3,111 research outputs found
Preliminary study of kaonic deuterium X-rays by the SIDDHARTA experiment at DAFNE
The study of the KbarN system at very low energies plays a key role for the
understanding of the strong interaction between hadrons in the strangeness
sector. At the DAFNE electron-positron collider of Laboratori Nazionali di
Frascati we studied kaonic atoms with Z=1 and Z=2, taking advantage of the
low-energy charged kaons from Phi-mesons decaying nearly at rest. The SIDDHARTA
experiment used X-ray spectroscopy of the kaonic atoms to determine the
transition yields and the strong interaction induced shift and width of the
lowest experimentally accessible level (1s for H and D and 2p for He). Shift
and width are connected to the real and imaginary part of the scattering
length. To disentangle the isospin dependent scattering lengths of the
antikaon-nucleon interaction, measurements of Kp and of Kd are needed. We
report here on an exploratory deuterium measurement, from which a limit for the
yield of the K-series transitions was derived: Y(K_tot)<0.0143 and
Y(K_alpha)<0.0039 (CL 90%). Also, the upcoming SIDDHARTA-2 kaonic deuterium
experiment is introduced.Comment: Accepted by Nuclear Physics
X-ray transition yields of low-Z kaonic atoms produced in Kapton
The X-ray transition yields of kaonic atoms produced in Kapton polyimide
(C22H10N2O5) were measured for the first time in the SIDDHARTA experiment.
X-ray yields of the kaonic atoms with low atomic numbers (Z = 6, 7, and 8) and
transitions with high principal quantum numbers (n = 5-8) were determined. The
relative yield ratios of the successive transitions and those of
carbon-to-nitrogen (C:N) and carbon-to-oxygen (C:O) were also determined. These
X-ray yields provide important information for understanding the capture ratios
and cascade mechanisms of kaonic atoms produced in a compound material, such as
Kapton.Comment: Accepted in Nucl. Phys. A (2013
First measurement of kaonic helium-3 X-rays
The first observation of the kaonic 3He 3d - 2p transition was made using
slow K- mesons stopped in a gaseous 3He target. The kaonic atom X-rays were
detected with large-area silicon drift detectors using the timing information
of the K+K- pairs of phi-meson decays produced by the DAFNE e+e- collider. The
strong interaction shift of the kaonic 3He 2p state was determined to be -2+-2
(stat)+-4 (syst) eV.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Lett.
A New Measurement of Kaonic Hydrogen X rays
The system at threshold is a sensitive testing ground for low
energy QCD, especially for the explicit chiral symmetry breaking. Therefore, we
have measured the -series x rays of kaonic hydrogen atoms at the DANE
electron-positron collider of Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati, and have
determined the most precise values of the strong-interaction energy-level shift
and width of the atomic state. As x-ray detectors, we used large-area
silicon drift detectors having excellent energy and timing resolution, which
were developed especially for the SIDDHARTA experiment. The shift and width
were determined to be eV and
eV, respectively. The new
values will provide vital constraints on the theoretical description of the
low-energy interaction.Comment: 5 figures, submitted to Physics Letters
Removal of xenoantigenic glycosylation patterns from porcine pulmonary heart valve matrices is dependent of the applied decellularization method
Department of Cardiac-, Thoracic-, Transplantation and Vascular Surgery, Hannover Medical School,
Hannover Germany and Leibniz Research Laboratories for Biotechnology and Artificial Organs
(LEBAO), Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany, The 6th International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors, May 12-14, 2016Introduction: Matrix guided tissue regeneration (GTR) based on allogeneic decellularized
matrices has been shown as an overall convincing method for heart valve replacement. Nevertheless, a
substantial donor shortage prevents an unlimited clinical application of human GTR-valves. Utilization
of porcine decellularized heart valve matrices could offer a possible solution for overcoming this
considerable limitation. In the past, implantation of xenogeneic valve tissues considered to be acellularinto human recipients, however, mostly lead to severe immune responses usually ending up into graft
rejection. This study addresses the question whether potential xenoantigenic glycosylation of
extracellular matrix components, like the major xenoantigen α-Gal, which served as model epitope for
this study, can be removed by adjusted decellularization procedures.
Materials and methods: Fresh porcine pulmonary heart valve conduits were decellularized by
application of different detergent- and enzyme-based decellularization protocols. Subsequent cleavage
of remaining matrix-related α-Gal epitopes was performed by enzymatic deglycosylation treatment on
matrix samples of each decellularization group. Resulting tissues, mainly composed from insoluble
extracellular matrix proteins, were afterwards divided into the relevant sections pulmonary artery wall
specimens and pulmonary valve leaflets, frozen in liquid nitrogen, minced and finally solubilized by
protease digestion. Evaluation of thus prepared solutions regarding to α-Gal contents was finally
performed using a novel designed lectin-based immunoblot technique.
Discussion results: Sole decellularization lead to significant removal of α-Gal, substantial
varying in strong dependency to applied protocols between 30 to 50% compared to α-Gal contents of
porcine native control tissues. An additional decrease of residual α-Gal in a range of another 15 to 30%
was achievable by additional α-Galactosidase treatment. Combining decellularization and subsequent
enzymatic digestion resulted in reductions of matrix related α-Gal contents down to levels, which could
be measured for respective pulmonary valve tissues of α-Gal-KnockOut pigs.
Conclusion: Residual xenoantigenic carbohydrates are detectable on insoluble matrix
components of porcine pulmonary heart valves, substantially varying dependent on applied
decellularization protocols. Combined with glycolytic digestions, remaining glycosylation contents are
reducible to background levels. Impacts of these novel insights have to be evaluated in further in vitro
as well as in vivo studies
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