1,166 results on '"Liermann, A."'
Search Results
2. A role for subducting clays in the water transportation into the Earth’s lower mantle
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Bang, Yoonah, Hwang, Huijeong, Liermann, Hanns-Peter, Kim, Duck Young, He, Yu, Jeon, Tae-Yeol, Shin, Tae Joo, Zhang, Dongzhou, Popov, Dmitry, and Lee, Yongjae
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- 2024
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3. Colostrum as a source of ESBL-Escherichia coli in feces of newborn calves
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Bachmann, Lisa, Weber, Laura, Liermann, Wendy, Hammon, Harald M., Delling, Cora, Dengler, Franziska, Schaufler, Katharina, Schwabe, Michael, Eger, Elias, Becker, Karsten, Schütz, Anne, and Homeier-Bachmann, Timo
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- 2024
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4. Phase transition kinetics of superionic H2O ice phases revealed by Megahertz X-ray free-electron laser-heating experiments
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R. J. Husband, H. P. Liermann, J. D. McHardy, R. S. McWilliams, A. F. Goncharov, V. B. Prakapenka, E. Edmund, S. Chariton, Z. Konôpková, C. Strohm, C. Sanchez-Valle, M. Frost, L. Andriambariarijaona, K. Appel, C. Baehtz, O. B. Ball, R. Briggs, J. Buchen, V. Cerantola, J. Choi, A. L. Coleman, H. Cynn, A. Dwivedi, H. Graafsma, H. Hwang, E. Koemets, T. Laurus, Y. Lee, X. Li, H. Marquardt, A. Mondal, M. Nakatsutsumi, S. Ninet, E. Pace, C. Pepin, C. Prescher, S. Stern, J. Sztuk-Dambietz, U. Zastrau, and M. I. McMahon
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Science - Abstract
Abstract H2O transforms to two forms of superionic (SI) ice at high pressures and temperatures, which contain highly mobile protons within a solid oxygen sublattice. Yet the stability field of both phases remains debated. Here, we present the results of an ultrafast X-ray heating study utilizing MHz pulse trains produced by the European X-ray Free Electron Laser to create high temperature states of H2O, which were probed using X-ray diffraction during dynamic cooling. We confirm an isostructural transition during heating in the 26-69 GPa range, consistent with the formation of SI-bcc. In contrast to prior work, SI-fcc was observed exclusively above ~50 GPa, despite evidence of melting at lower pressures. The absence of SI-fcc in lower pressure runs is attributed to short heating timescales and the pressure-temperature path induced by the pump-probe heating scheme in which H2O was heated above its melting temperature before the observation of quenched crystalline states, based on the earlier theoretical prediction that SI-bcc nucleates more readily from the fluid than SI-fcc. Our results may have implications for the stability of SI phases in ice-rich planets, for example during dynamic freezing, where the preferential crystallization of SI-bcc may result in distinct physical properties across mantle ice layers.
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- 2024
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5. Interim Report NFDI4Chem 2023
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Steffen Neumann, Ann-Christin Andres, Felix Bach, Theo Bender, Christian Bonatto Minella, Franziska Eberl, Tillmann Fischer, Benjamin Golub, Shashank Harivyasi, Sonja Herres-Pawlis, Pei-Chi Huang, Johannes Hunold, John Jollife, Nicole Jung, Johannes Liermann, Venkata Nainala, Matthias Razum, Oliver Koepler, and Christoph Steinbeck
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Chemistry ,Research Data Management ,Electronic La ,Science - Abstract
The progress of the DFG-funded NFDI4Chem consortium (NFDI 4/1 - project number 441958208) in data management in chemistry is outlined in our latest report, highlighting the steps we have taken to integrate a data-centric approach within the chemistry community. This interim report offers a comprehensive overview of our data management activities, covering the reporting period from October 2020 to August 2023.The shift to digital tools in research documentation is driven by our work with Electronic Laboratory Notebooks (ELNs), such as Chemotion ELN, offering systematic data storage for easy retrieval and sharing. Additionally, we focus on developing repositories, such as Chemotion repository and RADAR4Chem, which fulfil the needs for the storage of chemical data. The NFDI4Chem Search Service ensures easy data access from our repositories. Our efforts extend to community engagement through conference visits and online presence, aimed at creating awareness for (digital) research data management and connecting to chemistry students and researchers. Our training programs have reached over 600 participants to date. Initiatives like the FAIR4Chem award and the Chemistry Data Days promote cultural change towards FAIR data. Our Editors4Chem initiative collaborates with publishers for standardised data management and the Ontologies4Chem workshops organised by our consortium promote the ontology development in the field.Apart from the consortium's engagement for chemists, NFDI4Chem members played key roles in the development of the NFDI as a whole. Being actively involved in the sections and task forces, NFDI4Chem promotes collaborative solutions across NFDI consortia.
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- 2024
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6. Cryptosporidium parvum infection alters the intestinal mucosa transcriptome in neonatal calves: impacts on epithelial barriers and transcellular transport systems
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Arash Veshkini, Christa Kühn, Franziska Dengler, Lisa Bachmann, Wendy Liermann, Christiane Helm, Reiner Ulrich, Cora Delling, and Harald M. Hammon
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cryptosporidiosis ,intestinal permeability ,epithelial barriers ,SLC transporter ,ABC transporter ,bovine ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
IntroductionCryptosporidium parvum (C. parvum) is the most prevalent enteric protozoan parasite causing infectious diarrhea in neonatal calves worldwide with a direct negative impact on their health and welfare. This study utilized next-generation sequencing (NGS) to deepen our understanding of intestinal epithelial barriers and transport mechanisms in the pathophysiology of infectious diarrhea in neonatal calves, which could potentially unveil novel solutions for treatment.MethodsAt day 1 of life, male Holstein-Friesian calves were either orally infected (n = 5) or not (control group, n = 5) with C. parvum oocysts (in-house strain LE-01-Cp-15). On day 8 after infection, calves were slaughtered and jejunum mucosa samples were taken. The RNA was extracted from collected samples and subjected to sequencing. Differentially expressed genes (DEG) between the infected and CTRL groups were assessed using DESeq2 at a false discovery rate < 0.05 and used for gene ontology (GO) and pathway enrichment analysis in Cytoscape (v3.9.1).Results and discussionTo study the pathophysiology of infectious diarrhea on intestinal permeability, 459 genes related to epithelial cell barrier integrity and paracellular and transmembrane transport systems were selected from 12,908 identified genes in mucus. Among, there were 61 increased and 109 decreased gene transcripts belonged to adhesion molecules (e.g. ADGRD1 and VCAM1), ATP-binding cassette (ABC, e.g. ABCC2 and ABCD1) and solute carrier (SLC, e.g. SLC28A2 and SLC38A3) transporters, and ion channels (e.g. KCNJ15). Our results suggest deregulation of cellular junctions and thus a possibly increased intestinal permeability, whereas deregulation of ABC and SLC transporters and ion channels may influence the absorption/secretion of amino acids, carbohydrates, fats, and organic compounds, as well as acid-based balance and osmotic hemostasis. Besides pathogen-induced gene expression alterations, part of the DEG may have been triggered or consequently affected by inflammatory mechanisms. The study provided a deeper understanding of the pathophysiology of infectious diarrhea in neonatal calves and the host-pathogen interactions at the transcript level. For further studies with a particular focus on the transport system, these results could lead to a new approach to elucidating pathophysiological regulatory mechanisms.
