15 research outputs found
The nature of iron-oxygen vacancy defect centers in PbTiO3
The iron(III) center in ferroelectric PbTiO3 together with an oxygen vacancy
forms a charged defect associate, oriented along the crystallographic c-axis.
Its microscopic structure has been analyzed in detail comparing results from a
semi-empirical Newman superposition model analysis based on finestructure data
and from calculations using density functional theory.
Both methods give evidence for a substitution of Fe3+ for Ti4+ as an acceptor
center. The position of the iron ion in the ferroelectric phase is found to be
similar to the B-site in the paraelectric phase. Partial charge compensation is
locally provided by a directly coordinated oxygen vacancy.
Using high-resolution synchrotron powder diffraction, it was verified that
lead titanate remains tetragonal down to 12 K, exhibiting a c/a-ratio of
1.0721.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted in Phys. Rev.
Klinische Bedeutung der Röntgenkontrolle 4 Wochen nach TEN Osteosynthese bei Unterarmschaftfrakturen im Kindes- und Wachstumsalter
A new cost-effective method to mitigate ammonia loss from intensive cattle feedlots: application of lignite
Effects of vegetative heterogeneity and patch-scale harvest on energy balance closure and flux measurements
Calnexin overexpression sensitizes recombinant CHO cells to apoptosis induced by sodium butyrate treatment
Sodium butyrate (NaBu) can enhance the expression of foreign genes in recombinant Chinese hamster ovary (rCHO) cells, but it can also inhibit cell growth and induce cellular apoptosis. In this study, the potential role of calnexin (Cnx) expression in rCHO cells treated with 5 mM NaBu was investigated for rCHO cells producing tumor necrosis factor receptor FC. To regulate the Cnx expression level, a tetracycline-inducible system was used. Clones with different Cnx expression levels were selected and investigated. With regard to productivity per cell (qp), NaBu enhanced the qp by over twofold. Under NaBu treatment, Cnx overexpression further enhanced the qp by about 1.7-fold. However, under NaBu stress, the cells overexpressing Cnx showed a poorer viability profile with a consistent difference of over 25% in the viability when compared to the Cnx-repressed condition. This drop in the viability was attributed to increased apoptosis seen in these cells as evidenced by enhanced poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and cytochrome C release. Ca2+ localization staining and subsequent confocal imaging revealed elevated cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]c) in the Cnx-overexpressing cells when compared to the Cnx-repressed condition, thus endorsing the increased apoptosis observed in these cells. Taken together, Cnx overexpression not only improved the qp of cells treated with NaBu, but it also sensitized cells to apoptosis