396 research outputs found

    New Insights into Martian Atmospheric Chemistry

    Get PDF
    HO_x radicals are produced in the Martian atmosphere by the photolysis of water vapor and subsequently participate in catalytic cycles that recycle carbon dioxide (CO_2) from its photolysis product carbon monoxide (CO), providing a qualitative explanation for the stability of its atmosphere. Balancing CO_2 production and loss based on our current understanding of Martian gas-phase chemistry has, however, proven to be difficult. The photolysis of O_3 produces O(^1D), while oxidation of CO produces HOCO radicals, a new member of the HO_x family. The O(^1D) quantum yield has recently been updated, which quantifies nonzero quantum yields in the Huggins bands. In Earthā€™s atmosphere HOCO is considered to be unimportant since it is quickly removed by abundant oxygen molecules. The smaller amount of O_2 in the Marsā€™ atmosphere causes HOCOā€™s lifetime to be longer in Marsā€™ atmosphere than Earthā€™s (3 Ɨ 10^(-5) seconds to 1.2 days from Marsā€™s surface to 240 km, respectively). Limited kinetic data on reactions involving HOCO prevented consideration of its reactions directly in atmospheric models. Therefore, the impact of HOCO reactions on Martian chemistry is currently unknown. Here, we incorporate new literature rate constants for HOCO chemistry and an updated representation of the O(^1D) quantum yield in the Caltech/JPL 1-D photochemical model for Marsā€™ atmosphere. Our simulations exemplify perturbations to NO_y, HO_x, and CO_x species, ranging from 5 to 50%. The modified O(^1D) quantum yield and new HOCO chemistry cause a 10% decrease and a 50% increase in OH and H_2O_2 total column abundances, respectively. At low altitudes, HOCO production contributes 5% towards CO_2 production. Given recent experimentally-obtained branching ratios for the oxidation of CO, HOCO may contribute up to 70% toward the production of NO_y, where HO_x and NO_y species are enhanced up to a factor 3, which has implications for rethinking the fundamental understanding of NO_y, HO_x, and CO/CO_2 cycling on Mars. Two new reaction mechanisms for converting CO to CO_2 using HOCO reactions are proposed, which reveal that H_2O_2 is more intimately coupled to CO_x chemistry. Our simulations are in good agreement with satellite/spacecraft measurements of CO and H_2O_2 on Mars

    Dietary cholesterol directly induces acute inflammasome-dependent intestinal inflammation

    Get PDF
    Prolonged ingestion of a cholesterol- or saturated fatty acid-enriched diet induces chronic, often systemic, auto-inflammatory responses resulting in significant health problems worldwide. In vivo information regarding the local and direct inflammatory effect of these dietary components in the intestine and, in particular, on the intestinal epithelium is lacking. Here we report that both mice and zebrafish exposed to high-fat (HFDs) or high-cholesterol (HCDs) diets develop acute innate inflammatory responses within hours, reflected in the localized interleukin-1Ī²-dependent accumulation of myeloid cells in the intestine. Acute HCD-induced intestinal inflammation is dependent on cholesterol uptake via Niemann-Pick C1-like 1 and inflammasome activation involving apoptosis-associated Speck-like protein containing a caspase recruitment domain, which leads to Caspase-1 activity in intestinal epithelial cells. Extended exposure to HCD results in localized, inflammation-dependent, functional dysregulation as well as systemic pathologies. Our model suggests that dietary cholesterol initiates intestinal inflammation in epithelial cells

    Isotopic fractionation of nitrous oxide in the stratosphere: Comparison between model and observations

