107 research outputs found
Surface decoration of catanionic vesicles with superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles: a model system for triggered release under moderate temperature conditions
International audienceWe report the design of new catanionic vesicles decorated with iron oxide nanoparticles, which could be used as a model system to illustrate controlled delivery of small solutes under mild hyperthermia. Efficient release of fluorescent dye rhodamine 6G was observed when samples were exposed to an oscillating magnetic field. Our system provides direct evidence for reversible permeability upon magnetic stimulation
Control electronics for the CIME RF system
International audienceThe paper describes the characteristics of the amplitude and phase loops for the accelerating voltage, thecontrol system which manages securities, sparks and multipactor problems for the cavities. Design methods andresults during first power tests are presented
Rabies Virus Infection Induces Type I Interferon Production in an IPS-1 Dependent Manner While Dendritic Cell Activation Relies on IFNAR Signaling
As with many viruses, rabies virus (RABV) infection induces type I interferon (IFN) production within the infected host cells. However, RABV has evolved mechanisms by which to inhibit IFN production in order to sustain infection. Here we show that RABV infection of dendritic cells (DC) induces potent type I IFN production and DC activation. Although DCs are infected by RABV, the viral replication is highly suppressed in DCs, rendering the infection non-productive. We exploited this finding in bone marrow derived DCs (BMDC) in order to differentiate which pattern recognition receptor(s) (PRR) is responsible for inducing type I IFN following infection with RABV. Our results indicate that BMDC activation and type I IFN production following a RABV infection is independent of TLR signaling. However, IPS-1 is essential for both BMDC activation and IFN production. Interestingly, we see that the BMDC activation is primarily due to signaling through the IFNAR and only marginally induced by the initial infection. To further identify the receptor recognizing RABV infection, we next analyzed BMDC from Mda-5β/β and RIG-Iβ/β mice. In the absence of either receptor, there is a significant decrease in BMDC activation at 12h post infection. However, only RIG-Iβ/β cells exhibit a delay in type I IFN production. In order to determine the role that IPS-1 plays in vivo, we infected mice with pathogenic RABV. We see that IPS-1β/β mice are more susceptible to infection than IPS-1+/+ mice and have a significantly increased incident of limb paralysis
Neutron-proton pairing in the N=Z radioactive fp-shell nuclei 56Ni and 52Fe probed by pair transfer
The isovector and isoscalar components of neutron-proton pairing are
investigated in the N=Z unstable nuclei of the \textit{fp}-shell through the
two-nucleon transfer reaction (p,He) in inverse kinematics. The combination
of particle and gamma-ray detection with radioactive beams of Ni and
Fe, produced by fragmentation at the GANIL/LISE facility, made it
possible to carry out this study for the first time in a closed and an
open-shell nucleus in the \textit{fp}-shell. The transfer cross-sections for
ground-state to ground-state (J=0,T=1) and to the first (J=1,T=0) state
were extracted for both cases together with the transfer cross-section ratios
(0,T=1) /(1,T=0). They are compared with second-order
distorted-wave born approximation (DWBA) calculations. The enhancement of the
ground-state to ground-state pair transfer cross-section close to mid-shell, in
Fe, points towards a superfluid phase in the isovector channel. For the
"deuteron-like" transfer, very low cross-sections to the first (J=1,T=0)
state were observed both for \Ni\phe\, and \Fe\phe\, and are related to a
strong hindrance of this channel due to spin-orbit effect. No evidence for an
isoscalar deuteron-like condensate is observed.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Protein Expression Redirects Vesicular Stomatitis Virus RNA Synthesis to Cytoplasmic Inclusions
