22 research outputs found

    Tissue engineering, stem cells, cloning, and parthenogenesis: new paradigms for therapy

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    Patients suffering from diseased and injured organs may be treated with transplanted organs. However, there is a severe shortage of donor organs which is worsening yearly due to the aging population. Scientists in the field of tissue engineering apply the principles of cell transplantation, materials science, and bioengineering to construct biological substitutes that will restore and maintain normal function in diseased and injured tissues. Both therapeutic cloning (nucleus from a donor cell is transferred into an enucleated oocyte), and parthenogenesis (oocyte is activated and stimulated to divide), permit extraction of pluripotent embryonic stem cells, and offer a potentially limitless source of cells for tissue engineering applications. The stem cell field is also advancing rapidly, opening new options for therapy. The present article reviews recent progress in tissue engineering and describes applications of these new technologies that may offer novel therapies for patients with end-stage organ failure

    Rapid Effects of Hearing Song on Catecholaminergic Activity in the Songbird Auditory Pathway

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    Catecholaminergic (CA) neurons innervate sensory areas and affect the processing of sensory signals. For example, in birds, CA fibers innervate the auditory pathway at each level, including the midbrain, thalamus, and forebrain. We have shown previously that in female European starlings, CA activity in the auditory forebrain can be enhanced by exposure to attractive male song for one week. It is not known, however, whether hearing song can initiate that activity more rapidly. Here, we exposed estrogen-primed, female white-throated sparrows to conspecific male song and looked for evidence of rapid synthesis of catecholamines in auditory areas. In one hemisphere of the brain, we used immunohistochemistry to detect the phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), a rate-limiting enzyme in the CA synthetic pathway. We found that immunoreactivity for TH phosphorylated at serine 40 increased dramatically in the auditory forebrain, but not the auditory thalamus and midbrain, after 15 min of song exposure. In the other hemisphere, we used high pressure liquid chromatography to measure catecholamines and their metabolites. We found that two dopamine metabolites, dihydroxyphenylacetic acid and homovanillic acid, increased in the auditory forebrain but not the auditory midbrain after 30 min of exposure to conspecific song. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that exposure to a behaviorally relevant auditory stimulus rapidly induces CA activity, which may play a role in auditory responses

    SFDU documentation for CLAES - data set change history document

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    SFDU - Standard format data units CLAES - Cryogenic Limb Array Etalon Spectrometer This document describes the CLAES data set change history for each version of the cataloged data

    Global evolution of the Mt Pinatubo volcanic aerosols observed by the infrared limb-sounding instruments CLAES and ISAMS on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite

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    The cryogenic limb array etalon spectrometer (CLAES) and the improved stratospheric and mesospheric sounder (ISAMS) instruments on board the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) have been used to produce global information on the Mt. Pinatubo volcanic aerosol for the period from October 1991 to April 1993, The Satellite infrared extinction measurements near 12 mu m are converted into the aerosol-related parameters necessary for modelling the effects of the volcanic aerosol on the aeronomy of the stratosphere and are presented as zonal mean distributions for 80 degrees S to 80 degrees N averaged over similar to 35-day periods. The aerosol composition is derived from the CLAES and ISAMS temperature measurements and the water vapour abundances are obtained from the microwave limb sounder (MLS). The aerosol volume density is obtained from the extinction measurements from which the Surface area density and the effective particle radius are estimated. The maximum aerosol surface area density has a value of about 50 mu m(2) cm(-3) at a height of 24 km at the equator in October 1991, before decaying exponentially with a time constant of 443 +/- 10 days. The surface area density remained well above preeruption values in April 1993. The effective particle radius in the tropics decays monotonically from 0.65 mu m in October 1991 to 0.4 mu m in April 1993. The global aerosol sulphate mass loading is 19.5 Mt in October 1991 and decays exponentially with a time constant of 342 +/- 8 days to a value of 4.3 Mt by April 1993. Four months after the eruption the calculated optical thickness at 1.02 mu m was similar to 0.25 in the tropics. Rate constants are derived for the heterogeneous reactions of N2O5 and ClONO2 on the sulphate aerosols. The application of the aerosol parameters to the investigation of tracer transport, heterogeneous chemistry, and radiative transfer is discussed

