294 research outputs found

    Complex Tissue Regeneration in Mammals Is Associated with Reduced Inflammatory Cytokines and an Influx of T Cells

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    While mammals tend to repair injuries, other adult vertebrates like salamanders and fish regenerate damaged tissue. One prominent hypothesis offered to explain an inability to regenerate complex tissue in mammals is a bias during healing toward strong adaptive immunity and inflammatory responses. Here we directly test this hypothesis by characterizing part of the immune response during regeneration in spiny mice (Acomys cahirinus and Acomys percivali) vs. fibrotic repair in Mus musculus. By directly quantifying cytokines during tissue healing, we found that fibrotic repair was associated with a greater release of pro-inflammatory cytokines (i.e., IL-6, CCL2, and CXCL1) during acute inflammation in the wound microenvironment. However, reducing inflammation via COX-2 inhibition was not sufficient to reduce fibrosis or induce a regenerative response, suggesting that inflammatory strength does not control how an injury heals. Although regeneration was associated with lower concentrations of many inflammatory markers, we measured a comparatively larger influx of T cells into regenerating ear tissue and detected a local increase in the T cell associated cytokines IL-12 and IL-17 during the proliferative phase of regeneration. Taken together, our data demonstrate that a strong adaptive immune response is not antagonistic to regeneration and that other mechanisms likely explain the distribution of regenerative ability in vertebrates

    When Is a Bulge Not a Bulge? Inner Disks Masquerading as Bulges in NGC 2787 and NGC 3945

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    We present a detailed morphological, photometric, and kinematic analysis of two barred S0 galaxies with large, luminous inner disks inside their bars. We show that these structures, in addition to being geometrically disk-like, have exponential profiles (scale lengths \sim 300--500 pc) distinct from the central, non-exponential bulges. We also find them to be kinematically disk-like. The inner disk in NGC 2787 has a luminosity roughly twice that of the bulge; but in NGC 3945, the inner disk is almost ten times more luminous than the bulge, which itself is extremely small (half-light radius \approx 100 pc, in a galaxy with an outer ring of radius \approx 14 kpc) and only \sim 5% of the total luminosity -- a bulge/total ratio much more typical of an Sc galaxy. We estimate that at least 20% of (barred) S0 galaxies may have similar structures, which means that their bulge/disk ratios may be significantly overestimated. These inner disks dominate the central light of their galaxies; they are at least an order of magnitude larger than typical ``nuclear disks'' found in ellipticals and early-type spirals. Consequently, they must affect the dynamics of the bars in which they reside.Comment: LaTeX, 37 pages, 14 EPS figures. To appear in The Astrophysical Journal (November 10, 2003 issue). Version with full-resolution figures available at http://www.iac.es/galeria/erwin/research

    Nonequilibrium Fluctuations, Travelling Waves, and Instabilities in Active Membranes

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    The stability of a flexible fluid membrane containing a distribution of mobile, active proteins (e.g. proton pumps) is shown to depend on the structure and functional asymmetry of the proteins. A stable active membrane is in a nonequilibrium steady state with height fluctuations whose statistical properties are governed by the protein activity. Disturbances are predicted to travel as waves at sufficiently long wavelength, with speed set by the normal velocity of the pumps. The unstable case involves a spontaneous, pump-driven undulation of the membrane, with clumping of the proteins in regions of high activity.Comment: 4 two-column pages, two .eps figures included, revtex, uses eps

    C60_{60} in intense femtosecond laser pulses: nonlinear dipole response and ionization

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    We study the interaction of strong femtosecond laser pulses with the C60_{60} molecule employing time-dependent density functional theory with the ionic background treated in a jellium approximation. The laser intensities considered are below the threshold of strong fragmentation but too high for perturbative treatments such as linear response. The nonlinear response of the model to excitations by short pulses of frequencies up to 45eV is presented and analyzed with the help of Kohn-Sham orbital resolved dipole spectra. In femtosecond laser pulses of 800nm wavelength ionization is found to occur multiphoton-like rather than via excitation of a ``giant'' resonance.Comment: 14 pages, including 1 table, 5 figure

    Efficient pricing of discrete arithmetic Asian options under mean reversion and jumps based on Fourier-cosine expansions

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    We propose an efficient pricing method for arithmetic Asian options based on Fourier-cosine expansions. In particular, we allow for mean reversion and jumps in the underlying price dynamics. There is an extensive body of empirical evidence in the current literature that points to the existence and prominence of such anomalies in the prices of certain asset classes, such as commodities. Our efficient pricing method is derived for the discretely monitored versions of the European-style arithmetic Asian options. The analytical solutions obtained from our Fourier-cosine expansions are compared to the benchmark fast Fourier transform based pricing for the examination of its accuracy and computational efficienc
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