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FGF2 is expressed in human and murine embryonic choroid plexus and affects choroid plexus cell behaviour
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although fibroblast growth factor (Fgf) signalling plays crucial roles in several developing and mature tissues, little information is currently available on expression of Fgf2 during early choroid plexus development and whether Fgf2 directly affects the behaviour of the choroid plexus epithelium (CPe). The purpose of this study was to investigate expression of Fgf2 in rodent and human developing CPe and possible function of Fgf2, using <it>in vitro </it>models. The application of Fgf2 to brain <it>in vivo </it>can affect the whole tissue, making it difficult to assess specific responses of the CPe.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Expression of Fgf2 was studied by immunohistochemistry in rodent and human embryonic choroid plexus. Effects of Fgf2 on growth, secretion, aggregation and gene expression was investigated using rodent CPe vesicles, a three-dimensional polarized culture model that closely mimics CPe properties <it>in vivo</it>, and rodent CPe monolayer cultures.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Fgf2 was present early in development of the choroid plexus both in mouse and human, suggesting the importance of this ligand in Fgf signalling in the developing choroid plexus. Parallel analysis of Fgf2 expression and cell proliferation during CP development suggests that Fgf2 is not involved in CPe proliferation <it>in vivo</it>. Consistent with this observation is the failure of Fgf2 to increase proliferation in the tri-dimensional vesicle culture model. The CPe however, can respond to Fgf2 treatment, as the diameter of CPe vesicles is significantly increased by treatment with this growth factor. We show that this is due to an increase in cell aggregation during vesicle formation rather than increased secretion into the vesicle lumen. Finally, Fgf2 regulates expression of the CPe-associated transcription factors, <it>Foxj1 </it>and <it>E2f5</it>, whereas transthyretin, a marker of secretory activity, is not affected by Fgf2 treatment.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Fgf2 expression early in the development of both human and rodent choroid plexus, and its ability to modulate behaviour and gene expression in CPe, supports the view that Fgf signalling plays a role in the maintenance of integrity and function of this specialized epithelium, and that this role is conserved between rodents and humans.</p
Optical and dc transport properties of a strongly correlated charge density wave system: exact solution in the ordered phase of the spinless Falicov-Kimball model with dynamical mean-field theory
We derive the dynamical mean-field theory equations for transport in an
ordered charge-density-wave phase on a bipartite lattice. The formalism is
applied to the spinless Falicov-Kimball model on a hypercubic lattice at half
filling. We determine the many-body density of states, the dc charge and heat
conductivities, and the optical conductivity. Vertex corrections continue to
vanish within the ordered phase, but the density of states and the transport
coefficients show anomalous behavior due to the rapid development of thermally
activated subgap states. We also examine the optical sum rule and sum rules for
the first three moments of the Green's functions within the ordered phase and
see that the total optical spectral weight in the ordered phase either
decreases or increases depending on the strength of the interactions.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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Exploring thermal signatures in the experimentally heated CM carbonaceous chondrite Allan Hills 83100
Stars Versus Starters: The Relationship Between Ability Level and Character in High School Football Players Attending a Major College Football Camp
The image of a University of Miami football player wielding his helmet as a weapon during a brawl with cross-town rival Florida International University was broadcast repeatedly across the national television airwaves in the fall of 2006. This most recent brawl during a collegiate football contest has again fueled the debate: does sport build or reveal character? Sport advocates, former athletes, and coaches unabashedly promote the benefits of sport. Yet, scholars and empirical research have consistently backed the notion that sport may just as well contribute in a potentially damaging manner to the development of children and adolescents if not taught, organized, managed, and led properly (e.g., Beller & Stoll, 1995; Ewing, Gano-Overway, Branta, and Seefeldt, 2002; Petitpas, Cornelius, Van Raalte, & Jones, 2005). Beller and Stoll went a step further in concluding, As such, competitive athletics as it is taught and morally modeled in this country does not appear to cognitively develop young people (p. 361)
The effects of dust evolution on disks in the mid-IR
In this paper, we couple together the dust evolution code two-pop-py with the
thermochemical disk modelling code ProDiMo. We create a series of
thermochemical disk models that simulate the evolution of dust over time from
0.018 Myr to 10 Myr, including the radial drift, growth, and settling of dust
grains. We examine the effects of this dust evolution on the mid-infrared gas
emission, focussing on the mid-infrared spectral lines of C2H2, CO2, HCN, NH3,
OH, and H2O that are readily observable with Spitzer and the upcoming E-ELT and
JWST.
The addition of dust evolution acts to increase line fluxes by reducing the
population of small dust grains. We find that the spectral lines of all species
except C2H2 respond strongly to dust evolution, with line fluxes increasing by
more than an order of magnitude across the model series as the density of small
dust grains decreases over time. The C2H2 line fluxes are extremely low due to
a lack of abundance in the infrared line-emitting regions, despite C2H2 being
commonly detected with Spitzer, suggesting that warm chemistry in the inner
disk may need further investigation. Finally, we find that the CO2 flux
densities increase more rapidly than the other species as the dust disk
evolves. This suggests that the flux ratios of CO2 to other species may be
lower in disks with less-evolved dust populations.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted in A&
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Oxygen isotope ratios of large cosmic spherules: Carbonaceous and ordinary chondrite parent bodies
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Correlated modal mineralogy, aqueous alteration and oxygen isotope composition of CM Chondrites
In this study we move beyond defining alteration sequences in CM chondrites towards understanding the relationship between modal mineralogy, the extent of aqueous alteration and O-isotope compositions
The measurement of the winds near the ocean surface with a radiometer-scatterometer on Skylab
The author has identified the following significant results. There were a total of twenty-six passes in the ZLV mode that yielded useful data. Six were in the in-track noncontiguous mode; all others were in the cross-track noncontiguous mode. The wind speed and direction, as effectively determined in a neutral atmosphere at 19.5 m above the sea surface, were found for each cell scanned by S193. It is shown how the passive microwave measurements were used both to compute the attenuation of the radar beam and to determine those cells where the backscatter measurement was suspect. Given the direction of the wind from some independent source, with the typical accuracy of measurement by available meteorological methods, a backscatter measurement at a nadir angle of 50, 43, or 32 deg can be used to compute the speed of the wind averaged over the illuminated area
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