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1.
Arq. bras. med. vet. zootec ; 63(5): 1124-1130, out. 2011. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-605837

ABSTRACT

Avaliaram-se a proliferação de linfócitos e a apoptose de células CD5+ de bovinos naturalmente infectados pelo vírus da leucose enzoótica bovina. Para tal, 100 vacas da raça Holandesa, em lactação, foram triadas quanto ao sorodiagnóstico para a leucose enzoótica bovina e o perfil hematológico, e 15 foram escolhidos e distribuídos uniformemente entre os três grupos, a saber: animais negativos, animais positivos alinfocitóticos e animais positivos e que manifestaram linfocitose persistente (LP). Para a avaliação da proliferação de linfócitos, procedeu-se ao isolamento das células mononucleares por gradiente de centrifugação, em que 2x10(6) linfócitos por mL foram plaqueados por poço e analisados por citometria de fluxo utilizando-se o fluorocromo CFSE-DA. A apoptose do sangue periférico deu-se utilizando a anexina V-FITC, e para a identificação das células CD5+, utilizaram-se anticorpos monoclonais. Ocorreu menor proliferação de linfócitos nos animais infectados e que manifestavam LP, e menor apoptose de células CD5+ do sangue periférico. Pode-se sugerir que o desenvolvimento da LP, resultante do aumento de linfócitos B, deve-se à redução do processo apoptótico das células CD5+, principal população infectada, e que a maior proliferação linfocitária pode se restringir apenas ao estádio inicial do desenvolvimento da LP.


The purpose of the present trail was to evaluate the lymphocyte proliferation and the apoptosis rates of CD5+ cells in dairy cows infected with bovine leukemia virus (BLV) with distinct lymphocyte profiles in infected animals known as alymphocytotic (AL) and persistent lymphocytosis (PL). A total of 100 Holstein cows were sera tested for bovine leukemia virus through agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent-assay (ELISA). From these animals, 15 cows were selected and divided uniformly in 3 groups (negative, AL, LP). The lymphocyte proliferation was performed using flow cytometric measurement of CFSE-DA dye, where 2x10(6)/mL lymphocytes were plated per well. The apoptosis of CD5+ cells from peripheral blood was performed using the annexin V-FITC to measure the apoptosis rates and the identification of CD5+ was accessed using monoclonal antibodies. Animals from the LP group showed lower lymphocyte proliferation and also lower apoptosis rates of CD5+ cells compared with negative and AL animals. The development of PL which resulted from an increase in B cell count, is due to the decrease in the apoptosis rates of CD5+ cells, and the higher lymphocyte proliferation appears to be limited only in the initial stages of development of LP.


Subject(s)
Animals , Cattle , Lymphocytosis/veterinary , Retroviridae , Sheep/immunology , Serologic Tests
2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 106(1): 010403, 2011 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21231723

ABSTRACT

We establish a method of directly measuring and estimating nonclassicality--operationally defined in terms of the distinguishability of a given state from one with a positive Wigner function. It allows us to certify nonclassicality, based on possibly much fewer measurement settings than necessary for obtaining complete tomographic knowledge, and is at the same time equipped with a full certificate. We find that even from measuring two conjugate variables alone, one may infer the nonclassicality of quantum mechanical modes. This method also provides a practical tool to eventually certify such features in mechanical degrees of freedom in opto-mechanics. The proof of the result is based on Bochner's theorem characterizing classical and quantum characteristic functions and on semidefinite programming. In this joint theoretical-experimental work we present data from experimental optical Fock state preparation.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 106(1): 013602, 2011 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21231738

ABSTRACT

We report on the first experimental realization of optimal linear-optical controlled phase gates for arbitrary phases. The realized scheme is entirely flexible in that the phase shift can be tuned to any given value. All such controlled phase gates are optimal in the sense that they operate at the maximum possible success probabilities that are achievable within the framework of postselected linear-optical implementations with vacuum ancillas. The quantum gate is implemented by using bulk optical elements and polarization encoding of qubit states. We have experimentally explored the remarkable observation that the optimum success probability is not monotone in the phase.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 99(13): 130501, 2007 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17930565

ABSTRACT

We apply a notion of static renormalization to the preparation of entangled states for quantum computing, exploiting ideas from percolation theory. Such a strategy yields a novel way to cope with the randomness of nondeterministic quantum gates. This is most relevant in the context of optical architectures, where probabilistic gates are common, and cold atoms in optical lattices, where hole defects occur. We demonstrate how to efficiently construct cluster states without the need for rerouting, thereby avoiding a massive amount of conditional dynamics; we furthermore show that except for a single layer of gates during the preparation, all subsequent operations can be shifted to the final adapted single-qubit measurements. Remarkably, cluster state preparation is achieved using essentially the same scaling in resources as if deterministic gates were available.

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