40 research outputs found

    Dissipation, noise and vacuum decay in quantum field theory

    Get PDF
    We study the process of vacuum decay in quantum field theory focusing on the stochastic aspects of the interaction between long and short-wavelength modes. This interaction results in a diffusive behavior of the reduced Wigner function describing the state of the long-wavelength modes, and thereby to a finite activation rate even at zero temperature. This effect can make a substantial contribution to the total decay rate.Comment: 5 page

    Vacuum decay in quantum field theory

    Get PDF
    We study the contribution to vacuum decay in field theory due to the interaction between the long and short-wavelength modes of the field. The field model considered consists of a scalar field of mass MM with a cubic term in the potential. The dynamics of the long-wavelength modes becomes diffusive in this interaction. The diffusive behaviour is described by the reduced Wigner function that characterizes the state of the long-wavelength modes. This function is obtained from the whole Wigner function by integration of the degrees of freedom of the short-wavelength modes. The dynamical equation for the reduced Wigner function becomes a kind of Fokker-Planck equation which is solved with suitable boundary conditions enforcing an initial metastable vacuum state trapped in the potential well. As a result a finite activation rate is found, even at zero temperature, for the formation of true vacuum bubbles of size Mβˆ’1M^{-1}. This effect makes a substantial contribution to the total decay rate.Comment: 27 pages, RevTeX, 1 figure (uses epsf.sty

    Vacuum decay in quantum field theory

    Get PDF
    We study the contribution to vacuum decay in field theory due to the interaction between the long and short-wavelength modes of the field. The field model considered consists of a scalar field of mass MM with a cubic term in the potential. The dynamics of the long-wavelength modes becomes diffusive in this interaction. The diffusive behaviour is described by the reduced Wigner function that characterizes the state of the long-wavelength modes. This function is obtained from the whole Wigner function by integration of the degrees of freedom of the short-wavelength modes. The dynamical equation for the reduced Wigner function becomes a kind of Fokker-Planck equation which is solved with suitable boundary conditions enforcing an initial metastable vacuum state trapped in the potential well. As a result a finite activation rate is found, even at zero temperature, for the formation of true vacuum bubbles of size Mβˆ’1M^{-1}. This effect makes a substantial contribution to the total decay rate.Comment: 27 pages, RevTeX, 1 figure (uses epsf.sty

    Selective cyclooxygenase-2 silencing mediated by engineered E. coli and RNA interference induces anti-tumour effects in human colon cancer cells

    Get PDF
    Colorectal cancer (CRC) has an elevated incidence worldwide and represents one of the most aggressive human tumours. Many experimental data provide the evidence of a strong association between cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) enzyme overexpression and colon tumorigenesis. Furthermore, it has been demonstrated that the chronic use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs, a class of COX-2 inhibitors), partially protects patients from CRC development and progression. Unfortunately, NSAIDs have been shown to induce severe side effects in chronically treated patients and, therefore, new strategies for selective COX-2 blockade are needed. In this paper we present an innovative COX-2 silencing approach mediated by RNA Interference (RNAi) which is a mechanism we have already described as a powerful tool to knockdown COX-2 protein in CRC cells. In particular, we developed an improved method to gain a highly selective COX-2 silencing in CRC cells by a tumour-dependent expression of anti-COX-2 short hairpin RNA (shCOX-2). Moreover, we efficiently delivered shCOX-2 expressing vectors in CRC cells, in vitro and ex vivo, by using engineered Escherichia coli strains, capable of infecting and invading human tumour cells (InvColi). Combining the highly selective shCOX-2 expression and the delivery of COX-2 silencers mediated by InvColi strains, we obtained a strong reduction of both proliferative and invasive behaviour of tumour cells and we also confirmed the pivotal role of COX-2 overexpression for the survival of CRC cells. Finally, ex vivo data showed a global anti-inflammatory and anti-tumour effect elicited by COX-2 silencing

    RNA interference as a key to knockdown overexpressed cyclooxygenase-2 gene in tumour cells

    Get PDF
    Silencing those genes that are overexpressed in cancer and contribute to the survival and progression of tumour cells is the aim of several researches. Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is one of the most intensively studied genes since it is overexpressed in most tumours, mainly in colon cancer. The use of specific COX-2 inhibitors to treat colon cancer has generated great enthusiasm. Yet, the side effects of some inhibitors emerging during long-term treatment have caused much concern. Genes silencing by RNA interference (RNAi) has led to new directions in the field of experimental oncology. In this study, we detected sequences directed against COX-2 mRNA, that potently downregulate COX-2 gene expression and inhibit phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-induced angiogenesis in vitro in a specific, nontoxic manner. Moreover, we found that the insertion of a specific cassette carrying anti-COX-2 short hairpin RNA sequence into a viral vector (pSUPER.retro) greatly increased silencing potency in a colon cancer cell line (HT29) without activating any interferon response. Phenotypically, COX-2 deficient HT29 cells showed a significant impairment of their in vitro malignant behaviour. Thus, the retroviral approach enhancing COX-2 knockdown, mediated by RNAi, proved to be an useful tool to better understand the role of COX-2 in colon cancer. Furthermore, the higher infection efficiency we observed in tumour cells, if compared to normal endothelial cells, may disclose the possibility to specifically treat tumour cells without impairing endothelial COX-2 activity

