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Latest Paper:
H Sierks,
P Lamy,
C Barbieri,
D Koschny,
H Rickman,
R Rodrigo,
M F A'Hearn,
F Angrilli,
M A Barucci,
J-L Bertaux,
I Bertini,
S Besse,
B Carry,
G Cremonese,
V Da Deppo,
B Davidsson,
S Debei,
M De Cecco,
J De Leon,
F Ferri,
S Fornasier,
M Fulle,
S F Hviid,
R W Gaskell,
O Groussin,
P Gutierrez,
W Ip,
L Jorda,
M Kaasalainen,
H U Keller,
J Knollenberg,
R Kramm,
E Kührt,
M Küppers,
L Lara,
M Lazzarin,
C Leyrat,
J J Lopez Moreno,
S Magrin,
S Marchi,
F Marzari,
M Massironi,
H Michalik,
R Moissl,
G Naletto,
F Preusker,
L Sabau,
W Sabolo,
F Scholten,
C Snodgrass,
N Thomas,
C Tubiana,
P Vernazza,
J-B Vincent,
K-P Wenzel,
T Andert,
M Pätzold,
B P Weiss
Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung, Max-Planck-Strasse 2, 37191 Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany. sierks@mps.mpg.de
Images obtained by the Optical, Spectroscopic, and Infrared Remote Imaging System (OSIRIS) cameras onboard the Rosetta spacecraft reveal that asteroid 21 Lutetia has a complex geology and one of the highest asteroid densities measured so far, 3.4 ± 0.3 grams per cubic centimeter. The north pole region is covered by a thick layer of regolith, which is seen to flow in major landslides associated with albedo variation. Its geologically complex surface, ancient surface age, and high density suggest that Lutetia is most likely a primordial planetesimal. This contrasts with smaller asteroids visited by previous spacecraft, which are probably shattered bodies, fragments of larger parents, or reaccumulated rubble piles.
J Clin Invest. 2011 Sep 26;:
21946256
James C Lee,
Paul A Lyons,
Eoin F McKinney,
John M Sowerby,
Edward J Carr,
Francesca Bredin,
Hannah M Rickman,
Huzefa Ratlamwala,
Alexander Hatton,
Tim F Rayner,
Miles Parkes,
Kenneth G C Smith
Crohn disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) are increasingly common, chronic forms of inflammatory bowel disease. The behavior of these diseases varies unpredictably among patients. Identification of reliable prognostic biomarkers would enable treatment to be personalized so that patients destined to experience aggressive disease could receive appropriately potent therapies from diagnosis, while those who will experience more indolent disease are not exposed to the risks and side effects of unnecessary immunosuppression. Using transcriptional profiling of circulating T cells isolated from patients with CD and UC, we identified analogous CD8+ T cell transcriptional signatures that divided patients into 2 otherwise indistinguishable subgroups. In both UC and CD, patients in these subgroups subsequently experienced very different disease courses. A substantially higher incidence of frequently relapsing disease was experienced by those patients in the subgroup defined by elevated expression of genes involved in antigen-dependent T cell responses, including signaling initiated by both IL-7 and TCR ligation - pathways previously associated with prognosis in unrelated autoimmune diseases. No equivalent correlation was observed with CD4+ T cell gene expression. This suggests that the course of otherwise distinct autoimmune and inflammatory conditions may be influenced by common pathways and identifies what we believe to be the first biomarker that can predict prognosis in both UC and CD from diagnosis, a major step toward personalized therapy.
