6,019 research outputs found

    Effects of kappa-opioid receptor agonists on long-term cocaine use and dopamine neurotransmission

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    kappa-Opioid receptor agonists have been suggested as treatments for cocaine addiction based on studies showing that they block cocaine-related behaviors. To determine the effects of kappa-opioid receptor agonists on long-term behavioral effects associated with cocaine and the neurochemical bases underlying these effects, rats were treated with the selective kappa-opioid receptor agonist U-69593 ((+)(5alpha,7alpha,8beta)-N-methyl-N-[7-(1-pyrrolidinyl)-1 oxaspiro[4.5]dec-8-yl]-benzeneacetamide) alone or in combination with cocaine and locomotor activity was measured daily. In addition, dopamine transporter and dopamine receptor densities were measured using autoradiographic techniques, and tyrosine hydroxylase was measured using immunoautoradiographic techniques. Treatment with U-69593 with or without cocaine decreased locomotor activity. When challenged with cocaine after a 5-day treatment period, the effects of cocaine were markedly reduced in rats initially treated with U-69593 compared to vehicle. When U-69593 was administered five times with 3-day intervals, it alone had no effect on locomotor activity but still reduced activity associated with a cocaine injection. After five daily injections, U-69593 decreased dopamine transporter and dopamine D(2) receptor densities and increased tyrosine hydroxylase levels. These changes were not seen after the 3-day interval regimen, even though cocaine-induced activity was greatly reduced. These findings show that the effects associated with daily U-69593 treatment are attenuated if the drug is administered with a greater interval, while maintaining a blockade of cocaine-induced activity. In addition, U-69593 can block cocaine-induced locomotor effects without major perturbation of the dopamine system

    Kappa opioid agonists alter dopamine markers and cocaine-stimulated locomotor activity

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    To better understand the influence of kappa-opioid agonists on the effects of cocaine, rats were treated with daily injections of the selective kappa-opioid agonist U-69593 or bremazocine. In combination with 10 mg/kg cocaine, both compounds, at a dose of 0.32 mg/kg, greatly diminished locomotor activity, and these effects were maintained over a period of 5 days. In addition, the response to a challenge injection of 10 mg/kg cocaine several days after the end of kappa-Opioid agonist treatment with or without cocaine was markedly reduced. When naltrexone was given in combination with U-69593, it blocked the reduction in cocaine-induced locomotor activity after U-69593 treatment alone. However, a single injection of either kappa-opioid agonist alone had no effect on cocaine-induced locomotion several days later (i.e. no long-term effects), suggesting that multiple injections of the kappa-opioid agonist are needed to reduce the locomotor activating effects of cocaine other than acutely. In addition, treatment with the kappa-opioid agonist U-69593 (0.32 mg/kg) over a 5-day period decreased dopamine transporter densities in the caudate putamen, and this was also blocked by co-administration of naltrexone

    Mechanisms of shrub encroachment into Northern Chihuahuan Desert grasslands and impacts of climate change investigated using a cellular automata model

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    Arid and semiarid grasslands of southwestern North America have changed dramatically over the last 150 years as a result of woody plant encroachment. Overgrazing, reduced fire frequency, and climate change are known drivers of woody plant encroachment into grasslands. In this study, relatively sim- ple algorithms for encroachment factors (i.e., grazing, grassland fires, and seed dispersal by grazers) are proposed and implemented in the ecohydrological Cellular-Automata Tree Grass Shrub Simulator (CAT- GraSS). CATGraSS is used in a 7.3 km 2 rectangular domain located in central New Mexico along a zone of grassland to shrubland transition, where shrub encroachment is currently active. CATGraSS is calibrated and used to investigate the relative contributions of grazing, fire frequency, seed dispersal by herbivores and climate change on shrub abundance over a 150-year period of historical shrub encroachment. The impact of future climate change is examined using a model output that realistically represents current vegetation cover as initial condition, in a series of stochastic CATGraSS future climate simulations. Model simulations are found to be highly sensitive to the initial distribution of shrub cover. Encroachment fac- tors more actively lead to shrub propagation within the domain when the model starts with randomly distributed individual shrubs. However, when shrubs are naturally evolved into clusters, the model re- sponse to encroachment factors is muted unless the effect of seed dispersal by herbivores is amplified. The relative contribution of different drivers on modeled shrub encroachment varied based on the ini- tial shrub cover condition used in the model. When historical weather data is used, CATGraSS predicted loss of shrub and grass cover during the 1950 s drought. While future climate change is found to amplify shrub encroachment ( ∼13% more shrub cover by 2100), grazing remains the dominant factor promoting shrub encroachment. When we modeled future climate change, however, encroachment still occurred at a reduced rate in the absence of grazing along with pre-grazing fire frequency because of lower shrub water stress leading to reduced shrub mortality which increases the probability of shrub establishment

