11 research outputs found

    Evaluation of selected chemical processes for production of low-cost silicon phase 2. silicon material task, low-cost silicon solar array project

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    Progress from October 1, 1977, through December 31, 1977, is reported in the design of the 50 MT/year experimental facility for the preparation of high purity silicon by the zinc vapor reduction of silicon tetrachloride in a fluidized bed of seed particles to form a free flowing granular product

    Changes in neural activation underlying attention processing of emotional stimuli following treatment with positive search training in anxious children

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    Prior research indicates that positive search training (PST) may be a promising home-based computerised treatment for childhood anxiety disorders. It explicitly trains anxious individuals in adaptive, goal-directed attention-search strategies to search for positive and calm information and ignore goal-irrelevant negative cues. Although PST reduces anxiety symptoms, its neural effects are unknown. The main aim of this study was to examine changes in neural activation associated with changes in attention processing of positive and negative stimuli from pre- to post-treatment with PST in children with anxiety disorders. Children's neural activation was assessed with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during a visual-probe task indexing attention allocation to threat-neutral and positive-neutral pairs. Results showed pre- to post-treatment reductions in anxiety symptoms and neural reactivity to emotional faces (angry and happy faces, relative to neutral faces) within a broad neural network linking frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital regions. Changes in neural reactivity were highly inter-correlated across regions. Neural reactivity to the threat-bias contrast reduced from pre- to post-treatment in the mid/posterior cingulate cortex. Results are considered in relation to prior research linking anxiety disorders and treatment effects with functioning of a broad limbic-cortical network involved in emotion reactivity and regulation, and integrative functions linking emotion, memory, sensory and motor processes and attention control

    Comparative profiling of cortical gene expression in Alzheimer’s disease patients and mouse models demonstrates a link between amyloidosis and neuroinflammation

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    Abstract Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, characterized by accumulation of amyloid β (Aβ) and neurofibrillary tangles. Oxidative stress and inflammation are considered to play an important role in the development and progression of AD. However, the extent to which these events contribute to the Aβ pathologies remains unclear. We performed inter-species comparative gene expression profiling between AD patient brains and the App NL-G-F/NL-G-F and 3xTg-AD-H mouse models. Genes commonly altered in App NL-G-F/NL-G-F and human AD cortices correlated with the inflammatory response or immunological disease. Among them, expression of AD-related genes (C4a/C4b, Cd74, Ctss, Gfap, Nfe2l2, Phyhd1, S100b, Tf, Tgfbr2, and Vim) was increased in the App NL-G-F/NL-G-F cortex as Aβ amyloidosis progressed with exacerbated gliosis, while genes commonly altered in the 3xTg-AD-H and human AD cortices correlated with neurological disease. The App NL-G-F/NL-G-F cortex also had altered expression of genes (Abi3, Apoe, Bin2, Cd33, Ctsc, Dock2, Fcer1g, Frmd6, Hck, Inpp5D, Ly86, Plcg2, Trem2, Tyrobp) defined as risk factors for AD by genome-wide association study or identified as genetic nodes in late-onset AD. These results suggest a strong correlation between cortical Aβ amyloidosis and the neuroinflammatory response and provide a better understanding of the involvement of gender effects in the development of AD

    Produção de progesterona in vitro pelas células do corpo lúteo bovino ao longo da gestação In vitro progesterone production from bovine corpus luteum throughout gestation

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    O presente trabalho foi desenvolvido para testar a hipótese de que células luteínicas bovinas em cultivo, provenientes dos três terços de gestação, comportam-se da mesma maneira que células in vivo em relação à produção de P4. Foram coletadas amostras de corpos lúteos (CL) de 90 (n=3), 150 (n=3) e 210 (n=3) dias de gestação obtidos em abatedouro. Sob condições assépticas, as células foram mecanicamente dispersas e cultivadas em placas de 96 poços. Após 24 horas de cultivo foram feitas a lavagem dos poços e a adição do precursor pregnenolona. Os tratamentos foram realizados em octuplicata para cada tempo de tratamento (24, 48 e 96 horas) com três repetições de cada período gestacional. As amostras de meio de cultura e as células foram coletadas 24, 48 e 96 horas após adição do precursor e acondicionadas em freezer a -20ºC até o processamento. A progesterona foi dosada através de radioimunoensaio e o conteúdo protéico pelo método de Lowry. Os resultados foram analisados estatisticamente e considerados diferentes quando p<0.05. Foi observada maior produção de P4 aos 90 dias de gestação (35,277±0,075), posterior decréscimo aos 150 dias (28,820±0,231) e novo aumento aos 210 dias (32,777±0,099). A produção de P4 em células cultivadas por 24 horas foi maior (p<0,05) em células oriundas do grupo de 90 dias (2,912±0,047) quando comparado a 150 (2,669±0,137) e 210 dias (2,741±0,088). As 48 e 96 horas de cultivo, células luteínicas bovinas de 90 dias produziram mais P4 que células de 210 dias (2,934±0,029 e 2,976±0,121 respectivamente x 2,760±0,059 e 2,695±0,149, respectivamente; p<0,05), que por sua vez produziram mais do que células de 150 dias (2,334±0,084 para 48 horas e 2,205±0,136 para 96 horas). Aos 150 dias de gestação a produção de progesterona apresentou diminuição gradativa ao longo das 96 horas de cultivo. Essas diferenças podem ser explicadas pela expressão gênica diferencial de enzimas ou também de fatores presentes na cascata esteroidogênica de acordo com a idade gestacional. Este modelo de cultura celular luteínica poderá ser utilizado em estudos funcionais uma vez que o padrão de secreção de P4 mimetizou o que ocorre in vivo.<br>The aim was to test the hypothesis that cultivated bovine luteal cells from three different thirds of pregnancy behave the same way as in vivo luteal cells relative to P4 production. Corpus luteum samples from days 90 (n=3), 150 (n=3) and 210 (n=3) of pregnancy were obtained at a local slaughterhouse. Under aseptic conditions cells were mechanically dispersed and cultivated in a 96 wells-plate. After 24 hours of culture, cells were washed and the precursor pregnenolone was added. Experiments were conducted eight times for each studied time period (24, 48 and 96 h) and three times for each gestational age. Culture medium and cells were collected after 24, 48 and 96 hours of precursor addition and kept frozen at -20ºC until processing. Progesterone was measured by RIA and protein content by Lowry's method. Results were statistically analyzed and considered different when p <0.05. A higher P4 production was observed on day 90 of gestation (35.277±0.075), then this production was decreased at day 150 (28.820±0.231) and increased again at day 210 (32.777±0.099). After 24 hours of culture, luteal cells P4 production reached maximum values in the group of 90 days (2.912±0.047) when compared to 150 (2.669±0.137) and 210 days (2.741±0.088). At 48 and 96 hours of culture, bovine luteal cells from day 90 of gestation produced more P4 than cells from day 210 (2.934±0.029 and 2.976±0.121 respectively x 2.760±0.059 and 2.695±0.149, respectively; p<0.05), which in turn, produced more P4 than cells from day 150 (2.334±0.084 for 48 h and 2.205±0.136 for 96 h). Luteal cells from day 150 of gestation presented a decreasing P4 production throughout the 96 hours of culture. These differences could be explained by differential gene expression of enzymes and/or factors belonging to the esteroidogenic cascade in accordance to the gestational period. The established luteal cell culture model could be used for further functional studies once P4 secretion pattern in vitroresembled what occurs in vivo
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