189 research outputs found

    Reconstructing 3D x-ray CT images of polymer gel dosimeters using the zero-scan method

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    In this study x-ray CT has been used to produce a 3D image of an irradiated PAGAT gel sample, with noise-reduction achieved using the ‘zero-scan’ method. The gel was repeatedly CT scanned and a linear fit to the varying Hounsfield unit of each pixel in the 3D volume was evaluated across the repeated scans, allowing a zero-scan extrapolation of the image to be obtained. To minimise heating of the CT scanner’s x-ray tube, this study used a large slice thickness (1 cm), to provide image slices across the irradiated region of the gel, and a relatively small number of CT scans (63), to extrapolate the zero-scan image. The resulting set of transverse images shows reduced noise compared to images from the initial CT scan of the gel, without being degraded by the additional radiation dose delivered to the gel during the repeated scanning. The full, 3D image of the gel has a low spatial resolution in the longitudinal direction, due to the selected scan parameters. Nonetheless, important features of the dose distribution are apparent in the 3D x-ray CT scan of the gel. The results of this study demonstrate that the zero-scan extrapolation method can be applied to the reconstruction of multiple x-ray CT slices, to provide useful 2D and 3D images of irradiated dosimetry gels

    A hybrid radiation detector for simultaneous spatial and temporal dosimetry

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    In this feasibility study an organic plastic scintillator is calibrated against ionisation chamber measurements and then embedded in a polymer gel dosimeter to obtain a quasi-4D experimental measurement of a radiation field. This hybrid dosimeter was irradiated with a linear accelerator, with temporal measurements of the dose rate being acquired by the scintillator and spatial measurements acquired with the gel dosimeter. The detectors employed in this work are radiologically equivalent; and we show that neither detector perturbs the intensity of the radiation field of the other. By employing these detectors in concert, spatial and temporal variations in the radiation intensity can now be detected and gel dosimeters can be calibrated for absolute dose from a single irradiation

    The identification of tyrosine as a common key residue in unrelated H-2Kd restricted antigenic peptides

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    We have compared the activity of several Kd- or Ld-restricted antigenic peptides as competitors in a functional competition assay using cytolytic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones. All of four unrelated Kd-restricted peptides tested could compete with each other but not with the Ld-restricted peptide P91A-. 12-24 (P91A). Moreover, the P91A peptide failed to compete with the four Kd-restricted peptides. In contrast, another Ld-restricted peptide [mouse cytomegalovirus (MCMV) pp89 167-176] could clearly compete with both Kd- and Ld-restricted peptides. The comparison of a series of modified MCMV pp89 peptides suggested that distinct structural features allow the interaction of the peptide with the two different MHC class I molecules. We showed previously that the competitor activity of two different Kd-restricted antigenic peptides was reduced substantially upon Ala substitution of the single Tyr residues present in these peptides. We now show a similar effect for two additional Kd-restricted peptides. Our results thus suggest that Tyr may function as an 'anchor' residue for many antigenic peptides that bind to the Kd molecule. Molecular modeling of the presumed antigen-binding site of the Kd molecule revealed the presence of two deep cavities that may be involved in binding peptide amino acid side chains. A model illustrating one possible interaction of a Tyr-containing peptide with the Kd molecule is presented

    CD8+ cytolytic T cell clones derived against the Plasmodium yoelii circumsporozoite protein protect against malaria

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    Immunization of BALB/c mice with radiation-attenuated Plasmodium yoelii sporozoites induces cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) specific for an epitope located within the amino acid sequence 277-288 of the P. yoelii circumsporozoite (CS) protein. Several CD8+ CTL clones were derived from the spleen cells of sporozoite-immunized mice, all displaying an apparently identical epitope specificity. All the clones induced high levels of cytolysis in vitro upon exposure to peptide-incubated MHC-compatible target cells. The adoptive transfer of two of these clones conferred complete protection against sporozoite challenge to naive mice. This protection is species and stage specific. Using P. yoelii specific ribosomal RNA probes to monitor the in vivo effects of the CTL clones, we found that their target was the intrahepatocytic stage of the parasite. The protective clones completely inhibited the development of the liver stages of P. yoelii. Some CTL clones were only partially inhibitory in vivo, while others failed completely to alter liver stage development and to confer any detectable degree of protection. The elucidation of the effector mechanism of this CTL mediated protection against rodent malaria should facilitate the design of an effective malaria vaccine. From a broader perspective this model may provide further insight into the mechanism(s) of CTL mediated killing of intracellular non-viral pathogens in general

    7th Drug hypersensitivity meeting: part two

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