39 research outputs found
The effect of fasting on the ultrastructure of the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus in young rats
In the present study, we described ultrastructural changes occurring in the
neurons of the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus after food deprivation. Young
male Wistar rats (5 months old, n = 12) were divided into three groups. The
animals in Group I were used as control (normally fed), and the rats in Groups
II and III were fasted for 48 hours and 96 hours, respectively. In both treated
groups, fasting caused rearrangement of the rough endoplasmic reticulum forming
lamellar bodies and membranous whorls. The lamellar bodies were rather
short in the controls, whereas in the fasting animals they became longer and
were sometimes participating in the formation of membranous whorls composed
of the concentric layers of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum. The whorls
were often placed in the vicinity of a very well developed Golgi complex. Some
Golgi complexes displayed an early stage of whorl formation. Moreover, an
increased serum level of 8-isoprostanes, being a reliable marker of total oxidative
stress in the body, was observed in both fasting groups of rats as compared
to the control
Ultrastructural observations on the hypothalamic arcuate nuclei of aged rats in the fasting/refeeding model
The arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus (ARH) is involved in the control of
energy homeostasis. This is the first study on the ultrastructural response of ARH
neurons in aged rats after short-term fasting and subsequent refeeding. Male
Wistar rats (24 weeks old) were fasted for 48 or 96 hours and were then refed for
24 hours. The controls were normally fed. The rats received water ad libitum. In
both groups of fasting animals, we observed a rearrangement of the arcuate
rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and Golgi complexes to form membranous
whorls. Moreover, refeeding for 24 hours did not reverse this process. The RER
was frequently found to be well organized into lamellar bodies composed of
several cisternae. The membranous whorls were composed of concentric layers
of endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes. In addition, multiform lipofuscin
granules were observed in close relationship with Golgi complexes and membranous
whorls. Lipofuscin granules within the neurons of the arcuate nucleus are
assumed to be a morphological manifestation of oxidative stress phenomena,
which are presumably implicated in the formation of membranous whorls in
both fasting and fasting/refed animals. This observation correlates with a significant
increase in 8-isoprostane serum levels in the fasting and fasting/refed animals
as compared to the fed control rats
Ultrastructural response of arcuate nucleus neurons to fasting in aged rats
The arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus (ARH) is involved in the control of
energy homeostasis. Leptin - an adipocyte derived hormone - is known to
act on the hypothalamic nuclei and thus to control body weight by food intake
reduction. Oxidative stress is believed to be implicated in leptin signalling. However,
its relevance for leptin-induced signal transduction within ARH remains
unclear. The goal of the study was to investigate the effect of fasting on morphological
alterations of the neuronal endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi network as
well as on the expression of leptin receptors in the arcuate nucleus of aged
rats. Male Wistar rats, aged 24 months, were fasted for 96 hours. The control
animals were fed ad libitum. Membranous whorls in the ARH neurons were
visualized using the electron microscopy technique. Leptin receptors in the
membranes of ARH neurons were determined immunohistochemically (IHC),
and soluble leptin receptors in the plasma as well as plasma isoprostanes were
quantified immunochemically (ELISA). An intense formation of membranous
whorls was observed, directly associated with the cisternae of the rough endoplasmic
reticulum, as well as lamellar bodies. Interestingly, the whorls were
often localized near a well-developed Golgi complex. Moreover, some Golgi
complexes displayed an early stage of whorl formation. Groups of residual
lipofuscin granules were found in the immediate proximity of the whorls. An
