RESUMO
The Oak Ridge National Laboratory is planning to build the Second Target Station (STS) at the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS). STS will host a suite of novel instruments that complement the First Target Station's beamline capabilities by offering an increased flux for cold neutrons and a broader wavelength bandwidth. A novel neutron imaging beamline, named the Complex, Unique, and Powerful Imaging Instrument for Dynamics (CUPI2D), is among the first eight instruments that will be commissioned at STS as part of the construction project. CUPI2D is designed for a broad range of neutron imaging scientific applications, such as energy storage and conversion (batteries and fuel cells), materials science and engineering (additive manufacturing, superalloys, and archaeometry), nuclear materials (novel cladding materials, nuclear fuel, and moderators), cementitious materials, biology/medical/dental applications (regenerative medicine and cancer), and life sciences (plant-soil interactions and nutrient dynamics). The innovation of this instrument lies in the utilization of a high flux of wavelength-separated cold neutrons to perform real time in situ neutron grating interferometry and Bragg edge imaging-with a wavelength resolution of δλ/λ ≈ 0.3%-simultaneously when required, across a broad range of length and time scales. This manuscript briefly describes the science enabled at CUPI2D based on its unique capabilities. The preliminary beamline performance, a design concept, and future development requirements are also presented.
RESUMO
Porous materials with well-defined porosity have advantages in a wide range of applications, including filtration media, catalysis, and electrodes. The bottom-up fabrication of inverse opals have promised to provide those nanostructures, but fabrication of these materials is often plagued with large numbers of defects and macro-scale cracks. Here, we present a method for making nanostructured porous clay films with well defined pore size that are crack free over a large area (multiple cm2).
RESUMO
Strategies for interfering with protein aggregation are important for elucidating and controlling the pathologies of amyloid diseases. We have previously identified compounds that block the cellular toxicity of the beta-amyloid peptide, but the relationship between their ability to inhibit toxicity and their affinity for A beta is unknown. To elucidate this relationship, we have developed an assay capable of measuring the affinities of small molecules for beta-amyloid peptide. Our approach employs immobilized beta-amyloid peptide at low density to minimize the problems that arise from variability in the beta-amyloid aggregation state. We found that low-molecular weight (MW of 700-1700) ligands for beta-amyloid can be identified readily by using surface plasmon resonance. The best of these bound effectively (K(d) approximately 40 microM) to beta-amyloid. The affinities measured for peptides in the SPR assay correspond to results from A beta cell toxicity assays. The most potent ligands for immobilized beta-amyloid are the most potent inhibitors of the neuronal cell toxicity of beta-amyloid. Compounds with dissociation constants above approximately 100 microM did not show significant activity in the cell toxicity assays. Our data support the hypothesis that ligands exhibiting greater affinity for the beta-amyloid peptide are effective at altering its aggregation and inhibiting cell toxicity.