Positive-strand and double-strand RNA viruses typically compartmentalize their replication machinery in infected cells. This is thought to shield viral RNA from detection by innate immune sensors and favor RNA synthesis. The picture for the non-segmented negative-strand (NNS) RNA viruses, however, is less clear. Working with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), a prototype of the NNS RNA viruses, we examined the location of the viral replication machinery and RNA synthesis in cells. By short-term labeling of viral RNA with 5β²-bromouridine 5β²-triphosphate (BrUTP), we demonstrate that primary mRNA synthesis occurs throughout the host cell cytoplasm. Protein synthesis results in the formation of inclusions that contain the viral RNA synthesis machinery and become the predominant sites of mRNA synthesis in the cell. Disruption of the microtubule network by treatment of cells with nocodazole leads to the accumulation of viral mRNA in discrete structures that decorate the surface of the inclusions. By pulse-chase analysis of the mRNA, we find that viral transcripts synthesized at the inclusions are transported away from the inclusions in a microtubule-dependent manner. Metabolic labeling of viral proteins revealed that inhibiting this transport step diminished the rate of translation. Collectively those data suggest that microtubule-dependent transport of viral mRNAs from inclusions facilitates their translation. Our experiments also show that during a VSV infection, protein synthesis is required to redirect viral RNA synthesis to intracytoplasmic inclusions. As viral RNA synthesis is initially unrestricted, we speculate that its subsequent confinement to inclusions might reflect a cellular response to infection
Specific Roles of Akt iso Forms in Apoptosis and Axon Growth Regulation in Neurons
Akt is a member of the AGC kinase family and consists of three isoforms. As one of the major regulators of the class I PI3 kinase pathway, it has a key role in the control of cell metabolism, growth, and survival. Although it has been extensively studied in the nervous system, we have only a faint knowledge of the specific role of each isoform in differentiated neurons. Here, we have used both cortical and hippocampal neuronal cultures to analyse their function. We characterized the expression and function of Akt isoforms, and some of their substrates along different stages of neuronal development using a specific shRNA approach to elucidate the involvement of each isoform in neuron viability, axon development, and cell signalling. Our results suggest that three Akt isoforms show substantial compensation in many processes. However, the disruption of Akt2 and Akt3 significantly reduced neuron viability and axon length. These changes correlated with a tendency to increase in active caspase 3 and a decrease in the phosphorylation of some elements of the mTORC1 pathway. Indeed, the decrease of Akt2 and more evident the inhibition of Akt3 reduced the expression and phosphorylation of S6. All these data indicate that Akt2 and Akt3 specifically regulate some aspects of apoptosis and cell growth in cultured neurons and may contribute to the understanding of mechanisms of neuron death and pathologies that show deregulated growth
Streptococcus pneumoniae Serotype 1 Capsular Polysaccharide Induces CD8+CD28β Regulatory T Lymphocytes by TCR Crosslinking
Zwitterionic capsular polysaccharides (ZPS) of commensal bacteria are characterized by having both positive and negative charged substituents on each repeating unit of a highly repetitive structure that has an Ξ±-helix configuration. In this paper we look at the immune response of CD8+ T cells to ZPSs. Intraperitoneal application of the ZPS Sp1 from Streptococcus pneumoniae serotype 1 induces CD8+CD28β T cells in the spleen and peritoneal cavity of WT mice. However, chemically modified Sp1 (mSp1) without the positive charge and resembling common negatively charged polysaccharides fails to induce CD8+CD28β T lymphocytes. The Sp1-induced CD8+CD28β T lymphocytes are CD122lowCTLA-4+CD39+. They synthesize IL-10 and TGF-Ξ². The Sp1-induced CD8+CD28β T cells exhibit immunosuppressive properties on CD4+ T cells in vivo and in vitro. Experimental approaches to elucidate the mechanism of CD8+ T cell activation by Sp1 demonstrate in a dimeric MHC class I-Ig model that Sp1 induces CD8+ T cell activation by enhancing crosslinking of TCR. The expansion of CD8+CD28β T cells is independent, of direct antigen-presenting cell/T cell contact and, to the specificity of the T cell receptor (TCR). In CD8+CD28β T cells, Sp1 enhances Zap-70 phosphorylation and increasingly involves NF-ΞΊB which ultimately results in protection versus apoptosis and cell death and promotes survival and accumulation of the CD8+CD28β population. This is the first description of a naturally occurring bacterial antigen that is able to induce suppressive CD8+CD28β T lymphocytes in vivo and in vitro. The underlying mechanism of CD8+ T cell activation appears to rely on enhanced TCR crosslinking. The data provides evidence that ZPS of commensal bacteria play an important role in peripheral tolerance mechanisms and the maintenance of the homeostasis of the immune system
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