1,694 research outputs found

    Detection and characterization of local inverted repeats regularities

    Get PDF
    To explore the inverted repeats regularities along the genome sequences, we propose a sliding window method to extract the concentration scores of inverted repeats periodic regularities and the total mass of possible inverted repeats pairs. We apply the method to the human genome and locate the regions with the potential for the formation of large number of hairpin/cruciform structures. The number of found windows with periodic regularities is small and the patterns of occurrence are chromosome specific.publishe

    Superconductivity in Cu_xTiSe_2

    Full text link
    Charge density waves (CDWs) are periodic modulations of the conduction electron density in solids. They are collective states that arise from intrinsic instabilities often present in low dimensional electronic systems. The layered dichalcogenides are the most well-studied examples, with TiSe_2 one of the first CDW-bearing materials known. The competition between CDW and superconducting collective electronic states at low temperatures has long been held and explored, and yet no chemical system has been previously reported where finely controlled chemical tuning allows this competition to be studied in detail. Here we report how, upon controlled intercalation of TiSe_2 with Cu to yield Cu_xTiSe_2, the CDW transition is continuously suppressed, and a new superconducting state emerges near x = 0.04, with a maximum T_c of 4.15 K found at x = 0.08. Cu_xTiSe_2 thus provides the first opportunity to study the CDW to Superconductivity transition in detail through an easily-controllable chemical parameter, and will provide new insights into the behavior of correlated electron systems.Comment: Accepted to Nature Physic

    Emergent Properties of Tumor Microenvironment in a Real-life Model of Multicell Tumor Spheroids

    Get PDF
    Multicellular tumor spheroids are an important {\it in vitro} model of the pre-vascular phase of solid tumors, for sizes well below the diagnostic limit: therefore a biophysical model of spheroids has the ability to shed light on the internal workings and organization of tumors at a critical phase of their development. To this end, we have developed a computer program that integrates the behavior of individual cells and their interactions with other cells and the surrounding environment. It is based on a quantitative description of metabolism, growth, proliferation and death of single tumor cells, and on equations that model biochemical and mechanical cell-cell and cell-environment interactions. The program reproduces existing experimental data on spheroids, and yields unique views of their microenvironment. Simulations show complex internal flows and motions of nutrients, metabolites and cells, that are otherwise unobservable with current experimental techniques, and give novel clues on tumor development and strong hints for future therapies.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in PLOS One. The published version contains links to a supplementary text and three video file

    Revolutionizing heat recovery in shell-and-tube latent heat storage systems: an arc-shaped fin approach

    Get PDF
    Strengthening the thermal response of Phase-Change Materials (PCMs) is an essential and active field of research with promising potential for advanced applications such as solar energy storage, building energy conservation, and thermal management in electronic devices. This article evaluates the efficacy of a new arc-shaped fin array in shell-and-tube heat storage systems to enhance the PCM response during the discharge mode. Different fin geometric parameters including the fin curvature angle, the fin spacing, and the nonuniform angle between fins in the top and bottom sections of the PCM domain were considered to identify the best-performing layout. The analysis shows that increasing the curvature of arc-shaped fins between 60° and 180° and increasing the fin spacing between 5 and 15 mm can significantly reduce solidifying time and improve heat recovery rates. Moreover, the arc-shaped fins are more efficient than conventional longitudinal (+-shaped) fins, which are commonly employed in thermal energy storage applications. Arc-shaped fins can also save discharge time by more than half and improve the rate of heat recovery by almost four times than that of + -shaped fins. The present findings suggest that arc-shaped fins represent a promising design for enhancing the heat-recovery aspects in PCM-based energy storage systems

    Re-expression of ARHI (DIRAS3) induces autophagy in breast cancer cells and enhances the inhibitory effect of paclitaxel

