95,431 research outputs found
Tertiary lymphoid organs in central nervous system autoimmunity
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disease characterized by chronic inflammation in the central nervous system (CNS), which results in permanent neuronal damage and substantial disability in patients. Autoreactive T cells are important drivers of the disease; however, the efficacy of B cell depleting therapies uncovered an essential role for B cells in disease pathogenesis. They can contribute to inflammatory processes via presentation of autoantigen, secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines, and production of pathogenic antibodies. Recently, B cell aggregates reminiscent of tertiary lymphoid organs (TLOs) were discovered in the meninges of MS patients, leading to the hypothesis that differentiation and maturation of autopathogenic B and T cells may partly occur inside the CNS. Since these structures were associated with a more severe disease course, it is extremely important to gain insight into the mechanism of induction, their precise function, and clinical significance. Mechanistic studies in patients are limited. However, a few studies in the MS animal model experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) recapitulate TLO formation in the CNS and provide new insight into CNS TLO features, formation, and function. This review summarizes what we know so far about CNS TLOs in MS and what we have learned about them from EAE models. It also highlights the areas that are in need of further experimental work, as we are just beginning to understand and evaluate the phenomenon of CNS TLOs
New ways of being public: the experience of foundation degrees
This article explores the recent development of new spheres of public engagement within UK higher education through an analysis of the foundation degree qualification. These, according to the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE), were designed to equip students with the combination of technical skills, academic knowledge, and transferable skills increasingly being demanded by employers, and they have been identified as being at the forefront of educational agendas aimed at increasing employer engagement in the higher education (HE) sector. As such, they might be regarded as an expression of the 'increasing privatisation' of HE. However, this article argues that, on the contrary, they have enabled the development of new areas of public engagement relating to the design and delivery of courses as well as providing new opportunities for the pursuit of public policy goals such as widening participation. Such outcomes, it is argued, are the result of a number of factors that explain the 'publicness' of the qualification and that should be sustained to ensure the implementation of the 2006 Leitch Report in a manner that further develops public engagement
Ligand design for site-selective installation of Pd and Pt centers to generate homo- and heteropolymetallic motifs
The modular synthesis of a series of nitrogen-rich polydentate ligands that feature a common pincer-type framework is reported. These ligands allow for site-selective installation of palladium and platinum to give rise to bi- and trimetallic complexes that have d^(8)–d^(8) interactions
An ab-initio study of the electron-phonon coupling within a Cr(001)-surface
It is experimentally well established that the Cr(001)-surface exhibits a
sharp resonance around the Fermi level. However, there is no consensus about
its physical origin. It is proposed to be either due to a single particle dz2
surface state renormalised by electron-phonon coupling or the orbital Kondo
effect involving the degenerate dxz/dyz states. In this work we examine the
electron-phonon coupling of the Cr(001)-surface by means of ab-initio
calculations in the form of density functional perturbation theory. More
precisely, the electron-phonon mass-enhancement factor of the surface layer is
investigated for the 3d states. For the majority and minority spin dz2 surface
states we find values of 0.19 and 0.16. We show that these calculated
electron-phonon mass-enhancement factors are not in agreement with the
experimental data even if we use realistic values for the temperature range and
surface Debye frequency for the fit of the experimental data. More precisely,
then experimentally an electron-phonon mass-enhancement factor of 0.70~0.10 is
obtained, which is not in agreement with our calculated values of 0.19 and
0.16. Therefore, we conclude that the experimentally observed resonance at the
Cr(001)-surface is not due to polaronic effects, but due to electron-electron
correlation effects
High-speed ultrasound imaging in dense suspensions reveals impact-activated solidification due to dynamic shear jamming
A remarkable property of dense suspensions is that they can transform from
liquid-like at rest to solid-like under sudden impact. Previous work showed
that this impact-induced solidification involves rapidly moving jamming fronts;
however, details of this process have remained unresolved. Here we use
high-speed ultrasound imaging to probe non-invasively how the interior of a
dense suspension responds to impact. Measuring the speed of sound we
demonstrate that the solidification proceeds without a detectable increase in
packing fraction, and imaging the evolving flow field we find that the shear
intensity is maximized right at the jamming front. Taken together, this
provides direct experimental evidence for jamming by shear, rather than
densification, as driving the transformation to solid-like behavior. Based on
these findings we propose a new model to explain the anisotropy in the
propagation speed of the fronts and delineate the onset conditions for dynamic
shear jamming in suspensions.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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