135 research outputs found
Second Harmonic Generation from Phononic Epsilon-Near-Zero Berreman Modes in Ultrathin Polar Crystal Films
Immense optical field enhancement was predicted to occur for the Berreman
mode in ultrathin films at frequencies in the vicinity of epsilon near zero
(ENZ). Here, we report the first experimental proof of this prediction in the
mid-infrared by probing the resonantly enhanced second harmonic generation
(SHG) at the longitudinal optic phonon frequency from a deeply
subwavelength-thin aluminum nitride (AlN) film. Employing a transfer matrix
formalism, we show that the field enhancement is completely localized inside
the AlN layer, revealing that the observed SHG signal of the Berreman mode is
solely generated in the AlN film. Our results demonstrate that ENZ Berreman
modes in intrinsically low-loss polar dielectric crystals constitute a
promising platform for nonlinear nanophotonic applications
Strong Coupling of Epsilon-Near-Zero Phonon Polaritons in Polar Dielectric Heterostructures
We report the first observation of epsilon near zero (ENZ) phonon polaritons
in an ultrathin AlN film fully hybridized with surface phonon polaritons (SPhP)
supported by the adjacent SiC substrate. Employing a strong coupling model for
the analysis of the dispersion and electric field distribution in these
hybridized modes, we show that they share the most prominent features of the
two precursor modes. The novel ENZ-SPhP coupled polaritons with a highly
propagative character and deeply sub-wavelength light confinement can be
utilized as building blocks for future infrared and terahertz (THz)
nanophotonic integration and communication devices
Characterization of the immune cell response in the placentas from cattle following experimental inoculation with Neospora caninum throughout pregnancy
Trabajo presentado al 2nd International Meeting on Apicomplexan Parasites in Farm Animals (Kusadasi, Turquía, 31 octubre al 2 noviembre, 2013).Despite Neospora caninum (NC) being a major cause of bovine abortion worldwide, its pathogenesis is not completely understood. Evidence of immune mediated placental pathology has been reported as being responsible for compromising pregnancy probably due to the adverse effect of an exacerbated Th1 response at the maternal-foetal interface. Different clinical outcomes are known to follow experimental infections at different stages of gestation, with foetal death being the most common finding during early gestation infections, and the birth of live congenitally infected calves upon infection at mid or late gestation. The aim of our studies was to characterise placental immune responses following experimental infection during pregnancy. Cows were infected with NC tachyzoites at day 70, 140 and 210 of pregnancy and culled at 14, 28, 42 and 56 days post inoculation. Placentomes were examined by immunohistochemistry using antibodies against macrophages, T-cells (CD3, CD4, CD8, ¿¿TCR), NK and B cells and by in situ hybridization to characterize cytokine expression (IL-12, IFN-¿, TNF-¿ and IL-4). Inflammation was mainly characterised by the presence of CD3+, CD4+ and ¿¿ T-cells during the three time points. In early gestation inflammation was generally moderate to severe and mainly characterized by infiltration of IL-12, IFN-¿ and TNF-¿ expressing cells. This infiltration was more pronounced in the samples of placentome collected from dams carrying a dead foetus or one that had aborted, compared with the mothers carrying live foetuses at the time of sampling. In contrast, the infiltration of CD3+, CD4+, CD8+ and ¿¿ T-cells and Th1 cytokine expressing-cells was less evident following NC infection at mid gestation and scarce during infection at late gestation. These findings may partially explain the milder clinical outcome observed when animals are infected with NC at mid or late gestation.Peer Reviewe
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Ligand‐Directed Actinide Oxo‐Bond Manipulation in Actinyl Thiacalix[4]arene Complexes
Understanding the chemistry of the inert actinide oxo bond in actinyl ions AnO22+ is important for controlling actinide behavior in the environment, during separations, and in nuclear waste (An = U, Np, Pu). The thioether calixarene TC4A (4-tert-butyltetrathiacalix[4]arene) binds equatorially to [AnO2]n+ (An = U, Np) forming a conical pocket that differentiates the two trans-oxo groups. The 'ate' complexes, [A]2[UO2(TC4A)] (A = [Li(DME)2], HNEt3) and [HNEt3]2[NpO2(TC4A)], enable selective oxo chemistry. Silylation of the UVI oxo groups by bis(trimethylsilyl)pyrazine occurs first at only the unencapsulated exo oxo and only one silylation is needed to enable migration of the endo oxo out of the cone, whereupon a second silylation affords the stable UIV cis-bis(siloxide) [A]2[U(OSiMe3)2(TC4A)]. Calculations confirm that only one silylation event is needed to initiate oxo rearrangement, and that the putative cis dioxo isomer of [UO2(TC4A)]2- would be stable if it could be accessed synthetically, at only 23 kcal.mol-1 in energy above the classical trans dioxo. The aryloxide (OAr) groups of the macrocycle are essential in stabilizing this as-yet unseen uranyl geometry, with further bonding in the TC4A U-OAr groups stabilizing the U=O 'yl' bonds, explaining the stability of a calculated cis[UO2(TC4A)]2- in this ligand framework
