10,461 research outputs found
The neonatal splice variant of Nav1.5 potentiates in vitro invasive behaviour of MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells
Upregulation of functional voltage-gated Na+ channels (VGSCs) occurs in metastatic human breast cancer (BCa) in vitro and in vivo. The present study aimed to ascertain the specific involvement of the 'neonatal' splice variant of Nav1.5 (nNav1.5), thought to be predominant, in the VGSC-dependent invasive behaviour of MDA-MB-231 cells. Functional activity of nNav1.5 was suppressed by two different methods targeting nNav1.5: (i) small interfering RNA (siRNA), and (ii) a polyclonal antibody (NESO-pAb); effects upon migration and invasion were determined. nNav1.5 mRNA, protein and signalling were measured using real-time PCR, Western blotting, and patch clamp recording, respectively. Treatment with the siRNA rapidly reduced (by similar to 90%) the level of nNav1.5 (but not adult Nav1.5) mRNA, but the protein reduction was much smaller (similar to 30%), even after 13 days. Nevertheless, the siRNA reduced peak VGSC current density by 33%, and significantly increased the cells' sensitivity to nanomolar tetrodotoxin (TTX). Importantly, the siRNA suppressed in vitro migration by 43%, and eliminated the normally inhibitory effect of TTX. Migrated MDA-MB-231 cells expressed more nNav1.5 protein at the plasma membrane than non-migrated cells. Furthermore, NESO-pAb reduced migration by up to 42%, in a dose-dependent manner. NESO-pAb also reduced Matrigel invasion without affecting proliferation. TTX had no effect on cells already treated with NESO-pAb. It was concluded that nNav1.5 is primarily responsible for the VGSC-dependent enhancement of invasive behaviour in MDA-MB-231 cells. Accordingly, targeting nNav1.5 expression/activity may be useful in clinical management of metastatic BCa
Position-dependent-mass; Cylindrical coordinates, separability, exact solvability, and PT-symmetry
The kinetic energy operator with position-dependent-mass in cylindrical
coordinates is obtained. The separability of the corresponding Schr\"odinger
equation is discussed within radial cylindrical mass settings. Azimuthal
symmetry is assumed and spectral signatures of various z-dependent interaction
potentials (Hermitian and non-Hermitian PT-symmetric) are reported.Comment: 16 page
Gamma flashes from relativistic electron-positron plasma droplets
Ultra-intense lasers are expected to produce, in near future, relativistic
electron-positron plasma droplets. Considering the local photon production rate
in complete leading order in quantum electrodynamics (QED), we point out that
these droplets are interesting sources of gamma ray flashesComment: 4 pages, 6 figures; Text has been revised and new refs. are adde
Part of the D - dimensional Spiked harmonic oscillator spectra
The pseudoperturbative shifted - l expansion technique PSLET [5,20] is
generalized for states with arbitrary number of nodal zeros. Interdimensional
degeneracies, emerging from the isomorphism between angular momentum and
dimensionality of the central force Schrodinger equation, are used to construct
part of the D - dimensional spiked harmonic oscillator bound - states. PSLET
results are found to compare excellenly with those from direct numerical
integration and generalized variational methods [1,2].Comment: Latex file, 20 pages, to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. & Ge
Bound - states for truncated Coulomb potentials
The pseudoperturbative shifted - expansion technique PSLET is generalized
for states with arbitrary number of nodal zeros. Bound- states energy
eigenvalues for two truncated coulombic potentials are calculated using PSLET.
In contrast with shifted large-N expansion technique, PSLET results compare
excellently with those from direct numerical integration.Comment: TEX file, 22 pages. To appear in J. Phys. A: Math. & Ge
Can Van Hove singularities be observed in relativistic heavy-ion collisions ?
Based on general arguments the in-medium quark propagator in a quark-gluon
plasma leads to a quark dispersion relation consisting of two branches, of
which one exhibits a minimum at some finite momentum. This results in a
vanishing group velocity for collective quark modes. Important quantities such
as the production rate of low mass lepton pairs and mesonic correlators depend
inversely on this group velocity. Therefore these quantities, which follow from
self energy diagrams containing a quark loop, are strongly affected by Van Hove
singularities (peaks and gaps). If these sharp structures could be observed in
relativistic heavy-ion collisions it would reveal the physical picture of the
QGP as a gas of quasiparticles.Comment: 12 pages including nine figures and style files, invited talk given
at the ICPAQGP-2001, November 26-30, 2001, Jaipur, Indi
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