37 research outputs found
Dendritic position is a major determinant of presynaptic strength
Different regulatory principles influence synaptic coupling between neurons, including positional principles. In dendrites of pyramidal neurons, postsynaptic sensitivity depends on synapse location, with distal synapses having the highest gain. In this paper, we investigate whether similar rules exist for presynaptic terminals in mixed networks of pyramidal and dentate gyrus (DG) neurons. Unexpectedly, distal synapses had the lowest staining intensities for vesicular proteins vGlut, vGAT, Synaptotagmin, and VAMP and for many nonvesicular proteins, including Bassoon, Munc18, and Syntaxin. Concomitantly, distal synapses displayed less vesicle release upon stimulation. This dependence of presynaptic strength on dendritic position persisted after chronically blocking action potential firing and postsynaptic receptors but was markedly reduced on DG dendrites compared with pyramidal dendrites. These data reveal a novel rule, independent of neuronal activity, which regulates presynaptic strength according to dendritic position, with the strongest terminals closest to the soma. This gradient is opposite to postsynaptic gradients observed in pyramidal dendrites, and different cell types apply this rule to a different extent
Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy for Elemental Analysis in Environmental, Cultural Heritage and Space Applications: A Review of Methods and Results
Analytical applications of Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS), namely optical emission spectroscopy of laser-induced plasmas, have been constantly growing thanks to its intrinsic conceptual simplicity and versatility. Qualitative and quantitative analysis can be performed by LIBS both by drawing calibration lines and by using calibration-free methods and some of its features, so as fast multi-elemental response, micro-destructiveness, instrumentation portability, have rendered it particularly suitable for analytical applications in the field of environmental science, space exploration and cultural heritage. This review reports and discusses LIBS achievements in these areas and results obtained for soils and aqueous samples, meteorites and terrestrial samples simulating extraterrestrial planets, and cultural heritage samples, including buildings and objects of various kinds
Analysis of heavy metals in soils using laser-induced breakdown spectrometry combined with laser-induced fluorescence
The investigation of a hyphenated technique combining laser-induced breakdown spectrometry (LIBS) with laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) for the analysis of heavy metals in soils is described. In order to evaluate the applicability of the technique for fast in-situ analytical purposes, measurements were performed at atmospheric pressure. The plasma radiation was detected using a Paschen-Runge spectrometer equipped with photomultipliers for the simultaneous analysis of 22 different elements. The photomultiplier signals were processed by a fast gateable multichannel integrator. Calibration curves were recorded using a set of spiked soil samples. Limits of detection were derived from these curves for As (3.3 µg/g), Cd (6 µg/g), Cr (2.5 µg/g), Cu (3.3 µg/g), Hg (84 µg/g), Ni (6.8 µg/g), Pb (17 µg/g), Tl (48 µg/g) and Zn (98 µg/g) using the LIBS signals. LIBS-LIF measurements were performed for Cd and Tl. The excitation wavelength as well as the detected fluorescence wavelength for Cd was 228.8 nm. Alternatively, Tl was excited at 276.8 nm, where the observed fluorescence wavelength was 351.9 nm. The calibration curves based on the LIF signals showed significantly improved limits of detection of 0.3 and 0.5 µg/g for Cd and Tl, respectively