596 research outputs found
Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of electroweak transition matrix elements in A = 6,7 nuclei
Green's function Monte Carlo calculations of magnetic dipole, electric
quadrupole, Fermi, and Gamow-Teller transition matrix elements are reported for
A=6,7 nuclei. The matrix elements are extrapolated from mixed estimates that
bracket the relevant electroweak operator between variational Monte Carlo and
GFMC propagated wave functions. Because they are off-diagonal terms, two mixed
estimates are required for each transition, with a VMC initial (final) state
paired with a GFMC final (initial) state. The realistic Argonne v18 two-nucleon
and Illinois-2 three-nucleon interactions are used to generate the nuclear
states. In most cases we find good agreement with experimental data.Comment: v2: minor corrections to text and figure
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Oxidative stress specifically downregulates survivin to promote breast tumour formation.
BackgroundBreast cancer, a heterogeneous disease has been broadly classified into oestrogen receptor positive (ER+) or oestrogen receptor negative (ER-) tumour types. Each of these tumours is dependent on specific signalling pathways for their progression. While high levels of survivin, an anti-apoptotic protein, increases aggressive behaviour in ER- breast tumours, oxidative stress (OS) promotes the progression of ER+ breast tumours. Mechanisms and molecular targets by which OS promotes tumourigenesis remain poorly understood.ResultsDETA-NONOate, a nitric oxide (NO)-donor induces OS in breast cancer cell lines by early re-localisation and downregulation of cellular survivin. Using in vivo models of HMLE(HRAS) xenografts and E2-induced breast tumours in ACI rats, we demonstrate that high OS downregulates survivin during initiation of tumourigenesis. Overexpression of survivin in HMLE(HRAS) cells led to a significant delay in tumour initiation and tumour volume in nude mice. This inverse relationship between survivin and OS was also observed in ER+ human breast tumours. We also demonstrate an upregulation of NADPH oxidase-1 (NOX1) and its activating protein p67, which are novel markers of OS in E2-induced tumours in ACI rats and as well as in ER+ human breast tumours.ConclusionOur data, therefore, suggest that downregulation of survivin could be an important early event by which OS initiates breast tumour formation
What Do We Know? A Bibliometric Analysis of Current Literature on COVID-19 and its Implications
The COVID-19 pandemic has plunged the world into chaos by affecting people’s lifestyles and imposing immense pressures on healthcare professionals. Since its outbreak in Wuhan, China, back in December 2019, researchers all across the globe have been working tirelessly to provide reliable insights to understand and combat the virus. As a result, the number of publications related to the novel coronavirus has been increasing rapidly. This study aims to quantify and summarize the progress of SARS-CoV-2 related research from November 2019 onwards to January 2021 by employing a bibliometric analysis and topic modelling approaches. A total of 33,159 research publications, downloaded from the Web of Science (WoS) core collection database, were analyzed. The key aspects of our study include identifying important publications, their distribution across countries and organizations, important journals and central authors who have made a significant contribution to the current literature. We have also delineated the major themes addressed in the academic community
The no-core shell model with general radial bases
Calculations in the ab initio no-core shell model (NCSM) have conventionally
been carried out using the harmonic-oscillator many-body basis. However, the
rapid falloff (Gaussian asymptotics) of the oscillator functions at large
radius makes them poorly suited for the description of the asymptotic
properties of the nuclear wavefunction. We establish the foundations for
carrying out no-core configuration interaction (NCCI) calculations using a
basis built from general radial functions and discuss some of the
considerations which enter into using such a basis. In particular, we consider
the Coulomb-Sturmian basis, which provides a complete set of functions with a
realistic (exponential) radial falloff.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; presented at Horizons on Innovative Theories,
Experiments, and Supercomputing in Nuclear Physics 2012, New Orleans,
Louisiana, June 4-7, 2012; submitted to J. Phys. Conf. Se
Enhancing Scalability in Recommender Systems through Lottery Ticket Hypothesis and Knowledge Distillation-based Neural Network Pruning
This study introduces an innovative approach aimed at the efficient pruning
of neural networks, with a particular focus on their deployment on edge
devices. Our method involves the integration of the Lottery Ticket Hypothesis
(LTH) with the Knowledge Distillation (KD) framework, resulting in the
formulation of three distinct pruning models. These models have been developed
to address scalability issue in recommender systems, whereby the complexities
of deep learning models have hindered their practical deployment. With
judicious application of the pruning techniques, we effectively curtail the
power consumption and model dimensions without compromising on accuracy.