increased immunoreactivity with neuronal leptin receptors suggests that hypersensitive
neurons may still effectively respond to the fasting serum levels of
leptin, mediating ultrastructural transformation of ARH neurons during short-term fasting. Having observed a significant accumulation of lipofuscin granules
and a marked increase of total 8-isoprostane serum level in the fasting rats, we
hypothesize that signal transduction within the neurons of ARH is dependent
on oxidative stress phenomena
Non-Destructive Probing of Rabi Oscillations on the Cesium Clock Transition near the Standard Quantum Limit
We report on non-destructive observation of Rabi oscillations on the Cs clock
transition. The internal atomic state evolution of a dipole-trapped ensemble of
cold atoms is inferred from the phase shift of a probe laser beam as measured
using a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. We describe a single color as well as a
two-color probing scheme. Using the latter, measurements of the collective
pseudo-spin projection of atoms in a superposition of the clock states are
performed and the observed spin fluctuations are shown to be close to the
standard quantum limit.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Certified quantum non-demolition measurement of material systems
An extensive debate on quantum non-demolition (QND) measurement, reviewed in
Grangier et al. [Nature, {\bf 396}, 537 (1998)], finds that true QND
measurements must have both non-classical state-preparation capability and
non-classical information-damage tradeoff. Existing figures of merit for these
non-classicality criteria require direct measurement of the signal variable and
are thus difficult to apply to optically-probed material systems. Here we
describe a method to demonstrate both criteria without need for to direct
signal measurements. Using a covariance matrix formalism and a general noise
model, we compute meter observables for QND measurement triples, which suffice
to compute all QND figures of merit. The result will allow certified QND
measurement of atomic spin ensembles using existing techniques.Comment: 11 pages, zero figure
Hamiltonian Design in Atom-Light Interactions with Rubidium Ensembles: A Quantum Information Toolbox
We study the coupling between collective variables of atomic spin and light
polarization in an ensemble of cold 87Rb probed with polarized light. The
effects of multiple hyperfine levels manifest themselves as a rank-2 tensor
polarizability, whose irreducible components can be selected by means of probe
detuning. The D1 and D2 lines of Rb are explored and we identify different
detunings which lead to Hamiltonians with different symmetries for rotations.
As possible applications of these Hamiltonians, we describe schemes for spin
squeezing, quantum cloning, quantum memory, and measuring atom number.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; added reference
Interaction-based quantum metrology showing scaling beyond the Heisenberg limit
Quantum metrology studies the use of entanglement and other quantum resources
to improve precision measurement. An interferometer using N independent
particles to measure a parameter X can achieve at best the "standard quantum
limit" (SQL) of sensitivity {\delta}X \propto N^{-1/2}. The same interferometer
using N entangled particles can achieve in principle the "Heisenberg limit"
{\delta}X \propto N^{-1}, using exotic states. Recent theoretical work argues
that interactions among particles may be a valuable resource for quantum
metrology, allowing scaling beyond the Heisenberg limit. Specifically, a
k-particle interaction will produce sensitivity {\delta}X \propto N^{-k} with
appropriate entangled states and {\delta}X \propto N^{-(k-1/2)} even without
entanglement. Here we demonstrate this "super-Heisenberg" scaling in a
nonlinear, non-destructive measurement of the magnetisation of an atomic
ensemble. We use fast optical nonlinearities to generate a pairwise
photon-photon interaction (k = 2) while preserving quantum-noise-limited
performance, to produce {\delta}X \propto N^{-3/2}. We observe super-Heisenberg
scaling over two orders of magnitude in N, limited at large N by higher-order
nonlinear effects, in good agreement with theory. For a measurement of limited
duration, super-Heisenberg scaling allows the nonlinear measurement to overtake
in sensitivity a comparable linear measurement with the same number of photons.