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- 2024
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7. Validation of different automated segmentation models for target volume contouring in postoperative radiotherapy for breast cancer and regional nodal irradiation
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Eva Meixner, Benjamin Glogauer, Sebastian Klüter, Friedrich Wagner, David Neugebauer, Line Hoeltgen, Lisa A. Dinges, Semi Harrabi, Jakob Liermann, Maria Vinsensia, Fabian Weykamp, Philipp Hoegen-Saßmannshausen, Jürgen Debus, and Juliane Hörner-Rieber
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Deep learning segmentation ,Auto-segmentation ,AI contouring ,Target volume delineation ,Clinical implementation ,Quality assurance ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Introduction: Target volume delineation is routinely performed in postoperative radiotherapy (RT) for breast cancer patients, but it is a time-consuming process. The aim of the present study was to validate the quality, clinical usability and institutional-specific implementation of different auto-segmentation tools into clinical routine. Methods: Three different commercially available, artificial intelligence-, ESTRO-guideline-based segmentation models (M1-3) were applied to fifty consecutive reference patients who received postoperative local RT including regional nodal irradiation for breast cancer for the delineation of clinical target volumes: the residual breast, implant or chestwall, axilla levels 1 and 2, the infra- and supraclavicular regions, the interpectoral and internal mammary nodes. Objective evaluation metrics of the created structures were conducted with the Dice similarity index (DICE) and the Hausdorff distance, and a manual evaluation of usability. Results: The resulting geometries of the segmentation models were compared to the reference volumes for each patient and required no or only minor corrections in 72 % (M1), 64 % (M2) and 78 % (M3) of the cases. The median DICE and Hausdorff values for the resulting planning target volumes were 0.87–0.88 and 2.96–3.55, respectively. Clinical usability was significantly correlated with the DICE index, with calculated cut-off values used to define no or minor adjustments of 0.82–0.86. Right or left sided target and breathing method (deep inspiration breath hold vs. free breathing) did not impact the quality of the resulting structures. Conclusion: Artificial intelligence-based auto-segmentation programs showed high-quality accuracy and provided standardization and efficient support for guideline-based target volume contouring as a precondition for fully automated workflows in radiotherapy treatment planning.
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- 2024
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8. FDM in die Community bringen: Strategische Kommunikation der NFDI4Chem-Initiative
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Theo Bender, John D. Jolliffe, Willis Muganda, Christian Popp, Jochen Ortmeyer, Hans-Georg Weinig, Sonja Herres-Pawlis, and Johannes Liermann
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Forschungsdatenmanagement ,Kommunikation ,Kommunikationsstrategie ,Zielsetzungen ,Zielgruppen ,Cultural Change ,Technology - Abstract
Dieser Artikel beschreibt Herausforderungen, Ziele und Möglichkeiten strategischer Kommunikation zum Forschungsdatenmanagement. Er zeigt, wie das Chemie-Konsortium zur Umsetzung einer Nationalen ForschungsDatenInfrastruktur NFDI4Chem arbeitet, um mit begrenzten Ressourcen möglichst effektiv den Einsatz von Forschungsdatenmanagement und den Output FAIRer Daten in der Chemie zu erhöhen. Beschrieben wird die Erstellung und Umsetzung einer Kommunikationsstrategie von der Analyse über die Planung und Implementierung bis hin zur Evaluierung.
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- 2024
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9. Durvalumab Plus Gemcitabine and Cisplatin in Patients with Advanced Biliary Tract Cancer: An Exploratory Analysis of Real-World Data
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Olkus, Alexander, Tomczak, Aurelie, Berger, Anne Katrin, Rauber, Conrad, Puchas, Philip, Wehling, Cyrill, Longerich, Thomas, Mehrabi, Arianeb, Chang, De-Hua, Liermann, Jakob, Schäfer, Sophia, Pfeiffenberger, Jan, Jäger, Dirk, Michl, Patrick, Springfeld, Christoph, and Dill, Michael T.
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- 2024
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10. Diamond precipitation dynamics from hydrocarbons at icy planet interior conditions
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Frost, Mungo, McWilliams, R. Stewart, Bykova, Elena, Bykov, Maxim, Husband, Rachel J., Andriambariarijaona, Leon M., Khandarkhaeva, Saiana, Massani, Bernhard, Appel, Karen, Baehtz, Carsten, Ball, Orianna B., Cerantola, Valerio, Chariton, Stella, Choi, Jinhyuk, Cynn, Hyunchae, Duff, Matthew J., Dwivedi, Anand, Edmund, Eric, Fiquet, Guillaume, Graafsma, Heinz, Hwang, Huijeong, Jaisle, Nicolas, Kim, Jaeyong, Konôpková, Zuzana, Laurus, Torsten, Lee, Yongjae, Liermann, Hanns-Peter, McHardy, James D., McMahon, Malcolm I., Morard, Guillaume, Nakatsutsumi, Motoaki, Nguyen, Lan Anh, Ninet, Sandra, Prakapenka, Vitali B., Prescher, Clemens, Redmer, Ronald, Stern, Stephan, Strohm, Cornelius, Sztuk-Dambietz, Jolanta, Turcato, Monica, Wu, Zhongyan, Glenzer, Siegfried H., and Goncharov, Alexander F.
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- 2024
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11. A role for subducting clays in the water transportation into the Earth’s lower mantle
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Yoonah Bang, Huijeong Hwang, Hanns-Peter Liermann, Duck Young Kim, Yu He, Tae-Yeol Jeon, Tae Joo Shin, Dongzhou Zhang, Dmitry Popov, and Yongjae Lee
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Subducting sedimentary layer typically contains water and hydrated clay minerals. The stability of clay minerals under such hydrous subduction environment would therefore constraint the lithology and physical properties of the subducting slab interface. Here we show that pyrophyllite (Al2Si4O10(OH)2), one of the representative clay minerals in the alumina-silica-water (Al2O3-SiO2-H2O, ASH) system, breakdowns to contain further hydrated minerals, gibbsite (Al(OH)3) and diaspore (AlO(OH)), when subducts along a water-saturated cold subduction geotherm. Such a hydration breakdown occurs at a depth of ~135 km to uptake water by ~1.8 wt%. Subsequently, dehydration breakdown occurs at ~185 km depth to release back the same amount of water, after which the net crystalline water content is preserved down to ~660 km depth, delivering a net amount of ~5.0 wt% H2O in a phase assemblage containing δ-AlOOH and phase Egg (AlSiO3(OH)). Our results thus demonstrate the importance of subducting clays to account the delivery of ~22% of water down to the lower mantle.
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- 2024
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12. Colostrum as a source of ESBL-Escherichia coli in feces of newborn calves
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Lisa Bachmann, Laura Weber, Wendy Liermann, Harald M. Hammon, Cora Delling, Franziska Dengler, Katharina Schaufler, Michael Schwabe, Elias Eger, Karsten Becker, Anne Schütz, and Timo Homeier-Bachmann
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The aim of the present study was to determine if colostrum and the equipment for harvesting and feeding colostrum are sources of fecal ESBL/AmpC-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL/AmpC-E. coli) in calves. Therefore, 15 male calves fed with pooled colostrum on a dairy farm and held individually in an experimental barn, the colostrum pool and the equipment for harvesting and feeding colostrum were sampled and analyzed for the occurrence of ESBL/AmpC-E. coli. The ESBL-AmpC-E. coli suspicious isolates were subjected to whole-genome sequence analysis. Forty-three of 45 fecal samples were tested positive for ESBL/AmpC-E. coli. In the colostrum sample and in the milking pot, we also found ESBL/AmpC-E. coli. All 45 E. coli isolates were ESBL-producers, mainly commensal sequence type (ST) 10, but also human-extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli ST131 and ST117 were found. The clonal identity of six fecal isolates with the ESBL-E. coli isolate from the colostrum and of five fecal isolates with the strain from the milking pot demonstrates that the hygiene of colostrum or the colostrum equipment can play a significant role in the spread of ESBL-E. coli. Effective sanitation procedures for colostrum harvesting and feeding equipment are crucial to reduce the ESBL-E. coli shedding of neonatal dairy calves.
