48 CFR 252.225-7018 - Photovoltaic Devices-Certificate.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... that such photovoltaic device (e.g., solar panel) is a designated country photovoltaic device shall be... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Photovoltaic Devices... of Provisions And Clauses 252.225-7018 Photovoltaic Devices—Certificate. As prescribed in 225.7017-4...
48 CFR 252.225-7018 - Photovoltaic Devices-Certificate.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... that such photovoltaic device (e.g., solar panel) is a designated country photovoltaic device shall be... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Photovoltaic Devices... of Provisions And Clauses 252.225-7018 Photovoltaic Devices—Certificate. As prescribed in 225.7017-4...
Applicability of Firecracker Welding to Ship Production
1975-07-31
minor arc-outages seemed to coincide with defects in-the weld. For example, careful study of the film permitted orientation of such phenomena with the...Sample Electrode Electrode Voltage Current Frames Length weld covered No. Type diam. in. v A per sec. of film ft. in. Polarity 50 7024 1/4 35 240 128...to snuff out the arc. This was especially evident with the E7016 and E7018 electrodes which have a very fluid slag. The molten metal often caused a
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... technical data and computer software-Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 252.227-7018 Section... Clauses 252.227-7018 Rights in noncommercial technical data and computer software—Small Business... Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program (MAR 2011...
7 CFR 70.18 - Schedule of operation of official plants.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... Section 70.18 Agriculture Regulations of the Department of Agriculture (Continued) AGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICE (Standards, Inspections, Marketing Practices), DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE (CONTINUED) REGULATIONS AND STANDARDS UNDER THE AGRICULTURAL MARKETING ACT OF 1946 AND THE EGG PRODUCTS INSPECTION ACT...
32 CFR 701.8 - Processing FOIA requests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
...) Control FOIA Request. Each FOIA request should be date stamped upon receipt; given a case number; and entered into a formal control system to track the request from receipt to response. Coordinators may wish... in mind a test for reasonableness (i.e., file disposition requirements set forth in SECNAVINST 5212...
32 CFR 701.8 - Processing FOIA requests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
...) Control FOIA Request. Each FOIA request should be date stamped upon receipt; given a case number; and entered into a formal control system to track the request from receipt to response. Coordinators may wish... in mind a test for reasonableness (i.e., file disposition requirements set forth in SECNAVINST 5212...
32 CFR 701.8 - Processing FOIA requests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
...) Control FOIA Request. Each FOIA request should be date stamped upon receipt; given a case number; and entered into a formal control system to track the request from receipt to response. Coordinators may wish... in mind a test for reasonableness (i.e., file disposition requirements set forth in SECNAVINST 5212...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... technical data and computer software-Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 252.227-7018 Section... Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. As prescribed in 227.7104(a), use the following clause: Rights in Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program (JUN 1995...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... technical data and computer software-Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 252.227-7018 Section... Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. As prescribed in 227.7104(a), use the following clause: Rights in Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program (FEB 2014...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... technical data and computer software-Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 252.227-7018 Section... Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. As prescribed in 227.7104(a), use the following clause: Rights in Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program (MAR 2011...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... technical data and computer software-Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 252.227-7018 Section... Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. As prescribed in 227.7104(a), use the following clause: Rights in Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program (MAY 2013...
48 CFR 752.7018 - Health and accident coverage for USAID participant trainees.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... out and mail the Participant Data Form (PDF) (Form USAID 1381-4) to USAID. The Contractor can obtain information regarding each HAC program contractor, including contact information, and a supply of the PDF...
Double electron capture of {sup 106}Cd in the TGV-2 experiment
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Rukhadze, N. I.; Egorov, V. G.; Kovalik, A.
2015-10-28
A new experimental run of searching for EC/EC decay of {sup 106}Cd was performed at the Modane underground laboratory (4800 m w.e.) using the TGV-2 spectrometer and ∼23.2 g {sup 106}Cd with enrichment of 99.57%. The limit on 2νEC/EC decay of {sup 106}Cd - T{sub 1/2}(2νEC/EC) > 3.1×10{sup 20} y, at 90% C.L was obtained from the preliminary calculation of experimental data accumulated for 7018 h of measurement. The limits on the resonance neutrino-less double electron capture decay of {sup 106}Cd were obtained from the measurement of ∼23.2 g of {sup 106}Cd with the low-background HPGe spectrometer OBELIX lasted 395more » h - T{sub 1/2}(KL, 2741 keV) > 0.9×10{sup 20} y and T{sub 1/2}(KK, 2718 keV) > 1.4×10{sup 20} y at 90% C.L.« less
E4F1 deficiency results in oxidative stress–mediated cell death of leukemic cells
Hatchi, Elodie; Rodier, Genevieve; Lacroix, Matthieu; Caramel, Julie; Kirsh, Olivier; Jacquet, Chantal; Schrepfer, Emilie; Lagarrigue, Sylviane; Linares, Laetitia Karine; Lledo, Gwendaline; Tondeur, Sylvie; Dubus, Pierre
2011-01-01
The multifunctional E4F1 protein was originally discovered as a target of the E1A viral oncoprotein. Growing evidence indicates that E4F1 is involved in key signaling pathways commonly deregulated during cell transformation. In this study, we investigate the influence of E4F1 on tumorigenesis. Wild-type mice injected with fetal liver cells from mice lacking CDKN2A, the gene encoding Ink4a/Arf, developed histiocytic sarcomas (HSs), a tumor originating from the monocytic/macrophagic lineage. Cre-mediated deletion of E4F1 resulted in the death of HS cells and tumor regression in vivo and extended the lifespan of recipient animals. In murine and human HS cell lines, E4F1 inactivation resulted in mitochondrial defects and increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that triggered massive cell death. Notably, these defects of E4F1 depletion were observed in HS cells but not healthy primary macrophages. Short hairpin RNA–mediated depletion of E4F1 induced mitochondrial defects and ROS-mediated death in several human myeloid leukemia cell lines. E4F1 protein is overexpressed in a large subset of human acute myeloid leukemia samples. Together, these data reveal a role for E4F1 in the survival of myeloid leukemic cells and support the notion that targeting E4F1 activities might have therapeutic interest. PMID:21708927
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tahir, Abdullah Mohd; Lair, Noor Ajian Mohd; Wei, Foo Jun
2018-05-01
The Shielded Metal Arc Welding (SMAW) is (or the Stick welding) defined as a welding process, which melts and joins metals with an arc between a welding filler (electrode rod) and the workpieces. The main objective was to study the mechanical properties of welded metal under different types of welding fillers and current for SMAW. This project utilized the Design of Experiment (DOE) by adopting the Full Factorial Design. The independent variables were the types of welding filler and welding current, whereas the other welding parameters were fixed at the optimum value. The levels for types of welding filler were by the models of welding filler (E6013, E7016 and E7018) used and the levels for welding current were 80A and 90A. The responses were the mechanical properties of welded material, which include tensile strength and hardness. The experiment was analyzed using the two way ANOVA. The results prove that there are significant effects of welding filler types and current levels on the tensile strength and hardness of the welded metal. At the same time, the ANOVA results and interaction plot indicate that there are significant interactions between the welding filler types and the welding current on both the hardness and tensile strength of the welded metals, which has never been reported before. This project found that when the amount of heat input with increase, the mechanical properties such as tensile strength and hardness decrease. The optimum tensile strength for welded metal is produced by the welding filler E7016 and the optimum of hardness of welded metal is produced by the welding filler E7018 at welding current of 80A.
Yang, John Powen; Hsu, Taihao; Lin, Fangyi; Hsu, Wenkuang; Chen, Yucheng
2012-09-01
The separation and purification of extracellular polysaccharides from Coriolus versicolor LH1 were investigated along with their α-glucosidase inhibition properties. Three polysaccharide fractions (ePS-F2-1, ePS-F3-1, and ePS-F4-1) were separated from the culture medium of LH1 using a DEAE anion-exchange column and a Sephadex™ G-50 gel filtration column. Their chemical compositions was determined. On the basis of an α-glucosidase inhibition assay, the enzyme inhibition activities of ePS-F2-1, ePS-F3-1, and ePS-F4-1 were investigated. Among these, ePS-F4-1 had the highest enzyme inhibition effects on α-glucosidase. According to the results of the chemical component analysis, ePS-F3-1 and ePS-F4-1 are the polysaccharides which are combined with triterpenoides, and ePS-F2-1 is complexed with proteins and triterpenoides. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Park, Jun Won; Jang, Seok Hoon; Park, Dong Min; Lim, Na Jung; Deng, Chuxia; Kim, Dae Yong; Green, Jeffrey E; Kim, Hark Kyun
2014-08-01
Loss of E-cadherin (CDH1), Smad4, and p53 has been shown to play an integral role in gastric, intestinal, and breast cancer formation. Compound conditional knockout mice for Smad4, p53, and E-cadherin were generated to define and compare the roles of these genes in gastric, intestinal, and breast cancer development by crossing with Pdx-1-Cre, Villin-Cre, and MMTV-Cre transgenic mice. Interestingly, gastric adenocarcinoma was significantly more frequent in Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(F) (/+) mice than in Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(+/+) mice, demonstrating that Cdh1 heterozygosity accelerates the development and progression of gastric adenocarcinoma, in combination with loss of Smad4 and p53. Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(F) (/+) mice developed gastric adenocarcinomas without E-cadherin expression. However, intestinal and mammary adenocarcinomas with the same genetic background retained E-cadherin expression and were phenotypically similar to mice with both wild-type Cdh1 alleles. Lung metastases were identified in Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(F) (/+) mice, but not in the other genotypes. Nuclear β-catenin accumulation was identified at the invasive tumor front of gastric adenocarcinomas arising in Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(F) (/+) mice. This phenotype was less prominent in mice with intact E-cadherin or Smad4, indicating that the inhibition of β-catenin signaling by E-cadherin or Smad4 downregulates signaling pathways involved in metastases in Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(F) (/+) mice. Knockdown of β-catenin significantly inhibited the migratory activity of Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(F) (/+) cell lines. Thus, loss of E-cadherin and Smad4 cooperates with p53 loss to promote the development and metastatic progression of gastric adenocarcinomas, with similarities to human gastric adenocarcinoma. This study demonstrates that inhibition of β-catenin is a converging node for the antimetastatic signaling pathways driven by E-cadherin and Smad4 in Pdx-1-Cre;Smad4(F/F);Trp53(F/F);Cdh1(F) (/+) mice, providing novel insights into mechanisms for gastric cancer metastasis. ©2014 American Association for Cancer Research.
Avdulov, Svetlana; Li, Shunan; Michalek, Van; Burrichter, David; Peterson, Mark; Perlman, David M; Manivel, J Carlos; Sonenberg, Nahum; Yee, Douglas; Bitterman, Peter B; Polunovsky, Vitaly A
2004-06-01
Common human malignancies acquire derangements of the translation initiation complex, eIF4F, but their functional significance is unknown. Hypophosphorylated 4E-BP proteins negatively regulate eIF4F assembly by sequestering its mRNA cap binding component eIF4E, whereas hyperphosphorylation abrogates this function. We found that breast carcinoma cells harbor increases in the eIF4F constituent eIF4GI and hyperphosphorylation of 4E-BP1 which are two alterations that activate eIF4F assembly. Ectopic expression of eIF4E in human mammary epithelial cells enabled clonal expansion and anchorage-independent growth. Transfer of 4E-BP1 phosphorylation site mutants into breast carcinoma cells suppressed their tumorigenicity, whereas loss of these 4E-BP1 phosphorylation site mutants accompanied spontaneous reversion to a malignant phenotype. Thus, eIF4F activation is an essential component of the malignant phenotype in breast carcinoma.
1982-05-06
BUS MKS Fucioa Diagram ~ALAOAR *RSAU TT E E 0E U D*iQ MKSXQ16 Microinstruction Word 1 ~ ~5 .6 a7 . 6 1 1,I 1,. 151li "" SP*D ACCA CONTROL JASNTJ EX...result CALLSF 4F FA Call with ID in register GETSID 4F F9 Get re-time ID of function Data Forwarding FWD 4F F6 Forward integer DFWD 4F F5 Forward
1992-03-01
general aviation 53 Cop. Fleet 1985 BUSINESS JET 1i F turbojet & turbofan 55 Gates LEAR 25 CJ610-8 1 E,F 54 Gates LEAR 36 TFE731 -2 3 E,F...Cessna CI1 3 TFE731 -3-1005 3 * E,F 60 Mitsubishi MU300-10 J3I1D-4 3 E,F 58 Canadair CL600 ALFSO2L 3 E, 61 Canadair CL601 CF34-3A 3 E,F 62 Israel A/C ASIRA...1125 TFE731 -3A 3 EF S.. ... .. ... ... .. . .. ... .............. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --I.....- -- --- -- - - -------.-- -- - - -- - 4
The Use of a Higher Order Kinematic Relationship on the Analysis of Cylindrical Composite Panels
1991-12-01
form: exNl All A 12 A 16 B11 B12 B16 D nl D12 D16 E11 E12 E16 F11 F12 F16 COyI A12 A22 A6 B12 B22 B 1 D 2 D22 D26 E12 E2 2 E16 F1 2 F22 F26 0 A16 A 26...2 + 2E,,)kw,, ,., " kErWly + (kE11 + B 1 1)4f.,. + 2(kE 6 B16 )*.,x,, + (kE6 6 + B 616 ) *X,yy + (kE 1 6 + B 1 6 ) *y,, + [k (E1 2 + E6 6 ) " B12...B1 6 ) *x, y " (kE1 6 + B1 6 ) 1Y~ + (kE31 2 + B12) p,y, + -R-- 1 O 2 - B16 o, x + 12 W- 16W y- kF12 W, y - Wk16 + D6 x x-a W k 12 + D1 2)4r,y, 0 auo
Application of Acoustic Signal Processing Techniques to Seismic Data.
