1,459 research outputs found
Computational Screening of Tip and Stalk Cell Behavior Proposes a Role for Apelin Signaling in Sprout Progression
Angiogenesis involves the formation of new blood vessels by sprouting or
splitting of existing blood vessels. During sprouting, a highly motile type of
endothelial cell, called the tip cell, migrates from the blood vessels followed
by stalk cells, an endothelial cell type that forms the body of the sprout. To
get more insight into how tip cells contribute to angiogenesis, we extended an
existing computational model of vascular network formation based on the
cellular Potts model with tip and stalk differentiation, without making a
priori assumptions about the differences between tip cells and stalk cells. To
predict potential differences, we looked for parameter values that make tip
cells (a) move to the sprout tip, and (b) change the morphology of the
angiogenic networks. The screening predicted that if tip cells respond less
effectively to an endothelial chemoattractant than stalk cells, they move to
the tips of the sprouts, which impacts the morphology of the networks. A
comparison of this model prediction with genes expressed differentially in tip
and stalk cells revealed that the endothelial chemoattractant Apelin and its
receptor APJ may match the model prediction. To test the model prediction we
inhibited Apelin signaling in our model and in an \emph{in vitro} model of
angiogenic sprouting, and found that in both cases inhibition of Apelin or of
its receptor APJ reduces sprouting. Based on the prediction of the
computational model, we propose that the differential expression of Apelin and
APJ yields a "self-generated" gradient mechanisms that accelerates the
extension of the sprout.Comment: 48 pages, 10 figures, 8 supplementary figures. Accepted for
publication in PLoS ON
Baseline corticosterone in wintering marine birds: Methodological considerations and ecological patterns
Previous studies have related levels of plasma corticosterone (CORT) of seabirds to variation in foraging conditions during the breeding period, but it is unclear whether similar relationships between foraging conditions and baseline CORT exist during other life stages. We validated methods for identifying baseline CORT of lethally sampled birds and assessed variation in baseline CORT relative to winter habitat conditions. We collected free-living white-winged scoters (Melanitta fusca) at four wintering sites during December and February. We found increasing CORT values beyond 3 min after time since flush (the duration between initial flush and death), presumably reflecting acute stress responses. Our results demonstrate that it is possible to obtain baseline CORT from lethally sampled birds if the time from initial flush until death is measured. Our study sites varied appreciably in exposure to wind and waves, predation danger, diving depths, and the fraction of preferred foods in scoter diets. Despite these habitat differences, baseline CORT did not vary across sites or winter periods. We interpret this lack of variation as evidence that birds select wintering areas where they can successfully manage site-specific costs and maintain physiological homeostasis. © 2013 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved
Baseline Corticosterone in Wintering Marine Birds: Methodological Considerations and Ecological Patterns
Previous studies have related levels of plasma corticosterone (CORT) of seabirds to variation in foraging conditions during the breeding period, but it is unclear whether similar relationships between foraging conditions and baseline CORT exist during other life stages. We validated methods for identifying baseline CORT of lethally sampled birds and assessed variation in baseline CORT relative to winter habitat conditions. We collected free-living white-winged scoters (Melanitta fusca) at four wintering sites during December and February. We found increasing CORT values beyond 3 min after time since flush (the duration between initial flush and death), presumably reflecting acute stress responses. Our results demonstrate that it is possible to obtain baseline CORT from lethally sampled birds if the time from initial flush until death is measured. Our study sites varied appreciably in exposure to wind and waves, predation danger, diving depths, and the fraction of preferred foods in scoter diets. Despite these habitat differences, baseline CORT did not vary across sites or winter periods. We interpret this lack of variation as evidence that birds select wintering areas where they can successfully manage site-specific costs and maintain physiological homeostasis
Calibration of TCCON column-averaged CO2: the first aircraft campaign over European TCCON sites
The Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) is a ground-based network of Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) sites around the globe, where the column abundances of CO2, CH4, N2O, CO and O2 are measured. CO2 is constrained with a precision better than 0.25% (1-σ). To achieve a similarly high accuracy, calibration to World Meteorological Organization (WMO) standards is required. This paper introduces the first aircraft calibration campaign of five European TCCON sites and a mobile FTS instrument. A series of WMO standards in-situ profiles were obtained over European TCCON sites via aircraft and compared with retrievals of CO2 column amounts from the TCCON instruments. The results of the campaign show that the FTS measurements are consistently biased 1.1% ± 0.2% low with respect to WMO standards, in agreement with previous TCCON calibration campaigns. The standard a priori profile for the TCCON FTS retrievals is shown to not add a bias. The same calibration factor is generated using aircraft profiles as a priori and with the TCCON standard a priori. With a calibration to WMO standards, the highly precise TCCON CO2 measurements of total column concentrations provide a suitable database for the calibration and validation of nadir-viewing satellite
