155 research outputs found

    Brown Adipose Tissue Can Be Activated or Inhibited within an Hour before 18F-FDG Injection: A Preliminary Study with MicroPET

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    Brown adipose tissue (BAT) is emerging as a potential target for treating human obesity. It has been indicated that BAT is rich in innervations of sympathetic nerve control. Using 18F-FDG microPET imaging, this study aims at evaluating how factors related to sympathetic activation/inhibition changed BAT metabolism of mice. BAT 18F-FDG uptake were semiquantitatively evaluated in different groups of mice under temperature (cold or warm stimulus) or pharmacological interventions (norepinephrine, epinephrine, isoprenaline, or propranolol) and were compared with the corresponding controls. It was found that BAT activation can be stimulated by cold exposure (P = 1.96 × 10−4), norepinephrine (P = .002), or both (P = 2.19 × 10−6) within an hour before 18F-FDG injection and can also be alleviated by warming up (P = .001) or propranolol lavage (P = .027). This preliminary study indicated that BAT function could be evaluated by 18F-FDG PET imaging through short-term interventions, which paved the way for further investigation of the relationship between human obesity and BAT dysfunction

    A Construction of Bent Functions with Optimal Algebraic Degree and Large Symmetric Group

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    We present a construction of bent function fa,Sf_{a,S} with n=2mn=2m variables for any nonzero vector aF2ma\in \mathbb{F}_{2}^{m} and subset SS of F2m\mathbb{F}_{2}^{m} satisfying a+S=Sa+S=S. We give the simple expression of the dual bent function of fa,Sf_{a,S}. We prove that fa,Sf_{a,S} has optimal algebraic degree mm if and only if S2(mod4)|S|\equiv 2 (\bmod 4) . This construction provides series of bent functions with optimal algebraic degree and large symmetric group if aa and SS are chosen properly

    A Case study of a snowstorm at the Great Wall Station, Antarctica

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    A case of a snowstorm at the Great Wall Station was studied using data of NCEP(National Centers for Environmental Prediction) analysis, in situ observations and surface weather charts. The storm occurred on August 29th, 2006, and brought high winds and poor horizontal visibility to the region. It was found that the storm occurred under the synoptic situation of a high in the south and a low in the north. A low-level easterly jet from the Antarctic continent significantly decreased the air temperature and humidity. Warm air advection at high level brought sufficient vapor from lower latitudes for the snowstorm to develop. The dynamic factors relating to strong snowfall and even the development of a snowstorm were deep cyclonic vorticity at middle and low levels, the configuration of divergence at high level and convergence at low level, and strong vertical uplift. There was an inversion layer in the low-level atmosphere during the later phase of the storm. This vertical structure of cold air at low levels and warm air at high levels may have been important to the longevity of the snowstorm

    Ions-induced Epitaxial Growth of Perovskite Nanocomposites for Highly Efficient Light-Emitting Diodes with EQE Exceeding 30%

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    Cesium lead bromide (CsPbBr3) is a widely used emitter for perovskite light-emitting diodes (PeLEDs), benefiting from its large carrier mobility, high color purity and good thermal stability. However, the three-dimensional CsPbBr3 films encounter challenges due to their massive intrinsic defects and weak exciton binding effect, which limited their electroluminescence efficiency. To address this issue, the prevailing approach is to confine carriers by reducing dimensionality or size. Nonetheless, this method results in an increase in surface trap states due to the larger surface-to-volume ratio and presents difficulties in carrier injection and transport after reducing lattice splitting to smaller sizes. Here, we successfully achieved proper control over film crystallization by introducing sodium ions, which facilitate the epitaxial growth of zero-dimensional Cs4PbBr6 on the surface of CsPbBr3, forming large grain matrixes where CsPbBr3 is encapsulated by Cs4PbBr6. Notably, the ions-induced epitaxial growth enables the CsPbBr3 emitter with significantly reduced trap states, and generates coarsened nanocomposites of CsPbBr3&Cs4PbBr6 with grain size that surpass the average thickness of the thin perovskite film, resulting in a wavy surface conducive to light out-coupling. Additionally, another additive of formamidinium chloride was incorporated to assist the growth of nanocomposites with larger size and lower defects as well as better carrier injection and transportation. As a result, our demonstrated PeLEDs based on the coarsened nanocomposites exhibit low nonradiative recombination, enhanced light extraction and well-balanced carrier transportation, leading to high-performance devices. The champion device achieved an external quantum efficiency of 31.0% at the emission peak of 521 nm with a narrow full width at half-maximum (FWHM) of 18 nm

    PDE2 Inhibits PKA-Mediated Phosphorylation of TFAM to Promote Mitochondrial Ca2+-Induced Colorectal Cancer Growth