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- 2024
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13. Challenges of implementing a multi-agency monitoring and adaptive management strategy for federally threatened Chinook salmon and steelhead trout during and after dam removal in the Elwha River
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Roger J. Peters, Joseph H. Anderson, Jeffrey J. Duda, Michael McHenry, George R. Pess, Samuel J. Brenkman, Jeffery R. Johnson, Martin C. Liermann, Keith P. Denton, Matt M. Beirne, Pat Crain, and Heidi A. Connor
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adaptive management ,dam removal ,Elwha River ,Chinook salmon ,steelhead trout ,restoration ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Adaptive management, a process of planning, implementing, and evaluating management strategies, is often recommended for monitoring ecological systems. However, few examples of successful implementation and retrospective case studies exist. We provide a case study of adaptively managing hatchery-assisted protection and recovery for Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and winter steelhead trout (O. mykiss) during and after the removal of two large mainstem dams in the Elwha River, WA. We summarize key aspects of the monitoring and adaptive management plan over the last decade and highlight successes, challenges, and complications during the plan’s implementation. The Elwha Monitoring and Adaptive Management Guidelines included a trigger-based system for moving through four phases of recovery that included preservation, recolonization, local adaptation, and viable natural population, each with differing levels of hatchery production as the management actions. The monitoring component of the plan has been very successful, providing critical data to guide management actions that otherwise may not have occurred and, opportunistically, provided data for other native species in the Elwha River. Implementing adaptive management provided mixed results and was at times hindered by divergent management goals among project partners, the inflexibility of the Endangered Species Act regulatory requirements as implemented for this project, and conflicting information among guidance documents. We learned that some metrics and triggers in the plan were ill-defined or too difficult to measure in the field. In some cases, the performance indicators and/or triggers were successfully modified to incorporate what was learned; however, in other cases, we were unable to revise the values due to differing opinions among partners. The ability to reach consensus on revised triggers appeared to be influenced by the recovery trajectory of the species involved. The implemented adaptive management strategy resulted in substantial collaboration and learning, which resulted in revised management strategies, but was imperfect. Sufficient long-term funding is necessary to implement a well-designed monitoring program and could benefit from including a defined leadership position to shepherd and facilitate a multi-stakeholder adaptive management program. Additionally, incorporating adaptive management into legally binding conditions under the Endangered Species Act is feasible, but requires substantial pre-planning in close coordination with regulatory agencies.
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- 2024
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14. Initial responses of Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to removal of two dams on the Elwha River, Washington State, U.S.A.
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George R. Pess, Michael L. McHenry, Keith Denton, Joseph H. Anderson, Martin C. Liermann, Roger J. Peters, John R. McMillan, Samuel J. Brenkman, Todd R. Bennett, Jeffrey J. Duda, and Karrie M. Hanson
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dam removal ,restoration ,salmon ,monitoring ,salmon life-history diversity ,hatcheries ,Evolution ,QH359-425 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Large dam removal is being used to restore river systems, but questions remain regarding their outcomes. We examine how the removal of two large dams in the Elwha River, coupled with hatchery production and fishing closures, affected population attributes of Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and steelhead (O. mykiss). Initial responses by returning adult Chinook salmon and steelhead was an increase in the number and spatial extent of natural and hatchery origin fish. Although few naturally produced juvenile Chinook salmon and steelhead outmigrants were observed prior to and during dam removal, abundances increased three years after adult fish passage was restored, suggesting that impacts due to downstream sedimentation after dam removal were reduced. The Chinook salmon population demographics remain dominated by hatchery production, while increases in winter steelhead abundance included both hatchery and natural-origin spawners. The spatial expansion of winter steelhead upstream of former dam sites was predominantly by natural-origin spawners. We also observed a natural “reawakening” of summer steelhead that were in part derived from an up-river resident population that returned to the Upper Elwha. Our results showed that a combination of habitat, hatchery, and harvest actions can result in positive responses for salmonid populations.
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- 2024
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15. Exogenous APN protects normal tissues from radiation-induced oxidative damage and fibrosis in mice and prostate cancer patients with higher levels of APN have less radiation-induced toxicities
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Joshua A. McDowell, Elizabeth A. Kosmacek, Michael J. Baine, Oluwaseun Adebisi, Cheng Zheng, Madison M. Bierman, Molly S. Myers, Arpita Chatterjee, Kia T. Liermann-Wooldrik, Andrew Lim, Kristin A. Dickinson, and Rebecca E. Oberley-Deegan
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Adiponectin ,Adipose ,Cancer ,Fibrosis ,Radiation ,Reactive oxygen species ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Radiation causes damage to normal tissues that leads to increased oxidative stress, inflammation, and fibrosis, highlighting the need for the selective radioprotection of healthy tissues without hindering radiotherapy effectiveness in cancer. This study shows that adiponectin, an adipokine secreted by adipocytes, protects normal tissues from radiation damage in vitro and in vivo. Specifically, adiponectin (APN) reduces chronic oxidative stress and fibrosis in irradiated mice. Importantly, APN also conferred no protection from radiation to prostate cancer cells. Adipose tissue is the primary source of circulating endogenous adiponectin. However, this study shows that adipose tissue is sensitive to radiation exposure exhibiting morphological changes and persistent oxidative damage. In addition, radiation results in a significant and chronic reduction in blood APN levels from adipose tissue in mice and human prostate cancer patients exposed to pelvic irradiation. APN levels negatively correlated with bowel toxicity and overall toxicities associated with radiotherapy in prostate cancer patients. Thus, protecting, or modulating APN signaling may improve outcomes for prostate cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy.
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- 2024
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16. Validation of different automated segmentation models for target volume contouring in postoperative radiotherapy for breast cancer and regional nodal irradiation
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Meixner, Eva, Glogauer, Benjamin, Klüter, Sebastian, Wagner, Friedrich, Neugebauer, David, Hoeltgen, Line, Dinges, Lisa A., Harrabi, Semi, Liermann, Jakob, Vinsensia, Maria, Weykamp, Fabian, Hoegen-Saßmannshausen, Philipp, Debus, Jürgen, and Hörner-Rieber, Juliane
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- 2024
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17. NMRium: Teaching nuclear magnetic resonance spectra interpretation in an online platform
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Luc Patiny, Hamed Musallam, Alejandro Bolaños, Michaël Zasso, Julien Wist, Metin Karayilan, Eva Ziegler, Johannes C. Liermann, and Nils E. Schlörer
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chemical education ,e-learning ,nmr ,nmr spectra ,structure elucidation ,Science ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
NMRium is the first web-based software that allows displaying, processing, interpretation, and teaching of 1D and 2D NMR data in a user-friendly interface. It can import the most common data formats (e.g., JCAMP-DX, Bruker, Varian, and Jeol). While the scope for the use of NMRium encompasses a variety of applications such as being a component in data repositories or electronic lab notebooks (ELN), performing structure elucidation or preparing raw spectral data for publication, it also excels in enhancing teaching of NMR interpretation. In this paper, we present some current possibilities of this new tool. Several series of exercises are already provided on https://www.nmrium.org/teaching.
