2,430 research outputs found
Heterogeneity in structurally arrested hard spheres
When cooled or compressed sufficiently rapidly, a liquid vitrifies into a glassy amorphous state. Vitrification in a dense liquid is associated with jamming of the particles. For hard spheres, the density and degree of order in the final structure depend on the compression rate: simple intuition suggests, and previous computer simulation demonstrates, that slower compression results in states that are both denser and more ordered. In this work, we use the Lubachevsky-Stillinger algorithm to generate a sequence of structurally arrested hard-sphere states by varying the compression rate. We find that while the degree of order, as measured by both bond-orientation and translation order parameters, increases monotonically with decreasing compression rate, the density of the arrested state first increases, then decreases, then increases again, as the compression rate decreases, showing a minimum at an intermediate compression rate. Examination of the distribution of the local order parameters and the distribution of the root-mean-square fluctuation of the particle positions, as well as direct visual inspection of the arrested structures, reveal that they are structurally heterogeneous, consisting of disordered, amorphous regions and locally ordered crystal-like domains. In particular, the low-density arrested states correspond with many interconnected small crystal clusters that form a polycrystalline network interspersed in an amorphous background, suggesting that jamming by the domains may be an important mechanism for these states
Vesicular Zinc Promotes Presynaptic and Inhibits Postsynaptic Long-Term Potentiation of Mossy Fiber-CA3 Synapse
The presence of zinc in glutamatergic synaptic vesicles of excitatory neurons of mammalian cerebral cortex suggests that zinc might regulate plasticity of synapses formed by these neurons. Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a form of synaptic plasticity that may underlie learning and memory. We tested the hypothesis that zinc within vesicles of mossy fibers (mf) contributes to mf-LTP, a classical form of presynaptic LTP. We synthesized an extracellular zinc chelator with selectivity and kinetic properties suitable for study of the large transient of zinc in the synaptic cleft induced by mf stimulation. We found that vesicular zinc is required for presynaptic mf-LTP. Unexpectedly, vesicular zinc also inhibits a form of postsynaptic mf-LTP. Because the mf-CA3 synapse provides a major source of excitatory input to the hippocampus, regulating its efficacy by these dual actions, vesicular zinc is critical to proper function of hippocampal circuitry in health and disease.National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (Grant GM065519
First results of the new endcap TOF commissioning at BESIII
The upgrade of the current BESIII Endcap TOF (ETOF) is carried out with the
Multi-gap Resistive Plate Chamber (MRPC) technology. The installation of the
new ETOF has been finished in October 2015. The first results of the MRPCs
commissioning at BESIII are reported in this paper.Comment: 7 pages,8 figures,conferenc
No significant enrichment of rare functionally defective CPA1 variants in a large Chinese idiopathic chronic pancreatitis cohort
Rare functionally defective carboxypeptidase A1 (CPA1) variants have been reported to predispose
to nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis, mainly the idiopathic subtype. However, independent replication has so far been lacking, particularly in Asian cohorts where initial studies employed small sample sizes. Herein we performed targeted next-generation sequencing of the CPA1 gene
in 1,112 Han Chinese idiopathic chronic pancreatitis (ICP) patients—the largest ICP cohort so far analyzed in a single population—and 1,580 controls. Sanger sequencing was used to validate called variants, and theCPA1 activity and secretion of all newly found variants were measured.Atotal of 18 rare CPA1 variants were characterized, 11 of which have not been previously described. However,no significant association was noted with ICP irrespective of whether all rare variants [20 out of 1,112 (1.8%) in patients vs. 24 out of 1,580 (1.52%) in controls; P = 0.57] or functionally
impaired variants [three out of 1,112 (0.27%) in patients vs. two out of 1,580 (0.13%) in controls; P = 0.68] were considered
A cosmic microscope to probe the Universe from Present to Cosmic Dawn - dual-element low-frequency space VLBI observatory
A space-based very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) programme, named as
the Cosmic Microscope, is proposed to involve dual VLBI telescopes in the space
