52 research outputs found
Could Dark Matter Interactions be an Alternative to Dark Energy ?
We study the global dynamics of the universe within the framework of the
Interacting Dark Matter (IDM) scenario. Assuming that the dark matter obeys the
collisional Boltzmann equation, we can derive analytical solutions of the
global density evolution, which can accommodate an accelerated expansion,
equivalent to either the {\em quintessence} or the standard models,
with the present time located after the inflection point. This is possible if
there is a disequilibrium between the DM particle creation and annihilation
processes with the former process dominating, which creates an effective source
term with negative pressure. Comparing the predicted Hubble expansion of one of
the IDM models (the simplest) with observational data we find that the
effective annihilation term is quite small, as suggested by a variety of other
recent experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication by Astronomy &
Astrophysics, major revisio
Serratamolide is a hemolytic factor produced by Serratia marcescens
Serratia marcescens is a common contaminant of contact lens cases and lenses. Hemolytic factors of S. marcescens contribute to the virulence of this opportunistic bacterial pathogen. We took advantage of an observed hyper-hemolytic phenotype of crp mutants to investigate mechanisms of hemolysis. A genetic screen revealed that swrW is necessary for the hyper-hemolysis phenotype of crp mutants. The swrW gene is required for biosynthesis of the biosurfactant serratamolide, previously shown to be a broad-spectrum antibiotic and to contribute to swarming motility. Multicopy expression of swrW or mutation of the hexS transcription factor gene, a known inhibitor of swrW expression, led to an increase in hemolysis. Surfactant zones and expression from an swrW-transcriptional reporter were elevated in a crp mutant compared to the wild type. Purified serratamolide was hemolytic to sheep and murine red blood cells and cytotoxic to human airway and corneal limbal epithelial cells in vitro. The swrW gene was found in the majority of contact lens isolates tested. Genetic and biochemical analysis implicate the biosurfactant serratamolide as a hemolysin. This novel hemolysin may contribute to irritation and infections associated with contact lens use. © 2012 Shanks et al
A rise in the frequency of lasR mutant Pseudomonas aeruginosa among keratitis isolates between 1993 and 2021
IntroductionPseudomonas aeruginosa causes vision threatening keratitis. The LasR transcription factor regulates virulence factors in response to the quorum sensing molecule N-3-oxo-dodecanoyl-L-homoserine lactone. P. aeruginosa isolates with lasR mutations are characterized by an iridescent high sheen phenotype caused by a build-up of 2-heptyl-4-quinolone. A previous study demonstrated 22% (n=101) of P. aeruginosa keratitis isolates from India between 2010 and 2016 were sheen positive lasR mutants, and the sheen phenotype correlated with worse clinical outcomes for patients. In this study, a longitudinal collection of P. aeruginosa keratitis isolates from Eastern North America were screened for lasR mutations by the sheen phenotype and sequencing of the lasR gene.MethodsKeratitis isolates (n=399) were classified by sheen phenotype. The lasR gene was cloned from a subset of isolates, sequenced, and tested for loss of function or dominant-negative status based on an azocasein protease assay. A retrospective chart review compared outcomes of keratitis patients infected by sheen positive and negative isolates.ResultsA significant increase in sheen positive isolates was observed between 1993 and 2021. Extracellular protease activity was reduced among the sheen positive isolates and a defined lasR mutant. Cloned lasR alleles from the sheen positive isolates were loss of function or dominant negative and differed in sequence from previously reported ocular lasR mutant alleles. Retrospective analysis of patient information suggested significantly better visual outcomes for patients infected by sheen positive isolates.DiscussionThese results indicate an increase in lasR mutations among keratitis isolates in the United States and suggest that endemic lasR mutants can cause keratitis
Recommended from our members
Genomic analysis of a large set of currentlyâand historicallyâimportant human adenovirus pathogens
