5,319 research outputs found
Quantum Goos-H\"{a}nchen shift and tunneling transmission at a curved step potential
We study the quantum Goos-H\"{a}nchen (GH) shift and the tunneling
transmission at a curved step potential by investigating the time evolution of
a wave packet. An initial wave packet is expanded in terms of the eigenmodes of
a circular step potential. Its time evolution is then given by the interference
of their simple eigenmode oscillations. We show that the GH shift along the
step boundary can be explained by the energy-dependent phase loss upon
reflection, which is defined by modifying the one-dimensional (1D) effective
potential derived from the 2D circular system. We also demonstrate that the
tunneling transmission of the wave packet is characterized by a free-space
image distant from the boundary. The tunneling transmission exhibits a rather
wide angle divergence and the direction of maximum tunneling is slightly
rotated from the tangent at the incident point, which is consistent with the
time delay of the tunneling wave packet computed in the 1D modified effective
potential
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Functional Cellular Anti-Tumor Mechanisms are Augmented by Genetic Proteoglycan Targeting.
While recent research points to the importance of glycans in cancer immunity, knowledge on functional mechanisms is lacking. In lung carcinoma among other tumors, anti-tumor immunity is suppressed; and while some recent therapies boost T-cell mediated immunity by targeting immune-checkpoint pathways, robust responses are uncommon. Augmenting tumor antigen-specific immune responses by endogenous dendritic cells (DCs) is appealing from a specificity standpoint, but challenging. Here, we show that restricting a heparan sulfate (HS) loss-of-function mutation in the HS sulfating enzyme Ndst1 to predominantly conventional DCs (Ndst1f/f CD11cCre+ mutation) results in marked inhibition of Lewis lung carcinoma growth along with increased tumor-associated CD8+ T cells. In mice deficient in a major DC HS proteoglycan (syndecan-4), splenic CD8+ T cells showed increased anti-tumor cytotoxic responses relative to controls. Studies examining Ndst1f/f CD11cCre + mutants revealed that mutation was associated with an increase in anti-tumor cytolysis using either splenic CD8+ T cells or tumor-infiltrating (TIL) CD8+ T cells purified ex-vivo, and tested in pooled effector-to-target cytolytic assays against tumor cells from respective animals. On glycan compositional analysis, HS purified from Ndst1f/f CD11cCre + mutant DCs had reduced overall sulfation, including reduced sulfation of a tri-sulfated disaccharide species that was intriguingly abundant on wildtype DC HS. Interestingly, antigen presentation in the context of major histocompatibility complex class-I (MHC-I) was enhanced in mutant DCs, with more striking effects in the setting of HS under-sulfation, pointing to a likely regulatory role by sulfated glycans at the antigen/MHC-I - T-cell interface; and possibly future opportunities to improve antigen-specific T cell responses by immunologic targeting of HS proteoglycans in cancer
Shadowing the rotating annulus. Part I: Measuring candidate trajectory shadowing times
An intuitively necessary requirement of models used to provide forecasts of a
system's future is the existence of shadowing trajectories that are consistent
with past observations of the system: given a system-model pair, do model
trajectories exist that stay reasonably close to a sequence of observations of
the system? Techniques for finding such trajectories are well-understood in
low-dimensional systems, but there is significant interest in their application
to high-dimensional weather and climate models. We build on work by Smith et
al. [2010, Phys. Lett. A, 374, 2618-2623] and develop a method for measuring
the time that individual "candidate" trajectories of high-dimensional models
shadow observations, using a model of the thermally-driven rotating annulus in
the perfect model scenario. Models of the annulus are intermediate in
complexity between low-dimensional systems and global atmospheric models. We
demonstrate our method by measuring shadowing times against
artificially-generated observations for candidate trajectories beginning a
fixed distance from truth in one of the annulus' chaotic flow regimes. The
distribution of candidate shadowing times we calculated using our method
corresponds closely to (1) the range of times over which the trajectories
visually diverge from the observations and (2) the divergence time using a
simple metric based on the distance between model trajectory and observations.
