166 research outputs found

    Thermally-activated precipitation strengthening

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    Precipitation strengthening is a key strengthening method for metallic materials. However, the temperature effect on precipitation strengthening is still unclear to date. Based on dislocation theory, a thermally-activated precipitation strengthening model is built by considering the competition between shear and bypass mechanisms. For medium-sized precipitate particles, the thermally-activated shear mechanism dominates the precipitation strengthening, resulting in a plateau region. While, for large or very fine precipitate particles, the thermally-activated bypass mechanism dominates the precipitation strengthening, leading to the strengthening or weakening regions. Moreover, the effects of precipitate phase volume fraction, temperature, shear modulus, strain rate, and mobile dislocation density on precipitation strengthening are also investigated. This study not only provides new insights into precipitation strengthening from the perspective of thermal activation but also offers clear guidance for the design of new materials

    Respuesta de la actividad enzimática digestiva al incremento gradual de la salinidad en el cangrejo de Shanghai maduro, Eriocheir sinensis (Decapoda: Brachyura)

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    Mature Chinese mitten crabs, Eriocheir sinensis, were exposed to brackish water or seawater as an obligatory part of their reproductive migration. Physiological and biochemical reorganization were needed to adapt them to this migration. To understand the digestive adjustments of Eriocheir sinensis at biochemical level during this transformation from freshwater to seawater, the response of the activity of five digestive enzymes (amylase, cellulase, pepsin, trypsin and lipase) in the hepatopancreas to salinities increasing gradually from 0 (freshwater) to 35 (seawater) was analysed in mature females and males. Digestive enzymes exhibited significantly higher activities in the hepatopancreas of males than those of females, except lipase. In females, amylase, pepsin and trypsin activities began to decrease significantly as the salinity reached 28, and cellulase activity decreased at 35; in males, a considerable decrease in the activity of digestive enzymes, except lipase, was observed at 21 and higher salinities, while an increase was observed at 14. Reduced enzyme activities at elevated salinities suggest that the digestive capacity of crabs for diets becomes weak, and all these digestive enzymes participated in digestive adjustments during osmoregulation. The initial salinity which induced the decrease of enzyme activity was lower in males than in females, indicating that females were more tolerant to elevated salinities than males from the point of digestive biochemical modulation.Se expusieron cangrejos de Shanghai maduros (Eriocheir sinensis) a agua salobre o agua marina obligatoriamente durante la migración reproductora. A fin de que los ejemplares se adaptaran a esta migración, fue preciso proceder a una reorganización fisiológica y bioquímica. Con objeto de estudiar los ajustes digestivos de carácter bioquímico del Eriocheir sinensisdurante la transformación del agua dulce en agua marina, se analizó la reacción de la actividad en el hepatopáncreas de cinco enzimas digestivas (amilasa, celulasa, pepsina, tripsina y lipasa) a un aumento gradual de la salinidad, desde 0 ppt (agua dulce) hasta 35 ppt (agua marina), en ejemplares maduros machos y hembras. Las enzimas digestivas mostraron un grado de actividad notablemente mayor en el hepatopáncreas de los machos que en el de las hembras, con excepción de la lipasa. En las hembras, la actividad de la amilasa, la pepsina y la tripsina comenzó a reducirse notablemente cuando la salinidad alcanzó las 28 ppt, mientras que la actividad de la celulasa descendió cuando se alcanzaron las 35 ppt; en el caso de los machos, se observó un descenso muy pronunciado de la actividad enzimática digestiva a partir de las 21 ppt, aunque la actividad aumentó a las 14 ppt. La menor actividad enzimática indicaría que la capacidad digestiva de los cangrejos se reduce a niveles elevados de salinidad y que todas estas enzimas digestivas participan en los ajustes digestivos que se producen durante la osmorregulación. El nivel de salinidad inicial que indujo el descenso de la actividad enzimática fue inferior en los machos que en las hembras, lo cual indica que estas últimas mostraron una mayor tolerancia a un nivel elevado de salinidad que los machos desde el punto de vista de la modulación bioquímica del proceso digestivo

    Expressing gK gene of duck enteritis virus guided by bioinformatics and its applied prospect in diagnosis

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Duck viral enteritis, which is caused by duck enteritis virus (DEV), causes significant economic losses in domestic and wild waterfowls because of the high mortality and low egg production rates. With the purpose of eliminating this disease and decreasing economic loss in the commercial duck industry, researching on glycoprotein K (gK) of DEV may be a new kind of method for preventing and curing this disease. Because glycoproteins project from the virus envelope as spikes and are directly involved in the host immune system and elicitation of the host immune responses, and also play an important role in mediating infection of target cells, the entry into cell for free virus and the maturation or egress of virus. The gK is one of the major envelope glycoproteins of DEV. However, little information correlated with gK is known, such as antigenic and functional characterization.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Bioinformatic predictions revealed that the expression of the full-length gK gene (<it>fgK</it>) in a prokaryotic system is difficult because of the presence of suboptimal exon and transmembrane domains at the C-terminal. In this study, we found that the <it>fgK </it>gene might not be expressed in a prokaryotic system in accordance with the bioinformatic predictions. Further, we successfully used bioinformatics tools to guide the prokaryotic expression of the <it>gK </it>gene by designing a novel truncated <it>gK </it>gene (<it>tgK</it>). These findings indicated that bioinformatics provides theoretical data for target gene expression and saves time for our research. The recombinant tgK protein (tgK) was expressed and purified by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). Western blotting and indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) showed that the tgK possessed antigenic characteristics similar to native DEV-gK.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>In this work, the DEV-<it>tgK </it>was expressed successfully in prokaryotic system for the first time, which will provide usefull information for prokaryotic expression of alphaherpesvirus gK homologs, and the recombinant truncated gK possessed antigenic characteristics similar to native DEV gK. Because of the good reactionogenicity, specificity and sensitivity, the purified tgK could be useful for developing a sensitive serum diagnostic kit to monitor DEV outbreaks.</p

