86 research outputs found

    Timelike surfaces of constant mean curvature 1 in anti-de Sitter 3-space

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    It is shown that timelike surfaces of constant mean curvature 1 in anti-de Sitter 3-space can be constructed from a pair of Lorentz holomorphic and Lorentz antiholomorphic null curves in PSL(2,R) via Bryant type representation formulae. These formulae are used to investigate an explicit one-to-one correspondence, the so-called Lawson correspondence, between timelike surfaces of constant mean curvature 1 in anti-de Sitter 3-space and timelike minimal surfaces in Minkowski 3-space. The hyperbolic Gauss map of timelike surfaces in anti-de Sitter 3-space, which is a close analogue of the classical Gauss map is considered. It is discussed that the hyperbolic Gauss map plays an important role in the study of timelike surfaces of constant mean curvature 1 in anti-de Sitter 3-space. In particular, the relationship between the Lorentz holomorphicity of the hyperbolic Gauss map and timelike surfaces of constant mean curvature 1 in anti-de Sitter 3-space is studied.Comment: 47 pages, 24 figures, references revised, Annals of Global Analysis and Geometr

    Coxiella burnetii, the Agent of Q Fever, Replicates within Trophoblasts and Induces a Unique Transcriptional Response

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    Q fever is a zoonosis caused by Coxiella burnetii, an obligate intracellular bacterium typically found in myeloid cells. The infection is a source of severe obstetrical complications in humans and cattle and can undergo chronic evolution in a minority of pregnant women. Because C. burnetii is found in the placentas of aborted fetuses, we investigated the possibility that it could infect trophoblasts. Here, we show that C. burnetii infected and replicated in BeWo trophoblasts within phagolysosomes. Using pangenomic microarrays, we found that C. burnetii induced a specific transcriptomic program. This program was associated with the modulation of inflammatory responses that were shared with inflammatory agonists, such as TNF, and more specific responses involving genes related to pregnancy development, including EGR-1 and NDGR1. In addition, C. burnetii stimulated gene networks organized around the IL-6 and IL-13 pathways, which both modulate STAT3. Taken together, these results revealed that trophoblasts represent a protective niche for C. burnetii. The activation program induced by C. burnetii in trophoblasts may allow bacterial replication but seems unable to interfere with the development of normal pregnancy. Such pathophysiologocal processes should require the activation of immune placental cells associated with trophoblasts

    hTERT promoter activity and CpG methylation in HPV-induced carcinogenesis

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Activation of telomerase resulting from deregulated hTERT expression is a key event during high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV)-induced cervical carcinogenesis. In the present study we examined hTERT promoter activity and its relation to DNA methylation as one of the potential mechanisms underlying deregulated hTERT transcription in hrHPV-transformed cells.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Using luciferase reporter assays we analyzed hTERT promoter activity in primary keratinocytes, HPV16- and HPV18-immortalized keratinocyte cell lines and cervical cancer cell lines. In the same cells as well as cervical specimens we determined hTERT methylation by bisulfite sequencing analysis of the region spanning -442 to +566 (relative to the ATG) and quantitative methylation specific PCR (qMSP) analysis of two regions flanking the hTERT core promoter.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We found that in most telomerase positive cells increased hTERT core promoter activity coincided with increased hTERT mRNA expression. On the other hand basal hTERT promoter activity was also detected in telomerase negative cells with no or strongly reduced hTERT mRNA expression levels. In both telomerase positive and negative cells regulatory sequences flanking both ends of the core promoter markedly repressed exogenous promoter activity.</p> <p>By extensive bisulfite sequencing a strong increase in CpG methylation was detected in hTERT positive cells compared to cells with no or strongly reduced hTERT expression. Subsequent qMSP analysis of a larger set of cervical tissue specimens revealed methylation of both regions analyzed in 100% of cervical carcinomas and 38% of the high-grade precursor lesions, compared to 9% of low grade precursor lesions and 5% of normal controls.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Methylation of transcriptionally repressive sequences in the hTERT promoter and proximal exonic sequences is correlated to deregulated hTERT transcription in HPV-immortalized cells and cervical cancer cells. The detection of DNA methylation at these repressive regions may provide an attractive biomarker for early detection of cervical cancer.</p

    Structural Conformers of (1,3-Dithiol-2-ylidene)ethanethioamides: The Balance Between Thioamide Rotation and Preservation of Classical Sulfur-Sulfur Hypervalent Bonds

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    The reaction of N-(2-phthalimidoethyl)-N-alkylisopropylamines and S2Cl2 gave 4-N-(2-phthalimidoethyl)-N-alkylamino-5-chloro-1,2-dithiol-3-thiones that quantitatively cycloadded to dimethyl or diethyl acetylenedicarboxylate to give stable thioacid chlorides, which in turn reacted with one equivalent of aniline or a thiole to give thioanilides or a dithioester. Several compounds of this series showed atropisomers that were studied by a combination of dynamic NMR, simulation of the signals, conformational analysis by DFT methods, and single crystal X-ray diffraction, showing a good correlation between the theoretical calculations, the experimental values of energies, and the preferred conformations in the solid state. The steric hindering of the crowded substitution at the central amine group was found to be the reason for the presence of permanent atropisomers in this series of compounds and the cause of a unique disposition of the thioxo group at close-to-right angles with respect to the plane defined by the 1,3-dithiole ring in the dithiafulvene derivatives, thus breaking the sulfur–sulfur hypervalent bond that is always found in this kind of compounds.Ministerio de Economıá y Competitividad, Spain (Project CTQ2012- 31611), Junta de Castilla y León, Consejería de Educación y Cultura y Fondo Social Europeo (Project BU246A12-1), and the European Commission, Seventh Framework Programme (Project SNIFFER FP7-SEC-2012-312411