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p><it>ARHI </it>is a Ras-related imprinted gene that inhibits cancer cell growth and motility. ARHI is downregulated in the majority of breast cancers, and loss of its expression is associated with its progression from ductal carcinoma <it>in situ </it>(DCIS) to invasive disease. In ovarian cancer, re-expression of ARHI induces autophagy and leads to autophagic death in cell culture; however, ARHI re-expression enables ovarian cancer cells to remain dormant when they are grown in mice as xenografts. The purpose of this study is to examine whether ARHI induces autophagy in breast cancer cells and to evaluate the effects of ARHI gene re-expression in combination with paclitaxel.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Re-expression of ARHI was achieved by transfection, by treatment with trichostatin A (TSA) or by a combination of TSA and 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (DAC) in breast cancer cell cultures and by liposomal delivery of ARHI in breast tumor xenografts.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>ARHI re-expression induces autophagy in breast cancer cells, and ARHI is essential for the induction of autophagy. When ARHI was re-expressed in breast cancer cells treated with paclitaxel, the growth inhibitory effect of paclitaxel was enhanced in both the cell culture and the xenografts. Although paclitaxel alone did not induce autophagy in breast cancer cells, it enhanced ARHI-induced autophagy. Conversely, ARHI re-expression promoted paclitaxel-induced apoptosis and G2/M cell cycle arrest.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>ARHI re-expression induces autophagic cell death in breast cancer cells and enhances the inhibitory effects of paclitaxel by promoting autophagy, apoptosis, and G2/M cell cycle arrest.</p

    Risk-taking in disorders of natural and drug rewards: neural correlates and effects of probability, valence, and magnitude.

    Get PDF
    Pathological behaviors toward drugs and food rewards have underlying commonalities. Risk-taking has a fourfold pattern varying as a function of probability and valence leading to the nonlinearity of probability weighting with overweighting of small probabilities and underweighting of large probabilities. Here we assess these influences on risk-taking in patients with pathological behaviors toward drug and food rewards and examine structural neural correlates of nonlinearity of probability weighting in healthy volunteers. In the anticipation of rewards, subjects with binge eating disorder show greater risk-taking, similar to substance-use disorders. Methamphetamine-dependent subjects had greater nonlinearity of probability weighting along with impaired subjective discrimination of probability and reward magnitude. Ex-smokers also had lower risk-taking to rewards compared with non-smokers. In the anticipation of losses, obesity without binge eating had a similar pattern to other substance-use disorders. Obese subjects with binge eating also have impaired discrimination of subjective value similar to that of the methamphetamine-dependent subjects. Nonlinearity of probability weighting was associated with lower gray matter volume in dorsolateral and ventromedial prefrontal cortex and orbitofrontal cortex in healthy volunteers. Our findings support a distinct subtype of binge eating disorder in obesity with similarities in risk-taking in the reward domain to substance use disorders. The results dovetail with the current approach of defining mechanistically based dimensional approaches rather than categorical approaches to psychiatric disorders. The relationship to risk probability and valence may underlie the propensity toward pathological behaviors toward different types of rewards.This is the final version. It was first published by NPG at http://www.nature.com/npp/journal/v40/n4/full/npp2014242a.htm

