Publications by authors named "Wolfgang Roth"

The central nervous system (CNS) does not recover from traumatic axonal injury, but the peripheral nervous system (PNS) does. We hypothesize that this fundamental difference in regenerative capacity may be based upon the absence of stimulatory mechanical forces in the CNS due to the protective rigidity of the vertebral column and skull. We developed a bioreactor to apply low-strain cyclic axonal stretch to adult rat dorsal root ganglia (DRG) connected to either the peripheral or central nerves in an explant model for inducing axonal growth.

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We extend feed-forward neural networks with a Dirichlet process prior over the weight distribution. This enforces a sharing on the network weights, which can reduce the overall number of parameters drastically. We alternately sample from the posterior of the weights and the posterior of assignments of network connections to the weights.

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Aim of this study was a genome-wide identification of mechano-regulated genes and candidate pathways in human chondrocytes subjected to a single anabolic loading episode and characterization of time evolution and re-inducibility of the response. Osteochondral constructs consisting of a chondrocyte-seeded collagen-scaffold connected to β-tricalcium-phosphate were pre-cultured for 35 days and subjected to dynamic compression (25% strain, 1 Hz, 9 × 10 min over 3 hr) before microarray-profiling was performed. Proteoglycan synthesis was determined by S-sulfate-incorporation over 24 hr.

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The structure of the electronic ground- and first excited state of mono-hydroxy [2.2]paracyclophane (MHPC) and the S(1)← S(0) electronic transition have been investigated by resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionisation (REMPI) and by quantum chemical spin-component-scaled-approximate coupled cluster second order (SCS-CC2) computations. The origin of the S(1)← S(0) transition was located at 30,772 cm(-1) (3.

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The structures and energetics of the ground and first excited states of [2.2]paracyclophane (PC) and its pseudo-para- (p-DHPC) and pseudo-ortho-dihydroxy (o-DHPC) as well as monohydroxy derivates (MHPC) are investigated by quantum chemical calculations, X-ray crystallography, and resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization spectroscopy (REMPI) in a free jet. We show that substitution of the aromatic hydrogens in PC causes significant changes of the structure and in particular its change between the ground and the excited state.

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In this work we describe a study of the ground and first excited state structures and energetics of a dihydroxy-derivative of [2.2]paracyclophane (PC), the pseudo-ortho-dihydroxy[2.2]paracyclophane (o-DHPC), also termed 4,12-dihydroxy[2.

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One major problem in cartilage tissue engineering is the insufficient biochemical composition of the generated biocomposites. The aim of this study was to improve the collagen and proteoglycan deposition in tissue engineering constructs by application of long-term mechanical loading in culture. Chondrocyte-seeded chitosan biocomposites revealed a homogenous cell distribution, high viability (>95%) and maintenance of a rounded cell shape typical for chondrocytes over 3 weeks of load-free culture.

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The excitation energy in the multiphoton ionization spectrum of the trans-1-naphthol/N(2) cluster shows only a small red shift with respect to isolated naphthol, indicating a van der Waals pi-bound structure rather than a hydrogen-bonded one. To confirm this interpretation, high-level electronic structure calculations were performed for several pi- and hydrogen-bonded isomers of this cluster. The calculations were carried out at the second order Møller-Plesset (MP2) level of perturbation theory with the family of correlation consistent basis sets up to quintuple-zeta quality including corrections for the basis set superposition error and extrapolation to the MP2 complete basis set (CBS) limit.

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We present a simple but very secure non-compressive clamping device for in vitro tensile testing of the Achilles tendon in rats. Biomechanical studies were performed on 178 native and injured specimens without any registration of slippage out of the clamp. The average tensile strength of the native rat Achilles tendon was determined to be 48 N (+/-11 N) and its displacement to failure averaged 0.

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The excited singlet state of an azomethine ylide or 'stable dipole' exhibits an ultrafast radiationless relaxation after femtosecond laser excitation. These transients are observed before the excited state decays in an almost activationless manner, the barrier is 440 cm-1, to the ground state with a 1.5 ps lifetime.

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The allowed conrotatory cyclobutene ring-opening has a distinctly nonplanar carbon skeleton. Classic experiments by Brauman and Archie, and by Freedman et al., placed the allowed/forbidden gap at greater than 15 kcal/mol.

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This study analyzes the molecular response of articular chondrocytes to short-term mechanical loading with a special focus on gene expression of molecules relevant for matrix turnover. Porcine cartilage explants were exposed to static and dynamic unconfined compression and viability of chondrocytes was assessed to define physiologic loading conditions. Cell death in the superficial layer correlated with mechanical loading and occurred at peak stresses >or=6 MPa and a cartilage compression above 45%.

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