Rong-Rong Zhao,
Elizabeth M Muir,
João Nuno Alves,
Hannah Rickman,
Anna Y Allan,
Jessica C Kwok,
Kasper C D Roet,
Joost Verhaagen,
Bernard L Schneider,
Jean-Charles Bensadoun,
Sherif G Ahmed,
Rafael J Yáñez-Muñoz,
Roger J Keynes,
James W Fawcett,
John H Rogers
Cambridge Centre for Brain Repair, Forvie Site, Robinson Way, Cambridge CB2 0PY, UK. rz239@cam.ac.uk
Several diseases and injuries of the central nervous system could potentially be treated by delivery of an enzyme, which might most effectively be achieved by gene therapy. In particular, the bacterial enzyme chondroitinase ABC is beneficial in animal models of spinal cord injury. We have adapted the chondroitinase gene so that it can direct secretion of active chondroitinase from mammalian cells, and inserted it into lentiviral vectors. When injected into adult rat brain, these vectors lead to extensive secretion of chondroitinase, both locally and from long-distance axon projections, with activity persisting for more than 4 weeks. In animals which received a simultaneous lesion of the corticospinal tract, the vector reduced axonal die-back and promoted sprouting and short-range regeneration of corticospinal axons. The same beneficial effects on damaged corticospinal axons were observed in animals which received the chondroitinase lentiviral vector directly into the vicinity of a spinal cord lesion.
Science. 2010 Jan 8;327 (5962):190-3
20056887
H U Keller,
C Barbieri,
D Koschny,
P Lamy,
H Rickman,
R Rodrigo,
H Sierks,
M F A'Hearn,
F Angrilli,
M A Barucci,
J-L Bertaux,
G Cremonese,
V Da Deppo,
B Davidsson,
M De Cecco,
S Debei,
S Fornasier,
M Fulle,
O Groussin,
P J Gutierrez,
S F Hviid,
W-H Ip,
L Jorda,
J Knollenberg,
J R Kramm,
E Kührt,
M Küppers,
L-M Lara,
M Lazzarin,
J Lopez Moreno,
F Marzari,
H Michalik,
G Naletto,
L Sabau,
N Thomas,
K-P Wenzel,
I Bertini,
S Besse,
F Ferri,
M Kaasalainen,
S Lowry,
S Marchi,
S Mottola,
W Sabolo,
S E Schröder,
S Spjuth,
P Vernazza
Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany. keller@linmpi.mpg.de
The European Space Agency's Rosetta mission encountered the main-belt asteroid (2867) Steins while on its way to rendezvous with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Images taken with the OSIRIS (optical, spectroscopic, and infrared remote()imaging system) cameras on board Rosetta show that Steins is an oblate body with an effective spherical diameter of 5.3 kilometers. Its surface does not show color variations. The morphology of Steins is dominated by linear faults and a large 2.1-kilometer-diameter crater near its south pole. Crater counts reveal a distinct lack of small craters. Steins is not solid rock but a rubble pile and has a conical appearance that is probably the result of reshaping due to Yarkovsky-O'Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) spin-up. The OSIRIS images constitute direct evidence for the YORP effect on a main-belt asteroid.
The recently discovered periodic comet Machholz 1986 VIII (1986e) travels closer to the sun than any known planet and any known comet with an orbital period of less than 150 years, thus providing astronomers with a unique object for studying cometary evolution. The comet is spiraling steadily closer to the sun, from perihelion distance q [unknown] 0.9 astronomical unit at about A.D. 700 to q [unknown] 0.13 at present (orbital period, 5.25 years), to an expected q [unknown] 0.03 by about 2450; should the comet survive such increasingly close perihelion passages, q will begin steadily to increase shortly thereafter. A review of observations made since discovery is presented, together with a discussion of numerical investigations of the comet's orbit over 4000 years and prospects for observing the upcoming return to perihelion in 1991.