    Naturopathic Care for Chronic Low Back Pain: A Randomized Trial

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVE: Chronic low back pain represents a substantial cost to employers through benefits coverage and days missed due to incapacity. We sought to explore the effectiveness of Naturopathic care on chronic low back pain. METHODS: This study was a randomized clinical trial. We randomized 75 postal employees with low back pain of longer than six weeks duration to receive Naturopathic care (n = 39) or standardized physiotherapy (n = 36) over a period of 12 weeks. The study was conducted in clinics on-site in postal outlets. Participants in the Naturopathic care group received dietary counseling, deep breathing relaxation techniques and acupuncture. The control intervention received education and instruction on physiotherapy exercises using an approved education booklet. We measured low back pain using the Oswestry disability questionnaire as the primary outcome measure, and quality of life using the SF-36 in addition to low back range of motion, weight loss, and Body Mass Index as secondary outcomes. RESULTS: Sixty-nine participants (92%) completed eight weeks or greater of the trial. Participants in the Naturopathic care group reported significantly lower back pain (-6.89, 95% CI. -9.23 to -3.54, p = <0.0001) as measured by the Oswestry questionnaire. Quality of life was also significantly improved in the group receiving Naturopathic care in all domains except for vitality. Differences for the aggregate physical component of the SF-36 was 8.47 (95% CI, 5.05 to 11.87, p = <0.0001) and for the aggregate mental component was 7.0 (95% CI, 2.25 to 11.75, p = 0.0045). All secondary outcomes were also significantly improved in the group receiving Naturopathic care: spinal flexion (p<0.0001), weight-loss (p = 0.0052) and Body Mass Index (-0.52, 95% CI, -0.96 to -0.08, p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Naturopathic care provided significantly greater improvement than physiotherapy advice for patients with chronic low back pain. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Controlled-Trials.com ISRCTN41920953

    A conceptual framework for crop-based agri-food supply chain characterization under uncertainty

