1,293 research outputs found
Opportunities for financing sustainable development using complementary local currencies
Financing building retrofit projects that contribute to climate change mitigation has always represented a significant barrier. With 28% of global emissions coming from existing buildings, it is of paramount importance to carry out retrofit measures that lead to significant reduction of these emissions. Whilst this is perfectly possible to achieve with current methods and current technology, there is no sufficient conventional finance to carry out zero carbon retrofit at scale required for climate change mitigation. The article introduces an alternative and sustainable business model that creates new opportunities for financing zero carbon retrofit of buildings. It demonstrates that the value of solar energy falling on roofs of buildings can become a driver for new local economic systems, and discusses the requirements for practical application.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Giant optical anisotropy in a single InAs quantum dot in a very dilute quantum-dot ensemble
We present the experimental evidence of giant optical anisotropy in single
InAs quantum dots. Polarization-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy reveals
a linear polarization ratio with huge fluctuations, from one quantum dot to
another, in sign and in magnitude with absolute values up to 82%. Systematic
measurements on hundreds of quantum dots coming from two different laboratories
demonstrate that the giant optical anisotropy is an intrinsic feature of dilute
quantum-dot arrays.Comment: submitted to Applied Physics Letter
DEVELOPMENT AND OPTIMIZATION OF CARVEDILOL FORMULATION USING EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
The aim of this paper was to develop and optimize the carvedilol tablets formulation using the full factorial design. The content of binder (PVP K30), content of disintegrant (crospovidone) and main compression force were used as the independent variables. Tablets were prepared by wet granulation. The percentage of released carvedilol from prepared formulation after 10 minutes was defined as the response. It has been found that formulation with the low content of binding agents (4.8%), high content of disintegrant (4.5%) and compression force of 50 N has the best profile of drug. The optimal formulation was defined based on implementation of pharmaceuticaltechnological tests (testing strength, friability, disintegrating, contents of drug substance, drug release profiles). The stability of the optimal formulation with carvedilol was estimated using the aging tests
Fractal and stereological analyses of insulin-induced rat exocrine pancreas remodelling
Background: The effect of insulin on the endocrine pancreas has been the subject of extensive study, but quantitative morphometric investigations of the exocrine pancreas are scarce. This study was therefore undertaken to investigate the effect of acute and chronic insulin administration (two doses, 0.4 IU and 4 IU) on the morphology of rat pancreas acini. Materials and methods: Semi-fine sections stained with methylene blue and basic fuchsine or haematoxylin and eosin-stained 5-micrometer thick paraffin sections were used for fractal and stereological analysis of exocrine acini. Acute insulin treatment, independent of applied doses increased fractal dimension in line with decreased lacunarity of pancreas acini. Chronic low dose insulin decreased fractal dimension and increased lacunarity of pancreas acini, but a high dose had the opposite effect. The volume densities (Vv) of cytoplasm, granules and nucleus are affected differently: acute low dose and high chronic dose significantly decreased granules Vv, and in line increased cytoplasmic Vv, whereas other examined structures showed slight changes without statistical significance. Results: The results obtained from this investigation indicate that insulin treatment induced structural remodelling of the exocrine pancreas suggesting a substantial role of insulin in its functioning. Conclusions: Additionally, we showed that fine architectural changes in acini could be detected by fractal analysis, suggesting this method as an alternative or addition to routine stereology
Observation of multiple soliton generation mediated by amplification of asymmetries
We report the experimental observation of the formation of multiple optical quadratic solitons in a process mediated by the amplification of minute asymmetries in the diffraction properties of the input light. Experiments were conducted in phase-matched second-harmonic generation in a bulk crystal of periodically poled potassium titanyl phosphate pumped at 1064 nm. The different mechanisms that influence the process were investigated numerically, and the pulsed nature of the pump light was found to play a key role in the observed light distributions
Stability of quantized time-delay nonlinear systems: A Lyapunov-Krasowskii-functional approach
Lyapunov-Krasowskii functionals are used to design quantized control laws for
nonlinear continuous-time systems in the presence of constant delays in the
input. The quantized control law is implemented via hysteresis to prevent
chattering. Under appropriate conditions, our analysis applies to stabilizable
nonlinear systems for any value of the quantization density. The resulting
quantized feedback is parametrized with respect to the quantization density.
