478 research outputs found
Polarization mode dispersion in radio-frequency interferometric embedded fiber-optic sensors
The effect of fiber birefringence on the propagation delay in an embedded fiber-optic strain sensor is studied. The polarization characteristics of the sensor are described in terms of polarization mode dispersion through the principal states of polarization and their differential group delay. Using these descriptors, an analytical expression for the response of the sensor for an arbitrary input state of polarization is given and experimentally verified. It is found that the differential group delay, as well as the input and output principal states of polarization, vary when the embedded fiber is strained, leading to fluctuations in the sensor output. The use of high birefringence fibers and different embedding geometries is examined as a means for reducing the polarization dependency of the sensor
PMP22 exon 4 deletion causes ER retention of PMP22 and a gain-of-function allele in CMT1E
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether predicted fork stalling and template switching (FoSTeS) during mitosis deletes exon 4 in peripheral myelin protein 22 KD (PMP22) and causes gainâofâfunction mutation associated with peripheral neuropathy in a family with CharcotâMarieâTooth disease type 1E. METHODS: Two siblings previously reported to have genomic rearrangements predicted to involve exon 4 of PMP22 were evaluated clinically and by electrophysiology. Skin biopsies from the proband were studied by RTâPCR to determine the effects of the exon 4 rearrangements on exon 4 mRNA expression in myelinating Schwann cells. Transient transfection studies with wildâtype and mutant PMP22 were performed in Cos7 and RT4 cells to determine the fate of the resultant mutant protein. RESULTS: Both affected siblings had a sensorimotor dysmyelinating neuropathy with severely slow nerve conduction velocities (<10 m/sec). RTâPCR studies of Schwann cell RNA from one of the siblings demonstrated a complete inâframe deletion of PMP22 exon 4 (PMP22Î4). Transfection studies demonstrated that PMP22Î4 protein is retained within the endoplasmic reticulum and not transported to the plasma membrane. CONCLUSIONS: Our results confirm that that FoSTeSâmediated genomic rearrangement produced a deletion of exon 4 of PMP22, resulting in expression of both PMP22 mRNA and protein lacking this sequence. In addition, we provide experimental evidence for endoplasmic reticulum retention of the mutant protein suggesting a gainâofâfunction mutational mechanism consistent with the observed CMT1E in this family. PMP22Î4 is another example of a mutated myelin protein that is misfolded and contributes to the pathogenesis of the neuropathy
Weighted Dirac combs with pure point diffraction
A class of translation bounded complex measures, which have the form of
weighted Dirac combs, on locally compact Abelian groups is investigated. Given
such a Dirac comb, we are interested in its diffraction spectrum which emerges
as the Fourier transform of the autocorrelation measure. We present a
sufficient set of conditions to ensure that the diffraction measure is a pure
point measure. Simultaneously, we establish a natural link to the theory of the
cut and project formalism and to the theory of almost periodic measures. Our
conditions are general enough to cover the known theory of model sets, but also
to include examples such as the visible lattice points.Comment: 44 pages; several corrections and improvement
Steroid Hormone Signaling Is Essential to Regulate Innate Immune Cells and Fight Bacterial Infection in Drosophila
Coupling immunity and development is essential to ensure survival despite changing internal conditions in the organism. Drosophila metamorphosis represents a striking example of drastic and systemic physiological changes that need to be integrated with the innate immune system. However, nothing is known about the mechanisms that coordinate development and immune cell activity in the transition from larva to adult. Here, we reveal that regulation of macrophage-like cells (hemocytes) by the steroid hormone ecdysone is essential for an effective innate immune response over metamorphosis. Although it is generally accepted that steroid hormones impact immunity in mammals, their action on monocytes (e.g. macrophages and neutrophils) is still not well understood. Here in a simpler model system, we used an approach that allows in vivo, cell autonomous analysis of hormonal regulation of innate immune cells, by combining genetic manipulation with