Search results for " SUBSTRATE"

showing 10 items of 129 documents

Growth of low-density vertical quantum dot molecules with control in energy emission

2010

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License.-- This article is part of the series 8th International Workshop on Epitaxial Semiconductors on Patterned Substrates and Novel Index Surfaces.

NanostructureMaterials scienceNanochemistryNanotechnologyEpitaxyCondensed Matter::Materials ScienceMaterials Science(all)lcsh:TA401-492NanotechnologyMoleculeGeneral Materials ScienceChemistry/Food Science generalMaterial Sciencebusiness.industryQuantum dotsEngineering GeneralSpecial Issue ArticleMaterials Science generalCondensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall EffectCondensed Matter PhysicsPhysics General8th International Workshop on Epitaxial Semiconductors on Patterned Substrates and Novel Index SurfacesQuantum dotMolecular MedicineOptoelectronicslcsh:Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materialsPhotonicsbusinessDroplet epitaxyLayer (electronics)Molecular beam epitaxyMolecular beam epitaxy
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IRS2 signalling is required for the development of a subset of sensory spinal neurons

2012

Insulin and insulin-like growth factor-I play important roles in the development and maintenance of neurons and glial cells of the nervous system. Both factors activate tyrosine kinase receptors, which signal through adapter proteins of the insulin receptor substrate (IRS) family. Although insulin and insulin-like growth factor-I receptors are expressed in dorsal root ganglia (DRG), the function of IRS-mediated signalling in these structures has not been studied. Here we address the role of IRS2-mediated signalling in murine DRG. Studies in cultured DRG neurons from different embryonic stages indicated that a subset of nerve growth factor-responsive neurons is also dependent on insulin for …

Nervous systemmedicine.medical_specialtybiologyGeneral NeuroscienceInsulinmedicine.medical_treatmentGrowth factorReceptor tyrosine kinaseIRS2Insulin-like growth factorEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemInternal medicineInsulin receptor substratebiology.proteinmedicineReceptorEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
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Making a mountain out of a molehill: on the role of the rostral dorsal anterior cingulate and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex in conscious threat appra…

2013

According to appraisal theories fear and anxiety are elicited by the subjective evaluation of a situation or internal state as threatening. From this perspective anxiety disorders result from maladaptive, exaggerated threat appraisals that over-estimate the threatening consequences of often innocuous stimuli and situations. When these threat over-estimations occur at the level of conscious processing, they are referred to as catastrophizing and worrying. Both are major pathogenic processes in many clinical theories of anxiety. Until recently, little has been known about the neurobiological basis of normal and pathological conscious threat appraisal. Here, we review functional neuroimaging s…

Neural substrateCognitive NeuroscienceCatastrophizationFunctional NeuroimagingPerspective (graphical)Poison controlPanicPrefrontal CortexFearAnxietyGyrus CinguliDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyFunctional neuroimagingInjury preventionAnxiety sensitivitymedicineAnxietyHumansmedicine.symptomPsychologyNeuroscienceNeuroscience and biobehavioral reviews
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Neural Substrate to Associate Odorants and Pheromones: Convergence of Projections from the Main and Accessory Olfactory Bulbs in Mice

2012

In rodents olfactory stimuli are essential for socio-sexual behaviour. Volatile stimuli mainly activate the main olfactory system, whereas non-volatile ones, some of them considered as pheromones, activate the accessory olfactory system. Traditionally, it has been considered that the efferent projections of the main and the accessory olfactory bulbs innervate different telencephalic areas. Recent studies performed in rats and mice have challenged this view. In this work we explore in mice, through the use of anterograde tracer injections in the olfactory bulbs, the brain centres where olfactory and vomeronasal information might converge.

Olfactory systemStria terminalisVomeronasal organNeural substrateSex pheromoneEfferentBiologyAccessory Olfactory BulbNeuroscienceOlfactory bulb
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Effects of Vermicompost, Compost and Digestate as Commercial Alternative Peat-Based Substrates on Qualitative Parameters of Salvia officinalis

2021

Peat is a common substrate used for the cultivation of potted plants. However, the use of peat in horticulture has recently been questioned from an environmental standpoint, since it is a non-renewable resource and plays a major role in atmospheric CO2 sequestration. The aim of this work was to assess the potentialities of substrates obtained from vermicompost, compost and anaerobic digestion processes to partially substitute peat for sage (Salvia officinalis L.) cultivation. Therefore, we planned an experiment to assess the effect of these substrates on essential oil (EO) yield and composition, as well as on leaf nutrients concentration of sage plants. The three substrates were mixed with …

PeatSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agrariaengineering.materiallcsh:AgricultureNutrientfoodbiowaste reusesage essential oilChemistryCompostSAGEfungiSalvia officinalisSettore AGR/09 - Meccanica Agrarialcsh:Sfood and beveragessubstrate heavy metalsfood.foodAnaerobic digestionHorticulturebiowaste reuse substrate heavy metals sage essential oil sage heavy metalsDigestateengineeringsage heavy metalsAgronomy and Crop ScienceVermicompostAgronomy
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PRK1 phosphorylates MARCKS at the PKC sites: serine 152, serine 156 and serine 163

1996

AbstractThe 80kDa Myristolated Alanine-Rich C-Kinase Substrate (MARCKS) in a major in vivo substrate of protein kinase C (PKC). Here we report that MARCKS is a major substrate for the lipid-activated PKC-related kinase (PRK1) in cell extracts. Furthermore, PRK1 is shown to phosphorylate MARCKS on the same sites as PKC in vitro. Thus, control of MARCKS phosphorylation on these previously identified ‘PKC’ sites may be regulated under certain circumstances by PRK as well as PKC mediated signalling pathways. The implications for MARCKS as a marker of PKC activation and as a point of signal convergence are discussed.