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    Growing evidence indicates that the dysregulation of mitochondrial calcium (Ca2+) plays a critical role in the growth of tumor cells, including colorectal cancer (CRC). However, the underling mechanism is not fully elucidated. In this study, the regulatory effects of mitochondrial Ca2+ on phosphodiesterase 2 (PDE2)/cAMP/PKA axis and the phosphorylation of mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM) as well as the growth of CRC cells were systematically investigated both in vitro and in vivo. Our findings demonstrated that MCU-induced mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake activated mitochondrial PDE2 in CRC cells. Moreover, overexpression MCU in CRC led to a 1.9-fold increase in Ca2+ uptake compared to control cells. However, knockdown of MCU resulted in 1.5-fould decrease in Ca2+ uptake in mitochondria compared to the controls. Activation of mitochondrial PDE2 significantly inhibited the activity of mitochondrial protein kinase A (PKA), which subsequently leads to decreased phosphorylation of TFAM. Our data further revealed that PKA regulates the phosphorylation of TFAM and promotes the degradation of phosphorylated TFAM. Thus, TFAM protein levels accumulated in mitochondria when the activity of PKA was inhibited. Overall, this study showed that the overexpression of MCU enhanced CRC growth through promoting the accumulation of TFAM proteins in mitochondria. Conversely, knockdown of MCU in CRC cells resulted in decreased CRC growth. Collectively, these data suggest that the mitochondrial Ca2+-activated PDE2/cAMP/PKA axis plays a key role in regulating TFAM stability and the growth of CRC cells

    Vacancy-Mediated Magnetism in Pure Copper Oxide Nanoparticles

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    Room temperature ferromagnetism (RTF) is observed in pure copper oxide (CuO) nanoparticles which were prepared by precipitation method with the post-annealing in air without any ferromagnetic dopant. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) result indicates that the mixture valence states of Cu1+ and Cu2+ ions exist at the surface of the particles. Vacuum annealing enhances the ferromagnetism (FM) of CuO nanoparticles, while oxygen atmosphere annealing reduces it. The origin of FM is suggested to the oxygen vacancies at the surface/or interface of the particles. Such a ferromagnet without the presence of any transition metal could be a very good option for a class of spintronics

    Automatic Artery/Vein Classification Using a Vessel-Constraint Network for Multicenter Fundus Images

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    Retinal blood vessel morphological abnormalities are generally associated with cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and systemic diseases, automatic artery/vein (A/V) classification is particularly important for medical image analysis and clinical decision making. However, the current method still has some limitations in A/V classification, especially the blood vessel edge and end error problems caused by the single scale and the blurred boundary of the A/V. To alleviate these problems, in this work, we propose a vessel-constraint network (VC-Net) that utilizes the information of vessel distribution and edge to enhance A/V classification, which is a high-precision A/V classification model based on data fusion. Particularly, the VC-Net introduces a vessel-constraint (VC) module that combines local and global vessel information to generate a weight map to constrain the A/V features, which suppresses the background-prone features and enhances the edge and end features of blood vessels. In addition, the VC-Net employs a multiscale feature (MSF) module to extract blood vessel information with different scales to improve the feature extraction capability and robustness of the model. And the VC-Net can get vessel segmentation results simultaneously. The proposed method is tested on publicly available fundus image datasets with different scales, namely, DRIVE, LES, and HRF, and validated on two newly created multicenter datasets: Tongren and Kailuan. We achieve a balance accuracy of 0.9554 and F1 scores of 0.7616 and 0.7971 for the arteries and veins, respectively, on the DRIVE dataset. The experimental results prove that the proposed model achieves competitive performance in A/V classification and vessel segmentation tasks compared with state-of-the-art methods. Finally, we test the Kailuan dataset with other trained fusion datasets, the results also show good robustness. To promote research in this area, the Tongren dataset and source code will be made publicly available. The dataset and code will be made available at https://github.com/huawang123/VC-Net

    Integrative Analysis of Clinicopathological Features Defines Novel Prognostic Models for Mantle Cell Lymphoma in the Immunochemotherapy Era: A Report from The North American Mantle Cell Lymphoma Consortium

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    BACKGROUND: Patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) exhibit a wide variation in clinical presentation and outcome. However, the commonly used prognostic models are outdated and inadequate to address the needs of the current multidisciplinary management of this disease. This study aims to investigate the clinical and pathological features of MCL in the immunochemotherapy era and improve the prognostic models for a more accurate prediction of patient outcomes. METHODS: The North American Mantle Cell Lymphoma Project is a multi-institutional collaboration of 23 institutions across North America to evaluate and refine prognosticators for front-line therapy. A total of 586 MCL cases diagnosed between 2000 and 2012 are included in this study. A comprehensive retrospective analysis was performed on the clinicopathological features, treatment approaches, and outcomes of these cases. The establishment of novel prognostic models was based on in-depth examination of baseline parameters, and subsequent validation in an independent cohort of MCL cases. RESULTS: In front-line strategies, the use of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was the most significant parameter affecting outcomes, for both overall survival (OS, p \u3c 0.0001) and progression-free survival (PFS, p \u3c 0.0001). P53 positive expression was the most significant pathological parameter correlating with inferior outcomes (p \u3c 0.0001 for OS and p = 0.0021 for PFS). Based on the baseline risk factor profile, we developed a set of prognostic models incorporating clinical, laboratory, and pathological parameters that are specifically tailored for various applications. These models, when tested in the validation cohort, exhibited strong predictive power for survival and showed a stratification resembling the training cohort. CONCLUSIONS: The outcome of patients with MCL has markedly improved over the past two decades, and further enhancement is anticipated with the evolution of clinical management. The innovative prognostic models developed in this study would serve as a valuable tool to guide the selection of more suitable treatment strategies for patients with MCL
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