100 research outputs found
The Intermediate Filament Cytoskeleton of Macrophages
This study characterizes two-and three-dimensional ultrastructure and surface topography of polymerized networks of intermediate filaments (IF) isolated from mouse peritoneal macrophages. Isolated IF bound to monoclonal anti-IF antibodies in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Immunogold labeling of IF with specific antibodies revealed that epitopes are distributed along filaments particularly at junctions where filaments interconnect. Networks of IF, viewed by scanning electron microscopy, organized as ropelike groups of interconnecting filaments which swirl and encircle each other to form three-dimensional lattices containing ellipsoidal-, circular-, and vacuole-shaped cavities. Cavity diameters were similar in size to organelles and vacuoles; diameters were grouped as small (12-288 nm), medium (0.3-1.7 μm), and large (2-3 μm). The walls of the cavities appeared as beaded structures with alternating globular and linear regions. Linear regions were 14 nm. Repeat distances taken from the central axis of globular regions were 23-27 nm. The lattice organization of IF observed in vitro was similar to images seen in vivo in Triton-insoluble cytoskeletons immunofluorescently labeled with specific antibodies. In whole cells processed for TEM, swirling bundles of IF were found encircling membranous vacuoles. Based on the lattice architecture of IF, cavity dimensions, and IF location, we postulate that intermediate filaments may function in the mechanical and spatial distribution of vacuoles in the cell cytoplasm
Many Body Theory of Charge Transfer in Hyperthermal Atomic Scattering
We use the Newns-Anderson Hamiltonian to describe many-body electronic
processes that occur when hyperthermal alkali atoms scatter off metallic
surfaces. Following Brako and Newns, we expand the electronic many-body
wavefunction in the number of particle-hole pairs (we keep terms up to and
including a single particle-hole pair). We extend their earlier work by
including level crossings, excited neutrals and negative ions. The full set of
equations of motion are integrated numerically, without further approximations,
to obtain the many-body amplitudes as a function of time. The velocity and
work-function dependence of final state quantities such as the distribution of
ion charges and excited atomic occupancies are compared with experiment. In
particular, experiments that scatter alkali ions off clean Cu(001) surfaces in
the energy range 5 to 1600 eV constrain the theory quantitatively. The
neutralization probability of Na ions shows a minimum at intermediate
velocity in agreement with the theory. This behavior contrasts with that of
K, which shows ... (7 figures, not included. Figure requests:
[email protected])Comment: 43 pages, plain TeX, BUP-JBM-
Room Temperature Kondo effect in atom-surface scattering: dynamical 1/N approach
The Kondo effect may be observable in some atom-surface scattering
experiments, in particular, those involving alkaline-earth atoms. By combining
Keldysh techniques with the NCA approximation to solve the time-dependent
Newns-Anderson Hamiltonian in the infinite-U limit, Shao, Nordlander and
Langreth found an anomalously strong surface-temperature dependence of the
outgoing charge state fractions. Here we employ the dynamical 1/N expansion
with finite Coulomb interaction U to provide a more realistic description of
the scattering process. We test the accuracy of the 1/N expansion in the
spinless N = 1 case against the exact independent-particle solution. We then
compare results obtained in the infinite-U limit with the NCA approximation and
recover qualitative features found previously. Finally, we analyze the
realistic situation of Ca atoms with U = 5.8 eV scattered off Cu(001) surfaces.
