Publications by authors named "W D Salmon"

Article Synopsis
  • This text is a correction to a previously published article with the DOI: 10.1515/nanoph-2021-0718.
  • The correction likely addresses errors or inaccuracies found in the original paper.
  • Such amendments are important for maintaining the integrity and accuracy of academic research.
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A quantum dipole interacting with an optical cavity is one of the key models in cavity quantum electrodynamics (cavity-QED). To treat this system theoretically, the typical approach is to truncate the dipole to two levels. However, it has been shown that in the ultrastrong-coupling regime, this truncation naively destroys gauge invariance.

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Ferroptosis is an emerging cancer suppression strategy. However, how to select cancer patients for treating with ferroptosis inducers remains challenging. Here, we develop photochemical activation of membrane lipid peroxidation (PALP), which uses targeted lasers to induce localized polyunsaturated fatty acyl (PUFA)-lipid peroxidation for reporting ferroptosis sensitivity in cells and tissues.

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A "standard" historiographical overview of the development of health psychology in the United States, alongside behavioral medicine, first summarizes previous disciplinary and professional histories. A "historicist" approach follows, focussing on a collective biographical summary of accumulated contributions of one cohort (1967-1971) at State University of New York at Stony Brook. Foundational developments of the two areas are highlighted, contextualized within their socio-political context, as are innovative cross-boundary collaboration on "precursor" studies from the 1960s and 1970s, before the official disciplines emerged.

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Article Synopsis
  • Reactive oxygen species (ROS), like hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), play a crucial role in cellular signaling by affecting various proteins, particularly those with critical cysteine residues, leading to a general understanding of ROS signaling as broad and nonspecific.
  • New findings indicate that H2O2 signaling behaves more like a formal signal transduction cascade with organized hierarchical events, involving key players such as the mitochondrial respiratory chain, tyrosine-protein kinases Lyn and SYK (Syk).
  • This signaling process is consistent across different cell types and organisms, suggesting that the mechanisms involving H2O2 and its effects on Lyn and Syk are essential for regulating a variety of cellular functions, making it an ancient and widely conserved
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