140 research outputs found
Reference gene selection and RNA preservation protocol in the cat flea, Ctenocephalides felis, for gene expression studies
This work was supported by a Knowledge Transfer Network BBSRC Industrial Case (#414 BB/L502467/1) studentship in association Zoetis Inc.Peer reviewedPostprin
RNA interference in the cat flea, Ctenocephalides felis : Approaches for sustained gene knockdown and evidence of involvement of Dicer-2 and Argonaute2
This work was supported by a Knowledge Transfer Network BBSRC Industrial Case (# BB/L502467/1) studentship in association with Zoetis Inc. We acknowledge the expert help provided by Nikki Kernell (Zoetis Inc., Kalamazoo) during the feeding trials. Declarations of interest: none.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Status of the UCNÏ experiment
The neutron is the simplest nuclear system that can be used to probe the structure of the weak interaction and search for physics beyond the standard model. Measurements of neutron lifetime and ÎČ-decay correlation coefficients with precisions of 0.02% and 0.1%, respectively, would allow for stringent constraints on new physics. The UCNÏ experiment uses an asymmetric magneto-gravitational UCN trap with in situ counting of surviving neutrons to measure the neutron lifetime, Ï_n = 877.7s (0.7s)_(stat) (+0.4/â0.2s)_(sys). We discuss the recent result from UCNÏ, the status of ongoing data collection and analysis, and the path toward a 0.25 s measurement of the neutron lifetime with UCNÏ
High-Throughput Analysis of Calcium Signalling Kinetics in Astrocytes Stimulated with Different Neurotransmitters
Astrocytes express a wide range of receptors for neurotransmitters and hormones that are coupled to increases in intracellular Ca2+ concentration, enabling them to detect activity in both neuronal and vascular networks. There is increasing evidence that astrocytes are able to discriminate between different Ca2+-linked stimuli, as the efficiency of some Ca2+ dependent processes â notably release of gliotransmitters â depends on the stimulus that initiates the Ca2+ signal. The spatiotemporal complexity of Ca2+ signals is substantial, and we here tested the hypothesis that variation in the kinetics of Ca2+ responses could offer a means of selectively engaging downstream targets, if agonists exhibited a âsignature shapeâ in evoked Ca2+ response. To test this, astrocytes were exposed to three different receptor agonists (ATP, glutamate and histamine) and the resultant Ca2+ signals were analysed for systematic differences in kinetics that depended on the initiating stimulus. We found substantial heterogeneity between cells in the time course of Ca2+ responses, but the variation did not correlate with the type or concentration of the stimulus. Using a simple metric to quantify the extent of difference between populations, it was found that the variation between agonists was insufficient to allow signal discrimination. We conclude that the time course of global intracellular Ca2+ signals does not offer the cells a means for distinguishing between different neurotransmitters
Monte Carlo of Trapped Ultracold Neutrons in the UCNÏ Trap
In the UCNÏ experiment, ultracold neutrons (UCN) are confined by magnetic fields and the Earthâs gravitational field. Field-trapping mitigates the problem of UCN loss on material surfaces, which caused the largest correction in prior neutron experiments using material bottles. However, the neutron dynamics in field traps differ qualitatively from those in material bottles. In the latter case, neutrons bounce off material surfaces with significant diffusivity and the population quickly reaches a static spatial distribution with a density gradient induced by the gravitational potential. In contrast, the field-confined UCNâwhose dynamics can be described by Hamiltonian mechanicsâdo not exhibit the stochastic behaviors typical of an ideal gas model as observed in material bottles. In this report, we will describe our efforts to simulate UCN trapping in the UCNÏ magneto-gravitational trap. We compare the simulation output to the experimental results to determine the parameters of the neutron detector and the input neutron distribution. The tuned model is then used to understand the phase space evolution of neutrons observed in the UCNÏ experiment. We will discuss the implications of chaotic dynamics on controlling the systematic effects, such as spectral cleaning and microphonic heating, for a successful UCN lifetime experiment to reach a 0.01% level of precision
- âŠ