    A reafferent and feed-forward model of song syntax generation in the Bengalese finch

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    Adult Bengalese finches generate a variable song that obeys a distinct and individual syntax. The syntax is gradually lost over a period of days after deafening and is recovered when hearing is restored. We present a spiking neuronal network model of the song syntax generation and its loss, based on the assumption that the syntax is stored in reafferent connections from the auditory to the motor control area. Propagating synfire activity in the HVC codes for individual syllables of the song and priming signals from the auditory network reduce the competition between syllables to allow only those transitions that are permitted by the syntax. Both imprinting of song syntax within HVC and the interaction of the reafferent signal with an efference copy of the motor command are sufficient to explain the gradual loss of syntax in the absence of auditory feedback. The model also reproduces for the first time experimental findings on the influence of altered auditory feedback on the song syntax generation, and predicts song- and species-specific low frequency components in the LFP. This study illustrates how sequential compositionality following a defined syntax can be realized in networks of spiking neurons

    Unstable neurons underlie a stable learned behavior

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    Motor skills can be maintained for decades, but the biological basis of this memory persistence remains largely unknown. The zebra finch, for example, sings a highly stereotyped song that is stable for years, but it is not known whether the precise neural patterns underlying song are stable or shift from day to day. Here we demonstrate that the population of projection neurons coding for song in the premotor nucleus, HVC, change from day to day. The most dramatic shifts occur over intervals of sleep. In contrast to the transient participation of excitatory neurons, ensemble measurements dominated by inhibition persist unchanged even after damage to downstream motor nerves. These observations offer a principle of motor stability: spatiotemporal patterns of inhibition can maintain a stable scaffold for motor dynamics while the population of principal neurons that directly drive behavior shift from one day to the next

    Androgen and estrogen receptors in adult zebra finch brain

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    Androgens and estrogens have been implicated in the activation of a variety of sexually-dimorphic, hormone-dependent behaviors in the adult zebra finch. In the present report, several biochemical characteristics of two putative sex steroid receptors, androgen- and estrogen-binding activities, were determined by DNA-cellulose chromatography in brain tissues from these birds. High-affinity, limited-capacity receptors for androgens and estrogens were found in cytosolic extracts of telencephalon, diencephalon-mesencephalon, and metencephalon-myelencephalon from adult male and female zebra finches. Androgen-binding activity reproducibly adhered to DNA-cellulose and was eluted within the 110-150 mM NaCl region of a linear salt concentration gradient. Estrogen receptors adhered to DNA-cellulose and exhibited elution maxima between 170 mM and 210 mM NaCl. Collectively these data indicate that brain regions of zebra finches contain steroid receptors that are similar to those found in the brains of other vertebrates and that their biochemical properties are similar in males and females. Quantitatively, males consistently exhibited higher androgen binding than females in both anterior and posterior telencephalic areas. Females treated with estradiol immediately after hatching exhibited adult levels of androgen binding corresponding to those detected in males. Masculinization of the androgen receptor system by early steroid exposure is discussed

    Effect of Carbon Black on Heat Build-up and Energy Dissipation in Rubber Materials

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    The heat build-up and energy dissipation of carbon black reinforced natural rub-ber compounds are studied using a rebound resilience tester, Goodrich flexometer and a Coesfeld heat build-up analyser. Natural rubber compounds containing eight different carbon blacks at 50 parts per hundred (phr) were studied. The car-bon blacks varied widely in their structure and surface area properties allowing quantitative correlations to the heat build-up and rebound resilience measure-ments to be extracted from their colloidal properties. The results show the nature of deformation dictates different levels of influence of the carbon black proper-ties. Carbon black surface area dominates in influencing the heat build-up and energy dissipation in the Goodrich flexometer, Coesfeld heat build-up analyser and rebound resilience measurements. The Goodrich flexometer heat build-up measurement, however, is the only experimental measurement where carbon black structure places a significant role in determining the heat build-up. The dif-ferences in the levels of influence of carbon black colloidal properties can be un-derstood when the deformation index concept is applied to the experimental re-sults. Goodrich flexometer measurements are predominantly strain controlled measurements while rebound resilience and Coesfeld heat build-up are a complex combination of strain and energy-controlled deformations. Understanding the type of deformation that dominates in various heat build-up and energy dissipa-tion tests and how carbon black properties affect the results of the tests are of practical importance. It enables the heat build-up and energy dissipation tests that closely represent the type of deformation that will be predominant in field appli-cations to be selected during compound development and characterisation. It also gives an understanding of how carbon black properties can be leveraged to opti-mize desired heat build-up and energy dissipation properties depending on the type of deformation during compound development
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