1,883 research outputs found
Development and validation of an algorithm for cardiomyocyte beating frequency determination
The Chagas disease or Tripanosomiasis Americana affects between 16 and 18 million people in endemic areas. This disease affects the beating rate of infected patients' cardiomyocytes. At the Molecular Biology of Chagas Disease Laboratory in Argentina the effect of isolated patient's serum antibodies is studied over rat cardiomyocyte cultures. In this work an image processing application to measure the beating rate of this culture over video sequences is presented. This work is organized as follows. Firstly, a preliminary analysis of the problem is introduced, isolating the main characteristics of the problem. Secondly, a Monte Carlo experiment is designed and used to evaluate the robustness and validity of the algorithm. Finally, an algorithm of order O(T(N log N + N)) for tracking cardiomyocyte membranes is presented, where T is the number of frames and N is the maximum area of the membrane. Its performance is compared against the standard beating rate measure method. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005.Fil:Wassermann, D. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Mejail, M. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina
A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
After disulphide bonds are reduced with dithiothreitol, trans-3-(alpha-bromomethyl)-3’-[alpha-(trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (trans-QBr) alkylates a sulfhydryl group on receptors. The membrane conductance induced by this “tethered agonist” shares many properties with that induced by reversible agonists. Equilibrium conductance increases as the membrane potential is made more negative; the voltage sensitivity resembles that seen with 50 [mu]M carbachol. Voltage- jump relaxations follow an exponential time-course; the rate constants are about twice as large as those seen with 50 mu M carbachol and have the same voltage and temperature sensitivity. With reversible agonists, the rate of channel opening increases with the frequency of agonist-receptor collisions: with tethered trans-Qbr, this rate depends only on intramolecular events. In comparison to the conductance induced by reversible agonists, the QBr-induced conductance is at least 10-fold less sensitive to competitive blockade by tubocurarine and roughly as sensitive to “open-channel blockade” bu QX-222. Light-flash experiments with tethered QBr resemble those with the reversible photoisomerizable agonist, 3,3’,bis-[alpha-(trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (Bis-Q): the conductance is increased by cis {arrow} trans photoisomerizations and decreased by trans {arrow} cis photoisomerizations. As with Bis-Q, ligh-flash relaxations have the same rate constant as voltage-jump relaxations. Receptors with tethered trans isomer. By comparing the agonist-induced conductance with the cis/tans ratio, we conclude that each channel’s activation is determined by the configuration of a single tethered QBr molecule. The QBr-induced conductance shows slow decreases (time constant, several hundred milliseconds), which can be partially reversed by flashes. The similarities suggest that the same rate-limiting step governs the opening and closing of channels for both reversible and tethered agonists. Therefore, this step is probably not the initial encounter between agonist and receptor molecules
A photoisomerizable muscarinic antagonist. Studies of binding and of conductance relaxations in frog heart
These experiments employ the photoisomerizable compound, 3,3'-bis- [alpha-(trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (Bis-Q), to study the response to muscarinic agents in frog myocardium. In homogenates from the heart, trans-Bis-Q blocks the binding of [3H]-N-methylscopolamine to muscarinic receptors. In voltage-clamped atrial trabeculae, trans- Bis-Q blocks the agonist-induced potassium conductance. The equilibrium dose-response curve for carbachol is shifted to the right, suggesting competitive blockade. Both the biochemical and electrophysiological data yield a dissociation constant of 4-5 microM for trans-Bis-Q; the cis configuration is severalfold less potent as a muscarinic blocker. Voltage-clamped preparations were exposed simultaneously to carbachol and Bis-Q and were subjected to appropriately filtered flashes (less than 1 ms duration) from a xenon flashlamp. Trans leads to cis and cis leads to trans photoisomerizations cause small (less than 20%) increases and decreases, respectively, in the agonist-induced current. The relaxation follows an S-shaped time course, including an initial delay or period of zero slope. The entire waveform is described by [1 - exp(-kt)]n. At 23 degrees C, k is approximately 3 s-1 and n is 2. Neither k nor n is affected when: (a) [Bis-Q] is varied between 5 and 100 microM; (b) [carbachol] is varied between 1 and 50 microM; (c) carbachol is replaced by other agonists (muscarine, acetylcholine, or acetyl-beta-methylcholine); or (d) the voltage is varied between the normal resting potential and a depolarization of 80 mV. However, in the range of 13-30 degrees C, k increases with temperature; the Q10 is between 2 and 2.5. In the same range, n does not change significantly. Like other investigators, we conclude that the activation kinetics of the muscarinic K+ conductance are not determined by ligand-receptor binding, but rather by a subsequent sequence of two (or more) steps with a high activation energy
Classification of minimal actions of a compact Kac algebra with amenable dual
We show the uniqueness of minimal actions of a compact Kac algebra with
amenable dual on the AFD factor of type II. This particularly implies the
uniqueness of minimal actions of a compact group. Our main tools are a Rohlin
type theorem, the 2-cohomology vanishing theorem, and the Evans-Kishimoto type
intertwining argument.Comment: 68 pages, Introduction rewritten; minor correction
Canalizing Kauffman networks: non-ergodicity and its effect on their critical behavior
Boolean Networks have been used to study numerous phenomena, including gene
regulation, neural networks, social interactions, and biological evolution.
