307 research outputs found

    Rotavirus infections and climate variability in Dhaka, Bangladesh: a time-series analysis.

    Get PDF
    Attempts to explain the clear seasonality of rotavirus infections have been made by relating disease incidence to climate factors; however, few studies have disentangled the effects of weather from other factors that might cause seasonality. We investigated the relationships between hospital visits for rotavirus diarrhoea and temperature, humidity and river level, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, using time-series analysis adjusting for other confounding seasonal factors. There was strong evidence for an increase in rotavirus diarrhoea at high temperatures, by 40.2% for each 1 degrees C increase above a threshold (29 degrees C). Relative humidity had a linear inverse relationship with the number of cases of rotavirus diarrhoea. River level, above a threshold (4.8 m), was associated with an increase in cases of rotavirus diarrhoea, by 5.5% per 10-cm river-level rise. Our findings provide evidence that factors associated with high temperature, low humidity and high river-level increase the incidence of rotavirus diarrhoea in Dhaka

    Effect of Strain on Room-Temperature Spin Transport in Siā‚€.ā‚Geā‚€.ā‚‰

    Full text link
    We report a strain effect on spin transport in semiconductors that exhibit Ge-like conduction bands at room temperature. Using four-terminal nonlocal spin-transport measurements in lateral spin-valve devices, we experimentally estimate the spin diffusion length (Ī») of Ge and strained Siā‚€.ā‚Geā‚€.ā‚‰ with two different carrier concentrations. Despite the Ge-like electronic band structure, the obtained Ī» of a strained Siā‚€.ā‚Geā‚€.ā‚‰ is comparable to that of a Si channel. We discuss a possible mechanism of the strain-induced enhancement of Ī» at room temperature. As a consequence, we demonstrate the electrical detection of 5-Ī¼m lateral spin transport in the strained Siā‚€.ā‚Geā‚€.ā‚‰ by applying an electric field at room temperature.T. Naito, M. Yamada, Y. Wagatsuma, K. Sawano, and K. Hamaya, Effect of Strain on Room-Temperature Spin Transport in Siā‚€.ā‚Geā‚€.ā‚‰, Phys. Rev. Applied, 18, 024005

    Genotypic variability in phosphorus solubilizing activity of root exudates by pigeonpea grown in low-nutrient environments

    Get PDF
    A pot experiment confirmed that pigeonpea could efficiently utilize various sources of phosphorus (P) (aluminium phosphate, iron phosphate and apatite), irrespective of genotype. A qualitative assay method for iron (Fe)-P solubilizing activity showed that root exudates collected from P-deficient pigeonpea contained Fe-P solubilizing substances and that they were released mainly from root tips. Citric, malic, malonic, succinic and piscidic acids were identified in root exudates. Citric and piscidic acids release from roots was increased by low-P treatment in all the genotypes tested. The release rates of citric and piscidic acids were affected by the P concentration of shoots rather than that of roots. The pigeonpea roots released approximately 5-100 times more piscidic acid than citric acid depending on P stress status, plant age and genotype. When organic acids were added to Alfisols, citric acid was most capable of mobilizing P from the soil, followed by piscidic acid and malic acid. No correlation was found between genotypic variability in the release rates of citric and piscidic acids from the roots under low-P treatment at hydroponic culture and in the growth and P uptake of plants on Alfisols. Although citric and piscidic acids released from pigeonpea roots may play a partial role in solubilizing unavailable insoluble P in soils, the releases were thought to be an unsatisfactory strategy for explaining genotypic variation in low P availability of pigeonpea

    Significant effect of interfacial spin moments in ferromagnet-semiconductor heterojunctions on spin transport in a semiconductor

    Full text link
    Using controlled ferromagnet (FM) -semiconductor (SC) interfaces in SC-based lateral spin-valve (LSV) devices, we experimentally study the effect of interfacial spin moments in FM-SC heterojunctions on spin transport in SC. First-principles calculations predict that the spin moment of FM-SC junctions can be artificially reduced by inserting 3d transition metal V, Cr, or Cu atomic layers between FM and SC. When all-epitaxial FM-SC Schottky-tunnel contacts with a 0.4-0.5-nm-thick V, Cr, or Cu interfacial layer are formed, we find that the spin signals in FM-SC LSV devices are significantly decreased at 8 K. When we increase the interfacial spin moment by inserting an āˆ¼0.3-nm-thick Co layer between FM and SC, the spin signals at 8 K are significantly enhanced again. From these experiments, we conclude that the interfacial spin moments at FM-SC interfaces are one of the important factors to achieve large spin signals even in SC-based spintronic devices.T. Naito, R. Nishimura, M. Yamada, A. Masago, Y. Shiratsuchi, Y. Wagatsuma, K. Sawano, R. Nakatani, T. Oguchi, and K. Hamaya, Significant effect of interfacial spin moments in ferromagnet-semiconductor heterojunctions on spin transport in a semiconductor, Phys. Rev. B 105, 195308