Moreover, the maximal allowable delay tolerated by the system is characterized
as a function of the quantization density.Comment: 31 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Mathematics of Control, Signals,
and System
Endothelial cell apoptosis in brown adipose tissue of rats induced by hyperinsulinaemia: the possible role of TNF-α
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether hyperinsulinaemia, which frequently precedes insulin resistance syndrome (obesity, diabetes), induces apoptosis of endothelial cells (ECs) in brown adipose tissue (BAT) and causes BAT atrophy and also, to investigate the possible mechanisms underlying ECs death. In order to induce hyperinsuli-naemia, adult male rats of Wistar strain were treated with high dose of insulin (4 U/kg, intraperitonely) for one or three days. Examinations at ultrastructural level showed apoptotic changes of ECs, allowing us to point out that changes mainly but not exclusively, occur in nuclei. Besides different stages of condensation and alterations of the chromatin, nuclear fragmentation was also observed. Higher number of ECs apoptotic nuclei in the BAT of hyperinsulinaemic rats was also confirmed by propidium iodide staining. Immunohistochemical localization of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) revealed increased expression in ECs of BAT of hyperinsulinaemic animals, indicating its possible role in insulin-induced apoptotic changes. These results suggest that BAT atrophy in hyperinsulinaemia is a result of endothelial and adipocyte apoptosis combined, rather than any of functional components alone
A Global Review on Innovative, Sustainable, and Effective Materials Composing Growing Media for Forest Seedling Production
Purpose of Review: The demand for forest tree seedlings is increasing globally, and Sphagnum peat moss is widely used as a component of growing media for container plant production. However, peat extraction is environmentally unsustainable. The forest nursery sector needs to switch to more sustainable alternatives to peat. This review aims to identify potential substitutes for peat by reviewing the worldwide literature on alternative materials for growing media in forest nurseries. Recent Findings: Most studies on alternative growing media focused on single plant species growing under local conditions, thereby limiting generalizations about the effectiveness of alternative materials for plant production. To our knowledge, no systematic reviews of scientific literature on the effectiveness of new, alternative-to-peat materials for enhancing plant growth and the associated growing media characteristics for the forest nursery sector are currently available. Summary: Most of the analyzed case studies focused on angiosperms (73.1%), with the majority of studies coming from tropical seasonal forests/savannas (36.5%), followed by woodlands/shrublands (31.6%), and temperate forests (15.0%) biomes. Compost was the most studied material (19.5%), followed by bark, other organic materials, and manure (9.8, 9.7, and 8.0%, respectively). Green and municipal wastes were the principal sources of compost (> 60%), while agriculture and green wastes were the first sources of other materials (> 90%). Tested materials were dependent on the geographic region. Thus, manure was the most tested material in Africa and South America, tree bark in North America, and compost in Europe, Asia, and Oceania. Alternative materials effectively provided optimal physicochemical characteristics of growing media and enhanced seedling nursery growth when compared with peat-based growing media in more than 60% of the case studies. This review helps to identify research gaps and, most importantly, provides the basis for the future application of alternative growing media materials in forest nursery management worldwide
Phase 1 study of fianlimab, a human lymphocyte activation gene-3 (LAG-3) monoclonal antibody, plus cemiplimab in advanced melanoma
Background: Concurrent LAG-3 blockade may enhance efficacy of anti-program cell death-1 (PD-1) therapies such as cemiplimab. We present updated safety and clinical activity data from patients with advanced melanoma treated concurrently with cemiplimab and fianlimab (NCT03005782).
Methods: Patients were included with unresectable or metastatic melanoma (excluding uveal melanoma) who were anti-PD-ligand (L) 1 treatment naive (expansion cohort [EC] 6) or anti-PD-(L)1 experienced within 3 months of screening (EC7). Patients received fianlimab 1600 mg + cemiplimab 350 mg intravenously every 3 weeks for 12 months (optional extra 12 months if clinically indicated). Tumours were measured every 6 weeks for 24 weeks, then every 9 weeks. In EC6 (n = 40) and EC7 (n = 15), respectively (data cutoff 9th February 2022), median age was 69.5 and 59.0 years, and median treatment duration was 37.1 and 9.0 weeks.
Results: In EC6 and EC7, respectively, incidence of Grade ≥3 treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were 38% and 47%, incidence of serious TEAEs was 33% and 33%, and 18% and 13% of patients discontinued treatment due to a TEAE. Adrenal insufficiency rate was 13% and 7% in EC6 and EC7, respectively; no instances led to treatment discontinuation. Investigator-assessed objective response rate was63%(six complete responses; 19 partial responses) in EC6 and 13% (two partial responses) in EC7. Kaplan-Meier estimate of median progression-free survival was 14.2 (95% CI: 5.6-not estimated) months in EC6 and 1.4 (95% CI: 1.3-7.7) months in EC7. Median duration of response was not reached in EC6 or EC7.
Conclusion: Fianlimab plus cemiplimab in advanced melanoma had a similar safety profile to anti-PD-1 monotherapies. Clinical activity in anti-PD-(L)1-naive patients appeared higher than previously reported for anti-PD-1monotherapy or anti-LAG-3 plus anti-PD-1. A Phase 3 trial (NCT05352672) investigating fianlimab plus cemiplimab in advanced melanoma is ongoing
Cellular and humoral immune responses and protection against schistosomes induced by a radiation-attenuated vaccine in chimpanzees
The radiation-attenuated Schistosoma mansoni vaccine is highly effective in rodents and primates but has never been tested in humans, primarily for safety reasons. To strengthen its status as a paradigm for a human recombinant antigen vaccine, we have undertaken a small-scale vaccination and challenge experiment in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Immunological, clinical, and parasitological parameters were measured in three animals after multiple vaccinations, together with three controls, during the acute and chronic stages of challenge infection up to chemotherapeutic cure. Vaccination induced a strong in vitro proliferative response and early gamma interferon production, but type 2 cytokines were dominant by the time of challenge. The controls showed little response to challenge infection before the acute stage of the disease, initiated by egg deposition. In contrast, the responses of vaccinated animals were muted throughout the challenge period. Vaccination also induced parasite-specific immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG, which reached high levels at the time of challenge, while in control animals levels did not rise markedly before egg deposition. The protective effects of vaccination were manifested as an amelioration of acute disease and overall morbidity, revealed by differences in gamma-glutamyl transferase level, leukocytosis, eosinophilia, and hematocrit. Moreover, vaccinated chimpanzees had a 46% lower level of circulating cathodic antigen and a 38% reduction in fecal egg output, compared to controls, during the chronic phase of infection
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