    Expression and intracellular localization of duck enteritis virus pUL38 protein

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    Knowledge of the intracellular location of a protein can provide useful insights into its function. Bioinformatic studies have predicted that the DEV pUL38 mainly targets the cytoplasm and nucleus. In this study, we obtained anti-pUL38 polyclonal sera. These antibodies were functional in western blotting and immunofluorescence in DEV-infected duck embryo fibroblasts (DEFs). pUL38 was expressed as a 51-kDa protein from 8 h post-infection onward, initially showing a diffuse distribution throughout the cytoplasm, and later in the nucleus. Furthermore, pUL38 was found in purified virus. These results provide the first evidence of the kinetics of expression and intracellular localization of DEV pUL38

    Evolutionary origin of a tetraploid allium species in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau

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    Extinct taxa may be detectable if they were ancestors to extant hybrid species, which retain their genetic signature. In this study, we combined phylogenomics, population genetics and fluorescence in situ hybridization (GISH and FISH) analyses to trace the origin of the alpine tetraploid Allium tetraploideum (2n = 4x = 32), one of the five known members in the subgenus Cyathophora. We found that A. tetraploideum was an obvious allotetrapoploid derived from ancestors including at least two closely related diploid species, A. farreri and A. cyathophorum, from which it differs by multiple ecological and genomic attributes. However, these two species cannot account for the full genome of A. tetraploideum, indicating that at least one extinct diploid is also involved in its ancestry. Furthermore, A. tetraploideum appears to have arisen via homoploid hybrid speciation (HHS) from two extinct allotetraploid parents, which derived in turn from the aforementioned diploids. Other modes of origin were possible, but all were even more complex and involved additional extinct ancestors. Our study together highlights how some polyploid species might have very complex origins, involving both HHS and polyploid speciation and also extinct ancestors.</p

    Conceptual design and progress of transmitting \sim MV DC HV into 4 K LHe detectors

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    A dual-phase TPC (Time Projection Chamber) is more advanced in characterizing an event than a single-phase one because it can, in principle, reconstruct the 3D (X-Y-Z) image of the event, while a single-phase detector can only show a 2D (X-Y) picture. As a result, more enriched physics is expected for a dual-phase detector than a single-phase one. However, to build such a detector, DC HV (High Voltage) must be delivered into the chamber (to have a static electric field), which is a challenging task, especially for an LHe detector due to the extremely low temperature, \sim 4 K, and the very high voltage, \sim MV (Million Volts). This article introduces a convincing design for transmitting \sim MV DC into a 4 K LHe detector. We also report the progress of manufacturing a 100 kV DC feedthrough capable of working at 4 K. Surprisingly, we realized that the technology we developed here might be a valuable reference to the scientists and engineers aiming to build residential bases on the Moon or Mars

    Searching for ER and/or NR-like dark matter signals with the especially low background liquid helium TPCs

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    In the Dark Matter (DM) direct detection community, the absence of convincing signals has become a ``new normal'' for decades. Among other possibilities, the ``new normal'' might indicate that DM-matter interactions could generate not only the hypothetical NR (Nuclear Recoil) events but also the ER (Electron Recoil) ones, which have often been tagged as backgrounds historically. Further, we argue that ER and NR-like DM signals could co-exist in a DM detector's same dataset. So in total, there would be three scenarios we can search for DM signals: (i) ER excess only, (ii) NR excess only, and (iii) ER and NR excesses combined. To effectively identify any possible DM signal under the three scenarios, a DM detector should (a) have the minimum ER and NR backgrounds and (b) be capable of discriminating ER events from NR ones. Accordingly, we introduce the newly established project, ALETHEIA, which implements liquid helium-filled TPCs (Time Projection Chamber) in hunting for DM. Thanks to the nearly single-digit number of ER and NR backgrounds on 1 ton*yr exposure, presumably, the ALETHEIA detectors should be able to identify any form of DM-induced excess in its ROI (Research Of Interest). As far as we know, ALETHEIA is the first DM direct detection experiment claiming such an inclusive search; conventional detectors search DM mainly on the ``ER excess only'' and/or the ``NR excess only'' channel, not the ``ER and NR excesses combined'' channel. In addition, we introduce a preliminary scheme to one of the most challenging R\&D tasks, transmitting 500+ kV into a 4 K LHe detector
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