130 research outputs found
Antileishmanial High-Throughput Drug Screening Reveals Drug Candidates with New Scaffolds
Drugs currently available for leishmaniasis treatment often show parasite resistance, highly toxic side effects and prohibitive costs commonly incompatible with patients from the tropical endemic countries. In this sense, there is an urgent need for new drugs as a treatment solution for this neglected disease. Here we show the development and implementation of an automated high-throughput viability screening assay for the discovery of new drugs against Leishmania. Assay validation was done with Leishmania promastigote forms, including the screening of 4,000 compounds with known pharmacological properties. In an attempt to find new compounds with leishmanicidal properties, 26,500 structurally diverse chemical compounds were screened. A cut-off of 70% growth inhibition in the primary screening led to the identification of 567 active compounds. Cellular toxicity and selectivity were responsible for the exclusion of 78% of the pre-selected compounds. The activity of the remaining 124 compounds was confirmed against the intramacrophagic amastigote form of the parasite. In vitro microsomal stability and cytochrome P450 (CYP) inhibition of the two most active compounds from this screening effort were assessed to obtain preliminary information on their metabolism in the host. The HTS approach employed here resulted in the discovery of two new antileishmanial compounds, bringing promising candidates to the leishmaniasis drug discovery pipeline
QUBIC instrument for CMB polarization measurements
Measurements of cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization may reveal the presence of a background of gravitational waves produced during cosmic inflation, providing thus a test of inflationary models. The Q&U Bolometric Interferometer for Cosmology (QUBIC) is an experiment designed to measure the CMB polarization. It is based on the novel concept of bolometric interferometry, which combines the sensitivity of bolometric detectors with the properties of beam synthesis and control of calibration offered by interferometers. To modulate and extract the input polarized signal of the CMB, QUBIC exploits Stokes polarimetry based on a rotating half-wave plate (HWP). In this work, we illustrate the design of the QUBIC instrument, focusing on the polarization modulation system, and we present preliminary results of beam calibrations and the performance of the HWP rotator at 300 K
QUBIC VI: cryogenic half wave plate rotator, design and performances
Inflation Gravity Waves B-Modes polarization detection is the ultimate goal
of modern large angular scale cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments
around the world. A big effort is undergoing with the deployment of many
ground-based, balloon-borne and satellite experiments using different methods
to separate this faint polarized component from the incoming radiation. One of
the largely used technique is the Stokes Polarimetry that uses a rotating
half-wave plate (HWP) and a linear polarizer to separate and modulate the
polarization components with low residual cross-polarization. This paper
describes the QUBIC Stokes Polarimeter highlighting its design features and its
performances. A common systematic with these devices is the generation of large
spurious signals synchronous with the rotation and proportional to the
emissivity of the optical elements. A key feature of the QUBIC Stokes
Polarimeter is to operate at cryogenic temperature in order to minimize this
unwanted component. Moving efficiently this large optical element at low
temperature constitutes a big engineering challenge in order to reduce friction
power dissipation. Big attention has been given during the designing phase to
minimize the differential thermal contractions between parts. The rotation is
driven by a stepper motor placed outside the cryostat to avoid thermal load
dissipation at cryogenic temperature. The tests and the results presented in
this work show that the QUBIC polarimeter can easily achieve a precision below
0.1{\deg} in positioning simply using the stepper motor precision and the
optical absolute encoder. The rotation induces only few mK of extra power load
on the second cryogenic stage (~ 8 K).Comment: Part of a series of 8 papers on QUBIC to be submitted to a special
issue of JCA
Damping signatures at JUNO, a medium-baseline reactor neutrino oscillation experiment
We study damping signatures at the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO), a medium-baseline reactor neutrino oscillation experiment. These damping signatures are motivated by various new physics models, including quantum decoherence, nu(3) decay, neutrino absorption, and wave packet decoherence. The phenomenological effects of these models can be characterized by exponential damping factors at the probability level. We assess how well JUNO can constrain these damping parameters and how to disentangle these different damping signatures at JUNO. Compared to current experimental limits, JUNO can significantly improve the limits on tau(3)/m(3) in the nu(3) decay model, the width of the neutrino wave packet sigma(x), and the intrinsic relative dispersion of neutrino momentum sigma(rel)
Simulations and performance of the QUBIC optical beam combiner
QUBIC, the Q & U Bolometric Interferometer for Cosmology, is a novel ground-based instrument that aims to measure the extremely faint B-mode polarisation anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background at intermediate angular scales (multipoles o
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