4,556 research outputs found
First-principles study of electron transport through cages
Electron transport properties of C molecules suspended between gold
electrodes are investigated using first-principles calculations. Our study
reveals that the conductances are quite sensitive to the number of C
molecules between electrodes: the conductances of C monomers are near 1
G, while those of dimers are markedly smaller, since incident electrons
easily pass the C molecules and are predominantly scattered at the
C-C junctions. Moreover, we find both channel currents locally
circulating the outermost carbon atoms.Comment: 8 pages and 3 figure
Mincle-mediated anti-inflammatory IL-10 response counter-regulates IL-12 in vitro
The role of macrophage-inducible C-type lectin (Mincle) in anti-inflammatory responses has not yet been fully characterized. Herein, we show that engagement of Mincle by trehalose-dimycolate or mycobacteria promotes IL-10 production in macrophages, which causes down-regulation of IL-12p40 secretion. Thus, Mincle mediates both pro- as well as anti-inflammatory responses
Stat6-Dependent Inhibition of Mincle Expression in Mouse and Human Antigen-Presenting Cells by the Th2 Cytokine IL-4
The C-type lectin receptors (CLR) Mincle, Mcl and Dectin-2 bind mycobacterial and fungal cell wall glycolipids and carbohydrates. Recently, we described that expression of these CLR is down-regulated during differentiation of human monocytes to dendritic cells (DC) in the presence of GM-CSF and IL-4. Here, we demonstrate that the Th2 cytokine IL-4 specifically inhibits expression of Mincle, Mcl and Dectin-2in human APC. This inhibitory effect of IL-4 was observed across species, as murine macrophages and DC treated with IL-4 also down-regulated these receptors. IL-4 blocked up-regulation of Mincle and Mcl mRNA expression and cell surface protein by murine macrophages in response to the Mincle ligand Trehalose-6,6-dibehenate (TDB), whereas the TLR4 ligand LPS overcame inhibition by IL-4. Functionally, down-regulation of Mincle expression by IL-4 was accompanied by reduced cytokine production upon stimulation with TDB. These inhibitory effects of IL-4 were dependent on the transcription factor Stat6. Together, our results show that the key Th2 cytokine IL-4 exerts a negative effect on the expression of Mincle and other Dectin-2 cluster CLR in mouse and human macrophages and DC, which may render these sentinel cells less vigilant for sensing mycobacterial and fungal ligands
ab initio modeling of open systems: charge transfer, electron conduction, and molecular switching of a C_{60} device
We present an {\it ab initio} analysis of electron conduction through a
molecular device. Charge transfer from the device electrodes to the
molecular region is found to play a crucial role in aligning the lowest
unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the to the Fermi level of the
electrodes. This alignment induces a substantial device conductance of . A gate potential can inhibit charge transfer and
introduce a conductance gap near , changing the current-voltage
characteristics from metallic to semi-conducting, thereby producing a field
effect molecular current switch
Physiology, signaling, and pharmacology of galanin peptides and receptors:three decades of emerging diversity
Clinical effectiveness of hymenoptera venom immunotherapy
Treatment failure during venom immunotherapy (VIT) may be associated with a variety of risk factors. Our aim was to evaluate the association of baseline serum tryptase concentration (BTC) and of other parameters with the frequency of VIT failure during the maintenance phase. In this observational prospective multicenter study, we followed 357 patients with established honey bee or vespid venom allergy after the maintenance dose of VIT had been reached. In all patients, VIT effectiveness was either verified by sting challenge (n = 154) or patient self-reporting of the outcome of a field sting (n = 203). Data were collected on BTC, age, gender, preventive use of anti-allergic drugs (oral antihistamines and/or corticosteroids) right after a field sting, venom dose, antihypertensive medication, type of venom, side effects during VIT, severity of index sting reaction preceding VIT, and duration of VIT. Relative rates were calculated with generalized additive models. 22 patients (6.2%) developed generalized symptoms during sting challenge or after a field sting. A strong association between the frequency of VIT failure and BTC could be excluded. Due to wide confidence bands, however, weaker effects (odds ratios <3) of BTC were still possible, and were also suggested by a selective analysis of patients who had a sting challenge. The most important factor associated with VIT failure was a honey bee venom allergy. Preventive use of anti-allergic drugs may be associated with a higher protection rate. It is unlikely that an elevated BTC has a strong negative effect on the rate of treatment failures. The magnitude of the latter, however, may depend on the method of effectiveness assessment. Failure rate is higher in patients suffering from bee venom allergy
