15,179 research outputs found
Dextran sulfate enhances the level of an oxidative DNA damage biomarker, 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2 0-deoxyguanosine, in rat colonic mucosa
Dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) given in drinking water can induce colonic Inflammation and produce colorectal tumors in rodents, although it is not directly genotoxic. The hypothesis that DSS can produce free radicals and induce oxidative DNA damage in colonic mucosa has been tested. In rats fed for 2 days with water containing 3% and 6% DSS, colonic Inflammation manifestations were recorded and 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2 0-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodGuo), a major biomarker of oxidative DNA damage, was assayed in colonic mucosa. As compared with control rats given pure water, inflammatory manifestations were seen in rats given DSS. At the same time, 8-oxodGuo levels in colonic mucosa were doubled (P , 0:001). These results suggest that formation of oxidative DNA damage in colonic mucosa depends on inflammation and maybe on the production of reactive oxygen species. This study shows that DSS can induce oxidative DNA damage within only 2 days, which could explain in part its carcinogenic properties
Spot distribution and fast surface evolution on Vega
Spectral signatures of surface spots were recently discovered from high
cadence observations of the A star Vega. We aim at constraining the surface
distribution of these photospheric inhomogeneities, and investigating a
possible short term evolution of the spot pattern. Using data collected over
five consecutive nights, we employ the Doppler Imaging method to reconstruct
three different maps of the stellar surface, from three consecutive subsets of
the whole time-series. The surface maps display a complex distribution of dark
and bright spots, covering most of the visible fraction of the stellar surface.
A number of surface features are consistently recovered in all three maps, but
other features seem to evolve over the time span of observations, suggesting
that fast changes can affect the surface of Vega within a few days at most. The
short-term evolution is observed as emergence or disappearance of individual
spots, and may also show up as zonal flows, with low-latitude and high latitude
belts rotating faster than intermediate latitudes. It is tempting to relate the
surface brightness activity to the complex magnetic field topology previously
reconstructed for Vega, although strictly simultaneous brightness and magnetic
maps will be necessary to assess this potential link.Comment: MNRAS Letters, in pres
Meat and cancer: haemoglobin and haemin in a low calcium diet promote colorectal carcinogenesis at the aberrant crypt stage in rats
High intake of red meat, but not of white meat, is associated with an increased risk of colon cancer. However, red meat does not promote cancer in rodents. Haemin, added to low-calcium diets, increases colonic proliferation, and haemoglobin, added to high-fat diets, increases the colon tumour incidence in rats, an effect possibly due to peroxyl radicals. We thus speculated that haem might be the promoting agent in meat, and that prevention strategies could use calcium and antioxidants. These hypotheses were tested in rats at the aberrant crypt foci (ACF) stage at 100 days. F344 rats (n = 124) were given an injection of azoxymethane and were then randomized to 11 groups fed with low-calcium (20 micro mol/g) AIN76-based diets, containing 5% safflower oil. Haemin (0.25, 0.5 and 1.5 micro mol/g) or haemoglobin (1.5 and 3 micro mol haem/g) was added to five experimental diets, compared with a control diet without haem. Three other high-haemin diets (1.5 micro mol/g) were supplemented with calcium (250 micro mol/g), antioxidant butylated hydroxyanisole and rutin (0.05% each), and olive oil, which replaced safflower oil. Faecal water was assayed for lipid peroxidation by thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARs) test, and for cytolytic activity. Haemin strikingly increased the ACF size, dose-dependently, from 2.6 to 11.4 crypts/ACF (all P < 0.001). The high-haemin diet also increased the number of ACF per colon (P < 0.001). Promotion was associated with increased faecal water TBARs and cytotoxicity. Calcium, olive oil and antioxidants each inhibited the haemin-induced ACF promotion, and normalized the faecal TBARs and cytotoxicity. The haemoglobin diets increased the number of ACF and faecal TBARs, but not the ACF size or the faecal cytotoxicity. In conclusion, dietary haemin is the most potent known ACF promoter. Haemoglobin is also a potent promoter of colorectal carcinogenesis. The results suggest that myoglobin in red meat could promote colon cancer. Diets high in calcium, or in oxidation-resistant fats, may prevent the possible cancer-promoting effect of red meat
Simulated CII observations for SPICA/SAFARI
We investigate the case of CII 158 micron observations for SPICA/SAFARI using
a three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) simulation of the diffuse
interstellar medium (ISM) and the Meudon PDR code. The MHD simulation consists
of two converging flows of warm gas (10,000 K) within a cubic box 50 pc in
length. The interplay of thermal instability, magnetic field and self-gravity
leads to the formation of cold, dense clumps within a warm, turbulent
interclump medium. We sample several clumps along a line of sight through the
simulated cube and use them as input density profiles in the Meudon PDR code.