1977-06-30
Sr(U So 9RU FEND LOA SUNIT STA PLC3 LOA I STA OLC4 F A FORRE-C ;3f F’RARD I REC9; T9 3ET PAST T-4E E24F LIZE 2 0’ LC3 r ZE 0 PLC4 t~zs 0 FEND STZ 3AKSCN...0)0.4 E 4.1 33 Ŕ. 37.0 12-46-22.9 1?-34-07 .1 M VMiHM ,P1W LJ 31 wEST ER"’ %EDITEPRANFAN AqPA 301 ALBANIA P62 1220 F2 6P 2 2? 243990 al.0 N 20.4 E
Wang, Ling-Yu; Hung, Chiu-Lien; Chen, Yun-Ru; Yang, Joy C; Wang, Junjian; Campbell, Mel; Izumiya, Yoshihiro; Chen, Hong-Wu; Wang, Wen-Ching; Ann, David K; Kung, Hsing-Jien
2016-09-13
The histone lysine demethylase KDM4A/JMJD2A has been implicated in prostate carcinogenesis through its role in transcriptional regulation. Here, we describe KDM4A as a E2F1 coactivator and demonstrate a functional role for the E2F1-KDM4A complex in the control of tumor metabolism. KDM4A associates with E2F1 on target gene promoters and enhances E2F1 chromatin binding and transcriptional activity, thereby modulating the transcriptional profile essential for cancer cell proliferation and survival. The pyruvate dehydrogenase kinases (PDKs) PDK1 and PDK3 are direct targets of KDM4A and E2F1 and modulate the switch between glycolytic metabolism and mitochondrial oxidation. Downregulation of KDM4A leads to elevated activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase and mitochondrial oxidation, resulting in excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species. The altered metabolic phenotypes can be partially rescued by ectopic expression of PDK1 and PDK3, indicating a KDM4A-dependent tumor metabolic regulation via PDK. Our results suggest that KDM4A is a key regulator of tumor metabolism and a potential therapeutic target for prostate cancer. Copyright © 2016 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
1979-10-01
AIRCRAFT Flight Control ASA-32( ) Flight Director Computer TBD (Same as non -ARN-101 equipped F-4E aircraft) Air Data Computer CPK-92/A24G-34 Attitude...below. A two-inch separation between cable types is arbitrarily set as a minimum design goal. 3.2.6.4.1 Power and Control Circuits. Roucing and channel...plan in accordance with MIL-STD-461A(3) shall be the controlling document for EMIC design . 3.2.7.1 Design Reuire-nents. The generation of and suscepti
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... frequency deviation for F3E or G3E emission is as follows: (1) 5 kHz in the 72.0-73.0 MHz, 75.4-76.0 MHz and... 12 16K0A2D 20.0 A3E 6K00A3E 8.0 A3N 2 2K66A3N 2.8 A3X 3 3K20A3X 25.0 F1B 4 280HF1B 0.3 F1B 5 300HF1B 0.5 F1B 6 16KOF1B 20.0 F1C 2K80F1C 3.0 F1D 12 16K0F1D 20.0 F2B 6 16KOF2B 20.0 F2C 7 16KOF2C 20.0 F2D...
mTORC1 and CK2 coordinate ternary and eIF4F complex assembly
Gandin, Valentina; Masvidal, Laia; Cargnello, Marie; Gyenis, Laszlo; McLaughlan, Shannon; Cai, Yutian; Tenkerian, Clara; Morita, Masahiro; Balanathan, Preetika; Jean-Jean, Olivier; Stambolic, Vuk; Trost, Matthias; Furic, Luc; Larose, Louise; Koromilas, Antonis E.; Asano, Katsura; Litchfield, David; Larsson, Ola; Topisirovic, Ivan
2016-01-01
Ternary complex (TC) and eIF4F complex assembly are the two major rate-limiting steps in translation initiation regulated by eIF2α phosphorylation and the mTOR/4E-BP pathway, respectively. How TC and eIF4F assembly are coordinated, however, remains largely unknown. We show that mTOR suppresses translation of mRNAs activated under short-term stress wherein TC recycling is attenuated by eIF2α phosphorylation. During acute nutrient or growth factor stimulation, mTORC1 induces eIF2β phosphorylation and recruitment of NCK1 to eIF2, decreases eIF2α phosphorylation and bolsters TC recycling. Accordingly, eIF2β mediates the effect of mTORC1 on protein synthesis and proliferation. In addition, we demonstrate a formerly undocumented role for CK2 in regulation of translation initiation, whereby CK2 stimulates phosphorylation of eIF2β and simultaneously bolsters eIF4F complex assembly via the mTORC1/4E-BP pathway. These findings imply a previously unrecognized mode of translation regulation, whereby mTORC1 and CK2 coordinate TC and eIF4F complex assembly to stimulate cell proliferation. PMID:27040916
System Synthesis for Polymorphous Computing Architectures
2002-02-01
G H F Proc 5 : 4 : 3 11 1 Figure 3. Self-timed execution. D C B F G H E D B H EA CG F D C B F G H E D B H EA CG F AProc 1 Proc 2...first-iteration actors denoted by T. D B H E CG F D C B F G H E D B H EA CG F A 18 T T T T Proc 3 Proc 4 Proc 5 Proc 1 Proc 2 1 T⁄ T trmin30 ture-mirror...Phase1Algo( , ) = transientReduction( ) Output T G S′ S G T S′ S S′ Figure 11. Pseudocode to find
Chen, Shi; Zhang, Jia-Qiang; Chen, Jiang-Zhi; Chen, Hui-Xing; Qiu, Fu-Nan; Yan, Mao-Lin; Chen, Yan-Ling; Peng, Cheng-Hong; Tian, Yi-Feng; Wang, Yao-Dong
2017-09-01
This study aims to investigate the roles of lncRNA ANRIL in epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) by regulating the ATM-E2F1 signaling pathway in pancreatic cancer (PC). PC rat models were established and ANRIL overexpression and interference plasmids were transfected. The expression of ANRIL, EMT markers (E-cadherin, N-cadherin and Vimentin) and ATM-E2F1 signaling pathway-related proteins (ATM, E2F1, INK4A, INK4B and ARF) were detected. Small molecule drugs were applied to activate and inhibit the ATM-E2F1 signaling pathway. Transwell assay and the scratch test were adopted to detect cell invasion and migration abilities. ANRIL expression in the PC cells was higher than in normal pancreatic duct epithelial cells. In the PC rat models and PC cells, ANRIL interference promoted the expressions of INK4B, INK4A, ARF and E-cadherin, while reduced N-cadherin and Vimentin expression. Over-expressed ANRIL decreased the expression of INK4B, INK4A, ARF and E-cadherin, but raised N-cadherin and Vimentin expressions. By inhibiting the ATM-E2F1 signaling pathway in PC cells, E-cadherin expression increased but N-cadherin and Vimentin expressions decreased. After ANRIL was silenced or the ATM-E2F1 signaling pathway inhibited, PC cell migration and invasion abilities were decreased. In conclusion, over-expression of lncRNA ANRIL can promote EMT of PC cells by activating the ATM-E2F1 signaling pathway. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Organizational Diagnosis: A Review and a Proposed Method
1974-09-01
r IL YC I . I I I.j .. L 0 ie k.. LJt’IJ1, I C 10 k II I 63 , IIV. II I7 L ls L If e L-ue .J *7 C I 64 F2 C .1 F1 .1I 2Is 30a nI j1 ,33...L,. Ii 68 V.p In I? W.’ 1rvI ý I 4 VIi . 1 U.1,.1o. vi le . r : Wi It IC Lt’ ’ ofI -!Z 0’ c .. *’ .fNNN" f.,(4%ZI0CN Ii VI %j I Z.Z U, IJ 4-I4-. e A c ...FZ4WW4 i ,. e . I. 4:. Il L Ir -7, e %nI: I -IL, I r ,I . c ’ ’D
Performance Analysis of Polymorphous Computing Architectures
2001-01-01
G H F Proc 5 : 4 : 3 11 1 Figure 3. Self-timed execution. D C B F G H E D B H EA CG...F D C B F G H E D B H EA CG F AProc 1 Proc 2 Proc 3 Proc 4 Proc 5 185 cution pattern when the application graph in Figure 2 is executed in a self...transform, a quadra- E Figure 10. Self-timed execution with first-iteration actors denoted by T. D B H E CG F D C B F G H E D B H EA CG F A 18 T T T
1980-02-01
C to~~~ II qo 3 4 .. ..N~ V. ...... .V . .N N . .S ... .V .fI . i 0 Wi . .... . 53 .O .00... 0--N. .. ZZ W. I -. 0 -z J~~D &Z av F - -q qWe at s-a...q .a1 2c z oft ew dw- lp- eE- W - 0- fP- M .. 1 ,1e mc VftWU 00, 0%0 0000 - P-PtftoO. -%ffE Uqvv 4i . qwE ft . 04W -f ewF-0 wa rnm~~t.- tol Uw0 f E0
Absorption Analysis Applied to Neutrons in a Thermal Column
1960-11-01
determined experimentally, 4’ . can be obtained from the inverse transform of A(B). The desired quantity, f (E) , is then obtained by use of Eq. (7); f(E-dE...where a and d were found to be 16. 76 and 0. 0256, respectively. This transform is also found in Table 1. The inverse transform of Eq. (20) is 2:d-e...yielded this fit was [b F-b fx -ax] T(x)--.e 1.1 Equation 1. 1 yielded the inverse transform , Ŕ when (I-a)(0 S(71) =, b e[b4c- c(2-a)- 4(Z-a)] 1.2 e
Dover AFB Delaware. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations. Parts A-F
1974-08-07
8217 C IN @1 iN 2,2 71 SE 5, _ I _____. ws . 2,. A,’ , S _____ __ . _____ ____Sw . , 2, - :j ih , I. I I 12 .. SSWA NABE O2 .O 1.4 a CIO.S921 0 soi 4... SY HrsOMthTprat u MMA c Pe. H. AFD573 t ) 91660R 77 0 41 0 2-408b- 0_F_32_F_67_F73_F _8__F_ 93_ _ol I’- a ii-E 29(,06 899 3*CE/MA296.C4.19 -4- -E _1
The role of LANP and ataxin 1 in E4F-mediated transcriptional repression
Cvetanovic, Marija; Rooney, Robert J; Garcia, Jesus J; Toporovskaya, Nataliya; Zoghbi, Huda Y; Opal, Puneet
2007-01-01
The leucine-rich acidic nuclear protein (LANP) belongs to the INHAT family of corepressors that inhibits histone acetyltransferases. The mechanism by which LANP restricts its repression to specific genes is unknown. Here, we report that LANP forms a complex with transcriptional repressor E4F and modulates its activity. As LANP interacts with ataxin 1—a protein mutated in the neurodegenerative disease spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1)—we tested whether ataxin 1 can alter the E4F–LANP interaction. We show that ataxin 1 relieves the transcriptional repression induced by the LANP–E4F complex by competing with E4F for LANP. These results provide the first functional link, to our knowledge, between LANP and ataxin 1, and indicate a potential mechanism for the transcriptional aberrations observed in SCA1. PMID:17557114
Lam, E W; Glassford, J; van der Sman, J; Banerji, L; Pizzey, A R; Shaun, N; Thomas, B; Klaus, G G
1999-10-01
Since signals via CD40 and the B cell receptor are known to synergize to induce B cell activation, we have analyzed the pocket protein/E2F complexes in mouse B lymphocytes following stimulation by anti-IgM, anti-CD40, alone or together. We find that E2F4 and DP1 form the predominant E2F heterodimers in the G0 and G1 phases of the cell cycle, complexed with hypophosphorylated p130. During late G1 and S phase this complex is replaced by at least three different E2F complexes, one of which is an E2F complex containing p107 or pRB as well as two "free" E2F complexes consisting of E2F4/DP1 and E2F1-3/DP1. These effects were mirrored by the levels and phosphorylation status of the three pocket proteins. We also observed an increase in electrophoretic mobility of DP1 and E2F4 as B cells progressed from G0 into early G1, resulting from their dephosphorylation. This is known to correlate with a decrease in DNA binding capacity of these proteins and could also be important for derepression of genes negatively regulated through E2F sites in their promoters. These results therefore indicate that the pRB/E2F pathway integrates proliferative signals emanating from the sIgM and CD40 receptors.
1982-10-01
CR !PT Jr,4 CF THE FUPEP ELiAEN5 + f ,, 4, S**444444**44*4*4*444++ 44 4.+414++++++4++ + +++4+++44 f 44*4* ++ +444. + 172 FILE: IdES!’ GEN FC4TRAN Al...CLCC-(-"II e(1) 21...X’) STE’T ST’ICT *SSICT 179 FILE: PESI- GEN FCRTPAN Al NAVNL POSTGRAOLATE SCHO 70C CCITTNJUE P~lUPN C *****+*+*+4*+ *.4+..*4.4...PEtC IN fCCiNFC7Iv1TY IPATP:X, Lr..%L NdCDE NLVhJ3E S STAPT AT ELVEPTIS i.;PIi iR!G~e r~ fANC LC,.% IND) TAV -QSi Mih. C REIC IN 11-E FLEPOENT TypE
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wood, Claire M.; Bunce, Robert G. H.; Norton, Lisa R.; Maskell, Lindsay C.; Smart, Simon M.; Scott, W. Andrew; Henrys, Peter A.; Howard, David C.; Wright, Simon M.; Brown, Michael J.; Scott, Rod J.; Stuart, Rick C.; Watkins, John W.
2018-04-01
The Countryside Survey (CS) of Great Britain (GB) provides a unique and statistically robust series of datasets, consisting of an extensive set of repeated ecological measurements at a national scale, covering a time span of 29 years. CS was first undertaken in 1978 to provide a baseline for ecological and land use change monitoring in the rural environment of GB, following a stratified random design, based on 1 km squares. Originally, eight random 1 km squares were drawn from each of 32 environmental classes, thus comprising 256 sample squares in the 1978 survey. The number of these sites increased to 382 in 1984, 506 in 1990, 569 in 1998 and 591 in 2007. Detailed information regarding vegetation types and land use was mapped in all five surveys, allowing reporting by defined standard habitat classifications. Additionally, point and linear landscape features (such as trees and hedgerows) are available from all surveys after 1978. From these stratified, randomly located sample squares, information can be converted into national estimates, with associated error terms. Other data, relating to soils, freshwater and vegetation, were also sampled on analogous dates. However, the present paper describes only the surveys of landscape features and habitats. The resulting datasets provide a unique, comprehensive, quantitative ecological coverage of extent and change in these features in GB. Basic results are presented and their implications discussed. However, much opportunity for further analyses remains. Data from each of the survey years are available via the following DOIs: Landscape area data 1978: https://doi.org/10.5285/86c017ba-dc62-46f0-ad13-c862bf31740e, 1984: https://doi.org/10.5285/b656bb43-448d-4b2c-aade-7993aa243ea3, 1990: https://doi.org/10.5285/94f664e5-10f2-4655-bfe6-44d745f5dca7, 1998: https://doi.org/10.5285/1e050028-5c55-42f4-a0ea-c895d827b824, and 2007: https://doi.org/10.5285/bf189c57-61eb-4339-a7b3-d2e81fdde28d; Landscape linear feature data 1984: https://doi.org/10.5285/a3f5665c-94b2-4c46-909e-a98be97857e5, 1990: https://doi.org/10.5285/311daad4-bc8c-485a-bc8a-e0d054889219, 1998: https://doi.org/10.5285/8aaf6f8c-c245-46bb-8a2a-f0db012b2643 and 2007: https://doi.org/10.5285/e1d31245-4c0a-4dee-b36c-b23f1a697f88, Landscape point feature data 1984: https://doi.org/10.5285/124b872e-036e-4dd3-8316-476b5f42c16e, 1990: https://doi.org/10.5285/1481bc63-80d7-4d18-bcba-8804aa0a9e1b, 1998: https://doi.org/10.5285/ed10944f-40c8-4913-b3f5-13c8e844e153 and 2007: https://doi.org/10.5285/55dc5fd7-d3f7-4440-b8a7-7187f8b0550b.
