148 research outputs found

    Optically-selective window coatings of precious metal nanoparticles

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    University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Science.Energy-efficient window coatings limit the transfer of energy from one side of a window to the other. Their use has the potential to significantly reduce the electrical energy consumed by air conditioning, heating and lighting the interior space of a building. In particular, the use of spectrally selective coatings allows for more control over both the internal climate, the colour of the transmitted light, and the overall energy efficiency of the window coating. Gold nanoparticles, especially the optically anisotropic gold nanorods, offer a uniquely stable and long lasting solution to obtaining tuneable absorption of electromagnetic radiation for a wide range of potential applications. In this thesis the potential of gold nanorods as a spectrally selective coating for window glass is examined, the possible means of securing the nanorods to the glass are explored and their effectiveness as an optical coating compared to current commercially available coatings of similar design. The optical properties of these nanorods and some other shapes with potentially interesting properties are computationally modelled and are compared to the properties of samples fabricated using electron beam lithography and to samples made by wet chemistry. The work shows that gold nanostructures could serve as the basis for a new generation of spectrally-selective coatings for architectural glass. Chapter 1 of this thesis reviews the fabrication, optical properties and potential applications of gold nanostructures. The fabrication methods reviewed include reported lithographic procedures as well as wet chemical techniques for the formation of gold nanostructures. The optical properties of the gold nanostructures are examined, and the phenomenon of surface plasmon resonance is analysed. Some potential applications for the optical properties of gold nanostructures are explored, and an appraisal is made of window glazing technologies including their operating mechanism. Also, the advantages of the various technologies are reviewed. In Chapter 2, computational modelling of the optical properties of gold nanoparticles of rod, X and V shapes is carried out. The study shows the surface plasmon resonances of the gold nanoparticles are influenced by the dimensions, spacings and angles of the structures. The polarisation of the incoming light also affects the optical extinction properties of the investigated nanoparticles. When the structures are aligned in a 1D array, the main surface plasmon resonance peaks are red-shifted compared to the isolated structure. An analysis of the electric field intensity as a function of distance from the structure is conducted to determine the potential use of these structures as an amplifier for two-photon fluorescence. Chapter 3 explores the electron beam lithography fabrication process, including an examination of the effects of different substrates, chamber pressure, deposition parameters, dose characteristics and post-exposure processes. Due to the reduction in exposure time for conducting glass over insulating glass, further experimentation is conducted with a transparent conducting glass substrate. The formation of large arrays of high quality gold nanostructures is achieved through the comprehensive investigation of deposition conditions and in particular the addition of a short burst of plasma cleaning after the development step. Sufficient areas for rod and X arrays are fabricated to enable the measurement of the optical properties. The optical properties of the electron beam lithographically fabricated structures are addressed in Chapter 4. A comparison is undertaken between the measured optical properties from structures produced in Chapter 3 to the modelled structures investigated in Chapter 2. Surface plasmon resonance peaks are found on each gold nanostructured sample investigated. However, the optical properties of a single layer of gold nanostructures are insufficient to produce an effective window coating. Chapter 5 investigates the attachment of gold nanorods onto glass through an application of a molecular binding layer and immersion of the nanorods into a polymer. The use of 3-mercaptopropyltrimethoxysilane to bind gold to glass is found to increase the amount of gold nanorods attaching to glass compared to samples without the binding molecule. However, the immersion of gold nanorods into a polymer layer is found to have the most potential for use as a window coating, as careful control over the gold nanorod concentration could be used to adjust the required optical properties. Mixtures of different aspect ratio gold nanorods combine the different longitudinal plasmon resonances to absorb light over a larger spectral range. Control over the aspect ratio of the nanorods included in the film, ensured control over optical properties. The optical transmission properties of the large area films of gold nanorod mixtures provided superior window transmission properties in the spectral range 700 – 900 nm compared to a currently commercially available solar laminate window coating. In Chapter 6 the effect of an electric field on gold nanorods in solution is investigated. Prior reports suggested that the gold nanorods could be aligned under the influence of an AC electric field. No alignment was observed here for wet-chemically produced gold nanorods, with a CTAB stabiliser, when under the influence of an AC or DC electric field. A DC electric field of sufficient strength is found to strip the gold nanorods of the CTAB stabilising agent, which results in gold depositing on the positive electrode. The final chapter of this thesis, Chapter 7, summarises the work presented and highlights the significant conclusions. It also outlines some directions for possible further research built on and extending from the work presented here