Human adenoviruses (HAdVs) are uniquely important âmodel organismsâ as they have been used to elucidate fundamental biological processes, are recognized as complex pathogens, and are used as remedies for human health. As pathogens, HAdVs may effect asymptomatic or mild and severe symptomatic disease upon their infection of respiratory, ocular, gastrointestinal, and genitourinary systems. High-resolution genomic data have enhanced the understanding of HAdV epidemiology, with recombination recognized as an important and major pathway in the molecular evolution and genesis of emergent HAdV pathogens. To support this view and to actualize an algorithm for identifying, characterizing, and typing novel HAdVs, we determined the DNA sequence of 95 isolates from archives containing historically important pathogens and collections housing currently circulating strains to be sequenced. Of the 85 samples that were completely sequenced, 18 novel recombinants within species HAdV-B and D were identified. Two HAdV-D genomes were found to contain novel penton base and fiber genes with significant divergence from known molecular types. In this data set, we found additional isolates of HAdV-D53 and HAdV-D58, two novel genotypes recognized recently using genomics. This supports the thesis that novel HAdV genotypes are not limited to âone-timeâ appearances of the prototype but are of importance in HAdV epidemiology. These data underscore the significance of lateral genomic transfer in HAdV evolution and reinforce the potential public health impact of novel genotypes of HAdVs emerging in the population
Establishing homogeneity of the universe in the shadow of dark energy
Assuming the universe is spatially homogeneous on the largest scales lays the
foundation for almost all cosmology. This idea is based on the Copernican
principle, that we are not at a particularly special place in the universe.
Surprisingly, this philosophical assumption has yet to be rigorously
demonstrated independently of the standard paradigm. This issue has been
brought to light by cosmological models which can potentially explain apparent
acceleration by spatial inhomogeneity rather than dark energy. These models
replace the temporal fine tuning associated with Lambda with a spatial fine
tuning, and so violate the Copernican assumption. While is seems unlikely that
such models can really give a realistic solution to the dark energy problem,
they do reveal how poorly constrained radial inhomogeneity actually is. So the
bigger issue remains: How do we robustly test the Copernican principle
independently of dark energy or theory of gravity?Comment: 40 pages, 15 figures. Accepted review article to appear in a special
volume of the "Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences" about Dark Energy
and Dark Matte
Search for direct top-squark pair production in final states with two leptons in pp collisions at âs = 8TeV with the ATLAS detector
A search is presented for direct top-squark pair production in final states with two leptons (electrons or muons) of opposite charge using 20.3 fbâ1 of pp collision data at âs = 8 TeV, collected by the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider in 2012. No excess over the Standard Model expectation is found. The results are interpreted under the separate assumptions (i) that the top squark decays to a b-quark in addition to an on-shell chargino whose decay occurs via a real or virtual W boson, or (ii) that the top squark decays to a t-quark and the lightest neutralino. A top squark with a mass between 150 GeV and 445 GeV decaying to a b-quark and an on-shell chargino is excluded at 95% confidence level for a top squark mass equal to the chargino mass plus 10 GeV, in the case of a 1 GeV lightest neutralino. Top squarks with masses between 215 (90) GeV and 530 (170) GeV decaying to an on-shell (off-shell) t-quark and a neutralino are excluded at 95% confidence level for a 1 GeV neutralino
Search for top squark pair production in final states with one isolated lepton, jets, and missing transverse momentum in âs = 8 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector
