140 research outputs found
The Effect of Plateletâ Derived Growth Factor on the Cellular Response of the Periodontium: An Autoradiographic Study on Dogs
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142150/1/jper0429.pd
Calcium phosphate particles stimulate interleukin-1β release from human vascular smooth muscle cells: A role for spleen tyrosine kinase and exosome release
Aims: Calcium phosphate (CaP) particle deposits are found in several inflammatory diseases including atherosclerosis and osteoarthritis. CaP, and other forms of crystals and particles, can promote inflammasome formation in macrophages leading to caspase-1 activation and secretion of mature interleukin-1β (IL-1β). Given the close association of small CaP particles with vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) in atherosclerotic fibrous caps, we aimed to determine if CaP particles affected pro-inflammatory signalling in human VSMCs.
Methods and results: Using ELISA to measure IL-1β release from VSMCs, we demonstrated that CaP particles
stimulated IL-1β release from proliferating and senescent human VSMCs, but with substantially greater IL-1β release from senescent cells; this required caspase-1 activity but not LPS-priming of cells. Potential inflammasome agonists including ATP, nigericin and monosodium urate crystals did not stimulate IL-1β release from VSMCs. Western blot analysis demonstrated that CaP particles induced rapid activation of spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) (increased phospho-Y525/526). The SYK inhibitor R406 reduced IL-1β release and caspase-1 activation in CaP particle-treated VSMCs, indicating that SYK activation occurs upstream of and is required for caspase-1 activation. In addition, IL-1β and caspase-1 colocalised in intracellular endosome-like vesicles and we detected
IL-1β in exosomes isolated from VSMC media. Furthermore, CaP particle treatment stimulated exosome secretion by VSMCs in a SYK-dependent manner, while the exosome-release inhibitor spiroepoxide reduced IL-1β release.
Conclusions: CaP particles stimulate SYK and caspase-1 activation in VSMCs, leading to the release of IL-1β, at
least in part via exosomes. These novel findings in human VSMCs highlight the pro-inflammatory and procalcific potential of microcalcification
Hysteretic magnetoresistance and thermal bistability in a magnetic two-dimensional hole system
Colossal negative magnetoresistance and the associated field-induced
insulator-to-metal transition, the most characteristic features of magnetic
semiconductors, are observed in n-type rare earth oxides and chalcogenides,
p-type manganites, n-type and p-type diluted magnetic semiconductors (DMS) as
well as in quantum wells of n-type DMS. Here, we report on magnetostransport
studies of Mn modulation-doped InAs quantum wells, which reveal a magnetic
field driven and bias voltage dependent insulator-to-metal transition with
abrupt and hysteretic changes of resistance over several orders of magnitude.
These phenomena coexist with the quantised Hall effect in high magnetic fields.
We show that the exchange coupling between a hole and the parent Mn acceptor
produces a magnetic anisotropy barrier that shifts the spin relaxation time of
the bound hole to a 100 s range in compressively strained quantum wells. This
bistability of the individual Mn acceptors explains the hysteretic behaviour
while opening prospects for information storing and processing. At high bias
voltage another bistability, caused by the overheating of electrons10, gives
rise to abrupt resistance jumps
A questionnaire-based (UM-PDHQ) study of hallucinations in Parkinson's disease
Background: Hallucinations occur in 20-40% of PD patients and have been associated with unfavorable clinical outcomes (i.e., nursing home placement, increased mortality). Hallucinations, like other non-motor features of PD, are not well recognized in routine primary/secondary clinical practice. So far, there has been no instrument for uniform characterization of hallucinations in PD. To this end, we developed the University of Miami Parkinson's disease Hallucinations Questionnaire (UM-PDHQ) that allows comprehensive assessment of hallucinations in clinical or research settings.Methods: The UM-PDHQ is composed of 6 quantitative and 14 qualitative items. For our study PD patients of all ages and in all stages of the disease were recruited over an 18-month period. The UPDRS, MMSE, and Beck Depression and Anxiety Inventories were used for comparisons.Results and Discussion: Seventy consecutive PD patients were included in the analyses. Thirty-one (44.3%) were classified as hallucinators and 39 as non-hallucinators. No significant group differences were observed in terms of demographics, disease characteristics, stage, education, depressive/anxiety scores or cognitive functioning (MMSE) between hallucinators and non-hallucinators. Single mode hallucinations were reported in 20/31 (visual/14, auditory/4, olfactory/2) whereas multiple modalities were reported in 11/31 patients. The most common hallucinatory experience was a whole person followed by small animals, insects and reptiles.Conclusion: Using the UM-PDHQ, we were able to define the key characteristics of hallucinations in PD in our cohort. Future directions include the validation of the quantitative part of the questionnaire than will serve as a rating scale for severity of hallucinations
Semiconductor Spintronics
Spintronics refers commonly to phenomena in which the spin of electrons in a
solid state environment plays the determining role. In a more narrow sense
spintronics is an emerging research field of electronics: spintronics devices
are based on a spin control of electronics, or on an electrical and optical
control of spin or magnetism. This review presents selected themes of
semiconductor spintronics, introducing important concepts in spin transport,
spin injection, Silsbee-Johnson spin-charge coupling, and spindependent
tunneling, as well as spin relaxation and spin dynamics. The most fundamental
spin-dependent nteraction in nonmagnetic semiconductors is spin-orbit coupling.
Depending on the crystal symmetries of the material, as well as on the
structural properties of semiconductor based heterostructures, the spin-orbit
coupling takes on different functional forms, giving a nice playground of
effective spin-orbit Hamiltonians. The effective Hamiltonians for the most
relevant classes of materials and heterostructures are derived here from
realistic electronic band structure descriptions. Most semiconductor device
systems are still theoretical concepts, waiting for experimental
demonstrations. A review of selected proposed, and a few demonstrated devices
is presented, with detailed description of two important classes: magnetic
resonant tunnel structures and bipolar magnetic diodes and transistors. In most
cases the presentation is of tutorial style, introducing the essential
theoretical formalism at an accessible level, with case-study-like
illustrations of actual experimental results, as well as with brief reviews of
relevant recent achievements in the field.Comment: tutorial review; 342 pages, 132 figure
The state of association of band 3 protein of the human erythrocyte membrane in solutions of nonionic detergents
Band 3 protein, the anion transport protein of the human erythrocyte membrane, was solubilized and purified in aqueous solutions of two nonionic detergents: Ammonyx-LO (dimethyl laurylamine oxide) and C12E9 (nonaethylene glycol lauryl ether). The state of association of the purified protein was studied by analytical ultracentrifugation. Band 3 protein solubilized and studied in solutions of Ammonyx-LO was found to be in a monomer/dimer/tetramer association equilibrium. Band 3 protein freshly prepared in C12E9 showed the same behaviour; however, during aging the protein was converted into stable noncovalent dimers. The conversion was retarded by the presence of β-mercaptoethanol or by treatment of the samples with iodoacetamide; it seems to be due to oxidation of the protein by degradation products of the detergent. It is concluded that a monomer/dimer/tetramer association equilibrium is the native state of association of band 3 protein solubilized by nonionic detergents. Since nonionic detergents are assumed not to interfere with protein-protein interactions among membrane proteins, the results strongly support the claim that, in the erythrocyte membrane, band 3 is in a monomer/dimer/tetramer association equilibrium (Dorst, H.-J. and Schubert, D. (1979) Hoppe-Seyler's Z. Physiol. Chem. 360, 1605–1618)
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