    Spectrally selective coatings of gold nanorods on architectural glass

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    Infrared-blocking coatings on window glass can be produced by dispersing gold nanorods into a polymer coating. The spectral selectivity of the coating is controlled by the shape and aspect ratio of the nanoparticles, which are in turn determined by the conditions applied during their synthesis. Coatings of nanorods in polyvinyl alcohol were deposited onto glass and characterized in both laboratory and sun-lit conditions. Selective attenuation of the near-infrared was demonstrated with the test panels transmitting approximately one-third of the incident solar radiation and absorbing nearly two-thirds. The high absorptive cross sections of the gold nanorods suggest that they can be applied in efficacious coatings at relatively low volume fractions. Β© 2010 Springer Science+Business Media B.V

    On the experimental intradiscal pressure measurement techniques : a review

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    Series : Mechanisms and machine science, ISSN 2211-0984, vol. 24The intradiscal pressure has been essential for prevent the spinal complaints by forming a basis for clinical advice to promote the correct sitting postures. As a consequence, it is evident the need of an accurate method for measure the intradiscal pressure, to better understand the disc response to hydorstatic pressure fluctuations. Numerous reviews regarding disc mechanics are available, including intradiscal pressure benchmarks; however, an analysis on the techniques of intradiscal pressure measurement is needed. Therefore, this review will remain focused on the methodologies adopted for measure the intradiscal pressure in several conditions: for different daily activities, under external loads and for values where occurs annulus fibrosus disruption. The importance of the intradiscal pressure on disc function will be discussed as well as the some guidelines for design new measurement techniques will be defined

    Increased renal sodium absorption by inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis during fasting in healthy man. A possible role of the epithelial sodium channels

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Treatment with prostaglandin inhibitors can reduce renal function and impair renal water and sodium excretion. We tested the hypotheses that a reduction in prostaglandin synthesis by ibuprofen treatment during fasting decreased renal water and sodium excretion by increased absorption of water and sodium via the aquaporin2 water channels and the epithelial sodium channels.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The effect of ibuprofen, 600 mg thrice daily, was measured during fasting in a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded crossover study of 17 healthy humans. The subjects received a standardized diet on day 1, fasted at day 2, and received an IV infusion of 3% NaCl on day 3. The effect variables were urinary excretions of aquaporin2 (u-AQP2), the beta-fraction of the epithelial sodium channel (u-ENaCbeta), cyclic-AMP (u-cAMP), prostaglandin E2 (u-PGE2). Free water clearance (CH2O), fractional excretion of sodium (FENa), and plasma concentrations of vasopressin, angiotensin II, aldosterone, atrial-, and brain natriuretic peptide.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Ibuprofen decreased u-AQP2, u-PGE2, and FENa at all parts of the study. During the same time, ibuprofen significantly increased u-ENaCbeta. Ibuprofen did not change the response in p-AVP, u-c-AMP, urinary output, and free water clearance during any of these periods. Atrial-and brain natriuretic peptide were higher.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>During inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis, urinary sodium excretion decreased in parallel with an increase in sodium absorption and increase in u-ENaCbeta. U-AQP2 decreased indicating that water transport via AQP2 fell. The vasopressin-c-AMP-axis did not mediate this effect, but it may be a consequence of the changes in the natriuretic peptide system and/or the angiotensin-aldosterone system</p> <p>Trial Registration</p> <p>Clinical Trials Identifier: NCT00281762</p

    Reduced Exercise Tolerance and Pulmonary Capillary Recruitment with Remote Secondhand Smoke Exposure

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    RATIONALE: Flight attendants who worked on commercial aircraft before the smoking ban in flights (pre-ban FAs) were exposed to high levels of secondhand smoke (SHS). We previously showed never-smoking pre-ban FAs to have reduced diffusing capacity (Dco) at rest. METHODS: To determine whether pre-ban FAs increase their Dco and pulmonary blood flow (Qc) during exercise, we administered a symptom-limited supine-posture progressively increasing cycle exercise test to determine the maximum work (watts) and oxygen uptake (VO2) achieved by FAs. After 30 min rest, we then measured Dco and Qc at 20, 40, 60, and 80 percent of maximum observed work. RESULTS: The FAs with abnormal resting Dco achieved a lower level of maximum predicted work and VO2 compared to those with normal resting Dco (meanΒ±SEM; 88.7Β±2.9 vs. 102.5Β±3.1%predicted VO2; pβ€Š=β€Š0.001). Exercise limitation was associated with the FAs' FEV(1) (rβ€Š=β€Š0.33; pβ€Š=β€Š0.003). The Dco increased less with exercise in those with abnormal resting Dco (meanΒ±SEM: 1.36Β±0.16 vs. 1.90Β±0.16 ml/min/mmHg per 20% increase in predicted watts; pβ€Š=β€Š0.020), and amongst all FAs, the increase with exercise seemed to be incrementally lower in those with lower resting Dco. Exercise-induced increase in Qc was not different in the two groups. However, the FAs with abnormal resting Dco had less augmentation of their Dco with increase in Qc during exercise (meanΒ±SEM: 0.93Β±0.06 vs. 1.47Β±0.09 ml/min/mmHg per L/min; p<0.0001). The Dco during exercise was inversely associated with years of exposure to SHS in those FAs with β‰₯10 years of pre-ban experience (rβ€Š=β€Š-0.32; pβ€Š=β€Š0.032). CONCLUSIONS: This cohort of never-smoking FAs with SHS exposure showed exercise limitation based on their resting Dco. Those with lower resting Dco had reduced pulmonary capillary recruitment. Exposure to SHS in the aircraft cabin seemed to be a predictor for lower Dco during exercise

