4,238 research outputs found
Electrospun fibrous tissue engineering scaffolds: topographic cues and their influence on cell behavior
Theme of Conference: Research and Regulatory in Biomedical Engineering - Session B: Best Young Engineer's Paper Competitionpublished_or_final_versionThe International Conference and Pre-conference Workshop of Biomedical Engineering (BME2010), Hong Kong, China, 2-5 November 2010. In Proceedings of BME2010, 2010, p. B-
Electrospinning, characterization and in vitro biological evaluation of nanocomposite fibers containing carbonated hydroxyapatite nanoparticles
Poly(hydroxybutyrate-co-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV) fibers containing carbonated hydroxyapatite (CHA) nanoparticles with different CHA amounts (5, 10 and 15 wt%) were electrospun with the aid of ultrasonic power for dispersing the nanoparticles. Scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy results showed that the distribution of CHA within the CHA/PHBV nanocomposite fibers was homogeneous when the CHA content was 10 wt%. Slight particle agglomeration occurred when the CHA content was 15 wt%. The diameters of the electrospun CHA/PHBV nanocomposite fibers and PHBV polymer fibers were around 3 μm. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic analysis further confirmed the presence of CHA in CHA/PHBV nanocomposite fibers. Both PHBV and CHA/PHBV fibrous membranes exhibited similar tensile properties. Compared with PHBV solvent-cast film, the PHBV fibrous membrane was hydrophobic but the incorporation of CHA nanoparticles dramatically enhanced its wettability. In vitro studies revealed that both types of electrospun fibrous membranes (PHBV and CHA/PHBV) supported the proliferation of human osteoblastic cells (SaOS-2). The alkaline phosphatase activity of SaOS-2 cells seeded on the CHA/PHBV fibrous membranes was higher than that of the cells seeded on the PHBV fibrous membranes after 14 days of cell culture. The electrospun CHA/PHBV nanocomposite fibrous membranes show promises for bone tissue engineering applications. © 2010 IOP Publishing Ltd.postprin
Genetic diversity and population structure of Caragana microphylla Lam. based on analysis of inter-simple sequence repeat markers
Caragana microphylla Lam. is a long-lived shrub species in the semi-arid, arid and desert regions. To determine the genetic diversity and population structure of C. microphylla Lam., 17 wild populations from the central and eastern part of Inner Mongolia were analyzed by inter-simple sequence repeat. 18 primers produced 296 bands across a total of 510 individuals. A high percentage of polymorphic loci was observed at species level (PPB = 81.4%). Based on analysis of molecular variance, 74.99% of the genetic variation of C. microphylla Lam. was found within population, 7% difference between regions and 15.2% among collection sites within regions. Cluster analyses showed that 17 populations are most arranged in the same cluster by geographic location. An indirect estimate of the GST-derived Nm value (Nm = 1.8921) indicate that gene flow is high among 17 populations. No significant correlation (r2 = 0.13) between genetic and geographic distance was detected. Results of this study suggest that C. microphylla Lam. has a high genetic variability and potential as a source of variation for breeding programs.Key words: Inter-simple sequence repeat (ISSR), Caragana microphylla Lam., genetic structure
A bootstrap-based regression method for comprehensive discovery of differential gene expressions: An application to the osteoporosis study
A common purpose of microarray experiments is to study the variation in gene expression across the categories of an experimental factor such as tissue types and drug treatments. However, it is not uncommon that the studied experimental factor is a quantitative variable rather than categorical variable. Loss of information would occur by comparing gene-expression levels between groups that are factitiously defined according to the quantitative threshold values of an experimental factor. Additionally, lack of control for some sensitive clinical factors may bring serious false positive or negative findings.In the present study, we described a bootstrap-based regression method for analyzing gene-expression data from the non-categorical microarray experiments. To illustrate the utility of this method, we applied it to our recent gene-expression study of circulating monocytes in subjects with a wide range of variations in bone mineral density (BMD). This method allows a comprehensive discovery of gene expressions associated with osteoporosis-related traits while controlling other common confounding factors such as height, weight and age. Several genes identified in our study are involved in osteoblast and osteoclast functions and bone remodeling and/or menopause-associated estrogen-dependent pathways, which provide important clues to understand the etiology of osteoporosis. Availability: SAS code is available from the authors upon request. © 2011 Elsevier Masson SAS.postprin
On the Inability of Markov Models to Capture Criticality in Human Mobility
We examine the non-Markovian nature of human mobility by exposing the
inability of Markov models to capture criticality in human mobility. In
particular, the assumed Markovian nature of mobility was used to establish a
theoretical upper bound on the predictability of human mobility (expressed as a
minimum error probability limit), based on temporally correlated entropy. Since
its inception, this bound has been widely used and empirically validated using
Markov chains. We show that recurrent-neural architectures can achieve
significantly higher predictability, surpassing this widely used upper bound.
