Search results for "interference"

showing 10 items of 573 documents

Novel Narrow-Band Spectral Interference Filter with Very High Transmittance

2011

We report a novel scheme to improve the effective transmission of a standard interference filter, and demonstrate over 97% passband transmission. Such high efficiency is critical for quantum information applications, e.g. high-efficiency single-photon generation utilizing parametric down-conversion. The scheme can also be modified to function with a tilted filter, thereby allowing tuning of the passband frequency. In addition, the tilted configuration creates an infinite number of consecutive reflections from and transmissions through the filter, further improving the net filter transmission. Because spectral interference filters are a key element in optical quantum information experiments …

Quantum opticsInterference filterPhysicsbusiness.industryLow-pass filterNonlinear opticsRaised-cosine filterAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsFilter designOpticsTransmission (telecommunications)Spontaneous parametric down-conversionOptoelectronicsPrototype filterQuantum informationHigh-pass filterbusinessQuantum information sciencePassbandm-derived filterRoot-raised-cosine filterConference on Lasers and Electro-Optics 2010
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Clathrin-independent entry of baculovirus triggers uptake of E. coli in non-phagocytic human cells

2008

The prototype baculovirus, Autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus, an insect pathogen, holds great potential as a gene therapy vector. To develop transductional targeting and gene delivery by baculovirus, we focused on characterizing the nature and regulation of its uptake in human cancer cells. Baculovirus entered the cells along fluid-phase markers from the raft areas into smooth-surfaced vesicles devoid of clathrin. Notably, regulators associated with macropinocytosis, namely EIPA, Pak1, Rab34, and Rac1, had no significant effect on viral transduction, and the virus did not induce fluid-phase uptake. The internalization and nuclear uptake was, however, affected by mutants o…

RHOASciencevirusesmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationGene deliveryClathrinCell LineMembrane Lipids03 medical and health sciencesPhagocytosisCell Biology/Membranes and SortingViral entryVirologyEscherichia coliBiochemistry/Cell Signaling and Trafficking StructuresHumansInternalization030304 developmental biologymedia_commonAdenosine Triphosphatases0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryBase SequencebiologyADP-Ribosylation FactorsQ030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyHEK 293 cellsRTransfectionMolecular biologyClathrinEndocytosisNucleopolyhedroviruses3. Good healthCell biologyvirologiaADP-Ribosylation Factor 6Cell culturebiology.proteinMedicineRNA InterferenceResearch Article
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Mechanisms of interference of p-diphenols with the Trinder reaction

2020

p-Diphenols, such as homogentisic acid, gentisic acid, etamsylate, and calcium dobesilate, interfere with diagnostic tests utilizing the Trinder reaction but the mechanisms of these effects are not fully understood. We observed substantial differences both in oxidation of p-diphenols by horseradish peroxidase and their influence on oxidation of 4-aminoantipyrine and various phenolic substrates. Homogentisic acid was rapidly oxidized by the enzyme and completely blocked chromophore formation. Enzymatic oxidation of the remaining p-diphenols was slow and they only moderately inhibited chromophore formation. However, in the presence of standard substrates all tested p-diphenols were rapidly co…

RadicalSubstituentElectronsPhotochemistry01 natural sciencesBiochemistryRedoxHorseradish peroxidaseHomogentisic acidchemistry.chemical_compoundGentisic acidPhenolsDrug DiscoveryBenzoquinonesHomogentisic acidGentisic acidEnzymatic assay interferenceHydrogen peroxideMolecular BiologyHorseradish PeroxidaseCalcium dobesilatebiology010405 organic chemistryOrganic ChemistryHydrogen PeroxideChromophoreEtamsylate0104 chemical sciencesAmpyrone010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistrychemistrySpectrophotometrybiology.proteinOxidation-ReductionTrinder reactionBioorganic Chemistry
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The polypyrimidine tract-binding protein (PTB) is involved in the post-transcriptional regulation of human inducible nitric oxide synthase expression.