Here, we propose a general method for determining the critical behavior of
Boolean systems built from arbitrary ensembles of Boolean functions. In
particular, we solve the critical condition for systems of units operating
according to canalizing functions and present strong numerical evidence that
our approach correctly predicts the phase transition from order to chaos in
such systems.Comment: to be published in PR
Lattice dynamics and structural stability of ordered Fe3Ni, Fe3Pd and Fe3Pt alloys
We investigate the binding surface along the Bain path and phonon dispersion
relations for the cubic phase of the ferromagnetic binary alloys Fe3X (X = Ni,
Pd, Pt) for L12 and DO22 ordered phases from first principles by means of
density functional theory. The phonon dispersion relations exhibit a softening
of the transverse acoustic mode at the M-point in the L12-phase in accordance
with experiments for ordered Fe3Pt. This instability can be associated with a
rotational movement of the Fe-atoms around the Ni-group element in the
neighboring layers and is accompanied by an extensive reconstruction of the
Fermi surface. In addition, we find an incomplete softening in [111] direction
which is strongest for Fe3 Ni. We conclude that besides the valence electron
density also the specific Fe-content and the masses of the alloying partners
should be considered as parameters for the design of Fe-based functional
magnetic materials.Comment: Revised version, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Childhood Leukemia in the Vicinity of the Geesthacht Nuclear Establishments near Hamburg, Germany
BackgroundDuring 1990–1991 a childhood leukemia cluster was observed in the sparsely populated region surrounding two nuclear establishments southeast of Hamburg, Germany. Since then, several new cases have been reported. Recently a possible accidental release of radionuclides in 1986 was hypothesized.ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to analyze the childhood leukemia incidence in this area since 1990.MethodsAll incident cases ( 15 years warrants further investigation
Hidden semi-Markov Model based earthquake classification system using Weighted Finite-State Transducers
Automatic earthquake detection and classification is required for efficient analysis of large seismic datasets. Such techniques are particularly important now because access to measures of ground motion is nearly unlimited and the target waveforms (earthquakes) are often hard to detect and classify. Here, we propose to use models from speech synthesis which extend the double stochastic models from speech recognition by integrating a more realistic duration of the target waveforms. The method, which has general applicability, is applied to earthquake detection and classification. First, we generate characteristic functions from the time-series. The Hidden semi-Markov Models are estimated from the characteristic functions and Weighted Finite-State Transducers are constructed for the classification. We test our scheme on one month of continuous seismic data, which corresponds to 370 151 classifications, showing that incorporating the time dependency explicitly in the models significantly improves the results compared to Hidden Markov Models
Uso da farinha de minhoca como alimento para pós-larvas de tilápia.
Foi avaliada a influência da substituição da farinha de peixe pela farinha de minhoca (Eisenia foetida) no crescimento de pós-larvas de tilápia nilótica (Oreochromis niloticus). A farinha de peixe, que correspondeu a 50% da proteína da dieta, foi substituída pela farinha de minhoca nos seguintes níveis: 0%, 20%, 40%, 60%, 80% e 100%. Os peixes foram alimentados à vontade, quatro vezes ao dia, sendo pesados e medidos aos 21 e 41 dias de experimentação. O delineamento experimental foi o completamente casualizado, com quatro repetições por tratamento e 20 peixes por unidade experimental. Os dados coletados foram analisados pela ANOVA, sendo as médias posteriormente classificadas pelo teste de Tukey (5%). Após 21 dias, não houve diferença significativa entre os tratamentos. Entretanto, aos 41 dias houve diferença significativa entre os tratamentos e os animais com o nível de substituição de 20% apresentaram os maiores pesos e taxas de crescimento específico, e os animais com o nível de substituição de 100% os menores. Durante o período experimental não houve diferença significativa entre os tratamentos em relação à sobrevivência dos animais. Os resultados mostram que baixos níveis de substituição da farinha de peixe (20%) melhoram o crescimento dos animais e que a substituição total da farinha de peixe pela farinha de minhoca é prejudicial ao desenvolvimento dos peixes, mas não afeta a sua sobrevivência.bitstream/item/37405/1/BP45.pd
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