641 research outputs found
Analysis of High Quality Monatomic Chromium Films Used in Biological High Resolution Scanning Electron Microscopy
During the recent employment of field emission (FE) in-lens scanning electron microscopes (SEMs), refractory metal deposition technology has co-evolved to provide enhanced contrast of 1-10 nm hydrocarbon based biological structures imaged at high magnifications (\u3e 200,000 times). Pioneer development employing the Penning sputter system in a high vacuum chamber proved that imaging of chromium (Cr) coated biological specimens contained enriched secondary electron (SE)-(I) contrasts. Single nanometer size fibrillar and particulate ectodomains within the context of complex biological membranes were accurately imaged without significant enlargement using the high resolution SE-I mode (HRSEM). This paper reports the transmission electron microscopy (TEM) testing of ultrathin (0.5-2.0 nm) Cr films deposited by planar magnetron sputter coating (PMSC). Essential parameters necessary to reproduce quality sputtered films of refractory metals used in HRSEM studies were described for the vacuum system and target operation conditions (current, voltage, and target distance). HRSEM imaging of biological specimens is presented to assess contrast attained from ultrathin fine grain Cr films deposited by PMSC. High magnification images were recorded to illustrate high quality contrasts attainable by HRSEM at low (1-5 kV) and high (10-30 kV) voltages. Dispersed molecules on formvar coated grids were sputter coated with a 1 nm thick Cr film before employing scanning transmission (STEM)/SEM modes of the FESEM to establish non-decorative image accuracy in the transmitted electron mode
Design of a flight control architecture using a non-convex bundle method
We design a feedback control architecture for longitudinal flight of an aircraft. The multi-level architecture includes the flight control loop to govern the short term dynamics of the aircraft, and the autopilot to control the long term modes. Using H1 performance and robustness criteria, the
problem is cast as a non-convex and non-smooth optimization program. We present a non-convex bundle method, prove its convergence, and show that it is apt to solve the longitudinal flight control problem
Ultrastructure of Coronary Arterial Endothelium in Atherosclerotic Swine Suggests Lipid Retro-Endocytosis
During experimental atherosclerosis, arterial endothelial cells show characteristic ultrastructural changes including the appearance of increased numbers of plasmalemmal and cytoplasmic vesicles. These structures have been shown by tracer studies to participate in the transcellular transport of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and β-very-low-density lipoprotein cholesterol from the arterial lumen into the abluminal extracellular matrix. Although this probably represents the major lipid transport pathway, other forms of transport may exist. We document the presence of apparent lipid structures averaging approximately 300 nm in diameter at or near the luminal surface of coronary arterial endothelium of atherosclerotic miniature swine. The structures exhibited a particulate nature with subunits of a heterogenous size distribution. The appearance of the endothelial plasmalemma adjacent and subjacent to these structures suggests exocytosis. We hypothesize that this previously unreported morphology may represent an in vivo structural correlate for the lipoprotein retro-endocytosis pathway which has been recently identified using biochemical methods in smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts in vitro
Hormonal Regulation of Capillary Fenestrae in the Rat Adrenal Cortex: Quantitative Studies using Objective Lens Staging Scanning Electron Microscopy
High magnification studies of the fenestrated capillary endothelium in the zona fasciculata (ZF) of rat adrenal glands were performed using the objective lens stage of an analytical scanning electron microscope (SEM) equipped with a lanthanum hexaboride emitter (LaB6). Resolution of surface substructure of the luminal membrane obtained with specimens decorated with gold/palladium (Au/Pd) was compared with that observed in others sputter coated with tantalum (Ta). High magnification (50,000x) of the fenestrated endothelium demonstrates that tantalum coating of the cryofractured adrenals improves the substructural detail compared to that seen in Au/Pd decorated specimens.
The procedures used in specimen preparation, metal deposition and secondary electron imaging (SEI) are described. Quality imaging achieved using the objective lens stage is a result of the elimination of the SE-III component derived from backscattered electrons.
Rat adrenals exhibited uniformly patent capillaries. High magnification micrographs of capillary walls were randomly recorded in two morphometric studies of the fenestral content of capillaries in the rat adrenal cortex.
