111 research outputs found
Decreased activity of inducible nitric oxide synthase type 2 and modulation of the expression of glutathione S-transferase alpha, bcl-2, and metallothioneins during the differentiation of CaCo-2 cells.
Reactive oxygen species modulate the cell growth of a wide variety of mammalian cells. To determine whether oxidative metabolism is altered during the differentiation process, we studied the expression of pro- and antioxidant proteins in proliferating and differentiated CaCo-2 cells, a human colon adenocarcinoma cell line. Nitric oxide synthase type 2 (iNOS) produces nitric oxide (NO). Depending on its rate of synthesis, NO may either promote cellular and DNA damage or reduce the ability of other free radicals to induce cell injury. Using Western and Northern blot analysis and arginine conversion assay, we demonstrate that the expression of iNOS decreases when cells undergo differentiation. This biological event entails a diminished production of NO metabolites and correlates with the loss of activation of soluble guanylate cyclase activity. In differentiated cells, a 2-fold down-regulation of the nuclear factor kappa B activity was observed, suggesting that nuclear factor kappa B could be one of the iNOS gene regulatory factors in the CaCo-2 model. In parallel, we studied the expression of other antioxidant proteins including glutathione S-transferase alpha (GST alpha), bcl-2, and the metallothioneins (MTs). We show that the protein levels of GST alpha and MT increase during the differentiation of CaCo-2 cells, whereas bcl-2 levels decrease. Our investigation indicates that the expression of iNOS, GST alpha, bcl-2, and MT is associated with the enterocytic differentiation. The shift in the expression of specific antioxidant genes during CaCo-2 cell differentiation may occur to avoid alterations in the cell redox potential
Magnetically induced femtoscale strain modulations in HoMn2O5
International audienceX-ray scattering was used to investigate the magnetically induced ionic displacements in the low-temperature commensurate ferroelectric/antiferromagnetic phase of the multiferroic HoMn2O5. The structural modulation signal appearing at twice the magnetic wave vector km=(1/201/4) has been used, combined with symmetry analysis, to determine a model for the ionic displacements up to a precision of 10-3Å. The symmetry-breaking operations that are associated to the active irreducible representation have been experimentally determined from the analysis of the modulation modes. They reveal a lowering of symmetry to the polar point group m2m. Calculations based on the determined model show that the magnetic structure along the c direction is stabilized via nearest-neighbor and next-nearest-neighbor interactions through the rare-earth layer. We also show that by knowing both the magnetic and the magnetically induced strain waves patterns, it is possible to remove any phase ambiguity between the crystal and magnetic structures
Enhanced expression of hepatic lipogenic enzymes in an animal model of sedentariness.
The hindlimb-suspended rat was used as animal model to investigate the effects induced by immobilization of the skeletal muscle in the expression of the genes encoding hepatic lipogenic enzymes. Following a 14-day period of immobilization, rats were injected intraperitoneally with radioactive acetate, and the labeling of hepatic lipids and cholesterol was evaluated 15 min after the isotope injection. The incorporation of labeled acetate in lipids and cholesterol was almost three times higher in the liver of immobilized rats than in control animals as a consequence of the enhanced transcription of the genes encoding acetyl-CoA synthase, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, fatty acid synthase, and 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase. The high expression of the key enzymes for fatty acid and cholesterol synthesis induced by immobilization was not paralleled by an increase of the hepatic sterol-regulatory element binding protein (SREBP)-1 and SREBP-2 mRNA content. However, the expression of the mature form of SREBP-1 and SREBP-2 was higher in the nuclear fraction of immobilized rat liver than in controls due to a significant increase of the cleavage of the native proteins. Immobilization also affected the expression of proteins involved in lipid degradation. In fact, the hepatic content of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPARalpha) mRNA and of PPARalpha target genes encoding carnitine palmitoyl transferase-1 and acyl-CoA oxidase were significantly increased upon immobilization
Simultaneous dynamic electrical and structural measurements of functional materials
A new materials characterization system developed at the XMaS beamline, located at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in France, is presented. We show that this new capability allows to measure the atomic structural evolution (crystallography) of piezoelectric materials whilst simultaneously measuring the overall strain characteristics and electrical response to dynamically (ac) applied external stimuli
Order Parameters and Phase Diagrams of Multiferroics
The symmetry properties, order parameters, and magnetoelectric phase diagrams
of multiferroics are discussed. After brief reviews of NiVO,
TbMnO, and RbFe(MoO), we present a detailed analysis of
RMnO (with R=Y, Ho, Dy, Er, Tb, Tm).Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables. For FOCUS ON MULTIFERROICS (IOP
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Intrinsic and extrinsic nature of the giant piezoelectric effect in the initial poling of PMN-PT
Demonstrating both the intrinsic and extrinsic nature of the giant piezoelectric effect (GPE) in complex solid solutions, near the morphotropic phase boundary, has been extremely challenging until now, because such materials exhibit multiple phases on the order of tens of microns across, meaning important information is lost due to averaging when using established high resolution diffraction techniques to extract three dimensional structural information. We have used a different approach proposed by Nisbet et al. [Acta Crystallogr. Sect. A 71, 20 (2015)], which has been adapted to differentiate between spatially adjacent phases and simultaneously track the evolution of those phases in response to electric fields. As a result, we have identified three environment specific GPEs. The first of these is a GPE which is an order of magnitude greater than previously reported for a given change in field. This is observed during a tetragonal-monoclinic transition in a multiphasic environment. A secondary, large GPE is observed in the neighboring, nontransitioning, monoclinic phase due to stress biasing, and a more typical GPE is observed when the system becomes monophasic. Our results demonstrate the simultaneous and complex interplay of intrinsic and extrinsic factors contributing to the GPE which is likely to have implications for device manufacture and miniaturization
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