1,762 research outputs found
Development of chimeric antigen receptor-redirected T cell therapy targeting L1-CAM in ovarian cancer
Hot Gaseous Coronae around Spiral Galaxies: Probing the Illustris Simulation
The presence of hot gaseous coronae around present-day massive spiral
galaxies is a fundamental prediction of galaxy formation models. However, our
observational knowledge remains scarce, since to date only four gaseous coronae
were detected around spirals with massive stellar bodies
(). To explore the hot coronae around
lower mass spiral galaxies, we utilized Chandra X-ray observations of a sample
of eight normal spiral galaxies with stellar masses of . Although statistically significant diffuse X-ray emission is
not detected beyond the optical radii ( kpc) of the galaxies, we derive
limits on the characteristics of the coronae. These limits,
complemented with previous detections of NGC 1961 and NGC 6753, are used to
probe the Illustris Simulation. The observed upper limits on the
X-ray luminosities and gas masses exceed or are at the upper end of the model
predictions. For NGC 1961 and NGC 6753 the observed gas temperatures, metal
abundances, and electron density profiles broadly agree with those predicted by
Illustris. These results hint that the physics modules of Illustris are broadly
consistent with the observed properties of hot coronae around spiral galaxies.
However, a shortcoming of Illustris is that massive black holes, mostly
residing in giant ellipticals, give rise to powerful radio-mode AGN feedback,
which results in under luminous coronae for ellipticals.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Deep Chandra Observations of Abell 2199: the Interplay between Merger-Induced Gas Motions and Nuclear Outbursts in a Cool Core Cluster
We present new Chandra observations of Abell 2199 that show evidence of gas
sloshing due to a minor merger, as well as impacts of the radio source, 3C 338,
hosted by the central galaxy, NGC 6166, on the intracluster gas. The new data
are consistent with previous evidence of a Mach 1.46 shock 100" from the
cluster center, although there is still no convincing evidence for the expected
temperature jump. Other interpretations of this feature are possible, but none
is fully satisfactory. Large scale asymmetries, including enhanced X-ray
emission 200" southwest of the cluster center and a plume of low entropy,
enriched gas reaching 50" to the north of the center, are signatures of gas
sloshing induced by core passage of a merging subcluster about 400 Myr ago. An
association between the unusual radio ridge and low entropy gas are consistent
with this feature being the remnant of a former radio jet that was swept away
from the AGN by gas sloshing. A large discrepancy between the energy required
to produce the 100" shock and the enthalpy of the outer radio lobes of 3C 338
suggests that the lobes were formed by a more recent, less powerful radio
outburst. Lack of evidence for shocks in the central 10" indicates that the
power of the jet now is some two orders of magnitude smaller than when the 100"
shock was formed.Comment: 17 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Preclinical Results of Camptothecin-Polymer Conjugate (IT-101) in Multiple Human Lymphoma Xenograft Models
Purpose: Camptothecin (CPT) has potent broad-spectrum antitumor activity by inhibiting type I DNA topoisomerase (DNA topo I). It has not been used clinically because it is water-insoluble and highly toxic. As a result, irinotecan (CPT-11), a water-soluble analogue of CPT, has been developed and used as salvage chemotherapy in patients with relapsed/refractory lymphoma, but with only modest activity. Recently, we have developed a cyclodextrin-based polymer conjugate of 20-(S)-CPT (IT-101). In this study, we evaluated the preclinical antilymphoma efficacy of IT-101 as compared with CPT-11.
Experimental Design: We determined an in vitro cytotoxicity of IT-101, CPT-11, and their metabolites against multiple human lymphoma cell lines. In human lymphoma xenografts, the pharmacokinetics, inhibitions of tumor DNA topo I catalytic activity, and antilymphoma activities of these compounds were evaluated.
Results: IT-101 and CPT had very high in vitro cytotoxicity against all lymphoma cell lines tested. As compared with CPT-11 and SN-38, IT-101 and CPT had longer release kinetics and significantly inhibit higher tumor DNA topo I catalytic activities. Furthermore, IT-101 showed significantly prolonged the survival of animals bearing s.c. and disseminated human xenografts when compared with CPT-11 at its maximum tolerated dose in mice.
Conclusions: The promising present results provide the basis for a phase I clinical trial in patients with relapsed/refractory lymphoma
Globular Clusters and X-ray Point Sources in Centaurus A (NGC 5128)
We detect 353 X-ray point sources, mostly low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs), in
four Chandra observations of Centaurus A (NGC 5128), the nearest giant
early-type galaxy, and correlate this point source population with the largest
available ensemble of confirmed and likely globular clusters associated with
this galaxy. Of the X-ray sources, 31 are coincident with 30 globular clusters
that are confirmed members of the galaxy by radial velocity measurement (2
X-ray sources match one globular cluster within our search radius), while 1
X-ray source coincides with a globular cluster resolved by HST images. Another
36 X-ray point sources match probable, but spectroscopically unconfirmed,
globular cluster candidates. The color distribution of globular clusters and
cluster candidates in Cen A is bimodal, and the probability that a red, metal
rich GC candidate contains an LMXB is at least 1.7 times that of a blue, metal
poor one. If we consider only spectroscopically confirmed GCs, this ratio
increases to ~3. We find that LMXBs appear preferentially in more luminous
(massive) GCs. These two effects are independent, and the latter is likely a
consequence of enhanced dynamical encounter rates in more massive clusters
which have on average denser cores. The X-ray luminosity functions of the LMXBs
found in GCs and of those that are unmatched with GCs reveal similar underlying
populations, though there is some indication that fewer X-ray faint LMXBs are
found in globular clusters than X-ray bright ones. Our results agree with
previous observations of the connection of GCs and LMXBs in early-type galaxies
and extend previous work on Centaurus A.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, Accepted for Publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
The Chandra XBootes Survey - III: Optical and Near-IR Counterparts
The XBootes Survey is a 5-ks Chandra survey of the Bootes Field of the NOAO
Deep Wide-Field Survey (NDWFS). This survey is unique in that it is the largest
(9.3 deg^2), contiguous region imaged in X-ray with complementary deep optical
and near-IR observations. We present a catalog of the optical counterparts to
the 3,213 X-ray point sources detected in the XBootes survey. Using a Bayesian
identification scheme, we successfully identified optical counterparts for 98%
of the X-ray point sources. The optical colors suggest that the optically
detected galaxies are a combination of z<1 massive early-type galaxies and
bluer star-forming galaxies whose optical AGN emission is faint or obscured,
whereas the majority of the optically detected point sources are likely quasars
over a large redshift range. Our large area, X-ray bright, optically deep
survey enables us to select a large sub-sample of sources (773) with high X-ray
to optical flux ratios (f_x/f_o>10). These objects are likely high redshift
and/or dust obscured AGN. These sources have generally harder X-ray spectra
than sources with 0.1<f_x/f_o<10. Of the 73 X-ray sources with no optical
counterpart in the NDWFS catalog, 47 are truly optically blank down to R~25.5
(the average 50% completeness limit of the NDWFS R-band catalogs). These
sources are also likely to be high redshift and/or dust obscured AGN.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, ApJ accepted. Catalog can be found at:
http://www.noao.edu/noao/noaodeep or
ftp://archive.noao.edu/pub/catalogs/xbootes
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