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), when administered to rats following dexamethasone (DEX) treatment, significantly reduced the fenestrae/μm2 of endothelial surface and increased the mean size of fenestrae. After hypophysectomy, the number of fenestrae/μm2 declined over 48 h; within 2 h after ACTH was given to rats hypophysectomized 48 hours earlier, the fenestrae/μm2 had increased two-fold. These studies indicate that ACTH plays an important role in modulating fenestral content of the capillary endothelium in the adrenal cortex
Conventional and High Resolution Scanning Electron Microscopy and Cryofracture Techniques as Tools for Tracing Cerebellar Short Intracortical Circuits
The present paper shows the potential contribution of conventional and high resolution scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to trace short intracortical circuits in cryofractured fish, primate and human cerebelli. Conventional SEM slicing technique allowed us to identify afferent mossy and climbing fibers and their synaptic relationship in the granular layer. SEM freeze-fracture method exposed the mossy glomerular synapses and the axo-dendritic connections of climbing fibers. At the Purkinje cell layer, the cryofracture process removed the satellite Bergmann glial cell layer, displaying a partial view of the supra-and infra-ganglionic plexuses of Purkinje cells and the ascending pathways of climbing fibers. High resolution SEM (HRSEM) showed the specimen specific secondary electron (SE-I) image of axosomatic synapses on Golgi cell surface. At the molecular layer, the outer surface of parallel fiber synaptic varicosities were distinguished, establishing the cruciform en passant synaptic contact with the Purkinje cell dendritic spines. HRSEM showed the fractured parallel fiber synaptic varicosities containing spheroidal synaptic vesicles embedded in a high dense extravesicular material. Conventional SEM and gold-palladium coating are useful to trace intracortical circuits. With HRSEM and chromium coating, it is possible to study the outer and inner surfaces of synaptic connections
Correlative Light, Transmission, and High Resolution (SE-I) Scanning Electron Microscopy Studies of Rhesus Adrenocortical Vascular Morphology
A detailed correlative morphologic description using light microscopy (LM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and high resolution SE-I scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was conducted on the capillary endothelium of the zona-fasciculata (Z-F) in juvenile male rhesus monkeys. The glucocorticoid synthesis and release phenomena, associated with stress stimulated release of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) via the hypothalamic-pituitary axis, intimately involves capillaries of the Z-F. A comprehensive study of all the ultrastructural features implicated in the transendothelial uptake of steroidogenic precursors and release of glucocorticoids in perfused rhesus adrenals has not previously been made. This report presents correlative images of transendothelial openings that include previously described single diaphragmed fenestrae and plasmalemma vesicles, and double diaphragmed transendothelial channels. New observations of endothelial cell pockets, tight junctional complexes and membrane filled ghost sacs were recorded from perfused rhesus adrenal. Membranous ghosts associated with adrenocortical endothelium were reported in a previous TEM study of perfused rat, however the potential argument existed that ghosts were artifactual. Their role as steroid hormone releasing structures remains an open question, yet their structural characteristics appear justified based on imaging of identical profiles observed in perfused rhesus adrenocortical specimens. These structural features are considered for the potential of gating and sorting of metabolites, and release of glucocorticoids in response to ACTH stimulated stress events
Single subject pharmacological-MRI (phMRI) study: Modulation of brain activity of psoriatic arthritis pain by cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor
We use fMRI to examine brain activity for pain elicited by palpating joints in a single patient suffering from psoriatic arthritis. Changes in these responses are documented when the patient ingested a single dose of a selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor (COX-2i). We show that mechanical stimulation of the painful joints exhibited a cortical activity pattern similar to that reported for acute pain, with activity primarily localized to the thalamus, insular, primary and secondary somatosensory cortices and the mid anterior cingulum. COX-2i resulted in significant decreased in reported pain intensity and in brain activity after 1 hour of administration. The anterior insula and SII correlated with pain intensity, however no central activation site for the drug was detected. We demonstrate the similarity of the activation pattern for palpating painful joints to brain activity in normal subjects in response to thermal painful stimuli, by performing a spatial conjunction analysis between these maps, where overlap is observed in the insula, thalamus, secondary somatosensory cortex, and anterior cingulate. The results demonstrate that one can study effects of pharmacological manipulations in a single subject where the brain activity for a clinical condition is delineated and its modulation by COX-2i demonstrated. This approach may have diagnostic and prognostic utility
Correlated Microscopic Observations of Arterial Responses to Intravascular Stenting
Percutaneous catheter implantation of intravascular stent prostheses has emerged as a novel clinical adjunct to balloon angioplasty in the treatment of obstructive atherosclerotic vascular disease. We have examined the cellular and subcellular responses to stenting in the coronary arteries of the dog and pig (both normal and atherosclerotic), and in the iliac arteries and aorta of the atherosclerotic rabbit, using scanning electron, transmission electron, and light microscopies. Stenting in these models resulted in a thrombotic reaction ranging from mild to severe, depending on species and antithrombotic therapy. Subsequent organization of thrombotic material with hyperplasia of smooth muscle and inflammatory cells, luminal recovering with endothelial or pseudoendothelial cells, and atrophy of the tunica media led to incorporation of the prosthesis into the arterial wall. Endothelial or pseudoendothelial cells were observed adherent to the prosthesis as early as one day after placement, and regeneration of a confluent periluminal cell layer occurred within 2 to 4 weeks. Persistent ultrastructural abnormalities of the periluminal cell layer were seen as late as 2 years after stenting, but the intimal hyperplastic response appeared limited
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