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- 2024
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18. A hydrogen-enriched layer in the topmost outer core sourced from deeply subducted water
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Kim, Taehyun, O’Rourke, Joseph G., Lee, Jeongmin, Chariton, Stella, Prakapenka, Vitali, Husband, Rachel J., Giordano, Nico, Liermann, Hanns-Peter, Shim, Sang-Heon, and Lee, Yongjae
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- 2023
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19. Hypofractionated proton and carbon ion beam radiotherapy for sacrococcygeal chordoma (ISAC): An open label, randomized, stratified, phase II trial
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Seidensaal, Katharina, Froehlke, Andreas, Lentz-Hommertgen, Adriane, Lehner, Burkhard, Geisbuesch, Andreas, Meis, Jan, Liermann, Jakob, Kudak, Andreas, Stein, Katharina, Uhl, Matthias, Tessonnier, Thomas, Mairani, Andrea, Debus, Juergen, and Herfarth, Klaus
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- 2024
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20. Exogenous APN protects normal tissues from radiation-induced oxidative damage and fibrosis in mice and prostate cancer patients with higher levels of APN have less radiation-induced toxicities
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McDowell, Joshua A., Kosmacek, Elizabeth A., Baine, Michael J., Adebisi, Oluwaseun, Zheng, Cheng, Bierman, Madison M., Myers, Molly S., Chatterjee, Arpita, Liermann-Wooldrik, Kia T., Lim, Andrew, Dickinson, Kristin A., and Oberley-Deegan, Rebecca E.
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- 2024
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21. Carbon ion radiotherapy of hepatocellular carcinoma provides excellent local control: The prospective phase I PROMETHEUS trial
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Philipp Hoegen-Saßmannshausen, Patrick Naumann, Paula Hoffmeister-Wittmann, Semi Ben Harrabi, Katharina Seidensaal, Fabian Weykamp, Thomas Mielke, Malte Ellerbrock, Daniel Habermehl, Christoph Springfeld, Michael T. Dill, Thomas Longerich, Peter Schirmacher, Arianeb Mehrabi, De-Hua Chang, Juliane Hörner-Rieber, Oliver Jäkel, Thomas Haberer, Stephanie E. Combs, Jürgen Debus, Klaus Herfarth, and Jakob Liermann
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SBRT ,stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy ,RILD ,hadron therapy ,HCC ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
Background & Aims: Inoperable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) can be treated by stereotactic body radiotherapy. However, carbon ion radiotherapy (CIRT) is more effective for sparing non-tumorous liver. High linear energy transfer could promote therapy efficacy. Japanese and Chinese studies on hypofractionated CIRT have yielded excellent results. Because of different radiobiological models and the different etiological spectrum of HCC, applicability of these results to European cohorts and centers remains questionable. The aim of this prospective study was to assess safety and efficacy and to determine the optimal dose of CIRT with active raster scanning based on the local effect model (LEM) I. Methods: CIRT was performed every other day in four fractions with relative biological effectiveness (RBE)-weighted fraction doses of 8.1–10.5 Gy (total doses 32.4–42.0 Gy [RBE]). Dose escalation was performed in five dose levels with at least three patients each. The primary endpoint was acute toxicity after 4 weeks. Results: Twenty patients received CIRT (median age 74.7 years, n = 16 with liver cirrhosis, Child-Pugh scores [CP] A5 [n = 10], A6 [n = 4], B8 [n = 1], and B9 [n = 1]). Median follow up was 23 months. No dose-limiting toxicities and no toxicities exceeding grade II occurred, except one grade III gamma-glutamyltransferase elevation 12 months after CIRT, synchronous to out-of-field hepatic progression. During 12 months after CIRT, no CP elevation occurred. The highest dose level could be applied safely. No local recurrence developed during follow up. The objective response rate was 80%. Median overall survival was 30.8 months (1/2/3 years: 75%/64%/22%). Median progression-free survival was 20.9 months (1/2/3 years: 59%/43%/43%). Intrahepatic progression outside of the CIRT target volume was the most frequent pattern of progression. Conclusions: CIRT of HCC yields excellent local control without dose-limiting toxicity. Impact and implications: To date, safety and efficacy of carbon ion radiotherapy for hepatocellular carcinoma have only been evaluated prospectively in Japanese and Chinese studies. The optimal dose and fractionation when using the local effect model for radiotherapy planning are unknown. The results are of particular interest for European and American particle therapy centers, but also of relevance for all specialists involved in the treatment and care of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, as we present the first prospective data on carbon ion radiotherapy in hepatocellular carcinoma outside of Asia. The excellent local control should encourage further use of carbon ion radiotherapy for hepatocellular carcinoma and design of randomized controlled trials. Clinical Trials Registration: The study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01167374).
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- 2024
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22. Sinalização de qualidade no turismo brasileiro: Uma análise dos patrimônios culturais e naturais certificados sobre fluxos de turismo
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GABRIEL MARIN, NATHIÉLE LIERMANN, GUSTAVO GONZAGA, and SABINO JÚNIOR
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Economia Regional e Urbana ,Economia do Turismo ,Modelo Bayesiano Multinível ,Industries. Land use. Labor ,HD28-9999 ,Commerce ,HF1-6182 ,Economic theory. Demography ,HB1-3840 - Abstract
O presente trabalho utiliza um modelo bayesiano multinível para estimar o efeito da dotação de patrimônios culturais e naturais na quantidade de turistas estrangeiros recebida por 17 estados brasileiros nos anos de 2014, 2016 e 2019. Os resultados encontrados sugerem que a certificação de patrimônios por órgãos nacionais e internacionais pode, mesmo sem intenção ou indiretamente, servir como sinalização de qualidade para os turistas em potencial e, dessa forma, aumentar o fluxo de turistas internacionais recebido por uma determinada região.
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- 2024
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23. Stereotactic ultrahypofractionated MR-guided radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer – Acute toxicity and patient-reported outcomes in the prospective, multicenter SMILE phase II trial
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C.A. Fink, J. Ristau, C. Buchele, S. Klüter, J. Liermann, P. Hoegen-Saßmannshausen, E. Sandrini, A. Lentz-Hommertgen, L. Baumann, N. Andratschke, M. Baumgartl, M. Li, M. Reiner, S. Corradini, J. Hörner-Rieber, D. Bonekamp, H.-P. Schlemmer, C. Belka, M. Guckenberger, J. Debus, and S.A. Koerber
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Prostate cancer ,Stereotactic radiation therapy ,MR-guided radiotherapy ,Toxicity ,Daily adaptive radiotherapy ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: Due to superior image quality and daily adaptive planning, MR-guided stereotactic body radiation therapy (MRgSBRT) has the potential to further widen the therapeutic window in radiotherapy of localized prostate cancer. This study reports on acute toxicity rates and patient-reported outcomes after MR-guided adaptive ultrahypofractionated radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer within the prospective, multicenter phase II SMILE trial. Materials and methods: A total of 69 patients with localized prostate cancer underwent MRgSBRT with daily online plan adaptation. Inclusion criteria comprised a tumor stage ≤ T3a, serum PSA value ≤ 20 ng/ml, ISUP Grade group ≤ 4. A dose of 37.5 Gy was prescribed to the PTV in five fractions on alternating days with an optional simultaneous boost of 40 Gy to the dominant intraprostatic lesion defined by multiparametric MRI. Acute genitourinary (GU-) and gastrointestinal (GI-) toxicity, as defined by CTCAE v. 5.0 and RTOG as well as patient-reported outcomes according to EORTC QLQ-C30 and -PR25 scores were analyzed at completion of radiotherapy, 6 and 12 weeks after radiotherapy and compared to baseline symptoms. Results: There were no toxicity-related treatment discontinuations. At the 12-week follow-up visit, no grade 3 + toxicities were reported according to CTCAE. Up until the 12-week visit, in total 16 patients (23 %) experienced a grade 2 GU or GI toxicity. Toxicity rates peaked at the end of radiation therapy and subsided within the 12-week follow-up period. At the 12-week follow-up visit, no residual grade 2 GU toxicities were reported and 1 patient (1 %) had residual grade 2 enteritic symptoms. With exception to a significant improvement in the emotional functioning score following MRgSBRT, no clinically meaningful changes in the global health status nor in relevant subscores were reported. Conclusion: Daily online-adaptive MRgSBRT for localized prostate cancer resulted in an excellent overall toxicity profile without any major negative impact on quality of life.
