30 research outputs found
Identification of intracellular squalene in living algae, Aurantiochytrium mangrovei with hyper-spectral coherent anti-Stokes Raman microscopy using a sub-nanosecond supercontinuum laser source
We applied hyper-spectral coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering imaging to intracellular lipid identification in living microalgae, Aurantiochytrium mangrovei 18W-13a. Two different lipids, squalene and triacylglycerol, were found inside living cells with clear vibrational contrast. Based on the endogenous lipid band as a result of the cis C[DOUBLE BOND]C stretch vibrational mode, squalene and triacylglycerol were clearly distinguished in different intracellular areas. In particular, squalene was detected solely in vacuoles as lipid particles, which was also supported by electron microscopy
Special Relativistic Simulations of Magnetically-dominated Jets in Collapsing Massive Stars
We perform a series of two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic core-collapse
simulations of rapidly rotating and strongly magnetized massive stars. To study
the properties of magnetic explosions for a longer time stretch of postbounce
evolution, we develop a new code under the framework of special relativity
including a realistic equation of state with a multiflavor neutrino leakage
scheme. Our results show the generation of the magnetically-dominated jets in
the two ways. One is launched just after the core-bounce in a prompt way and
another is launched at ms after the stall of the prompt shock. We
find that the shock-revival occurs when the magnetic pressure becomes strong,
due to the field wrapping, enough to overwhelm the ram pressure of the
accreting matter. The critical toroidal magnetic fields for the magnetic
shock-revival are found to be universal of behind the
jets. We point out that the time difference before the shock-revival has a
strong correlation with the explosions energies. Our results suggest that the
magnetically dominated jets are accompanied by the formation of the magnetars.
Since the jets are mildly relativistic, we speculate that they might be the
origin of some observed X-ray flashes.Comment: 50 pages, 14 figures, Accepted to ApJ, A paper with high-resolution
figures available at
http://www-utap.phys.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~takiwaki/res/index-j.htm
Three novel NY-ESO-1 epitopes bound to DRB1*0803, DQB1*0401 and DRB1*0901 recognized by CD4 T cells from CHP-NY-ESO-1-vaccinated patients
Three novel NY-ESO-1 CD4 T cell epitopes were identified using PBMC obtained from patients who were vaccinated with a complex of cholesterol-bearing hydrophobized pullulan (CHP) and NY-ESO-1 protein (CHP-NY-ESO-1). The restriction molecules were determined by antibody blocking and using various EBV-B cells with different HLA alleles as APC to present peptides to CD4 T cells. The minimal epitope peptides were determined using various N- and C-termini truncated peptides deduced from 18-mer overlapping peptides originally identified for recognition. Those epitopes were DRB1*0901-restricted NY-ESO-1 87-100. DQB1*0401-restricted NY-ESO-1 95-107 and DRB1*0803-restricted NY-ESO-1 124-134. CD4 T cells used to determine those epitope peptides recognized EBV-B cells or DC that were treated with recombinant NY-ESO-1 protein or NY-ESO-1-expressing tumor cell lysate, suggesting that the epitope peptides are naturally processed. These CD4 T cells showed a cytokine profile with Th1 characteristics. Furthermore, NY-ESO-1 87-100 peptide/HLA-DRB1*0901 tetramer staining was observed. Multiple Th1-type CD4 T cell responses are beneficial for inducing effective anti-tumor responses after NY-ESO-1 protein vaccination
Quantum circuit-like learning: A fast and scalable classical machine-learning algorithm with similar performance to quantum circuit learning
The application of near-term quantum devices to machine learning (ML) has
attracted much attention. In one such attempt, Mitarai et al. (2018) proposed a
framework to use a quantum circuit for supervised ML tasks, which is called
quantum circuit learning (QCL). Due to the use of a quantum circuit, QCL can
employ an exponentially high-dimensional Hilbert space as its feature space.
However, its efficiency compared to classical algorithms remains unexplored. In
this study, using a statistical technique called count sketch, we propose a
classical ML algorithm that uses the same Hilbert space. In numerical
simulations, our proposed algorithm demonstrates similar performance to QCL for
several ML tasks. This provides a new perspective with which to consider the
computational and memory efficiency of quantum ML algorithms.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
Quantum-inspired canonical correlation analysis for exponentially large dimensional data.
Canonical correlation analysis (CCA) serves to identify statistical dependencies between pairs of multivariate data. However, its application to high-dimensional data is limited due to considerable computational complexity. As an alternative to the conventional CCA approach that requires polynomial computational time, we propose an algorithm that approximates CCA using quantum-inspired computations with computational time proportional to the logarithm of the input dimensionality. The computational efficiency and performance of the proposed quantum-inspired CCA (qiCCA) algorithm are experimentally evaluated on synthetic and real datasets. Furthermore, the fast computation provided by qiCCA allows directly applying CCA even after nonlinearly mapping raw input data into high-dimensional spaces. The conducted experiments demonstrate that, as a result of mapping raw input data into the high-dimensional spaces with the use of second-order monomials, qiCCA extracts more correlations compared with the linear CCA and achieves comparable performance with state-of-the-art nonlinear variants of CCA on several datasets. These results confirm the appropriateness of the proposed qiCCA and the high potential of quantum-inspired computations in analyzing high-dimensional data
Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy in a Patient on Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis
The patient was a 72-year-old man who was receiving continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) with a diagnosis of chronic renal failure. Although his response to dialysis therapy was favorable, right hypochondralgia and fever occurred, and gallstones were detected by abdominal ultrasonography and computed tomography. Drip-infusion cholangiography (DIC) revealed neither dilation nor calculus in the common bile duct. The patient was diagnosed as having acute cholecystitis and cholecystolithiasis and, in consideration of his general condition, laparoscopic cholecystectomy was carried out. Pneumoperitoneum was performed through a CAPD tube, and a 10 mm-trocar was carefully introduced through a supraumbilical incision so as not to injure the CAPD tube. Since intraoperative cholangiography showed a condition similar to preoperative DIC, only cholecystectomy was undertaken. The postoperative course was uneventful, with neither postoperative hemorrhage nor leakage of dialysate from the wound