51 research outputs found
Sensing and Tactile Artificial Muscles from Reactive Materials
Films of conducting polymers can be oxidized and reduced in a reversible way. Any intermediate oxidation state determines an electrochemical equilibrium. Chemical or physical variables acting on the film may modify the equilibrium potential, so that the film acts as a sensor of the variable. The working potential of polypyrrole/DBSA (Dodecylbenzenesulfonic acid) films, oxidized or reduced under constant currents, changes as a function of the working conditions: electrolyte concentration, temperature or mechanical stress. During oxidation, the reactive material is a sensor of the ambient, the consumed electrical energy being the sensing magnitude. Devices based on any of the electrochemical properties of conducting polymers must act simultaneously as sensors of the working conditions. Artificial muscles, as electrochemical actuators constituted by reactive materials, respond to the ambient conditions during actuation. In this way, they can be used as actuators, sensing the surrounding conditions during actuation. Actuating and sensing signals are simultaneously included by the same two connecting wires
Changes in Water Relations, Water Flux, and Root Exudate Abscisic Acid Content With Cold Acclimation of Pinus sylvestris L
The effect of photoperiod and thermoperiod on cold acclimation and growth of <i>Pinus</i><i>sylvestris</i>
Low temperature acclimation and growth of roots and shoots of Scots pine seedlings (Pinussylvestris L.) under long day or short day (SD), and warm temperature or low temperature (LT) treatments were compared. Three methods were used to evaluate shoot injury; measurement of electrolyte leakage, regrowth, and visual microscopic evaluation were also compared to determine their usefulness in root injury evaluation. Visual evaluation was the most accurate and convenient technique for assessing LT root injury. Under all treatments shoots were hardier than roots with maximum hardiness of −40 and −15 °C, respectively, induced by SD/LT treatment. Stems acclimated and ceased growth in response to SD and LT, while only LT induced root acclimation and growth cessation. SD treatment does not induce substantial root cold acclimation and it reduces root growth primarily by limiting the availability of assimilates. White root tips were acclimated to −10 °C and did not affect the cold hardiness of more mature portions of the root. </jats:p
Immunomodulation by herpesvirus U51A chemokine receptor via CCL5 and FOG-2 down-regulation plus XCR1 and CCR7 mimicry in human leukocytes.
Human herpesvirus-6A (HHV-6A) betachemokine-receptor U51A binds inflammatory modulators CCL2, CCL5, CCL11, CCL7, and CCL13. This unique specificity overlaps that of human chemokine receptors CCR1, CCR2, CCR3, and CCR5. In model cell lines, expression leads to CCL5 down-regulation with both constitutive and inducible signaling. Here, immunomodulation pathways are investigated in human leukocytes permissive for infection. Constitutive signaling was shown using inositol phosphate assays and inducible calcium signaling by response to CCL2, CCL5 and CCL11. Constitutive signaling targets were examined using an immune response-related microarray and RT-PCR, showing down-regulation of CCL5 and FOG-2, a hematopoietic transcriptional repressor. By RT-PCR and siRNA reversion, CCL5 and FOG-2 were shown down-regulated, during peak U51A expression post infection. Two further active ligands, XCL1 and CCL19, were identified, making U51A competitor to their human receptors, XCR1 and CCR7, on T lymphocytes, NK and dendritic cells. Finally, U51A-expressing cell lines and infected ex vivo leukocytes, showed migration towards chemokine-gradients, and chemokine internalization. Consequently, U51A may affect virus dissemination or host transmission by chemotaxis of infected cells to sites of chemokine secretion specific for U51A (for example the lymph node or lung, by CCL19 or CCL11, respectively) and evade immune-effector cells by chemokine diversion and down-regulation, affecting virus spread and inflammatory pathology
Nuclear gene phylogeography reveals the historical legacy of an ancient inland sea on lineages of the western pond turtle, Emys marmorata
Effects of soil frost on soil respiration and its radiocarbon signature in a Norway spruce forest soil
Effect of photoperiod and temperature on the development of frost hardiness in three Alnus species
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