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1.
Nat Mater ; 12(12): 1112-8, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24240241

ABSTRACT

The emerging field of complex oxide interfaces is generically built on one of the most celebrated substrates--strontium titanate (SrTiO3). This material hosts a range of phenomena, including ferroelasticity, incipient ferroelectricity, and most puzzlingly, contested giant piezoelectricity. Although these properties may markedly influence the oxide interfaces, especially on microscopic length scales, the lack of local probes capable of studying such buried systems has left their effects largely unexplored. Here we use a scanning charge detector--a nanotube single-electron transistor--to non-invasively image the electrostatic landscape and local mechanical response in the prototypical LaAlO3/SrTiO3 system with unprecedented sensitivity. Our measurements reveal that on microscopic scales SrTiO3 exhibits large anomalous piezoelectricity with curious spatial dependence. Through electrostatic imaging we unravel the microscopic origin for this extrinsic piezoelectricity, demonstrating its direct, quantitative connection to the motion of locally ordered tetragonal domains under applied gate voltage. These domains create striped potential modulations that can markedly influence the two-dimensional electron system at the conducting interface. Our results have broad implications to all complex oxide interfaces built on SrTiO3 and demonstrate the importance of microscopic structure to the physics of electrons at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface.

2.
Neurology ; 36(2): 273-6, 1986 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3945399

ABSTRACT

We report a 38-year-old man with a pure motor syndrome and IgM gammopathy leading to flaccid quadriplegia. Improvement followed treatment with dexamethasone, cyclophosphamide, and plasmapheresis, but he died of pulmonary embolism. At autopsy, he had a proximal motor axonopathy with lymphocytic infiltration of ventral roots. Proximal motor neuropathy may masquerade as motor neuron disease. The association with gammopathy and response to treatment suggest that patients with motor neuron disease should be routinely screened for serum protein abnormalities.


Subject(s)
Axons/pathology , Motor Neurons , Neuromuscular Diseases/diagnosis , Paraproteinemias/diagnosis , Adult , Diagnosis, Differential , Humans , Male
6.
Biochem J ; 102(1): 153-62, 1967 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6030277

ABSTRACT

1. When slices of guinea-pig cerebral-cortex slices are incubated with [U-(14)C]-aspartate and non-radioactive glucose as substrates, the specific radioactivities of the citric acid-cycle intermediates are lower than that of the glutamate isolated from the same vessels. 2. Glutamate was significantly labelled when [1-(14)C]-aspartate and glucose were present in the incubation medium. These results would not be expected on the basis of simple conversion of aspartate into glutamate through the citric acid cycle, since the C-1 position of oxaloacetate is decarboxylated in the conversion of isocitrate into alpha-oxoglutarate. 3. It appears that aspartate is converted into glutamate by citric acid-cycle mechanisms; however, the carbon ;skeleton' is not immediately condensed with acetyl-CoA to form citrate but first follows the cycle in a reverse direction to fumarate or succinate and then proceeds in the forward direction. 4. The conversion of aspartate into glutamate appears to be compartmentalized.


Subject(s)
Aspartic Acid/metabolism , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Glutamates/biosynthesis , Animals , Carbon Isotopes , Chromatography, Gas , Citric Acid Cycle , Fumarates/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Guinea Pigs , In Vitro Techniques , Ketoglutaric Acids/metabolism , Succinates/metabolism
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