Rare Earth Ion-Host Lattice Interactions. 9. Lanthanides in YAsO4
1976-08-01
CA 1:.1E 043 S.:11 04 5:602( 0ZZ1 ) 2.$02 1 1 01. 1 1 0.43 I 1 1 .1 4S# 2 1.10 1 J. I1-0 ’*546 1Z 2.lE 19 $e6l )2I 0, 2:.411 O) .l [0 .ll0 k4 4 113...04 " .471 0 .1 26E 04 2.391F 00 2.2431 03 3.001( 04 6.043 s 03 22 6113/1 .M 04 1.36% 3 ) .3 1" 01 1.120 043 . 04 :52f 0200 1.330F 0) 2.4084 0 7 23:0t...0 4.1141 01 1 1 6 1:11"E " .6111-Ol 64 111 4.012* 0 1 S.184t 0 4 4 4 61 04 6-ME a) 1.230C 04 NOM 04 9.521t Of 2.ST4 a of I .ME 01 Most 04 3.4SSE Ok
Coddens, Annelies; Valis, Erik; Benktander, John; Ångström, Jonas; Breimer, Michael E; Cox, Eric; Teneberg, Susann
2011-01-01
Enterotoxigenic F4-fimbriated Escherichia coli is associated with diarrheal disease in neonatal and postweaning pigs. The F4 fimbriae mediate attachment of the bacteria to the pig intestinal epithelium, enabling an efficient delivery of diarrhea-inducing enterotoxins to the target epithelial cells. There are three variants of F4 fimbriae designated F4ab, F4ac and F4ad, respectively, having different antigenic and adhesive properties. In the present study, the binding of isolated F4ab, F4ac and F4ad fimbriae, and F4ab/ac/ad-fimbriated E. coli, to glycosphingolipids from erythrocytes and from porcine small intestinal epithelium was examined, in order to get a comprehensive view of the F4-binding glycosphingolipids involved in F4-mediated hemagglutination and adhesion to the epithelial cells of porcine intestine. Specific interactions between the F4ab, F4ac and F4ad fimbriae and both acid and non-acid glycosphingolipids were obtained, and after isolation of binding-active glycosphingolipids and characterization by mass spectrometry and proton NMR, distinct carbohydrate binding patterns were defined for each fimbrial subtype. Two novel glycosphingolipids were isolated from chicken erythrocytes, and characterized as GalNAcα3GalNAcß3Galß4Glcß1Cer and GalNAcα3GalNAcß3Galß4GlcNAcß3Galß4Glcß1Cer. These two compounds, and lactosylceramide (Galß4Glcß1Cer) with phytosphingosine and hydroxy fatty acid, were recognized by all three variants of F4 fimbriae. No binding of the F4ad fimbriae or F4ad-fimbriated E. coli to the porcine intestinal glycosphingolipids occurred. However, for F4ab and F4ac two distinct binding patterns were observed. The F4ac fimbriae and the F4ac-expressing E. coli selectively bound to galactosylceramide (Galß1Cer) with sphingosine and hydroxy 24:0 fatty acid, while the porcine intestinal glycosphingolipids recognized by F4ab fimbriae and the F4ab-fimbriated bacteria were characterized as galactosylceramide, sulfatide (SO(3)-3Galß1Cer), sulf-lactosylceramide (SO(3)-3Galß4Glcß1Cer), and globotriaosylceramide (Galα4Galß4Glcß1Cer) with phytosphingosine and hydroxy 24:0 fatty acid. Finally, the F4ad fimbriae and the F4ad-fimbriated E. coli, but not the F4ab or F4ac subtypes, bound to reference gangliotriaosylceramide (GalNAcß4Galß4Glcß1Cer), gangliotetraosylceramide (Galß3GalNAcß4Galß4Glcß1Cer), isoglobotriaosylceramide (Galα3Galß4Glcß1Cer), and neolactotetraosylceramide (Galß4GlcNAcß3Galß4Glcß1Cer).
Coddens, Annelies; Valis, Erik; Benktander, John; Ångström, Jonas; Breimer, Michael E.; Cox, Eric; Teneberg, Susann
2011-01-01
Enterotoxigenic F4-fimbriated Escherichia coli is associated with diarrheal disease in neonatal and postweaning pigs. The F4 fimbriae mediate attachment of the bacteria to the pig intestinal epithelium, enabling an efficient delivery of diarrhea-inducing enterotoxins to the target epithelial cells. There are three variants of F4 fimbriae designated F4ab, F4ac and F4ad, respectively, having different antigenic and adhesive properties. In the present study, the binding of isolated F4ab, F4ac and F4ad fimbriae, and F4ab/ac/ad-fimbriated E. coli, to glycosphingolipids from erythrocytes and from porcine small intestinal epithelium was examined, in order to get a comprehensive view of the F4-binding glycosphingolipids involved in F4-mediated hemagglutination and adhesion to the epithelial cells of porcine intestine. Specific interactions between the F4ab, F4ac and F4ad fimbriae and both acid and non-acid glycosphingolipids were obtained, and after isolation of binding-active glycosphingolipids and characterization by mass spectrometry and proton NMR, distinct carbohydrate binding patterns were defined for each fimbrial subtype. Two novel glycosphingolipids were isolated from chicken erythrocytes, and characterized as GalNAcα3GalNAcß3Galß4Glcß1Cer and GalNAcα3GalNAcß3Galß4GlcNAcß3Galß4Glcß1Cer. These two compounds, and lactosylceramide (Galß4Glcß1Cer) with phytosphingosine and hydroxy fatty acid, were recognized by all three variants of F4 fimbriae. No binding of the F4ad fimbriae or F4ad-fimbriated E. coli to the porcine intestinal glycosphingolipids occurred. However, for F4ab and F4ac two distinct binding patterns were observed. The F4ac fimbriae and the F4ac-expressing E. coli selectively bound to galactosylceramide (Galß1Cer) with sphingosine and hydroxy 24:0 fatty acid, while the porcine intestinal glycosphingolipids recognized by F4ab fimbriae and the F4ab-fimbriated bacteria were characterized as galactosylceramide, sulfatide (SO3-3Galß1Cer), sulf-lactosylceramide (SO3-3Galß4Glcß1Cer), and globotriaosylceramide (Galα4Galß4Glcß1Cer) with phytosphingosine and hydroxy 24:0 fatty acid. Finally, the F4ad fimbriae and the F4ad-fimbriated E. coli, but not the F4ab or F4ac subtypes, bound to reference gangliotriaosylceramide (GalNAcß4Galß4Glcß1Cer), gangliotetraosylceramide (Galß3GalNAcß4Galß4Glcß1Cer), isoglobotriaosylceramide (Galα3Galß4Glcß1Cer), and neolactotetraosylceramide (Galß4GlcNAcß3Galß4Glcß1Cer). PMID:21949679
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kanai, Dai; Ueda, Atsushi; Akagi, Tadayuki
Embryonic stem (ES) cells, derived from the inner cell mass of blastocysts, have a characteristic cell cycle with truncated G1 and G2 phases. Recent findings that suppression of Oct3/4 expression results in a reduced proliferation rate of ES cells suggest the involvement of Oct3/4 in the regulation of ES cell growth, although the underlying molecular mechanism remains unclear. In the present study, we identified E2F3a as a direct target gene of Oct3/4 in ES cells. Oct3/4 directly bound to the promoter region of the E2F3a gene and positively regulated expression of E2F3a in mouse ES cells. Suppression of E2F3a activitymore » by E2F6 overexpression led to the reduced proliferation in ES cells, which was relieved by co-expression of E2F3a. Furthermore, cell growth retardation caused by loss of Oct3/4 was rescued by E2F3a expression. These results suggest that Oct3/4 upregulates E2F3a expression to promote ES cell growth. - Highlights: • Oct3/4 positively regulates E2F3a expression in ES cells. • Oct3/4 binds to the promoter region of the E2F3a gene. • Overexpression of E2F6, an inhibitor of E2F3a, reduces ES cell growth. • E2F3a recovers growth retardation of ES cells caused by Oct3/4 reduction.« less
1989-12-15
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Lin, Patrick S.; McPherson, Lisa A.; Chen, Aubrey Y.; Sage, Julien; Ford, James M.
2009-01-01
The retinoblastoma Rb/E2F tumor suppressor pathway plays a major role in the regulation of mammalian cell cycle progression. The pRb protein, along with closely related proteins p107 and p130, exerts its anti-proliferative effects by binding to the E2F family of transcription factors known to regulate essential genes throughout the cell cycle. We sought to investigate the role of the Rb/E2F1 pathway in the lesion recognition step of nucleotide excision repair (NER) in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Rb−/−;p107−/−;p130−/− MEFs repaired both cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) and 6-4 photoproducts (6-4PPs) at higher efficiency than did wildtype cells following UV-C irradiation. The expression of damaged DNA binding gene DDB2 involved in the DNA lesion recognition step was elevated in the Rb family-deficient MEFs. To determine if the enhanced DNA repair in the absence of the Rb gene family is due to the derepression of E2F1, we assayed the ability of E2F1-deficient cells to repair damaged DNA and demonstrated that E2F1−/− MEFs are impaired for the removal of both CPDs and 6-4PPs. Furthermore, wildtype cells induced a higher expression of DDB2 and xeroderma pigmentosum gene XPC transcript levels than did E2F1−/− cells following UV-C irradiation. Using an E2F SiteScan algorithm, we uncovered a putative E2F-responsive element in the XPC promoter upstream of the transcription start site. We showed with chromatin immunoprecipitation assays the binding of E2F1 to the XPC promoter in a UV-dependent manner, suggesting that E2F1 is a transcriptional regulator of XPC. Our study identifies a novel E2F1 gene target and further supports the growing body of evidence that the Rb/E2F1 tumor suppressor pathway is involved in the regulation of the DNA lesion recognition step of nucleotide excision repair. PMID:19376752
Tian, Shuang; Li, Xiu-Li; Shi, Mei; Yao, Yuan-Qing; Li, Li-Wen; Xin, Xiao-Yan
2011-02-01
PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome ten)/PI3K (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase)/Akt/mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) signaling pathway, which is commonly dysregulated in a broad array of human malignancies, controls the assembly of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4F (eIF4F) complex through regulation of eIF4E binding proteins (4E-BPs) phosphorylation. And accumulated data over the past two decades implicated eIF4F complex as one of the promising targets for anticancer therapy. It has been confirmed that the translation initiation of mRNA coding for hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) and survivin, which had been considered as the two major determinants of tumor radiosensitivity, are both controlled by eIF4F complex. Also, eIF4F complex controls the expression of VEGF and bFGF, the two well-known pro-angiogenic factors involved in developing radioresistance. Therefore eIF4F complex plays a pivotal role in regulation of radiosensitivity. In this article, we postulate that cell-permeable, phosphorylation-defective 4E-BP fusion proteins, which could be prepared by substituting the mTOR recognition motif located in N-terminal of 4E-BPs with protein transduction domain from HIV-1 TAT, HSV-1 VP22 or PTD4, could not only inhibit tumor growth but also enhance tumor response to radiation therapy through disruption of eIF4F complex assembly. In our opinion, the recombinant fusion proteins are superior to mTOR inhibitors for they do not cause immunosuppression, do not lead to Akt activation, and could be easily prepared by prokaryotic expression. If the hypothesis was proved to be practical, the cell-permeable, phosphorylation-defective 4E-BP fusion proteins would be widely used in clinical settings to improve tumor response to radiotherapy in the near future. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
1993-01-01
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48 CFR 252.239-7018 - Supply chain risk.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... subsystem(s) of equipment, that is used in the automatic acquisition, storage, analysis, evaluation..., ancillary equipment (including imaging peripherals, input, output, and storage devices necessary for... of a computer, software, firmware and similar procedures, services (including support services), and...
Coddens, Annelies; Loos, Michaela; Vanrompay, Daisy; Remon, Jean Paul; Cox, Eric
2017-04-01
F4 + E. coli and F18 + E. coli infections are an important threat for pig industry worldwide. Antibiotics are commonly used to treat infected piglets, but the emerging development of resistance against antibiotics raises major concerns. Hence, alternative therapies to prevent pigs from F4 + E. coli and F18 + E. coli infections need to be developed. Since cranberry previously showed anti-adhesive activity against uropathogenic E. coli, we aimed to investigate whether cranberry extract could also inhibit binding of F4 + E. coli and F18 + E. coli to pig intestinal epithelium. Using the in vitro villus adhesion assay, we found that low concentrations of cranberry extract (20μg or 100μg/ml) have strong inhibitory activity on F4 + E. coli (75.3%, S.D.=9.31 or 95.8%, S.D.=2.56, respectively) and F18 + E. coli adherence (100% inhibition). This effect was not due to antimicrobial activity. Moreover, cranberry extract (10mg or 100mg) could also abolish in vivo binding of F4 and F18 fimbriae to the pig intestinal epithelium in ligated loop experiments. Finally, two challenge experiments with F18 + E. coli were performed to address the efficacy of in-feed or water supplemented cranberry extract. No effect could be observed in piglets that received cranberry extract only in feed (1g/kg or 10g/kg). However, supplementation of feed (10g/kg) and drinking water (1g/L) significantly decreased excretion and diarrhea. The decreased infection resulted in a decreased serum antibody response indicating reduced exposure to F18 + E. coli. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Mechanisms of Polymer Curing and Thermal Degradation
1979-12-01
respectively. 29 0)- Fi . J . IR S e t u f i ( - 3 E hy y p e o y Ph n l S f n .30 z Iii 41 rI2P6i4000 3500 3000 42500 §200010 6010 2010 0 0 0 0...Polymer X Obs.6(_pm) Obs.(ppmA H 7.9,8.0 g,h 7.8 g,h 7.5 I ,e 7.5 i ,c,2 7.3 b,e 6.0-7.2 b,d,f,j,=CH 7.2 d 7.0 f,j 3.1 a HC C =- T O" 7.9 g 7.9 g 7.3 b...e 7.4 b,e 7.1 d 6.0-7.1 c,d,f,=CH 7.0 f,c 3.1 a 3.1 a aFor X 0 H, ggh, f= i b Based on first-order analysis of multiplets. 37 t TABLE 4. SUMMARY OF 13C
Comparison of Ion Chemistries in Octafluoro-2-butene (2-C4F8) and in Octfluorocyclobutane (c-C4F8)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jiao, Charles; Dejoseph, Charles; Garscadden, Alan
2007-10-01
2-C4F8 is one of the promising candidates to replace c-C4F8 that has been widely used for dielectric etching but is not environmentally friendly. In this study we have investigated electron impact ionization and ion-molecule reactions of 2-C4F8 using Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS), and compared the results with those of c-C4F8 we have studied previously. Electron impact ionization of 2-C4F8 produces 15 ionic species including C4F7,8^+, C3F3,5,6^+, C2F4^+ and CF1-3^+ as the major ions. The total ionization cross section of 2-C4F8 reaches a maximum of 1.8x10-15 cm^2 at 90 eV. The ionization is dominated by the channel forming the parent ion C4F8^+ from 12 to 18 eV, and by the channel forming C3F5^+ from 18 to 70 eV. After 70 eV, CF3^+ becomes the dominant product ion. Among the major ions generated from the electron impact ionization of 2-C4F8, only CF^+, CF2^+ and CF3^+ are found to react with 2-C4F8, via F^- abstraction or charge transfer mechanism. The charge transfer reaction of Ar^++2-C4F8 produces primarily C4F7^+.
