1,392 research outputs found
The Cellular Metabolism and Effects of Gold Complexes
Leads to the cellular effects of the anti-arthritic gold complexes may come from
the determination of their metabolism by target cells and, possibly, cells in the immediate
environment of the target cells. Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) and mononuclear cells
(monocytes and lymphocytes) are present in inflamed joints of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and
these cells have been widely used in pharmacological studies on the gold complexes. It is
suggested that the cellular effects of the gold complexes are mediated by the production of
aurocyanide. According to this hypothesis, PMN metabolize small quantities of thiocyanate to
cyanide which, in turn, converts gold complexes, such as aurothiomalate, to aurocyanide
(dicyanogold(I)) which inhibits the functions of PMN and other cells. There is now considerable
evidence for this hypothesis from in vitro studies but there is little in vivo work to back up the
hypothesis. One of the few in vivo studies which tested the hypothesis involved the examination
of the activity of aurothiomalate in the treatment of polyarthritis in Hooded Wistar rats. Activity of
aurothiomalate is only shown in animals which received thiocyanate. Hydrogen cyanide is a
constituent of cigarette smoke and the aurocyanide formed by the interaction with gold complexes
and inhaled hydrogen cyanide rapidly diffuses into red blood cells. Because of the metabolism of
hydrogen cyanide to thiocyanate in the liver, there are higher plasma levels of thiocyanate in
smokers than in non-smokers. Smokers may have a greater incidence of side effects than non-smokers
but there appears to be little difference in therapeutic response, possibly because there is
sufficient thiocyanate in extracellular fluid, even in non-smokers, to support the conversion of gold
complexes to aurocyanide. The relationship between the metabolism and effects of the orally
active gold complex, auranofin are less clear. Auranofin itself is taken up by cells with the loss of the
ligands bound to gold while its inhibitory activity against the oxidative burst of PMN decreases with
increasing cell density. For example, the lucigenin-dependent chemiluminescence of 106 PMN/ml
is 46 percent of control at 0.5 ÎŒM auranofin but only 2.2 percent in 2.105 PMN/ml in the presence
of the same concentration of auranofin. A potentially active gold complex is a plasma component
which is taken up by red blood cells
3D-MHD simulations of an accretion disk with star-disk boundary layer
We present global 3D MHD simulations of geometrically thin but unstratified
accretion disks in which a near Keplerian disk rotates between two bounding
regions with initial rotation profiles that are stable to the MRI. The inner
region models the boundary layer between the disk and an assumed more slowly
rotating central, non magnetic star. We investigate the dynamical evolution of
this system in response to initial vertical and toroidal fields imposed in a
variety of domains contained within the near Keplerian disk. Cases with both
non zero and zero net magnetic flux are considered and sustained dynamo
activity found in runs for up to fifty orbital periods at the outer boundary of
the near Keplerian disk. Simulations starting from fields with small radial
scale and with zero net flux lead to the lowest levels of turbulence and
smoothest variation of disk mean state variables. For our computational set up,
average values of the Shakura & Sunyaev (1973) parameter in the
Keplerian disk are typically Magnetic field eventually always
diffuses into the boundary layer resulting in the build up of toroidal field
inward angular momentum transport and the accretion of disk material. The mean
radial velocity, while exhibiting large temporal fluctuations is always
subsonic. Simulations starting with net toroidal flux may yield an average
While being characterized by one order of magnitude larger
average , simulations starting from vertical fields with large radial
scale and net flux may lead to the formation of persistent non-homogeneous,
non-axisymmetric magnetically dominated regions of very low density.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
The interaction of a giant planet with a disc with MHD turbulence I: The initial turbulent disc models
This is the first of a series of papers aimed at developing and interpreting
simulations of protoplanets interacting with turbulent accretion discs. Here we
study the disc models prior to the introduction of a protoplanet.We study
models in which a Keplerian domain is unstable to the magnetorotational
instability (MRI). Various models with B-fields having zero net flux are
considered.We relate the properties of the models to classical viscous disc
theory.All models attain a turbulent state with volume averaged stress
parameter alpha ~ 0.005. At any particular time the vertically and azimuthally
averaged value exhibited large fluctuations in radius. Time averaging over
periods exceeding 3 orbital periods at the outer boundary of the disc resulted
in a smoother quantity with radial variations within a factor of two or so. The
vertically and azimuthally averaged radial velocity showed much larger spatial