In other scenarios, however, higher-order nonlinearities prevent this crossover
from occurring, reflecting the subtle relationship of scaling to sensitivity in
nonlinear systems. This work shows that inter-particle interactions can improve
sensitivity in a quantum-limited measurement, and introduces a fundamentally
new resource for quantum metrology
Influence of crop residue ration supplementation on the attainment of puberty and postpartum reproductive activities of Red Sokoto goats
The general objective of this study was to come up with an appropriate, affordable and locally available crop residue supplementation package that would enhance reproductive performance in small ruminants. Specifically, 28 Red Sokoto weaner does between 3 and 4 months of age weighing between 2 and 3 kg were used in the first experiment to determine the influence of crop residue supplementation on age and weight at puberty as determined by blood progesterone levels. In the second experiment, another 28 adult does (equal to or greater than 2 years old) of the same breed in the same flock with lactation numbers between 1 and 3 were used to determine the length of postpartum acyclic period. In both experiments, a 3 x 2 factorial experimental design comprising three dietary supplements (A, B, C) at two feeding levels (1% and 2% of body weight) fed in addition to a basal diet of Digitaria smutsii hay and natural pasture ad libitum with an unsupplemented negative control group (D) and four goats per treatment was utilized. In ration A, a conventional concentrate supplement consisting of maize, wheat offal, cottonseed cake and bonemeal was utilized; in rations B and C, the supplement consisted of guinea-corn bran, cowpea husk and groundnut haulms; and maize offal, groundnut shells and groundnut haulms respectively. Unsupplemented (ration D) weaner does reached puberty at a later age and had lighter body weights than all the others. Weaner does on ration 2A (concentrate fed at 2% of body weight) attained puberty at the earliest age and heaviest body weight, although the age at puberty was not significantly different from those on rations 1A (concentrate fed at 1% body weight), 1C and 2C. Blood progesterone profiles before and after puberty ranged from 0.05 to 9.0 ng/ml, respectively, and was highest in does fed rations A and C and least in the unsupplemented does. The mean interval between kidding and initiation of ovarian activity was 54.28 plus or minus 17.61 days and the mean interval between kidding and conception was 63.04 plus or minus 25.34 days. Only 25% of the unsupplemented does conceived again during the period under study compared with 100% in rations 1A, 2A, 1C and 2C; 75% in ration 2B and 50% in ration 1B. It was concluded that implementation of supplementary feeding in the dry season improves reproductive performance in the Red Sokoto doe. Furthermore, ration C, a crop residue-based ration, was a suitable dry season supplementation alternative to the expensive conventional concentrate ration for the smallholder goat farmer in the subhumid tropics of Nigeria
Estimating trace deposition time with circadian biomarkers: a prospective and versatile tool for crime scene reconstruction
Linking biological samples found at a crime scene with the actual crime event represents the most important aspect of forensic investigation, together with the identification of the sample donor. While DNA profiling is well established for donor identification, no reliable methods exist for timing forensic samples. Here, we provide for the first time a biochemical approach for determining deposition time of human traces. Using commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays we showed that the characteristic 24-h profiles of two circadian hormones, melatonin (concentration peak at late night) and cortisol (peak in the morning) can be reproduced from small samples of whole blood and saliva. We further demonstrated by analyzing small stains dried and stored up to 4 weeks the in vitro stability of melatonin, whereas for cortisol a statistically significant decay with storage time was observed, although the hormone was still reliably detectable in 4-week-old samples. Finally, we showed that the total protein concentration, also assessed using a commercial assay, can be used for normalization of hormone signals in blood, but less so in saliva. Our data thus demonstrate that estimating normalized concentrations of melatonin and cortisol represents a prospective approach for determining deposition time of biological trace samples, at least from blood, with promising expectations for forensic applications. In the broader context, our study opens up a new field of circadian biomarkers for deposition timing of forensic traces; future studies using other circadian biomarkers may reveal if the time range offered by the two hormones studied here can be specified more exactly
A solid-phase enzyme-linked assay for vitamin B 12
A new solid-phase enzyme-linked competitive binding assay for vitamin B 12 (cyanocobalamin) is described. The assay is based on the competition between analyte B 12 molecules and a glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-vitamin B 12 conjugate for a limited number of R-protein binding sites immobilized on sepharose particles. After appropriate incubation and washing steps, the enzyme activity bound to the solid-phase is inversely related to the concentration of B 12 in the sample. Under optimized conditions, the method can detect B 12 in the range of 3×10 −10 −1×10 −8 M (using 100 μ l sample) with high selectivity over other biological molecules.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/41626/1/604_2005_Article_BF01197285.pd