2006

Human inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression is regulated by transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms. We have recently shown that the multifunctional RNA-binding proteins KH-type splicing regulatory protein and tristetraprolin are critically involved in the post-transcriptional regulation of human iNOS expression. Several reports have shown that KH-type splicing regulatory protein colocalizes with the polypyrimidine tract-binding protein (PTB), and both RNA-binding proteins seem to interact with the same mRNAs. Therefore we analyzed the involvement of PTB in human iNOS expression. In human DLD-1 cells, cytokine incubation necessary to induce iNOS expression did not ch…

Recombinant Fusion ProteinsTristetraprolinGreen Fluorescent ProteinsNitric Oxide Synthase Type IImacromolecular substancesBiologyIn Vitro TechniquesTransfectionenvironment and public healthBiochemistryGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicCell LineCell Line TumorHumansPolypyrimidine tract-binding proteinRNA MessengerEnzyme InhibitorsPromoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyPost-transcriptional regulationRegulation of gene expressionMessenger RNAintegumentary systemCarcinomaEpithelial CellsCell BiologyTransfectionMolecular biologyNitric oxide synthaseRNA splicingColonic Neoplasmsbiology.proteinCytokinesRNA InterferenceProtein Processing Post-TranslationalDichlororibofuranosylbenzimidazolePolypyrimidine Tract-Binding ProteinThe Journal of biological chemistry
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p27Kip1participates in the regulation of endoreplication in differentiating chick retinal ganglion cells

2015

Nuclear DNA duplication in the absence of cell division (i.e. endoreplication) leads to somatic polyploidy in eukaryotic cells. In contrast to some invertebrate neurons, whose nuclei may contain up to 200,000-fold the normal haploid DNA amount (C), polyploid neurons in higher vertebrates show only 4C DNA content. To explore the mechanism that prevents extra rounds of DNA synthesis in these latter cells we focused on the chick retina, where a population of tetraploid retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) has been described. We show that differentiating chick RGCs that express the neurotrophic receptors p75 and TrkB while lacking retinoblastoma protein, a feature of tetraploid RGCs, also express p27K…

Retinal Ganglion CellsretinaEndocycleCell divisionCellular differentiationChick EmbryoRetinoblastoma ProteinendoreduplicationMicevertebrateRNA Small InterferingpolyploidyMice KnockoutRGCeducation.field_of_studyCell DifferentiationEndoreduplicationCell cycleImmunohistochemistryNuclear DNAendocycleneurogenesiscell cycleRNA InterferenceCyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p27NeurogenesisPopulationDown-RegulationCell cycleBiologyRetinal ganglionRetinaPolyploidyReportAnimalsReceptor trkBEndoreduplicationeducationMolecular BiologyPloidiesDNA synthesisVertebrateCyclin-Dependent Kinase 4Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 6Cell BiologyMinichromosome Maintenance Complex Component 7Molecular biologyeye diseasessense organsChickensDevelopmental BiologyCell Cycle
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Nonnegative signal factorization with learnt instrument models for sound source separation in close-microphone recordings

2013

Close-microphone techniques are extensively employed in many live music recordings, allowing for interference rejection and reducing the amount of reverberation in the resulting instrument tracks. However, despite the use of directional microphones, the recorded tracks are not completely free from source interference, a problem which is commonly known as microphone leakage. While source separation methods are potentially a solution to this problem, few approaches take into account the huge amount of prior information available in this scenario. In fact, besides the special properties of close-microphone tracks, the knowledge on the number and type of instruments making up the mixture can al…

ReverberationInstruments musicalsComputer sciencebusiness.industryMicrophoneMúsica -- InformàticaSignalNon-negative matrix factorizationSet (abstract data type)FactorizationInterference (communication)Source separationComputer visionArtificial intelligenceMicròfonsbusinessEURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
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Chromatin-associated RNA interference components contribute to transcriptional regulation in Drosophila

2009

RNA interference (RNAi) pathways have evolved as important modulators of gene expression that operate in the cytoplasm by degrading RNA target molecules through the activity of short (21-30 nucleotide) RNAs1-6. RNAi components have been reported to have a role in the nucleus, as they are involved in epigenetic regulation and heterochromatin formation(7-10). However, although RNAi-mediated post-transcriptional gene silencing is well documented, the mechanisms of RNAi-mediated transcriptional gene silencing and, in particular, the role of RNAi components in chromatin dynamics, especially in animal multicellular organisms, are elusive. Here we show that the key RNAi components Dicer 2 (DCR2) a…

