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Distributional Stress-Energy in General Relativity and Its Implications for Quantum Gravity
We review the current state of the art of techniques in general relativity involving null and/or distributional sources of stress-energy, with an emphasis on the study of gravitational shockwaves. We then propose a series of unsolved problems in which these techniques can be applied to uncover novel features of causal structure. In particular, we demonstrate methods in which the gravitational field due to quantum fluctuations can be modeled under the assumption that gravity is coherent over causal diamonds. The first example studied is the decay of a particle with mass into two counter-propagating null point particles. The resulting spherical shockwave is shown to produce displacement and velocity memory on a system of spherically arranged, synchronized clocks. We then consider quantum superpositions of decay axes and demonstrate that fluctuations of time shifts measured on the system of clocks should scale like in the limit of Planck mass particles. The second problem studied is the gravitational effect of a ``bubble model'' representing the effective stress-energy of a pion. It is shown that such a model produces a mean secular outward acceleration of nearby test bodies that is consistent with the relative acceleration of bodies due to the cosmological constant
Recurrent explosive behaviour of debt-to-GDP ratio
In this paper the recurrent explosive behaviour of debt-to-GDP ratio is tested in three countries with a long fiscal record: Sweden, the UK and the US. The testing is based on the method developed by Phillips et al. (2015) which is new in this context. The method allows us to avoid the size distortion problem of the traditional tests of fiscal sustainability and makes it possible to examine potential unsustainability as a transitory rather than permanent phenomenon. It has been demonstrated that in the economies analyzed, long periods of fiscal sustainability were interrupted by relatively short periods when the debt-to-GDP ratio had explosive dynamics
Tuning SMSI Kinetics on Pt-loaded TiO(110) by Choosing the Pressure: A Combined UHV / Near-Ambient Pressure XPS Study
Pt catalyst particles on reducible oxide supports often change their activity
significantly at elevated temperatures due to the strong metal-support
interaction (SMSI), which induces the formation of an encapsulation layer
around the noble metal particles. However, the impact of oxidizing and reducing
treatments at elevated pressures on this encapsulation layer remains
controversial, partly due to the 'pressure gap' between surface science studies
and applied catalysis. In the present work, we employ synchrotron-based
near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS) to study the
effect of O and H on the SMSI-state of well-defined Pt/TiO(110)
catalysts at pressures of up to 0.1 Torr. By tuning the O pressure, we can
either selectively oxidize the TiO support or both the support and the Pt
particles. Catalyzed by metallic Pt, the encapsulating oxide overlayer grows
rapidly in 1x10 Torr O, but orders of magnitudes less effective at
higher O pressures, where Pt is in an oxidic state. While the
oxidation/reduction of Pt particles is reversible, they remain embedded in the
support once encapsulation has occurred
Effector cell mediated cytotoxicity measured by intracellular Granzyme B release in HIV infected subjects
CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity is currently believed to be one of the key immunologic mechanisms responsible for the prevention or attenuation of HIV-1 infection. The induction of CD8+ T cell activation may also result in the production of soluble or non-classical lytic factors that are associated with protection from infection or slower disease progression. Traditionally, CD8+ CTL responses have been measured by the classic chromium release assay, monitoring the ability of T cells (Effector cells) to lyse radiolabelled HLA ā matched ātarget cellsā that express the appropriate antigen-MHC complex. This method is not only labor intensive, semi quantitative assay at best, but also needs fresh, non-cryopreserved cells. Recently, cytokine specific ELISPOT assays or tetrameric MHC-I/ peptide complexes have utilized to directly quantitate circulating CD8+ effector cells, and these assays are more sensitive, quantitative and reproducible than the traditional CTL lysis assay and can also be performed on cryopreserved cells. Although these are reproducible assays for the assessment of soluble antiviral activity secreted by activated T cell populations they can be extremely expensive to perform. We have used FACS Analysis to measure Granzyme B release as a function of cell mediated cytotoxicity. This method helps quantitate the CTL activity and also identifies the phenotype of the cells elucidating this immune response. The method described not only monitors immunological response but also is also simple to perform, precise and extremely time efficient and is ideal for screening a large number of samples
Dramatic Rise in Plasma Viremia after CD8+ T Cell Depletion in Simian Immunodeficiency Virusāinfected Macaques
To determine the role of CD8+ T cells in controlling simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) replication in vivo, we examined the effect of depleting this cell population using an anti-CD8 monoclonal antibody, OKT8F. There was on average a 99.9% reduction of CD8 cells in peripheral blood in six infected Macaca mulatta treated with OKT8F. The apparent CD8 depletion started 1 h after antibody administration, and low CD8 levels were maintained until day 8. An increase in plasma viremia of one to three orders of magnitude was observed in five of the six macaques. The injection of a control antibody to an infected macaque did not induce a sustained viral load increase, nor did it significantly reduce the number of CD8+ T cells. These results demonstrate that CD8 cells play a crucial role in suppressing SIV replication in vivo
Why Don't CD8+ T Cells Reduce the Lifespan of SIV-Infected Cells In Vivo?
