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Palabras contadas: review: 38
Chialvo, D.R. - Balenzuela, P. - Fraiman, D.
AIP Conf. Proc. 2008;1028:28-45
2008

Descripción: We review the recent proposal that the most fascinating brain properties are related to the fact that it always stays close to a second order phase transition. In such conditions, the collective of neuronal groups can reliably generate robust and flexible behavior, because it is known that at the critical point there is the largest abundance of metastable states to choose from. Here we review the motivation, arguments and recent results, as well as further implications of this view of the functioning brain. © 2008 American Institute of Physics.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/documento de conferencia

Ferraro, R.
AIP Conf. Proc. 2012;1471:103-110
2012

Descripción: We briefly review f(R) theories, both in the metric and Palatini formulations, their scalar-tensor representations and the chameleon mechanism that could explain the absence of perceptible consequences in the Solar System. We also review f(T) theories, a different approach to modified gravity consisting in a deformation of the teleparallel equivalent of General Relativity. We show some applications to cosmology and cosmic strings. As f(R)'s, f(T) theories are not exempted from additional degrees of freedom; we also discuss this still open issue. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/documento de conferencia

Duboscq, C.
Acta Bioquim. Clin. Latinoam. 2006;40(3)
2006

Descripción: The endothelium is an organ that is involved in several physiological processes, mainly blood fluid preservation. Non-activated endothelial cells express an anticoagulant, antiadhesive and vasodilative phenotype, whereas activated endothelial cells express procoagulant, proadhesive and vasoconstrictive properties. The structure and function are regulated in space and time and this fact originates a specific vascular bed haemostasis . The objective of this work is to review the new concepts in endothelial cell heterogeneity and their influence in haemostasis regulation. © 2007 Federación Bioquímica de la Provincia de Buenos Aires.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Levi, V. - Gratton, E.
Chromosome Res. 2008;16(3):439-449
2008

Descripción: Our view of the structure and function of the interphase nucleus has changed drastically in recent years. It is now widely accepted that the nucleus is a well organized and highly compartmentalized organelle and that this organization is intimately related to nuclear function. In this context, chromatin-initially considered a randomly entangled polymer-has also been shown to be structurally organized in interphase and its organization was found to be very important to gene regulation. Relevant and not completely answered questions are how chromatin organization is achieved and what mechanisms are responsible for changes in the positions of chromatin loci in the nucleus. A significant advance in the field resulted from tagging chromosome sites with bacterial operator sequences, and visualizing these tags using green fluorescent protein fused with the appropriate repressor protein. Simultaneously, fluorescence imaging techniques evolved significantly during recent years, allowing observation of the time evolution of processes in living specimens. In this context, the motion of the tagged locus was observed and analyzed to extract quantitative information regarding its dynamics. This review focuses on recent advances in our understanding of chromatin dynamics in interphase with the emphasis placed on the information obtained from single-particle tracking (SPT) experiments. We introduce the basis of SPT methods and trajectory analysis, and summarize what has been learnt by using this new technology in the context of chromatin dynamics. Finally, we briefly describe a method of SPT in a two-photon excitation microscope that has several advantages over methods based on conventional microscopy and review the information obtained using this novel approach to study chromatin dynamics. © 2008 Springer.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Gatica, S.M. - Hernández, E.S. - Barranco, M.
J Chem Phys 1997;107(3):927-931
1997

Descripción: In the frame of finite range density functional (FRDF) theory, we review the systematics of energetic features of 4HeN clusters doped with atomic or molecular impurities, as well as the instability scenario of their collective motions. It is shown that for drops up to N = 500, the predictions of FRDF theory are coincident with those arising from microscopic many-body calculations that employ variational or diffusion Monte Carlo methods. For larger drops, the present description predicts a smooth approach to zero of the collective energies, a scenario that appears to support the most recent experimental data and microscopic calculations that demonstrate that the impurity is located within the bulk of the drop. © 1997 American Institute of Physics.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Arrachea, L. - Rizzo, B.
J. Phys. Conf. Ser. 2013;427
2013

Descripción: We review a recent theoretical development based on non-equilibrium Green's function formalism to study heat transport in nanomechanical devices modeled by phononic systems of coupled quantum oscillators driven by ac forces and connected to phononic reservoirs. We present the relevant equations to calculate the heat currents flowing along different regions of the setup, as well as the power developed by the time-dependent forces. We also present different strategies to evaluate the Green's functions exactly or approximately within the weak driving regime. We finally discuss the different mechanisms in which the ac driving forces deliver the energy. We show that, besides generating heat, the forces may operate exchanging energy as a quantum engine.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/documento de conferencia

