783 research outputs found
Master of Science
thesisAdvances in silicon photonics are enabling hybrid integration of optoelectronic circuits alongside current complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technologies. To fully exploit the capability of this integration, it is important to explore the effects of thermal gradients on optoelectronic devices. The sensitivity of optical components to temperature variation gives rise to design issues in silicon on insulator (SOI) optoelectronic technology. The thermo-electric effect becomes problematic with the integration of hybrid optoelectronic systems, where heat is generated from electrical components. Through the thermo-optic effect, the optical signals are in turn affected and compensation is necessary. To improve the capability of optical SOI designs, optical-wave-simulation models and the characteristic thermal operating environment need to be integrated to ensure proper operation. In order to exploit the potential for compensation by virtue of resynthesis, temperature characterization on a system level is required. Thermal characterization within the flow of physical design automation tools for hybrid optoelectronic technology enables device resynthesis and validation at a system level. Additionally, thermally-aware routing and placement would be possible. A simplified abstraction will help in the active design process, within the contemporary computer-aided design (CAD) flow when designing optoelectronic features. This thesis investigates an abstraction model to characterize the effect of a temperature gradient on optoelectronic circuit operation. To make the approach scalable, reduced order computations are desired that effectively model the effect of temperature on an optoelectronic layout; this is achieved using an electrical analogy to heat flow. Given an optoelectronic circuit, using a thermal resistance network to abstract thermal flow, we compute the temperature distribution throughout the layout. Subsequently, we show how this thermal distribution across the optoelectronic system layout can be integrated within optoelectronic device- and system-level analysis tools
Hepatic progenitor cells from adult human livers for cell transplantation.
Objective: Liver regeneration is mainly based on cellular
self-renewal including progenitor cells. Efforts have been
made to harness this potential for cell transplantation, but
shortage of hepatocytes and premature differentiated
progenitor cells from extra-hepatic organs are limiting
factors. Histological studies implied that resident cells in
adult liver can proliferate, have bipotential character and
may be a suitable source for cell transplantation.
Methods: Particular cell populations were isolated after
adequate tissue dissociation. Single cell suspensions were
purified by Thy-1 positivity selection, characterised in vitro
and transplanted in immunodeficient Pfp/Rag2 mice.
Results: Thy-1+ cells that are mainly found in the portal
tract and the surrounding parenchyma, were isolated from
surgical liver tissue with high yields from specimens with
histological signs of regeneration. Thy-1+ cell populations
were positive for progenitor (CD34, c-kit, CK14, M2PK,
OV6), biliary (CK19) and hepatic (HepPar1) markers
revealing their progenitor as well as hepatic and biliary
nature. The potential of Thy-1+ cells for differentiation in
vitro was demonstrated by increased mRNA and protein
expression for hepatic (CK18, HepPar1) and biliary (CK7)
markers during culture while progenitor markers CK14,
chromogranin A and nestin were reduced. After
transplantation of Thy-1+ cells into livers of immunodeficient
mice, engraftment was predominantly seen in the
periportal portion of the liver lobule. Analysis of in situ
material revealed that transplanted cells express human
hepatic markers HepPar1 and albumin, indicating functional
engraftment.
Conclusion: Bipotential progenitor cells from human
adult livers can be isolated using Thy-1 and might be a
potential candidate for cell treatment in liver diseases
Entwurfsmuster fĂźr verteilte Anwendungssystem-Architekturen
Aus der Motivation:
"In den letzten Jahren werden verstärkt neue Organisationsformen fĂźr Unternehmen diskutiert (vgl. [Zimm97], [DaMa93], [BuIl+97]). Diese reichen von innerbetrieblicher Dezentralisierung der Entscheidungsbefugnis bis hin zur Bildung autonomer Geschäftseinheiten, die in virtuellen Unternehmen kooperieren. Neben der stärkeren Verteilung der Entscheidungsbefugnis stehen neue Formen der Arbeitsverteilung sowie die Tendenz zur Globalisierung im Vordergrund. Daraus ergeben sich weitreichende Anforderungen an betriebliche Informationssysteme. Diese betreffen insbesondere technische Merkmale wie Flexibilität und Verteilbarkeit von Anwendungssystemkomponenten sowie die VerfĂźgbarkeit und Performanz des Gesamtsystems. Aus betriebswirtschaftlicher Sicht mĂźssen die Zielverfolgung, die Konsistenz sowie Aspekte der Datensicherheit berĂźcksichtigt werden (vgl. [FeSi+97]). Konventionelle Anwendungssysteme, die auf Datenintegration basieren, erfĂźllen insbesondere die Anforderungen nach Flexibilität und Verteilbarkeit nicht in ausreichendem MaĂe. Daher ist es notwendig, Anwendungssystem-Architekturen zu entwickeln, welche die Realisierung unterschiedlicher technischer und organisatorischer Verteilungsformen unterstĂźtzen. Dies erfordert einen integrierten Ansatz zur Modellierung verteilter Anwendungssysteme im Kontext organisatorischer und technischer Rahmenbedingungen. Eine geeignete Modellierungsmethode sollte somit Verteilungskonzepte fĂźr alle angesprochenen Aspekte eines betrieblichen Systems beinhalten.