The results of a search for top squark (stop) pair production in final states with one isolated lepton, jets, and missing transverse momentum are reported. The analysis is performed with proton-proton collision data at sâ = 8 TeV collected with the ATLAS detector at the LHC in 2012 corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 20 fbâ1. The lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) is taken to be the lightest neutralino which only interacts weakly and is assumed to be stable. The stop decay modes considered are those to a top quark and the LSP as well as to a bottom quark and the lightest chargino, where the chargino decays to the LSP by emitting a W boson. A wide range of scenarios with different mass splittings between the stop, the lightest neutralino and the lightest chargino are considered, including cases where the W bosons or the top quarks are off-shell. Decay modes involving the heavier charginos and neutralinos are addressed using a set of phenomenological models of supersymmetry. No significant excess over the Standard Model prediction is observed. A stop with a mass between 210 and 640 GeV decaying directly to a top quark and a massless LSP is excluded at 95% confidence level, and in models where the mass of the lightest chargino is twice that of the LSP, stops are excluded at 95% confidence level up to a mass of 500 GeV for an LSP mass in the range of 100 to 150 GeV. Stringent exclusion limits are also derived for all other stop decay modes considered, and model-independent upper limits are set on the visible cross-section for processes beyond the Standard Model
Search for direct top squark pair production in final states with two leptons in âs=13 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector
The results of a search for direct pair production of top squarks in events with two opposite-charge leptons (electrons or muons) are reported, using 36.1 fbâ1 of integrated luminosity from protonâproton collisions at âs=13 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. To cover a range of mass differences between the top squark t~ and lighter supersymmetric particles, four possible decay modes of the top squark are targeted with dedicated selections: the decay t~âbÏ~1± into a b-quark and the lightest chargino with Ï~1±âWÏ~10 , t~âtÏ~10 into an on-shell top quark and the lightest neutralino, the three-body decay t~âbWÏ~10 and the four-body decay t~âbâÎœÏ~10. No significant excess of events is observed above the Standard Model background for any selection, and limits on top squarks are set as a function of the t~ and Ï~01 masses. The results exclude at 95% confidence level t~ masses up to about 720 GeV, extending the exclusion region of supersymmetric parameter space covered by previous searches
Endophthalmitis Prophylaxis Using a Single Drop of Thermoresponsive Controlled-Release Microspheres Loaded with Moxifloxacin in a Rabbit Model
Citation: Mammen A, Romanowski EG, Fedorchak MV, Dhaliwal DK, Shanks RM, Kowalski RP. Endophthalmitis prophylaxis using a single drop of thermoresponsive controlled-release microspheres loaded with moxifloxacin in a rabbit model. Trans Vis Sci Tech. 2016;5(6):12, doi: 10.1167/tvst.5.6.12 Purpose: Postsurgical endophthalmitis is a sight-threatening problem. We introduce a simple approach by using a single application of thermoresponsive controlledrelease microspheres, loaded with moxifloxacin, to prevent bacterial endophthalmitis in a rabbit endophthalmitis prevention model. Methods: We separated 24 rabbits into 3 treatment groups in which topical drop treatment was placed onto the conjunctival cul-de-sac: (1) a single drop of controlledrelease microspheres containing moxifloxacin, (2) a single drop of controlled-release microspheres without moxifloxacin, and (3) multiple topical treatment with moxifloxacin alone every 15 minutes for 1 hour. All rabbits were challenged, 1 hour after microspheres drop placement and immediately after the fifth topical dose of moxifloxacin, with anterior chamber injections of Staphylococcus aureus. Rabbits in the topical moxifloxacin group also were treated after challenge and four additional times over the next 24 hours. After 24 hours, the rabbits were clinically evaluated for endophthalmitis and the animals were euthanized to culture for intraocular S. aureus. The treatment groups were compared statistically for bacterial endophthalmitis. Results: No eyes had endophthalmitis, based on clinical presentation and/or positive culture, in the groups with controlled-release microspheres loaded with moxifloxacin (0/8, 0%) or multiple drops of topical moxifloxacin (0/8, 0%). In contrast, 8 of 8 eyes (100%; P Œ 0.0001), had endophthalmitis among eyes treated with controlled-release microspheres drops without moxifloxacin. Conclusion: A single drop of controlled-release microspheres loaded with moxifloxacin was successful in preventing endophthalmitis. Further clinical studies will be required to confirm the full potential of controlled-release anti-infective loaded microspheres to prevent endophthalmitis. Translational Relevance: This study presents a simple method of prophylaxis to prevent postsurgical endophthalmitis
- âŠ