Disalvo, E.A. - Lairion, F. - Martini, F. - Almaleck, H. - Diaz, S. - Gordillo, G.
- 2004;92(4-6):1-22
2004

Descripción: The purpose of this review is to examine and discuss the ways in which water is organized at the interface of a biological membrane. The relevance of this structure to the surface properties and to the adsorption of proteins in membranes is also analized. The approach is based on the idea that cell functions are confined to a restricted water media, the cell interior, in which the proximity of the membrane may be key to regulating the enzyme activity and the cell membrane permeability. As the lipid bilayer is the structural base of cell membranes, the distribution of water in the surface sites of a phospholipid membrane is analyzed by means of Fourier Transform spectrometry. The polarization of water at the surface was looked into through the measure of surface potentials and the dynamics of the surface hydration by cyclic voltammetry. Modification of these properties by the replacement of water by polyol molecules such as trehalose and phloretin and by the insertion of aqueous soluble enzymes, has also been investigated.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Kowalski, A.M. - Martín, M.T. - Plastino, A. - Rosso, O.A. - Casas, M.
Entropy 2011;13(6):1055-1075
2011

Descripción: Statistical complexity measures (SCM) are the composition of two ingredients: (i) entropies and (ii) distances in probability-space. In consequence, SCMs provide a simultaneous quantification of the randomness and the correlational structures present in the system under study. We address in this review important topics underlying the SCM structure, viz., (a) a good choice of probability metric space and (b) how to assess the best distance-choice, which in this context is called a "disequilibrium" and is denoted with the letter Q. Q, indeed the crucial SCM ingredient, is cast in terms of an associated distance D. Since out input data consists of time-series, we also discuss the best way of extracting from the time series a probability distribution P. As an illustration, we show just how these issues affect the description of the classical limit of quantum mechanics. © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Pouquet, A. - Brachet, M.-E. - Lee, E. - Mininni, P. - Rosenberg, D. - Uritsky, V.
Proc. Int. Astron. Union 2010;6(S271):304-316
2010

Descripción: We review some of the recent results obtained in MHD turbulence, as encountered in many astrophysical objects.We focus attention on the lack of universality in such flows, including in the simplest case (no externally imposed magnetic field, no forcing, unit magnetic Prandtl number). Several parameters can foster such a breakdown of classical Kolmogorov scaling, such as the presence of velocity-magnetic field correlations, or of magnetic helicity and the role of the interplay between nonlinear eddies and Alfven waves. A link with avalanche processes is also discussed. These findings have led to the conjecture of the emergence of a new paradigm for MHD turbulence, as a possibly unsettled competition between several dynamical phenomena. © International Astronomical Union 2011.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Parera, V.E. - De Siervi, A. - Varela, L. - Rossetti, M.V. - Batlle, A.M.
Cell. Mol. Biol. (Noisy-le-grand) 2003;49(4):493-500
2003

Descripción: The porphyrias are a group of inherited metabolic disorders of heme biosynthesis which result from a partial deficiency in one of its seven specific enzymes, after its first and rate limiting enzyme, delta-aminolevulinic acid synthetase. They can be classified on the basis of their clinical manifestations into cutaneous, acute and mixed disorders. Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is the most common type of hepatic acute porphyrias, inherited as an autosomal dominant trait, caused by a defect in the gene which codifies for the heme enzyme porphobilinogen deaminase. Its prevalence in the Argentinean population is about 1:125,000. A partial deficiency in another enzyme, protoporphyrinogen oxidase, produces variegate porphyria (VP), the second acute porphyria most frequent in the Argentinean population (1:600,000). Here, we review all the mutations we have found in 46 AIP and 9 VP unrelated Argentinean patients. To screen for mutations in symptomatic patients, we have proposed a geneticresearch strategy.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Laderach, D.J. - Compagno, D. - Toscano, M.A. - Croci, D.O. - Dergan-Dylon, S. - Salatino, M. - Rabinovich, G.A.
IUBMB Life 2010;62(1):1-13
2010

Descripción: Galectins are a family of evolutionarily conserved animal lectins with pleiotropic functions and widespread distribution. Fifteen members have been identified in a wide variety of cells and tissues. Through recognition of cell surface glycoproteins and glycolipids, these endogenous lectins can trigger a cascade of intracellular signaling pathways capable of modulating cell differentiation, proliferation, survival, and migration. These cellular events are critical in a variety of biological processes including embryogenesis, angiogenesis, neurogenesis, and immunity and are substantially altered during tumorigenesis, neurodegeneration, and inflammation. In addition, galectins can modulate intracellular functions and this effect involves direct interactions with distinct signaling pathways. In this review, we discuss current knowledge on the intracellular signaling pathways triggered by this multifunctional family of β-galactoside-binding proteins in selected physiological and pathological settings. Understanding the "galectin signalosome" will be essential to delineate rational therapeutic strategies based on the specific control of galectin expression and function. © 2009 IUBMB.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Centanin, L. - Gorr, T.A. - Wappner, P.
J. Insect Physiol. 2010;56(5):447-454
2010

