139 research outputs found

    Characterization of gasoline/ethanol blends by infrared and excess infrared spectroscopy

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    This work was supported by the Northern Research Partnership (NRP) in Scotland and the Scottish Sensor Systems Centre (SSSC) funded by the Scottish Funding Council (SFC).Peer reviewedPostprin

    Analysis of barotactic and chemotactic guidance cues on directional decision-making of Dictyostelium discoideum cells in confined environments

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    Neutrophils and dendritic cells when migrating in confined environments have been shown to actuate a directional choice toward paths of least hydraulic resistance (barotaxis), in some cases overriding chemotactic responses. Here, we investigate whether this barotactic response is conserved in the more primitive model organism Dictyostelium discoideum using a microfluidic chip design. This design allowed us to monitor the behavior of single cells via live imaging when confronted with bifurcating microchannels, presenting different combinations of hydraulic and chemical stimuli. Under the conditions employed we find no evidence in support of a barotactic response; the cells base their directional choices on the chemotactic cues. When the cells are confronted by a microchannel bifurcation, they often split their leading edge and start moving into both channels, before a decision is made to move into one and retract from the other channel. Analysis of this decision-making process has shown that cells in steeper nonhydrolyzable adenosine- 3', 5'- cyclic monophosphorothioate, Sp- isomer (cAMPS) gradients move faster and split more readily. Furthermore, there exists a highly significant strong correlation between the velocity of the pseudopod moving up the cAMPS gradient to the total velocity of the pseudopods moving up and down the gradient over a large range of velocities. This suggests a role for a critical cortical tension gradient in the directional decision-making process

    Effects of spatial confinement on migratory properties of Dictyostelium discoideum cells

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    © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Funding This work was supported a PhD studentship of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Grant [BB/L00271X/1 to C.J.W.].Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Modelling of optical traps for aerosols

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    Experimental observations suggest that there are differences between the behavior of particles optically trapped in air and trapped in a liquid phase. We present a modified version of Mie Debye Spherical Aberration theory to numerically simulate such optical system in attempt to explain and predict these effects. The model incorporates Mie scattering and focussing of the trapping beam through media of stratified refractive index. Our results show a geometrical optics approach cannot correctly describe our system and that spherical aberration must be included. We successfully qualitatively explain the observed phenomena and those of other authors, before discussing the limits of our experimental techniques and methods to improve it. We draw the important conclusion that when optically trapping aerosols the system does not behave as a true `optical tweezers', varying between levitation and single beam gradient force trapping depending on particle and beam parameters

    Effects of spatial confinement on migratory properties of Dictyostelium discoideum cells

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    10.1080/19420889.2021.1872917Communicative & Integrative Biology1415-1

    Interactions between spherical nanoparticles optically trapped in Laguerre-Gaussian modes

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    When a Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) laser mode is used to trap nanoparticles, the spatial disposition of the particles about the beam axis is determined by a secondary mechanism that engages the input radiation with the interparticle potential. This analysis, based on the identification of a range-dependent laser-induced energy shift, elicits and details features that arise for spherical nanoparticles irradiated by a LG mode. Calculations of the absolute minima are performed for LG beams of variable topological charge, and the results are displayed graphically. It is shown that more complex ordered structures emerge on extension to three- and four-particle systems and that similar principles will apply to other kinds of radially structured optical mode. © 2005 Optical Society of America

    Numerically Enhanced Stimulated Emission Depletion Microscopy with Adaptive Optics for Deep-Tissue Super-Resolved Imaging

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    Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society. In stimulated emission depletion (STED) nanoscopy, the major origin of decreased signal-to-noise ratio within images can be attributed to sample photobleaching and strong optical aberrations. This is due to STED utilizing a high-power depletion laser (increasing the risk of photodamage), while the depletion beam is very sensitive to sample-induced aberrations. Here, we demonstrate a custom-built STED microscope with automated aberration correction that is capable of 3D super-resolution imaging through thick, highly aberrating tissue. We introduce and investigate a state of the art image denoising method by block-matching and collaborative 3D filtering (BM3D) to numerically enhance fine object details otherwise mixed with noise and further enhance the image quality. Numerical denoising provides an increase in the final effective resolution of the STED imaging of 31% using the well established Fourier ring correlation metric. Results achieved through the combination of aberration correction and tailored image processing are experimentally validated through super-resolved 3D imaging of axons in differentiated induced pluripotent stem cells growing under an 80 μm thick layer of tissue with lateral and axial resolution of 204 and 310 nm, respectively

    Examining the Effect of Kindlin-3 Binding Site Mutation on LFA-1-ICAM-1 Bonds by Force Measuring Optical Tweezers

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    Integrins in effector T cells are crucial for cell adhesion and play a central role in cell-mediated immunity. Leukocyte adhesion deficiency (LAD) type III, a genetic condition that can cause death in early childhood, highlights the importance of integrin/kindlin interactions for immune system function. A TTT/AAA mutation in the cytoplasmic domain of the beta 2 integrin significantly reduces kindlin-3 binding to the beta 2 tail, abolishes leukocyte adhesion to intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1), and decreases T cell trafficking in vivo. However, how kindlin-3 affects integrin function in T cells remains incompletely understood. We present an examination of LFA-1/ICAM-1 bonds in both wild-type effector T cells and those with a kindlin-3 binding site mutation. Adhesion assays show that effector T cells carrying the kindlin-3 binding site mutation display significantly reduced adhesion to the integrin ligand ICAM-1. Using optical trapping, combined with back focal plane interferometry, we measured a bond rupture force of 17.85 +/- 0.63 pN at a force loading rate of 30.21 +/- 4.35 pN/s, for single integrins expressed on wild-type cells. Interestingly, a significant drop in rupture force of bonds was found for TTT/AAA-mutant cells, with a measured rupture force of 10.08 +/- 0.88pN at the same pulling rate. Therefore, kindlin-3 binding to the cytoplasmic tail of the beta 2-tail directly affects catch bond formation and bond strength of integrin-ligand bonds. As a consequence of this reduced binding, CD8+ T cell activation in vitro is also significantly reduced.Peer reviewe

    Self-evolving ghost imaging

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    Funding Australian Research Council (DE200100074, DP190101058); China Scholarship Council (201607950009, 201706020170); University of Technology Sydney. Acknowledgment We thank Prof. Fengli Gao from Jilin University for the helpful discussion about PGPeer reviewedPublisher PD
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