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Intera??es de polissacar?deos sulfatados da macroalga marinha Caulerpa cupressoides var. flabellata com cristais de oxalato de c?lcioGomes, Dayanne Lopes 20 July 2017 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2017-07-20 / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cient?fico e Tecnol?gico (CNPq) / Coordena??o de Aperfei?oamento de Pessoal de N?vel Superior (CAPES) / A urolit?ase afeta aproximadamente 10% da popula??o mundial e est? associada fortemente a forma??o de cristais de oxalato de c?lcio (CaOx). Atualmente n?o existe nenhum composto eficiente que possa ser utilizado para prevenir esta doen?a. No entanto, os polissacar?deos sulfatados (PS) de algas possuem a capacidade de alterar a carga superficial dos cristais de CaOx e assim modificar a din?mica da cristaliza??o, devido ? intera??o das cargas negativas desse pol?mero com a superf?cie do cristal durante sua s?ntese. Nestre trabalho foi verificado o efeito de quatro popula??es de PS extra?dos da alga verde Caulerpa cupressoides var. flabellata na forma??o de cristais de CaOx in vitro. Os PS extra?dos foram nomeados de CCB-F0.3, CCB-F0.5, CCB-F1.0 e CCB-F2.0. An?lises de microscopia eletr?nica de varredura e de potencial zeta mostraram que os polissacar?deos extra?dos modificam a morfologia, o tamanho e a carga superficial dos cristais de CaOx formados na presen?a dos PS. Todos os PS de C. cupressoides induziram o aumento da quantidade de cristais CaOx formados. Contudo, com exce??o de CCB-F2.0, a presen?a dos demais PS levou ? forma??o de cristais de CaOx dihidratados (COD), que s?o comuns em pessoas n?o formadoras de c?lculos. Al?m disso, esses cristais COD apresentaram morfologia arredondada ou em formato de halteres. As an?lises de infravermelho, miscroscopia de fluoresc?ncia, citometria de fluxo e a an?lise de composi??o at?mica (EDS) permitiram a proposi??o de um modelo de intera??o entre os PS de Caulerpa e os cristais COD. Neste modelo, a distribui??o de PS na estrutura do cristal de CaOx ideal para que haja maior estabiliza??o dos cristais COD ? de 2:1:1 entre a base: ?pice: face. Acredita-se que nessa distribui??o os PS consigam evitar a desidrata??o dos cristais COD, tornando-os mais est?veis. Este estudo ? o primeiro passo para entender as intera??es entre PS de C. cupressoides e os cristais de CaOx, que s?o a principal causa de c?lculos renais. / Urolithiasis affects approximately 10% of the world population and is strongly associated with calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystals. Currently, there is no efficient compound that can be used to prevent this disease. However, seaweeds? sulfated polysaccharides (SPs) have the ability to change the CaOx crystals surface?s charge and thus modify the crystallization dynamics, due to the interaction of the negative charges of these polymers with the crystal surface during their synthesis. We observed that the SPs of C. cupressoides modify the morphology, size and surface charge of CaOx crystals. Thus, these crystals are similar to those found in healthy persons. In the presence of SPs, dihydrate CaOx crystals showed rounded or dumbbell morphology. Infrared analyzes, fluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry (FITC-conjugated SPs) and atomic composition analysis (EDS) let us propose the mode of action between the Caulerpa?s SPs and the CaOx crystals. This study is the first step in understanding the interactions between SPs, which are promising molecules for the treatment of urolithiasis, and CaOx crystals, which are the main cause of kidney stones.
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Induced haltere movements reveal multisensory integration schema in <i>Drosophila</i>Rauscher, Michael James 21 June 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Modeling of the Haltere-A Natural Micro-Scale Vibratory GyroscopeParween, Rizuwana January 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Vibratory gyroscopes have gained immense popularity in the microsystem technology
because of their suitability to planar fabrication techniques. With considerable effort in design and fabrication, MEMS (Micro-electro-mechanical-system) vibratory gyroscopes have started pervading consumer electronics apart from their well known applications in aerospace and defence systems. Vibratory gyroscopes operate on the Coriolis principle for sensing rates of rotation of the r tating body. They typically employ capacitive or piezoresistive sensing for detecting the Coriolis force induced motion which is, in turn, used to determine the impressed rate of rotation. Interestingly, Nature also uses vibratory gyroscopes in its designs. Over several years, it has evolved an incredibly
elegant design for vibratory gyroscopes in the form of dipteran halteres. Dipterans are
known to receive mechanosensory feedback on their aerial rotations from halteres for
their flight navigation. Insect biologists have also studied this sensor and continue to be fascinated by the intricate mechanism employed to sense the rate of rotation.