Inflammatory infiltration into placentas of Neospora caninum challenged cattle correlates with clinical outcome of pregnancy
International audienceInfection with Neospora caninum stimulates host cell-mediated immune responses, which may be responsible for placental damage leading to bovine abortion. The aim of this study was to compare immune responses in the bovine placenta, following experimental infection in different stages of pregnancy. Placentomes were examined by immunohistochemistry and inflammation in early gestation was generally moderate to severe, particularly in the placentas carrying non-viable foetuses, whereas it was milder in later stages, mainly characterised by the presence of CD3+, CD4+ and γδ T-cells. This distinctive cellular immune response may explain the milder clinical outcome observed when animals are infected in later gestation
Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa
BACKGROUND : Theileria parva causes East Coast fever (ECF), one of the most economically important tick-borne diseases
of cattle in sub-Saharan Africa. A live immunisation approach using the infection and treatment method (ITM)
provides a strong long-term strain-restricted immunity. However, it typically induces a tick-transmissible carrier state
in cattle and may lead to spread of antigenically distinct parasites. Thus, understanding the genetic composition of T.
parva is needed prior to the use of the ITM vaccine in new areas. This study examined the sequence diversity and the
evolutionary and biogeographical dynamics of T. parva within the African Great Lakes region to better understand the
epidemiology of ECF and to assure vaccine safety. Genetic analyses were performed using sequences of two antigencoding
genes, Tp1 and Tp2, generated among 119 T. parva samples collected from cattle in four agro-ecological zones
of DRC and Burundi.
RESULTS : The results provided evidence of nucleotide and amino acid polymorphisms in both antigens, resulting
in 11 and 10 distinct nucleotide alleles, that predicted 6 and 9 protein variants in Tp1 and Tp2, respectively. Theileria
parva samples showed high variation within populations and a moderate biogeographical sub-structuring due to the
widespread major genotypes. The diversity was greater in samples from lowlands and midlands areas compared to
those from highlands and other African countries. The evolutionary dynamics modelling revealed a signal of selective
evolution which was not preferentially detected within the epitope-coding regions, suggesting that the observed
polymorphism could be more related to gene flow rather than recent host immune-based selection. Most alleles
isolated in the Great Lakes region were closely related to the components of the trivalent Muguga vaccine.
CONCLUSIONS : Our findings suggest that the extensive sequence diversity of T. parva and its biogeographical distribution
mainly depend on host migration and agro-ecological conditions driving tick population dynamics. Such
patterns are likely to contribute to the epidemic and unstable endemic situations of ECF in the region. However, the fact that ubiquitous alleles are genetically similar to the components of the Muguga vaccine together with the limited
geographical clustering may justify testing the existing trivalent vaccine for cross-immunity in the region.Additional file 1: Table S1. Cattle blood sample distribution across agroecological
zones.Additional file 2: Table S2. Nucleotide and amino acid sequences of Tp1
and Tp2 antigen epitopes from T. parva Muguga reference sequence.Additional file 3: Table S3. Characteristics of 119 T. parva samples
obtained from cattle in different agro-ecological zones (AEZs) of The
Democratic Republic of Congo and Burundi.Additional file 4: Figure S1. Multiple sequence alignment of the 11 Tp1
gene alleles obtained in this study.Additional file 5: Table S4. Estimates of evolutionary divergence
between gene alleles for Tp1 and Tp2, using proportion nucleotide
distance.Additional file 6: Table S5. Tp1 and Tp2 genes alleles with their corresponding
antigen variants.Additional file 7: Table S6. Amino acid variants of Tp1 and Tp2 CD8+
T
cell target epitopes of T. parva from DRC and Burundi.Additional file 8: Figure S2. Multiple sequence alignment of the 10 Tp2
gene alleles obtained in this study.Additional file 9: Table S7. Distribution of Tp1 gene alleles of T. parva
from cattle and buffalo in the sub-Saharan region of Africa.Additional file 10: Table S8. Distribution of Tp2 gene alleles of T. parva
from cattle and buffalo in the sub-Saharan region of Africa.Additional file 11: Figure S3. Neighbor-joining tree showing phylogenetic
relationships among 48 Tp1 gene alleles described in Africa.Additional file 12: Figure S4. Phylogenetic tree showing the relationships
among concatenated Tp1 and Tp2 nucleotide sequences of 93 T.