This allows us to derive intensity predictions for the CII 158 micron line and
provide time estimates for the mapping of a given sky area.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the workshop "The
  Space Infrared Telescope for Cosmology & Astrophysics: Revealing the Origins
  of Planets and Galaxies" (July 2009, Oxford, United Kingdom
Allometric Trajectories and \u201cStress\u201d: A Quantitative Approach
The term \u201cstress\u201d is an important but vague term in plant biology. We show situations in which thinking in terms of \u201cstress\u201d is profitably replaced by quantifying distance from functionally optimal scaling relationships between plant parts. These relationships include, for example, the often-cited one between leaf area and sapwood area, which presumably reflects mutual dependence between source and sink tissues and which scales positively within individuals and across species. These relationships seem to be so basic to plant functioning that they are favored by selection across nearly all plant lineages. Within a species or population, individuals that are far from the common scaling patterns are thus expected to perform negatively. For instance, \u201ctoo little\u201d leaf area (e.g. due to herbivory or disease) per unit of active stem mass would be expected to incur to low carbon income per respiratory cost and thus lead to lower growth. We present a framework that allows quantitative study of phenomena traditionally assigned to \u201cstress,\u201d without need for recourse to this term. Our approach contrasts with traditional approaches for studying \u201cstress,\u201d e.g. revealing that small \u201cstressed\u201d plants likely are in fact well suited to local conditions. We thus offer a quantitative perspective to the study of phenomena often referred to under such terms as \u201cstress,\u201d plasticity, adaptation, and acclimation
Observation of magnetic fragmentation in spin ice
Fractionalised excitations that emerge from a many body system have revealed
rich physics and concepts, from composite fermions in two-dimensional electron
systems, revealed through the fractional quantum Hall effect, to spinons in
antiferromagnetic chains and, more recently, fractionalisation of Dirac
electrons in graphene and magnetic monopoles in spin ice. Even more surprising
is the fragmentation of the degrees of freedom themselves, leading to
coexisting and a priori independent ground states. This puzzling phenomenon was
recently put forward in the context of spin ice, in which the magnetic moment
field can fragment, resulting in a dual ground state consisting of a
fluctuating spin liquid, a so-called Coulomb phase, on top of a magnetic
monopole crystal. Here we show, by means of neutron scattering measurements,
that such fragmentation occurs in the spin ice candidate NdZrO. We
observe the spectacular coexistence of an antiferromagnetic order induced by
the monopole crystallisation and a fluctuating state with ferromagnetic
correlations. Experimentally, this fragmentation manifests itself via the
superposition of magnetic Bragg peaks, characteristic of the ordered phase, and
a pinch point pattern, characteristic of the Coulomb phase. These results
highlight the relevance of the fragmentation concept to describe the physics of
systems that are simultaneously ordered and fluctuating.Comment: accepted in Nature Physic
Discovery of new magnetic early-B stars within the MiMeS HARPSpol survey
To understand the origin of the magnetic fields in massive stars as well as
their impact on stellar internal structure, evolution, and circumstellar
environment, within the MiMeS project, we searched for magnetic objects among a
large sample of massive stars, and build a sub-sample for in-depth follow-up
studies required to test the models and theories of fossil field origins,
magnetic wind confinement and magnetospheric properties, and magnetic star
evolution.
  We obtained high-resolution spectropolarimetric observations of a large
number of OB stars thanks to three large programs that have been allocated on
the high-resolution spectropolarimeters ESPaDOnS, Narval, and the polarimetric
module HARPSpol of the HARPS spectrograph. We report here on the methods and
first analysis of the HARPSpol magnetic detections. We identified the magnetic
stars using a multi-line analysis technique. Then, when possible, we monitored
the new discoveries to derive their rotation periods, which are critical for
follow-up and magnetic mapping studies. We also performed a first-look analysis
of their spectra and identified obvious spectral anomalies (e.g., abundance
peculiarities, Halpha emission), which are also of interest for future studies.
  In this paper, we focus on eight of the 11 stars in which we discovered or
confirmed a magnetic field from the HARPSpol LP sample (the remaining three
were published in a previous paper). Seven of the stars were detected in
early-type Bp stars, while the last star was detected in the Ap companion of a
normal early B-type star. We report obvious spectral and multiplicity
properties, as well as our measurements of their longitudinal field strengths,
and their rotation periods when we are able to derive them. We also discuss the
presence or absence of Halpha emission with respect to the theory of
centrifugally-supported magnetospheres. (Abriged)Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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