1,033 research outputs found
Monet of the orient
This dress is inspired by painter Claude Monet woks, especially soft pastel tone of Water Lilly in colors. The purpose of the dress is to express oriental beauty coming from Korean traditional costume āHanbokā that has balloon lines with pastel tone of color. It could be worn for evening wear
A surface forces platform for dielectric measurements
Methods are described to implement dielectric spectroscopy (frequency range 10(-1)-10(6) Hz) within a surface forces apparatus by using as electrodes silver sheets on the backside of mica. These methods are applied to study the competitive effects of surface alignment, confinement, and shear field on 5CB (5-cyanobiphenyl), a nematic liquid crystal at the experimental temperature of 25degreesC. In the planar orientation, films could be squeezed to a minimum thickness of approximate to5 Angstrom, the molecule's thickness. In the perpendicular (homeotropic) orientation, films could be squeezed to approximate to25 Angstrom, the expected thickness of the head-to-tail 5CB dimer. It was difficult to discuss responses at f >10(5) Hz quantitatively because the peak was not visible in the experimental frequency window. Nonetheless, the onset of the relaxation mode for the planar oriented molecules appears at higher frequency than for the homeotropic orientation. A slower relaxation mode, peaked at f approximate to 10 Hz, was assigned to electrode polarization due to the mobility of trace ions within the 5CB samples although these samples were >99.7% pure. The peak frequency was a factor of 3 slower with homeotropic than planar alignment and, in both cases, independent of film thickness except when the film thickness exceeded 10 mum. This was explained using a simple model based on the assumption that trace ions move to oppositely charged electrodes to form electric double layers. A small influence of shear on the dielectric response was observed but only when the dielectric response was measured at the same frequency as the large-amplitude shear deformation. Also described is the use of capacitance to measure force-distance profiles.open8
Dielectric response of polymer films confined between mica surfaces
The thin-film dielectric response of organic films confined within a surface forces apparatus (SFA) and also between parallel sheets of atomically smooth mica is reported for the first time. Analysis is presented to infer dielectric properties of the organic film from the measured capacitance of the total system: sample, and mica sheets intervening between sample and electrodes. Measurements concerned the frequency dependence of normal-mode dielectric relaxation of cis-polyisoprene having dipoles aligned in the same direction along the chain backbone. We find that in thin-film geometries the peak frequency, f(peak), of normal mode dielectric loss (epsilon") is moderately lower than for bulk samples and that, more important, the expected terminal tail, observed in the bulk sample (epsilon"proportional to f for f < f(peak)), is not observed even at the lowest frequency examined. Thus the slow normal mode distribution is much broader and the terminal relaxation time is much longer for chains in the thin layers. These dielectric features are attributed to spatial constraints on global chain motion in the thin layers and also to adsorption of chains on mica surfaces when the layer thickness is comparable to the unperturbed chain dimension. Independent measurements of shear relaxation, performed using a SFA modified for measurement of dynamical mechanical shear rheology, found a tremendously retarded viscoelastic response relative to bulk samples. There is the possibility that the broad distribution of the dielectric response of individual polymer chains may correspond to the observed retarded viscoelastic relaxation. However, we cannot rule out the other possibility that the dielectrically detected relaxation of individual chains is still faster than the terminal viscoelastic relaxation and that the latter thus corresponds to the collective motion of many confined chains.open333
Elastomeric membrane valves in a disc
We present elastomeric membrane valves integrated into a centrifugal microfluidic platform for precise control of fluid on a disc. The amount of the fluid passing through the valves, which depends on the rotating speed of the disc and the membrane thickness, has been characterized, and could be precisely controlled by tuning the disc motion.close131
Catalytic enzymes are active matter
Using a microscopic theory to analyze experiments, we demonstrate that enzymes are active matter. Superresolution fluorescence measurementsāperformed across four orders of magnitude of substrate concentration, with emphasis on the biologically relevant regime around or below the MichaelisāMenten constantāshow that catalysis boosts the motion of enzymes to be superdiffusive for a few microseconds, enhancing their effective diffusivity over longer timescales. Occurring at the catalytic turnover rate, these fast ballistic leaps maintain direction over a duration limited by rotational diffusion, driving enzymes to execute wormlike trajectories by piconewton forces performing work of a few kBT against viscosity. The boosts are more frequent at high substrate concentrations, biasing the trajectories toward substrate-poor regions, thus exhibiting antichemotaxis, demonstrated here experimentally over a wide range of aqueous concentrations. Alternative noncatalytic, passive mechanisms that predict chemotaxis, cross-diffusion, and phoresis, are critically analyzed. We examine the physical interpretation of our findings, speculate on the underlying mechanism, and discuss the avenues they open with biological and technological implications. These findings violate the classical paradigm that chemical reaction and motility are distinct processes, and suggest reactionāmotion coupling as a general principle of catalysis.11sciescopu