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- 2024
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24. Comparison of early and late 68Ga-FAPI-46-PET in 33 patients with possible recurrence of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas
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Jorge Hoppner, Levin van Genabith, Thomas Hielscher, Ulrike Heger, Lucas Sperling, Teresa Colbatzky, Ewgenija Gutjahr, Matthias Lang, Thomas Pausch, Anna-Maria Spektor, Frederik M. Glatting, Jakob Liermann, Thilo Hackert, Clemens Kratochwil, Frederik L. Giesel, Uwe Haberkorn, and Manuel Röhrich
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Positron emission tomography with 68Gallium (68Ga) labeled inhibitors of fibroblast activation protein (68Ga-FAPI-PET) is a promising imaging technique for patients with recurrent pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDAC). To date, it is not clear if different acquisition timepoints for 68Ga-FAPI-PET may result in comparable imaging information and if repetitive 68Ga-FAPI-PET imaging may add diagnostic value to single timepoint acquisition for recurrent PDAC. Here we analyzed retrospectively early (20 min p.i.) and late (60 min p.i.) 68Ga-FAPI-PET imaging using FAPI-46 of 33 patients with possible recurrence of PDAC concerning detection rates and uptake over time of local recurrences, metastases, inflammatory lesions of the pancreas, cholestatic lesions of the liver and reactive tissue. 33 patients with histologically confirmed PDAC after complete or partial resection of the pancreas and possible recurrence were examined by 68Ga-FAPI-46-PET acquired 20- and 60-min post injection (p.i.) of the radiotracer. FAPI-positive lesions were classified as local recurrences, metastases, inflammatory lesions of the pancreas (ILP), cholestatic lesions of the liver and reactive tissue based on histology, PET- and CT-morphology and clinical information. Lesions were contoured, and standardized uptake values (SUVmax and SUVmean) and target-to-background ratios (TBR) were analyzed for both acquisition timepoints. In total, 152 FAPI-positive lesions (22 local relapses, 47 metastases, 26 inflammatory lesions of the pancreas, 28 reactive tissues, and 29 cholestatic lesions) were detected. Detection rates for the early and late acquisition of 68Ga-FAPI-46-PET were almost identical except cholestatic lesions, which showed a higher detection rate at early imaging. SUV parameters and TBRs of ILP significantly decreased over time. Cholestatic lesions showed a tendency towards decreasing uptake. All other types of lesions showed relatively stable uptake over time. Early and late acquisition of 68Ga-FAPI-PET results in comparable imaging information in patients with possible recurrence of PDAC. Two timepoint imaging offers additional diagnostic potential concerning differential diagnoses.
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- 2023
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25. Carbon ion radiotherapy of hepatocellular carcinoma provides excellent local control: The prospective phase I PROMETHEUS trial
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Hoegen-Saßmannshausen, Philipp, Naumann, Patrick, Hoffmeister-Wittmann, Paula, Ben Harrabi, Semi, Seidensaal, Katharina, Weykamp, Fabian, Mielke, Thomas, Ellerbrock, Malte, Habermehl, Daniel, Springfeld, Christoph, Dill, Michael T., Longerich, Thomas, Schirmacher, Peter, Mehrabi, Arianeb, Chang, De-Hua, Hörner-Rieber, Juliane, Jäkel, Oliver, Haberer, Thomas, Combs, Stephanie E., Debus, Jürgen, Herfarth, Klaus, and Liermann, Jakob
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- 2024
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26. Stereotactic ultrahypofractionated MR-guided radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer – Acute toxicity and patient-reported outcomes in the prospective, multicenter SMILE phase II trial
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Fink, C.A., Ristau, J., Buchele, C., Klüter, S., Liermann, J., Hoegen-Saßmannshausen, P., Sandrini, E., Lentz-Hommertgen, A., Baumann, L., Andratschke, N., Baumgartl, M., Li, M., Reiner, M., Corradini, S., Hörner-Rieber, J., Bonekamp, D., Schlemmer, H.-P., Belka, C., Guckenberger, M., Debus, J., and Koerber, S.A.
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- 2024
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27. High-pressure adsorption phenomena in natural and synthetic zeolites with EAB topology
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Battiston, Tommaso, Comboni, Davide, Lotti, Paolo, Ferrarelli, Giorgia, Migliori, Massimo, Giordano, Girolamo, Hanfland, Michael, Garbarino, Gaston, Liermann, Hanns-Peter, and Gatta, G. Diego
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- 2024
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28. A MHz X-ray diffraction set-up for dynamic compression experiments in the diamond anvil cell
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Rachel J. Husband, Cornelius Strohm, Karen Appel, Orianna B. Ball, Richard Briggs, Johannes Buchen, Valerio Cerantola, Stella Chariton, Amy L. Coleman, Hyunchae Cynn, Dana Dattelbaum, Anand Dwivedi, Jon H. Eggert, Lars Ehm, William J. Evans, Konstantin Glazyrin, Alexander F. Goncharov, Heinz Graafsma, Alex Howard, Larissa Huston, Trevor M. Hutchinson, Huijeong Hwang, Sony Jacob, Johannes Kaa, Jaeyong Kim, Minseob Kim, Egor Koemets, Zuzana Konôpková, Falko Langenhorst, Torsten Laurus, Xinyang Li, Jona Mainberger, Hauke Marquardt, Emma E. McBride, Christopher McGuire, James D. McHardy, Malcolm I. McMahon, R. Stewart McWilliams, Alba S. J. Méndez, Anshuman Mondal, Guillaume Morard, Earl F. O'Bannon, Christoph Otzen, Charles M. Pépin, Vitali B. Prakapenka, Clemens Prescher, Thomas R. Preston, Ronald Redmer, Michael Roeper, Carmen Sanchez-Valle, Dean Smith, Raymond F. Smith, Daniel Sneed, Sergio Speziale, Tobias Spitzbart, Stephan Stern, Blake T. Sturtevant, Jolanta Sztuk-Dambietz, Peter Talkovski, Nenad Velisavljevic, Cara Vennari, Zhongyan Wu, Choong-Shik Yoo, Ulf Zastrau, Zsolt Jenei, and Hanns-Peter Liermann
- Subjects
extreme conditions science ,x-ray free-electron lasers ,diamond anvil cells ,dynamic compression ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
An experimental platform for dynamic diamond anvil cell (dDAC) research has been developed at the High Energy Density (HED) Instrument at the European X-ray Free Electron Laser (European XFEL). Advantage was taken of the high repetition rate of the European XFEL (up to 4.5 MHz) to collect pulse-resolved MHz X-ray diffraction data from samples as they are dynamically compressed at intermediate strain rates (≤103 s−1), where up to 352 diffraction images can be collected from a single pulse train. The set-up employs piezo-driven dDACs capable of compressing samples in ≥340 µs, compatible with the maximum length of the pulse train (550 µs). Results from rapid compression experiments on a wide range of sample systems with different X-ray scattering powers are presented. A maximum compression rate of 87 TPa s−1 was observed during the fast compression of Au, while a strain rate of ∼1100 s−1 was achieved during the rapid compression of N2 at 23 TPa s−1.