Carcagno, Abel L; Marazita, Mariela C; Ogara, María F; Ceruti, Julieta M; Sonzogni, Silvina V; Scassa, María E; Giono, Luciana E; Cánepa, Eduardo T
2011-01-01
A central aspect of development and disease is the control of cell proliferation through regulation of the mitotic cycle. Cell cycle progression and directionality requires an appropriate balance of positive and negative regulators whose expression must fluctuate in a coordinated manner. p19INK4d, a member of the INK4 family of CDK inhibitors, has a unique feature that distinguishes it from the remaining INK4 and makes it a likely candidate for contributing to the directionality of the cell cycle. p19INK4d mRNA and protein levels accumulate periodically during the cell cycle under normal conditions, a feature reminiscent of cyclins. In this paper, we demonstrate that p19INK4d is transcriptionally regulated by E2F1 through two response elements present in the p19INK4d promoter. Ablation of this regulation reduced p19 levels and restricted its expression during the cell cycle, reflecting the contribution of a transcriptional effect of E2F1 on p19 periodicity. The induction of p19INK4d is delayed during the cell cycle compared to that of cyclin E, temporally separating the induction of these proliferative and antiproliferative target genes. Specific inhibition of the E2F1-p19INK4d pathway using triplex-forming oligonucleotides that block E2F1 binding on p19 promoter, stimulated cell proliferation and increased the fraction of cells in S phase. The results described here support a model of normal cell cycle progression in which, following phosphorylation of pRb, free E2F induces cyclin E, among other target genes. Once cyclinE/CDK2 takes over as the cell cycle driving kinase activity, the induction of p19 mediated by E2F1 leads to inhibition of the CDK4,6-containing complexes, bringing the G1 phase to an end. This regulatory mechanism constitutes a new negative feedback loop that terminates the G1 phase proliferative signal, contributing to the proper coordination of the cell cycle and provides an additional mechanism to limit E2F activity.
Carcagno, Abel L.; Marazita, Mariela C.; Ogara, María F.; Ceruti, Julieta M.; Sonzogni, Silvina V.; Scassa, María E.; Giono, Luciana E.; Cánepa, Eduardo T.
2011-01-01
Background A central aspect of development and disease is the control of cell proliferation through regulation of the mitotic cycle. Cell cycle progression and directionality requires an appropriate balance of positive and negative regulators whose expression must fluctuate in a coordinated manner. p19INK4d, a member of the INK4 family of CDK inhibitors, has a unique feature that distinguishes it from the remaining INK4 and makes it a likely candidate for contributing to the directionality of the cell cycle. p19INK4d mRNA and protein levels accumulate periodically during the cell cycle under normal conditions, a feature reminiscent of cyclins. Methodology/Principal Findings In this paper, we demonstrate that p19INK4d is transcriptionally regulated by E2F1 through two response elements present in the p19INK4d promoter. Ablation of this regulation reduced p19 levels and restricted its expression during the cell cycle, reflecting the contribution of a transcriptional effect of E2F1 on p19 periodicity. The induction of p19INK4d is delayed during the cell cycle compared to that of cyclin E, temporally separating the induction of these proliferative and antiproliferative target genes. Specific inhibition of the E2F1-p19INK4d pathway using triplex-forming oligonucleotides that block E2F1 binding on p19 promoter, stimulated cell proliferation and increased the fraction of cells in S phase. Conclusions/Significance The results described here support a model of normal cell cycle progression in which, following phosphorylation of pRb, free E2F induces cyclin E, among other target genes. Once cyclinE/CDK2 takes over as the cell cycle driving kinase activity, the induction of p19 mediated by E2F1 leads to inhibition of the CDK4,6-containing complexes, bringing the G1 phase to an end. This regulatory mechanism constitutes a new negative feedback loop that terminates the G1 phase proliferative signal, contributing to the proper coordination of the cell cycle and provides an additional mechanism to limit E2F activity. PMID:21765927
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Levin, E. M.; Jensen, B. A.; Barua, R.; Lejeune, B.; Howard, A.; McCallum, R. W.; Kramer, M. J.; Lewis, L. H.
2018-03-01
AlF e2B2 is a ferromagnet with the Curie temperature around 300 K and has the potential to be an outstanding rare-earth free candidate for magnetocaloric applications. However, samples prepared from the melt contain additional phases which affect the functional response of the AlF e2B2 phase. We report on the effects of Al content in samples with the initial (nominal) composition of A lxF e2B2 , where x =1.0 , 1.1, and 1.2 prepared by arc-melting followed by suction casting and annealing. The as-cast A lxF e2B2 alloys contain AlF e2B2 as well as additional phases, including the primary solidifying FeB and A l13F e4 compounds, which are ferromagnetic and paramagnetic, respectively, at 300 K. The presence of these phases makes it difficult to extract the intrinsic magnetic properties of AlF e2B2 phase. Annealing of A lxF e2B2 alloys at 1040 °C for 3 days allows for reaction of the FeB with A l13F e4 to form the AlF e2B2 phase, significantly reduces the amount of additional phases, and results in nearly pure AlF e2B2 phase as confirmed with XRD, magnetization, scanning electron microscopy, and electronic transport. The values of the magnetization, effective magnetic moment per Fe atom, specific heat capacity, electrical resistivity, and Seebeck coefficient for the AlF e2B2 compound have been established.
Structures and electron affinities of the di-arsenic fluorides As2Fn/As2Fn- (n=1-8).
Kasalová, Veronika; Schaefer, Henry F
2005-04-15
Developments in the preparation of new materials for microelectronics are focusing new attention on molecular systems incorporating several arsenic atoms. A systematic investigation of the As2Fn/As2Fn- systems was carried out using Density Functional Theory methods and a DZP++ quality basis set. Global and low-lying local geometric minima and relative energies are discussed and compared. The three types of neutral-anion separations reported in this work are: the adiabatic electron affinity (EAad), the vertical electron affinity (EAvert), and the vertical detachment energy (VDE). Harmonic vibrational frequencies pertaining to the global minimum for each compound are reported. From the first four studied species (As2Fn, n=1-4), all neutral molecules and their anions are shown to be stable with respect to As-As bond breaking. The neutral As2F molecule and its anion are predicted to have Cs symmetry. We find the trans F-As-As-F isomer of C2h symmetry and a pyramidalized vinylidene-like As-As-F2- isomer of Cs symmetry to be the global minima for the As2F2 and As2F2- species, respectively. The lowest lying minima of As2F3 and As2F3- are vinyl radical-like structures F-As-As-F2 of Cs symmetry. The neutral As2F4 global minimum is a trans-bent (like Si2H4) F2-As-As-F2 isomer of C2 symmetry, while its anion is predicted to have an unusual fluorine-bridged (C(1)) structure. The global minima of the neutral As2Fn species, n=5-8, are weakly bound complexes, held together by dipole-dipole interactions. All such structures have the AsFm-AsFn form, where (m,n) is (2,3) for As2F5, (3,3) for As2F6, (4,3) for As2F7), and (5,3) for As2F8. For As2F8 the beautiful pentavalent F4As-AsF4 structure (analogous to the stable AsF5 molecule) lies about 30 kcal/mol above the AsF3 . . . AsF5 complex. The stability of AsF(5) depends crucially on the strong As-F bonds, and replacing one of these with an As-As bond (in F4As-AsF4) has a very negative impact on the molecule's stability. The anions As2Fn-, n=5-8, are shown to be stable with respect to the As-As bond breaking, and we predict that all of them have fluorine-bridged or fluorine-linked structures. The zero-point vibrational energy corrected adiabatic electron affinities are predicted to be 2.28 eV (As2F), 1.95 eV (As2F2), 2.39 eV (As2F3), 1.71 eV (As2F4), 2.72 eV (As2F5), 1.79 eV (As2F6), 5.26 eV (As2F7), and 3.40 eV (As2F8) from the BHLYP method. Vertical detachment energies are rather large, especially for species with fluorine-bridged global minima, having values up to 6.45 eV (As2F7, BHLYP).
1995-12-01
Geotechnical Data D Geophysical Surveys E Analysis of QA/QC Program F Aquifer Hydraulic Characterization (Slug Testing) G Groundwater Model Report H...M " f ; Soil/Rock ~ Dataii~ 2!Desc~lpliOn ccl - -GR OUND SURFACE- -~~ MMJrb OMOE U)IF ’G gm~ * t -iG O p& 11 i 1 ’ w //* I M E - F .51"’/j H5As o4 2-e...o fS A D 11tL IN SNE,7f ’(;v ,* , F * It~ .-. 4 1I4O WLD ~*’h4,Ft , T6.r,17,L ’DIULLe8ING NOTa 4 14.6@AO 0w- IUL W 33s - reyce pae A-, 7 1= amd n 01r0r
Boring Information and Subsurface Data Base Package User’s Guide.
1984-09-01
Army Engineer Waterways Experiment Station Computer Application in’ Ceotechnical Labor o y mue lctosi cia Geotechnical Engineering P0 Box 631...l F -3 7F - 2 1Y 1 U 3. T. 2 F1’--I F 4 -FEST- F,-1rE *~7 1 . ESTR - I -IL’’ 1 2 A. T F- E:7 * 7 T)*i ES l 2) 1-’E M 6FI- I; 2 6 .D L fO.W -ELLYV
Khan, Mateen A; Ma, Jia; Walden, William E; Merrick, William C; Theil, Elizabeth C; Goss, Dixie J
2014-06-01
Metal ion binding was previously shown to destabilize IRE-RNA/IRP1 equilibria and enhanced IRE-RNA/eIF4F equilibria. In order to understand the relative importance of kinetics and stability, we now report rapid rates of protein/RNA complex assembly and dissociation for two IRE-RNAs with IRP1, and quantitatively different metal ion response kinetics that coincide with the different iron responses in vivo. kon, for FRT IRE-RNA binding to IRP1 was eight times faster than ACO2 IRE-RNA. Mn(2+) decreased kon and increased koff for IRP1 binding to both FRT and ACO2 IRE-RNA, with a larger effect for FRT IRE-RNA. In order to further understand IRE-mRNA regulation in terms of kinetics and stability, eIF4F kinetics with FRT IRE-RNA were determined. kon for eIF4F binding to FRT IRE-RNA in the absence of metal ions was 5-times slower than the IRP1 binding to FRT IRE-RNA. Mn(2+) increased the association rate for eIF4F binding to FRT IRE-RNA, so that at 50 µM Mn(2+) eIF4F bound more than 3-times faster than IRP1. IRP1/IRE-RNA complex has a much shorter life-time than the eIF4F/IRE-RNA complex, which suggests that both rate of assembly and stability of the complexes are important, and that allows this regulatory system to respond rapidly to change in cellular iron. © The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.
7 CFR 271.8 - Information collection/recordkeeping-OMB assigned control numbers.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
...) 0584-0124 273.11 (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (h) 0584-0064 273.11 (g) 0584-0334 273.11 (i) (1)-(4... 273.18 (i) 0584-0053 273.21 (a), (c), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), (j), (m), (p), (q) 0584-0064 274.1 (c...), (h) 0584-0083 278.1 (a), (b), (l) 0584-0008 278.1 (e), (f) 0584-0064 278.4 (b), (c) 0584-0085 278.5...
Efficient High-Order Accurate Methods using Unstructured Grids for Hydrodynamics and Acoustics
2007-08-31
Leer. On upstream differencing and godunov-type schemes for hyperbolic conservation laws. SIAM Review, 25(1):35-61, 1983. [46] F . Eleuterio Toro ...early stage [4-61. The basic idea can be surmised from simple approximation theory. If a continuous function f is to be approximated over a set of...a2f 4h4 a4ff(x+eh) = f (x)+-- + _ •-+• e +0 +... (1) where 0 < e < 1 for approximations inside the interval of width h. For a second-order approximation
High susceptibility prevalence for F4+ and F18+Escherichia coli in Flemish pigs.
Nguyen, Ut V; Coddens, Annelies; Melkebeek, Vesna; Devriendt, Bert; Goetstouwers, Tiphanie; Poucke, Mario Van; Peelman, Luc; Cox, Eric
2017-04-01
F4 and/or F18 enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (F4 + /F18 + ETEC) are responsible for diarrhea while F18 + verotoxigenic E. coli (F18 + VTEC) cause edema disease in pigs. Both infections can result in severe economic losses, which are mainly the result of the medication, growth retardation and mortality. The susceptibility of piglets to these pathogens is determined by the presence of F4 and F18 receptors (F4R and F18R). Understanding the composition of the susceptibility phenotypes of pigs is useful for animal health and breeding management. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of the F4 ETEC susceptibility phenotypes and F18 + E. coli susceptibility among Flemish pig breeds by using the in vitro villous adhesion assay. In this study, seven F4 ETEC susceptibility phenotypes were found, namely A (F4 ab R + , ac R + , ad R + ; 59.16%), B (F4 ab R + , ac R + , ad R - ; 6.28%), C (F4 ab R + , ac R - , ad R + ; 2.62%), D (F4 ab R - , ac R - , ad R + ; 6.28%), E (F4 ab R - , ac R - , ad R - ; 24.08%), F (F4 ab R + , ac R - , ad R - ; 1.05%) and G (F4 ab R - , ac R + , ad R - ; 0.52%). F4ab and F4ac E. coli showed a stronger degree of adhesion to the intestinal villi (53.40% and 52.88% strong adhesion, respectively), compared to F4ad E. coli (43.46% strong adhesion). Furthermore, the correlation between F4ac and F4ab adhesion was higher (r=0.78) than between F4ac and F4ad adhesion (r=0.41) and between F4ab and F4ad adhesion (r=0.57). For F18 + E. coli susceptibility, seven out of 82 pigs were F18R negative (8.54%), but only two of these seven pigs (2.44%) were also negative for F4R. As such, the chance to identify a pig that is positive for a F4 ETEC variant or F18 + E. coli is 97.56%. Therefore, significant economic losses will arise due to F4 + and/or F18 + E. coli infections in the Flemish pig population due to the high susceptibility prevalence. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kuvychko, Igor V.; Whitaker, James B.; Larson, Bryon W.
