184 research outputs found

    Optical trapping in micro- and nanoconfinement systems: Role of thermo-fluid dynamics and applications

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    In this mini-review, recent advances on the role of a focused laser in micro- and nanofluidic systems is widely introduced with special interest in thermo-fluid dynamical aspects and their importance in optical manipulation. As a brief introduction to microfluidic systems, we describe the advantages and challenges of the use of micro- and nanoscale confinement in optical trapping, as well as standard fabrication techniques for micro- and nanofluidic systems. From thermo-fluid dynamical viewpoints, various phenomena that accompany a laser irradiation to fluidic devices, are explained in detail. These phenomena can affect the optical trapping of target materials significantly, and are classified into two categories: one that induces the fluid flow around the target and another that directly acts on it as an external force. These classes are reviewed by shedding light on some recent cutting-edge researches for optical manipulation. Some applications using thermo-fluid dynamics in microfluidic systems for the measurement of optical forces and for the separation, measurement, and detection of target materials are also introduced

    Inhibitory Effect of Flavonoids on the Efflux of N-Acetyl 5-Aminosalicylic Acid Intracellularly Formed in Caco-2 Cells

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    N-acetyl 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-AcASA) that was intracellularly formed from 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) at 200 μM was discharged 5.3, 7.1, and 8.1-fold higher into the apical site than into the basolateral site during 1, 2, and 4-hour incubations, respectively, in Caco-2 cells grown in Transwells. The addition of flavonols (100 μM) such as fisetin and quercetin with 5-ASA remarkably decreased the apically directed efflux of 5-AcASA. When 5-ASA (200 μM) was added to Caco-2 cells grown in tissue culture dishes, the formation of 5-AcASA decreased, and, in addition, the formed 5-AcASA was found to be accumulated within the cells in the presence of such flavonols. Thus, the decrease in 5-AcASA efflux by such flavonols was attributed not only to the inhibition of N-acetyl-conjugation of 5-ASA but to the predominant cellular accumulation of 5-AcASA. Various flavonoids also had both of the effects with potencies that depend on their specific structures. The essential structure of flavonoids was an absence of a hydroxyl substitution at the C5 position on the A-ring of flavone structure for the inhibitory effect on the N-acetyl-conjugation of 5-ASA, and a presence of hydroxyl substitutions at the C3′ or C4′ position on the B-ring of flavone structure for the promoting effect on the cellular accumulation of 5-AcASA. Both the decrease in 5-AcASA apical efflux and the increase in 5-AcASA cellular accumulation were also caused by MK571 and indomethacin, inhibitors of MRPs, but not by quinidine, cyclosporin A, P-glycoprotein inhibitors, and mitoxantrone, a BCRP substrate. These results suggest that certain flavonoids suppress the apical efflux of 5-AcASA possibly by inhibiting MRPs pumps located on apical membranes in Caco-2 cells

    Electrochemical response of biased nanoelectrodes in solution

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    Novel approaches to DNA sequencing and detection require the measurement of electrical currents between metal probes immersed in ionic solution. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that these systems maintain large background currents with a transient response that decays very slowly in time and noise that increases with ionic concentration. Using a non-equilibrium stochastic model, we obtain an analytical expression for the ionic current that shows these results are due to a fast electrochemical reaction at the electrode surface followed by the slow formation of a diffusion layer. During the latter, ions translocate in the weak electric field generated after the initial rapid screening of the strong fields near the electrode surfaces. Our theoretical results are in very good agreement with experimental findings

    Discovery of primitive CO2-bearing fluid in an aqueously altered carbonaceous chondrite

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    隕石中に閉じ込められたCO2に富む液体の水を世界で初めて発見 --太陽系形成時に誕生した小天体がその後の木星の軌道変化に伴なって移動した証拠--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2021-04-22.Water is abundant as solid ice in the solar system and plays important roles in its evolution. Water is preserved in carbonaceous chondrites as hydroxyl and/or H₂O molecules in hydrous minerals, but has not been found as liquid. To uncover such liquid, we performed synchrotron-based x-ray computed nanotomography and transmission electron microscopy with a cryo-stage of the aqueously altered carbonaceous chondrite Sutter’s Mill. We discovered CO₂-bearing fluid (CO₂/H₂O > ~0.15) in a nanosized inclusion incorporated into a calcite crystal, appearing as CO₂ ice and/or CO₂ hydrate at 173 K. This is direct evidence of dynamic evolution of the solar system, requiring the Sutter’s Mill’s parent body to have formed outside the CO₂ snow line and later transportation to the inner solar system because of Jupiter’s orbital instability

    Inhibitory Effect of Flavonoids on the Efflux of N-Acetyl 5-Aminosalicylic Acid Intracellularly Formed in Caco-2 Cells