Descripción: The insect tracheal system is a continuous tubular network that ramifies into progressively thinner branches to provide air directly to every organ and tissue throughout the body. During embryogenesis the basic architecture of the tracheal system develops in a stereotypical and genetically controlled manner. Later, in larval stages, the tracheal system becomes plastic, and adapts to particular oxygen needs of the different tissues of the body. Oxygen sensing is mediated by specific prolyl-4-hydroxylases that regulate protein stability of the alpha subunit of oxygen-responsive transcription factors from the HIF family. Tracheal cells are exquisitely sensitive to oxygen levels, modulating the expression of hypoxia-inducible proteins that mediate sprouting of tracheal branches in direction to oxygen-deprived tissues. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Alleva, K. - Chara, O. - Amodeo, G.
FEBS Lett. 2012;586(19):2991-2999
2012

Descripción: Osmolarity not only plays a key role in celluar homeostasis but also challenges cell survival. The molecular understanding of osmosis has not yet been completely achieved, and the discovery of aquaporins as molecular entities involved in water transport has caused osmosis to again become a focus of research. The main questions that need to be answered are the mechanism underlying the osmotic permeability coefficients and the extent to which aquaporins change our understanding of osmosis. Here, attempts to answer these questions are discussed. Critical aspects of the state of the state of knowledge on osmosis, a topic that has been studied since 19th century, are reviewed and integrated with the available information provided by in vivo, in vitro and in silico approaches. © 2012 Federation of European Biochemical Societies. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Gilbert, C.D. - Sigman, M.
Neuron 2007;54(5):677-696
2007

Descripción: All cortical and thalamic levels of sensory processing are subject to powerful top-down influences, the shaping of lower-level processes by more complex information. New findings on the diversity of top-down interactions show that cortical areas function as adaptive processors, being subject to attention, expectation, and perceptual task. Brain states are determined by the interactions between multiple cortical areas and the modulation of intrinsic circuits by feedback connections. In perceptual learning, both the encoding and recall of learned information involves a selection of the appropriate inputs that convey information about the stimulus being discriminated. Disruption of this interaction may lead to behavioral disorders, including schizophrenia. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Giribet, G. - Nicolás, L.
J. Math. Phys. 2009;50(4)
2009

Descripción: Recently, exact agreement has been found between bulk and boundary three-point functions in Ad S3 × S3 × T4 with Neveu-Schwarz-Neveu- Schwarz (NSNS) fluxes. This represents a nontrivial check of AdS/CFT correspondence beyond the supergravity approximation as it corresponds to an exact worldsheet computation. When taking a closer look at this computation, one notices that a crucial point for the bulk-boundary agreement to hold is an intriguing mutual cancellation between worldsheet contributions corresponding to the Ad S3 and to the S3 pieces of the geometry, that results in a simple factorized form for the final three-point function. In this note we review this cancellation and clarify some points about the analytic relation between the SU (2) and the SL (2,R) structure constants. In particular, we dicuss the connection to the Coulomb gas representation. We also make some comments on the four-point function. © 2009 American Institute of Physics.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Gómez, D.O.
Proc. Int. Astron. Union 2010;6(S273):44-50
2010

Descripción: Recent observations of coronal loops in solar active regions show that their heating must be a truly dynamic process. Even though it seems clear that the energy source is the magnetic field that confines the coronal plasma, the details of how it dissipates are still a matter of debate. In this presentation we review the theoretical models of coronal heating, which have been traditionally clasified as DC or AC depending on the electrodynamic response of the loops to the photospheric driving motions. Also, we show results from numerical simulations of the internal dynamics of coronal loops within the framework of the reduced MHD approximation. These simulations indicate that the application of a stationary velocity field at the photospheric boundary leads to a turbulent stationary regime after several photospheric turnover times. Once this turbulent regime is set, both DC and AC stresses dissipate at faster rates as a result of a direct energy cascade. © International Astronomical Union 2011.
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Nogués, G. - Kadener, S. - Cramer, P. - De la Mata, M. - Fededa, J.P. - Blaustein, M. - Srebrow, A. - Kornblihtt, A.R.
IUBMB Life 2003;55(4-5):235-241
2003