An empirical relationship between the expected candidate shadowing times and
the initial distance from truth confirms that the method behaves reasonably as
parameters are varied.Comment: This paper was submitted to Physica D in 2010, but, after review, was
not accepted. We no longer have the time or resources to work on this topic,
but would like this record of our work to be available for others to read,
cite, and follow up. 19 pages, 9 figure
Seasonal and diurnal variations of dust storms in Martian Year 36 based on the EMM-EXI database
Peer reviewe
Spatially resolved correlative microscopy and microbial identification reveal dynamic depth- and mineral-dependent anabolic activity in salt marsh sediment.
Coastal salt marshes are key sites of biogeochemical cycling and ideal systems in which to investigate the community structure of complex microbial communities. Here, we clarify structural-functional relationships among microorganisms and their mineralogical environment, revealing previously undescribed metabolic activity patterns and precise spatial arrangements within salt marsh sediment. Following 3.7-day in situ incubations with a non-canonical amino acid that was incorporated into new biomass, samples were resin-embedded and analysed by correlative fluorescence and electron microscopy to map the microscale arrangements of anabolically active and inactive organisms alongside mineral grains. Parallel sediment samples were examined by fluorescence-activated cell sorting and 16S rRNA gene sequencing to link anabolic activity to taxonomic identity. Both approaches demonstrated a rapid decline in the proportion of anabolically active cells with depth into salt marsh sediment, from ~60% in the top centimetre to 9.4%-22.4% between 2 and 10 cm. From the top to the bottom, the most prominent active community members shifted from sulfur cycling phototrophic consortia, to putative sulfate-reducing bacteria likely oxidizing organic compounds, to fermentative lineages. Correlative microscopy revealed more abundant (and more anabolically active) organisms around non-quartz minerals including rutile, orthoclase and plagioclase. Microbe-mineral relationships appear to be dynamic and context-dependent arbiters of biogeochemical cycling.R24 GM137200 - NIGMS NIH HHShttps://sfamjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1462-2920.1566
Revealing the intensity of turbulent energy transfer in planetary atmospheres
Images of the giant planets Jupiter and Saturn show highly turbulent storms and swirling Q23 clouds that reflect the intensity of turbulence in their atmospheres.
Quantifying planetary turbulence is inaccessible to conventional tools, however, since they require large quantities of spatially and temporally resolved data.
Here we show, using experiments, observations, and simulations, that potential vorticity (PV) is a straightforward and universal diagnostic that can be used to estimate turbulent energy transfer in a stably stratified atmosphere.
We use the conservation of PV to define a length scale, LM, representing a typical distance over which PV is mixed by planetary turbulence. LM increases as the turbulent intensity increases and can be estimated from any latitudinal PV profile.
Using this principle, we estimate LM within Jupiter's and Saturn's tropospheres, showing for the first time that turbulent energy transfer in Saturn's atmosphere is four times less intense than Jupiter'
A Receptor-based Switch that Regulates Anthrax Toxin Pore Formation
Cellular receptors can act as molecular switches, regulating the sensitivity of microbial proteins to conformational changes that promote cellular entry. The activities of these receptor-based switches are only partially understood. In this paper, we sought to understand the mechanism that underlies the activity of the ANTXR2 anthrax toxin receptor-based switch that binds to domains 2 and 4 of the protective antigen (PA) toxin subunit. Receptor-binding restricts structural changes within the heptameric PA prepore that are required for pore conversion to an acidic endosomal compartment. The transfer cross-saturation (TCS) NMR approach was used to monitor changes in the heptameric PA-receptor contacts at different steps during prepore-to-pore conversion. These studies demonstrated that receptor contact with PA domain 2 is weakened prior to pore conversion, defining a novel intermediate in this pathway. Importantly, ANTXR2 remained bound to PA domain 4 following pore conversion, suggesting that the bound receptor might influence the structure and/or function of the newly formed pore. These studies provide new insights into the function of a receptor-based molecular switch that controls anthrax toxin entry into cells
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