31 research outputs found

    Inhibiting the recruitment of PLCγ1 to Kaposi's Sarcoma Herpesvirus K15 protein reduces the invasiveness and angiogenesis of infected endothelial cells.

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    Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), caused by Kaposi's sarcoma herpesvirus (KSHV), is a highly vascularised tumour of endothelial origin. KSHV infected endothelial cells show increased invasiveness and angiogenesis. Here, we report that the KSHV K15 protein, which we showed previously to contribute to KSHV-induced angiogenesis, is also involved in KSHV-mediated invasiveness in a PLCγ1-dependent manner. We identified βPIX, GIT1 and cdc42, downstream effectors of PLCγ1 in cell migration, as K15 interacting partners and as contributors to KSHV-triggered invasiveness. We mapped the interaction between PLCγ1, PLCγ2 and their individual domains with two K15 alleles, P and M. We found that the PLCγ2 cSH2 domain, by binding to K15P, can be used as dominant negative inhibitor of the K15P-PLCγ1 interaction, K15P-dependent PLCγ1 phosphorylation, NFAT-dependent promoter activation and the increased invasiveness and angiogenic properties of KSHV infected endothelial cells. We increased the binding of the PLCγ2 cSH2 domain for K15P by substituting two amino acids, thereby creating an improved dominant negative inhibitor of the K15P-dependent PLCγ1 activation. Taken together, these results demonstrate a necessary role of K15 in the increased invasiveness and angiogenesis of KSHV infected endothelial cells and suggest the K15-PLCγ1 interaction as a possible new target for inhibiting the angiogenic and invasive properties of KSHV

    A Predictive Analytical Model of Thermal Conductivity for Aluminum/Transition Metal High Entropy Alloys

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    A predictive analytical model for the thermal conductivity of aluminum/transition metal based high-entropy alloys based on contributions from the electron and lattice subsystems is presented. Lattice conductivity is modeled as an oscillator damped by electron-phonon and defect scattering. Electron subsystem conductivity is dominated by scattering from the aperiodic crystal potential arising from alloying atom induced lattice disorder; its effect was quantitatively calculated using a virtual crystal approximation. We show that model predictions agree with published values and for an exemplar high-entropy alloy largely based on transition (i.e., non-refractory) elements, AlxCoCrCuyFeNi. Within this alloy system, the crystal structure varies between face centered cubic and body centered cubic depending on composition and temperature, and it was found that thermal conductivity behaves as a weighted-average composite of the multiple phases
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