13 research outputs found
Efficient extreme-ultraviolet high-order wave mixing from laser-dressed silica
The emission of high-order harmonics from solids
\cite{ghimire11a,schubert14a,luu15a,golde08a} under intense laser-pulse
irradiation is revolutionizing our understanding of strong-field solid-light
interactions
\cite{ghimire11a,schubert14a,luu15a,vampa15b,yoshikawa17a,hafez18a,jurgens20a},
while simultaneously opening avenues towards novel, all-solid, coherent,
short-wavelength table-top sources with tailored emission profiles and
nanoscale light-field control\cite{franz19a,roscamCLEO21}. To date, broadband
spectra have been generated well into the extreme-ultraviolet (XUV)
\cite{luu15a,luu18b,han19a,uzan20a}, but the comparatively low conversion
efficiency still lags behind gas-based high-harmonic generation (HHG) sources
\cite{luu15a,luu18b}, and have hindered wider-spread applications. Here, we
overcome the low conversion efficiency by two-color wave mixing. A quantum
theory reveals that our experiments follow a novel generation mechanism where
the conventional interband and intraband nonlinear dynamics are boosted by
Floquet-Bloch dressed states, that make solid HHG in the XUV more efficient by
at least one order of magnitude. Emission intensity scalings that follow
perturbative optical wave mixing, combined with the angular separation of the
emitted frequencies, make our approach a decisive step for all-solid coherent
XUV sources and for studying light-engineered materials
Blocking Sodium-Taurocholate Cotransporting Polypeptide Stimulates Biliary Cholesterol and Phospholipid Secretion in Mice
Active secretion of bile salts into the canalicular lumen drives bile formation and promotes biliary cholesterol and phospholipid output. Disrupting hepatic bile salt uptake, by inhibition of sodiumâtaurocholate cotransporting polypetide (NTCP; Slc10a1) with Myrcludex B, is expected to limit bile salt flux through the liver and thereby to decrease biliary lipid excretion. Here, we show that Myrcludex Bâmediated NTCP inhibition actually causes an increase in biliary cholesterol and phospholipid excretion whereas biliary bile salt output and bile salt composition remains unchanged. Increased lysosomal discharge into bile was excluded as a potential contributor to increased biliary lipid secretion. Induction of cholesterol secretion was not a consequence of increased ATPâbinding cassette subfamily G member 5/8 activity given that NTCP inhibition still promoted cholesterol excretion in Abcg8â/â mice. Stimulatory effects of NTCP inhibition were maintained in Srâb1â/â mice, eliminating the possibility that the increase in biliary lipids was derived from enhanced uptake of highâdensity lipoproteinâderived lipids. NTCP inhibition shifts bile salt uptake, which is generally more periportally restricted, toward pericentral hepatocytes, as was visualized using a fluorescently labeled conjugated bile salt. As a consequence, exposure of the canalicular membrane to bile salts was increased, allowing for more cholesterol and phospholipid molecules to be excreted per bile salt. Conclusion: NTCP inhibition increases biliary lipid secretion, which is independent of alterations in bile salt output, biliary bile salt hydrophobicity, or increased activity of dedicated cholesterol and phospholipid transporters. Instead, NTCP inhibition shifts hepatic bile salt uptake from mainly periportal hepatocytes toward pericentral hepatocytes, thereby increasing exposure of the canalicular membrane to bile salts linking to increased biliary cholesterol secretion. This process provides an additional level of control to biliary cholesterol and phospholipid secretion.Biopharmaceutic
Children and Their Parents: A Comparative Study of the Legal Position of Children with Regard to Their Intentional and Biological Parents in English and Dutch Law
This is a book about children and their parents. There are many different kinds of children and at least about as many different kinds of parents. In addition to the many different disciplines that study children and their parents, such as sociology, psychology, child studies and gender studies, to name but a few, this study concerns a legal question with regard to the parent-child relationship, namely how the law assigns parents to children. This subject is approached in a comparative legal perspective and covers England and The Netherlands. The book contains a detailed comparison and analysis of the manner in which the law in the two jurisdictions assigns the status of legal parent and/or attributes parental responsibility to the childâs biological and intentional parents. The concept âprocreational responsibilityâ, which is introduced in the concluding chapter of the book, may be used as a tool to assess and reform existing regulations on legal parent-child relationships. The structure of the book, which is based on a categorisation of different family types in a âfamily treeâ, enables the reader to have easy access to family-specific information.FdR â Publicaties zonder aanstelling Universiteit Leide