In order to explain this anomaly, we shed light on several underlying
assumptions in previous research works that has resulted in this bias. By
evaluating the mobility predictability on real-world datasets, we show that
human mobility exhibits scale-invariant long-range correlations, bearing
similarity to a power-law decay. This is in contrast to the initial assumption
that human mobility follows an exponential decay. This assumption of
exponential decay coupled with Lempel-Ziv compression in computing Fano's
inequality has led to an inaccurate estimation of the predictability upper
bound. We show that this approach inflates the entropy, consequently lowering
the upper bound on human mobility predictability. We finally highlight that
this approach tends to overlook long-range correlations in human mobility. This
explains why recurrent-neural architectures that are designed to handle
long-range structural correlations surpass the previously computed upper bound
on mobility predictability
Phase transitions and critical behavior of black branes in canonical ensemble
We study the thermodynamics and phase structure of asymptotically flat
non-dilatonic as well as dilatonic black branes in a cavity in arbitrary
dimensions (). We consider the canonical ensemble and so the charge inside
the cavity and the temperature at the wall are fixed. We analyze the stability
of the black brane equilibrium states and derive the phase structures. For the
zero charge case we find an analog of Hawking-Page phase transition for these
black branes in arbitrary dimensions. When the charge is non-zero, we find that
below a critical value of the charge, the phase diagram has a line of
first-order phase transition in a certain range of temperatures which ends up
at a second order phase transition point (critical point) as the charge attains
the critical value. We calculate the critical exponents at that critical point.
Although our discussion is mainly concerned with the non-dilatonic branes, we
show how it easily carries over to the dilatonic branes as well.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figures, the validity of using the effective action
discussed, references adde
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Superconducting ECR ion source: From 24-28 GHz SECRAL to 45 GHz fourth generation ECR.
The development of superconducting ECR source with higher magnetic fields and higher microwave frequency is the most straight forward path to achieve higher beam intensity and higher charge state performance. SECRAL, a superconducting third generation ECR ion source, is designed for 24-28 GHz microwave frequency operation with an innovative magnet configuration of sextupole coils located outside the three solenoids. SECRAL at 24 GHz has already produced a number of record beam intensities, such as 40Ar12+ 1.4 emA, 129Xe26+ 1.1 emA, 129Xe30+ 0.36 emA, and 209Bi31+ 0.68 emA. SECRAL-II, an upgraded version of SECRAL, was built successfully in less than 3 years and has recently been commissioned at full power of a 28 GHz gyrotron and three-frequency heating (28 + 45 + 18 GHz). New record beam intensities for highly charged ion production have been achieved, such as 620 eμA 40Ar16+, 15 eμA 40Ar18+, 146 eμA 86Kr28+, 0.5 eμA 86Kr33+, 53 eμA 129Xe38+, and 17 eμA 129Xe42+. Recent beam test results at SECRAL and SECRAL II have demonstrated that the production of more intense highly charged heavy ion beams needs higher microwave power and higher frequency, as the scaling law predicted. A 45 GHz superconducting ECR ion source FECR (a first fourth generation ECR ion source) is being built at IMP. FECR will be the world's first Nb3Sn superconducting-magnet-based ECR ion source with 6.5 T axial mirror field, 3.5 T sextupole field on the plasma chamber inner wall, and 20 kW at a 45 GHz microwave coupling system. This paper will focus on SECRAL performance studies at 24-28 GHz and technical design of 45 GHz FECR, which demonstrates a technical path for highly charged ion beam production from 24 to 28 GHz SECRAL to 45 GHz FECR
Phase structure of black branes in grand canonical ensemble
This is a companion paper of our previous work [1] where we studied the
thermodynamics and phase structure of asymptotically flat black -branes in a
cavity in arbitrary dimensions in a canonical ensemble. In this work we
study the thermodynamics and phase structure of the same in a grand canonical
ensemble. Since the boundary data in two cases are different (for the grand
canonical ensemble boundary potential is fixed instead of the charge as in
canonical ensemble) the stability analysis and the phase structure in the two
cases are quite different. In particular, we find that there exists an analog
of one-variable analysis as in canonical ensemble, which gives the same
stability condition as the rather complicated known (but generalized from black
holes to the present case) two-variable analysis. When certain condition for
the fixed potential is satisfied, the phase structure of charged black
-branes is in some sense similar to that of the zero charge black -branes
in canonical ensemble up to a certain temperature. The new feature in the
present case is that above this temperature, unlike the zero-charge case, the
stable brane phase no longer exists and `hot flat space' is the stable phase
here. In the grand canonical ensemble there is an analog of Hawking-Page
transition, even for the charged black -brane, as opposed to the canonical
ensemble. Our study applies to non-dilatonic as well as dilatonic black
-branes in space-time dimensions.Comment: 32 pages, 2 figures, various points refined, discussion expanded,
references updated, typos corrected, published in JHEP 1105:091,201
Composition of gut microbiota in infants in China and global comparison
published_or_final_versio
VCAM-1 and VLA-4 Modulate Dendritic Cell IL-12p40 Production in Experimental Visceral Leishmaniasis
Vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) interacts with its major ligand very late antigen-4 (VLA-4) to mediate cell adhesion and transendothelial migration of leukocytes. We report an important role for VCAM-1/VLA-4 interactions in the generation of immune responses during experimental visceral leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania donovani. Our studies demonstrate that these molecules play no direct role in the recruitment of leukocytes to the infected liver, but instead contribute to IL-12p40-production by splenic CD8+ dendritic cells (DC). Blockade of VCAM-1/VLA-4 interactions using whole antibody or anti-VCAM-1 Fab′ fragments reduced IL-12p40 mRNA accumulation by splenic DC 5 hours after L. donovani infection. This was associated with reduced anti-parasitic CD4+ T cell activation in the spleen and lowered hepatic IFNγ, TNF and nitric oxide production by 14 days post infection. Importantly, these effects were associated with enhanced parasite growth in the liver in studies with either anti-VCAM-1 or anti-VLA-4 antibodies. These data indicate a role for VCAM-1 and VLA-4 in DC activation during infectious disease
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