working together with giant ground-based telescopes (e.g., Square Kilometre
Array, FAST, Arecibo) to image the low radio frequency Universe with the
purpose of unraveling the compact structure of cosmic constituents including
supermassive black holes and binaries, pulsars, astronomical masers and the
underlying source, and exoplanets amongst others. The operational frequency
bands are 30, 74, 330 and 1670 MHz, supporting broad science areas. The mission
plans to launch two 30-m-diameter radio telescopes into 2,000 km x 90,000 km
elliptical orbits. The two telescopes can work in flexibly diverse modes: (i)
space-ground VLBI. The maximum space-ground baseline length is about 100,000
km; it provides a high-dynamic-range imaging capacity with unprecedented high
resolutions at low frequencies (0.4 mas at 1.67 GHz and 20 mas at 30 MHz)
enabling studies of exoplanets and supermassive black hole binaries (which emit
nanoHz gravitational waves); (ii) space-space single-baseline VLBI. This unique
baseline enables the detection of flaring hydroxyl masers, and more precise
position measurement of pulsars and radio transients at milli-arcsecond level;
(iii) single dish mode, where each telescope can be used to monitor transient
bursts and rapidly trigger follow-up VLBI observations. The large space
telescope will also contribute in measuring and constraining the total angular
power spectrum from the Epoch of Reionization. In short, the Cosmic Microscope
offers astronomers the opportunity to conduct novel, frontier science.Comment: Accepted for publication in Chinese Journal of Space Science, 10
pages, 2 figure
Conodonts in Ordovician biostratigraphy
The long time interval after Pander's (1856) original conodont study can in terms of Ordovician conodont biostratigraphical research be subdivided into three periods, namely the Pioneer Period (1856-1955), the Transition Period (1955-1971) and the Modern Period (1971-Recent). During the pre-1920s, the few published conodont investigations were restricted to Europe and North America and were not concerned about the potential use of conodonts as guide fossils. Although primarily of taxonomic nature, the pioneer studies by Branson & Mehl, Stauffer and Furnish during the 1930s represent the beginning of the use of conodonts in Ordovician biostratigraphy. However, no formal zones were introduced until Lindstr\uf6m (1955) proposed four conodont zones in the Lower Ordovician of Sweden, which marks the end of the Pioneer Period. Because Lindstr\uf6m's zone classification was not followed by similar work outside Baltoscandia, the time interval up to the late 1960s can be regarded as a Transition Period. A milestone symposium volume, entitled 'Symposium on Conodont Biostratigraphy' and published in 1971, summarized much new information on Ordovician conodont biostratigraphy and is taken as the beginning of the Modern Period of Ordovician conodont biostratigraphy. In this volume, the Baltoscandic Ordovician was subdivided into named conodont zones, whereas the North American Ordovician succession was classified into a series of lettered or numbered faunas. Although most of the latter did not receive zone names until 1984, this classification has been used widely in North America. The Middle and Upper Ordovician Baltoscandic zone classification, which was largely based on evolutionary species changes in lineages and hence includes phylozones, has subsequently undergone only minor changes and has been used slightly modified also in some other regions, such as New Zealand, China and eastern North America. The great importance of conodonts in Ordovician biostratigraphy is shown by the fact that conodonts are used for the definition of two of the seven global stages, and seven of the 20 stage slices, now recognized within this system
MicroRNA-19b downregulates insulin 1 through targeting transcription factor NeuroD1
AbstractMiR-17-92 cluster miRNAs are disclosed to contribute to the development of multiple organs and tumorigenesis, but their roles in pancreas development remains unclear. In this study, we found that miR-19b, a member of miR-17-92, was highly expressed in the pancreatic progenitor cells, and miR-19b could target the 3′ UTR of NeuroD1 mRNA to decrease its protein and mRNA levels. Functional analysis showed that miR-19b exerted little effect on the proliferation of pancreatic progenitors, whereas it inhibited the expression of insulin 1, but not insulin 2 in MIN6 cells. These results suggest that miR-19b can downregulate insulin 1 expression through targeting transcription factor NeuroD1, and thus regulate the differentiation and function of β-cells
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