Publications by authors named "M O Blunt"

Metal-oxide aqueous interfaces are important in areas as varied as photocatalysis and mineral reforming. Crucial to the chemistry at these interfaces is the structure of the electrical double layer formed when anions or cations compensate for the charge arising from adsorbed H or OH. This has proven extremely challenging to determine at the atomic level.

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Conventional measurements of two-phase flow in porous media often use completely immiscible fluids, or are performed over time scales of days to weeks. If applied to the study of gas storage and recovery, these measurements do not properly account for Ostwald ripening, significantly overestimating the amount of trapping and hysteresis. When there is transport of dissolved species in the aqueous phase, local capillary equilibrium is achieved: this may take weeks to months on the centimeter-sized samples on which measurements are performed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Strategies to enhance natural killer (NK) cell responses against cancer include using tumor-targeting antibodies, NK cell engagers, and adopting NK cells from healthy donors.
  • KIR2DS2, an activating receptor on NK cells, is linked to better cancer outcomes in healthy individuals, but its optimal use in therapy is uncertain.
  • Research found that KIR2DS2+ NK cells from cancer patients respond better to antibodies than KIR2DS2- cells, but the effectiveness of KIR2DS2+ NK cells from healthy donors decreases after expansion needed for therapeutic use.
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The lymph nodes are vital to enable adaptive immune responses to infection. Natural killer (NK) cells are cytotoxic lymphocytes that directly kill cancer cells and modulate the activation of other immune cells during anti-tumour immune response. NK cells in the lymph nodes are involved in the regulation of T-cell and B-cell populations and the clearance of viral infections.

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XPO1 (Exportin-1/CRM1) is a nuclear export protein that is frequently overexpressed in cancer and functions as a driver of oncogenesis. Currently small molecules that target XPO1 are being used in the clinic as anticancer agents. We identify XPO1 as a target for natural killer (NK) cells.

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