5,089 research outputs found
(Chloromethyl)pentacarbonylmanganese(I): a crystal structure with a non-crystallographic centre of symmetry
There are two molecules in the asymmetric unit of the P2â/c unit cell of ClCHâMn(CO)â
, the first halomethyl complex of manganese to be structurally determined. The molecules are crystallographically independent, despite an apparent local centre of symmetry. The average bond parameters include MnâCalkyl 2.128(8) Ă
, CâCl 1.811(8) Ă
and MnâCâCl 116.4(4)
Platelet Lysate to Promote Angiogenic Cell Therapies
Cellular therapies for patients with ischemic muscle have been limited by poor cell retention and survivability. Platelets are a robust source of growth factors and structural proteins, and extracts from this peripheral blood component may be manipulated to improve both cell retention and survivability in percutaneous delivery methods. Human platelet lysate is generated from pooled human platelets and contains a growth factor milieu that promotes robust human mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) proliferation without risk of xenogenic contamination. As such, platelet lysate is a practical alternative to animal serum for MSC culture and, with minor adjustments to the production process, can also be used as a scaffold for cell delivery. Human platelet lysate is a promising substrate that can provide nutritive delivery both in vitro and during cell implantation, potentially improving retention and survivability of MSCs that may improve angiogenic function for cell therapy in treatment of ischemic tissues
Primary Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Urinary Bladder Presenting as Peritoneal Carcinomatosis
We report an unusual case of a 78-year-old Caucasian female, who presented with peritoneal carcinomatosis and hypercalcemia, and was found to have a rapidly progressive primary squamous cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder. Squamous cell bladder carcinoma is a rare malignancy in the United States, accounting for just 1â3% of bladder tumors. Interestingly our patient lacked the established risk factors, including exposure to the parasite Schistosoma haematobium, recurrent urinary tract infections, bladder calculi, radiation exposure, chronic indwelling catheter, neurogenic bladder, or tobacco abuse. Although hypercalcemia has been rarely described, an initial presentation of peritioneal carcinomatosis has not been previously reported
Building research capacity for evidence-informed tobacco control in Canada: a case description
Tobacco use remains the leading cause of death and disability in Canada. Insufficient research capacity can inhibit evidence-informed decision making for tobacco control. This paper outlines a Canadian project to build research capacity, defined as a community's ability to produce research that adequately informs practice, policy, and future research in a timely, practical manner. A key component is that individuals and teams within the community must mutually engage around common, collectively negotiated goals to address specific practices, policies or programs of research. An organizing framework, a set of activities to build strategic recruitment, productivity tools, and procedures for enhancing social capital are described. Actions are intended to facilitate better alignment between research and the priorities of policy developers and service providers, enhance the external validity of the work performed, and reduce the time required to inform policy and practice
Spatial dependency between task positive and task negative networks
Functional neuroimaging reveals both relative increases (task-positive) and
decreases (task-negative) in neural activation with many tasks. There are
strong spatial similarities between many frequently reported task-negative
brain networks, which are often termed the default mode network. The default
mode network is typically assumed to be a spatially-fixed network; however,
when defined by task-induced deactivation, its spatial distribution it varies
depending on what specific task is being performed. Many studies have revealed
a strong temporal relationship between task-positive and task-negative networks
that are important for efficient cognitive functioning and here. Here, using
data from four different cognitive tasks taken from two independent datasets,
we test the hypothesis that there is also a fundamental spatial relationship
between them. Specifically, it is hypothesized that the distance between task
positive and negative-voxels is preserved despite different spatial patterns of
activation and deactivation being evoked by different cognitive tasks. Here, we
show that there is lower variability in the distance between task-positive and
task-negative voxels across four different sensory, motor and cognitive tasks
than would be expected by chance - implying that deactivation patterns are
spatially dependent on activation patterns (and vice versa) and that both are
modulated by specific task demands. We propose that this spatial relationship
may be the macroscopic analogue of microscopic neuronal organization reported
in sensory cortical systems, and we speculate why this spatial organization may
be important for efficient sensorimotor and cognitive functioning.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Mining Public Domain Data to Develop Selective DYRK1A Inhibitors
Kinases represent one of the most intensively pursued groups of targets in modern-day drug discovery. Often it is desirable to achieve selective inhibition of the kinase of interest over the remaining âŒ500 kinases in the human kinome. This is especially true when inhibitors are intended to be used to study the biology of the target of interest. We present a pipeline of open-source software that analyzes public domain data to repurpose compounds that have been used in previous kinase inhibitor development projects. We define the dual-specificity tyrosine-regulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A) as the kinase of interest, and by addition of a single methyl group to the chosen starting point we remove glycogen synthase kinase ÎČ (GSK3ÎČ) and cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibition. Thus, in an efficient manner we repurpose a GSK3ÎČ/CDK chemotype to deliver 8b, a highly selective DYRK1A inhibitor
Resolved Mid-IR Emission in the Narrow Line Region of NGC 4151
We present subarcsecond resolution mid infrared images of NGC 4151 at 10.8
micron and 18.2 micron. These images were taken with the University of Florida
mid-IR camera/spectrometer OSCIR at the Gemini North 8-m telescope. We resolve
emission at both 10.8 micron and 18.2 micron extending ~ 3.5" across at a P.A.
of ~ 60 degrees. This coincides with the the narrow line region of NGC 4151 as
observed in [OIII] by the Hubble Space Telescope. The most likely explanation
for this extended mid-IR emission is dust in the narrow line region heated by a
central engine. We find no extended emission associated with the proposed torus
and place an upper limit on its mid-IR size of less than or equal to ~ 35 pc.Comment: accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, 19 pages
including 5 figure
AzTEC millimeter survey of the COSMOS field - III. Source catalog over 0.72 sq. deg. and plausible boosting by large-scale structure
We present a 0.72 sq. deg. contiguous 1.1mm survey in the central area of the
COSMOS field carried out to a 1sigma ~ 1.26 mJy/beam depth with the AzTEC
camera mounted on the 10m Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment (ASTE). We
have uncovered 189 candidate sources at a signal-to-noise ratio S/N >= 3.5, out
of which 129, with S/N >= 4, can be considered to have little chance of being
spurious (< 2 per cent). We present the number counts derived with this survey,
which show a significant excess of sources when compared to the number counts
derived from the ~0.5 sq. deg. area sampled at similar depths in the Scuba HAlf
Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES, Austermann et al. 2010). They are,
however, consistent with those derived from fields that were considered too
small to characterize the overall blank-field population. We identify
differences to be more significant in the S > 5 mJy regime, and demonstrate
that these excesses in number counts are related to the areas where galaxies at
redshifts z < 1.1 are more densely clustered. The positions of optical-IR
galaxies in the redshift interval 0.6 < z < 0.75 are the ones that show the
strongest correlation with the positions of the 1.1mm bright population (S > 5
mJy), a result which does not depend exclusively on the presence of rich
clusters within the survey sampled area. The most likely explanation for the
observed excess in number counts at 1.1mm is galaxy-galaxy and galaxy-group
lensing at moderate amplification levels, that increases in amplitude as one
samples larger and larger flux densities. This effect should also be detectable
in other high redshift populations.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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