Ribonuclease IIIanimal structuresRNA-induced transcriptional silencingTranscription GeneticRNA-induced silencing complexBiology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRNA interferenceTranscriptional regulationAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsPromoter Regions Genetic030304 developmental biologyRNA Double-StrandedGenetics0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryfungiRNARNA-Binding ProteinsChromatinChromatinRNA silencingMicroRNAsDrosophila melanogasterGene Expression RegulationArgonaute ProteinsRNA InterferenceRNA Polymerase II030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDrosophila ProteinHeat-Shock ResponseRNA HelicasesProtein BindingTranscription Factors
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The Strange Case of the Protective Perimeter: Liberties and Claims to Non-Interference

2011

In this paper I aim at pointing out some difficulties raised by the so-called thesis of the protective perimeter of liberties (ToPP), that is: the thesis according to which: neither a privilege necessarily involves a claim to non-interference, nor a claim to non-interference necessarily presupposes a privilege. As to the first aspect of the thesis, I argue that it relies on a misleading concept of ‘interference with a liberty’, which surfaces in the examples to which the thesis is made applicable. As to the second aspect of the thesis, I argue that the idea of someone having a claim to be unimpeded in wronging another person is a misleading description of the situation taken into considerat…

Rights. Protective perimeter of liberties. Claims to non-interference.Settore IUS/20 - Filosofia Del DirittoPublic interest theoryNon interferencePrivilege (computing)PhilosophyGeneral dutyLawSociologyPolitical philosophyPhilosophy of lawSettore IUS/17 - Diritto PenaleLawLaw and economicsLaw and Philosophy
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Regulation of the hDlg/hScrib/Hugl-1 tumour suppressor complex.

2008

The proper function of the Scribble tumour suppressor complex is dependent upon the correct localisation of its components. Previously we observed dynamic relocalisation of the hDlg component under conditions of osmotic stress. We now show that the other two components of the complex, hScrib and Hugl-1 display similar patterns of expression. We demonstrate, by shRNA ablation of hScrib expression, that hDlg and Hugl-1 are in part dependent upon hScrib for their correct localization. However under conditions of osmotic stress this apparent dependency no longer exists: hDlg and Hugl-1 localise to cell membranes independently of hScrib. We also demonstrate an interaction between the three compo…

SCRIBBlotting WesternBiologylaw.inventionCell LineSmall hairpin RNADiscs Large Homolog 1 ProteinlawSyntaxinAnimalsHumansSorbitolTransport VesiclesAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingRegulation of gene expressionQa-SNARE ProteinsTumor Suppressor ProteinsOsmolar ConcentrationSignal transducing adaptor proteinMembrane ProteinsCell BiologyTransport proteinCell biologyVesicular transport proteinCytoskeletal ProteinsProtein TransportGene Expression RegulationMultiprotein ComplexesSuppressorRNA InterferenceSignal TransductionExperimental cell research
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Dual-targeting siRNAs.

2010

We have developed an algorithm for the prediction of dual-targeting short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) in which both strands are deliberately designed to separately target different mRNA transcripts with complete complementarity. An advantage of this approach versus the use of two separate duplexes is that only two strands, as opposed to four, are competing for entry into the RNA-induced silencing complex. We chose to design our dual-targeting siRNAs as Dicer substrate 25/27mer siRNAs, since design features resembling pre-microRNAs (miRNAs) can be introduced for Dicer processing. Seven different dual-targeting siRNAs targeting genes that are potential targets in cancer therapy have been develo…

STAT3 Transcription FactorSmall interfering RNATranscription GeneticTrans-acting siRNAGenes mycMethodComputational biologyKidneyPolymerase Chain ReactionCell LineSuppression GeneticRNA interferencemicroRNAGene silencingHumansRNA MessengerRNA Small InterferingMolecular BiologyGeneticsGene knockdownbiologyBase SequenceRNAProtein Biosynthesisbiology.proteinProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-6AlgorithmsDicerRNA (New York, N.Y.)
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