parva samples from cattle in DRC and Burundi.This study is part of the PhD work supported by the University of Namur (UNamur,
Belgium) through the UNamur-CERUNA institutional PhD grant awarded
to GSA for bioinformatic analyses, interpretation of data and manuscript write
up in Belgium. The laboratory aspects (molecular biology analysis) of the
project were supported by the BecA-ILRI Hub through the Africa Biosciences
Challenge Fund (ABCF) programme. The ABCF Programme is funded by
the Australian Department for Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) through the
BecA-CSIRO partnership; the Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture
(SFSA); the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF); the UK Department for International Development (DFID); and the Swedish International Development
Cooperation Agency (Sida). The ABCF Fellowship awarded to GAS was
funded by BMGF grant (OPP1075938). Sample collection, field equipment and
preliminary sample processing were supported through the “Theileria” project
co-funded to the Université Evangélique en Afrique (UEA) by the Agence
Universitaire de la Francophonie (AUF) and the Communauté Economique
des Pays des Grands Lacs (CEPGL). The International Foundation for Science
(IFS, Stockholm, Sweden) supported the individual scholarship awarded to
GSA (grant no. IFS-92890CA3) for field work and part of field equipment to the
“Theileria” project.http://www.parasitesandvectors.comam2020Veterinary Tropical Disease
Improved GaN-based HEMT performance by nanocrystalline diamond capping
As a wide-bandgap semiconductor, gallium nitride (GaN) is an attractive material for next-generation power devices. To date, the capabilities of GaN-based high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) have been limited by self-heating effects (drain current decreases due to phonon scattering-induced carrier velocity reductions at high drain fields). Despite awareness of this, attempts to mitigate thermal impairment have been limited due to the difficulties involved with placing high thermal conductivity materials close to heat sources in the device. Heat spreading schemes have involved growth of AIGaN/GaN on single crystal or CVD diamond, or capping of fullyprocessed HEMTs using nanocrystalline diamond (NCD). All approaches have suffered from reduced HEMT performance or limited substrate size. Recently, a "gate after diamond" approach has been successfully demonstrated to improve the thermal budget of the process by depositing NCD before the thermally sensitive Schottky gate and also to enable large-area diamond implementation
Two Theileria parva CD8 T Cell Antigen Genes Are More Variable in Buffalo than Cattle Parasites, but Differ in Pattern of Sequence Diversity
<p><b>Background:</b> Theileria parva causes an acute fatal disease in cattle, but infections are asymptomatic in the African buffalo (Syncerus caffer). Cattle can be immunized against the parasite by infection and treatment, but immunity is partially strain specific. Available data indicate that CD8(+) T lymphocyte responses mediate protection and, recently, several parasite antigens recognised by CD8(+) T cells have been identified. This study set out to determine the nature and extent of polymorphism in two of these antigens, Tp1 and Tp2, which contain defined CD8(+) T-cell epitopes, and to analyse the sequences for evidence of selection.</p>
<p><b>Methodology/Principal Findings:</b> Partial sequencing of the Tp1 gene and the full-length Tp2 gene from 82 T. parva isolates revealed extensive polymorphism in both antigens, including the epitope-containing regions. Single nucleotide polymorphisms were detected at 51 positions (similar to 12%) in Tp1 and in 320 positions (similar to 61%) in Tp2. Together with two short indels in Tp1, these resulted in 30 and 42 protein variants of Tp1 and Tp2, respectively. Although evidence of positive selection was found for multiple amino acid residues, there was no preferential involvement of T cell epitope residues. Overall, the extent of diversity was much greater in T. parva isolates originating from buffalo than in isolates known to be transmissible among cattle.</p>
<p><b>Conclusions/Significance:</b> The results indicate that T. parva parasites maintained in cattle represent a subset of the overall T. parva population, which has become adapted for tick transmission between cattle. The absence of obvious enrichment for positively selected amino acid residues within defined epitopes indicates either that diversity is not predominantly driven by selection exerted by host T cells, or that such selection is not detectable by the methods employed due to unidentified epitopes elsewhere in the antigens. Further functional studies are required to address this latter point.</p>
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