79 research outputs found
A super-Earth transiting a nearby low-mass star
A decade ago, the detection of the first transiting extrasolar planet
provided a direct constraint on its composition and opened the door to
spectroscopic investigations of extrasolar planetary atmospheres. As such
characterization studies are feasible only for transiting systems that are both
nearby and for which the planet-to-star radius ratio is relatively large,
nearby small stars have been surveyed intensively. Doppler studies and
microlensing have uncovered a population of planets with minimum masses of
1.9-10 times the Earth's mass (M_Earth), called super-Earths. The first
constraint on the bulk composition of this novel class of planets was afforded
by CoRoT-7b, but the distance and size of its star preclude atmospheric studies
in the foreseeable future. Here we report observations of the transiting planet
GJ 1214b, which has a mass of 6.55 M_Earth and a radius 2.68 times Earth's
radius (R_Earth), indicating that it is intermediate in stature between Earth
and the ice giants of the Solar System. We find that the planetary mass and
radius are consistent with a composition of primarily water enshrouded by a
hydrogen-helium envelope that is only 0.05% of the mass of the planet. The
atmosphere is probably escaping hydrodynamically, indicating that it has
undergone significant evolution during its history. As the star is small and
only 13 parsecs away, the planetary atmosphere is amenable to study with
current observatories.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, published in Natur
Nuclear Reprogramming: Kinetics of Cell Cycle and Metabolic Progression as Determinants of Success
Establishment of totipotency after somatic cell nuclear transfer (NT) requires not only reprogramming of gene expression, but also conversion of the cell cycle from quiescence to the precisely timed sequence of embryonic cleavage. Inadequate adaptation of the somatic nucleus to the embryonic cell cycle regime may lay the foundation for NT embryo failure and their reported lower cell counts. We combined bright field and fluorescence imaging of histone H2b-GFP expressing mouse embryos, to record cell divisions up to the blastocyst stage. This allowed us to quantitatively analyze cleavage kinetics of cloned embryos and revealed an extended and inconstant duration of the second and third cell cycles compared to fertilized controls generated by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Compared to fertilized embryos, slow and fast cleaving NT embryos presented similar rates of errors in M phase, but were considerably less tolerant to mitotic errors and underwent cleavage arrest. Although NT embryos vary substantially in their speed of cell cycle progression, transcriptome analysis did not detect systematic differences between fast and slow NT embryos. Profiling of amino acid turnover during pre-implantation development revealed that NT embryos consume lower amounts of amino acids, in particular arginine, than fertilized embryos until morula stage. An increased arginine supplementation enhanced development to blastocyst and increased embryo cell numbers. We conclude that a cell cycle delay, which is independent of pluripotency marker reactivation, and metabolic restraints reduce cell counts of NT embryos and impede their development
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon exposure and pediatric asthma in children: a case–control study
Perivascular macrophages in health and disease
Macrophages are a heterogeneous group of cells that are capable of carrying out distinct functions in different tissues, as well as in different locations within a given tissue. Some of these tissue macrophages lie on, or close to, the outer (abluminal) surface of blood vessels and perform several crucial activities at this interface between the tissue and the blood. In steady-state tissues, these perivascular macrophages maintain tight junctions between endothelial cells and limit vessel permeability, phagocytose potential pathogens before they enter tissues from the blood and restrict inappropriate inflammation. They also have a multifaceted role in diseases such as cancer, Alzheimer disease, multiple sclerosis and type 1 diabetes. Here, we examine the important functions of perivascular macrophages in various adult tissues and describe how these functions are perturbed in a broad array of pathological conditions
Interaction between chlorophyll and silver nanoparticles: A close analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence quenching
Silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) are among the most widely produced and used nanomaterial due to their antimicrobial and antibacterial properties, allowing a wide range of commercial applications. Thereby, the increasing use of Ag NPs should inevitably lead to the release and accumulation of these NPs into the environment, resulting in adverse effects on plants, animals and humans. Chlorophyll fluorescence (ChlF) has been proposed as a non-destructive and accurate tool for detecting the impacts of environmental stress on plants. Little is known about the photophysical behavior of plants when exposed to a metallic NPs-containing environment. The present study evaluated the interaction between chlorophyll (Chl) and Ag NPs, over a wide range of nanoparticle concentrations (from 0 μM to 200.0 μM), by monitoring the ChlF. The results reveal that the ChlF is quenched in the presence of Ag NPs, as a result of the static and dynamic quenching processes. The present results suggest that ChlF has a great potential to be used in the future as an analytical tool for monitoring the interaction of plants and NPs as well as investigating the effects of NPs on plants
Venous lakes (Bean-Walsh) of the lips-treatment experience with the argon laser and 18 months follow-up
Simultaneous Extraction of Density of States Width, Carrier Mobility and Injection Barriers in Organic Semiconductors
Geschichtliche Grundlagen und treibende Faktoren für die Quote für die Seele und die Armen bei den kappadozischen Vätern und bei Johannes Chrysostomus
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