Refine
Document Type
- Article (3)
- Part of Periodical (1)
Keywords
- Militär / Geschichte (1)
- X-rays: stars (1)
- acid sphingomyelinase (1)
- ceramide (1)
- integrins (1)
- platelets (1)
- pulsars: individual: PSR B0656+14 (1)
- stars: neutron (1)
- tumor-metastasis (1)
Aus dem Inhalt dieser Ausgabe: BEITRÄGE: Tania Ünlüdag-Puschnerat: "Wir sind keine bloße Söldnerarmee." Cromwells Revolutionsarmee 1645-49 Peter Blastenbrei: Literaten und Soldaten. Die Militärkritik der deutschen Aufklärung (Teil 1) PROJEKTE: Gabriele Haug-Moritz: "Geschwinde Welt". Krieg und öffentliche Kommunikatrion 1542-1554 Iris Becker: Militär und Aufklärung - Die Rolle der Soldatenbibliotheken im militärischen Bildungs- und Reformprozess Stephan Schwenke: Stadt und Militär - Armee und Bevölkerung. Untersuchungen zu hessischen Festungs- und Garnisonsstädten Malte Prietzel: Mittelalterliche Kriegsgeschichte als Kulturgeschichte Ewa Herfordt/Heidi Mehrkens: Frankreich und Deutschland im Krieg. Zur Kulturgeschichte der europäischen "Erbfeindschaft" Kieron Kleinert: Dialog oder Konfrontation? Der Rat der Stadt Leipzig - sein Verhältnis zu Universität und Garnison BERICHTE: Norbert Winnige: Protokoll der Mitgliederversammlung des AMG Stefan Kroll: Tagungsbericht: Militär und Religiosität in der Frühen Neuzeit Gerhard Sälter: Legislationspraxis in der Vormoderne. Bericht über die 5. Tagung des APO REZENSIONEN: Sascha Möbius: Constantin Hruschka, Kriegsführung und Geschichtsschreibung im Spätmittelalter. Eine Untersuchung zur Chronistik der Konzilszeit, Köln et al. 2001 Uwe Tresp: Stephan Selzer, Deutsche Söldner im Italien des Trecento, Tübingen: Niemeyer, 2001 Matthias Franz: Söldnerleben am Vorabend des Dreißigjährigen Krieges, hrsg. und bearbeitet von Holger Th. Gräf. Mit Beiträgen von Sven Externbrink und Ralf Pröve, Marburg a. d. Lahn 2000 Thomas Fuchs: Was ist Militärgeschichte?, hrsg. von Thomas Kühne und Benjamin Ziemann in Verbindung mit dem Arbeitskreis Mili-tärgeschichte e. V. und dem Institut für soziale Bewegungen der Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Paderborn, München, Wien, Zürich: Ferdinand Schöningh 2000
Militär und Aufklärung
(2002)
Metastatic dissemination of cancer cells is the ultimate hallmark of malignancy and accounts for approximately 90% of human cancer deaths. We investigated the role of acid sphingomyelinase (Asm) in the hematogenous metastasis of melanoma cells. Intravenous injection of B16F10 melanoma cells into wild-type mice resulted in multiple lung metastases, while Asm-deficient mice (Smpd1(-/-) mice) were protected from pulmonary tumor spread. Transplanting wild-type platelets into Asm-deficient mice reinstated tumor metastasis. Likewise, Asm-deficient mice were protected from hematogenous MT/ret melanoma metastasis to the spleen in a mouse model of spontaneous tumor metastasis. Human and mouse melanoma cells triggered activation and release of platelet secretory Asm, in turn leading to ceramide formation, clustering, and activation of 51 integrins on melanoma cells finally leading to adhesion of the tumor cells. Clustering of integrins by applying purified Asm or C-16 ceramide to B16F10 melanoma cells before intravenous injection restored trapping of tumor cells in the lung in Asm-deficient mice. This effect was revertable by arginine-glycine-aspartic acid peptides, which are known inhibitors of integrins, and by antibodies neutralizing 1 integrins. These findings indicate that melanoma cells employ platelet-derived Asm for adhesion and metastasis.
We present a detailed spectroscopic and timing analysis of X-ray observations of the bright pulsar PSR B0656+14. The observations were obtained simultaneously with eROSITA and XMM-Newton during the calibration and performance verification phase of the Spektrum-Roentgen-Gamma mission (SRG). The analysis of the 100 ks deep observation of eROSITA is supported by archival observations of the source, including XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, and NICER. Using XMM-Newton and NICER, we first established an X-ray ephemeris for the time interval 2015 to 2020, which connects all X-ray observations in this period without cycle count alias and phase shifts. The mean eROSITA spectrum clearly reveals an absorption feature originating from the star at 570 eV with a Gaussian sigma of about 70 eV that was tentatively identified in a previous long XMM-Newton observation. A second previously discussed absorption feature occurs at 260-265 eV and is described here as an absorption edge. It could be of atmospheric or of instrumental origin. These absorption features are superposed on various emission components that are phenomenologically described here as the sum of hot (120 eV) and cold (65 eV) blackbody components, both of photospheric origin, and a power law with photon index Gamma = 2 from the magnetosphere. We created energy-dependent light curves and phase-resolved spectra with a high signal-to-noise ratio. The phase-resolved spectroscopy reveals that the Gaussian absorption line at 570 eV is clearly present throughout similar to 60% of the spin cycle, but it is otherwise undetected. Likewise, its parameters were found to be dependent on phase. The visibility of the line strength coincides in phase with the maximum flux of the hot blackbody. If the line originates from the stellar surface, it nevertheless likely originates from a different location than the hot polar cap. We also present three families of model atmospheres: a magnetized atmosphere, a condensed surface, and a mixed model. They were applied to the mean observed spectrum, whose continuum fit the observed data well. The atmosphere model, however, predicts distances that are too short. For the mixed model, the Gaussian absorption may be interpreted as proton cyclotron absorption in a field as high as 10(14) G, which is significantly higher than the field derived from the moderate observed spin-down.