327 research outputs found

    Ferromagnetic feature from Mn near room temperature in the fine particles of GdMn2Ge2 and TbMn2Ge2

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    The magnetization behaviors of GdMn2Ge2 and TbMn2Ge2 in the bulk and in the fine particles obtained by high-energy ball-milling are compared. Pronounced modificayions in the spontaneous, remnent and high-field magnetization in the fine particle form, attributable to Mn are observed. The results indicate that the antiferromagnetism of Mn sub-lattice known for the bulk form in the range 100-300 K gets weakened in favor of ferromagnetism in the fine particles. On the basis of this observation, we infer that there are other factors like size (and possibly defects) also play a role to decide the exact nature of magnetic ordering of Mn in this ternary family of compounds, contrasting the traditionally held view that the basal plane Mn-Mn distance is the crucial controlling parameter.Comment: Communicated for publication on 2nd January 201

    Dynamic Axonal Translation in Developing and Mature Visual Circuits.

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    Local mRNA translation mediates the adaptive responses of axons to extrinsic signals, but direct evidence that it occurs in mammalian CNS axons in vivo is scant. We developed an axon-TRAP-RiboTag approach in mouse that allows deep-sequencing analysis of ribosome-bound mRNAs in the retinal ganglion cell axons of the developing and adult retinotectal projection in vivo. The embryonic-to-postnatal axonal translatome comprises an evolving subset of enriched genes with axon-specific roles, suggesting distinct steps in axon wiring, such as elongation, pruning, and synaptogenesis. Adult axons, remarkably, have a complex translatome with strong links to axon survival, neurotransmission, and neurodegenerative disease. Translationally co-regulated mRNA subsets share common upstream regulators, and sequence elements generated by alternative splicing promote axonal mRNA translation. Our results indicate that intricate regulation of compartment-specific mRNA translation in mammalian CNS axons supports the formation and maintenance of neural circuits in vivo.This work was supported by Wellcome Trust Programme Grant (085314/Z/08/Z), European Research Council Advanced Grant (322817) to CEH , Cambridge Wellcome Trust PhD programme in Developmental Biology (PMAG/406; BT-B), Gates Cambridge Scholarship (JQL), Basic Science Research Program (2013R1A1A1009625 & 2014K2A7A1036305), Biomedical Technology Development Program (2013M3A9D5072551), & Brain Research Program (2015M3C7A1028396) funded through the NRF by the Korean government (MSIP), Yonsei University Future-leading Research Initiative of 2015 (2015-22-0095), and a faculty research grant from Yonsei University College of Medicine for 2013 (6-2013-0064-2-1) to HJ.This is the author accepted manuscript. It is currently under an indefinite embargo pending publication by Cell Press

    Multivariate modeling of chromium-induced oxidative stress and biochemical changes in plants of Pistia stratiotes L.

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    Biochemical changes in the plants of Pistia stratiotes L., a free floating macrophyte exposed to different concentrations of hexavalent chromium (0, 10, 40, 60, 80 and 160 μM) for 48, 96 and 144 h were studied. Chromium-induced oxidative stress in macrophyte was investigated using the multivariate modeling approaches. Cluster analysis rendered two fairly distinct clusters (roots and shoots) of similar characteristics in terms of their biochemical responses. Discriminant analysis identified ascorbate peroxidase (APX) as discriminating variable between the root and shoot tissues. Principal components analysis results suggested that malondialdehyde (MDA), superoxide dismutase (SOD), APX, non-protein thiols (NP-SH), cysteine, ascorbic acid, and Cr-accumulation are dominant in root tissues, whereas, protein and guaiacol peroxidase (GPX) in shoots of the plant. Discriminant partial least squares analysis results further confirmed that MDA, SOD, NP-SH, cysteine, GPX, APX, ascorbic acid and Cr-accumulation dominated in the root tissues, while protein in the shoot. Three-way analysis helped in visualizing simultaneous influence of metal concentration and exposure duration on biochemical variables in plant tissues. The multivariate approaches, thus, allowed for the interpretation of the induced biochemical changes in the plant tissues exposed to chromium, which otherwise using the conventional approaches is difficult

    Validating Antimetastatic Effects of Natural Products in an Engineered Microfluidic Platform Mimicking Tumor Microenvironment

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    Development of new, antimetastatic drugs from natural products has been substantially constrained by the lack of a reliable in vitro screening system. Such a system should ideally mimic the native, three-dimensional (3D) tumor microenvironment involving different cell types and allow quantitative analysis of cell behavior critical for metastasis. These requirements are largely unmet in the current model systems, leading to poor predictability of the in vitro collected data for in vivo trials, as well as prevailing inconsistency among different in vitro tests. In the present study, we report application of a 3D, microfluidic device for validation of the antimetastatic effects of 12 natural compounds. This system supports co-culture of endothelial and cancer cells in their native 3D morphology as in the tumor microenvironment and provides real-time monitoring of the cells treated with each compound. We found that three compounds, namely sanguinarine, nitidine, and resveratrol, exhibited significant antimetastatic or antiangiogenic effects. Each compound was further examined for its respective activity with separate conventional biological assays, and the outcomes were in agreement with the findings collected from the microfluidic system. In summary, we recommend use of this biomimetic model system as a new engineering tool for high-throughput evaluation of more diverse natural compounds with varying anticancer potentials
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