Slow fiber cluster pattern in pig longissimus thoracis muscle: Implications for myogenesis

2003 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 973-983 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Fonseca ◽  
I. J. Wilson ◽  
G. W. Horgan ◽  
C. A. Maltin
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (14) ◽  
pp. 7637
Author(s):  
Taekyoung Lee ◽  
Jieun Cha ◽  
Sohyun Sung

Trees’ ability to capture atmospheric Particular Matter (PM) is related to morphological traits (shape, size, and micro-morphology) of the leaves. The objectives of this study were (1) to find out whether cluster pattern of the leaves is also a parameter that affects trees’ PM capturing performance and (2) to apply the cluster patterns of the leaves on architectural surfaces to confirm its impact on PM capturing performance. Two series of chamber experiments were designed to observe the impact of cluster patterns on PM capturing performance whilst other influential variables were controlled. First, we exposed synthetic leaf structures of different cluster patterns (a large and sparsely arranged cluster pattern and a small and densely arranged cluster pattern) to artificially generated PM in a chamber for 60 min and recorded the changing levels of PM2.5 and PM10 every minute. The results confirmed that the small and densely arranged cluster pattern has more significant effect on reducing PM2.5 and PM10 than the large and sparsely arranged cluster pattern. Secondly, we created three different types of architectural surfaces mimicking the cluster patterns of the leaves: a base surface, a folded surface, and a folded and porous surface. The surfaces were also exposed to artificially generated PM in the chamber and the levels of PM2.5 and PM10 were recorded. The results confirmed that the folded and porous surface has a more significant effect on reducing PM2.5 and PM10 than other surfaces. The study has confirmed that the PM capturing performance of architectural surfaces can be improved by mimicking cluster pattern of the leaves.


Author(s):  
S. M. Towhidur Rahman ◽  
Ahsanul Kabir

AbstractThis study aims to identify the location and cluster pattern of manufacturing SMEs in Khulna City and the reasons behind such pattern since localisation of SMEs has significant impact on the economic development of cities and regions. A walking survey was conducted to identify the SME location pattern and a semi-structured personal interview was conducted to collect data from manufacturing SME entrepreneurs to find why such patterns exist. A cross section qualitative multiple case study design and pattern matching technique was applied to answer the research questions. The finding of the study shows SME location choice was influenced by a combination of location specific, personal, and community factors whereby personal factors are prioritised over other factors in location selection. While the cluster formation or localisation of SMEs depends on only location-specific factors. The study findings are expected to contribute in urban planning and regional development through providing useful insights relating allocation of spaces for industry development.


1995 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 599-607 ◽  
Author(s):  
LINDA K. LEVITT ◽  
JOHN V. O'MAHONEY ◽  
KAREN J. BRENNAN ◽  
JOSEPHINE E. JOYA ◽  
LEI ZHU ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 472-475 ◽  
pp. 2354-2360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Shan Lu ◽  
Cheng Yi Zhao ◽  
Jun Wang ◽  
Yan He ◽  
Zhi Hui Kou

In order to achieve the controllability of the abrasive arrangement on the working surface of grinding wheel,a new kind of the superabrasive grinding wheel, which has defined abrasive grain cluster pattern, has been designed based on the phyllotaxis theory of biology, and fabricated with UV lithography method and electroplating technology. The analytical results indicate that the phyllotactic parameters influence on the abrasive arrangement configuration on the work surface of the superabrasive grinding wheel, so as to improve grinding performance of the grinding wheel, increasing the diameter of phyllotactic abrasive grain cluster and decreasing phyllotactic coefficient can increases the abrasive grain density of the surperabrasive grinding wheel surface. Electroplating experimental results show that the reasonable electroplating processes can reduce the faults of defined abrasive arrangement on the superabrasive grinding wheel surface.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (12) ◽  
pp. 2356-2363 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. K. Govind ◽  
A. T. Read ◽  
W. T. Claxton ◽  
R. W. Elner

Male snow crabs, Chionoecetes opilio (Majidae), use their modified chelae to retain females for weeks before copulation. Consequently, adaptations for such sustained activity were examined in the chela-closer muscle responsible for clasping. Based on an allometric increase in the ratio of chela size to carapace width, male snow crabs were categorized as morphometrically mature or immature, the former displaying precopulatory clasping more readily than the latter. However, the two types were similar in terms of the properties of the chela-closer muscle, which was examined in this study. The motor pattern during clasping consisted of low-frequency firing of one of the excitor motoneurons, which gives rise to small synaptic potentials. The other excitor motoneuron, which produces large synaptic potentials, fired only when the female struggled during the embrace. The synaptic potentials of both axons showed little if any fatigue at these low firing frequencies. The neuromuscular terminals of these motoneurons displayed areas of synaptic contact larger than most found in other tonically active crustacean muscles. The majority of these synapses had an active site for transmitter release denoted by a dense bar, with many containing more than three dense bars. The closer muscle had typically slow features, with 10 or 11 thin filaments surrounding a thick filament, and sarcomere lengths of 9 – 10 μm. Overall, the closer muscle with its slow-fiber composition, tonic motoneurons, and neuromuscular synapses is well suited to sustained, low-level activity such as precopulatory clasping.


2018 ◽  
Vol 618 ◽  
pp. A81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elmo Tempel ◽  
Maarja Kruuse ◽  
Rain Kipper ◽  
Taavi Tuvikene ◽  
Jenny G. Sorce ◽  
...  

