133 research outputs found
The use of clamping grips and friction pads by tree frogs for climbing curved surfaces
Most studies on the adhesive mechanisms of climbing animals have addressed attachment against flat surfaces, yet many animals can climb highly curved surfaces, like twigs and small branches. Here we investigated whether tree frogs use a clamping grip by recording the ground reaction forces on a cylindrical object with either a smooth or anti-adhesive, rough surface. Furthermore, we measured the contact area of fore and hindlimbs against differently sized transparent cylinders and the forces of individual pads and subarticular tubercles in restrained animals. Our study revealed that frogs use friction and normal forces of roughly a similar magnitude for holding on to cylindrical objects. When challenged with climbing a non-adhesive surface, the compressive forces between opposite legs nearly doubled, indicating a stronger clamping grip. In contrast to climbing flat surfaces, frogs increased the contact area on all limbs by engaging not just adhesive pads but also subarticular tubercles on curved surfaces. Our force measurements showed that tubercles can withstand larger shear stresses than pads. SEM images of tubercles revealed a similar structure to that of toe pads including the presence of nanopillars, though channels surrounding epithelial cells were less pronounced. The tubercles' smaller size, proximal location on the toes and shallow cells make them probably less prone to buckling and thus ideal for gripping curved surfaces
Magnetic structures and magnetoelastic coupling of Fe-doped hexagonal manganites LuMn1-xFexO3 (0 < x < 0.3)
We have studied the crystal and magnetic structures of Fe-doped hexagonal
manganites LuMn1-xFexO3 (x = 0, 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3) by using bulk magnetization
and neutron powder diffraction methods. The samples crystalize consistently in
a hexagonal structure and maintain the space group P63cm from 2 to 300 K. The
N\'eel temperature TN increases continuously with increasing Fe-doping. In
contrast to a single {\Gamma}4 representation in LuMnO3, the magnetic ground
state of the Fe-doped samples can only be described with a spin configuration
described by a mixture of {\Gamma}3 (P63'cm') and {\Gamma}4 (P63'c'm)
representations, whose contributions have been quantitatively estimated. The
drastic effect of Fe-doping is highlighted by composition-dependent spin
reorientations. A phase diagram of the entire composition series is proposed
based on the present results and those reported in literature. Our result
demonstrates the importance of tailoring compositions in increasing magnetic
transition temperatures of multiferroic systems.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
You shall not pass: Mitigating SQL Injection Attacks on Legacy Web Applications
SQL injection (SQLi) attacks pose a significant threat to the security of web
applications. Existing approaches do not support object-oriented programming
that renders these approaches unable to protect the real-world web apps such as
Wordpress, Joomla, or Drupal against SQLi attacks. We propose a novel hybrid
static-dynamic analysis for PHP web applications that limits each PHP function
for accessing the database. Our tool, SQLBlock, reduces the attack surface of
the vulnerable PHP functions in a web application to a set of query descriptors
that demonstrate the benign functionality of the PHP function. We implement
SQLBlock as a plugin for MySQL and PHP. Our approach does not require any
modification to the web app. W evaluate SQLBlock on 11 SQLi vulnerabilities in
Wordpress, Joomla, Drupal, Magento, and their plugins. We demonstrate that
SQLBlock successfully prevents all 11 SQLi exploits with negligible performance
overhead (i.e., a maximum of 3% on a heavily-loaded web server)Comment: Accepted in ASIACCS 202
A review of recent work on discharge characteristics during plasma electrolytic oxidation of various metals
The review describes recent progress on understanding and quantification of the various phenomena that take place during plasma electrolytic oxidation, which is in increasing industrial use for production of protective coatings and other surface treatment purposes. A general overview of the process, and some information about usage of these coatings, are provided in the first part of the review. The focus is then on the dielectric breakdown that repeatedly occurs over the surface of the work-piece. These discharges are central to the process, since it is largely via the associated plasmas that oxidation of the substrate takes place and the coating is created. The details are complex, since the discharge characteristics are affected by a number of processing variables. The inter-relationships between electrical conditions, electrolyte composition, coating microstructure and rates of growth, which are linked via the characteristics of the discharges, have become clearer over recent years and these improvements in understanding are summarized here. There is considerable scope for more effective process control, with specific objectives in terms of coating performance and energy efficiency, and an attempt is made to identify key points that are likely to assist this
Environmental risk factors of type 2 diabetes-an exposome approach
Type 2 diabetes is one of the major chronic diseases accounting for a substantial proportion of disease burden in Western countries. The majority of the burden of type 2 diabetes is attributed to environmental risks and modifiable risk factors such as lifestyle. The environment we live in, and changes to it, can thus contribute substantially to the prevention of type 2 diabetes at a population level. The ‘exposome’ represents the (measurable) totality of environmental, i.e. nongenetic, drivers of health and disease. The external exposome comprises aspects of the built environment, the social environment, the physico-chemical environment and the lifestyle/food environment. The internal exposome comprises measurements at the epigenetic, transcript, proteome, microbiome or metabolome level to study either the exposures directly, the imprints these exposures leave in the biological system, the potential of the body to combat environmental insults and/or the biology itself. In this review, we describe the evidence for environmental risk factors of type 2 diabetes, focusing on both the general external exposome and imprints of this on the internal exposome. Studies provided established associations of air pollution, residential noise and area-level socioeconomic deprivation with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes, while neighbourhood walkability and green space are consistently associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes. There is little or inconsistent evidence on the contribution of the food environment, other aspects of the social environment and outdoor temperature. These environmental factors are thought to affect type 2 diabetes risk mainly through mechanisms incorporating lifestyle factors such as physical activity or diet, the microbiome, inflammation or chronic stress. To further assess causality of these associations, future studies should focus on investigating the longitudinal effects of our environment (and changes to it) in relation to type 2 diabetes risk and whether these associations are explained by these proposed mechanisms. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.
A Novel Strategy to Screen Bacillus Calmette-Guérin Protein Antigen Recognized by γδ TCR
BACKGROUND: Phosphoantigen was originally identified as the main γδ TCR-recognized antigen that could activate γδ T cells to promote immune protection against mycobacterial infection. However, new evidence shows that the γδ T cells activated by phosphoantigen can only provide partial immune protection against mycobacterial infection. In contrast, whole lysates of Mycobacterium could activate immune protection more potently, implying that other γδ TCR-recognized antigens that elicit protective immune responses. To date, only a few distinct mycobacterial antigens recognized by the γδ TCR have been characterized. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In the present study, we established a new approach to screen epitopes or protein antigens recognized by the γδ TCR using Bacillus Calmette-Guérin- (BCG-) specific γ TCR transfected cells as probes to pan a 12-mer random-peptide phage-displayed library. Through binding assays and functional analysis, we identified a peptide (BP3) that not only binds to the BCG-specific γδ TCR but also effectively activates γδ T cells isolated from human subjects inoculated with BCG. Importantly, the γδ T cells activated by peptide BP3 had a cytotoxic effect on THP-1 cells infected with BCG. Moreover, the oxidative stress response regulatory protein (OXYS), a BCG protein that matches perfectly with peptide BP3 according to bioinformatics analysis, was confirmed as a ligand for the γδ TCR and was found to activate γδ T cells from human subjects inoculated with BCG. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: In conclusion, our study provides a novel strategy to identify epitopes or protein antigens for the γδ TCR, and provides a potential means to screen mycobacterial vaccines or candidates for adjuvant
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