2013-04-08
A series of seven structurally-similar compounds with different pairs of R{sub F} groups were prepared, characterized spectroscopically, and studied by electrochemical methods (cyclic and square-wave voltammetry), low-temperature anion photoelectron spectroscopy, and DFT calculations (five of the compounds are reported here for the first time). This is the first time that a set of seven R{sub F} groups have been compared with respect to their relative effects on E{sub 1/2}(0/-), electron affinity (EA), and the DFT-calculated LUMO energy. The compounds, 1,7-C{sub 60}(R{sub F}){sub 2} (R{sub F} = CF{sub 3}, C{sub 2}F{sub 5}, i-C{sub 3}F{sub 7}, n-C{sub 3}F{sub 7}, s-C{sub 4}F{sub 9},more » n-C{sub 4}F{sub 9} and n-C{sub 8}F{sub 21}), were found to have statistically different electron affinities (EA), at the {+-}10 meV level of uncertainty, but virtually identical first reduction potentials, at the {+-}10 mV level of uncertainty. The lack of a correlation between EA and E{sub 1/2}(0/-), and between E(LUMO) and E{sub 1/2}(0/-), for such similar compounds is unprecedented and suggests that explanations for differences in figures of merit for materials and/or devices that are based on equating easily measurable E{sub 1/2}(0/-) values with EAs or E(LUMO) values should be viewed with caution. The solubilities of the seven compounds in toluene varied by nearly a factor of six, but in an unpredictable way, with the C{sub 2}F{sub 5} and s-C{sub 4}F{sub 9} compounds being the most soluble and the i-C{sub 3}F{sub 7} compound being the least soluble. The effects of the different R{sub F} groups on EAs, E(LUMO) values, and solubilities should help fluorine chemists choose the right R{sub F} group to design new materials with improved morphological, electronic, optical, and/or magnetic properties.« less
Margot, Nicolas; Cox, Stephanie; Das, Moupali; McCallister, Scott; Miller, Michael D; Callebaut, Christian
2018-06-01
The single tablet regimen (STR) composed of elvitegravir (E), cobicistat (C), emtricitabine (F), and tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) (E/C/F/TAF) was compared to the STR composed of E, C, F, and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) (E/C/F/TDF) in 2 phase 3 studies in 1733 HIV-1 infected treatment-naïve adults. Superior efficacy of E/C/F/TAF compared to E/C/F/TDF was demonstrated at Week 144 with 84% treatment success compared to 80%, respectively, along with significantly better outcomes of bone and renal safety. Analyze the emergence of HIV-1 resistance in treatment-naïve adults receiving E/C/F/TAF for 144 weeks. We conducted an integrated resistance analysis of the 2 Phase 3 studies, comprising pretreatment HIV-1 sequencing for all participants (N = 1733) and post-baseline HIV-1 resistance analysis for participants with virologic failure (HIV-1 RNA ≥400 copies/mL). Primary resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) were observed pre-treatment in 7.4% (NRTI-RAMs), 18.1% (NNRTI-RAMs), and 3.3% (PI-RAMs) of enrolled subjects. Baseline HIV-1 subtype or pre-existing RAMs did not affect E/C/F/TAF treatment response at week 144. Virologic failure resistance analyses were conducted for 28/866 (3.2%) and 30/867 (3.5%) patients in the E/C/F/TAF and E/C/F/TDF arms, respectively. Over the 3-year study, the rate of resistance emergence remained low at 1.4% in each group (12/866 in E/C/F/TAF; 12/867 in E/C/F/TDF). Resistant virus emerged in 24 patients who developed resistance to antiretrovirals in the regimens (E/C/F/TAF: M184V/I [1.3%], INSTI-RAMs [0.9%], K65R/N [0.2%]; E/C/F/TDF: M184V/I [1.0%], INSTI-RAMs [0.9%], K65R/N [0.5%]). Resistance emergence was rare (1.4%) with similar patterns of emergent mutations in both groups. M184V/I was the most prevalent RAM (1.2% overall). Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tian, Xiaoqing; Xu, Jianbin; Wang, Xiaomu
2010-09-09
The band gap opening of bilayer graphene with one side surface adsorption of F4-TCNQ is reported. F4-TCNQ doped bilayer graphene shows p-type semiconductor characteristics. With a F4-TCNQ concentration of 1.3 x 10(-10) mol/cm(2), the charge transfer between each F4-TCNQ molecule and graphene is 0.45e, and the built-in electric field, E(bi), between the graphene layers could reach 0.070 V/A. The charge transfer and band gap opening of the F4-TCNQ-doped graphene can be further modulated by an externally applied electric field (E(ext)). At 0.077 V/A, the gap opening at the Dirac point (K), DeltaE(K) = 306 meV, and the band gap, E(g) = 253 meV, are around 71% and 49% larger than those of the pristine bilayer under the same E(ext).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Klinger, Emmanuel; Sargsyan, Armen; Tonoyan, Ara; Hakhumyan, Grant; Papoyan, Aram; Leroy, Claude; Sarkisyan, David
2018-01-01
The two technical points below are corrected by this erratum: 1. The publisher apologizes for a technical problem occurring in the scale numbering of Figure 2. The figure is corrected below. [Figure not available: see fulltext.] 2. Page 6, line 14 of the Conclusion section " F g = 2, m F = -3 → F e = 4, m F = -2" should be replaced by " F g = 2, m F = -2 → F e = 4, m F = -1".
Ikwap, Kokas; Larsson, Jenny; Jacobson, Magdalena; Owiny, David Okello; Nasinyama, George William; Nabukenya, Immaculate; Mattsson, Sigbrit; Aspan, Anna; Erume, Joseph
2016-08-05
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) significantly contribute to diarrhea in piglets and weaners. The smallholder pig producers in Uganda identified diarrhea as one of the major problems especially in piglets. The aim of this study was to; i) characterize the virulence factors of E. coli strains isolated from diarrheic and non-diarrheic suckling piglets and weaners from smallholder herds in northern and eastern Uganda and ii) identify and describe the post-mortem picture of ETEC infection in severely diarrheic piglets. Rectal swab samples were collected from 83 piglets and weaners in 20 herds and isolated E. coli were characterized by PCR, serotyping and hemolysis. The E. coli strains carried genes for the heat stable toxins STa, STb and EAST1 and adhesins F4 and AIDA-I. The genes for the heat labile toxin LT and adhesins F5, F6, F18 and F41 were not detected in any of the E. coli isolates. Where the serogroup could be identified, E. coli isolates from the same diarrheic pig belonged to the same serogroup. The prevalence of EAST1, STb, Stx2e, STa, AIDA-I, and F4 in the E. coli isolates from suckling piglets and weaners (diarrheic and non-diarrheic combined) was 29, 26.5, 2.4, 1.2, 16, and 8.4 %, respectively. However the prevalence of F4 and AIDA-I in E. coli from diarrheic suckling piglets alone was 22.2 and 20 %, respectively. There was no significant difference in the prevalence of the individual virulence factors in E. coli from the diarrheic and non-diarrheic pigs (p > 0.05). The main ETEC strains isolated from diarrheic and non-diarrheic pigs included F4/STb/EAST1 (7.2 %), F4/STb (1.2 %), AIDA/STb/EAST1 (8 %) and AIDA/STb (8 %). At post-mortem, two diarrheic suckling piglets carrying ETEC showed intact intestinal villi, enterocytes and brush border but with a layer of cells attached to the brush border, suggestive of ETEC infections. This study has shown that the F4 fimbriae is the most predominant in E. coli from diarrheic piglets in the study area and therefore an F4-based vaccine should be considered one of the preventive measures for controlling ETEC infections in the piglets in northern and eastern Uganda.
Dollar Summary of Federal Supply Classification and Service Category by Company. Part 2 (B502-J066)
1990-01-01
U 0 V ) V ( w~~~~ ae a11 - 4 W 4 0~~~~ a a4 " A 0 1> z~~~~ a. a0 4 0 4 1 4 ,0 4 - 4a%- %. 0 4a4 t4 i acca Lu awHIu 0a 0 0 0 Iw awa In InI I IK t0 n 4...f0 <z 1. 0 m) 1-4 w 0 .0 0 ) 0 w ’ -J z U) 1-- -- &a x -- m < I z w z 0 F- or. o LU c-c, J O "I- "I- 11-1 0 F1 {A - " " :)ix [ I-- . U H E (. 0 ’ C3...I Ir 10 0 10 - U I I CO F1 4 04 U 40 40 IWI O 4 -~ ~ ~ OF- ~ 1 Z E c’) a Sc 0 00 -4 0 U) SO (a e UL N 4 q 0 -4 1 -tr N (0 0) r, (a L0 m w) m 0 -t
1983-04-01
OBSERVATIONS) L P- 14 H~N A A-F S .~ 73-F2 ____ JA&,. ALL WI- LAt E -- .. - - 6 7 0 11 16 17 21 22 27 28- 33 34 *0 41 A7 48 5 .7 * . .3 .4 .4 . 1 . i E...PERCENTAGE FREQUENCY OF WIND DIRECTION AND SPEED (FROM HOURLY OBSERVATIONS) 4LL . LAT -E- - 10 1 1 i 7 23 22 ’ 2 3 3 A 40 A 3 5 A7 A • ’ .. 5 .t",5...SCOTT A. APR 03 UNCLASSIFIED USAFETAC/DS-83/019 SBI-AD-EB50 397 F/6 4/2 NL SU 2. lii .0 EM *,*,- Ica L- 11111 1.25 s~w ,r- 1 . 11.6 I MiCRQ OPY
32 CFR 701.8 - Processing FOIA requests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... signature or a statement certifying under the penalty of perjury that their identity is true and correct.... Representatives of the news media would normally qualify as individuals primarily engaged in disseminating... or commercial activities would not qualify, nor would a news media publication or broadcast deadline...
Condition Based Maintenance Technology Impacts Study for the Military Land Environment
2014-08-01
3a, 2g 3b,3m,3j,3e,3d,3f,3a,3c,3i 3c,3d,3h,3n 3d,3h 3e,3k,3i 3f,3h UNCLASSIFIED DSTO-RR-0404 UNCLASSIFIED 158 3g ,3c 3h,4b 3i,3m,3j,CBM...3e -> 3k 3i Egress of 2: 3n -> 3h 4b Egress of 2: 3k -> 3j 5c Egress of 2: 4d -> 3g 3c Egress of 1: 3a -> 2g Egress of 1: 1b -> 2g Egress...Ingress+Egress of 8: 2d 3b 3g 4d 4f -> 3c -> 3d 3h 3n Ingress+Egress of 7: 1b 2e 3a -> 2g -> 3b 2e 2c 2f Ingress+Egress of 7: 2a 2d 6b 6c -> 2b -> 3a
Humphreys, Jean; Browning, Karen S.; Ravel, Joanne M.
1988-01-01
A kinase has been isolated from wheat (Triticum aestivum) germ that phosphorylates the 220 kilodaltons (kD) subunit of wheat germ initiation factor (eIF) 4F, the 80 kD subunit of eIF-4B (an isozyme form of eIF-4F) and eIF-4G (the functional equivalent to mammalian eIF-4B). The kinase elutes from Sephacryl S-200 slightly in front of ovalbumin. The kinase phosphorylates casein and histone IIA to a small extent, but does not phosphorylate phosvitin. Of the wheat germ initiation factors, elongation factors, and small and large ribosomal subunits, only eIF-4F, eIF-4B, and eIF-4G are phosphorylated to a significant extent. The kinase phosphorylates eIF-4F to the extent of two phosphates per mole of the 220 kD subunit and phosphorylates eIF-4B to the extent of one phosphate per mole of the 80 kD subunit. The 26 kD subunit of eIF-4F and the 28 kD subunit of eIF-4B are not phosphorylated by the kinase. The kinase phosphorylates the 59 kD component of eIF-4G to the extent of 0.25 phosphate per mole of eIF-4G. Phosphorylation of eIF-4F and eIF-4B does not affect their ability to support the binding of mRNA to small ribosomal subunits in vitro. Images Fig. 2 Fig. 3 PMID:16666331
49 CFR 173.52 - Classification codes and compatibility groups of explosives.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... or hypergolic liquid) E 1.1E1.2E 1.4E Article containing a secondary detonating explosive substance....1E 1.1F 1.1G 1.1J 1.1L 9 1.2 1.2B 1.2C 1.2D 1.2E 1.2F 1.2G 1.2H 1.2J 1.2K 1.2L 10 1.3 1.3C 1.3F 1.3G...
Wave Propagation and Dynamics of Lattice Structures.
1984-05-01
Progress in Solid Mechanics, North Holand Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1960. [7) Y. K. Linn, and T. J. McDaniel, ’n)amics of Beam Type Periodic...deformation. -99- APPENDIX F FREQUENCY RESPONSE AND IMPULSE RESPONSE FUNCTIONS FOR LONGITUDINAL VIBRATION IN AN ELASTIC ROD Figure F1 shows the elastic rod to b...6 (F38) Rearranging eqn. (F38), .HE(w) = e’ 4e~3 ~e e 2 e1" +e " 6 e r (F39) Mlultiplying eqn. ( F1 =39) by 6Ŕ 6- and aragn te - . e 6 -e _ aix
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Maroulis, George
1998-04-01
The electric multipole moments, dipole and quadrupole polarizability and hyperpolarizability of hydrogen chloride have been determined from an extensive and systematic study based on finite-field fourth-order many-body perturbation theory and coupled-cluster calculations. Our best values for the dipole, quadrupole, octopole and hexadecapole moment at the experimental internuclear separation of Re=2.408645a0 are μ=0.4238ea0, Θ=2.67ea02, Ω=3.94ea03, and Φ=13.37ea04, respectively. For the mean and the anisotropy of the dipole polarizability ααβ we recommend ᾱ=17.41±0.02 and Δα=1.60±0.03e2a02Eh-1. For the mean value of the first dipole hyperpolarizability βαβγ we advance β¯=-6.8±0.3e3a03Eh-2. Extensive calculations with a [8s6p6d3f/5s4p2d1f] basis set at the CCSD(T) level of theory yield the R-dependence of the Cartesian components and the mean of the second dipole hyperpolarizability γαβγδ(R)/e4a04Eh-3 around Re as γzzzz(R)=1907+1326(R-Re)+570(R-Re)2+10(R-Re)3-40(R-Re)4, γxxxx(R)=3900+747(R-Re)-65(R-Re)2-38(R-Re)3-7(R-Re)4, γxxzz(R)=962+222(R-Re)+88(R-Re)2+49(R-Re)3+5(R-Re)4, γ¯(R)=3230+841(R-Re)+151(R-Re)2+21(R-Re)3-9(R-Re)4, with z as the molecular axis. The present investigation suggests an estimate of (26.7±0.3)×102e4a04Eh-3 for the Hartree-Fock limit of the mean value γ¯ at Re. CCSD(T) calculations with basis sets of [8s6p6d3f/5s4p2d1f] and [9s7p5d4f/6s5p4d1f] size and MP4 calculations with the even larger [15s12p7d3f/12s7p2d1f] give (7.0±0.3)×102e4a04Eh-3 for the electron correlation effects for this property, thus leading to a recommended value of γ¯=(33.7±0.6)×102e4a04Eh-3. For the quadrupole polarizability Cαβ,γδ/e2a04Eh-1 at Re our best values are Czz,zz=41.68, Cxz,xz=26.11, and Cxx,xx=35.38, calculated with the [9s7p5d4f/6s5p4d1f] basis set at the CCSD(T) level of theory. The following CCSD(T) values were obtained with [8s6p6d3f/5s4p2d1f] at Re: dipole-quadrupole polarizability Aα,βγ/e2a03Eh-1, Az,zz=14.0, and Ax,zx=3.75, dipole-octopole polarizability Eα,βγδ/e2a04Eh-1, Ez,zzz=20.0, and Ex,xxx=3.0, and dipole-dipole-quadrupole hyperpolarizability Bαβ,γδ/e3a04Eh-2, Bzz,zz=-277, Bxz,xz=-261, Bxx,zz=246, and Bxx,xx=-416. A comparison of the mean polarizability and hyperpolarizability of some 18-electron systems shows that ᾱ(H2S)>ᾱ(HCl)>ᾱ(HOOH)>ᾱ(HOF)>ᾱ(Ar)>ᾱ(F2), and γ¯(H2S)>γ¯(HCl)>γ¯(HOOH)>γ¯(HOF)≈γ¯(Ar)>γ¯(F2).