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- 2023
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29. Dosimetric benefit of online treatment plan adaptation in stereotactic ultrahypofractionated MR-guided radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer
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Christoph A. Fink, Carolin Buchele, Lukas Baumann, Jakob Liermann, Philipp Hoegen, Jonas Ristau, Sebastian Regnery, Elisabetta Sandrini, Laila König, Carolin Rippke, David Bonekamp, Heinz-Peter Schlemmer, Juergen Debus, Stefan A. Koerber, Sebastian Klüter, and Juliane Hörner-Rieber
- Subjects
stereotactic body radiation therapy ,MR-guided radiotherapy ,daily adaptive radiotherapy ,prostate cancer ,dosimetric benefits ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundApart from superior soft tissue contrast, MR-guided stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) offers the chance for daily online plan adaptation. This study reports on the comparison of dose parameters before and after online plan adaptation in MR-guided SBRT of localized prostate cancer.Materials and methods32 consecutive patients treated with ultrahypofractionated SBRT for localized prostate cancer within the prospective SMILE trial underwent a planning process for MR-guided radiotherapy with 37.5 Gy applied in 5 fractions. A base plan, derived from MRI simulation at an MRIdian Linac, was registered to daily MRI scans (predicted plan). Following target and OAR recontouring, the plan was reoptimized based on the daily anatomy (adapted plan). CTV and PTV coverage and doses at OAR were compared between predicted and adapted plans using linear mixed regression models.ResultsIn 152 out of 160 fractions (95%), an adapted radiation plan was delivered. Mean CTV and PTV coverage increased by 1.4% and 4.5% after adaptation. 18% vs. 95% of the plans had a PTV coverage ≥95% before and after online adaptation, respectively. 78% vs. 100% of the plans had a CTV coverage ≥98% before and after online adaptation, respectively. The D0.2cc for both bladder and rectum were
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- 2024
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30. Corrigendum: Dam removal enables diverse juvenile life histories to emerge in threatened salmonids repopulating a heterogeneous landscape
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Stuart H. Munsch, Mike McHenry, Martin C. Liermann, Todd R. Bennett, John McMillan, Raymond Moses, and George R. Pess
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Elwha river ,habitat mosaic ,restoration ,thermal regime ,phenology ,Evolution ,QH359-425 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Published
- 2024
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31. Cryptosporidium parvum infection alters the intestinal mucosa transcriptome in neonatal calves: implications for immune function
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Arash Veshkini, Franziska Dengler, Lisa Bachmann, Wendy Liermann, Christiane Helm, Reiner Ulrich, Cora Delling, Christa Kühn, and Harald M. Hammon
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innate immunity ,diarrhea ,next generation sequencing ,adaptive immunity ,chemotaxis ,bovine ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
One of the leading causes of infectious diarrhea in newborn calves is the apicomplexan protozoan Cryptosporidium parvum (C. parvum). However, little is known about its immunopathogenesis. Using next generation sequencing, this study investigated the immune transcriptional response to C. parvum infection in neonatal calves. Neonatal male Holstein-Friesian calves were either orally infected (N = 5) or not (CTRL group, N = 5) with C. parvum oocysts (gp60 subtype IIaA15G2R1) at day 1 of life and slaughtered on day 7 after infection. Total RNA was extracted from the jejunal mucosa for short read. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between infected and CTRL groups were assessed using DESeq2 at a false discovery rate < 0.05. Infection did not affect plasma immunohematological parameters, including neutrophil, lymphocyte, monocyte, leucocyte, thrombocyte, and erythrocyte counts as well as hematocrit and hemoglobin concentration on day 7 post infection. The immune-related DEGs were selected according to the UniProt immune system process database and were used for gene ontology (GO) and pathway enrichment analysis using Cytoscape (v3.9.1). Based on GO analysis, DEGs annotated to mucosal immunity, recognizing and presenting antigens, chemotaxis of neutrophils, eosinophils, natural killer cells, B and T cells mediated by signaling pathways including toll like receptors, interleukins, tumor necrosis factor, T cell receptor, and NF-KB were upregulated, while markers of macrophages chemotaxis and cytosolic pattern recognition were downregulated. This study provides a holistic snapshot of immune-related pathways induced by C. parvum in calves, including novel and detailed feedback and feedforward regulatory mechanisms establishing the crosstalk between innate and adaptive immune response in neonate calves, which could be utilized further to develop new therapeutic strategies.
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- 2024
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32. Comparison of early and late 68Ga-FAPI-46-PET in 33 patients with possible recurrence of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas
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Hoppner, Jorge, van Genabith, Levin, Hielscher, Thomas, Heger, Ulrike, Sperling, Lucas, Colbatzky, Teresa, Gutjahr, Ewgenija, Lang, Matthias, Pausch, Thomas, Spektor, Anna-Maria, Glatting, Frederik M., Liermann, Jakob, Hackert, Thilo, Kratochwil, Clemens, Giesel, Frederik L., Haberkorn, Uwe, and Röhrich, Manuel
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- 2023
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33. Evidence for a rosiaite-structured high-pressure silica phase and its relation to lamellar amorphization in quartz
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Otzen, Christoph, Liermann, Hanns-Peter, and Langenhorst, Falko
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- 2023
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34. Cryptosporidium parvum competes with the intestinal epithelial cells for glucose and impairs systemic glucose supply in neonatal calves
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Dengler, Franziska, Hammon, Harald M., Liermann, Wendy, Görs, Solvig, Bachmann, Lisa, Helm, Christiane, Ulrich, Reiner, and Delling, Cora
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- 2023
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35. Cryptosporidium parvum competes with the intestinal epithelial cells for glucose and impairs systemic glucose supply in neonatal calves
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Franziska Dengler, Harald M. Hammon, Wendy Liermann, Solvig Görs, Lisa Bachmann, Christiane Helm, Reiner Ulrich, and Cora Delling
- Subjects
Cryptosporidiosis ,GLUT2 ,in vivo ,metabolism ,SGLT1 ,Ussing chamber ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Abstract Cryptosporidiosis is one of the main causes of diarrhea in children and young livestock. The interaction of the parasite with the intestinal host cells has not been characterized thoroughly yet but may be affected by the nutritional demand of the parasite. Hence, we aimed to investigate the impact of C. parvum infection on glucose metabolism in neonatal calves. Therefore, N = 5 neonatal calves were infected with C. parvum on the first day of life, whereas a control group was not (N = 5). The calves were monitored clinically for one week, and glucose absorption, turnover and oxidation were assessed using stable isotope labelled glucose. The transepithelial transport of glucose was measured using the Ussing chamber technique. Glucose transporters were quantified on gene and protein expression level using RT-qPCR and Western blot in the jejunum epithelium and brush border membrane preparations. Plasma glucose concentration and oral glucose absorption were decreased despite an increased electrogenic phlorizin sensitive transepithelial transport of glucose in infected calves. No difference in the gene or protein abundance of glucose transporters, but an enrichment of glucose transporter 2 in the brush border was observed in the infected calves. Furthermore, the mRNA for enzymes of the glycolysis pathway was increased indicating enhanced glucose oxidation in the infected gut. In summary, C. parvum infection modulates intestinal epithelial glucose absorption and metabolism. We assume that the metabolic competition of the parasite for glucose causes the host cells to upregulate their uptake mechanisms and metabolic machinery to compensate for the energy losses.
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- 2023
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36. Carbon-ion radiotherapy (CIRT) as treatment of pancreatic cancer at HIT: initial radiation plan analysis of the prospective phase II PACK-study
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Baltazar, Filipa, Tessonnier, Thomas, Haberer, Thomas, Debus, Juergen, Herfarth, Klaus, Tawk, Bouchra, Knoll, Maximilian, Abdollahi, Amir, Liermann, Jakob, and Mairani, Andrea
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- 2023
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37. Mapping the planet’s critical natural assets
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Chaplin-Kramer, Rebecca, Neugarten, Rachel A., Sharp, Richard P., Collins, Pamela M., Polasky, Stephen, Hole, David, Schuster, Richard, Strimas-Mackey, Matthew, Mulligan, Mark, Brandon, Carter, Diaz, Sandra, Fluet-Chouinard, Etienne, Gorenflo, L. J., Johnson, Justin A., Kennedy, Christina M., Keys, Patrick W., Longley-Wood, Kate, McIntyre, Peter B., Noon, Monica, Pascual, Unai, Reidy Liermann, Catherine, Roehrdanz, Patrick R., Schmidt-Traub, Guido, Shaw, M. Rebecca, Spalding, Mark, Turner, Will R., van Soesbergen, Arnout, and Watson, Reg A.