and temporal fluctuations, requiring additional time averaging for 7-8 orbital
periods at the outer boundary to limit them. Comparison with the value derived
from the averaged stress using viscous disc theory yielded schematic agreement
for feasible averaging times but with some indication that the effects of
residual fluctuations remained. The behaviour described above must be borne in
mind when considering laminar disc simulations with anomalous Navier--Stokes
viscosity. This is because the operation of a viscosity as in classical viscous
disc theory with anomalous viscosity coefficient cannot apply to a turbulent
disc undergoing rapid changes due to external perturbation. The classical
theory can only be used to describe the time averaged behaviour of the parts of
the disc that are in a statistically steady condition for long enough for
appropriate averaging to be carried out.Comment: 10 pages, 23 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. A gzipped
postscript version including high resolution figures is available at
http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~rp
Helicobacter pylori and cancer among adults in Uganda
Data from Africa on infection with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) are sparse. Therefore, as part of an epidemiological study of cancer in Uganda, we investigated the prevalence and determinants of antibodies against H. pylori among 854 people with different cancer types and benign tumours. Patients were recruited from hospitals in Kampala, Uganda, interviewed about various demographic and lifestyle factors and tested for antibodies against H. pylori. In all patients combined, excluding those with stomach cancer (which has been associated with H. pylori infection), the prevalence of antibodies was 87% (723/833) overall, but declined with increasing age (p = 0.02) and was lower among people who were HIV seropositive compared to seronegative (p <0.001). Otherwise, there were few consistent epidemiological associations. Among those with stomach cancer, 18/21 (86%) had anti-H. pylori antibodies (odds ratio 0.8, 95% confidence intervals 0.2â2.9, p = 0.7; estimated using all other patients as controls, with adjustment for age, sex and HIV serostatus). No other cancer site or type was significantly associated with anti-H. pylori antibodies. The prevalence of H. pylori reported here is broadly in accord with results from other developing countries, although the determinants of infection and its' role in the aetiology of gastric cancer in Uganda remain unclear
KELT-8b: A highly inflated transiting hot Jupiter and a new technique for extracting high-precision radial velocities from noisy spectra
We announce the discovery of a highly inflated transiting hot Jupiter
discovered by the KELT-North survey. A global analysis including constraints
from isochrones indicates that the V = 10.8 host star (HD 343246) is a mildly
evolved, G dwarf with K, , , an inferred mass
M, and radius
R. The planetary companion has mass , radius
, surface gravity , and density
g cm. The planet is on a roughly
circular orbit with semimajor axis AU and
eccentricity . The best-fit linear ephemeris is
BJD and
days. This planet is one of the most inflated of all known transiting
exoplanets, making it one of the few members of a class of extremely low
density, highly-irradiated gas giants. The low stellar and large
implied radius are supported by stellar density constraints from follow-up
light curves, plus an evolutionary and space motion analysis. We also develop a
new technique to extract high precision radial velocities from noisy spectra
that reduces the observing time needed to confirm transiting planet candidates.
This planet boasts deep transits of a bright star, a large inferred atmospheric
scale height, and a high equilibrium temperature of
K, assuming zero albedo and perfect heat redistribution, making it one of the
best targets for future atmospheric characterization studies.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, feedback is welcom
The Evolution of Early-type Red Galaxies with the GEMS Survey: Luminosity-size and Stellar Mass-size Relations Since z=1
We combine HST/ACS imaging from the GEMS survey with redshifts and rest-frame
quantities from COMBO-17 to study the evolution of morphologically early-type
galaxies with red colors since z=1. We use a new large sample of 728 galaxies
with centrally-concentrated radial profiles (Sersic n>2.5) and rest-frame U-V
colors on the red sequence. By appropriate comparison with the local relations
from SDSS, we find that the luminosity-size (L-R) and stellar mass-size (M-R)
relations evolve in a manner that is consistent with the passive aging of
ancient stars. By itself, this result is consistent with a completely passive
evolution of the red early-type galaxy population. If instead, as demonstrated
by a number of recent surveys, the early-type galaxy population builds up in
mass by a factor of 2 since z=1, our results imply that new additions to the
early-type galaxy population follow similar L-R and M-R correlations, compared
to the older subset of early-type galaxies. Adding early-type galaxies to the
red sequence through disk fading appears to be consistent with the data.
