320 research outputs found
Departure from the vogel behaviour in the glass transition region-thermally stimulated recovery, creep and dynamic mechanical analysis studies
In this work the study of the dynamics of the segmental motions close to Tg of a poly(methyl methacrylate), PMMA, network was analysed
by distinct mechanical spectroscopy techniques. Three techniques were employed: dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), creep and
thermally stimulated recovery (TSR). The timeâtemperature superposition principle was applied to the DMA and creep results, and master
curves were successfully constructed. A change from a Vogel to an Arrhenius behaviour was observed in these results. Above Tg it was found
a distinct temperature dependence for the retardation times calculated from creep and the relaxation times calculated from DMA. This
unexpected behaviour was attributed to the merging of the a and the b relaxations that occurs in PMMA systems. The apparent activation
energies Ă°EaĂ were also calculated from DMA, creep and TSR experiments. Above Tg the Ea values obtained agreed very well for all the
techniques. In addition, the fragility exhibited by this material was investigated by the mechanical spectroscopy techniques referred above
and by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The obtained values of the fragility index m indicated that the PMMA network is a
kinetically fragile system. The thermodynamic manifestation of the fragility was also analysed
One naive T cell, multiple fates in CD8+ T cell differentiation
The mechanism by which the immune system produces effector and memory T cells is largely unclear. To allow a large-scale assessment of the development of single naive T cells into different subsets, we have developed a technology that introduces unique genetic tags (barcodes) into naive T cells. By comparing the barcodes present in antigen-specific effector and memory T cell populations in systemic and local infection models, at different anatomical sites, and for TCRâpMHC interactions of different avidities, we demonstrate that under all conditions tested, individual naive T cells yield both effector and memory CD8+ T cell progeny. This indicates that effector and memory fate decisions are not determined by the nature of the priming antigen-presenting cell or the time of T cell priming. Instead, for both low and high avidity T cells, individual naive T cells have multiple fates and can differentiate into effector and memory T cell subsets
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