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    Recommended by Mostafa Z. Badr N-acetyl 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-AcASA) that was intracellularly formed from 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) at 200 μM was discharged 5.3, 7.1, and 8.1-fold higher into the apical site than into the basolateral site during 1, 2, and 4-hour incubations, respectively, in Caco-2 cells grown in Transwells. The addition of flavonols (100 μM) such as fisetin and quercetin with 5-ASA remarkably decreased the apically directed efflux of 5-AcASA. When 5-ASA (200 μM) was added to Caco-2 cells grown in tissue culture dishes, the formation of 5-AcASA decreased, and, in addition, the formed 5-AcASA was found to be accumulated within the cells in the presence of such flavonols. Thus, the decrease in 5-AcASA efflux by such flavonols was attributed not only to the inhibition of N-acetyl-conjugation of 5-ASA but to the predominant cellular accumulation of 5-AcASA. Various flavonoids also had both of the effects with potencies that depend on their specific structures. The essential structure of flavonoids was an absence of a hydroxyl substitution at the C5 position on the A-ring of flavone structure for the inhibitory effect on the N-acetylconjugation of 5-ASA, and a presence of hydroxyl substitutions at the C3 or C4 position on the B-ring of flavone structure for the promoting effect on the cellular accumulation of 5-AcASA. Both the decrease in 5-AcASA apical efflux and the increase in 5-AcASA cellular accumulation were also caused by MK571 and indomethacin, inhibitors of MRPs, but not by quinidine, cyclosporin A, P-glycoprotein inhibitors, and mitoxantrone, a BCRP substrate. These results suggest that certain flavonoids suppress the apical efflux of 5-AcASA possibly by inhibiting MRPs pumps located on apical membranes in Caco-2 cells

    Cycloaddition Reactions of 1-Aza- and 1,3-Diazaazulenium 1-Methylides

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    2-Chloro-, 2-methoxy-, and 2-amino-1-azaazulenium 1-methylides and 1,3-diazaazulenium 1-methylide were generated by the treatment of the corresponding 1-trimethylsilylmethyl-1-azaazulenium triflates and 1-trimethylsilylmethyl-1,3-diazaazulenium triflate with CsF; the triflates were prepared from the corresponding 1-azaazulenes and 1,3-diazaazulene with trimethylsilylmethyl triflate. The 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions of the 2-chloro-1-azazaazulenium 1-methylide, prepared in situ, with acetylenic esters gave 2a-azabenz[cd]azulene derivatives and 3a-azacyclopenta[a]naphthalene derivatives as major products, whereas 2-piperizino-1-azaazulenium 1-methylide underwent extended dipolar cycloaddition with acetylenic esters and afforded 9b-azacyclopent[a]azulene derivatives as major products

    Matrix-Embedded Osteocytes Regulate Mobilization of Hematopoietic Stem/Progenitor Cells

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    The bone marrow (BM) niche comprises multiple cell types that regulate hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell (HSPC) migration out of the niche and into the circulation. Here, we demonstrate that osteocytes, the major cellular component of mature bone, are regulators of HSPC egress. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), used clinically to mobilize HSPCs, induces changes in the morphology and gene expression of the osteocytic network that precedes changes in osteoblasts. This rapid response is likely under control of the sympathetic nervous system, since osteocytes express the β2-adrenergic receptor and surgical sympathectomy prevents it. Mice with targeted ablation of osteocytes or a disrupted osteocyte network have comparable numbers of HSPCs in the BM but fail to mobilize HSPCs in response to G-CSF. Taken together, these results indicate that the BM/bone niche interface is critically controlled from inside of the bone matrix and establish an important physiological role for skeletal tissues in hematopoietic function

    Characterisation of the static offset in the travelling wave in the cochlear basal turn

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    The version of record of this article, first published in Pflugers Archiv European Journal of Physiology, is available online at Publisher’s website: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00424-020-02373-6.In mammals, audition is triggered by travelling waves that are evoked by acoustic stimuli in the cochlear partition, a structure containing sensory hair cells and a basilar membrane. When the cochlea is stimulated by a pure tone of low frequency, a static offset occurs in the vibration in the apical turn. In the high-frequency region at the cochlear base, multi-tone stimuli induce a quadratic distortion product in the vibrations that suggests the presence of an offset. However, vibrations below 100 Hz, including a static offset, have not been directly measured there. We therefore constructed an interferometer for detecting motion at low frequencies including 0 Hz. We applied the interferometer to record vibrations from the cochlear base of guinea pigs in response to pure tones. When the animals were exposed to sound at an intensity of 70 dB or higher, we recorded a static offset of the sinusoidally vibrating cochlear partition by more than 1 nm towards the scala vestibuli. The offset’s magnitude grew monotonically as the stimuli intensified. When stimulus frequency was varied, the response peaked around the best frequency, the frequency that maximised the vibration amplitude at threshold sound pressure. These characteristics are consistent with those found in the low-frequency region and are therefore likely common across the cochlea. The offset diminished markedly when the somatic motility of mechanosensitive outer hair cells, the force-generating machinery that amplifies the sinusoidal vibrations, was pharmacologically blocked. Therefore, the partition offset appears to be linked to the electromotile contraction of outer hair cells
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