PhosphopeptidesMARCKSPRKRecombinant Fusion ProteinsMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsKidneyBiochemistryCell-free systemCell LineSerineStructural BiologyProtein kinase CGeneticsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceBinding siteMARCKSPKCPhosphorylationMyristoylated Alanine-Rich C Kinase SubstrateMolecular BiologyProtein kinase CGlutathione TransferaseBinding SitesCell-Free SystemKinaseChemistryIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsMembrane ProteinsProteinsCell BiologyHaplorhiniPeptide FragmentsBiochemistryPhosphorylationElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelSignal transductionSequence AnalysisSignal TransductionFEBS Letters
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Evidences of adaptive traits to rocky substrates undermine paradigm of habitat preference of the Mediterranean seagrass Posidonia oceanica

2015

AbstractPosidonia oceanica meadows are acknowledged as one of the most valuable ecosystems of the Mediterranean Sea. P. oceanica has been historically described as a species typically growing on mobile substrates whose development requires precursor communities. Here we document for the first time the extensive presence of sticky hairs covering P. oceanica seedling roots. Adhesive root hairs allow the seedlings to firmly anchor to rocky substrates with anchorage strength values up to 5.23 N, regardless of the presence of algal cover and to colonise bare rock without the need for precursor assemblages to facilitate settlement. Adhesive root hairs are a morphological trait common on plants li…

Phyllospadix scouleriMultidisciplinaryAlismatalesbiologyEcologySettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaAdaptation BiologicalMicrositeEnvironmentbiology.organism_classificationArticleColonisationAlismatidaeSeagrassPhenotypeQuantitative Trait HeritablePropaguleHabitatSeedlingsPosidonia oceanicaBotanyMediterranean SeaMediterranean Sea Posidonia oceanica root hairs substrates seedlingsEcosystemScientific Reports
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Modelling leaky photonic wires: a mode solver comparison

2006

We present results from a mode solver comparison held within the framework of the European COST P11 project. The structure modelled is a high-index contrast photonic wire in silicon-oninsulator subject to substrate leakage. The methods compared are both in-house developed and commercial, and range from effective index and perturbation methods, over finite-element and finite-difference codes, beam propagation methods, to film mode matching methods and plane wave expansion methods.

Plane waveSubstrate leakageno keywordsIR-67031METIS-248208OpticsBeam propagation methodBoundary value problemElectrical and Electronic EngineeringOptical mode solvers Photonic wires Substrate leakage WaveguidesLeakage (electronics)Physicsbusiness.industryOptical mode solversSolverPhotonic wiresIOMS-PCS: PHOTONIC CRYSTAL STRUCTURESAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsFinite element methodElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsEWI-9572IOMS-SNS: SENSORSPlane wave expansionPhotonicsbusinessWaveguides
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Highly selective and sensitive chromo-fluorogenic detection of the Tetryl explosive using functional silica nanoparticles

2011

Silica nanoparticles containing polyamines and thiol groups have been used as probes for the selective detection of Tetryl. © 2011 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

PolyamineINGENIERIA DE LA CONSTRUCCIONUnclassified drugNanoparticlePhotochemistryColorimetry (chemical method)Nitrobenzenechemistry.chemical_compoundNanoparticleQUIMICA ORGANICAChemical structureSilicon dioxidePolyaminesMaterials ChemistryChemical analysischemistry.chemical_classificationAniline CompoundsChemistryMetals and Alloysrespiratory systemTetrylSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsThiolColorimetryDyeExplosive materialSilicon dioxideChemical structureArticleCatalysisThiol groupBinding site246 trinitrophenylmethylnitramineExplosive AgentsExplosiveReaction analysisQUIMICA ANALITICASulfhydryl CompoundsNitrobenzenesSensorFluorescent DyesFluorescent dyeQUIMICA INORGANICAGeneral ChemistrySilane derivativeCombinatorial chemistryChromogenic substrateCeramics and CompositesNanoparticlesChemical Communications
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Straightforward Approach for Preparing Durable Antibacterial ZnO Nanoparticle Coatings on Flexible Substrates

2022

Flexible antibacterial materials have gained utmost importance in protection from the distribution of bacteria and viruses due to the exceptional variety of applications. Herein, we demonstrate a readily scalable and rapid single-step approach for producing durable ZnO nanoparticle antibacterial coating on flexible polymer substrates at room temperature. Substrates used are polystyrene, poly(ethylene-co-vinyl acetate) copolymer, poly(methyl methacrylate), polypropylene, high density polyethylene and a commercial acrylate type adhesive tape. The deposition was achieved by a spin-coating process using a slurry of ZnO nanoparticles in toluene. A stable modification layer was obtained when tolu…

PolymersnanoparticleOrganic ChemistryE. coliPharmaceutical Sciencecoating:NATURAL SCIENCES::Physics [Research Subject Categories]S. aureus540ZnO; nanoparticle; coating; flexible substrate; antibacterial; <i>E. coli</i>; <i>S. aureus</i>Anti-Bacterial AgentsAnalytical Chemistryantibacterialflexible substrateChemistry (miscellaneous)Drug DiscoveryEscherichia coliSolventsZnOPolystyrenesMolecular MedicineZinc OxidePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryToluene
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