Test of a Supersonic Axial Compressor Stage Incorporating Splitter Vanes in the Rotor
1975-06-01
fi~,l n~~.0.t *o f- -t -03 ............ 1, C(4’ . . . . . . . . ~.e .. rN.. n..s m ee, "N .NS af @.,V(p . . . .. . . A42 g -.*o flea a’ ip *. ’a...4oP= #4u’Ol4Dj. I- ft000. #W~*g~De.ftsýtl9.".1 Is no Io *1 Otis 0.ee gee.. 0000 0.. . .. 00 00 OA La ’a. af ~.4i teeA @rJ~t a4 f" *.ge g e~ee. no Iŕ...aV .4f1M f .jlu~M p ttpt t Ij I`G 4-" Lccfpf t** *S* ** **dm4( -W* A 4.162CPCC=2DOC440CCM in ~~~6- OlL tftl " J"If" ’t~f.0a4ft= OW -.. ot- af t0m.*.J
1990-01-01
4.44c V c- U CU4 0 1.- (A 0.0 a* .W - 0. i- -4 C10t- (D I M 6 l UN W 0 >. GN C4 i ae ad )-4N0C, D,0 P. f6 MŔ R~ = 1- (0 00 .8 (A Q 0 0 Zococ3- 00cv I...In 0 P.- CM -4 0 -4 ’I- U u I 000 Go I -16 OC) f6 ’ -4 0A 0 CN - Ll.UC I oo r WNI 00 0 16060 I toN 4: N f 0 L I. I OP.- U -4 -. 4.4 -4 .4.4 .- 46. 4...00 "M M 0i 201(f 1 E00 -4 N)x 0 0 0 Q 0x- 0 0 F6 . Co C4- NI- al 2 0 Wi U) ~ ~ 1. C.) ai a 1 I0 04 N U)N-mN-NN -. 0-4- 1- 4 1.( 4-4 4 (Y00 0 ) -e4 n N
1992-09-01
d, 0 U 0 E-4- 1-4 p/7. .4 H, , , I I F T 1 1 I1 - - B1 -4 c nI a W I~ 0" Q o6 0G 0 00 24 Q N~nIn 1--- U 00 :C% F’-4 -. 07 ;T4 LIn E1-6 TABLE 1-5 30...0 RUGBY ................................... ........................... ND N ZMP 43 0 0 42 1 RUSHFORD MUNICIPAL ..................... MN N ZMP 1 0 0
Testing Properties of Boolean Functions
2012-01-01
Applying the Hermite decomposition of f and linearity of expectation, E x,y [f(x)f(y) 〈x, y〉] = n∑ i=1 ∑ S,T∈Nn f̂(S)f̂(T )E x [HS(x)xi]E y [ HT (y)yi...otherwise it takes the value 0. Similarly, Ey[ HT (y)yi] = 1 iff T = ei. 38 Part I Exact Query Complexity 39 Chapter 5 Testing Juntas We begin by studying the...1− 2e− 6m /2 = 1− 2e−O( √ n). The estimate ν̃ is a U-statistic with kernel ψ∗f . This kernel satisfies ‖ψ∗f − Eψ∗f‖∞ ≤ 2‖ψ∗f‖∞ = 2 √ 4n log(4n/3
1982-04-01
for Step 6h Command - Configuration FO, Fl, F6 , F4, F2 .................................................. ....... 309 C-15 Frequency Response of e/Fs...Configuration FO, Fl, F6 , F4, F2.. 312 C-16 Time History for Step Sh Command - Configuration L21, L71, L72, L73...505 T= 2 sec 2 F4 .465 4 sec F6 .453 6 sEc where F indicates unaugmented F-1l1A and the number following F indicates T2 in sec, except 0 : stable, 1
1983-09-13
4 T .. . 7 8 , -t I j: S" VA 4 ~ 0 7 C ) I* C S. 0 7 W-ei 9It 9. 0 T./COEF 0. 1333 C) 13:: 0 121) 0 5 3-: 0...a: ,-’:, .uIr.re’.l I ,:, !, IIF,,;r.,:’,e~ f cc,,trllir A R : i,:, of -,ny ot.le-r Media t’-di~ a 1-, or, 2 3 4 5 6. 7 8 3 0 S-.r OEF 0. O’° ).-. 0...F - - COMMOD I TY (U’ 1TS- ) (UilT .3.) f % L ATED ORMP’eFT. At.ITY r; :- - - FALT F:. 4 E-: - 4 7 402 5 8 . 5 3413. 1 7 A ’C EL 2n -, -- ". . ’
Magainin 2a - Induced Permeabilization of Phospholipid Vesicles
1991-01-02
flJ ə) fl) C rH -H 0) E M D e t e 1 0 0 % • 43 • fl) J3 0 C3...fl) +) ft-H to U4 EH RJ OP 43 o 4J H -H IS *M 0 0 fl) c to 0 • H O 4J O -H in 73 TJ h RJ 0 MH >t 43 fl) to TJ flj fl) fl) C...r H - H F r e t e r m O fl) VD TJ tp to G rt •rH r% f o l l o w : f 6 C F 1 O 43 0) to T J flJ fl) fl) C rH •H fl) E Ul
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wallrabe, Horst; Sun, Yuansheng; Fang, Xiaolan; Periasamy, Ammasi; Bloom, George
2012-03-01
With traditional 2-color Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) microscopy, valuable quantitative analyses can be conducted. Correlations of donor (D), acceptor (A) and their ratios (D:A) with energy transfer efficiency (E%) or distance (r) allows measurement of changes between control and experimental samples; also, clustered vs. random assembly of cellular components can be differentiated. Essentially, only the above three parameters D, A and D:A vs. E% are the basis for these deductions. 3-color FRET uses the same basic parameters, but exponentially expands the opportunities to quantify interrelationships among 3 cellular components. We investigated a number of questions based on the results of a triple combination (F1-F2-F3) of TFPNWASP/ Venus-IQGAP1/mCherry-Actin - all involved in the nucleation of actin - to apply the extensive analysis assay possible with 3-color FRET. How do changing N-WASP or IQGAP1 fluorescence levels affect actin fluorescence? What is the effect on E% of NWASP-actin by IQGAP1 or E% of IQGAP1-actin by N-WASP? These and other questions are explored in the context of all proteins of interest being in FRET distance vs. any two in the absence of the third. 4 cases are compared based on bleed-through corrected FRET: (1) all 3 interact, (2) only F1- F3 and F2-F3 [not F1-F2], (3) only F1-F2 and F2-F3 interact [not F1-F3], (4) only F1-F2 and F1-F3 interact [not F2-F3]. Other than describing the methodology in detail, several biologically relevant results are presented showing how E% (i.e. distance), fluorescence levels and ratios are affected in each of the cases. These correlations can only be observed in a 3-fluorophore combination. 3-color FRET will greatly expand the investigative range of quantitative analysis for the life-science researcher.
Fire Incident Reporting Manual
1984-02-01
Purpose 1-1 B. Scope 1-1 C. Procedures 1-1 D. Exclusions 1-3 E . Preparation 1-3 F. Information Requirements 1-4 CHAPTER 2 - INSTRUCTIONS FOR PREPARING DoD...Structure and Fire Data 2-16 4. Section D - Fire Protection Facilities (In Structures Only) 2-28 5. Section E - Losses 2-30 6. Section F - Times (24...Activities Program," February 21, 1976 ( e ) National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Standard 901, "Uniform Coding for Fire Protection," 1976 (f) NFPA
47 CFR 95.633 - Emission bandwidth.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... is 4 kHz. The authorized bandwidth for emission type A1D or A3E is 8 kHz. The authorized bandwidth for emission type F1D, G1D, F3E or G3E is 20 kHz. (b) The authorized bandwidth for any emission type transmitted by an R/C transmitter is 8 kHz. (c) The authorized bandwidth for emission type F3E or F2D...
47 CFR 95.633 - Emission bandwidth.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... is 4 kHz. The authorized bandwidth for emission type A1D or A3E is 8 kHz. The authorized bandwidth for emission type F1D, G1D, F3E or G3E is 20 kHz. (b) The authorized bandwidth for any emission type transmitted by an R/C transmitter is 8 kHz. (c) The authorized bandwidth for emission type F3E or F2D...
47 CFR 95.633 - Emission bandwidth.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... is 4 kHz. The authorized bandwidth for emission type A1D or A3E is 8 kHz. The authorized bandwidth for emission type F1D, G1D, F3E or G3E is 20 kHz. (b) The authorized bandwidth for any emission type transmitted by an R/C transmitter is 8 kHz. (c) The authorized bandwidth for emission type F3E or F2D...
Boiler Control Systems Oxygen Trim Systems Manual.
1983-02-01
F/ G 5/9 N EhhhhhhhmonsoI smhhhEmhhhhhh smhhhhhhhhhhh Ehh0h0010I-E1E FEmhhhhEmmhhhhhhI LL+4 -.Lm(m~mkl~~d - - ." " - , -, - - ’ - °. ,,_ ". . . b...PAGIES Ik NNITrG A9NC ORS7 Ir- e, 0) 1 SECURITY CLASS. (of K4* MPMf) Office, g &, Washington, DC 20360 Unclassified Naval Facilities Engineering Coand...1NPLJT SoNAI . S141NAL. f* FIR4GIb[CTIQNAL SCkEMIATC DICIAN A’ RLfL FOSITIOWINC- SY<STEM1 (FUUMArIC) PRESSURE PROC.ESS PIIN42 ATI 6 C~rEMASTERO F13UE
1994-09-30
DE LME NDO G E R A R D O MAR I GZA A I R F O R C E D E LMUNDO L I LY F E D E R I S NAVY D E LOACH B O B B Y D E A N A I R F ORCE D E LOGE B...YAN LAMON EAR LE JAME S ARTHUR EAR LEY KEN W EAR LEY R OB E R T WI L L IAM J R EAR LS M I CHAE L G EAR LS OMAR DALE EAR LY BE N JAMIN J R...8 9 B R OOK LYN E 0 4 2 2 F e b 8 2 KEN TON E 0 7 14 D e c 9 1 R OCKH I L L 0 0 2 1 4 J u l 8 1 T E XAS C I T Y E 0 6 24 Oc t 7 9
32 CFR 701.8 - Processing FOIA requests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... queues as they wish, however, at a minimum three processing tracks shall be established, all based on a... simple requests, one track for complex requests, and one track for expedited processing. Determinations as to whether a request is simple or complex shall be made by each DON activity. (2) DON activities...
1993-01-01
a4 a -- 0 a ,r 00 a.H Va CO u 0 0~ a. a . a 404~~ x- 4z. . . a a a. a~~~c. a WOw C6 Cr a D 00 - aa a a a3 a . Ca.~ ~ 0 acca rI a. az 0-. a 0 a 0 aD...4Ed V-4E ) F .4 ~ F 0.4 00. F4C n- F EL F: F3. xL O F-F,-.1~~~~F o)40 F en0 F (F 1. F 0 4 4 4 4 41 F6 F6 F8 a F6. 6 a 444~ F) 44 F) 4 0 4~~~ ccFF 0
Spectral Deferred Corrections for Parabolic Partial Differential Equations
2015-06-08
n− 1. (5.1) The inverse DFT is given by the formula fj = n−1∑ k=0 f̂` e 2πi`j/n, j = 0, . . . , n− 1 (5.2) (see, e.g., [23, 33]). The n complex...n−1 2∑ `=−n−1 2 f̂` e 2πi`j/n, j = 0, . . . , n− 1. (5.4) While the forms (5.1) and (5.2) are the standard representation for the DFT, the forms...samples on [0, 1], then (5.4) can be restated as f(xj) = n−1 2∑ `=−n−1 2 f̂` e 2πi`tj , j = 0, . . . , n− 1. (5.5) The corresponding trigonometric
48 CFR 239.7306 - Solicitation provision and contract clause.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... TECHNOLOGY Requirements for Information Relating to Supply Chain Risk 239.7306 Solicitation provision and contract clause. (a) Insert the provision at 252.239-7017, Notice of Supply Chain Risk, in all... as a supply. (b) Insert the clause at 252.239-7018, Supply Chain Risk, in all solicitations and...
1978-08-01
ow epC, Oj f0L o 64w 6* +*’r4- {(lo.d, J*t*. M .C , f. * Stpm ". I47.,, 08%~~~ (3u~t 1 CY4 p.,4 5sf- Stc. ’ few&4. I tVC 100 ’ eX4 F:’/POCJ FIDV&4, 4Z...IESIT CiHAR1( * NATIONAL BUREAU OF S ANOAS- 1 % 3 *A N 7 o .. .. Vc " w .. BLACKSTONE RIVER BASIN LU WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS 3,4., 4• . PATCH...report. 19I. KEY WORDS (Coninue on reverse aide # 1 01*0064IOWuEIel 1 ~0F 6? l0eAk M111I..o) DAMS, INSPECTION, DAM SAFETY, Blackstone River Basin
Acute Effects of Anticholinesterase Agents on Pupillary Function
1986-09-16
Neuropharmacology, 24(4):325-328, 1985. Richardson, J.S., T.G. Mattio and E. Giacobini, Amitriptyline and imipramine inhibit the release of...Gidcobini 217, 785-2185 Satellite meeting of Intl. Soc. Neuro - - chem., Iraklion, Crete, Greece 5/26-29/85 THE ISOLATEO IRIS AS A :IODEL OF AG13G...104 t" lil 9( f H aid "Itti .&i kilo, Sf61014 WR(I Artv 400.4*f914 4 1qitlt il.911 l eo 14 11 1..4 14 h *ttl4 4fotIogoto tIritl f ol r e s ("ol i 46 f
Patoka Lake Foundation Report. Book 4. Appendix D. Contractor Drill Logs.
1983-04-01
IJK1 f°- ..... . .0 e". a I’e ~ .1 , 34.. 411 go-- t.__ 4p//, /, -.z fr FNC PORN 1836 PREVIOUS EDITIONS ARE OBSOLETE PROJECT HOLE NO. MAR71 t...AE OSOLTS. PROECT 4OL NO BEEI 71 /A*I .. ~ ~ ISO LOCATIONIO (C.U4.i. N, TII~ .3____________________________ 1. -ROJET IA. siOTAND NTMPER orE BOi E S...IN ~ .. d N.1 K. SGAUEOINPO. R I.*.R. f.4~k . T Od OF HOLELVTO LEGEN ", UIIC , CL •% COE ,p JNP LIt ./" /yIf/ -z- 8MNG PORN # 18 36 PREVIOUS EDI
Buckley ANGB, Colorado. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.