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- 2023
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38. Modeling timing and size of juvenile Chinook salmon out-migrants at three Elwha River rotary screw traps: a window into early life history post dam removal
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Martin C. Liermann, Aimee H. Fullerton, George R. Pess, Joseph H. Anderson, Sarah A. Morley, Michael L. McHenry, mcKenzi N. Taylor, Justin Stapleton, Mel Elofson, Randall E. McCoy, and Todd R. Bennett
- Subjects
Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) ,life history diversity ,dam removal influence ,Elwha River ,growth models ,incubation models ,Evolution ,QH359-425 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) populations express diverse early life history pathways that increase habitat utilization and demographic resiliency. Extensive anthropogenic alterations to freshwater habitats along with hatchery and harvest impacts have led to marked reductions in early life history diversity across much of the species’ range. The recent removal of two Elwha River dams between 2011 and 2014 restored access to over 90% of the available habitat that had been inaccessible to Chinook salmon since the early 1900s. This provided an opportunity to investigate how renewed access to this habitat might affect life history diversity. As exotherms, egg-to-fry development, juvenile growth, and movement are influenced by water temperatures. We used spatially and temporally explicit Elwha River water temperature and Chinook salmon spawning location data, in conjunction with spawn timing, emergence, growth, and movement models, to predict observed timing and sizes of juvenile Chinook salmon captured in three rotary screw traps in the mainstem and two tributaries during four trap years. This effort allowed us to test hypotheses regarding Elwha River Chinook salmon early life history, identify potential problems with the data, and predict how emergence and growth would change with increased spawning in the upper watershed. Predicted Chinook salmon emergence timing and predicted dates that juveniles reached 65 mm differed by as much as 2 months for different river locations due to large differences in thermal regimes longitudinally in the mainstem and between tributaries. For 10 out of the 12 trap–year combinations, the model was able to replicate important characteristics of the out-migrant timing and length data collected at the three traps. However, in most cases, there were many plausible parameter combinations that performed well, and in some cases, the model predictions and observations differed. Potential problems with the data and model assumptions were identified as partial explanations for differences and provide avenues for future work. We show that juvenile out-migrant data combined with mechanistic models can improve our understanding of how differences in temperature, spawning extent, and spawn timing affect the emergence, growth, and movement of juvenile fish across diverse riverine habitats.
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- 2023
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39. Evidence for a rosiaite-structured high-pressure silica phase and its relation to lamellar amorphization in quartz
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Christoph Otzen, Hanns-Peter Liermann, and Falko Langenhorst
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Rapid compression experiments on quartz provide evidence for a metastable high-pressure phase with rosiaite structure. The phase forms as lamellae and breaks down to glass during decompression. These discoveries may solve the enigma of lamellar amorphization of quartz during impact events.
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- 2023
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40. Pressure-mediated crystal-fluid interaction in the zeolite offretite
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Battiston, Tommaso, Comboni, Davide, Pagliaro, Francesco, Lotti, Paolo, Hanfland, Michael, Glazyrin, Konstantin, Liermann, Hanns-Peter, and Gatta, G. Diego
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- 2023
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41. Stereotactic magnetic resonance-guided online adaptive radiotherapy of adrenal metastases combines high ablative doses with optimized sparing of organs at risk
- Author
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Hoegen, Philipp, Katsigiannopulos, Efthimios, Buchele, Carolin, Regnery, Sebastian, Weykamp, Fabian, Sandrini, Elisabetta, Ristau, Jonas, Liermann, Jakob, Meixner, Eva, Forster, Tobias, Renkamp, C. Katharina, Schlüter, Fabian, Rippke, Carolin, Debus, Jürgen, Klüter, Sebastian, and Hörner-Rieber, Juliane
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- 2023
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42. Dynamic compression of Ce and Pr with millisecond time-resolved X-ray diffraction
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Earl F. O’Bannon III, Rachel J. Husband, Bruce J. Baer, Magnus J. Lipp, Hanns-Peter Liermann, William J. Evans, and Zsolt Jenei
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Both cerium (Ce) and praseodymium (Pr) undergo a volume collapse transition under compression that originate from similar electronic mechanisms. Yet the outcome could not be more different. In the case of Ce with one affected 4f electron the volume collapse leaves the crystal symmetry intact, whereas for Pr with two 4f electrons the crystal symmetry changes from a distorted face centered cubic structure to a lower symmetry orthorhombic structure. In this paper, we present a study of the effect of strain/compression rate spanning nearly 4 orders of magnitude on the volume collapse phase transitions in Ce and Pr. These dynamic compression experiments in a diamond anvil cell also reveal kinetic differences between the phase transformations observed in these two materials. The transition cannot be overdriven in pressure in Ce, which indicates a fast kinetic process, whereas fast compression rates in Pr lead to a shift of the phase boundary to higher pressures, pointing to slower kinetics possibly due to the realization of a new crystal structure.
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- 2022
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43. Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 metallic glass gaskets for high-pressure research beyond 1 Mbar
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Weiwei Dong, Konstantin Glazyrin, Saiana Khandarkhaeva, Timofey Fedotenko, Jozef Bednarčík, Eran Greenberg, Leonid Dubrovinsky, Natalia Dubrovinskaia, and Hanns-Peter Liermann
- Subjects
diamond anvil cell (dac) ,amorphous metal gasket ,metallic glass ,axial and radial high-pressure x-ray diffraction ,signal-to-noise ratio ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
A gasket is an important constituent of a diamond anvil cell (DAC) assembly, responsible for the sample chamber stability at extreme conditions for X-ray diffraction studies. In this work, we studied the performance of gaskets made of metallic glass Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 in a number of high-pressure X-ray diffraction (XRD) experiments in DACs equipped with conventional and toroidal-shape diamond anvils. The experiments were conducted in either axial or radial geometry with X-ray beams of micrometre to sub-micrometre size. We report that Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 metallic glass gaskets offer a stable sample environment under compression exceeding 1 Mbar in all XRD experiments described here, even in those involving small-molecule gases (e.g. Ne, H2) used as pressure-transmitting media or in those with laser heating in a DAC. Our results emphasize the material's importance for a great number of delicate experiments conducted under extreme conditions. They indicate that the application of Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 metallic glass gaskets in XRD experiments for both axial and radial geometries substantially improves various aspects of megabar experiments and, in particular, the signal-to-noise ratio in comparison to that with conventional gaskets made of Re, W, steel or other crystalline metals.
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- 2022
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44. Hepatite Fulminante como Primeira Apresentação da Doença de Wilson
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Djulia Adriani Frainer, Carolina da Silveira Welter, Claudia Theis, Raquel Francine Liermann Garcia, Ricardo Lemos, Franco Haritsch, Andre Carminati Lima, and Christian Evangelista Garcia
- Subjects
Insuficiência Hepática Fulminante ,Transplante de Fígado ,Pseudoaneurisma ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 ,Special situations and conditions ,RC952-1245 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
A doença de Wilson é uma rara patologia, porém, que engloba 6–12% dos pacientes com indicação de transplante hepático de urgência. As principais manifestações, além de hepáticas, são as neurológicas e psiquiátricas, sendo mais raro a evolução com hepatite fulminante sem sintomas neuropsiquiátricos. Apesar da urgência, o prognóstico para os pacientes pós-transplante é, em média, 85% de sobrevivência em cinco anos. Neste relato, é apresentado o caso de uma paciente mulher, 18 anos de idade, com início de dor abdominal, icterícia e colúria com evolução para hepatite fulminante e necessidade de transplante hepático de urgência. A paciente evoluiu no pós-operatório com choque séptico devido encefalite herpética, úlcera duodenal com sangramento ativo e pseudoaneurisma de artéria hepática. Apesar das medidas para estabilização e solicitação, novamente, de um transplante, a paciente evoluiu para óbito.