Through comparison with models, the role of dissipationless merging is limited
to <1 major merger on average since z=1 for the most massive galaxies.
Predictions from models of gas-rich mergers are not yet mature enough to allow
a detailed comparison to our observations. We find tentative evidence that the
amount of luminosity evolution depends on galaxy stellar mass, such that the
least massive galaxies show stronger luminosity evolution compared to more
massive early types. This could reflect a different origin of low-mass
early-type galaxies and/or younger stellar populations; the present data is
insufficient to discriminate between these possibilities. (abridged)Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 23 pages, Latex using emulateapj5.sty and
onecolfloat.sty (included), 10 figures, version with full resolution figures
at http://www.astro.umass.edu/~dmac/Papers/ETevol.hires.p
From Social Data Mining to Forecasting Socio-Economic Crisis
Socio-economic data mining has a great potential in terms of gaining a better
understanding of problems that our economy and society are facing, such as
financial instability, shortages of resources, or conflicts. Without
large-scale data mining, progress in these areas seems hard or impossible.
Therefore, a suitable, distributed data mining infrastructure and research
centers should be built in Europe. It also appears appropriate to build a
network of Crisis Observatories. They can be imagined as laboratories devoted
to the gathering and processing of enormous volumes of data on both natural
systems such as the Earth and its ecosystem, as well as on human
techno-socio-economic systems, so as to gain early warnings of impending
events. Reality mining provides the chance to adapt more quickly and more
accurately to changing situations. Further opportunities arise by individually
customized services, which however should be provided in a privacy-respecting
way. This requires the development of novel ICT (such as a self- organizing
Web), but most likely new legal regulations and suitable institutions as well.
As long as such regulations are lacking on a world-wide scale, it is in the
public interest that scientists explore what can be done with the huge data
available. Big data do have the potential to change or even threaten democratic
societies. The same applies to sudden and large-scale failures of ICT systems.
Therefore, dealing with data must be done with a large degree of responsibility
and care. Self-interests of individuals, companies or institutions have limits,
where the public interest is affected, and public interest is not a sufficient
justification to violate human rights of individuals. Privacy is a high good,
as confidentiality is, and damaging it would have serious side effects for
society.Comment: 65 pages, 1 figure, Visioneer White Paper, see
http://www.visioneer.ethz.c
Assessing Coral Reef Fish Population and Community Changes in Response to Marine Reserves in the Dry Tortugas, Florida, USA
The efficacy of no-take marine reserves (NTMRs) to enhance and sustain regional coral reef fisheries was assessed in Dry Tortugas, Florida, through 9 annual fishery-independent research surveys spanning 2 years before and 10 years after NTMR implementation. A probabilistic sampling design produced precise estimates of population metrics of more than 250 exploited and non-target reef fishes. During the survey period more than 8100 research dives utilizing SCUBA Nitrox were optimally allocated using stratified random sampling. The survey domain covered 326 km2, comprised of eight reef habitats in four management areas that offered different levels of resource protection: the Tortugas North Ecological Reserve (a NTMR), Dry Tortugas National Park (recreational angling only), Dry Tortugas National Park Research Natural Area (a NTMR), and southern Tortugas Bank (open to all types of fishing). Surveys detected significant changes in population occupancy, density, and abundance within management zones for a suite of exploited and non-target species. Increases in size, adult abundance, and occupancy rates were detected for many principal exploited species in protected areas, which harbored a disproportionately greater number of adult spawning fishes. In contrast, density and occupancy rates for aquaria and non-target reef fishes fluctuated above and below baseline levels in each management zone. Observed decreases in density of exploited species below baseline levels only occurred at the Tortugas Bank area open to all fishing. Our findings indicate that these NTMRs, in conjunction with traditional fishery management control strategies, are helping to build sustainable fisheries while protecting the fundamental ecological dynamics of the Florida Keys coral-reef ecosystem
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