6 resultados para cell transformation

em Deakin Research Online - Australia


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It is well established that arsenic toxicity is postulated to be primarily due to the binding of As(III) to sulfhydryl-containing enzymes. However, the mechanism of carcinogenesis induced by arsenic is still unclear. The interaction of arsenic with GSH and related enzymes seems a very important issue regarding mechanism of arsenical induced toxicity or carcinogenesis. The purpose of this work is to investigate the effect of chronic exposure to low dose of As(III) on GSH level, gene expression and cell transformation in NIH3T3 cells. The results showed that long-term, low dose arsenic treatment makes 3T3 cell more resistant to acute arsenic treatment. There were morphology changes after long-term arsenic treatment. First, partially immortalized 3T3 cell became immortalized. In addition, the cells were doubling more quickly than the control cells and attained higher density than the control cells at confluence. Second, cells treated with 0.1 µ.M As(III) exhibited anchorage-independent growth. Arsenic could enhance GSH level at 0.5 -10 µM dose of arsenic in 24 h treatment and decrease it at 25 µM and above. In long-term treatment with low dose of arsenic, GSH levels were decreased. As(I1I) can increase both glutathione S-transferase (GST) and glutathione reductase (GR) activities at low dose (0.5-10 M), but decreased GST and GR activities at 25 M and higher dose of arsenic, while in long-term As(III) treatment, GST and GR activities are increased. Both long-term and short-term treatments with As(III) can induce GR gene expression. GPx mRNA levels were decreased both in acute and chronic arsenic treated cells. Chronic treatment with As(III) also decreased the p53 mRNA level. Taken together, our results suggest that As(III) can alter GST, GR enzyme activities as well as GSH level and related gene expression both in long-term and short-term treatment but in a different manner in different doses. Alteration of cellular GSH level by As(III) might play all important role in gene expression and arsenic induced cell transformation.

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A novel approach was used to produce an ultrafine grain structure in low carbon steels with a wide range of hardenability. This included warm deformation of supercooled austenite followed by reheating in the austenite region and cooling (RHA). The ultrafine ferrite structure was independent of steel composition. However, the mechanism of ferrite refinement hanged with the steel quench hardenability. In a relatively low hardenable steel, the ultrafine structure was produced through dynamic strain-induced transformation, whereas the ferrite refinement was formed by static transformation in steels with high quench hardenability. The use of a model Ni–30Fe austenitic alloy revealed that the deformation temperature has a strong effect on the nature of the intragranular defects. There was a transition temperature below which the cell dislocation structure changed to laminar microbands. It appears that the extreme refinement of ferrite is due to the formation of extensive high angle intragranular defects at these low deformation temperatures that then act as sites for static transformation.

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The effect of prestraining (PS) and bake hardening (BH) on the microstructures and mechanical properties has been studied in transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) and dual-phase (DP) steels after intercritical annealing. The DP steel showed an increase in the yield strength and the appearance of the upper and lower yield points after a single BH treatment as compared with the as-received condition, whereas the mechanical properties of the TRIP steel remained unchanged. This difference appears to be because of the formation of plastic deformation zones with high dislocation density around the “as-quenched” martensite in the DP steel, which allowed carbon to pin these dislocations, which, in turn, increased the yield strength. It was found for both steels that the BH behavior depends on the dislocation rearrangement in ferrite with the formation of cell, microbands, and shear band structures after PS. The strain-induced transformation of retained austenite to martensite in the TRIP steel contributes to the formation of a complex dislocation structure.

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In the current study, the role of dynamic strain induced transformation on ferrite grain refinement was investigated using different thermomechanical processing routes. A Ni-30Fe austenitic model alloy was also employed to study the evolution of the deformation structure under different deformation conditions. It was shown that the extreme refinement of ferrite is more likely due to the formation of extensive high angle intragranular defects in the austenite through deformation. Among the different thermomechanical parameters, the deformation temperature had a significant effect on the intragranular defect characteristics. There was a transition where the cell dislocation structure changed to laminar microband structures with a decrease in the deformation temperature. Moreover, the ultrafine grained structure was also successfully produced through static transformation using warm deformation process; in other words, concurrent deformation and transformation are not necessary for ultrafine ferrite formation.

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A particle-based method for multiscale modeling of multiphase materials such as Dual Phase (DP) and Transformation Induced Plasticity (TRIP) steels has been developed. The multiscale Particle-In-Cell (PIC) method benefits from the many advantages of the FEM and mesh-free methods, and to bridge the micro and macro scales through homogenization. The conventional mesh-based modeling methods fail to give reasonable and accurate predictions for materials with complex microstructures. Alternatively in the multiscale PIC method, the Lagrangian particles moving in an Eulerian grid represent the material deformation at both the micro and macro scales. The uniaxial tension test of two phase and three-phase materials was simulated and compared with FE based simulations. The predictions using multiscale PIC method showed that accuracy of field variables could be improved by up to 7%. This can lead to more accurate forming and springback predictions for materials with important multiphase microstructural effects.

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A novel approach was used to produce an ultrafine grain structure in low carbon steels with a wide range of hardenability. This included warm deformation of supercooled austenite followed by reheating in the austenite region and cooling (RHA). The ultrafine ferrite structure was independent of steel composition. However, the mechanism of ferrite refinement changed with the steel quench hardenability. In a relatively low hardenable steel, the ultrafine structure was produced through dynamic strain induced transformation, whereas the ferrite refinement was formed by static transformation in steels with high quench hardenability. The use of a model Ni-30Fe austenitic alloy revealed that the deformation temperature has a strong effect on the nature of the intragranular defects. There was a transition temperature below which the cell dislocation structure changed to laminar microbands. It appears that the extreme refinement of ferrite is due to the formation of extensive high angle intragranular defects at these low deformation temperature that then act as sites for static transformation. © 2008 World Scientific Publishing Company.