8 research outputs found

    Observation of ion temperatures exceeding background electron temperatures in petawatt laser-solid experiments

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    Neutron time of flight signals have been observed with a high resolution neutron spectrometer using the petawatt arm of the Vulcan laser facility at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory from plastic sandwich targets containing a deuterated layer. The neutron spectra have two elements: a high-energy component generated by beam-fusion reactions and a thermal component around 2.45 MeV. The ion temperatures calculated from the neutron signal width clearly demonstrate a dependence on the front layer thickness and are significantly higher than electron temperatures measured under similar conditions. The ion heating process is intensity dependent and is not observed with laser intensities on target below 1020 W cm-2. The measurements are consistent with an ion instability driven by electron perturbations. © 2005 IOP Publishing Ltd

    GPCR-CARMA3-NF-kappaB Signaling Axis: A Novel Drug Target for Cancer Therapy

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    G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) play pivotal roles in regulating various cellular functions. It has been well established that GPCR activates NF-κB and aberrant regulation of GPCR-NF-κB signaling axis leads to cancers. However, how GPCRs induce NF-κB activation remains largely elusive. Recently, it has been shown that a novel scaffold protein, CARMA3, is indispensable in GPCR-induced NF-κB activation. In CARMA3-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblast cells, some GPCR ligand-, like lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), induced NF-κB activation is completely abolished. Mechanistically, upon GPCR activation, CARMA3 is linked to the membrane by β-arrestin 2 and phosphorylated by some PKC isoform. Phosphorylation of CARMA3 unfolds its steric structure and recruits its downstream effectors, which in turn activate the IKK complex and NF-κB. Interestingly, GPCR (LPA)-CARMA3-NF-κB signaling axis also exists in ovarian cancer cells, and knockdown of CARMA3 results in attenuation of ovarian cancer migration and invasion, suggesting a novel target for cancer therapy. In this review, we summarize the biology of CARMA3, discuss the GPCR (LPA)-CARMA3-NF-κB signaling axis in ovarian cancer and speculate its potential role in other types of cancers. With a strongly increasing tendency to identify more LPA-like ligands, such as endothelin-1 and angiotensin II, which also activate NF-κB through CARMA3 and contribute to myriad diseases, GPCR- CARMA3-NF-κB signaling axis is emerging as a novel drug target for various types of cancer and other myriad diseases
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