4 research outputs found

    Generation of the millisecond electron beam at forevacuum

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    The possibility of generation of a quasicontinuous electron beam with pulse duration up to 4.2 ms from arc discharge plasma in the forevacuum pressure range is presented. It is shown, that the voltage-current characteristic of the forevacuum plasma electron source generating millisecond electron beam has a "classical" form for electron sources with a plasma cathode

    Analysis of the interaction of influenza virus polymerase complex with human cell factors

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    12 pages, 4 figures.-- PMID: 18491320 [PubMed].-- Supplementary information (Suppl. figure S1, 2 pages) available at: http://www.wiley-vch.de/contents/jc_2120/2008/pro200700508_s.pdfThe influenza virus polymerase is formed by the PB1, PB2 and PA subunits and is required for virus transcription and replication in the nucleus of infected cells. Here we present the characterisation of the complexes formed intracellularly by the influenza polymerase in human cells. The virus polymerase was expressed by cotransfection of the polymerase subunits cDNAs, one of which fused to the tandem-affinity purification (TAP) tag. The intracellular complexes were purified by the TAP approach, which involves IgG-Sepharose and calmodulin-agarose chromatography, under very mild conditions. The purified complexes contained the heterotrimeric polymerase and a series of associated proteins that were not apparent in purifications of untagged polymerase used as a control. Several influenza polymerase-associated proteins were identified by MALDI-MS and their presence in purified polymerase-containing complexes were verified by Western blot. Their relevance for influenza infection was established by colocalisation with virus ribonucleoproteins in human infected cells. Most of the associated human factors were nuclear proteins involved in cellular RNA synthesis, modification and nucleo-cytoplasmic export, but some were cytosolic proteins involved in translation and transport. The interactions recognised in this proteomic approach suggest that the influenza polymerase might be involved in steps of the infection cycle other than RNA replication and transcription.N. J. was a fellow from Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia. E. T. was a fellow from Instituto de Salud Carlos III. P. G. was a fellow from Gobierno Vasco. This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science (Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia) (grant BFU2004-491), the VIRHOST Program financed by Comunidad de Madrid, European Vigilance Network for the Management of Antiviral Drug Resistance (VIRGIL) and the FLUPOL strep project (SP5B-CT-2007-044263).Peer reviewe

    Neural circuits underlying imitation learning of hand actions: an event-related fMRI study.

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    The neural bases of imitation learning are virtually unknown. In the present study, we addressed this issue using an event-related fMRI paradigm. Musically naive participants were scanned during four events: (1) observation of guitar chords played by a guitarist, (2) a pause following model observation, (3) execution of the observed chords, and (4) rest. The results showed that the basic circuit underlying imitation learning consists of the inferior parietal lobule and the posterior part of the inferior frontal gyrus plus the adjacent premotor cortex (mirror neuron circuit). This circuit, known to be involved in action understanding, starts to be active during the observation of the guitar chords. During pause, the middle frontal gyrus (area 46) plus structures involved in motor preparation (dorsal premotor cortex, superior parietal lobule, rostral mesial areas) also become active. Given the functional properties of area 46, a model of imitation learning is proposed based on interactions between this area and the mirror neuron system
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