331 research outputs found

    Gluino-mediated electroweak penguin with flavor-violating trilinear couplings

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    In light of a discrepancy of the direct CPCP violation in KππK\to\pi\pi decays, ε/εK\varepsilon'/\varepsilon_K, we investigate gluino contributions to the electroweak penguin, where flavor violations are induced by squark trilinear couplings. Top-Yukawa contributions to ΔS=2\Delta S = 2 observables are taken into account, and vacuum stability conditions are evaluated in detail. It is found that this scenario can explain the discrepancy of ε/εK\varepsilon'/\varepsilon_K for the squark mass smaller than 5.6 TeV. We also show that the gluino contributions can amplify B(Kπνν)\mathcal{B}(K \to \pi \nu \overline{\nu}), B(KSμ+μ)eff\mathcal{B}(K_S \to \mu^+ \mu^-)_{\rm eff} and ΔACP(bsγ)\Delta A_{\rm CP}(b\to s\gamma). Such large effects could be measured in future experiments.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figures; references added, version published in JHE

    Dimethylsulfoxide-quenched hydrogen/deuterium exchange method to study amyloid fibril structure

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    AbstractA general method to analyze the structure of a supramolecular complex of amyloid fibrils at amino acid residue resolution has been developed. This method combines the NMR-detected hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange technique to detect hydrogen-bonded amide groups and the ability of the aprotic organic solvent dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) to dissolve amyloid fibrils into NMR-observable, monomeric components while suppressing the undesired H/D exchange reaction. Moreover, this method can be generally applied to amyloid fibrils to elucidate the distribution of hydrogen-bonded amino acid residues in the three-dimensional molecular organization in the amyloid fibrils. In this study, we describe theoretical considerations in the H/D exchange method to obtain the structural information of proteins, and the DMSO-quenched H/D exchange method to study a supramolecular complex of amyloid fibrils. A possible application of this method to study the interaction of a protein/peptide with phospholipid membrane is also discussed

    Masking Tape Art-Work May Provide Beneficial Positive Effects

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    Background: The authors and colleagues have been involved in treatment and care for the elderly with rehabilitation, Integrative Medicine (IM), art in hospitals for artworks using masking tape. Combined together, we conducted a pilot study for medical application of masking tape art-work for elderly subjects. Subjects and Methods: Subjects enrolled were 12 elderly patients with dementia regularly coming to day care center for rehabilitation (M/F 3/9, 78-100 years, 88.3±6.0 years). As methods, masking tape has been known as Washi Tape (wa=Japanese and shi=paper), which is adhesive tape easily to stick and peel off for decorative work. Protocol included i) working 2-3 times a week, ii) sticking masking tape on a rough sketch paper, iii) evaluation of several biomarkers before and after the intervention. Results: i) Artworks were performed satisfactory for each case, ii) grasping power (right) showed increasing tendency from 13.5±7.7kg to 14.8±6.8kg (p=0.11), iii) vitality test showed significantly increase (p=0.02). Discussion and Conclusion: Artworks of masking tape seem to be beneficial for improving grasping power and psychological condition. This study included other biomarkers such as Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), pinch power, language word test and Barthel index. We plan to develop further detail analyses in the future research

    Evolutionary history and functional implications of protein domains and their combinations in eukaryotes

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    A rapid emergence of animal-specific domains was observed in animals, contributing to specific domain combinations and functional diversification, but no similar trends were observed in other clades of eukaryotes

    Flow-induced Alignment of Amyloid Protofilaments Revealed by Linear Dichroism

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    This research was originally published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. Rumi Adachi, Kei-ichi Yamaguchi, Hisashi Yagi, Kazumasa Sakurai, Hironobu Naiki and Yuji Goto. Flow-induced Alignment of Amyloid Protofilaments Revealed by Linear Dichroism. J. Biol. Chem. 2007; 282, 8978-8983. © the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biolog

    6-(1-Methyl­ethyl)-12-phenyl-5,6,7,12-tetra­hydro­dibenz[c,f][1,5]aza­silocine

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    The title compound, C23H25NSi, has an eight-membered silicon-containing heterocyclic ring with an intra­molecular N⋯Si close contact, the transannular distance of which is 2.6294 (18) Å. The resulting geometry about the Si atom is distorted trigonal-bypyramidal, with the N and H atoms occupying apical sites. The dihedral angle between the aromatic rings fused to the eight-membered ring is 63.27 (7)°

    Metal Ion-dependent Effects of Clioquinol on the Fibril Growth of an Amyloid β Peptide

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    This research was originally published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. Bakthisaran Raman, Tadato Ban, Kei-ichi Yamaguchi, Miyo Sakai, Tomoji Kawai, Hironobu Naiki and Yuji Goto. Metal Ion-dependent Effects of Clioquinol on the Fibril Growth of an Amyloid β Peptide. J. Biol. Chem. 2005; 280, 16157-16162. © the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biolog

    選択的セロトニン再取り込み阻害薬とセロトニン4受容体作動薬の直腸吻合部におけるインビボ神経再建に与える効果の比較

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    It was recently reported that activation of enteric neural 5-HT(4) receptors (SR4) promotes reconstruction of enteric neural circuit injury in distal gut of guinea pigs and that this reconstruction involves neural stem cells. We aimed to explore a novel approach using a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), which increases endogenous 5-HT, to repair enteric nerve fiber injury in the rat distal gut. Enteric nerve fiber injury was performed by rectal transection and subsequent end-to-end one-layer anastomosis. The SSRI fluvoxamine maleate (100 μmol/l) was applied locally at the anastomotic site to compare with the 5-HT(4) agonist mosapride citrate (100 μmol/l) (applied for patent) applied locally and orally. Unlike mosapride, fluvoxamine failed to promote the regeneration of the nerve fiber tract across the anastomosis. Furthermore, fluvoxamine did not generate anti-distal-less homeobox 2 (DLX2)- and anti-SR4-positive cells (neural stem cells) and/or anti-neurofilament (NF)-positive cells (neural cells) in newly formed granulation tissue at the anastomosis, whereas these cell types were observed in mosapride-treated preparations. In contrast to its effects in guinea pigs, mosapride generated 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU)-positive neural cells in ganglia sites 3 mm oral and anal from the anastomosis 2 wk after nerve fiber injury. All actions of mosapride were observed after local and or oral applications. These findings indicate that local SSRI treatment does not induce in vivo nerve fiber tract growth across the anastomosis in the rat distal gut. Mosapride induces nerve fiber tract growth across the anastomosis, mediated through enteric neural stem cells possibly from neural crest-derived stem cells or mesenchymal stem cells in the bone marrow.博士(医学)・甲616号・平成26年3月17日発行元の規定により、本文の登録不可。本文は以下のURLを参照 "http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.00284.2011
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