2,163 research outputs found
Temperature dependence of circular DNA topological states
Circular double stranded DNA has different topological states which are
defined by their linking numbers. Equilibrium distribution of linking numbers
can be obtained by closing a linear DNA into a circle by ligase. Using Monte
Carlo simulation, we predict the temperature dependence of the linking number
distribution of small circular DNAs. Our predictions are based on flexible
defect excitations resulted from local melting or unstacking of DNA base pairs.
We found that the reduced bending rigidity alone can lead to measurable changes
of the variance of linking number distribution of short circular DNAs. If the
defect is accompanied by local unwinding, the effect becomes much more
prominent. The predictions can be easily investigated in experiments, providing
a new method to study the micromechanics of sharply bent DNAs and the thermal
stability of specific DNA sequences. Furthermore, the predictions are directly
applicable to the studies of binding of DNA distorting proteins that can
locally reduce DNA rigidity, form DNA kinks, or introduce local unwinding.Comment: 15 pages in preprint format, 4 figure
Acute morphine activates satellite glial cells and up-regulates IL-1β in dorsal root ganglia in mice via matrix metalloprotease-9
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Activation of spinal cord glial cells such as microglia and astrocytes has been shown to regulate chronic opioid-induced antinociceptive tolerance and hyperalgesia, due to spinal up-regulation of the proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β). Matrix metalloprotease-9 (MMP-9) has been implicated in IL-1β activation in neuropathic pain. However, it is unclear whether acute opioid treatment can activate glial cells in the peripheral nervous system. We examined acute morphine-induced activation of satellite glial cells (SGCs) and up-regulation of IL-1β in dorsal root ganglia (DRGs), and further investigated the involvement of MMP-9 in these opioid-induced peripheral changes.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Subcutaneous morphine injection (10 mg/kg) induced robust peripheral glial responses, as evidenced by increased GFAP expression in DRGs but not in spinal cords. The acute morphine-induced GFAP expression is transient, peaking at 2 h and declining after 3 h. Acute morphine treatment also increased IL-1β immunoreactivity in SGCs and IL-1β activation in DRGs. MMP-9 and GFAP are expressed in DRG neurons and SGCs, respectively. Confocal analysis revealed a close proximity of MMP-9 and GFAP immunostaining. Importantly, morphine-induced DRG up-regulation of GFAP expression and IL-1β activation was abolished after <it>Mmp9 </it>deletion or naloxone pre-treatment. Finally, intrathecal injections of IL-1β-selective siRNA not only reduced DRG IL-1β expression but also prolonged acute morphine-induced analgesia.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Acute morphine induces opioid receptors- and MMP-9-dependent up-regulation of GFAP expression and IL-1β activation in SGCs of DRGs. MMP-9 could mask and shorten morphine analgesia via peripheral neuron-glial interactions. Targeting peripheral glial activation might prolong acute opioid analgesia.</p
Domain size and charge defects on the polarization switching of antiferroelectric domains
The switching behavior of antiferroelectric domain structures under the
applied electric field is not fully understood. In this work, by using the
phase field simulation, we have studied the polarization switching property of
antiferroelectric domains. Our results indicate that the ferroelectric domains
nucleate preferably at the boundaries of the antiferroelectric domains, and
antiferroelectrics with larger initial domain sizes possess a higher coercive
electric field as demonstrated by hysteresis loops. Moreover, we introduced
charge defects into the sample and numerically investigated their influence. It
is also shown that charge defects can induce local ferroelectric domains, which
could suppress the saturation polarization and narrow the enclosed area of the
hysteresis loop. Our results give insights into understanding antiferroelectric
phase transformation and optimizing the energy storage property in experiments
Discontinuous Galerkin Immersed Finite Volume Element Method for Anisotropic Flow Models in Porous Medium
By choosing the trial function space to the immersed finite element space and the test function space to be piecewise constant function space, we develop a discontinuous Galerkin immersed finite volume element method to solve numerically a kind of anisotropic diffusion models governed by the elliptic interface problems with discontinuous tensor-conductivity. The existence and uniqueness of the discrete scheme are proved, and an optimal-order energy-norm estimate and L2-norm estimate for the numerical solution are derived
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