In most Diptera, including the soldier fly, Hermetia illucens, the halteres are simple
cantilever like structures with an end mass that probably evolved from the hind wings of
the ancestral four-winged insect form. The halteres along with their connecting joint with the fly’s body constitute a mechanism that is used for muscle-actuated oscillations of the halteres along the actuation direction. These oscillations occur in the actuation plane such that any rotation of the insect body, induces Coriolis force on the halteres causing their plane of vibration to shift laterally by a small degree. This induced deflection along the sensing plane (out of the haltere’s actuation plane) results in strain variation at the
base of the haltere shaft, which is sensed by the campaniform sensilla. The goal of the
current study is to understand the strain sensing mechanism of the haltere, the nature
of boundary attachments of the haltere with the fly’s body, the reasons of asymmetrical
geometry of the haltere, and the interaction between both wings and the contralateral
wing and haltere.
In order to understand the haltere’s strain sensing mechanism, we estimate the strain
pattern at the haltere base induced due to rotations about the body’s pitch, roll, and yaw axes. We model the haltere as a cantilever structure (cylindrical stalk with a spherical end knob) with experimentally determined material properties from nanoindentation and carry out analytical and numerical (finite element) analysis to estimate strains in the haltere
due to Coriolis forces and inertia forces resulting from various body rotations. From
the strain pattern, we establish a correlation between the location of maximum strain and the position of the campaniform sensilla and propose strain sensing mechanisms.
The haltere is connected to the meta thoracic region of the fly’s body by a complicated
hinge mechanism that actuates the haltere into angular oscillations with a large
amplitude of 170 ◦ in the actuation plane and very small oscillation in the sensing plane.
We aim to understand the reason behind the dissimilar boundary attachments along
the two directions. We carry out bending experiments using micro Newton force sensor
and estimate the stiffness along the actuation and sensing directions. We observe that the haltere behaves as a rigid body in the actuation direction and a flexible body in the sensing direction. We find the haltere to be a resonating structure with two different kinds of boundary attachments in the actuation and sensing directions. We create a finite element model of the haltere joint based on the optical and scanning microscope images, approximate material properties, and stiffness properties obtained from the bending experiments. We subsequently validate the model with experimental results.
The haltere geometry has asymmetry along the length and the cross-section. This
specific design of the haltere is in contrast to the the existing MEMS vibratory gyroscope,
where the elastic beams supporting the proof mass are typically designed with symmetric
cross-sections so that there is a mode matching between the actuation and the sensing vibrations. The mode matching provides high sensitivity and low bandwidth. Hence, we are interested in understanding the mechanical significance of the haltere’s asymmetry.
First, we estimate the location of the maximum stress by using the actual geometry of the haltere. Next, by using the stiffness determined from bending experiments and mass
properties from the geometric model, we find the natural frequencies along both actuation
and sensing directions. We compare these findings with existing MEMS vibratory
gyroscopes.
The dipteran halteres always vibrate at the wing beat frequency. Each wing maintains
180 ◦ phase difference with its contralateral haltere and the opposite wing. Both
wings and the contralateral wing-haltere mechanism exhibit coupled oscillatory motion
through passive linkages. These linkages modulate the frequency and maintain the out- of-phase relationship. We explore the dynamics behind the out-of-phase behaviour and the frequency modulation of the wing-wing and wing-haltere coupled oscillatory motion.
We observe that the linear coupled oscillatory model can explain the out-of-phase relationship between the two wings. However, a nonlinear coupled oscillator model is required to explain both frequency synchronization and frequency modulation of the wing with the haltere. We also carry out a finite element analysis of the wing-haltere
mechanism and show that the out-of-phase motion between the wing and the haltere is
due to the passive mechanical linkage of finite strength and high actuation force.
The results of this study reveal the mechanics of the haltere as a rate sensing gyroscope and show the basis of the Nature’s design of this elegant sensor. This study brings out two specific features— the large amplitude actuated oscillations and the asymmetric geometry of the haltere structure— that are not found in current vibratory gyroscope designs. We hope that our findings inspire new designs of MEMS gyroscopes that have elegance and simplicity of the haltere along with the desired performance.
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