9,204 research outputs found
FGB1 and WSC3 are in planta-induced beta-glucan-binding fungal lectins with different functions
In the root endophyte Serendipita indica, several lectin-like members of the expanded multigene family of WSC proteins are transcriptionally induced in planta and are potentially involved in beta-glucan remodeling at the fungal cell wall. Using biochemical and cytological approaches we show that one of these lectins, SiWSC3 with three WSC domains, is an integral fungal cell wall component that binds to long-chain beta 1-3-glucan but has no affinity for shorter beta 1-3- or beta 1-6-linked glucose oligomers. Comparative analysis with the previously identified beta-glucan-binding lectin SiFGB1 demonstrated that whereas SiWSC3 does not require beta 1-6-linked glucose for efficient binding to branched beta 1-3-glucan, SiFGB1 does. In contrast to SiFGB1, the multivalent SiWSC3 lectin can efficiently agglutinate fungal cells and is additionally induced during fungus-fungus confrontation, suggesting different functions for these two beta-glucan-binding lectins. Our results highlight the importance of the beta-glucan cell wall component in plant-fungus interactions and the potential of beta-glucan-binding lectins as specific detection tools for fungi in vivo
The Alzheimer variant of Lewy body disease: A pathologically confirmed case-control study
The objective of the study was to identify clinical features that distinguish patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), who were classified as Alzheimer's disease ( AD) patients, from patients with AD. We examined a group of 27 patients from our memory clinic, originally diagnosed with AD, of whom 6 were postmortem found to have DLB. For the present study, we compared cognitive, noncognitive and neurological symptoms between the two groups. We found that there were no differences on ratings of dementia and scales for activities of daily living. Patients with DLB performed better on the MMSE and the memory subtest of the CAMCOG, but there was no difference in any other cognitive domain. Furthermore, genetic risk factors, including family history of dementia or allele frequency of the apolipoprotein epsilon 4, did not discriminate between the two groups, and there were no differences on CCT scans. Taken together, our findings suggest that Lewy body pathology may be present in patients who do not show the typical clinical features which distinguish DLB from AD. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel
Solid-State Excitation Laser for Laser-Ultrasonics
The inspection speed of laser-ultrasonics compared with conventional ultrasonic testing is limited by the pulse repetition rate of the excitation laser. The maximum pulse repetition rate reported up to now for CO2-lasers, which are presently used for nearly all systems, is in the range of 400 Hz. In this paper a new approach based on a diode-pumped solid-state laser is discussed, which is currently being developed. This new excitation laser is designed for a repetition rate of 1 kHz and will operate at a mid-IR wavelength of 3.3 m. The higher repeti-tion rate enables a higher inspection speed, whereas the mid-IR wavelength anticipates a better coupling efficiency. The total power for pumping the laser crystals is transported via flexible optical fibres to the compact laser head, thus allowing operation on a robot arm. The laser head consists of a master oscillator feeding several lines of power amplifiers and in-cludes nonlinear optical wavelength conversion by an optical parametric process. It is char-acterized by a modular construction which provides optimal conditions for operation at high average power as well as for easy maintenance. These features will enable building reliable, long-lived, rugged, smart laser ultrasonic systems in futur
3C 295, a cluster and its cooling flow at z=0.46
We present ROSAT HRI data of the distant and X-ray luminous (L_x(bol)=2.6^
{+0.4}_{-0.2} 10^{45}erg/sec) cluster of galaxies 3C 295. We fit both a
one-dimensional and a two-dimensional isothermal beta-model to the data, the
latter one taking into account the effects of the point spread function (PSF).
