Recent development of screen-like bonded weaves of titanium wire for orthopaedic implant anchorage affords a unique opportunity for analytic studies of porous ingrowth micromechanics. The regular geometry of individual wires and the periodicity of the mesh weave are exploited in a series of two-dimensional finite element models, mapping interstitial bone stress fields as a function of ingrowth depth and wire size, shape, and spacing.
When the depth of bone ingrowth was less than one wire diameter, peak bone stresses always occurred at the leading (i.e. deepest) edge of bone ingrowth, immediately adjacent to the wire. As ingrowth depth approached a full wire diameter, peak local bone stresses were 2–9 times the nominal applied host bone stress, with greater stresses occurring for lower screen weave densities. Within multiple screen layers, the top layer consistently experienced the peak stress and transmitted most of the applied load, regardless of the number of underlying screen layers surrounded by bone. Neither wire size variations nor partial wire flattening substantially affected general trends in stress predictions. 相似文献
Abstract.The stimuli and mechanisms mediating host location and host choice by the bee mite, Varroa jacobsoni (Oudemans), are currently unknown. It is shown that Varroa can use single clean‐air puffs and bee‐odour plumes in a wind tunnel as directional cues. Varroa turned nearly straight upwind in response to single 0.1‐s puffs of clean air directed at 90° to the their anterior‐posterior axis. They turned significantly further to their left side (104°) than to their right (76°), but showed no difference in latency to initiation of the turns (means of 63.3 ms vs. 62.6 ms, respectively). They also followed bee‐odour plumes in a wind tunnel. When released in odour and control plumes mid‐way between the plume's origin and the downwind end of the tunnel, mites responding to bee‐odour walked upwind in, or along the edge of, the odour plume with 38% making contact with the odour delivery tube; mites in clean air did not walk upwind along the air stream, and none made contact with the air delivery tube. Walking speeds were not different between the bee‐odour and control groups (0.28 vs. 0.29 cm s–1); there were also no differences in the turning rates (96.85 vs. 97.16 deg s–1 and 388.08 vs. 379.18 deg cm–1, respectively). Under all conditions, mites walked in a zigzag fashion. 相似文献
Regulated exocytosis involves the Ca(2+)-triggered fusion of secretory vesicles with the plasma membrane, by activation of vesicle membrane Ca(2+)-binding proteins [1]. The Ca(2+)-binding sites of these proteins are likely to lie within 30 nm of the vesicle surface, a domain in which changes in Ca2+ concentration cannot be resolved by conventional fluorescence microscopy. A fluorescent indicator for Ca2+ called a yellow 'cameleon' (Ycam2) - comprising a fusion between a cyan-emitting mutant of the green fluorescent protein (GFP), calmodulin, the calmodulin-binding peptide M13 and an enhanced yellow-emitting GFP - which is targetable to specific intracellular locations, has been described [2]. Here, we generated a fusion between phogrin, a protein that is localised to secretory granule membranes [3], and Ycam2 (phogrin-Ycam2) to monitor changes in Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]) at the secretory vesicle surface ([Ca2+]gd) through alterations in fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between the linked cyan and yellow fluorescent proteins (CFP and YFP, respectively) in Ycam2. In both neuroendocrine PC12 and MIN6 pancreatic beta cells, apparent resting values of cytosolic [Ca2+] and [Ca2+](gd) were similar throughout the cell. In MIN6 cells following the activation of Ca2+ influx, the minority of vesicles that were within approximately 1 microm of the plasma membrane underwent increases in [Ca2+](gd) that were significantly greater than those experienced by deeper vesicles, and greater than the apparent cytosolic [Ca2+] change. The ability to image both global and compartmentalised [Ca2+] changes with recombinant targeted cameleons should extend the usefulness of these new Ca2+ probes. 相似文献
A variety of plant secondary compounds, several of which are quite widespread in nature were tested for their deterrence to the specialist coleopteran Hypera brunneipennis (Boheman) in short-term behavioral assays. The compounds were nicotine, quinine, sparteine, hordenine, linamarin, amygdalin, sinigrin, morin, juglone, chlorogenic acid, digitonin, mimosine, diosgenin, rutin and ursolic acid. Nine of these were then tested for their post-ingestional effects over one to two weeks of adult life, using fecundity as a measure of the effects. In only one case was there any indication of a detrimental effect or any trend suggesting one. The evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed. 相似文献