956 research outputs found
Microsurgical Technique of Simultaneous Pancreas/Kidney Transplantation in the Rat: Clinical Experience and Review of the Literature
Background: For experimental basic research, standardized transplantation models reflecting technical and immunologic aspects are necessary. This article describes an experimental model of combined pancreas/kidney transplantation (PKTx) in detail. Materials and Methods: Donor rats underwent en bloc pancreatectomy and nephrectomy. Revascularization was performed using the aorta with the superior mesenteric artery and the inferior vena cava with the portal vein. Exocrine drainage of the pancreas took place over a segment of the duodenum which was transplanted side-to-side to the jejunum. The kidney vessels were transplanted end-to-side. The ureter was anastomosed by patch technique. Postoperatively, serum parameters were monitored daily. Biopsies for histopathology were taken on days 5, 8 and 12. Results: All 12 recipients survived the combined PKTx without serious surgical complications. One thrombosis of the portal vein led to organ failure. Blood glucose levels were normal by the 3rd postoperative day. The transplanted duodenal segment showed slight villous atrophy, and the kidneys were well perfused without vascular complications. The anastomosis between ureter and bladder was leakproof. Conclusions: Excellent graft function and survival rates can be achieved due to simplified operation technique and short operation time. It may thus have high clinical relevance to immunologic issues within the scope of basic research. Copyright (C) 2009 S. Karger AG, Base
Thermoelectric cross-plane properties on p- and n-Ge/SixGe1-x superlattices
Silicon and germanium materials have demonstrated an increasing attraction for energy harvesting, due to their sustainability and integrability with complementary metal oxide semiconductor and micro-electro-mechanical-system technology. The thermoelectric efficiencies for these materials, however, are very poor at room temperature and so it is necessary to engineer them in order to compete with telluride based materials, which have demonstrated at room temperature the highest performances in literature [1].
Micro-fabricated devices consisting of mesa structures with integrated heaters, thermometers and Ohmic contacts were used to extract the cross-plane values of the Seebeck coefficient and the thermal conductivity from p- and n-Ge/SixGe1-x superlattices. A second device consisting in a modified circular transfer line method structure was used to extract the electrical conductivity of the materials. A range of p-Ge/Si0.5Ge0.5 superlattices with different doping levels was investigated in detail to determine the role of the doping density in dictating the thermoelectric properties. A second set of n-Ge/Si0.3Ge0.7 superlattices was fabricated to study the impact that quantum well thickness might have on the two thermoelectric figures of merit, and also to demonstrate a further reduction of the thermal conductivity by scattering phonons at different wavelengths. This technique has demonstrated to lower the thermal conductivity by a 25% by adding different barrier thicknesses per period
Dependence of Dust Formation on the Supernova Explosion
We investigate the properties, composition, and dynamics of dust formation
and growth for a diverse set of core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe), varying the
progenitor mass, explosion energy, and engine type. These explosions are
evolved with a 1-D Lagrangian hydrodynamics code out to several hundred days to
model the ejecta as it expands and cools. A multigrain dust nucleation and
growth model is applied to these results. We find that higher explosion
energies lead to an earlier onset of dust formation, smaller grain sizes, and
larger silicate abundances. Further, we see that nuclear burning during the
explosion leads to enhanced formation of silicate dust. Finally, we build
composite models from our suite to predict the efficiency of CCSNe dust
production as a function of metallicity.Comment: 30 pages (incl. Appendix), 12 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to ApJ.
Comments are welcom
Temporal fluctuations in excimer-like interactions between pi-conjugated chromophores
Inter- or intramolecular coupling processes between chromophores such as
excimer formation or H- and J-aggregation are crucial to describing the
photophysics of closely packed films of conjugated polymers. Such coupling is
highly distance dependent, and should be sensitive to both fluctuations in the
spacing between chromophores as well as the actual position on the chromophore
where the exciton localizes. Single-molecule spectroscopy reveals these
intrinsic fluctuations in well-defined bi-chromophoric model systems of
cofacial oligomers. Signatures of interchromophoric interactions in the excited
state - spectral red-shifting and broadening, and a slowing of
photoluminescence decay - correlate with each other but scatter strongly
between single molecules, implying an extraordinary distribution in coupling
strengths. Furthermore, these excimer-like spectral fingerprints vary with
time, revealing intrinsic dynamics in the coupling strength within one single
dimer molecule, which constitutes the starting point for describing a molecular
solid. Such spectral sensitivity to sub-Angstrom molecular dynamics could prove
complementary to conventional FRET-based molecular rulers
Immunotherapeutic targeting of membrane Hsp70-expressing tumors using recombinant human granzyme B
Background: We have previously reported that human recombinant granzyme B (grB) mediates apoptosis in membrane heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70)-positive tumor cells in a perforin-independent manner
Glutathione deficiency down-regulates hepatic lipogenesis in rats
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Oxidative stress is supposed to increase lipid accumulation by stimulation of hepatic lipogenesis at transcriptional level. This study was performed to investigate the role of glutathione in the regulation of this process. For that purpose, male rats were treated with buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), a specific inhibitor of γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase, for 7 days and compared with untreated control rats.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>BSO treatment caused a significant reduction of total glutathione in liver (-70%), which was attributable to diminished levels of reduced glutathione (GSH, -71%). Glutathione-deficient rats had lower triglyceride concentrations in their livers than the control rats (-23%), whereas the circulating triglycerides and the cholesterol concentrations in plasma and liver were not different between the two groups of rats. Livers of glutathione-deficient rats had lower mRNA abundance of sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SREBP)-1c (-47%), Spot (S)14 (-29%) and diacylglycerol acyltransferase 2 (DGAT-2, -27%) and a lower enzyme activity of fatty acid synthase (FAS, -26%) than livers of the control rats. Glutathione-deficient rats had also a lower hepatic activity of the redox-sensitive protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)1B, and a higher concentration of irreversible oxidized PTP1B than control rats. No differences were observed in protein expression of total PTP1B and the mature mRNA encoding active XBP1s, a key regulator of unfolded protein and ER stress response.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This study shows that glutathione deficiency lowers hepatic triglyceride concentrations via influencing lipogenesis. The reduced activity of PTP1B and the higher concentration of irreversible oxidized PTP1B could be, at least in part, responsible for this effect.</p
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