Challenges and opportunities of centrifugal microfluidics for extreme point-of-care testing
The advantages offered by centrifugal microfluidic systems have encouraged its rapid adaptation in the fields of in vitro diagnostics, clinical chemistry, immunoassays, and nucleic acid tests. Centrifugal microfluidic devices are currently used in both clinical and point-of-care settings. Recent studies have shown that this new diagnostic platform could be potentially used in extreme point-of-care settings like remote villages in the Indian subcontinent and in Africa. Several technological inventions have decentralized diagnostics in developing countries; however, very few microfluidic technologies have been successful in meeting the demand. By identifying the finest difference between the point-of-care testing and extreme point-of-care infrastructure, this review captures the evolving diagnostic needs of developing countries paired with infrastructural challenges with technological hurdles to healthcare delivery in extreme point-of-care settings. In particular, the requirements for making centrifugal diagnostic devices viable in developing countries are discussed based on a detailed analysis of the demands in different clinical settings including the distinctive needs of extreme point-of-care settings.ope
Peroxisome Proliferators-Activated Receptor (PPAR) Modulators and Metabolic Disorders
Overweight and obesity lead to an increased risk for metabolic disorders such as impaired glucose regulation/insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and hypertension. Several molecular drug targets with potential to prevent or treat metabolic disorders have been revealed. Interestingly, the activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR), which belongs to the nuclear receptor superfamily, has many beneficial clinical effects. PPAR directly modulates gene expression by binding to a specific ligand. All PPAR subtypes (Ī±, Ī³, and
Ļ) are involved in glucose metabolism, lipid metabolism, and energy balance. PPAR agonists play an important role in therapeutic aspects of metabolic disorders. However, undesired effects of the existing PPAR agonists have been reported. A great deal of recent research has focused on the discovery of new PPAR modulators with more beneficial effects and more safety without producing undesired side effects. Herein, we briefly review the roles of PPAR in metabolic disorders, the effects of PPAR modulators in metabolic disorders, and the technologies with which to discover new PPAR modulators
Enzyme leaps fuel antichemotaxis
There is mounting evidence that enzyme diffusivity is enhanced when the enzyme is catalytically active. Here, using superresolution microscopy [stimulated emission-depletion fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (STED-FCS)], we show that active enzymes migrate spontaneously in the direction of lower substrate concentration (???antichemotaxis???) by a process analogous to the run-and-tumble foraging strategy of swimming microorganisms and our theory quantifies the mechanism. The two enzymes studied, urease and acetylcholinesterase, display two families of transit times through subdiffraction-sized focus spots, a diffusive mode and a ballistic mode, and the latter transit time is close to the inverse rate of catalytic turnover. This biochemical information-processing algorithm may be useful to design synthetic self-propelled swimmers and nanoparticles relevant to active materials. Executed by molecules lacking the decision-making circuitry of microorganisms, antichemotaxis by this run-and-tumble process offers the biological function to homogenize product concentration, which could be significant in situations when the reactant concentration varies from spot to spot
Liquid biopsy in lung cancer: Clinical applications of circulating biomarkers (CTCs and ctDNA)
Lung cancer is by far the leading cause of cancer death worldwide, with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounting for the majority of cases. Recent advances in the understanding of the biology of tumors and in highly sensitive detection technologies for molecular analysis offer targeted therapies, such as epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors. However, our understanding of an individual patient's lung cancer is often limited by tumor accessibility because of the high risk and invasive nature of current tissue biopsy procedures. Liquid biopsy, the analysis of circulating biomarkers from peripheral blood, such as circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), offers a new source of cancer-derived materials that may reflect the status of the disease better and thereby contribute to more personalized treatment. In this review, we examined the clinical significance and uniqueness of CTCs and ctDNA from NSCLC patients, isolation and detection methods developed to analyze each type of circulating biomarker, and examples of clinical studies of potential applications for early diagnosis, prognosis, treatment monitoring, and prediction of resistance to therapy. We also discuss challenges that remain to be addressed before such tools are implemented for routine use in clinical settings
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