1983-09-19
911. 91. 911, 94.1 9.1. 914.1 9,4. 94.1 9c( ;J.t 92.1 92.8 93.1’ 94.? 94.2! 94 11.6 91.6 911.7 91.7i 91.8’ 94.7l 9 .9 95.9 9.19 9.1 & Kc ’ 3 .1 92.1 .F9...1 7, El.....’ (X) l I s ![ .i N. Oh.. N e N.. .4 Nw.~e wil Teq.. * 6 ’ I. N .... ti0P 132F * TeO . 2 11.. , 1 ... .. 4 1.. S.97 • , - -4 a It maml Wd
Emulsions and rectal formulations containing myrrh essential oil for better patient compliance.
Etman, M; Amin, M; Nada, A H; Shams-Eldin, M; Salama, O
2011-06-01
Myrrh has long been used for its circulatory, disinfectant, analgesic, antirheumatic, antidiabetic, and schistosomicidal properties. Myrrh essential oil (MEO) was extracted from the oleo-gum resin of Commiphora molmol and formulated into emulsions and suppositories to mask/avoid its bitter taste. Three oil-in-water emulsions (E1-E3) were formulated and taste was evaluated by 10 volunteers. Particle size distribution was measured and correlated with excipients and the method of preparation. Physical and chemical stability testing was carried out for the optimum formulation (E2). Seven suppository formulations were investigated (F1-F7). Suppocire AML (F1) and Suppocire CM (F2) were chosen as fatty bases, and polyethylene glycol (PEG) 1500 (F3), PEG 4000 (F4), and a PEG blend (50% PEG 6000 + 30% PEG 1500 + 20% PEG 400) (F5) were chosen as water-soluble bases. A blend of PEG 1500 and Suppocire CM was also used (F7). Camphor (5%) was added to PEG 1500 (F6). Disintegration time, release rate, DSC, fracture points, and weight uniformity were evaluated. The overall average bitterness for formulations E1, E2, and E3 was 6.44, 4.15, and 3.45, respectively. Suppositories containing Suppocire AML had the fastest disintegration time (1.5 min) with dissolution efficiency (DE) of 56.8%. F3 containing PEG 1500 had a fast disintegration time of 2.5 min and maximum DE of 93.5%. The PEG blend had satisfactory release: (DE = 90.9%). A mixed fatty and water-soluble base (F7) had a disintegration time of 5 min and low DE (33.4%). A stable MEO emulsion with acceptable taste was formulated to improve patient acceptance and compliance. F3 suppositories yielded satisfactory results, while formulations containing fatsoluble bases exhibited poor release.
Miyasaka, Hitoshi; Motokawa, Natsuko; Atsuumi, Ryo; Kamo, Hiromichi; Asai, Yuichiro; Yamashita, Masahiro
2011-01-21
A series of paddlewheel diruthenium(ii, ii) complexes with various fluorine-substituted benzoate ligands were isolated as THF adducts and structurally characterized: [Ru(2)(F(x)PhCO(2))(4)(THF)(2)] (F(x)PhCO(2)(-) = o-fluorobenzoate, o-F; m-fluorobenzoate, m-F; p-fluorobenzoate, p-F; 2,6-difluorobenzoate, 2,6-F(2); 3,4-difluorobenzoate, 3,4-F(2); 3,5-difluorobenzoate, 3,5-F(2); 2,3,4-trifluorobenzoate, 2,3,4-F(3); 2,3,6-trifluorobenzoate, 2,3,6-F(3); 2,4,5-trifluorobenzoate, 2,4,5-F(3); 2,4,6-trifluorobenzoate, 2,4,6-F(3); 3,4,5-trifluorobenzoate, 3,4,5-F(3); 2,3,4,5-tetrafluorobenzoate, 2,3,4,5-F(4); 2,3,5,6-tetrafluorobenzoate, 2,3,5,6-F(4); pentafluorobenzoate, F(5)). By adding fluorine atoms on the benzoate ligands, it was possible to tune the redox potential (E(1/2)) for [Ru(2)(II,II)]/[Ru(2)(II,III)](+) over a wide range of potentials from -40 mV to 350 mV (vs. Ag/Ag(+) in THF). 2,3,6-F(3), 2,3,4,5-F(4), 2,3,5,6-F(4) and F(5) were relatively air-stable compounds even though they are [Ru(2)(II,II)] species. The redox potential in THF was dependent on an electronic effect rather than on a structural (steric) effect of the o-F atoms, although more than one substituent in the m- and p-positions shifted E(1/2) to higher potentials in relation to the general Hammett equation. A quasi-Hammett parameter for an o-F atom (σ(o)) was estimated to be ∼0.2, and a plot of E(1/2)vs. a sum of Hammett parameters including σ(o) was linear. In addition, the HOMO energy levels, which was calculated based on atomic coordinates of solid-state structures, as well as the redox potential were affected by adding F atoms. Nevertheless, a steric contribution stabilizing their static structures in the solid state was present in addition to the electronic effect. On the basis of the electronic effect, the redox potential of these complexes is correlated to the HOMO energy level, and the electronic effect of F atoms is the main factor controlling the ionization potential of the complexes with ligands free from the rotational constraint, i.e. complexes in solution.
48 CFR 227.7104 - Contracts under the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 227.7104 Section 227.7104 Federal Acquisition Regulations... Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. (a) Use the clause at 252.227-7018, Rights in Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, when technical data or...
48 CFR 227.7104 - Contracts under the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 227.7104 Section 227.7104 Federal Acquisition Regulations... Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. (a) Use the clause at 252.227-7018, Rights in Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, when technical data or...
48 CFR 227.7104 - Contracts under the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. 227.7104 Section 227.7104 Federal Acquisition Regulations... Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. (a) Use the clause at 252.227-7018, Rights in Noncommercial Technical Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, when technical data or...
Muthu, Valliappan; Sehgal, Inderpaul Singh; Dhooria, Sahajal; Aggarwal, Ashutosh N; Agarwal, Ritesh
2018-06-21
The role of recombinant A.fumigatus (rAsp) antigens in the diagnosis of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) has not been systematically evaluated. Herein, we evaluate the utility of recombinant A.fumigatus (rAsp) antigens in diagnosing ABPA. We systematically reviewed the PubMed, EmBase, and Scopus databases for studies evaluating rAsp antigens in ABPA. The QUADAS-2 tool and the GRADE approach were used to assess the risk of bias and the quality of evidence, respectively. The diagnostic performance of IgE or skin test against rAsp f1, f2, f3, f4, f6, and their combination was evaluated separately for ABPA complicating asthma or cystic fibrosis (CF), using an HSROC model. The reference standard for diagnosing ABPA was the composite (clinical, radiological, immunological) criteria. Our search yielded 26 studies (n=1,694) and 17 studies (n=1,131) for inclusion in the systematic review and meta-analysis, respectively. In asthmatics, the pooled sensitivity for diagnosing ABPA was best for IgE against a combination of rAsp f1 or f3 (96.7%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 87.6-99.2). The pooled specificity for diagnosing ABPA was highest (99.2%; 95% CI, 88.2-99.9) for IgE against a combination of f4 or f6. In CF patients, the pooled sensitivity of rAsp f1 or f3 was 93.3% (95% CI, 55.2-99.9) while the pooled specificity of rAsp f4 or f6 was 93.9% (95% CI, 68.8-99.9). The quality of evidence was low as per the GRADE approach. A combination of IgE against rAsp antigens (f1, f2, f3, f4, f6) are likely to be helpful in the diagnosis of ABPA. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
The Numerical Calculation of Traveling Wave Solutions of Nonlinear Parabolic Equations on the Line.
1984-02-01
kc(i~~ +’~ which can be rewrittenw W (T is) Ic (sic) - (+ Using the convolution formulas and the expression for the inverse transform of-I (se e.g...2i 2f 1 2 c) + 4f1 1- f 3] 1 We now have: f ) (0,0,4) ; (2.17) f2 3(U) (0,0,0*) x 3 -, (0,,) . 3u ’ The inverse transform of (2.15) is given by: E
Heat Transfer and Thermal Stability of Alternative Aircraft Fuels. Volume 2. Appendices.
1983-11-01
eoea a aS mOOaeO 0OO eoO eoo oee I:pp ’D ed.V 5 0-4 * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ OC Cd Fr .04F-V4,FFq.CdSIF0ddF-0-.VW4 o0 F- 01 w* .40 v A4F -C 4...oo a oft oees 0 e s sD1 .ees,, a r . .4.%44Zci.4 por.. 0 -~~~C vi 9 1oN,.ee~ * 0 0 a 0a a g 0l as e Cc,. a aa C. Ca 0 C, 0 c,0 c 00 0 011a 00 I 0 .0
U.S. EPA, Pesticide Product Label, MONOPROP MOLD KILLER, 08/28/1986
2011-04-21
... The. 4t.poe. of e~t1 baa illl .... i- 1ary lan4fill or by iatineration. or. ... ( •• f ( I A,.Iy It poe"", 'Jlt!1' tGn 'Gf • 'r .. 4h 'nrage I>v 'fIr:lIln!l·~'t" fn .. "~ I. It !f<>f!lI. ...
1993-01-01
Fa U ~ 4 0 F0 co00 F 0~ 0~~~ z CC FF; F F (0 FEFn E3 >w 40 pa P4 PO FPi 40~~ ~ 0 HC F F 0 Z 4 F < OF C Z N N z w to F3 C) i3Z 0 CO Q F. 0 r. F0 0 4h...3331*7.30-.4 0 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ a m x3 Fx3. (- F3 3 0 (3 .~0 IHC ~ - r 2 00 0.00 F ’> F .0-.. 0co 33.. 13 F 0 1 ~ CO F- 3 F - 2431~~~~~~~~~~~ U)4X 0o F...0( F3 00 0 n ;r3 000 r0o ( -- N r.’- m -- a, m w "D 00 N C> (n0r 0 0) 0 0 , ~ 1 (0.5 0 4CNC, i n ) ~ 04 3 I- F I~~~~C C,) F 0 0o’e
1970-01-29
1.4 a,? 42 /.0f 48 1.4*1 13.1 NNE ed ,~ *1 ., 111.2 TNE 1.j 142 Io . 2 ,, 7( ENE 0 4~ 0 ?1.I EST ~ ~ ~ * , t* e,6 , SE lob .0 .6 1.2 1.0) * 6 ISO , 11.4...47 48 55 56 % WINDfill" SPEED .. L . 1.4 11.4 :~~ 4 e107SO at OA .4 *1 ISO to 4 Z8Ř J,6 .- 4..) 1 .a. .1 4I .’.o I -1 1 0,, 7.’ Li,7 21.0 27.7 10.1 5...93e. 94*, 924,.90 95, 93. 1j 9’, >_ o 73,! e2, 8 ,3 87, 89,-. 89, 9j, 92. 92o. 9*, 95,. 93, 96. 96, 96,. 9*, __ 2__ 9* 9. 790 ISo 1 1, :6:1 8:o: 1
1981-02-10
76.,a41 7S.4 ?R.4’ 7B.q. .4 . I 78.uf 7-.t- . .I 2 V_ 77.71 77.71 72.2 f6 . I 7 -.. 4 78. . ,= , 9Ss 7. 7. ’ 7 .Z 7 7 79.Z 79.2 79.1-3; 77. 7 79.a: 75...cof-. .4r E0C >j a- -- =* C.j C . = ± (i3e!’ afl o oc- g Nta.. a .o.r3azdflloD2Coa.aoc a- f~ie~~z. n.!. G a 4 . ACca . . rx Co.--&Z3Er,0C i1DaI Da...6-=.1 66.4 ;-’ -0 o-b 915 c.01 is 99.2i 90.7 99.7 9 9. 1 99.7s. JO 200 1 5 01 6 ,. 1 66.4! .69 F6 . 1 ? 1 .61 976.1if 97.r1 99. 1 9gs 999 .39 a c .3 c
1990-11-21
VOLUME 16 -mg iis veet n ’ O V-15 19910 -. 4 EDIOR Doad .Wofr I~ ~ ~~ez ’PSRBNSAEMnT E u g ene________________________________________ E .H l e rn...Apraed~f2 pblicrelase REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE O A0QrQV & 9e~~~~a~~~.aww~~~Mxi or~ &W.m~ OVW oft f"t9t 9,f9~b~ 4WcN6W WIU i o i 1 19 i 900S S.t 4t0...80111 -0 m i,0 a.1 oe O &. I qu.+ A o lmZ.43r. 4 tO MI tP oc 09 4a0.a wt *4 4K. saw** A’ " AVD0" (O0t7C464.ww:= oc ’as"j. 1. AGENCY USE ONLY (L+w wWn
Connective Tissue Growth Factor (CTGF) as a Regulator of Lactogenic Differentiation
2009-06-09
1 1.62 Myeloid leukemia factor 1, Mlf1 1.57 ADAMTS-l4 1.55 E2F transcription factor, E2F2 1.44 Tensin 4 -1.5 BCL2/adenovirus E1B interacting... Mlf1 1.57 ADAMTS-l4 1.55 Ras homolog gene family, member B, RhoB 1.48 Cell Differentiation-associated Wingless-type MMTV integration site family...B, relB 1.92 Myeloid leukemia factor 1, Mlf1 1.57 Growth Factor, Catalytic Activity-associated Dual specificity protein phosphatase 8, Dusp8
Canada’s First National Interoperability Baseline Assessment: CPRC 91052 Project Study
2012-03-01
Time and Leadership. 33 Y on ge S t ., S ui te 4 20 , T or on to , O nt ar io C an ad a, M 5E 1 G 4 #91052 T A B L E O F C O N T E N T ...28 Essential Guidance 30 #91052 L I S T O F F I G U R E S P 1 Demographics...30 #91052 1 I N T H I S S T U D Y M e t h o d o l o g y This study was based on a web survey of 105
Kim, Dong Hyun; Choe, Yearn Seong; Choi, Joon Young; Lee, Kyung-Han; Kim, Byung-Tae
2011-05-01
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) has been an important cholinergic factor for the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), because of reduced AChE activity in the postmortem brains of AD patients. We previously developed 5,7-dihydro-3-(2-(1-(2-[(18)F]fluorobenzyl)-4-piperidinyl)ethyl)-6H-pyrrolo(3,2,f)-1,2-benzisoxazol-6-one (2-[(18)F]fluoro-CP-118,954) for in vivo studies of AChE in mice. In the present study, we automated the synthesis of 2-[(18)F]fluoro-CP-118,954 for the routine use and evaluated the radioligand by microPET and ex vivo Cerenkov luminescence imaging of mouse AChE. 4-[(18)F]Fluoro-donepezil, another AChE inhibitor, was used for comparison. Automated syntheses of 2-[(18)F]fluoro-CP-118,954 and 4-[(18)F]fluoro-donepezil resulted in high radiochemical yields (25-33% and 30-40%) and high specific activity (27.1-35.4 and 29.7-37.3 GBq/μmol). Brain microPET images of two ICR mice injected with 2-[(18)F]fluoro-CP-118,954 demonstrated high uptake in the striatum (ROI analysis: 5.1 %ID/g for the first 30 min and 4.1 %ID/g for another 30 min), and a blocking study with injection of CP-118,954 into one of the mice at 30 min after radioligand injection led to complete blocking of radioligand uptake in the striatum (ROI analysis: 1.9 %ID/g), whereas (18)F-labeled donepezil did not show specific uptake in the striatum. In another set of experiments, the brain tissues (striatum, parietal cortex, frontal cortex and cerebellum) were excised after brain microPET/CT imaging of mouse injected with 2-[(18)F]fluoro-CP-118,954, and a high striatal uptake was also detected in ex vivo optical and microPET images (ROI analysis: 1.4 %ID/g) and in γ-counting data (2.1 %ID/g at 50 min post-injection) of the brain tissues. Taken together, these results demonstrated that 2-[(18)F]fluoro-CP-118,954 specifically binds to AChE in mouse brains. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Marre, D; Ferreira, I H; Bridier, A; Björeland, A; Svensson, H; Dutreix, A; Chavaudra, J
2000-12-01
Absorbed dose determination with thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLDs) generally relies on calibration in 60Co gamma-ray reference beams. The energy correction factor fCo(E) for electron beams takes into account the difference between the response of the TLD in the beam of energy E and in the 60Co gamma-ray beam. In this work, fCo(E) was evaluated for an LiF powder irradiated in electron beams of 6 to 20 MeV (Varian 2300C/D) and 10 to 50 MeV (Racetrack MM50), and its variation with electron energy, TLD size and nature of the surrounding medium was also studied for LiF powder. The results have been applied to the ESTRO-EQUAL mailed dosimetry quality assurance network. Monte Carlo calculations (EGS4, PENELOPE) and experiments have been performed for the LiF powder (rho = 1.4 g cm3) (DTL937, Philitech, France), read on a home made reader and a PCL3 automatic reader (Fimel, France). The TLDs were calibrated using Fricke dosimetry and compared with three ionization chambers (NE2571, NACP02, ROOS). The combined uncertainties in the experimental fCo(E) factors determined in this work are less than about 0.4% (1 SD), which is appreciably smaller than the uncertainties up to 1.4% (1 SD) reported for other calculated values in the literature. Concerning the Varian 2300C/D beams, the measured fCo(E) values decrease from 1.065 to 1.049 +/- 0.004 (1 SD) when the energy at depth in water increases from 2.6 to 14.1 MeV; the agreement with Monte Carlo calculations is better than 0.5%. For the Racetrack MM50 pulsed-scanned beams, the average experimental value of fCo(E) is 1.071 +/- 0.005 (1 SD) for a mean electron energy at depth Ez ranging from 4.3 to 36.3 MeV: fCo(E) is up to 2% higher for the MM50 beams than for the 2300C/D beams in the range of the tested energies. The energy correction factor for LiF powder (3 mm diameter and 15 mm length) varies with beam quality and type (pulsed or pulsed-scanning), cavity size and nature of the surrounding medium. The fCo(E) values obtained for the LiF powder (3 mm diameter and 15 mm length) irradiated in water, have been applied to the EQUAL external audit network, leading to a good agreement between stated and measured doses, with a mean value of 1.002 +/- 0.022 (1 SD), for 170 beam outputs checked (36 electron beam energies) in 13 'reference' radiotherapy centres in Europe. Such fCo(E) data improve the accuracy of the absorbed dose TLD determination in electron beams, justifying their use for quality control in radiotherapy.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fox, Lyndsey R.; Stukins, Stephen; Hill, Tom; Bailey, Haydon
2018-01-01
This paper describes four new Cenozoic, deep-water benthic foraminifera from the reference collections at the Natural History Museum in London. The focus is on selected calcareous taxa that are of stratigraphical and/or palaeoecological significance for academic and industrial-related activities. Alabamina heyae (urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:1E8A66E9-1F4C-4B61-BA97-6E0ECCD0173E), Nonion cepa (urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:9F36350A-1E49-4D69-B2CC-C83F343E2952), Uvigerina kingi (urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:C36C89C2-2E65-4FF6-9368-C169B4591995) and Lenticulina stewarti (urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:485AE871-CECA-44E8-ABD1-BAE2961FFD59) are described with new illustrations. Their biostratigraphic and palaeoecological significance is briefly discussed.