Michael Küppers,
Ivano Bertini,
Sonia Fornasier,
Pedro J Gutierrez,
Stubbe F Hviid,
Laurent Jorda,
Horst Uwe Keller,
Jörg Knollenberg,
Detlef Koschny,
Rainer Kramm,
Luisa-Maria Lara,
Holger Sierks,
Nicolas Thomas,
Cesare Barbieri,
Philippe Lamy,
Hans Rickman,
Rafael Rodrigo
Comets spend most of their life in a low-temperature environment far from the Sun. They are therefore relatively unprocessed and maintain information about the formation conditions of the planetary system, but the structure and composition of their nuclei are poorly understood. Although in situ and remote measurements have derived the global properties of some cometary nuclei, little is known about their interiors. The Deep Impact mission shot a projectile into comet 9P/Tempel 1 in order to investigate its interior. Here we report the water vapour content (1.5 10(32) water molecules or 4.5 10(6) kg) and the cross-section of the dust (330 km2 assuming an albedo of 0.1) created by the impact. The corresponding dust/ice mass ratio is probably larger than one, suggesting that comets are 'icy dirtballs' rather than 'dirty snowballs' as commonly believed. High dust velocities (between 110 m s(-1) and 300 m s(-1)) imply acceleration in the comet's coma, probably by water molecules sublimated by solar radiation. We did not find evidence of enhanced activity of 9P/Tempel 1 in the days after the impact, suggesting that in general impacts of meteoroids are not the cause of cometary outbursts.
Horst Uwe Keller,
Laurent Jorda,
Michael Küppers,
Pedro J Gutierrez,
Stubbe F Hviid,
Jörg Knollenberg,
Luisa-Maria Lara,
Holger Sierks,
Cesare Barbieri,
Philippe Lamy,
Hans Rickman,
Rafael Rodrigo
Max-Planck Institut für Sonnensystemforschung, Max-Planck-Strasse 2, 37191 Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany. keller@mps.mpg.de
The OSIRIS cameras (optical, spectroscopic, and infrared remote imaging system) onboard the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft observed comet 9P/Tempel 1 for 17 days continuously around the time of NASA's Deep Impact mission. The cyanide-to-water production ratio was slightly enhanced in the impact cloud, compared with that of normal comet activity. Dust particles were flowing outward in the coma at >160 meters per second, accelerated by the gas. The slope of the brightness increase showed a dip about 200 seconds after the impact. Dust Afrho values before and long after the impact confirm the slight decrease of cometary activity. The dust-to-water mass ratio was much larger than 1.
Icarus. 2000 Jun ;145 (2):391-427
11543506
Cit:46
C Mileikowsky,
F A Cucinotta,
J W Wilson,
B Gladman,
G Horneck,
L Lindegren,
J Melosh,
H Rickman,
M Valtonen,
J Q Zheng
U AZ, Tucson
The possibility and probability of natural transfer of viable microbes from Mars to Earth and Earth to Mars traveling in meteoroids during the first 0.5 Ga and the following 4 Ga are investigated, including:--radiation protection against the galactic cosmic ray nuclei and the solar rays, dose rates as a function of the meteorite's radial column mass (radius x density), combined with dose rates generated by natural radioactivity within the meteorite; and survival curves for some bacterial species using NASA's HZETRN transport code --other factors affecting microbe survival: vacuum; central meteorite temperatures at launch, orbiting, and arrival; pressure and acceleration at launch; spontaneous DNA decay; metal ion migration --mean sizes and numbers of unshocked meteorites ejected and percentage falling on Earth, using current semiempirical results --viable flight times for the microbe species Bacillus subtilis and Deinococcus radiodurans R1 --the approximate fraction of microbes (with properties like the two species studied) viably arriving on Earth out of those ejected from Mars during the period 4 Ga BP to the present time, and during the 700 Ma from 4.5 to 3.8 Ga. Similarly, from Earth to Mars. The conclusion is that if microbes existed or exist on Mars, viable transfer to Earth is not only possible but also highly probable, due to microbes' impressive resistance to the dangers of space transfer and to the dense traffic of billions of martian meteorites which have fallen on Earth since the dawn of our planetary system. Earth-to-Mars transfer is also possible but at a much lower frequency.
Pharmacy Practice Department, College of Pharmacy, Ferris State University, Big Rapids, MI 49307-2740, USA. cambria_reed@ferris.edu
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