Terahertz spectroscopy can be utilized as an effective nondestructive identification tool for the study of artist's pigments. Consequently, extensive measurements have been conducted on representative pigment species, and a few terahertz spectral databases have been constructed. However, the reported spectra were often acquired from pigment samples mixed with polyethylene at room temperature with low resolution, which often led to low-quality spectra with unresolved overlapping lines further broadened due to thermal effects. Here, we present our study of vermilion (HgS, mercury sulfide) as an illustration of how we can overcome such difficulties by studying free-standing oil-paint samples at room temperature and then by performing low-temperature measurements on polyethylene-mixed samples to minimize line broadening due to thermal effects. Our results identify clearly resolved absorption peaks due to lattice vibrations of vermilion at 40.4, 44.5, and 89.9 cm −1 at 2 K. The temperature dependence of the peak shift and line broadening reveals anharmonic characteristics of these lattice vibrational modes. Our approach will definitely suggest new ways to improve and enhance existing terahertz spectral databases of ancient and modern pigments toward actual analysis, diagnosis, and conservation of heritage artworks.
Lymphocyte activation gene-3 (LAG-3; CD223) is a transmembrane protein that is structurally similar to CD4. Since LAG-3 has a much higher binding affinity to MHC class II than that of CD4, several approaches using soluble LAG-3 were used to modulate immune responses by activation or inhibition of MHC class II expressing antigen presenting cells. In this study, we constructed soluble pig LAG-3 containing a critical binding site (D1 and D2 region) to MHC class II molecules, combined with a constant region of an immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy chain. Flow cytometry analyses indicated that soluble pig LAG-3 binds to both pig and human MHC class II molecules. Moreover, soluble pig LAG-3 can inhibit human lymphocyte proliferation in the human-pig xenogeneic mixed lymphocyte reaction in a dose-dependent manner. These results indicate that soluble pig LAG-3 may be useful for controlling the xenogeneic T cell immune responses between the human and pig.
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