INTEGRAL and Swift/XRT observations of the source PKS 0208-512
The active galaxy PKS 0208-512, detected at lower energies by COMPTEL, has
been claimed to be a MeV blazar from EGRET. We report on the most recent
INTEGRAL observations of the blazar PKS 0208-512, which are supplemented by
Swift ToO observations. The high energy X-ray and gamma-ray emission of PKS
0208-512 during August - December 2008 has been studied using 682 ks of
INTEGRAL guest observer time and ~ 56 ks of Swift/XRT observations. These data
were collected during the decay of a gamma-ray flare observed by Fermi/LAT. At
X-ray energies (0.2 - 10 keV) PKS 0208-512 is significantly detected by
Swift/XRT, showing a power-law spectrum with a photon index of ~ 1.64. Its
X-ray luminosity varied by roughly 30% during one month. At hard X-/soft
gamma-ray energies PKS 0208-512 shows a marginally significant (~ 3.2 sigma)
emission in the 0.5-1 MeV band when combining all INTEGRAL/SPI data.
Non-detections at energies below and above this band by INTEGRAL/SPI may
indicate intrinsic excess emission. If this possible excess is produced by the
blazar, one possible explanation could be that its jet consists of an abundant
electron-positron plasma, which may lead to the emission of an annihilation
radiation feature. Assuming this scenario, we estimate physical parameters of
the jet of PKS 0208-512.Comment: accepted for publication in A&
Holstein model in infinite dimensions at half-filling
The normal state of the Holstein model is studied at half-filling in infinite
dimensions and in the adiabatic regime. The dynamical mean-field equations are
solved using perturbation expansions around the extremal paths of the effective
action for the atoms. We find that the Migdal-Eliashberg expansion breaks down
in the metallic state if the electron-phonon coupling exceeds a value
of about 1.3 in spite of the fact that the formal expansion parameter ( is the phonon frequency, the Fermi energy) is
much smaller than 1. The breakdown is due to the appearance of more than one
extremal path of the action. We present numerical results which illustrate in
detail the evolution of the local Green's function, the self-energy and the
effective atomic potential as a function of .Comment: Revtex + 17 postscript figures include
Does the quality and outcomes framework reduce psychiatric admissions in people with serious mental illness? A regression analysis
BackgroundThe Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) incentivises general practices in England to provide proactive care for people with serious mental illness (SMI) including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and other psychoses. Better proactive primary care may reduce the risk of psychiatric admissions to hospital, but this has never been tested empirically.MethodsThe QOF data set included 8234 general practices in England from 2006/2007 to 2010/2011. Rates of hospital admissions with primary diagnoses of SMI or bipolar disorder were estimated from national routine hospital data and aggregated to practice level. Poisson regression was used to analyse associations.ResultsPractices with higher achievement on the annual review for SMI patients (MH9), or that performed better on either of the two lithium indicators for bipolar patients (MH4 or MH5), had more psychiatric admissions. An additional 1% in achievement rates for MH9 was associated with an average increase in the annual practice admission rate of 0.19% (95% CI 0.10% to 0.28%) or 0.007 patients (95% CI 0.003 to 0.01).ConclusionsThe positive association was contrary to expectation, but there are several possible explanations: better quality primary care may identify unmet need for secondary care; higher QOF achievement may not prevent the need for secondary care; individuals may receive their QOF checks postdischarge rather than prior to admission; individuals with more severe SMI may be more likely to be registered with practices with better QOF performance; and QOF may be a poor measure of the quality of care for people with SMI
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