Convection in colloidal suspensions with particle-concentration-dependent viscosity
The onset of thermal convection in a horizontal layer of a colloidal
suspension is investigated in terms of a continuum model for binary-fluid
mixtures where the viscosity depends on the local concentration of colloidal
particles. With an increasing difference between the viscosity at the warmer
and the colder boundary the threshold of convection is reduced in the range of
positive values of the separation ratio psi with the onset of stationary
convection as well as in the range of negative values of psi with an
oscillatory Hopf bifurcation. Additionally the convection rolls are shifted
downwards with respect to the center of the horizontal layer for stationary
convection (psi>0) and upwards for the Hopf bifurcation (psi<0).Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted to European Physical Journal
Localized f electrons in CexLa1-xRhIn5: dHvA Measurements
Measurements of the de Haas-van Alphen effect in CexLa1-xRhIn5 reveal that
the Ce 4f electrons remain localized for all x, with the mass enhancement and
progressive loss of one spin from the de Haas-van Alphen signal resulting from
spin fluctuation effects. This behavior may be typical of antiferromagnetic
heavy fermion compounds, inspite of the fact that the 4f electron localization
in CeRhIn5 is driven, in part, by a spin-density wave instability.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Magnetism and Ion Diffusion in Honeycomb Layered Oxide KNiTeO: First Time Study by Muon Spin Rotation & Neutron Scattering
In the quest of finding novel and efficient batteries, a great interest has
raised in K-based honeycomb layer oxide materials both for their fundamental
properties and potential applications. A key issue in the realization of
efficient batteries based on such compounds, is to understand the K-ion
diffusion mechanism. However, investigation of potassium-ion (K) dynamics
in materials using magneto-spin properties has so far been challenging, due to
its inherently weak nuclear magnetic moment, in contrast to other alkali ions
such as lithium and sodium. Spin-polarised muons, having a high gyromagnetic
ratio, make the muon spin rotation and relaxation (+SR) technique ideal
for probing ions dynamics in weak magneto-spin moment materials. Here we report
the magnetic properties and K+ dynamics in honeycomb layered oxide material of
the KNiTeO using +SR measurements. Our low-temperature
+SR results together with, with complementary magnetic susceptibility,
find an antiferromagnetic transition at 26 K. Further +SR studies
performed at higher temperatures reveal that potassium ions (K) become
mobile above 250 K and the activation energy for the diffusion process is Ea =
121(13) meV. This is the first time that K+ dynamics in potassium-based battery
materials has been measured using +SR. Finally our results also indicate
an interesting possibility that K-ion self diffusion occurs predominantly at
the surface of the powder particles. This opens future possibilities for
improving ion diffusion and device performance using nano-structuring.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
Recommended from our members
A Digital Periegesis: Implementing Spatial Research Infrastructures for Classical History and Archaeology
Over the past ten years the spatial turn in the humanities in Scandinavia has resulted in a growing number of infrastructural projects aimed at facilitating interdisciplinary research into spatial aspects of a rich variety of materials, place-names, early modern inventories and cadastral maps, medieval literature and art, as well as Viking-Age and medieval runic inscriptions, to name just a few. This intensive development has brought about a number of challenges, as these projects differ with regard to their agendas, setups, and customized approaches to data, theories, and methods.
This volume provides the research community with an opportunity to revisit traditional research questions in the context of new infrastructural environments. Although primarily aimed at medievalists and scholars of the early modern period, the volume offers a broader spatial and temporal scope with a contribution from classical studies. The classics have in many ways pioneered the application of digital methods to narrative spatial analysis and developed strong collaborative engagement with infrastructure, producing Pelagios, an ever-growing platform for a plethora of spatial databases and gazetteers, as well as Recogito, a digital annotation tool. These two successful examples show a pressing need for community building around SRIs for early modern and medieval Scandinavia to ensure sustainable design, long-term preservation, and further collaborative developmen
- …