Descripción: The realization that the mammalian proteomic complexity is achieved with a limited number of genes demands a better understanding of alternative splicing regulation. Promoter control of alternative splicing was originally described by our group in studies performed on the fibronectin gene. Recently, other labs extended our findings to the cystic fibrosis, CD44 and CGRP genes strongly supporting a coupling between transcription and pre-mRNA splicing. A possible mechanism that would fit in these results is that the promoter itself is responsible for recruiting splicing factors, such as SR proteins, to the site of transcription, possibly through transcription factors that bind the promoter or the transcriptional enhancers. An alternative model, discussed more extensively in this review, involves modulation of RNA pol II (pol II) elongation rate. The model is supported by findings that cis- and trans-acting factors that modulate pol II elongation on a particular template also provoke changes in the alternative splicing balance of the encoded mRNAs.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Disalvo, E.A. - Lairion, F. - Martini, F. - Tymczyszyn, E. - Frías, M. - Almaleck, H. - Gordillo, G.J.
Biochim. Biophys. Acta Biomembr. 2008;1778(12):2655-2670
2008

Descripción: The scope of the present review focuses on the interfacial properties of cell membranes that may establish a link between the membrane and the cytosolic components. We present evidences that the current view of the membrane as a barrier of permeability that contains an aqueous solution of macromolecules may be replaced by one in which the membrane plays a structural and functional role. Although this idea has been previously suggested, the present is the first systematic work that puts into relevance the relation water-membrane in terms of thermodynamic and structural properties of the interphases that cannot be ignored in the understanding of cell function. To pursue this aim, we introduce a new definition of interphase, in which the water is organized in different levels on the surface with different binding energies. Altogether determines the surface free energy necessary for the structural response to changes in the surrounding media. The physical chemical properties of this region are interpreted in terms of hydration water and confined water, which explain the interaction with proteins and could affect the modulation of enzyme activity. Information provided by several methodologies indicates that the organization of the hydration states is not restricted to the membrane plane albeit to a region extending into the cytoplasm, in which polar head groups play a relevant role. In addition, dynamic properties studied by cyclic voltammetry allow one to deduce the energetics of the conformational changes of the lipid head group in relation to the head-head interactions due to the presence of carbonyls and phosphates at the interphase. These groups are, apparently, surrounded by more than one layer of water molecules: a tightly bound shell, that mostly contributes to the dipole potential, and a second one that may be displaced by proteins and osmotic stress. Hydration water around carbonyl and phosphate groups may change by the presence of polyhydroxylated compounds or by changing the chemical groups esterified to the phosphates, mainly choline, ethanolamine or glycerol. Thus, surface membrane properties, such as the dipole potential and the surface pressure, are modulated by the water at the interphase region by changing the structure of the membrane components. An understanding of the properties of the structural water located at the hydration sites and the functional water confined around the polar head groups modulated by the hydrocarbon chains is helpful to interpret and analyze the consequences of water loss at the membranes of dehydrated cells. In this regard, a correlation between the effects of water activity on cell growth and the lipid composition is discussed in terms of the recovery of the cell volume and their viability. Critical analyses of the properties of water at the interface of lipid membranes merging from these results and others from the literature suggest that the interface links the membrane with the aqueous soluble proteins in a functional unit in which the cell may be considered as a complex structure stabilized by water rather than a water solution of macromolecules surrounded by a semi permeable barrier. © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Sequera, G. - Gangui, A.
Proc. Int. Astron. Union 2011;7(S278):65-73
2011

Descripción: The small community of the Tomárâho, an ethnic group culturally derived from the Zamucos, have become known in the South American and world anthropological scenario in recent times. This group, far from the banks of the Paraguay river, remained concealed from organized modern societies for many years. Like any other groups of people in close contact with nature, the Tomárâho developed a profound and rich world-view which parallels other more widely researched aboriginal cultures as well as showing distinctive features of their own. This is also apparent in their imagery of the sky and of the characters that are closely connected with the celestial sphere. This paper is based on the lengthy anthropological studies of G. Sequera. We have recently undertaken a project to carry out a detailed analysis of the different astronomical elements present in the imagined sky of the Tomárâho and other Chamacoco ethnic groups. We will briefly review some aspects of this aboriginal culture: places where they live, regions of influence in the past, their linguistic family, their living habits and how the advancement of civilization affected their culture and survival. We will later mention the fieldwork carried out for decades and some of the existing studies and publications. We will also make a brief description of the methodology of this work and special anthropological practices. Last but not least, we will focus on the Tomárâho conception of the sky and describe the research work we have been doing in recent times. © International Astronomical Union 2011.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

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