9,781 research outputs found
Intracellular trafficking and cellular uptake mechanism of PHBV nanoparticles for targeted delivery in epithelial cell lines
Indexación: Web of Science; Scopus; Scielo.Background: Nanotechnology is a science that involves imaging, measurement, modeling and a manipulation of matter at the nanometric scale. One application of this technology is drug delivery systems based on nanoparticles obtained from natural or synthetic sources. An example of these systems is synthetized from poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate), which is a biodegradable, biocompatible and a low production cost polymer. The aim of this work was to investigate the uptake mechanism of PHBV nanoparticles in two different epithelial cell lines (HeLa and SKOV-3).
Results: As a first step, we characterized size, shape and surface charge of nanoparticles using dynamic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy. Intracellular incorporation was evaluated through flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy using intracellular markers. We concluded that cellular uptake mechanism is carried out in a time, concentration and energy dependent way. Our results showed that nanoparticle uptake displays a cell-specific pattern, since we have observed different colocalization in two different cell lines. In HeLa (Cervical cancer cells) this process may occur via classical endocytosis pathway and some internalization via caveolin-dependent was also observed, whereas in SKOV-3 (Ovarian cancer cells) these patterns were not observed. Rearrangement of actin filaments showed differential nanoparticle internalization patterns for HeLa and SKOV-3. Additionally, final fate of nanoparticles was also determined, showing that in both cell lines, nanoparticles ended up in lysosomes but at different times, where they are finally degraded, thereby releasing their contents.
Conclusions: Our results, provide novel insight about PHBV nanoparticles internalization suggesting that for develop a proper drug delivery system is critical understand the uptake mechanism.https://jnanobiotechnology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12951-016-0241-
Controllable direction of liquid jets generated by thermocavitation within a droplet.
A high-velocity fluid stream ejected from an orifice or nozzle is a common mechanism to produce liquid jets in inkjet printers or to produce sprays among other applications. In the present research, we show the generation of liquid jets of controllable direction produced within a sessile water droplet by thermocavitation. The jets are driven by an acoustic shock wave emitted by the collapse of a hemispherical vapor bubble at the liquid-solid/substrate interface. The generated shock wave is reflected at the liquid-air interface due to acoustic impedance mismatch generating multiple reflections inside the droplet. During each reflection, a force is exerted on the interface driving the jets. Depending on the position of the generation of the bubble within the droplet, the mechanical energy of the shock wave is focused on different regions at the liquid-air interface, ejecting cylindrical liquid jets at different angles. The ejected jet angle dependence is explained by a simple ray tracing model of the propagation of the acoustic shock wave inside the droplet
Quantum fluctuations in high field magnetization of 2D square lattice J1-J2 antiferromagnets
The J1-J2 square lattice Heisenberg model with spin S=1/2 has three phases
with long-range magnetic order and two unconventionally ordered phases
depending on the ratio of exchange constants. It describes a number of recently
found layered vanadium oxide compounds. A simple means of investigating the
ground state is the study of the magnetization curve and high-field
susceptibility. We discuss these quantities by using the spin-wave theory and
the exact diagonalization in the whole J1-J2 plane. We compare both results and
find good overall agreement in the sectors of the phase diagram with magnetic
order. Close to the disordered regions the magnetization curve shows strong
deviations from the classical linear behaviour caused by large quantum
fluctuations and spin-wave approximation breaks down. On the FM side (J1<0)
where one approaches the quantum gapless spin nematic ground state this region
is surprisingly large. We find that inclusion of second order spin-wave
corrections does not lead to fundamental improvement. Quantum corrections to
the tilting angle of the ordered moments are also calculated. They may have
both signs, contrary to the always negative first order quantum corrections to
the magnetization. Finally we investigate the effect of the interlayer coupling
and find that the quasi-2D picture remains valid up to |J_\perp/J1| ~ 0.3.Comment: 13 pages, 6figure
Discovery of x-ray pulsations from the integral source IGR J11014−6103
published_or_final_versio
p-wave Holographic Superconductors and five-dimensional gauged Supergravity
We explore five-dimensional and
SO(6) gauged supergravities as frameworks for condensed matter applications.
These theories contain charged (dilatonic) black holes and 2-forms which have
non-trivial quantum numbers with respect to U(1) subgroups of SO(6). A question
of interest is whether they also contain black holes with two-form hair with
the required asymptotic to give rise to holographic superconductivity. We first
consider the case, which contains a complex two-form potential
which has U(1) charge . We find that a slight
generalization, where the two-form potential has an arbitrary charge , leads
to a five-dimensional model that exhibits second-order superconducting
transitions of p-wave type where the role of order parameter is played by
, provided . We identify the operator that condenses
in the dual CFT, which is closely related to Super Yang-Mills
theory with chemical potentials. Similar phase transitions between R-charged
black holes and black holes with 2-form hair are found in a generalized version
of the gauged supergravity Lagrangian where the two-forms have
charge .Comment: 35 pages, 14 figure
Clinical and genetic analysis of 29 Brazilian patients with Huntington’s disease-like phenotype
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by chorea,
behavioral disturbances and dementia, caused by a pathological expansion of the CAG
trinucleotide in the HTT gene. Several patients have been recognized with the typical HD
phenotype without the expected mutation. The objective of this study was to assess the
occurrence of diseases such as Huntington’s disease-like 2 (HDL2), spinocerebellar ataxia
(SCA) 1, SCA2, SCA3, SCA7, dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) and choreaacanthocytosis
(ChAc) among 29 Brazilian patients with a HD-like phenotype. In the group
analyzed, we found 3 patients with HDL2 and 2 patients with ChAc. The diagnosis was not
reached in 79.3% of the patients. HDL2 was the main cause of the HD-like phenotype in
the group analyzed, and is attributable to the African ancestry of this population. However,
the etiology of the disease remains undetermined in the majority of the HD negative
patients with HD-like phenotype.
Key words: Huntington’s disease, Huntington’s disease-like, chorea-acanthocytosis,
Huntington’s disease-like 2
Local variation of hashtag spike trains and popularity in Twitter
We draw a parallel between hashtag time series and neuron spike trains. In
each case, the process presents complex dynamic patterns including temporal
correlations, burstiness, and all other types of nonstationarity. We propose
the adoption of the so-called local variation in order to uncover salient
dynamics, while properly detrending for the time-dependent features of a
signal. The methodology is tested on both real and randomized hashtag spike
trains, and identifies that popular hashtags present regular and so less bursty
behavior, suggesting its potential use for predicting online popularity in
social media.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
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