    Get PDF
    [EN] Crop-based Agri-food Supply Chains (AFSCs) are complex systems that face multiple sources of uncertainty that can cause a significant imbalance between supply and demand in terms of product varieties, quantities, qualities, customer requirements, times and prices, all of which greatly complicate their management. Poor management of these sources of uncertainty in these AFSCs can have negative impact on quality, safety, and sustainability by reducing the logistic efficiency and increasing the waste. Therefore, it becomes crucial to develop models in order to deal with the key sources of uncertainty. For this purpose, it is necessary to precisely understand and define the problem under study. Even, the characterisation process of this domains is also a difficult and time-consuming task, especially when the right directions and standards are not in place. In this chapter, a Conceptual Framework is proposed that systematically collects those aspects that are relevant for an adequate crop-based AFSC management under uncertainty.Authors of this publication acknowledge the contribution of the Project 691249, RUC-APS "Enhancing and implementing Knowledge based ICT solutions within high Risk and Uncertain Conditions for Agriculture Production Systems" (www.ruc-aps.eu), funded by the European Union under their funding scheme H2020-MSCA-RISE-2015Alemany Díaz, MDM.; Esteso, A.; Ortiz Bas, Á.; Hernández Hormazabal, JE.; Fernández, A.; Garrido, A.; Martin, J.... (2021). A conceptual framework for crop-based agri-food supply chain characterization under uncertainty. Studies in Systems, Decision and Control. 280:19-33. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51047-3_2S1933280Taylor, D.H., Fearne, A.: Towards a framework for improvement in the management of demand in agri-food supply chains. Supply Chain Manage. 11, 379–384 (2006)Matopoulos, A., Vlachopoulou, M., Manthou, V., Manos, B.: A conceptual framework for supply chain collaboration: empirical evidence from the agri-food industry. Supply Chain Manage. 12, 177–186 (2007)Ahumada, O., Villalobos, J.R.: Application of planning models in the agri-food supply chain: a review. Eur. J. Oper. Res. 196, 1–20 (2009)Iakovou, E., Vlachos, D., Achillas, C., Anastasiadis, F.: A methodological framework for the design of green supply chains for the agrifood sector. Paper presented at the 2nd international conference on supply chains, Katerini, 5–7 Oct 2012Manzini, R., Accorsi, R.: The new conceptual framework for food supply chain assessment. J. Food Eng. 115, 251–263 (2013)Shukla, M., Jharkharia, S.: Agri-fresh produce supply chain management: a state-of-the-art literature review. Int. J. Oper. Prod. Manage. 33, 114–158 (2013)Lemma, Y., Kitaw, D., Gatew, G.: Loss in perishable food supply chain: an optimization approach literature review. Int. J. Sci. Eng. Res. 5, 302–311 (2014)Tsolakis, N.K., Keramydas, C.A., Toka, A.K., Aidonis, D.A., Iakovou, E.T.: Agrifood supply chain management: a comprehensive hierarchical decision-making framework and a critical taxonomy. Biosyst. Eng. 120, 47–64 (2014)Van der Vorst, J.G., Da Silva, C.A., Trienekens, J.H.: Agro-industrial Supply Chain Management: Concepts and Applications. FAO (2007)Hernandez, J., Mortimer, M., Patelli, E., Liu, S., Drummond, C., Kehr, E., Calabrese, N., Iannacone, R., Kacprzyk, J., Alemany, M.M.E., Gardner, D.: RUC-APS: enhancing and implementing knowledge based ICT solutions within high risk and uncertain conditions for agriculture production systems. In: 11th International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Industrial Management, Valencia, Spain (2017)Miles, M.B., Huberman, A.M.: Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded Sourcebook. Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks (1994)Alemany, M.M.E., Alarcón, F., Lario, F.C., Boj, J.J.: An application to support the temporal and spatial distributed decision-making process in supply chain collaborative planning. Comput. Ind. 62, 519–540 (2011)Teimoury, E., Nedaei, H., Ansari, S., Sabbaghi, M.: A multi-objective analysis for import quota policy making in a perishable fruit and vegetable supply chain: a system dynamics approach. Comput. Electron. Agric. 93, 37–45 (2013)Kusumastuti, R.D., van Donk, D.P., Teunter, R.: Crop-related harvesting and processing planning: a review. Int. J. Prod. Econ. 174, 76–92 (2016)Zhang, W., Wilhelm, W.E.: OR/MS decision support models for the specialty crops industry: a literature review. Ann. Oper. Res. 190, 131–148 (2011)Grillo, H., Alemany, M.M.E., Ortiz, A.: A review of mathematical models for supporting the order promising process under lack of homogeneity in product and other sources of uncertainty. Comput. Ind. Eng. 91, 239–261 (2016)Blanco, A.M., Masini, G., Petracci, N., Bandoni, J.A.: Operations management of a packaging plant in the fruit industry. J. Food Eng. 70, 299–307 (2005)Grillo, H., Alemany, M.M.E., Ortiz, A., Fuertes-Miquel, V.S.: Mathematical modelling of the order-promising process for fruit supply chains considering the perishability and subtypes of products. Appl. Math. Model. 49, 255–278 (2017)Verdouw, C.N., Beulens, A.J.M., Trienekens, J.H., Wolferta, J.: Process modelling in demand-driven supply chains: a reference model for the fruit industry. Comput. Electron. Agric. 