    UARS first global N2O5 data sets: Application to a stratospheric warming event in January 1992

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    For the first time, global measurements of N2O5 are available for study. N2O5 has long been a missing link in large-scale observations of stratospheric nitrogen species, the chemical family that comprises the major global loss cycle for ozone above about 25 km [McElroy et al., 1992]. N2O5 is also an important intermediate in conversion of NOx to HNO3, thus limiting the effect of nitrogen-catalyzed ozone destruction below about 25 km [Fahey et al., 1993]. The new N2O5 observations come from both the Cryogenic Limb Array Etalon Spectrometer (CLAES) and Improved Stratospheric and Mesospheric Sounder (ISAMS) instruments on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS), providing near-global coverage at high spatial and temporal resolution for almost 20 months. Here we focus on data obtained near 40 km during a stratospheric warming in January 1992. The N2O5 fields show globally coherent structures with large variation in response to global transport coupled with highly temperature dependent chemistry. Comparison of the data with chemistry and transport models indicates that our understanding of processes controlling N2O5 amounts and the interaction with other reactive nitrogen species is largely accurate under most conditions; however, an exceptional disagreement is found in the prolonged polar dark. This example demonstrates the utility of global data to understand the combined effects of chemistry and transport on N2O5 under a wide range of conditions

    Coupled aerosol-chemical modeling of UARS HNO3 and N2O5 measurements in the arctic upper stratosphere

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    Gas-phase photochemical models do not account for the formation of a secondary altitude HNO3 maximum in the upper stratosphere at high latitudes during winter, suggesting that some processes are missing in the currently accepted chemistry of reactive nitrogen species [Kawa et al., 1995]. Heterogeneous chemistry on aerosol particles had been discounted as the cause because the aerosol surface area is expected to be very low at these altitudes. We have coupled a sulphate aerosol microphysical model to a chemical transport model to investigate this model deficiency in the Arctic during January 1992. The aerosol model predicts the formation of small sulphate particles at 1100 K. Comparisons with cryogenic limb array etalon spectrometer (CLAES) HNO3 and improved stratospheric and mesospheric sounder (ISAMS) N2O5 observations show that the heterogeneous conversion of N2O5 to HNO3 on the modeled small sulphate particles can account for some of the unexpected features seen in Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) observations

    Validation of aerosol measurements from the improved stratospheric and mesospheric sounder

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    Atmospheric temperature measurements from the improved stratospheric and mesospheric sounder (ISAMS) are evaluated. Flown on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS), ISAMS obtained 180 days of science data between September 26, 1991 and July 29, 1992. Typically, over 2600 temperature profiles/day were retrieved, spaced every 200 km along the limb-viewing track and nominally extending from 100 to 0.01 mbar (15-80 km). The latitude coverage ranged from 80°S to 80°N, depending on the particular ISAMS/UARS viewing geometry on any day. UARS is in a near-Sun-synchronous orbit, so that while the 15 orbits/d are spaced approximately every 24° longitude around the equator, the sampled local solar time actually changes by 20 min/d. The ISAMS temperature retrieval process is outlined and the various products are described. A detailed error budget for the retrieval is presented and comparisons are made with temperature measurements from other sources. Finally, a table is provided summarizing the best estimates of ISAMS temperature bias and precision. The results suggest a general cold bias of around 1 K in the stratospheric temperatures, with a superimposed 2-3 K warm bias associated with the densest part of the Pinatubo aerosol cloud. The precision of individual profiles is ±2 K throughout the stratosphere but falls off in the mesosphere to about ±10 K at 80 km. The error bars produced by the retrieval appear to be reasonable (although slightly pessimistic) estimates of the precision. Copyright 1996 by the American Geophysical Union
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