3 resultados para Àrid

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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Flory-Huggins interaction parameters and thermal diffusion coefficients were measured for aqueous biopolymer solutions. Dextran (a water soluble polysaccharide) and bovine serum albumin (BSA, a water soluble protein) were used for this study. The former polymer is representative for chain macromolecules and the latter is for globular macromolecules. The interaction parameters for the systems water/dextran and water/BSA were determined as a function of composition by means of vapor pressure measurements, using a combination of headspace sampling and gas chromatography (HS-GC). A new theoretical approach, accounting for chain connectivity and conformational variability, describes the observed dependencies quantitatively for the system water/dextran and qualitatively for the system water/BSA. The phase diagrams of the ternary systems water/methanol/dextran and water/dextran/BSA were determined via cloud point measurements and modeled by means of the direct minimization of the Gibbs energy using the information on the binary subsystems as input parameters. The thermal diffusion of dextran was studied for aqueous solutions in the temperature range 15 < T < 55 oC. The effects of the addition of urea were also studied. In the absence of urea, the Soret coefficient ST changes its sign as T is varied; it is positive for T > 45.0 oC, but negative for T < 45.0 oC. The positive sign of ST means that the dextran molecules migrate towards the cold side of the fluid; this behavior is typical for polymer solutions. While a negative sign indicates the macromolecules move toward the hot side; this behavior has so far not been observed with any other binary aqueous polymer solutions. The addition of urea to the aqueous solution of dextran increases ST and reduces the inversion temperature. For 2 M urea, the change in the sign of ST is observed at T = 29.7 oC. At higher temperature ST is always positive in the studied temperature range. To rationalize these observations it is assumed that the addition of urea opens hydrogen bonds, similar to that induced by an increase in temperature. For a future extension of the thermodynamic studies to the effects of poly-dispersity, dextran was fractionated by means of a recently developed technique called Continuous Spin Fractionation (CSF). The solvent/precipitant/polymer system used for the thermodynamic studies served as the basis for the fractionation of dextran The starting polymer had a weight average molar mass Mw = 11.1 kg/mol and a molecular non-uniformity U= Mw / Mn -1= 1.0. Seventy grams of dextran were fractionated using water as the solvent and methanol as the precipitant. Five fractionation steps yielded four samples with Mw values between 4.36 and 18.2 kg/mol and U values ranging from 0.28 to 0.48.

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Light pseudoscalar bosons, such as the axion that was originally proposed as a solution of the strong CP problem, would cause a new spin-dependent short-range interaction. In this thesis, an experiment is presented to search for axion mediated short-range interaction between a nucleon and the spin of a polarized bound neutron. This interaction cause a shift in the precession frequency of nuclear spin-polarized gases in the presence of an unpolarized mass. To get rid of magnetic field drifts co-located, nuclear spin polarized 3He and 129Xe atoms were used. The free nuclear spin precession frequencies were measured in a homogeneous magnetic guiding field of about 350nT using LTc SQUID detectors. The whole setup was housed in a magnetically shielded room at the Physikalisch Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) in Berlin. With this setup long nuclear spin-coherence times, respectively, transverse relaxation times of 5h for 129Xe and 53h for 3He could be achieved. The results of the last run in September 2010 are presented which give new upper limits on the scalar-pseudoscalar coupling of axion-like particles in the axion-mass window from 10^(-2) eV to 10^(-6) eV. The laboratory upper bounds were improved by up to 4 orders of magnitude.

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In this thesis, we investigated the interaction of the obligate intracellular parasite Leishmania (L.) major with two phenotypes of human monocyte derived macrophages (hMDMs). Thereby we focused on the development and maturation of the parasitophorous vacuole (PV) and could show that compartment development is dependent on the parasite stage.rnFocusing on the ultrastructure of PVs containing axenic amastigotes, we demonstrated that the parasites are partially located in damaged PVs or in the cytoplasm of the host. Moreover, we visualized multiple amastigotes in a common PV 144 h p.i. in pro-inflammatory hMDM I but not in anti-inflammatory hMDM II indicating different PV development. rnRegarding the promastigote form, we demonstrated a different uptake of viable and apoptotic L. major promastigotes by hMDMs. Viable promastigotes are predominantly taken up via the flagellum tip whereas apoptotic promastigotes enter the cells via the parasite body. Analyzing compartment maturation, we found that 20-30% of the PVs get positive for the early maturation markers PI3P and EEA1 independent of the viability of the parasites and unaffected by the human macrophage type. Subsequently, 25-40% of the parasites acquire the autophagy marker LC3 on their PV, what is independent of the viability of the parasites as well. We quantified this and in hMDM II less LC3-positive compartments formed compared to hMDM I. Analyzing the ultrastructure, we investigated that the compartments consist of a single-membrane PV characteristic for LC3-associated phagocytosis (LAP). Involvement of LAP was confirmed by demonstrating that the protein kinase ULK1 is dispensable for LC3-compartment formation around Leishmania PVs. Visualizing compartment dynamics in real time showed that apoptotic promastigotes are degraded in LC3-positve compartments, whereas viable promastigotes are able to get rid of LC3-protein on their PV suggesting an involvement in parasite development and survival. In this thesis, we established a lentiviral based fluorescent imaging technique that we combined with High-Pressure-Freezing (HPF) and high-resolution 3D electron microscopy. We visualized a promastigote in a LC3-compartment whose ultrastructure showed an opening of the PV to the outside. To identify new LAP markers involved in Leishmania infection, we established an immuno-magnetic isolation protocol for the purification of Leishmania containing compartments.rnIn conclusion, this study suggests that L. major compartment biogenesis and maturation in pro- and anti-inflammatory human macrophages is dependent on the parasite stage and is different between axenic amastigotes, viable promastigotes and apoptotic promastigotes. Understanding the development and maturation of Leishmania parasites in human host cells is important to control and combat the neglected disease leishmaniasis in the future.rn