73, 174–187 (2010)Amorim, P., Günther, H., Almada-Lobo, B.: Multi-objective integrated production and distribution planning of perishable products. Int. J. Prod. Econ. 138, 89–101 (2012)Nahmias, S.: Perishable inventory theory: a review. Oper. Res. 30, 680–708 (1982)Mowat, A., Collins, R.: Consumer behavior and fruit quality: supply chain management in an emerging industry. Supply Chain Manage. 5, 45–54 (2000)Kazaz, B., Webster, S.: The impact of yield-dependent trading costs on pricing and production planning under supply uncertainty. M&SOM Manuf. Serv. Oper. Manage. 13, 404–417 (2011)Van der Vorst, J.G.: Effective food supply chains: generating, modelling and evaluating supply chain scenarios (2000)Fuertes-Miquel, V.S., Cuenca, L., Boza, A., Guyon, C., Alemany, M.M.E.: Conceptual framework for the characterization of vegetable breton supply chain sustainability in an uncertain context. In: 12th International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Industrial Management, XXII Congreso de Ingeniería de Organización, Girona, Spain, 12–13 July 2018Kummu, M., de Moel, H., Porkka, M., Siebert, S., Varis, O., Ward, P.J.: Lost food, wasted resources: global food supply chain losses and their impacts on freshwater, cropland, and fertiliser use. Sci. Total Environ. 438, 477–489 (2012)Hoekstra, S., Romme, J.: Integral Logistic Structures: Developing Customer-Oriented Goods Flow. Industrial Press Inc., New York (1992)Borodin, V., Bourtembourg, J., Hnaien, F., Labadie, N.: Handling uncertainty in agricultural supply chain management: a state of the art. Eur. J. Oper. Res. 254, 348–359 (2016)Handayati, Y., Simatupang, T.M., Perdana, T.: Agri-food supply chain coordination: the state-of-the-art and recent developments. Logist. Res. 8, 1–15 (2015)Mintzberg, H.: The Structuring of Organisations. Prentice-Hall, Upper Saddle River (1979)Keuning, D.: Grondslagen Van Het Management. Stenfert Kroese, Houten (1995) (in Dutch)Esteso, A., Alemany, M.M.E., Ortiz, A.: Conceptual framework for designing agri-food supply chains under uncertainty by mathematical programming models. Int. J. Prod. Res. (2018)Backus, G.B.C., Eidman, V.R., Dijkhuizen, A.A.: Farm decision making under risk and uncertainty. Neth. J. Agr. Sci. 45, 307–328 (1997)Esteso, A., Alemany, M.M.E., Ortiz, A.: Conceptual framework for managing uncertainty in a collaborative agri-food supply chain context. In: IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology, vol. 506, pp. 715–724 (2017)Mundi, I., Alemany, M.M.E., Poler, R., Fuertes-Miquel, V.S.: Review of mathematical models for production planning under uncertainty due to lack of homogeneity: proposal of a conceptual model. Int. J. Prod. Res. (2019)Grillo, H., Alemany, M.M.E., Ortiz, A., De Baets, B.: Possibilistic compositions and state functions: application to the order promising process for perishables. Int. J. Prod. Res. (2019)Soto-Silva, W.E., Nadal-Roig, E., González-Araya, M.C., Pla-Aragones, L.M.: Operational research models applied to the fresh fruit supply chain. Eur. J. Oper. Res. 251, 345–355 (2016)Farahani, R.Z., Rezapour, S., Drezner, T., Fallah, S.: Competitive supply chain network design: an overview of classifications, models, solution techniques and applications. Omega 45, 92–118 (2014)Banasik, A., Bloemhof-Ruwaard, J.M., Kanellopoulos, A., Claassen, G.D.H., van der Vorst, J.G.: Multi-criteria decision making approaches for green supply chains: a review. Flex. Serv. Manuf. J. 1–31 (2016)Paam, P., Berretta, R., Heydar, M., Middleton, R.H., García-Flores, R., Juliano, P.: Planning models to optimize the agri-fresh food supply chain for loss minimization: a review. In: Reference Module in Food Science (2016)Soysal, M., Bloemhof-Ruwaard, J.M., Meuwissen, M.P., van der Vorst, J.G.: A review on quantitative models for sustainable food logistics management. Int. J. Food Syst. Dyn. 3, 136–155 (2012

    Topology by Design in Magnetic nano-Materials: Artificial Spin Ice

    Full text link
    Artificial Spin Ices are two dimensional arrays of magnetic, interacting nano-structures whose geometry can be chosen at will, and whose elementary degrees of freedom can be characterized directly. They were introduced at first to study frustration in a controllable setting, to mimic the behavior of spin ice rare earth pyrochlores, but at more useful temperature and field ranges and with direct characterization, and to provide practical implementation to celebrated, exactly solvable models of statistical mechanics previously devised to gain an understanding of degenerate ensembles with residual entropy. With the evolution of nano--fabrication and of experimental protocols it is now possible to characterize the material in real-time, real-space, and to realize virtually any geometry, for direct control over the collective dynamics. This has recently opened a path toward the deliberate design of novel, exotic states, not found in natural materials, and often characterized by topological properties. Without any pretense of exhaustiveness, we will provide an introduction to the material, the early works, and then, by reporting on more recent results, we will proceed to describe the new direction, which includes the design of desired topological states and their implications to kinetics.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures, 116 references, Book Chapte
    corecore