    Comparative mRNA and microRNA Expression Profiling of Three Genitourinary Cancers Reveals Common Hallmarks and Cancer-Specific Molecular Events

    Get PDF
    Genome-wide gene expression profile using deep sequencing technologies can drive the discovery of cancer biomarkers and therapeutic targets. Such efforts are often limited to profiling the expression signature of either mRNA or microRNA (miRNA) in a single type of cancer.Here we provided an integrated analysis of the genome-wide mRNA and miRNA expression profiles of three different genitourinary cancers: carcinomas of the bladder, kidney and testis.Our results highlight the general or cancer-specific roles of several genes and miRNAs that may serve as candidate oncogenes or suppressors of tumor development. Further comparative analyses at the systems level revealed that significant aberrations of the cell adhesion process, p53 signaling, calcium signaling, the ECM-receptor and cell cycle pathways, the DNA repair and replication processes and the immune and inflammatory response processes were the common hallmarks of human cancers. Gene sets showing testicular cancer-specific deregulation patterns were mainly implicated in processes related to male reproductive function, and general disruptions of multiple metabolic pathways and processes related to cell migration were the characteristic molecular events for renal and bladder cancer, respectively. Furthermore, we also demonstrated that tumors with the same histological origins and genes with similar functions tended to group together in a clustering analysis. By assessing the correlation between the expression of each miRNA and its targets, we determined that deregulation of 'key' miRNAs may result in the global aberration of one or more pathways or processes as a whole.This systematic analysis deciphered the molecular phenotypes of three genitourinary cancers and investigated their variations at the miRNA level simultaneously. Our results provided a valuable source for future studies and highlighted some promising genes, miRNAs, pathways and processes that may be useful for diagnostic or therapeutic applications

    Perkutane Vertebroplastie oder Ballon-Kyphoplastie? Was ist besser?

    No full text

    Neutron-Induced Soft Errors in Graphic Processing Units

    No full text

    Assays for membrane and intracellular signalling events. in Angiogenesis Assays

    No full text
    The growth of new blood vessels from existing vessels, familiar to most as angiogenesis or neovascularization, has acquired an importance that would have been difficult to imagine a few years ago. The proven efficacy of recently approved drugs that block angiogenesis in tumours and age-related macular degeneration has heightened the visibility and relevance of research on blood vessel growth and regression. The promise of factors that stimulate functional revascularization of organs, starved of their blood supply by ischaemic vascular disease or other conditions, is also increasing. Success in the clinic has shifted into high gear the search for even more efficacious drugs. How can these agents be identified, screened and tested? How can their mechanism of action be determined? The seemingly ideal approach for evaluating agents would be through pre-clinical models of the targeted diseases. However, few pre-clinical models faithfully mimic human disease. There-fore, the search continues for faster, easier, more relevant ways of assessing agents that stimulate or inhibit angiogenesis

    Identification and analysis of human RCAN3 (DSCR1L2) mRNA and protein isoforms

    No full text
    Human RCAN3 (Regulator of calcineurin 3; previously known as DSCR1L2, Down syndrome critical region gene 1-like 2) is a five-exon gene mapped on chromosome 1 and belongs to the human RCAN gene family which also includes RCAN1 and RCAN2. The novel denomination RCAN for genes and proteins, instead of DSCR1L (Down syndrome critical region gene 1-like) has recently been widely discussed. The aim of the present work was to perform a multiple approach analysis of five RCAN3 mRNA and encoded protein isoforms, two of which have been identified for the first time in this research. The two new RCAN3 mRNA isoforms, RCAN3-2,4,5, which lacks exon 3, and RCAN3-2,3,5, which lacks exon 4, were identified during RCAN3 RT-PCR (reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction) cloning, the product of which unexpectedly revealed the presence of five isoforms as opposed to the three previously known. In order to analyze the expression pattern of the five RCAN3 mRNA isoforms in seven different human tissues, a quantitative relative RT-PCR was performed: interestingly, all isoforms are present in all tissues investigated, with a statistically significant constant prevalence of RCAN3 isoform (the most complete, \u201creference\u201d isoform). The RCAN3 locus expression level was comparable in all seven tissues analyzed, considering all isoforms, which indicates a ubiquitous expression of this human RCAN family member. To date two possible interactors have been described for this protein: human cardiac troponin I (TNNI3) and calcineurin. Here we report the interaction between the new RCAN3 variants and TNNI3, demonstrated by both yeast cotransformation and by the GST (glutathione-sepharose transferase) fusion protein assay, as was to be expected from the presence of exon 2 whose product has been seen to be sufficient for binding to TNNI3
    corecore