659 research outputs found
Protein kinase a distribution in meningioma
Deregulation of intracellular signal transduction pathways is a hallmark of cancer cells, clearly differentiating them from healthy cells. Differential intracellular distribution of the cAMP-dependent protein kinases (PKA) was previously detected in cell cultures and in vivo in glioblastoma and medulloblastoma. Our goal is to extend this observation to meningioma, to explore possible differences among tumors of different origins and prospective outcomes. The distribution of regulatory and catalytic subunits of PKA has been examined in tissue specimens obtained during surgery from meningioma patients. PKA RI subunit appeared more evenly distributed throughout the cytoplasm, but it was clearly detectable only in some tumors. RII was present in discrete spots, presumably at high local concentration; these aggregates could also be visualized under equilibrium binding conditions with fluorescent 8-substituted cAMP analogues, at variance with normal brain tissue and other brain tumors. The PKA catalytic subunit showed exactly overlapping pattern to RII and in fixed sections could be visualized by fluorescent cAMP analogues. Gene expression analysis showed that the PKA catalytic subunit revealed a significant correlation pattern with genes involved in meningioma. Hence, meningioma patients show a distinctive distribution pattern of PKA regulatory and catalytic subunits, different from glioblastoma, medulloblastoma, and healthy brain tissue. These observations raise the possibility of exploiting the PKA intracellular pathway as a diagnostic tool and possible therapeutic interventions
A Determination of the Hubble Constant from Cepheid Distances and a Model of the Local Peculiar Velocity Field
We present a measurement of the Hubble Constant based on Cepheid distances to
27 galaxies within 20 Mpc. We take the Cepheid data from published measurements
by the Hubble Telescope Key Project on the Distance Scale (H0KP). We calibrate
the Cepheid Period-Luminosity (PL) relation with data from over 700 Cepheids in
the LMC obtained by the OGLE collaboration; we assume an LMC distance modulus
of 18.50 mag (d=50.1 kpc). Using this PL calibration we obtain new distances to
the H0KP galaxies. We correct the redshifts of these galaxies for peculiar
velocities using two distinct velocity field models: the phenomenological model
of Tonry et al. and a model based on the IRAS density field and linear
gravitational instability theory. We combine the Cepheid distances with the
corrected redshifts for the 27 galaxies to derive H_0, the Hubble constant. The
results are H_0 = 85 +/- 5 km/s/Mpc (random error) at 95% confidence when the
IRAS model is used, and 92 +/- 5 km/s/Mpc when the phenomenological model is
used. The IRAS model is a better fit to the data and the Hubble constant it
returns is more reliable. Systematic error stems mainly from LMC distance
uncertainty which is not directly addressed by this paper. Our value of H_0 is
significantly larger than that quoted by the H0KP, H_0 = 71 +/- 6 km/s/Mpc.
Cepheid recalibration explains ~30% of this difference, velocity field analysis
accounts for ~70%. We discuss in detail possible reasons for this discrepancy
and future study needed to resolve it.Comment: 33 pages, 8 embedded figures. New table, 5 new references, text
revision
Relation between Brown Dwarfs and Exoplanets
One of the most debated subjects in Astronomy since the discovery of
exoplanets is how can we distinguish the most massive of such objects from
very-low mass stars like Brown Dwarfs (BDs)? We have been looking for evidences
of a difference in physical characteristics that could be related to different
formation processes. Using a new diagnostic diagram that compares the baryonic
gravitational potential (BGP) with the distances from their host stars, we have
classified a sample of 355 well-studied exoplanets according to their possible
structures. We have then compared the exoplanets to a sample of 87 confirmed
BDs, identifying a range in BGP that could be common to both objects. By
analyzing the mass-radius relations (MRR) of the exoplanets and BDs in those
different BGP ranges, we were able to distinguish different characteristic
behaviors. By comparing with models in the literature, our results suggest that
BDs and massive exoplanets might have similar structures dominated by liquid
metallic hydrogen (LMH).Comment: Poster #149 from proceeding of The 19th Cambridge Workshop on Cool
Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun; 06-10 June 2016, Uppsala, Swede
Asymptotic behavior of the Kleinberg model
We study Kleinberg navigation (the search of a target in a d-dimensional
lattice, where each site is connected to one other random site at distance r,
with probability proportional to r^{-a}) by means of an exact master equation
for the process. We show that the asymptotic scaling behavior for the delivery
time T to a target at distance L scales as (ln L)^2 when a=d, and otherwise as
L^x, with x=(d-a)/(d+1-a) for ad+1. These
values of x exceed the rigorous lower-bounds established by Kleinberg. We also
address the situation where there is a finite probability for the message to
get lost along its way and find short delivery times (conditioned upon arrival)
for a wide range of a's
A road to hydrogenating graphene by a reactive ion etching plasma
We report the hydrogenation of single and bilayer graphene by an
argon-hydrogen plasma produced in a reactive ion etching (RIE) system.
Electronic transport measurements in combination with Raman spectroscopy are
used to link the electric mean free path to the optically extracted defect
concentration. We emphasize the role of the self-bias of the graphene in
suppressing the erosion of the akes during plasma processing. We show that
under the chosen plasma conditions the process does not introduce considerable
damage to the graphene sheet and that hydrogenation occurs primarily due to the
hydrogen ions from the plasma and not due to fragmentation of water adsorbates
on the graphene surface by highly accelerated plasma electrons. For this reason
the hydrogenation level can be precisely controlled. The hydrogenation process
presented here can be easily implemented in any RIE plasma system.Comment: 7 page
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