For the error analysis of the parameters of the two-dimensional model we
introduce a Monte-Carlo technique. Applying a substructure analysis, by
subtracting a cluster model from the data, we find no evidence for a merger,
but we see a decrement in emission South-East of the center of the cluster,
which might be due to absorption. We confirm previous results by Henry &
Henriksen(1986) that 3C 295 hosts a cooling flow. The equations for the simple
and idealized cooling flow analysis presented here are solely based on the
isothermal beta-model, which fits the data very well, including the center of
the cluster. We determine a cooling flow radius of 60-120kpc and mass accretion
rates of dot{M}=400-900 Msun/y, depending on the applied model and temperature
profile. We also investigate the effects of the ROSAT PSF on our estimate of
dot{M}, which tends to lead to a small overestimate of this quantity if not
taken into account. This increase of dot{M} (10-25%) can be explained by a
shallower gravitational potential inferred by the broader overall profile
caused by the PSF, which diminishes the efficiency of mass accretion. We also
determine the total mass of the cluster using the hydrostatic approach. At a
radius of 2.1 Mpc, we estimate the total mass of the cluster (M{tot}) to be
(9.2 +/- 2.7) 10^{14}Msun. For the gas to total mass ratio we get M{gas}/M{tot}
=0.17-0.31, in very good agreement with the results for other clusters of
galaxies, giving strong evidence for a low density universe.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Tunable Fano Resonances in Transport through Microwave Billiards
We present a tunable microwave scattering device that allows the controlled
variation of Fano line shape parameters in transmission through quantum
billiards. Transport in this device is nearly fully coherent. By comparison
with quantum calculations, employing the modular recursive Green's-function
method, the scattering wave function and the degree of residual decoherence can
be determined. The parametric variation of Fano line shapes in terms of
interacting resonances is analyzed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The role of controllability in optimizing quantum dynamics
This paper discusses the important role of controllability played on the
complexity of optimizing quantum mechanical control systems. The study is based
on a topology analysis of the corresponding quantum control landscape, which is
referred to as the optimization objective as a functional of control fields. We
find that the degree of controllability is closely relevant with the ruggedness
of the landscape, which determines the search efficiency for global optima.
This effect is demonstrated via the gate fidelity control landscape of a system
whose controllability is restricted on a SU(2) dynamic symmetry group. We show
that multiple local false traps (i.e., non-global suboptima) exist even if the
target gate is realizable and that the number of these traps is increased by
the loss of controllability, while the controllable systems are always devoid
of false traps.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Characterizing Quantum Properties of a Measurement Apparatus: Insights from the Retrodictive Approach
Using the retrodictive approach of quantum physics, we show that the state
retrodicted from the response of a measurement apparatus is a convenient tool
to fully characterize its quantum properties. We translate in terms of this
state some interesting aspects of the quantum behavior of a detector, such as
the non-classicality or the non-gaussian character of its measurements. We also
introduce estimators - the projectivity, the ideality, the fidelity or the
detectivity of measurements perfomed by the apparatus - which directly follow
from the retrodictive approach. Beyond their fundamental significance for
describing general quantum measurements, these properties are crucial in
several protocols, in particular in the conditional preparation of
non-classical states of light or in measurement-driven quantum information
processing
Traveling Poles Elimination Scheme And Calculations Of External Quality Factors Of HOMS In SC Cavities
The main scope of this work is the automation of the extraction procedure of the external quality factors Qext of Higher Order Modes HOMs in Superconducting SC radio frequency RF cavities. The HOMs are generated by charged particle beams traveling through a SC cavity at the speed of light amp; 8776; 1 . The HOMs decay very slowly, depending on localization inside the structure and cell to cell coupling, and may influence succeeding charged particle bunches. Thus it is important, at the SC cavity design optimization stage, to calculate the Qext of HOMs. Traveling Poles Elimination TPE scheme was used to automatically extract Qext from the transmission spectra and careful eigenmode analysis of the SC cavity was performed to confirm TPE results. The eigenmode analysis also delivers important information about band structure, cell to cell coupling and allows rapid identification of modes that could interact with the charged particle bunches
Real-space Manifestations of Bottlenecks in Turbulence Spectra
An energy-spectrum bottleneck, a bump in the turbulence spectrum between the
inertial and dissipation ranges, is shown to occur in the non-turbulent,
one-dimensional, hyperviscous Burgers equation and found to be the
Fourier-space signature of oscillations in the real-space velocity, which are
explained by boundary-layer-expansion techniques. Pseudospectral simulations
are used to show that such oscillations occur in velocity correlation functions
in one- and three-dimensional hyperviscous hydrodynamical equations that
display genuine turbulence.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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