24 research outputs found

    Management and intrinsic hurdles in the development process of integrated communication between service providers and consumers

    Full text link
    Integrated communication is an effective strategic tool that enables creating and maintaining tight dialogue and cooperation between service providers and consumers, managing communication chaos, information flow, matching consumers’ needs. Its successful application requires reorganizing the communication processes, implementing their strategic changes, introducing new attitudes towards work and new culture, striving for overall synergy. Under such changes, this article aims at identifying the hurdles hindering the effective integration of smooth service providers and consumers’ communication. Testing hypotheses based on a survey demonstrates that hurdles reflecting employees’ competences, integrated communication development resources and result evaluation are more frequent in the stage of communication channel integration than in the functional one

    Modeling CICR in rat ventricular myocytes: voltage clamp studies

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The past thirty-five years have seen an intense search for the molecular mechanisms underlying calcium-induced calcium-release (CICR) in cardiac myocytes, with voltage clamp (VC) studies being the leading tool employed. Several VC protocols including lowering of extracellular calcium to affect <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>loading of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), and administration of blockers caffeine and thapsigargin have been utilized to probe the phenomena surrounding SR <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>release. Here, we develop a deterministic mathematical model of a rat ventricular myocyte under VC conditions, to better understand mechanisms underlying the response of an isolated cell to calcium perturbation. Motivation for the study was to pinpoint key control variables influencing CICR and examine the role of CICR in the context of a physiological control system regulating cytosolic <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>concentration ([<it>Ca</it><sup>2+</sup>]<it><sub>myo</sub></it>).</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The cell model consists of an electrical-equivalent model for the cell membrane and a fluid-compartment model describing the flux of ionic species between the extracellular and several intracellular compartments (cell cytosol, SR and the dyadic coupling unit (DCU), in which resides the mechanistic basis of CICR). The DCU is described as a controller-actuator mechanism, internally stabilized by negative feedback control of the unit's two diametrically-opposed <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>channels (trigger-channel and release-channel). It releases <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>flux into the cyto-plasm and is in turn enclosed within a negative feedback loop involving the SERCA pump, regulating[<it>Ca</it><sup>2+</sup>]<it><sub>myo</sub></it>.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our model reproduces measured VC data published by several laboratories, and generates graded <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>release at high <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>gain in a homeostatically-controlled environment where [<it>Ca</it><sup>2+</sup>]<it><sub>myo </sub></it>is precisely regulated. We elucidate the importance of the DCU elements in this process, particularly the role of the ryanodine receptor in controlling SR <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>release, its activation by trigger <it>Ca</it><sup>2+</sup>, and its refractory characteristics mediated by the luminal SR <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>sensor. Proper functioning of the DCU, sodium-calcium exchangers and SERCA pump are important in achieving negative feedback control and hence <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>homeostasis.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>We examine the role of the above <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>regulating mechanisms in handling various types of induced disturbances in <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>levels by quantifying cellular <it>Ca</it><sup>2+ </sup>balance. Our model provides biophysically-based explanations of phenomena associated with CICR generating useful and testable hypotheses.</p

    Generating inversion on a nuclear transition - photopumping of 103Rh

    No full text
    The natural isotope 103Rh has two low-lying levels with energies of 357.4 keV and 295.0 keV, the lifetimes of which are 107 and 9.7 ps, respectively. Thus the lower level has a considerably shorter lifetime than the upper one, a situation favorable for generating population inversion. Nuclear Resonance Fluorescence (NRF) experiments have been performed in which 26 high-lying levels have been identified, from which either the upper or the lower level or both can be populated by radiative decay. An evaluation of the data shows that this "feeding" mechanism indeed resulted in inversion on the 62.4 keV transition
    corecore