    Abrupt changes, multidecadal variability and long-term trends in sea surface temperature and sea level datasets within the southeastern Bay of Biscay

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    for the southeastern Bay of Biscay have been examined. The SST dataset (Aquarium of San Sebastián), measured on a nearly daily basis, extends from 1947 to 2010. The daily SL data utilised are those from Santander (IEO tide gauge network) and from St. Jean de Luz (SHOM), spanning the periods 1943–2004 and 1964–1997, respectively. This paper presents an approach for the extraction of multidecadal variability and long-term trends. First of all, the KZA (Kolmogorov–Zurbenko Adaptive) filter was used to detect possible discontinuities in time-series. Subsequently, the seasonal and multidecadal variability was identified by spectral analysis and further quantified by least squares fitting. Finally, prior to the trend determination, the long-term natural variability was removed. The results revealed significant contribution of the annual component to the SST and SL, with a weaker contribution of the semiannual signal. The sea level air pressure and long-term tides also contributed to the SL variability. The estimated trends were less than those obtained by other authors. The analysis revealed no trend in the SST and the Jean de Luz SL series, whilst an increasing trend was detected for the Santander SL dataset

    Pseudolithoxus kinja Bifi, de Oliveira, Rapp Py-Daniel & Collins 2018

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    Pseudolithoxus kinja Bifi, de Oliveira, Rapp Py-Daniel & Collins, 2018 in Collins et al. (2018): 5, fig. 1. Paratype: 1 lot, 1 specimen — NUP 18761, 1, 98.3 mm SL: Brazil, Amazonas, Nhamunda, rio Nhamunda, acima da cidade de Nhamunda, abaixo da lagoa Sete Ilhas, 0°43’04”S, 57°22’07”W, V.N. Machado, E.D. Ribeiro & R. A. Collins, 6 Nov 2013.Published as part of De Oliveira, Rianne C., Ota, Renata R., Deprá, Gabriel C., Zawadzki, Cláudio H., Pavanelli, Carla S. & Da Graça, Weferson J., 2022, Catalog of type specimens of the fish collection of the Núcleo de Pesquisas em Limnologia, Ictiologia e Aquicultura (NUP), Universidade Estadual de Maringá Paraná, Brazil, pp. 1-43 in Zootaxa 5128 (1) on page 29, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5128.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/647949

    CR1 Knops blood group alleles are not associated with severe malaria in the Gambia

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    The Knops blood group antigen erythrocyte polymorphisms have been associated with reduced falciparum malaria-based in vitro rosette formation (putative malaria virulence factor). Having previously identified single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the human complement receptor 1 (CR1/CD35) gene underlying the Knops antithetical antigens Sl1/Sl2 and McC(a)/McC(b), we have now performed genotype comparisons to test associations between these two molecular variants and severe malaria in West African children living in the Gambia. While SNPs associated with Sl:2 and McC(b+) were equally distributed among malaria-infected children with severe malaria and control children not infected with malaria parasites, high allele frequencies for Sl 2 (0.800, 1,365/1,706) and McC(b) (0.385, 658/1706) were observed. Further, when compared to the Sl 1/McC(a) allele observed in all populations, the African Sl 2/McC(b) allele appears to have evolved as a result of positive selection (modified Nei-Gojobori test Ka-Ks/s.e.=1.77, P-valu

    Quantum SL(2,R)SL(2,\mathbb{R}) and its irreducible representations

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    We define for real qq a unital *-algebra Uq(sl(2,R))U_q(\mathfrak{sl}(2,\mathbb{R})) quantizing the universal enveloping *-algebra of sl(2,R)\mathfrak{sl}(2,\mathbb{R}). The *-algebra Uq(sl(2,R))U_q(\mathfrak{sl}(2,\mathbb{R})) is realized as a *-subalgebra of the Drinfeld double of Uq(su(2))U_q(\mathfrak{su}(2)) and its dual Hopf *-algebra Oq(SU(2))\mathcal{O}_q(SU(2)), generated by the equatorial Podle\'s sphere coideal *-subalgebra Oq(K\SU(2))\mathcal{O}_q(K\backslash SU(2)) of Oq(SU(2))\mathcal{O}_q(SU(2)) and its associated orthogonal coideal *-subalgebra Uq(k)Uq(su(2))U_q(\mathfrak{k}) \subseteq U_q(\mathfrak{su}(2)). We then classify all the irreducible *-representations of Uq(sl(2,R))U_q(\mathfrak{sl}(2,\mathbb{R})).Comment: 22 pages; author accepted manuscrip