Empirical evaluation has been performed using two real world datasets from
diverse domains against two baselines. Gratifyingly, our approaches yielded a
GPU computation-power reduction of up to 66.67%. Notably, our study contributes
to the field of recommendation system by pioneering the application of LTH and
KD.Comment: Accepted in WITS 2023 as a workshop pape
The Role of in Two-pion Exchange Three-nucleon Potential
In this paper we have studied the two-pion exchange three-nucleon potential
using an approximate chiral symmetry of the
strong interaction. The off-shell pion-nucleon scattering amplitudes obtained
from the Weinberg Lagangian are supplemented with contributions from the
well-known -term and the exchange. It is the role of the
-resonance in , which we have investigated in detail in the
framework of the Lagrangian field theory. The -contribution is quite
appreciable and, more significantly, it is dependent on a parameter Z which is
arbitrary but has the empirical bounds . We find that the
-contribution to the important parameters of the depends
on the choice of a value for Z, although the correction to the binding energy
of triton is not expected to be very sensitive to the variation of Z within its
bounds.Comment: 14 pages, LaTe
Semileptonic Decays of Heavy Lambda Baryons in a Quark Model
The semileptonic decays of Lambda_c and Lambda_b are treated in the framework
of a constituent quark model. Both nonrelativistic and semirelativistic
Hamiltonians are used to obtain the baryon wave functions from a fit to the
spectra, and the wave functions are expanded in both the harmonic oscillator
and Sturmian bases. The latter basis leads to form factors in which the
kinematic dependence on q^2 is in the form of multipoles, and the resulting
form factors fall faster as a function of q^2 in the available kinematic
ranges. As a result, decay rates obtained in the two models using the Sturmian
basis are significantly smaller than those obtained using the harmonic
oscillator basis. In the case of the Lambda_c, decay rates calculated using the
Sturmian basis are closer to the experimentally reported rates. However, we
find a semileptonic branching fraction for the Lambda_c to decay to excited
Lambda* states of 11% to 19%, in contradiction with what is assumed in
available experimental analyses. Our prediction for the Lambda_b semileptonic
decays is that decays to the ground state Lambda_c provide a little less than
70% of the total semileptonic decay rate. For the decays Lambda_b to Lambda_c,
the analytic form factors we obtain satisfy the relations expected from
heavy-quark effective theory at the non-recoil point, at leading and
next-to-leading orders in the heavy-quark expansion. In addition, some features
of the heavy-quark limit are shown to naturally persist as the mass of the
heavy quark in the daughter baryon is decreased.Comment: 51 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Is famine exposure during developmental life in rural Bangladesh associated with a metabolic and epigenetic signature in young adulthood? A historical cohort study
Objectives Famine exposure in utero can ‘programme’ an individual towards type 2 diabetes and obesity in later life. We sought to identify, (1) whether Bangladeshis exposed to famine during developmental life are programmed towards diabetes and obesity, (2) whether this programming was specific to gestational or postnatal exposure windows and (3) whether epigenetic differences were associated with famine exposure.
Design A historical cohort study was performed as part of a wider cross-sectional survey. Exposure to famine was defined through birth date and historical records and participants were selected according to: (A) exposure to famine in postnatal life, (B) exposure to famine during gestation and (C) unexposed.
Setting Matlab, a rural area in the Chittagong division of Bangladesh.
Participants Young adult men and women (n=190) recruited to a historical cohort study with a randomised subsample included in an epigenetic study (n=143).
Outcome measures Primary outcome measures of weight, body mass index and oral glucose tolerance tests (0 and 120 min glucose). Secondary outcome measures included DNA methylation using genome-wide and targeted analysis of metastable epialleles sensitive to maternal nutrition.
Results More young adults exposed to famine in gestation were underweight than those postnatally exposed or unexposed. In contrast, more young adults exposed to famine postnatally were overweight compared to those gestationally exposed or unexposed. Underweight adults exposed to famine in gestation in utero were hyperglycaemic following a glucose tolerance test, and those exposed postnatally had elevated fasting glucose, compared to those unexposed. Significant differences in DNA methylation at seven metastable epialleles (VTRNA2-1, PAX8, PRDM-9, near ZFP57, near BOLA, EXD3) known to vary with gestational famine exposure were identified.
Conclusions Famine exposure in developmental life programmed Bangladeshi offspring towards diabetes and obesity in adulthood but gestational and postnatal windows of exposure had variable effects on phenotype. DNA methylation differences were replicated at previously identified metastable epialleles sensitive to periconceptual famine exposure
Association of maternal prenatal copper concentration with gestational duration and preterm birth: a multicountry meta-analysis Author links open overlay panel.
Background: Copper (Cu), an essential trace mineral regulating multiple actions of inflammation and oxidative stress, has been implicated in risk for preterm birth (PTB).
Objectives: This study aimed to determine the association of maternal Cu concentration during pregnancy with PTB risk and gestational duration in a large multicohort study including diverse populations.
Methods: Maternal plasma or serum samples of 10,449 singleton live births were obtained from 18 geographically diverse study cohorts. Maternal Cu concentrations were determined using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. The associations of maternal Cu with PTB and gestational duration were analyzed using logistic and linear regressions for each cohort. The estimates were then combined using meta-analysis. Associations between maternal Cu and acute-phase reactants (APRs) and infection status were analyzed in 1239 samples from the Malawi cohort.
Results: The maternal prenatal Cu concentration in our study samples followed normal distribution with mean of 1.92 μg/mL and standard deviation of 0.43 μg/mL, and Cu concentrations increased with gestational age up to 20 wk. The random-effect meta-analysis across 18 cohorts revealed that 1 μg/mL increase in maternal Cu concentration was associated with higher risk of PTB with odds ratio of 1.30 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.08, 1.57) and shorter gestational duration of 1.64 d (95% CI: 0.56, 2.73). In the Malawi cohort, higher maternal Cu concentration, concentrations of multiple APRs, and infections (malaria and HIV) were correlated and associated with greater risk of PTB and shorter gestational duration.
Conclusions: Our study supports robust negative association between maternal Cu and gestational duration and positive association with risk for PTB. Cu concentration was strongly correlated with APRs and infection status suggesting its potential role in inflammation, a pathway implicated in the mechanisms of PTB. Therefore, maternal Cu could be used as potential marker of integrated inflammatory pathways during pregnancy and risk for PTB
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