DX5+NKT cells display phenotypical and functional differences between spleen and liver as well as NK1.1-Balb/c and NK1.1+ C57Bl/6 mice
These results show that DX5+NKT cells are a heterogeneous population, depending on the dedicated organ and mouse strain, that has diverse functional capacity
Increased cytoplasmatic expression of cancer immune surveillance receptor CD1d in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas
Background Anaplastic thyroid carcinomas are associated with rapid tumor growth, short survival time and without any promising therapy to improve the poor prognosis. In this study, expression of immunoregulative receptor CD1d and lymphocyte infiltration in different thyroid tumors as well as in healthy tissue were analyzed in order to find new targets for an immunotherapeutic approach. Methods CD1d immunohistochemistry was performed in samples of 18 anaplastic, 17 follicular, 27 papillary, and 4 medullary thyroid carcinomas as well as in 19 specimens from normal thyroid tissue and additionally in 10 samples of sarcoma, seven malignant melanoma and three spindle-cell lung carcinoma. Furthermore, thyroid samples were stained with antibodies against CD3, CD20, CD56, CD68, and LCA in order to analyze lymphocyte infiltration. Results For the first time CD1d receptor expression on normal thyroid tissue could be demonstrated. Moreover, anaplastic thyroid carcinomas showed significantly higher expression levels compared to other thyroid samples. Most astonishingly, CD1d expression disappeared from the cellular surface and was detected rather in the cytoplasm of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma cells. In addition, histologically similar tumors to anaplastic carcinoma like sarcoma and malignant melanoma revealed distinct CD1d staining patterns. Furthermore, infiltration of T cells, B cells, and macrophages in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas was different when compared to normal thyroid tissue and all other thyroid carcinomas. Conclusions Anaplastic thyroid carcinomas show significantly higher expression of CD1d, a receptor for NKT cells, which are subject of several anticancer therapy studies. These results may offer a novel approach to explore immunotherapeutic treatment options
Deroceras panormitanum and congeners from Malta and Sicily, with a redescription of the widespread pest slug as Deroceras invadens n. sp.
The name Deroceras panormitanum is generally applied to a terrestrial slug that has spread worldwide and can be a pest; earlier this tramp species had been called Deroceras caruanae. Neither name is appropriate. The taxonomic descriptions apply to a species from Sicily and Malta. This true D. panormitanum and the tramp species are distinct in morphology and mating behaviour. For instance, the penial caecum of D. panormitanum is more pointed, everting faster at copulation. The size of the penial lobe varies considerably in preserved specimens but is always prominent at copulation. D. panormitanum is distinct from the Maltese endemic Deroceras golcheri, but a phylogeny based on mtDNA COI sequences implies that they are more closely related than is the tramp species. D. golcheri has a still closer counterpart on Sicily, but we leave the taxonomy of this species X unresolved. In interspecific crosses, D. panormitanum may transfer sperm to the partner's sarcobelum whereas the partner fails to evert its penis (D. golcheri) or to transfer sperm (the tramp species). Names previously applied to the tramp species originally referred to D. panormitanum or are otherwise invalid, so it is here formally redescribed as D. invadens. Deroceras giustianum Wiktor, 1998 is synonymised with D. panormitanum
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