    The Role of Interleukin-1 and Interleukin-18 in Pro-Inflammatory and Anti-Viral Responses to Rhinovirus in Primary Bronchial Epithelial Cells

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    Human Rhinovirus (HRV) is associated with acute exacerbations of chronic respiratory disease. In healthy individuals, innate viral recognition pathways trigger release of molecules with direct anti-viral activities and pro-inflammatory mediators which recruit immune cells to support viral clearance. Interleukin-1alpha (IL-1Ξ±), interleukin-1beta (IL-1Ξ²) and interleukin-18 (IL-18) have critical roles in the establishment of neutrophilic inflammation, which is commonly seen in airways viral infection and thought to be detrimental in respiratory disease. We therefore investigated the roles of these molecules in HRV infection of primary human epithelial cells. We found that all three cytokines were released from infected epithelia. Release of these cytokines was not dependent on cell death, and only IL-1Ξ² and IL-18 release was dependent on caspase-1 catalytic activity. Blockade of IL-1 but not IL-18 signaling inhibited up-regulation of pro-inflammatory mediators and neutrophil chemoattractants but had no effect on virus induced production of interferons and interferon-inducible genes, measured at both mRNA and protein level. Similar level of virus mRNA was detected with and without IL-1RI blockade. Hence IL-1 signaling, potentially involving both IL-1Ξ² and IL-1Ξ±, downstream of viral recognition plays a key role in induction of pro-inflammatory signals and potentially in recruitment and activation of immune cells in response to viral infection instigated by the epithelial cells, whilst not participating in direct anti-viral responses

    Crystal Structure of an Integron Gene Cassette-Associated Protein from Vibrio cholerae Identifies a Cationic Drug-Binding Module

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    Background The direct isolation of integron gene cassettes from cultivated and environmental microbial sources allows an assessment of the impact of the integron/gene cassette system on the emergence of new phenotypes, such as drug resistance or virulence. A structural approach is being exploited to investigate the modularity and function of novel integron gene cassettes. Methodology/Principal Findings We report the 1.8 A crystal structure of Cass2, an integron-associated protein derived from an environmental V. cholerae. The structure defines a monomeric beta-barrel protein with a fold related to the effector-binding portion of AraC/XylS transcription activators. The closest homologs of Cass2 are multi-drug binding proteins, such as BmrR. Consistent with this, a binding pocket made up of hydrophobic residues and a single glutamate side chain is evident in Cass2, occupied in the crystal form by polyethylene glycol. Fluorescence assays demonstrate that Cass2 is capable of binding cationic drug compounds with submicromolar affinity. The Cass2 module possesses a protein interaction surface proximal to its drug-binding cavity with features homologous to those seen in multi-domain transcriptional regulators. Conclusions/Significance Genetic analysis identifies Cass2 to be representative of a larger family of independent effector-binding proteins associated with lateral gene transfer within Vibrio and closely-related species. We propose that the Cass2 family not only has capacity to form functional transcription regulator complexes, but represents possible evolutionary precursors to multi-domain regulators associated with cationic drug compounds.National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia) (NHMRC grant 488502)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant GM62414-0 )Ontario. Ministry of Revenue (Challenge Fund

