Gold nanoparticles with an average diameter of approximately 8 nm (Au approximately 15,000) were irradiated with a tightly focused pulse laser at 355 nm in an aqueous solution of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Transient absorption spectra of the solution were measured at 25-100 ns after the laser irradiation. The observed transient absorption around 720 nm is assignable to the 2p <-- 1s transition of solvated electrons produced via multiple ionization of the gold nanoparticles. The nascent charge state of the gold nanoparticles was estimated from the transient absorbance. The dependence of the charge state on the SDS concentration shows a gradual increase from approximately +60 to approximately +70 in the 2 x 10(-4) to 3 x 10(-4) M range and an abrupt increase up to approximately +710 at the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of SDS, 8 x 10(-3) M. TEM measurements after laser irradiation reveal that the gold nanoparticles fragment into Au(approximately 1000) at a SDS concentration of 3 x 10(-4) M, whereas they are significantly dissociated into Au(approximately 100) above the CMC. The observed correlation between the nascent charge states and the extent of size reduction of the gold nanoparticles after the laser treatment indicates that the size reduction is caused by the Coulomb explosion of the highly charged gold nanoparticles. The mechanism of laser-induced size reduction is quantitatively discussed based on the liquid drop model.
Most mammalian somatic cells are thought to have a limited proliferative capacity because they permanently stop dividing after a finite number of divisions in culture, a state termed replicative cell senescence. Here we show that most oligodendrocyte precursor cells purified from postnatal rat optic nerve can proliferate indefinitely in serum-free culture if prevented from differentiating; various cell cycle-inhibitory proteins increase, but the cells do not stop dividing. The cells maintain high telomerase activity and p53- and Rb-dependent cell cycle checkpoint responses, and serum or genotoxic drugs induce them to acquire a senescence-like phenotype. Our findings suggest that some normal rodent precursor cells have an unlimited proliferative capacity if cultured in conditions that avoid both differentiation and the activation of checkpoint responses that arrest the cell cycle.
The timing of oligodendrocyte differentiation is thought to depend on both intracellular mechanisms and extracellular signals. Thyroid hormone (TH) helps control this timing both in vitro and in vivo, but it is still uncertain how it does so. TH acts through nuclear receptors that are encoded by two genes, TRalpha and TRbeta. Previous studies suggested that TRbeta receptors may mediate the effect of TH on oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs). Consistent with this possibility, we show here that overexpression of TRbeta1 promotes precocious oligodendrocyte differentiation, whereas expression of two dominant-negative forms of TRbeta1 greatly delays differentiation. Surprisingly, however, we find that postnatal TRbeta-/- mice have a normal number of oligodendrocytes in their optic nerves and that TRbeta-/- OPCs stop dividing and differentiate normally in response to TH in vitro. Moreover, we find that OPCs do not express TRbeta1 or TRbeta2 mRNAs, whereas they do express TRalpha1 and TRalpha2 mRNAs. These findings suggest that alpha receptors mediate the effect of TH on the timing of oligodendrocyte differentiation. We also show that TRalpha2 mRNA, which encodes a dominant-negative form of TRalpha, decreases as OPCs proliferate in vitro and in vivo. This decrease may help control when oligodendrocyte precursors differentiate.
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