Although the presence of the doubly-ionized Ca species can change the absolute
scattered positive Ca yields, the temperature dependence is qualitatively the
same as that found in the infinite-U limit. One of the main difficulties that
experimentalists face in attempting to detect this effect is that the atomic
velocity must be kept small enough to reduce possible kinematic smearing of the
metal's Fermi surface.Comment: 15 pages, 10 Postscript figures; references and typos correcte
Relaxation and reconstruction on (111) surfaces of Au, Pt, and Cu
We have theoretically studied the stability and reconstruction of (111)
surfaces of Au, Pt, and Cu. We have calculated the surface energy, surface
stress, interatomic force constants, and other relevant quantities by ab initio
electronic structure calculations using the density functional theory (DFT), in
a slab geometry with periodic boundary conditions. We have estimated the
stability towards a quasi-one-dimensional reconstruction by using the
calculated quantities as parameters in a one-dimensional Frenkel-Kontorova
model. On all surfaces we have found an intrinsic tensile stress. This stress
is large enough on Au and Pt surfaces to lead to a reconstruction in which a
denser surface layer is formed, in agreement with experiment. The
experimentally observed differences between the dense reconstruction pattern on
Au(111) and a sparse structure of stripes on Pt(111) are attributed to the
details of the interaction potential between the first layer of atoms and the
substrate.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review
A novel treatment strategy for preterm birth: Intra-vaginal progesterone-loaded fibrous patches
Progesterone-loaded poly(lactic) acid fibrous polymeric patches were produced using electrospinning and pressurized gyration for intra-vaginal application to prevent preterm birth. The patches were intravaginally inserted into rats in the final week of their pregnancy, equivalent to the third trimester of human pregnancy. Maintenance tocolysis with progesterone-loaded patches was elucidated by recording the contractile response of uterine smooth muscle to noradrenaline in pregnant rats. Both progesterone-loaded patches indicated similar results from release and thermal studies, however, patches obtained by electrospinning had smaller average diameters and more uniform dispersion compared to pressurized gyration. Patches obtained by pressurized gyration had better results in production yield and tensile strength than electrospinning; thereby pressurized gyration is better suited for scaled-up production. The patches did not affect cell attachment, viability, and proliferation on Vero cells negatively. Consequently, progesterone-loaded patches are a novel and successful treatment strategy for preventing preterm birth
Enhancing surface production of negative ions using nitrogen doped diamond in a deuterium plasma
The production of negative ions is of significant interest for applications
including mass spectrometry, particle acceleration, material surface
processing, and neutral beam injection for magnetic confinement fusion. Methods
to improve the efficiency of the surface production of negative ions, without
the use of low work function metals, are of interest for mitigating the complex
engineering challenges these materials introduce. In this study we investigate
the production of negative ions by doping diamond with nitrogen. Negatively
biased ( V or V), nitrogen doped micro-crystalline diamond films
are introduced to a low pressure deuterium plasma (helicon source operated in
capacitive mode, 2 Pa, 26 W) and negative ion energy distribution functions
(NIEDFs) are measured via mass spectrometry with respect to the surface
temperature (30C to 750C) and dopant concentration. The
results suggest that nitrogen doping has little influence on the yield when the
sample is biased at V, but when a relatively small bias voltage of
V is applied the yield is increased by a factor of 2 above that of un-doped
diamond when its temperature reaches 550C. The doping of diamond with
nitrogen is a new method for controlling the surface production of negative
ions, which continues to be of significant interest for a wide variety of
practical applications
Influence of band width on the scattered ion yield spectra of a He + Ion by resonant or quasi-resonant charge exchange neutralization
The influence of the band structure, especially the bandwidth, on the scattered ion yield spectra of a He+ ion by the resonant or quasi-resonant neutralization was theoretically examined using quantum rate equations. When calculating the scattered ion yield spectra of He+ to simulate the experimental data, we observed that the band structure, especially the bandwidth, had a strong influence on the spectra at relatively low incident He+ ion energies of less than several hundred eV. Through many simulations, it was determined that theoretical calculations that include bandwidth calculation can simulate or reproduce the experimentally observed spectra of He+-In, He+-Ga, and He+-Sn systems. In contrast, simulations not including bandwidth simulation could neither reproduce nor account for such spectra. Furthermore, the calculated ion survival probability (ISP) at low incident ion energies tended to decrease with increasing bandwidth. This decrease in ISP probably corresponds to the relatively small scattered ion yield usually observed at low incident ion energies. Theoretically, such a decrease indicates that a He+ ion with a low incident energy can be easily neutralized on the surface when the bandwidth is large
- …