- Published
- 2023
45. Dam removal enables diverse juvenile life histories to emerge in threatened salmonids repopulating a heterogeneous landscape
- Author
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Stuart H. Munsch, Mike McHenry, Martin C. Liermann, Todd R. Bennett, John McMillan, Raymond Moses, and George R. Pess
- Subjects
Elwha river ,habitat mosaic ,restoration ,thermal regime ,phenology ,Evolution ,QH359-425 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Human stressors block, eliminate, and simplify habitat mosaics, eroding landscapes’ life history diversity and thus biological resilience. One goal of restoration is to alleviate human stressors that suppress life history diversity, but life history responses to these efforts are still coming into focus. Here, we report life history diversity emerging in threatened salmonids (Oncorhynchus spp.) repopulating the recently undammed Elwha River (WA, United States) in adjacent but environmentally distinct tributaries. The ~20 km tributaries entered the Elwha River
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- 2023
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46. Strong Effect of Stress on the Seismic Signature of the Post‐Stishovite Phase Transition in the Earth's Lower Mantle
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Biao Wang, Johannes Buchen, Alba San José Méndez, Alexander Kurnosov, Giacomo Criniti, Hanns‐Peter Liermann, and Hauke Marquardt
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Earth's lower mantle ,stishovite to post‐stishovite phase transition ,stress ,bulk modulus ,high pressure experiments ,seismic scatterers ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Abstract The stishovite to post‐stishovite phase transition may modify the scattering of seismic waves by stishovite‐bearing rocks in the Earth's lower mantle. A series of continuous compression experiments on sintered polycrystalline stishovite was performed to study the effect of stress on the phase transition. The experimental results show that the phase transition shifts to lower pressures as the magnitude of deviatoric stress increases. Our results further show that the bulk modulus of sintered polycrystalline stishovite differs from that derived from single crystal measurements and decreases at the phase transition. In cold regions, such as subducted slabs, stresses may accumulate and shift the phase transition to a shallower depth. In hot regions with less stress, such as rising plumes, the phase transition is shifted to a greater depth. In addition, the phase transition may have varying seismic signatures depending on the behavior of the grain boundaries in mantle rocks and the micro‐stresses present in neighboring grains.
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- 2023
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47. Effects of rumen cannulation combined with different pre-weaning feeding intensities on the intestinal, splenic and thymic immune system in heifer calves several month after surgery
- Author
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Wendy Liermann, Lisa-Maria Tümmler, Björn Kuhla, Torsten Viergutz, and Harald Michael Hammon
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milk replacer ,feeding regime ,T and B cell ,mesenteric lymph node ,intraepithelial lymphocyte (IEL) ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Fistulation is a helpful procedure in animal nutritional research and also common practise in human medicine. However, there are indications that alterations in the upper gastrointestinal tract contribute to intestinal immune modulations. The present study aimed to investigate effects of a rumen cannulation in week 3 of life on the intestinal and tissue specific immune system of 34-week old heifers. Nutrition influences the development of the neonatal intestinal immune system to a high extent. Therefore, rumen cannulation was investigated in combination with different pre-weaning milk feeding intensities (20% (20MR) vs. 10% milk replacer feeding (10MR). Heifers of 20MR without rumen cannula (NRC) showed higher cluster of differentiation (CD)8+ T cell subsets in mesenteric lymph nodes (MSL) compared to heifers with rumen cannula (RC) and 10MRNRC heifers. CD4+ T cell subsets in jejunal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) were higher in 10MRNRC heifers compared to 10MRRC heifers. CD4+ T cell subsets in ileal IELs were lower and CD21+ B cell subsets were higher in NRC heifers compared to RC heifers. CD8+ T cell subsets in spleen tended to be lower in 20MRNRC heifers compared to all other groups. Splenic CD21+ B cell subsets were higher in 20MRNRC heifers compared to RC heifers. Splenic toll like receptor (TLR) 6 expression was increased and IL4 expression tended to be increased in RC heifers than NRC heifers. Splenic TLR2, 3 and 10 gene expression was higher in 20MR compared to 10MR heifers. Jejunal prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase 2 expression was higher in RC heifers than NRC heifers, and MUC2 expression tended to increase in 20MR heifers compared to 10MR heifers. In conclusion, rumen cannulation modulated T and B cell subsets in the down streaming gastrointestinal tract and spleen. Pre-weaning feeding intensity seemed to affect intestinal mucin secretion and T and B cell subsets in MSL, spleen and thymus until several month later. Interestingly, in MSL, spleen and thymus the 10MR feeding regime evoked similar modulations of T and B cell subsets like rumen cannulation.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Carbon ion radiotherapy as definitive treatment in locally recurrent pancreatic cancer
- Author
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Liermann, Jakob, Ben-Josef, Edgar, Syed, Mustafa, Debus, Juergen, Herfarth, Klaus, and Naumann, Patrick
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Magnetic field screening in hydrogen-rich high-temperature superconductors
- Author
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V. S. Minkov, S. L. Bud’ko, F. F. Balakirev, V. B. Prakapenka, S. Chariton, R. J. Husband, H. P. Liermann, and M. I. Eremets
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Abstract In the last few years, the superconducting transition temperature, T c , of hydrogen-rich compounds has increased dramatically, and is now approaching room temperature. However, the pressures at which these materials are stable exceed one million atmospheres and limit the number of available experimental studies. Superconductivity in hydrides has been primarily explored by electrical transport measurements, whereas magnetic properties, one of the most important characteristic of a superconductor, have not been satisfactory defined. Here, we develop SQUID magnetometry under extreme high-pressure conditions and report characteristic superconducting parameters for Im-3m-H3S and Fm-3m-LaH10—the representative members of two families of high-temperature superconducting hydrides. We determine a lower critical field H c1 of ∼0.82 T and ∼0.55 T, and a London penetration depth λ L of ∼20 nm and ∼30 nm in H3S and LaH10, respectively. The small values of λ L indicate a high superfluid density in both hydrides. These compounds have the values of the Ginzburg-Landau parameter κ ∼12–20 and belong to the group of “moderate” type II superconductors, rather than being hard superconductors as would be intuitively expected from their high T c s.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Sub-micrometer focusing setup for high-pressure crystallography at the Extreme Conditions beamline at PETRA III
- Author
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K. Glazyrin, S. Khandarkhaeva, T. Fedotenko, W. Dong, D. Laniel, F. Seiboth, A. Schropp, J. Garrevoet, D. Brückner, G. Falkenberg, A. Kubec, C. David, M. Wendt, S. Wenz, L. Dubrovinsky, N. Dubrovinskaia, and H.-P. Liermann
- Subjects
high pressure ,diamond anvil cells ,x-ray diffraction ,phase correcting plate ,sub-micrometer focusing ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
Scientific tasks aimed at decoding and characterizing complex systems and processes at high pressures set new challenges for modern X-ray diffraction instrumentation in terms of X-ray flux, focal spot size and sample positioning. Presented here are new developments at the Extreme Conditions beamline (P02.2, PETRA III, DESY, Germany) that enable considerable improvements in data collection at very high pressures and small scattering volumes. In particular, the focusing of the X-ray beam to the sub-micrometer level is described, and control of the aberrations of the focusing compound refractive lenses is made possible with the implementation of a correcting phase plate. This device provides a significant enhancement of the signal-to-noise ratio by conditioning the beam shape profile at the focal spot. A new sample alignment system with a small sphere of confusion enables single-crystal data collection from grains of micrometer to sub-micrometer dimensions subjected to pressures as high as 200 GPa. The combination of the technical development of the optical path and the sample alignment system contributes to research and gives benefits on various levels, including rapid and accurate diffraction mapping of samples with sub-micrometer resolution at multimegabar pressures.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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