1,918 research outputs found
Fermions on an Interval: Quark and Lepton Masses without a Higgs
We consider fermions on an extra dimensional interval. We find the boundary
conditions at the ends of the interval that are consistent with the variational
principle, and explain which ones arise in various physical circumstances. We
apply these results to higgsless models of electroweak symmetry breaking, where
electroweak symmetry is not broken by a scalar vacuum expectation value, but
rather by the boundary conditions of the gauge fields. We show that it is
possible to find a set of boundary conditions for bulk fermions that would give
a realistic fermion mass spectrum without the presence of a Higgs scalar, and
present some sample fermion mass spectra for the standard model quarks and
leptons as well as their resonances.Comment: LaTeX, 36 pages, 5 figure
Female Reproductive Performance and Maternal Birth Month: A Comprehensive Meta-Analysis Exploring Multiple Seasonal Mechanisms
Globally, maternal birth season affects fertility later in life. The purpose of this systematic literature review is to comprehensively investigate the birth season and female fertility relationship. Using PubMed, we identified a set of 282 relevant fertility/birth season papers published between 1972 and 2018. We screened all 282 studies and removed 13
Contamination of human DNA samples with mouse DNA can lead to false detection of XMRV-like sequences
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In 2006, a novel gammaretrovirus, XMRV (xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus), was discovered in some prostate tumors. A more recent study indicated that this infectious retrovirus can be detected in 67% of patients suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), but only very few healthy controls (4%). However, several groups have published to date that they could not identify XMRV RNA or DNA sequences in other cohorts of CFS patients, while another group detected murine leukemia virus (MLV)-like sequences in 87% of such patients, but only 7% of healthy controls. Since there is a high degree of similarity between XMRV and abundant endogenous MLV proviruses, it is important to distinguish contaminating mouse sequences from true infections.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>DNA from the peripheral blood of 112 CFS patients and 36 healthy controls was tested for XMRV with two different PCR assays. A TaqMan qPCR assay specific for XMRV <it>pol </it>sequences was able to detect viral DNA from 2 XMRV-infected cells (~ 10-12 pg DNA) in up to 5 Îźg of human genomic DNA, but yielded negative results in the test of 600 ng genomic DNA from 100,000 peripheral blood cells of all samples tested. However, positive results were obtained with some of these samples, using a less specific nested PCR assay for a different XMRV sequence. DNA sequencing of the PCR products revealed a wide variety of virus-related sequences, some identical to those found in prostate cancer and CFS patients, others more closely related to known endogenous MLVs. However, all samples that tested positive for XMRV and/or MLV DNA were also positive for the highly abundant intracisternal A-type particle (IAP) long terminal repeat and most were positive for murine mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase sequences. No contamination was observed in any of the negative control samples, containing those with no DNA template, which were included in each assay.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Mouse cells contain upwards of 100 copies each of endogenous MLV DNA. Even much less than one cell's worth of DNA can yield a detectable product using highly sensitive PCR technology. It is, therefore, vital that contamination by mouse DNA be monitored with adequately sensitive assays in all samples tested.</p
Long-range three-body atom-diatom potential for doublet Li
An accurate long-range {\em ab initio} potential energy surface has been
calculated for the ground state lithium trimer in the frozen diatom
approximation using all electron RCCSD(T). The {\em ab initio} energies are
corrected for basis set superposition error and extrapolated to the complete
basis limit. Molecular van der Waals dispersion coefficients and three-body
dispersion damping terms for the atom-diatomic dissociation limit are presented
from a linear least squares fit and shown to be an essentially exact
representation of the {\em ab initio} surface at large range
Cytoprotective Activated Protein C Averts Nlrp3 InflammasomeâInduced Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury Via Mtorc1 Inhibition
Cytoprotection by activated protein C (aPC) after ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is associated with apoptosis inhibition. However, IRI is hallmarked by inflammation, and hence, cell-death forms disjunct from immunologically silent apoptosis are, in theory, more likely to be relevant. Because pyroptosis (ie, cell death resulting from inflammasome activation) is typically observed in IRI, we speculated that aPC ameliorates IRI by inhibiting inflammasome activation. Here we analyzed the impact of aPC on inflammasome activity in myocardial and renal IRIs. aPC treatment before or after myocardial IRI reduced infarct size and Nlrp3 inflammasome activation in mice. Kinetic in vivo analyses revealed that Nlrp3 inflammasome activation preceded myocardial injury and apoptosis, corroborating a pathogenic role of the Nlrp3 inflammasome. The constitutively active Nlrp3A350V mutation abolished the protective effect of aPC, demonstrating that Nlrp3 suppression is required for aPC-mediated protection from IRI. In vitro aPC inhibited inflammasome activation in macrophages, cardiomyocytes, and cardiac fibroblasts via proteinase-activated receptor 1 (PAR-1) and mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) signaling. Accordingly, inhibiting PAR-1 signaling, but not the anticoagulant properties of aPC, abolished the ability of aPC to restrict Nlrp3 inflammasome activity and tissue damage in myocardial IRI. Targeting biased PAR-1 signaling via parmodulin-2 restricted mTORC1 and Nlrp3 inflammasome activation and limited myocardial IRI as efficiently as aPC. The relevance of aPC-mediated Nlrp3 inflammasome suppression after IRI was corroborated in renal IRI, where the tissue protective effect of aPC was likewise dependent on Nlrp3 inflammasome suppression. These studies reveal that aPC protects from IRI by restricting mTORC1-dependent inflammasome activation and that mimicking biased aPC PAR-1 signaling using parmodulins may be a feasible therapeutic approach to combat IRI
Prospects for an electron electric dipole moment search in metastable ThO and ThF
The observation of an electron electric dipole moment (eEDM) would have major
ramifications for the standard model of physics. Polar molecules offer a
near-ideal laboratory for such searches due to the large effective electric
field (), on order of tens of GV/cm that can be easily
oriented in the lab frame. We present an improved method for simply and
accurately determining , in a heavy polar molecule, allowing
for a quick determination of candidates for an eEDM experiment. We apply this
method to ThO and ThF, both of which possess metastable
electronic states. The values of in ThO and ThF
are estimated to be 104 GV/cm and 90 GV/cm respectively, and are therefore two
of the best known candidates for the eEDM search.Comment: Two column format submitted to PR
The Effective Lagrangian in the Randall-Sundrum Model and Electroweak Physics
We consider the two-brane Randall-Sundrum (RS) model with bulk gauge fields.
We carefully match the bulk theory to a 4D low-energy effective Lagrangian. In
addition to the four-fermion operators induced by KK exchange we find that
large negative S and T parameters are induced in the effective theory. This is
a tree-level effect and is a consequence of the shapes of the W and Z wave
functions in the bulk. Such effects are generic in extra dimensional theories
where the standard model (SM) gauge bosons have non-uniform wave functions
along the extra dimension. The corrections to precision electroweak observables
in the RS model are mostly dominated by S. We fit the parameters of the RS
model to the experimental data and find somewhat stronger bounds than
previously obtained; however, the standard model bound on the Higgs mass from
precision measurements can only be slightly relaxed in this theory.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, 1 figure included, uses JHEP.cls, extended
introduction, added reference
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