    A Stochastic Description of Dictyostelium Chemotaxis

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    Chemotaxis, the directed motion of a cell toward a chemical source, plays a key role in many essential biological processes. Here, we derive a statistical model that quantitatively describes the chemotactic motion of eukaryotic cells in a chemical gradient. Our model is based on observations of the chemotactic motion of the social ameba Dictyostelium discoideum, a model organism for eukaryotic chemotaxis. A large number of cell trajectories in stationary, linear chemoattractant gradients is measured, using microfluidic tools in combination with automated cell tracking. We describe the directional motion as the interplay between deterministic and stochastic contributions based on a Langevin equation. The functional form of this equation is directly extracted from experimental data by angle-resolved conditional averages. It contains quadratic deterministic damping and multiplicative noise. In the presence of an external gradient, the deterministic part shows a clear angular dependence that takes the form of a force pointing in gradient direction. With increasing gradient steepness, this force passes through a maximum that coincides with maxima in both speed and directionality of the cells. The stochastic part, on the other hand, does not depend on the orientation of the directional cue and remains independent of the gradient magnitude. Numerical simulations of our probabilistic model yield quantitative agreement with the experimental distribution functions. Thus our model captures well the dynamics of chemotactic cells and can serve to quantify differences and similarities of different chemotactic eukaryotes. Finally, on the basis of our model, we can characterize the heterogeneity within a population of chemotactic cells

    Vasopressin V2R-Targeting Peptide Carrier Mediates siRNA Delivery into Collecting Duct Cells

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    Internalization of receptor proteins after interacting with specific ligands has been proposed to facilitate siRNA delivery into the target cells via receptor-mediated siRNA transduction. In this study, we demonstrated a novel method of vasopressin V2 receptor (V2R)-mediated siRNA delivery against AQP2 in primary cultured inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) cells of rat kidney. We synthesized the dDAVP conjugated with nine D-arginines (dDAVP-9r) as a peptide carrier for siRNA delivery. The structure of synthetic peptide carrier showed two regions (i.e., ligand domain to V2R (dDAVP) and siRNA carrying domain (nine D-arginine)) bisected with a spacer of four glycines. The results revealed that 1) synthesized dDAVP-9r peptides formed a stable polyplex with siRNA; 2) siRNA/dDAVP-9r polyplex could bind to the V2R of IMCD cells and induced AQP2 phosphorylation (Ser 256); 3) siRNA/dDAVP-9r polyplex was stable in response to the wide range of different osmolalities, pH levels, or to the RNases; 4) fluorescein-labeled siRNA was delivered into V2R-expressing MDCK and LLC-PK1 cells by siRNA/dDAVP-9r polyplex, but not into the V2R-negative Cos-7 cells; and 5) AQP2-siRNA/dDAVP-9r polyplex effectively delivered siRNA into the IMCD cells, resulting in the significant decrease of protein abundance of AQP2, but not AQP4. Therefore, for the first time to our knowledge, we demonstrated that V2R-mediated siRNA delivery could be exploited to deliver specific siRNA to regulate abnormal expression of target proteins in V2R-expressing kidney cells. The methods could be potentially used in vivo to regulate abnormal expression of proteins associated with disease conditions in the V2R-expressing kidney cells

    CD44 Expression in Oro-Pharyngeal Carcinoma Tissues and Cell Lines

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    Expression of CD44, a transmembrane hyaluronan-binding glycoprotein, is variably considered to have prognostic significance for different cancers, including oral squamous cell carcinoma. Although unclear at present, tissue-specific expression of particular isoforms of CD44 might underlie the different outcomes in currently available studies. We mined public transcriptomics databases for gene expression data on CD44, and analyzed normal, immortalized and tumour-derived human cell lines for splice variants of CD44 at both the transcript and protein levels. Bioinformatics readouts, from a total of more than 15,000 analyses, implied an increased CD44 expression in head and neck cancer, including increased expression levels relative to many normal and tumor tissue types. Also, meta-analysis of over 260 cell lines and over 4,000 tissue specimens of diverse origins indicated lower CD44 expression levels in cell lines compared to tissue. With minor exceptions, reverse transcribed polymerase chain reaction identified expression of the four main isoforms of CD44 in normal oral keratinocytes, transformed lines termed DT and HaCaT, and a series of paired primary and metastasis-derived cell lines from oral or pharyngeal carcinomas termed HN4/HN12, HN22/HN8 and HN30/HN31. Immunocytochemistry, Western blotting and flow cytometric assessments all confirmed the isoform expression pattern at the protein level. Overall, bioinformatic processing of large numbers of global gene expression analyses demonstrated elevated CD44 expression in head and neck cancer relative to other cancer types, and that the application of standard cell culture protocols might decrease CD44 expression. Additionally, the results show that the many variant CD44 exons are not fundamentally deregulated in a diverse range of cultured normal and transformed keratinocyte lines
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