271 research outputs found
The arouser EPS8L3 Gene Is Critical for Normal Memory in Drosophila
The genetic mechanisms that influence memory formation and sensitivity to the effects of ethanol on behavior in Drosophila have some common elements. So far, these have centered on the cAMP/PKA signaling pathway, synapsin and fas2-dependent processes, pumilio-dependent regulators of translation, and a few other genes. However, there are several genes that are important for one or the other behaviors, suggesting that there is an incomplete overlap in the mechanisms that support memory and ethanol sensitive behaviors. The basis for this overlap is far from understood. We therefore examined memory in arouser (aru) mutant flies, which have recently been identified as having ethanol sensitivity deficits. The aru mutant flies showed memory deficits in both short-term place memory and olfactory memory tests. Flies with a revertant aru allele had wild-type levels of memory performance, arguing that the aru gene, encoding an EPS8L3 product, has a role in Drosophila memory formation. Furthermore, and interestingly, flies with the aru8β128 insertion allele had deficits in only one of two genetic backgrounds in place and olfactory memory tests. Flies with an aru imprecise excision allele had deficits in tests of olfactory memory. Quantitative measurements of aru EPS8L3 mRNA expression levels correlate decreased expression with deficits in olfactory memory while over expression is correlated with place memory deficits. Thus, mutations of the aru EPS8L3 gene interact with the alleles of a particular genetic background to regulate arouser expression and reveals a role of this gene in memory
The Radish Gene Reveals a Memory Component with Variable Temporal Properties
Memory phases, dependent on different neural and molecular mechanisms, strongly influence memory performance. Our understanding, however, of how memory phases interact is far from complete. In Drosophila, aversive olfactory learning is thought to progress from short-term through long-term memory phases. Another memory phase termed anesthesia resistant memory, dependent on the radish gene, influences memory hours after aversive olfactory learning. How does the radish-dependent phase influence memory performance in different tasks? It is found that the radish memory component does not scale with the stability of several memory traces, indicating a specific recruitment of this component to influence different memories, even within minutes of learning
Search for Pauli Exclusion Principle Violating Atomic Transitions and Electron Decay with a P-type Point Contact Germanium Detector
A search for Pauli-exclusion-principle-violating K-alpha electron transitions
was performed using 89.5 kg-d of data collected with a p-type point contact
high-purity germanium detector operated at the Kimballton Underground Research
Facility. A lower limit on the transition lifetime of 5.8x10^30 seconds at 90%
C.L. was set by looking for a peak at 10.6 keV resulting from the x-ray and
Auger electrons present following the transition. A similar analysis was done
to look for the decay of atomic K-shell electrons into neutrinos, resulting in
a lower limit of 6.8x10^30 seconds at 90 C.L. It is estimated that the MAJORANA
DEMONSTRATOR, a 44 kg array of p-type point contact detectors that will search
for the neutrinoless double-beta decay of 76-Ge, could improve upon these
exclusion limits by an order of magnitude after three years of operation
Low Background Signal Readout Electronics for the MAJORANA DEMONSTRATOR
The MAJORANA DEMONSTRATOR is a planned 40 kg array of Germanium detectors
intended to demonstrate the feasibility of constructing a tonne-scale
experiment that will seek neutrinoless double beta decay () in
. Such an experiment would require backgrounds of less than 1
count/tonne-year in the 4 keV region of interest around the 2039 keV Q-value of
the decay. Designing low-noise electronics, which must be placed
in close proximity to the detectors, presents a challenge to reaching this
background target. This paper will discuss the MAJORANA collaboration's
solutions to some of these challenges
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