Context. Galaxy groups and clusters are formidable cosmological probes. They permit the studying of the environmental effects on galaxy formation. A reliable detection of galaxy groups is an open problem and is important for ongoing and future cosmological surveys. Aims. We propose a probabilistic galaxy group detection algorithm based on marked point processes with interactions. Methods. The pattern of galaxy groups in a catalogue is seen as a random set of interacting objects. The positions and the interactions of these objects are governed by a probability density. The parameters of the probability density were chosen using a priori knowledge. The estimator of the unknown cluster pattern is given by the configuration of objects maximising the proposed probability density. Adopting the Bayesian framework, the proposed probability density is maximised using a simulated annealing (SA) algorithm. At fixed temperature, the SA algorithm is a Monte Carlo sampler of the probability density. Hence, the method provides “for free” additional information such as the probabilities that a point or two points in the observation domain belong to the cluster pattern, respectively. These supplementary tools allow the construction of tests and techniques to validate and to refine the detection result. Results. To test the feasibility of the proposed methodology, we applied it to the well-studied 2MRS data set. Compared to previously published Friends-of-Friends (FoF) group finders, the proposed Bayesian group finder gives overall similar results. However for specific applications, like the reconstruction of the local Universe, the details of the grouping algorithms are important. Conclusions. The proposed Bayesian group finder is tested on a galaxy redshift survey, but more detailed analyses are needed to understand the actual capabilities of the algorithm regarding upcoming cosmological surveys. The presented mathematical framework permits adapting it easily for other data sets (in astronomy and in other fields of sciences). In cosmology, one promising application is the detection of galaxy groups in photometric galaxy redshift surveys, while taking into account the full photometric redshift posteriors.


2007 ◽  
Vol 293 (2) ◽  
pp. R686-R694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Stupka ◽  
Jonathan D. Schertzer ◽  
Rhonda Bassel-Duby ◽  
Eric N. Olson ◽  
Gordon S. Lynch

Calcineurin signaling is essential for successful muscle regeneration. Although calcineurin inhibition compromises muscle repair, it is not known whether calcineurin activation can enhance muscle repair after injury. Tibialis anterior (TA) muscles from adult wild-type (WT) and transgenic mice overexpressing the constitutively active calcineurin-Aα transgene under the control of the mitochondrial creatine kinase promoter (MCK-CnAα*) were injected with the myotoxic snake venom Notexin to destroy all muscle fibers. The TA muscle of the contralateral limb served as the uninjured control. Muscle structure was assessed at 5 and 9 days postinjury, and muscle function was tested in situ at 9 days postinjury. Calcineurin stimulation enhanced muscle regeneration and altered levels of myoregulatory factors (MRFs). Recovery of myofiber size and force-producing capacity was hastened in injured muscles of MCK-CnAα* mice compared with control. Myogenin levels were greater 5 days postinjury and myocyte enhancer factor 2a (MEF2a) expression was greater 9 days postinjury in muscles of MCK-CnAα* mice compared with WT mice. Higher MEF2a expression in regenerating muscles of MCK-CnAα* mice 9 days postinjury may be related to an increase of slow fiber genes. Calcineurin activation in uninjured and injured TA muscles slowed muscle contractile properties, reduced fatigability, and enhanced force recovery after 4 min of intermittent maximal stimulation. Therefore, calcineurin activation can confer structural and functional benefits to regenerating skeletal muscles, which may be mediated in part by differential expression of MRFs.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (15) ◽  
pp. 6629-6638 ◽  
Author(s):  
Misook Oh ◽  
Igor I. Rybkin ◽  
Victoria Copeland ◽  
Michael P. Czubryt ◽  
John M. Shelton ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Skeletal muscles are a mosaic of slow and fast twitch myofibers. During embryogenesis, patterns of fiber type composition are initiated that change postnatally to meet physiological demand. To examine the role of the protein phosphatase calcineurin in the initiation and maintenance of muscle fiber types, we used a “Flox-ON” approach to obtain muscle-specific overexpression of the modulatory calcineurin-interacting protein 1 (MCIP1/DSCR1), an inhibitor of calcineurin. Myo-Cre transgenic mice with early skeletal muscle-specific expression of Cre recombinase were used to activate the Flox-MCIP1 transgene. Contractile components unique to type 1 slow fibers were absent from skeletal muscle of adult Myo-Cre/Flox-MCIP1 mice, whereas oxidative capacity, myoglobin content, and mitochondrial abundance were unaltered. The soleus muscles of Myo-Cre/Flox-MCIP1 mice fatigued more rapidly than the wild type as a consequence of the replacement of the slow myosin heavy chain MyHC-1 with a fast isoform, MyHC-2A. MyHC-1 expression in Myo-Cre/Flox-MCIP1 embryos and early neonates was normal. These results demonstrate that developmental patterning of slow fibers is independent of calcineurin, while the maintenance of the slow-fiber phenotype in the adult requires calcineurin activity.


2002 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina V. Kosevich ◽  
Oleg A. Boryak ◽  
Vadim S. Shelkovsky

Low temperature fast-atom bombardment study of frozen D2O–NaCl solutions gave results similar to those obtained earlier for the H2O–NaCl system. Thus, sets of clusters (D2O) n•D+, (D2O) n•Na+, (D2O) n•NaCl•Na+, (NaCl) m•Na+ with a characteristic distribution depending on the composition of the sample and phase transitions on its thawing were recorded. A typical cluster pattern, attributed in the case of the H2O–NaCl system to a phase of a crystalline hydrate NaCl•2H2O, was observed for the D2O–NaCl system as well. At the same time, recently available reference data on the solubility of NaCl do not contain a specification for the formation of a crystalline hydrate on cooling of NaCl solution in D2O. Considering the present mass spectrometry data, the possibility of incorporation of heavy water into NaCl crystalline hydrates is discussed.


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