    On the sheaf-theoretic SL(2, C) Casson–Lin invariant

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    We prove that the (τ-weighted, sheaf-theoretic) SL(2, C) Casson–Lin invariant introduced by Manolescu and the first author is generically independent of the parameter τ and additive under connected sums of knots in integral homology 3-spheres. This addresses two questions asked by Manolescu and the first author. Our arguments involve a mix of topology and algebraic geometry, and rely crucially on the fact that the SL(2, C) Casson–Lin invariant admits an alternative interpretation via the theory of Behrend functions.</p

    Candidatus Rhetoricae (or Novus Candidatus).

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    This little book is a find whatever it finally turns out to be! For now it seems to be a Jesuit collegium text in rhetoric following the Progymnasmata of Aphthonius. If one works from the back of the book, there is an apparently independent 48-page work, Angelus Pacis by Nicolas Caussini (Latinized name), S.J. The rest of the book seems to be a commentary on or presentation of Aphthonius' Progymnasmata in 3 parts covering 435 pages, followed by a T of C and an AI, which is often one page off. Pars II is titled Rhetoricae Praecepta, Pars III De Panegyrico seu Laudatione. Pars I seems to be Apparatus ad Fabulam et Narrationem. Fable is handled on 15-31. After the famous Greek definition of Theion done into Latin ( sermo falsus veritatem effingens ), the author distinguishes rational (human) and moral (animal) fables, with mixed fables including both. He holds (19) that the sense of the fable generally needs to be expressed; otherwise people often miss the point of a fable. His Latin for promythium is praefabulatio, for epimythium affabulatio. Apologus and parabola are identical for him with fabula. After describing the qualities and uses of fables, the author presents some nine fables that exemplify various levels of style, twice telling the same stories on two levels (WL and FC). The last example is of the florid style: The Silkworm and the Spider takes four pages to tell! I found this book sitting in a box of disparate, unmarked, old books. It pays to look!This is a hardbound book (hard cover)Language note: Bilingual: Greek/LatinElzevers

    Searches for New Physics effects in b →sl-sl+ transitions

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    The dissertation aims at presenting the current situation in the measurements of electroweak penguin diagrams dominated decays: b → sl−l+1 . These decays have been a smoking gun for hunting for New Physics effects over many years, but in the last three years the research on these phenomena has intensified due to new measurements. Enormous progress has been made both on the theoretical and the experimental sides to understand the measured deviations from the current Standard Model predictions, referred to in what follows as “anomalies”. The author of this dissertation has been one of the main authors of the angular analysis of B0→ K∗ 0µ+µ− decay in the LHCb experiment, which has been widely regarded as one of the most important results of the flavour physics sector in recent years. He has proposed a method called “the method of moments” to measure the angular terms of this decay, which he has later successfully applied in the measurement itself. Moreover, he has been the driving force behind the two other important analyses in LHCb: the measurement of the angular distribution and branching ratio of the B0→ K∗ 0 (1430)µ+µ− decay, where again the method of moments has been used to obtain the angular coefficients, and the search for the light scalar particle that can be produced in the b → s transitions and that decays to a dimuon pair. In this case no signal has been observed and the upper limits on the branching fraction have been set, later to be used for constraining the inflaton model. The dissertation is organized as follows: the brief introduction is followed by, the second chapter devoted to a theoretical description of rare B decays, where the effective field theory formalism is introduced. Furthermore, the author discusses the current theoretical problems in calculating the Standard Model predictions for the b → sl−l+ processes. Last but not least, the optimised angular observables that are less dependent on the form factors uncertainness are derived. The third chapter describes the experimental apparatus used in the b → sl−l+ measurements. Special focus is put on the sub-detectors that play an important role in the studies of b → sl−l+ transitions. Chapters 4, 5, 6 are devoted to describing the data analyses performed by the author in the LHCb experiment. In Chapter 7 the global analysis of electroweak penguin decays is presented. This kind of global analysis has become extremely popular in the past few years as it helps to constrain and pin down those New Physics models that are likely to be responsible for the observed anomalies. The author of this monograph is involved in one of the biggest collaborations performing New Physics fits, where he is the convenor of the Flavour Working group. Furthermore, the author presents his own study on separating the long distance effects in the B0→ K∗ 0µ+µ−decay. This is the state of the art way of determining those contributions. The chapter ends with a description of possible New Physics models that can explain the observed discrepancies
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