flow cytometry, high-resolution time-lapse imaging and tissue-specific transcriptomic analysis. We show that in response to ecdysone, hemocytes rapidly upregulate actin dynamics, motility and phagocytosis of apoptotic corpses, and acquire the ability to chemotax to damaged epithelia. Most importantly, individuals lacking ecdysone-activated hemocytes are defective in bacterial phagocytosis and are fatally susceptible to infection by bacteria ingested at larval stages, despite the normal systemic and local production of antimicrobial peptides. This decrease in survival is comparable to the one observed in pupae lacking immune cells altogether, indicating that ecdysone-regulation is essential for hemocyte immune functions and survival after infection. Microarray analysis of hemocytes revealed a large set of genes regulated at metamorphosis by EcR signaling, among which many are known to function in cell motility, cell shape or phagocytosis. This study demonstrates an important role for steroid hormone regulation of immunity in vivo in Drosophila, and paves the way for genetic dissection of the mechanisms at work behind steroid regulation of innate immune cells.FCT fellowships: (SFRH/BPD/44613/2008, SFRH/BD/51175/2010), EMBO: (ALTF 178-2009), Gulbenkian Institute PhD Program
Pure point diffraction and cut and project schemes for measures: The smooth case
We present cut and project formalism based on measures and continuous weight
functions of sufficiently fast decay. The emerging measures are strongly almost
periodic. The corresponding dynamical systems are compact groups and
homomorphic images of the underlying torus. In particular, they are strictly
ergodic with pure point spectrum and continuous eigenfunctions. Their
diffraction can be calculated explicitly. Our results cover and extend
corresponding earlier results on dense Dirac combs and continuous weight
functions with compact support. They also mark a clear difference in terms of
factor maps between the case of continuous and non-continuous weight functions.Comment: 30 page
A new perturbative expansion of the time evolution operator associated with a quantum system
A novel expansion of the evolution operator associated with a -- in general,
time-dependent -- perturbed quantum Hamiltonian is presented. It is shown that
it has a wide range of possible realizations that can be fitted according to
computational convenience or to satisfy specific requirements. As a remarkable
example, the quantum Hamiltonian describing a laser-driven trapped ion is
studied in detail.Comment: 32 pages; modified version with examples of my previous paper
quant-ph/0404056; to appear on the J. of Optics B: Quantum and Semiclassical
Optics, Special Issue on 'Optics and Squeeze Transformations after Einstein
How and Why Does a Fly Turn Its Immune System Off?
The fly immune response is actively turned down, and if it is not, pathology results
Recommended from our members
Drosophila Host Model Reveals New Enterococcus faecalis Quorum-Sensing Associated Virulence Factors
Enterococcus faecalis V583 is a vancomycin-resistant clinical isolate which belongs to the hospital-adapted clade, CC2. This strain harbours several factors that have been associated with virulence, including the fsr quorum-sensing regulatory system that is known to control the expression of GelE and SprE proteases. To discriminate between genes directly regulated by Fsr, and those indirectly regulated as the result of protease expression or activity, we compared gene expression in isogenic mutants of V583 variously defective in either Fsr quorum sensing or protease expression. Quorum sensing was artificially induced by addition of the quorum signal, GBAP, exogenously in a controlled manner. The Fsr regulon was found to be restricted to five genes, gelE, sprE, ef1097, ef1351 and ef1352. Twelve additional genes were found to be dependent on the presence of GBAP-induced proteases. Induction of GelE and SprE by GBAP via Fsr resulted in accumulation of mRNA encoding lrgAB, and this induction was found to be lytRS dependent. Drosophila infection was used to discern varying levels of toxicity stemming from mutations in the fsr quorum regulatory system and the genes that it regulates, highlighting the contribution of LrgAB and bacteriocin EF1097 to infection toxicity. A contribution of SprE to infection toxicity was also detected. This work brought to light new players in E. faecalis success as a pathogen and paves the way for future studies on host tolerance mechanisms to infections caused by this important nosocomial pathogen
- âŠ