stress. The results support our recent findings that the activities of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHC) and succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) are elevated in HD. The data also show a large unexpected depression in MDH activities. Furthermore, message levels for isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) were markedly increased in in HD lymphoblasts and were responsive to treatments. The use of lymphoblasts allowed us to clarify that the reported decrease in aconitase activity in HD autopsy brains is likely due to secondary hypoxic effects. These results demonstrate the mRNA and enzymes of the TCA cycle are critical therapeutic targets that have been understudied in HD
Co-infections of Adenovirus Species in Previously Vaccinated Patients
Adenoviral infections associated with respiratory illness in military trainees involve multiple co-infecting species and serotypes
RPL24: a potential therapeutic target whose depletion or acetylation inhibits polysome assembly and cancer cell growth.
Partial loss of large ribosomal subunit protein 24 (RPL24) function is known to protect mice against Akt or Myc-driven cancers, in part via translational inhibition of a subset of cap(eIF4E)-dependently translated mRNAs. The role of RPL24 in human malignancies is unknown. By analyzing a public dataset of matched human breast cancers and normal mammary tissue, we found that breast cancers express significantly more RPL24 than matched normal breast samples. Depletion of RPL24 in breast cancer cells by \u3e70% reduced cell viability by 80% and decreased protein expression of the eIF4E-dependently translated proteins cyclin D1 (75%), survivin (46%) and NBS1 (30%) without altering GAPDH or beta-tubulin levels. RPL24 knockdown also reduced 80S subunit levels relative to 40S and 60S levels. These effects on expression of eIF4E-dependent proteins and ribosome assembly were mimicked by 2-24 h treatment with the pan-HDACi, trichostatin A (TSA), which induced acetylation of 15 different polysome-associated proteins including RPL24. Furthermore, HDAC6-selective inhibition or HDAC6 knockdown induced ribosomal protein acetylation. Via mass spectrometry, we found that 60S-associated, but not, polysome-associated, RPL24 undergoes HDACi-induced acetylation on K27. Thus, RPL24 K27 acetylation may play a role in ribosome assembly. These findings point toward a novel acetylation-dependent polysome assembly mechanism regulating tumorigenesis
Homologous Flares and Magnetic Field Topology in Active Region NOAA 10501 on 20 November 2003
We present and interpret observations of two morphologically homologous
flares that occurred in active region (AR) NOAA 10501 on 20 November 2003. Both
flares displayed four homologous H-alpha ribbons and were both accompanied by
coronal mass ejections (CMEs). The central flare ribbons were located at the
site of an emerging bipole in the center of the active region. The negative
polarity of this bipole fragmented in two main pieces, one rotating around the
positive polarity by ~ 110 deg within 32 hours. We model the coronal magnetic
field and compute its topology, using as boundary condition the magnetogram
closest in time to each flare. In particular, we calculate the location of
quasiseparatrix layers (QSLs) in order to understand the connectivity between
the flare ribbons. Though several polarities were present in AR 10501, the
global magnetic field topology corresponds to a quadrupolar magnetic field
distribution without magnetic null points. For both flares, the photospheric
traces of QSLs are similar and match well the locations of the four H-alpha
ribbons. This globally unchanged topology and the continuous shearing by the
rotating bipole are two key factors responsible for the flare homology.
However, our analyses also indicate that different magnetic connectivity
domains of the quadrupolar configuration become unstable during each flare, so
that magnetic reconnection proceeds differently in both events.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, Solar Physics (accepted
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