In January 2010 two groups independently published the observation that the depletion of CD8+ cells in SIV-infected macaques had no detectable impact on the lifespan of productively infected cells. This unexpected observation led the authors to suggest that CD8+ T cells control SIV viraemia via non-lytic mechanisms. However, a number of alternative plausible explanations, compatible with a lytic model of CD8+ T cell control, were proposed. This left the field with no consensus on how to interpret these experiments and no clear indication whether CD8+ T cells operated primarily via a lytic or a non-lytic mechanism. The aim of this work was to investigate why CD8+ T cells do not appear to reduce the lifespan of SIV-infected cells in vivo
HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships
HIV exposed seronegative (HESN) women represent the population most in need of a prophylactic antiviral strategy. Mucosal cationic polypeptides can potentially be regulated for this purpose and we here aimed to determine their endogenous expression and HIV neutralizing activity in genital secretions of women at risk of HIV infection.Cervicovaginal secretions (CVS) of Kenyan women in HIV-serodiscordant relationships (HESN, nā=ā164; HIV seropositive, nā=ā60) and low-risk controls (nā=ā72) were assessed for the cationic polypeptides HNP1ā3, LL-37 and SLPI by ELISA and for HIV neutralizing activity by a PBMC-based assay using an HIV primary isolate. Median levels of HNP1ā3 and LL-37 in CVS were similar across study groups. Neither HSV-2 serostatus, nor presence of bacterial vaginosis, correlated with levels of HNP1ā3 or LL-37 in the HESN women. However, an association with their partner's viral load was observed. High viral load (>10,000 HIV RNA copies/ml plasma) correlated with higher levels of HNP1ā3 and LL-37 (pā=ā0.04 and 0.03, respectively). SLPI was most abundant in the low-risk group and did not correlate with male partner's viral load in the HESN women. HIV neutralizing activity was found in CVS of all study groups. In experimental studies, selective depletion of cationic polypeptides from CVS rendered the remaining CVS fraction non-neutralizing, whereas the cationic polypeptide fraction retained the activity. Furthermore, recombinant HNP1ā3 and LL-37 could induce neutralizing activity when added to CVS lacking intrinsic activity.These findings show that CVS from HESN, low-risk, and HIV seropositive women contain HIV neutralizing activity. Although several innate immune proteins, including HNP1ā3 and LL-37, contribute to this activity these molecules can also have inflammatory properties. This balance is influenced by hormonal and environmental factors and in the present HIV serodiscordant couple cohort study we show that a partner's viral load is associated with levels of such molecules
A Decline in CCL3-5 Chemokine Gene Expression during Primary Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection
BACKGROUND: The CC-chemokines CCL3, CCL4 and CCL5 have been found to block the entry of CCR5-tropic HIV into host cells and to suppress the viral replication in vitro, but the in vivo role of endogenous CC-chemokines in HIV-1 infection is still incompletely understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPLE FINDINGS: In this study, the primate host CCL3, CCL4 and CCL5 gene expression was evaluated in response to simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) infection in rhesus macaque model. Five rhesus macaques were inoculated with CCR5-tropic SHIV(SF162P4). The mRNA levels of CCL3, CCL4 and CCL5 were measured by real-time PCR at post inoculation day (PID) 0, 7, 14, 21, 35, 56 and 180 in peripheral blood. In addition, a selected subset of samples from CXCR4-tropic SHIV(Ku1)-infected macaques was included with objective to compare the differences in CC-chemokine down-regulation caused by the two SHIVs. Gut-associated lymphoid tissues (GALT) collected from SHIV(SF162P4)-infected animals were also tested by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy to corroborate the gene expression results. Predictably, higher viral loads and CD4+ T cell losses were observed at PID 14 in macaques infected with SHIV(Ku1) than with SHIV(SF162P4). A decline in CC-chemokine gene expression was also found during primary (PID 7-21), but not chronic (PID 180) stage of infection. CONCLUSIONS: It was determined that A) SHIV(SF162P4) down-regulated the CC-chemokine gene expression during acute stage of infection to a greater extent (p<0.05) than SHIV(Ku1), and B) such down-regulation was not paralleled with the CD4+ T cell depletion. Evaluation of CC-chemokine enhancing immunomodulators such as synthetic CpG-oligonucleotides could be explored in future HIV vaccine studies
Identification of HIV-1 Epitopes that Induce the Synthesis of a R5 HIV-1 Suppression Factor by Human CD4+ T Cells Isolated from HIV-1 Immunized Hu-PBL SCID Mice
We have previously reported that immunization of the severe combined
immunodeficiency (SCID) mice reconstituted with human peripheral blood
mononuclear cells (PBMC) (hu-PBL-SCID mice) with inactivated human
immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1)-pulsed-autologous dendritic cells (HIV-DC)
elicits HIV-1-reactive CD4+ T cells that produce an as yet to be defined novel
soluble factor in vitro with anti-viral properties
against CCR5 tropic (R5) HIV-1
infection. These findings led us to perform studies designed to identify the lineage
of the cell that synthesizes such a factor in vitro and define the epitopes of HIV-1
protein that have specificity for the induction of such anti-viral factor. Results of
our
studies show that this property is a function of CD4+ but not
CD8+ T cells. Human
CD4+ T cells were thus recovered from the HIV-DC-immunized
hu-PBL-SCID mice
and were re-stimulated in vitro by co-culture for 2 days with
autologous adherent
PBMC as antigen presenting cells, APC previously pulsed with inactivated HIV in
IL-2-containing medium to expand HIV-1-reactive CD4+
T cells. Aliquots of these
re-stimulated CD4+ T cells were then co-cultured with
similar APC's that were
previously pulsed with 10 Ī¼g/ml of a panel of HIV peptides for
an additional 2 days,
and their culture supernatants were examined for the production of both the R5
HIV-1 suppression factor and IFN-Ī„. The data presented herein
show that the HIV-1
primed CD4+ T cells produced the R5 suppression factor in
response to a wide
variety of HIV-1 gag, env, pol, nef or vif peptides, depending on the donor of
the CD4+ T cells. Simultaneous production of human interferon
(IFN)-Ī„ was
observed in some cases. These results indicate that human
CD4+ T cells in
PBMC of HIV-1 naive donors have a wide variety of HIV-1 epitope-specific
CD4+ T
cell precursors that are capable of producing the R5 HIV-1
suppression factor upon DC-based vaccination with whole inactivated HIV-1
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