1,063 research outputs found
Pattern Competition in the Photorefractive Semiconductors
We analytically study the photorefractive Gunn effect in n-GaAs subjected to
two external laser beams which form a moving interference pattern (MIP) in the
semiconductor. When the intensity of the spatially independent part of the MIP,
denoted by , is small, the system has a periodic domain train (PDT),
consistent with the results of linear stability analysis. When is large,
the space-charge field induced by the MIP will compete with the PDT and result
in complex dynamics, including driven chaos via quasiperiodic route
Anderson Model out of equilibrium: decoherence effects in transport through a quantum dot
The paper deals with the nonequilibrium two-lead Anderson model, considered
as an adequate description for transport through a d-c biased quantum dot.
Using a self-consistent equation-of-motion method generalized out of
equilibrium, we calculate a fourth-order decoherence rate
induced by a bias voltage . This decoherence rate provides a cut-off to the
infrared divergences of the self-energy showing up in the Kondo regime. At low
temperature, the Kondo peak in the density of states is split into two peaks
pinned at the chemical potential of the two leads. The height of these peaks is
controlled by . The voltage dependence of the differential
conductance exhibits a zero-bias peak followed by a broad Coulomb peak at large
, reflecting charge fluctuations inside the dot. The low-bias differential
conductance is found to be a universal function of the normalized bias voltage
, where is the Kondo temperature. The universal scaling with a
single energy scale at low bias voltages is also observed for the
renormalized decoherence rate . We discuss the effect of
on the crossover from strong to weak coupling regime when either
the temperature or the bias voltage is increased.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure
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Synergistic effect of phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor and serum on migration of endotoxin-stimulated macrophages.
Macrophage migration is an essential step in host defense against infection and wound healing. Elevation of cAMP by inhibiting phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE4), enzymes that specifically degrade cAMP, is known to suppress various inflammatory responses in activated macrophages, but the role of PDE4 in macrophage migration is poorly understood. Here we show that the migration of Raw 264.7 macrophages stimulated with LPS was markedly and dose-dependently induced by the PDE4 inhibitor rolipram as assessed by scratch wound healing assay. Additionally, this response required the involvement of serum in the culture medium as serum starvation abrogated the effect. Further analysis revealed that rolipram and serum exhibited synergistic effect on the migration, and the influence of serum was independent of PDE4 mRNA expression in LPS-stimulated macrophages. Moreover, the enhanced migration by rolipram was mediated by activating cAMP/exchange proteins directly activated by cAMP (Epac) signaling, presumably via interaction with LPS/TLR4 signaling with the participation of unknown serum components. These results suggest that PDE4 inhibitors, together with serum components, may serve as positive regulators of macrophage recruitment for more efficient pathogen clearance and wound repair
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T Oligo-Primed Polymerase Chain Reaction (TOP-PCR): A Robust Method for the Amplification of Minute DNA Fragments in Body Fluids.
Body fluid DNA sequencing is a powerful noninvasive approach for the diagnosis of genetic defects, infectious agents and diseases. The success relies on the quantity and quality of the DNA samples. However, numerous clinical samples are either at low quantity or of poor quality due to various reasons. To overcome these problems, we have developed T oligo-primed polymerase chain reaction (TOP-PCR) for full-length nonselective amplification of minute quantity of DNA fragments. TOP-PCR adopts homogeneous "half adaptor" (HA), generated by annealing P oligo (carrying a phosphate group at the 5' end) and T oligo (carrying a T-tail at the 3' end), for efficient ligation to target DNA and subsequent PCR amplification primed by the T oligo alone. Using DNA samples from body fluids, we demonstrate that TOP-PCR recovers minute DNA fragments and maintains the DNA size profile, while enhancing the major molecular populations. Our results also showed that TOP-PCR is a superior method for detecting apoptosis and outperforms the method adopted by Illumina for DNA amplification
Tunable Kondo effect in a single donor atom
The Kondo effect has been observed in a single gate-tunable atom. The
measurement device consists of a single As dopant incorporated in a Silicon
nanostructure. The atomic orbitals of the dopant are tunable by the gate
electric field. When they are tuned such that the ground state of the atomic
system becomes a (nearly) degenerate superposition of two of the Silicon
valleys, an exotic and hitherto unobserved valley Kondo effect appears.
Together with the regular spin Kondo, the tunable valley Kondo effect allows
for reversible electrical control over the symmetry of the Kondo ground state
from an SU(2)- to an SU(4) -configuration.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
The clinical, biochemical and genetic features associated with RMND1-related mitochondrial disease.
BACKGROUND: Mutations in the RMND1 (Required for Meiotic Nuclear Division protein 1) gene have recently been linked to infantile onset mitochondrial disease characterised by multiple mitochondrial respiratory chain defects.
METHODS: We summarised the clinical, biochemical and molecular genetic investigation of an international cohort of affected individuals with RMND1 mutations. In addition, we reviewed all the previously published cases to determine the genotype-phenotype correlates and performed survival analysis to identify prognostic factors.
RESULTS: We identified 14 new cases from 11 pedigrees that harbour recessive RMND1 mutations, including 6 novel variants: c.533C\u3eA, p.(Thr178Lys); c.565C\u3eT, p.(Gln189*); c.631G\u3eA, p.(Val211Met); c.1303C\u3eT, p.(Leu435Phe); c.830+1G\u3eA and c.1317+1G\u3eT. Together with all previously published cases (n=32), we show that congenital sensorineural deafness, hypotonia, developmental delay and lactic acidaemia are common clinical manifestations with disease onset under 2 years. Renal involvement is more prevalent than seizures (66% vs 44%). In addition, median survival time was longer in patients with renal involvement compared with those without renal disease (6 years vs 8 months, p=0.009). The neurological phenotype also appears milder in patients with renal involvement.
CONCLUSIONS: The clinical phenotypes and prognosis associated with RMND1 mutations are more heterogeneous than that were initially described. Regular monitoring of kidney function is imperative in the clinical practice in light of nephropathy being present in over 60% of cases. Furthermore, renal replacement therapy should be considered particularly in those patients with mild neurological manifestation as shown in our study that four recipients of kidney transplant demonstrate good clinical outcome to date
On conditional skewness with applications to environmental data
The statistical literature contains many univariate and multivariate skewness measures that allow two datasets to be compared, some of which are defined in terms of quantile values. In most situations, the comparison between two random vectors focuses on univariate comparisons of conditional random variables truncated in quantiles; this kind of comparison is of particular interest in the environmental sciences. In this work, we describe a new approach to comparing skewness in terms of the univariate convex transform ordering proposed by van Zwet (Convex transformations of random variables. Mathematical Centre Tracts, Amsterdam, 1964), associated with skewness as well as concentration. The key to these comparisons is the underlying dependence structure of the random vectors. Below we describe graphical tools and use several examples to illustrate these comparisons.The research of FĂ©lix Belzunce, Julio Mulero and JosĂ© MarĂa RuĂz is partially funded by the Ministerio de EconomĂa y Competitividad (Spain) under Grant MTM2012-34023-FEDER. Alfonso Suárez-Llorens acknowledges support received from the Ministerio de EconomĂa y Competitividad (Spain) under Grant MTM2014-57559-P
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