    Ferroelectric property of an epitaxial lead zirconate titanate thin film deposited by a hydrothermal method

    Get PDF
    Deposition of thin films via hydrothermal method has various advantages: low deposition temperature, high purity, deposition on a three-dimensional structure, and a large thickness. Although an epitaxial lead zirconate titanate (PZT) thin-film deposition has been reported, the ferroelectric measurement has not been conducted due to the peel-off morphology of the film. The current paper investigates the improvement of an epitaxial PZT thin film deposited via a hydrothermal method. By adjusting the position at which the substrate was suspended in the solution, smooth morphology surface was successfully obtained. As a bottom electrode, a 200-nm SrRuO3 thin film was deposited on SrTiO3 single crystals, and the PZT thin film was deposited on SrRuO3. The remanent polarization 2Pr and coercive electric field for PZT on SrRuO3/SrTiO3 (001) were 17.1 muC/cm(2) and 36 kV/cm, respectively, and those of PZT on SrRuO3/SrTiO3 (111) were 32.7 muC/cm(2) and 59 kV/cm, respectively. The reason for large imprint electrical field, 91 kV/cm and 40 kV/cm for each film, was unclear at this stage, although it is associated with self-alignment poling direction. This self-alignment poling direction was confirmed via scanning nonlinear dielectric microscopy and is thought to have been related to the deposition mechanisms

    X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectra of Fe-Cr-N films deposited by DC reactive sputtering

    Get PDF
    The effects of nitrogen flow ratio, target area ratio of Cr, and substrate temperature on the structure of DC reactive sputtered Fe-Cr-N ternary films have been studied. X-ray diffraction measurements show that Fe-Cr-N films consist of alpha-Fe(Cr) and gamma'-(Fe,Cr)(4)N-x (x < 1) phases. The crystal grain of the alpha-Fe(Cr) phase becomes finer and a (200) texture of the gamma'-(Fe,Cr)(4)N-x phase becomes more marked with increasing the nitrogen flow ratio. X-ray photoelectron spectra of the films show that oxidation resistance of Fe-Cr-N films is superior to that of Fe-N films, and oxides are formed only in the film surface due to contacting with the ambient atmosphere and oxygen contamination is very small in the inner parts of these films. (C) 1999 Kluwer Academic Publishers

    Single-tube multiplex PCR using type-specific E6/E7 primers and capillary electrophoresis genotypes 21 human papillomaviruses in neoplasia

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Human papillomavirus (HPV) <it>E6/E7 </it>type-specific oncogenes are required for cervical carcinogenesis. Current PCR protocols for genotyping high-risk HPV in cervical screening are not standardized and usually use consensus primers targeting HPV capsid genes, which are often deleted in neoplasia. PCR fragments are detected using specialized equipment and extra steps, including probe hybridization or primer extension. In published papers, analytical sensitivity is typically compared with a different protocol on the same sample set.</p> <p>A single-tube multiplex PCR containing type-specific primers was developed to target the <it>E6/E7 </it>genes of two low-risk and 19 high-risk genotypes (HPV6, 11 and 16, 18, 26, 31, 33, 35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 53, 56, 58, 59, 66, 68, 70, 73 and 82) and the resulting short fragments were directly genotyped by high-resolution fluorescence capillary electrophoresis.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The method was validated using long oligonucleotide templates, plasmid clones and 207 clinical samples of DNA from liquid-based cytology, fresh and formalin-fixed specimens and FTA Microcards<sup>Ā® </sup>imprinted with cut tumor surfaces, swabbed cervical cancers or ejected aspirates from nodal metastases of head and neck carcinomas. Between one and five long oligonucleotide targets per sample were detected without false calls. Each of the 21 genotypes was detected in the clinical sample set with up to five types simultaneously detected in individual specimens. All 101 significant cervical neoplasias (CIN 2 and above), except one adenocarcinoma, contained <it>E6/E7 </it>genes. The resulting genotype distribution accorded with the national pattern with HPV16 and 18 accounting for 69% of tumors. Rare HPV types 70 and 73 were present as the sole genotype in one carcinoma each. One cervical SCC contained DNA from HPV6 and 11 only. Six of twelve oropharyngeal cancer metastases and three neck metastases of unknown origin bore <it>E6/E7 </it>DNA; all but one were HPV16. One neck aspirate contained atypical squames with HPV26.</p> <p>Analytical sensitivity in dilute plasmid mixes was variable.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>A primer-rich PCR readily detects the <it>E6/E7 </it>oncogenes of 21 HPV types in cellular and fixed tissue specimens. The method is straightforward, robust and reproducible and avoids post-PCR enzymatic and hybridization steps while detecting HPV with high clinical sensitivity in significant HPV-related neoplasia regardless of specimen type.</p
    • ā€¦
    corecore