    Get PDF
    We investigate the mass dependent isotopic fractionation mechanisms, based on photolytic destruction and reaction with O^1D, to explain the ^(15)N/^(14)N and ^(18)O/^(16)O fractionation of stratospheric N_2O and reconcile laboratory experiments with atmospheric observations. The Caltech/JPL two-dimensional (2-D) model is utilized for detailed studies of N_2O and its isotopologues and isotopomers in the stratosphere. We compare model results with observations of isotopic enrichment using three different methods of calculating photolytic cross-sections for each of the major isotopologues and isotopomers of N_2O. Although the Yung and Miller [1997] successfully modeled the pattern of enrichments for each isotopologue or isotopomer relative to each other, their approach underestimated the magnitude of the enrichments. The ab initio approach by Johnson et al. [2001] provides a better fit to the magnitudes of the enrichments, with the notable exception of the enrichment for the ^(15)N^(14)N^(16)O. A simpler, semi-empirical approach by Blake et al. [2003] is able to model the magnitude of all the enrichments, including the one for ^(15)N^(14)N^(16)O. The Blake et al. [2003] cross-sections are temperature-dependent, but adjustments are needed to match the measurements of Kaiser et al. [2002a] . Using these modified cross-sections generally improves the agreement between model and mass spectrometric measurements. Destruction of N_2O by reaction with O(^1D) results in a small but nonnegligible isotopic fractionation in the lower stratosphere. On a per molecule basis, the rates of destruction of the minor isotopologues or isotopomers are somewhat less than that for ^(14)N^(14)N^(16)O. From our 2-D model we infer the relative rates for isotopologues and isotopomers ^(14)N^(14)N^(16)O (446), ^(14)N^(15)N^(16)O (456), ^(15)N^(14)N^(16)O (546), ^(14)N^(14)N^(17)O (447) and ^(14)N^(14)N^(18)O (448), to be 1, 0.9843, 0.9942, 0.9949, and 0.9900, respectively. Thus the destruction of N_2O in the atmosphere results in isotopic fractionations of (456), (546), (447) and (448) by 19.4, 9.5, 5.5 and 12.0ā€°. If we do not distinguish between the (456) and (546) isotopomers, the mean isotopic fractionation for ^(15)N is 14.5ā€°. If we assume that the mean tropospheric values for Ī“_(456), Ī“_(546_, Ī“^(15)N and Ī“^(18)O are 16.35, āˆ’2.35, 7.0 and 20.7ā€°, respectively, we infer the following isotopic signature for the integrated sources of N_2O: Ī“_(456) = āˆ’ 2.9ā€°, Ī“_(546) = āˆ’11.7ā€°, Ī“^(15)N = āˆ’7.3ā€° and Ī“^(18)O = 8.7ā€°

    The Risk of Recurrence in Breast Cancer Patients Treated with Tamoxifen: Polymorphisms of CYP2D6 and ABCB1

    Get PDF
    CYP2D6 plays a major role in the metabolism of tamoxifen, and polymorphism of Pglycoprotein has been associated with resistance of many drug therapies. This study investigates the clinical impact of genetic variants of CYP2D6 and ABCB1 in breast cancer patients treated with tamoxifen. Blood samples from 95 breast cancer patients treated with tamoxifen were collected and genotyped for CYP2D6 and ABCB1 variants using allele-specific PCR method. Recurrence risks were calculated using Kaplanā€“Meier analysis and compared using the log-rank test. Patients carrying CYP2D6*10/*10 and heterozygous null allele (IM) showed higher risks of developing recurrence and metastasis (OR 13.14; 95% CI 1.57ā€“109.94; P=0.004) than patients with CYP2D6*1/*1 and *1/*10 genotypes. Patients with homozygous CC genotypes of ABCB1 C3435T showed a shorter time to recurrence. Patients who were CYP2D6 IM and homozygous CC genotype of C3435T have statistically significant higher risks of recurrence (P=0.002). Similarly, median time to recurrence in these patients was only 12 months (95% CI=0.79ā€“23.2) compared to those without this combination which was 48 months (95% CI=14.7ā€“81.2). Patients with CYP2D6 IM and homozygous CC genotype of ABCB1 C3435T have shorter times to recurrence. The results confirmed the findings of previous studies and support FDA recommendation to perform pre-genotyping in patients before the choice of therapy is determined in breast cancer patients

    Changes in the multidisciplinary management of rectal cancer from 2009 to 2015 and associated improvements in shortā€term outcomes

    Get PDF
    Aim: Significant recent changes in management of locally advanced rectal cancer include preoperative staging, use of extended neoadjuvant therapies, and minimally invasive surgery (MIS). This study was aimed at characterizing those changes and associated shortā€term outcomes. Method: We retrospectively analysed treatment and outcome data from patients with T3/4 or N+ locally advanced rectal cancer ā‰¤15 cm from the anal verge who were evaluated at a comprehensive cancer center in 2009ā€“2015. Results: In total, 798 patients were identified and grouped into five cohorts based on treatment year: 2009ā€2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014ā€2015. Temporal changes included increased reliance on MRI staging, from 57% in 2009ā€2010 to 98% in 2014ā€2015 (p < 0.001); increased use of total neoadjuvant therapy, from 17% to 76% (p < 0.001); and increased use of MIS, from 33% to 70% (p < 0.001). Concurrently, median hospital stay decreased (from 7 to 5 days; p < 0.001), as did the rates of grade IIIā€V complications (from 13% to 7%; p < 0.05), surgical site infections (from 24% to 8%; p < 0.001), anastomotic leak (from 11% to 3%; p < 0.05), and positive circumferential resection margin (from 9% to 4%; p < 0.05). TNM downstaging increased from 62% to 74% (p = 0.002). Conclusion: Shifts toward MRIā€based staging, total neoadjuvant therapy, and MIS occurred between 2009 and 2015. Over the same period, treatment responses improved, and lengths of stay and the incidence of complications decreased
    • ā€¦
    corecore