HESCOMP. The Helicopter Sizing and Performance Computer Program. User’s Manual. Revision 2.
1979-10-01
uruieGlwChr)Pr f7 GO TO4100 ja I IDS CXS!G-CXS!GL* (1 CXS!G;I.CXS!G ~~~~ IF.X.T I X. NE. 0) jrWRTEi6.q90u IF XOL2MT(I)- CXS!G/CTPSL XCT2ILq II CTPSL 660...1 AO F ( F7 ~ ~ ~ 1 -I-3weN C3 77 C e0uffM~m1~asa~Y ~ rC -13 cS., 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ G 7CI4I*11t~~l~ I TI.V’,ITt- Figure 4-62. PARA Function, Flow...7-255 L C4SA. a ACA ANA ACCA I r- I r4. .m Q. . 7.f kJim p41 oml Ni Nii ’e N~6 a. aQa OL a -0 c .. -7 4.;- C~ 4c>.Q a,1 ci ~ ~ % a cam p- F. . a a a
Parametric Instability, Inverse Cascade, and the 1/f Range of Solar-Wind Turbulence.
Chandran, Benjamin D G
2018-02-01
In this paper, weak turbulence theory is used to investigate the nonlinear evolution of the parametric instability in 3D low- β plasmas at wavelengths much greater than the ion inertial length under the assumption that slow magnetosonic waves are strongly damped. It is shown analytically that the parametric instability leads to an inverse cascade of Alfvén wave quanta, and several exact solutions to the wave kinetic equations are presented. The main results of the paper concern the parametric decay of Alfvén waves that initially satisfy e + ≫ e - , where e + and e - are the frequency ( f ) spectra of Alfvén waves propagating in opposite directions along the magnetic field lines. If e + initially has a peak frequency f 0 (at which fe + is maximized) and an "infrared" scaling f p at smaller f with -1 < p < 1, then e + acquires an f -1 scaling throughout a range of frequencies that spreads out in both directions from f 0 . At the same time, e - acquires an f -2 scaling within this same frequency range. If the plasma parameters and infrared e + spectrum are chosen to match conditions in the fast solar wind at a heliocentric distance of 0.3 astronomical units (AU), then the nonlinear evolution of the parametric instability leads to an e + spectrum that matches fast-wind measurements from the Helios spacecraft at 0.3 AU, including the observed f -1 scaling at f ≳ 3 × 10 -4 Hz. The results of this paper suggest that the f -1 spectrum seen by Helios in the fast solar wind at f ≳ 3 × 10 -4 Hz is produced in situ by parametric decay and that the f -1 range of e + extends over an increasingly narrow range of frequencies as r decreases below 0.3 AU. This prediction will be tested by measurements from the Parker Solar Probe .
Loring AFB, Maine. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.
1983-08-12
8217rHE ( S.9V1CE/-At "- 7-c L-) T’ AFR ME 73-62 J A’, PERCENTAGE FREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE 1 , ?-17’ FROM HOURLY OBSERVATIONS) iso S. <A’- ’fVE 1. , 39.1...142976_ 33977 3A.9 5.5 90 S O 22.1 02? 9 ? W.8.b 0P56 3~3~33~7.786 898 41013 go *~O..669019 22619 ZS.21tV.521 69 .51 68.3 : ,-Ni V4 7 L AL CL IMA TOLCu...8217 I f4 64 4/ e .’ .1 .2 1 .3 .2 .21 C 93 93’ S. 4 1 .11 .2 . , .4 . .1 ISO 1513 -f 79 1 .’ .7 .6’ :6 *5 . 7’ *1 I 256 256 ’ 7, / 77 .0 .2 .Q .91 .8 .e
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sahu, Nilima; Mondal, Sudipa; Naskar, Kaushik; Mahapatra, Ananya Das; Gupta, Suvroma; Slawin, Alexandra M. Z.; Chattopadhyay, Debprasad; Sinha, Chittaranjan
2018-03-01
[SMXsbnd Ndbnd Nsbnd C6H3sbnd (p-OH)(msbnd CHO)] (1) reacts with ArNH2 to synthesize Schiff bases, [SMXsbnd Ndbnd Nsbnd C6H3sbnd (psbnd OH)(msbnd HCdbnd Nsbnd Ar)] (Ar = sbnd C6H5 (2a), sbnd C6H4sbnd psbnd CH3 (2b), sbnd C6H4sbnd psbnd OCH3 (2c), sbnd C6H4sbnd psbnd Cl (2d), sbnd C6H4sbnd psbnd NO2 (2e), sbnd C10H7 (2f)) and the products have been assessed for antibacterial properties against Gram positive bacteria, B. subtillis: IC50 (μg/ml): 39.2 (1), 60.1 (2a), 64.0 (2b), 85.6 (2c), 55.1 (2d), 88.4 (2e) and 65.1 (2f); and Gram negative bacteria, E. coli: IC50 (μg/ml): 159.0 (1), 151.4 (2a), 155.3 (2b), 140 (2c), 156.0 (2d), 153.5 (2e) and 157 (2f). The cell line toxicity (Vero cells) has also been evaluated with these compounds and EC50 (μg/ml) values are 129.9 (1), 74.2 (2a) and 93.0 (2b), 191.9 (2c), 99.1 (2d), 93.2 (2e) and 62.0 (2f). The anti-viral efficiency against harpies virus (HSVsbnd 1F ATCC-733) infection demonstrates that the compound 1 has highest selectivity index (CC50/EC50), 5.06 than the compounds 2a-f (CC50/EC50: 1.18 (2a), 1.42 (2b), 3.50 (2c), 1.45 (2d), 1.58 (2e), 1.29 (2f)). The compounds have been spectroscopically characterized and the structural confirmation has been established in one case by single crystal X-ray diffraction studies of 2c. In silico Molecular Docking study has been done using optimized geometries of the compounds to search the most favored binding mode of these drugs and hence useful to explain their competitive drug efficiency.
48 CFR 752.7018 - Health and accident coverage for USAID participant trainees.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... Directive System (ADS) 253.5.6b, the Contractor shall enroll all non-U.S. trainees (hereinafter referred to... information regarding each HAC program contractor, including contact information, and a supply of the PDF... participating in a training program financed by USAID, and that enrollment continues in full force and effect...
48 CFR 752.7018 - Health and accident coverage for USAID participant trainees.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... Directive System (ADS) 253.5.6b, the Contractor shall enroll all non-U.S. trainees (hereinafter referred to... information regarding each HAC program contractor, including contact information, and a supply of the PDF... participating in a training program financed by USAID, and that enrollment continues in full force and effect...
48 CFR 752.7018 - Health and accident coverage for USAID participant trainees.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... Directive System (ADS) 253.5.6b, the Contractor shall enroll all non-U.S. trainees (hereinafter referred to... information regarding each HAC program contractor, including contact information, and a supply of the PDF... participating in a training program financed by USAID, and that enrollment continues in full force and effect...
48 CFR 752.7018 - Health and accident coverage for USAID participant trainees.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... Directive System (ADS) 253.5.6b, the Contractor shall enroll all non-U.S. trainees (hereinafter referred to... information regarding each HAC program contractor, including contact information, and a supply of the PDF... participating in a training program financed by USAID, and that enrollment continues in full force and effect...
E2F8 as a Novel Therapeutic Target for Lung Cancer
Park, Sin-Aye; Platt, James; Lee, Jong Woo; López-Giráldez, Francesc; Herbst, Roy S.
2015-01-01
Background: The E2F members have been divided into transcription activators (E2F1-E2F3) and repressors (E2F4-E2F8). E2F8 with E2F7 has been known to play an important physiologic role in embryonic development and cell cycle regulation by repressing E2F1. However, the function of E2F8 in cancer cells is unknown. Methods: E2F8 expression was assessed by immunoblotting or immunofluorescence staining in human lung cancer (LC) cells and tissues from LC patients (n = 45). Cell proliferation, colony formation, and invasion analysis were performed to evaluate the role of E2F8 in LC. Microarray analysis was used to determine the target genes of E2F8. The regulation of E2F8 on the expression of ubiquitin-like PHD and RING domain-containing 1 (UHRF1), one of E2F8 target genes, was determined using chromatin immunoprecipitation and promoter activity assays. Human LC xenograft models were used to determine the effects of inhibiting E2F8 by siRNAs (n = 7 per group) or antisense morpholino (n = 8 per group) on tumor growth. Survival was analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method and group differences by the Student’s t test. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: LC tumors overexpressed E2F8 compared with normal lung tissues. Depletion of E2F8 inhibited cell proliferation and tumor growth. E2F8 knockdown statistically significantly reduced the expression of UHRF1 (~60%-70%, P < .001), and the direct binding of E2F8 on the promoter of UHRF1 was identified. Kaplan-Meier analysis with a public database showed prognostic significance of aberrant E2F8 expression in LC (HR = 1.91 95% CI = 1.21 to 3.01 in chemo-naïve patients, P = .0047). Conclusions: We demonstrated that E2F8 is overexpressed in LC and is required for the growth of LC cells. These findings implicate E2F8 as a novel therapeutic target for LC treatment. PMID:26089541
77 FR 3590 - Registration of Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants; Correction
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-01-25
...--REGISTRATION Sec. 3.1 [Corrected] 0 2. On page 2626 in the left column, in Sec. 3.1 Definitions, in paragraph (f), ``4s(e), 4s(f), 4s(h), 4s(i), 4s(j), 4s(k) or 4s(l) of the Act.'' is corrected to read ``4s(e), 4s(f), 4s(g), 4s(h), 4s(i), 4s(j), 4s(k) or 4s(l) of the Act.'' PART 23--[CORRECTED] 0 3. On page...
Li, Wenji; Su, Zheng-Yuan; Guo, Yue; Zhang, Chengyue; Wu, Renyi; Gao, Linbo; Zheng, Xi; Du, Zhi-Yun; Zhang, Kun; Kong, Ah-Ng
2018-02-19
The carcinogenesis of prostate cancer (PCa) in TRAMP model is highly correlated with hypermethylation in the promoter region of Nrf2 and the accompanying reduced transcription of Nrf2 and its regulated detoxifying genes. We aimed to investigate the effects of (3E,5E)-3,5-bis-(3,4,5-trimethoxybenzylidene)-tetrahydro-thiopyran-4-one (F10) and (3E,5E)-3,5-bis-(3,4,5-trimethoxy-benzylidene)-tetrahydropyran-4-one (E10), two synthetic curcumin derivatives, on restoring Nrf2 activity in TRAMP C1 cells. HepG2-C8 cells transfected with an antioxidant-response element (ARE)-luciferase vector were treated with F10, E10, curcumin, and sulforaphane (SFN) to compare their effects on Nrf2-ARE pathways. We performed real-time quantitative PCR and Western blotting to investigate the effects of F10 and E10 on Nrf2, correlated phase II detoxification genes. We also measured expression and activity of DNMTand HDAC enzymes. Enrichment of H3K27me3 on the promoter region of Nrf2 was explored with a chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay. Methylation of the CpG region in Nrf2 promoter was doubly examined by bisulfite genomic sequencing (BGS) and methylation DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP). Compared with curcumin and SFN, F10 is more potent in activating Nrf2-ARE pathways. Both F10 and E10 enhanced level of Nrf2 and the correlated phase II detoxifying genes. BGS and MeDIP assays indicated that F10 but not E10 hypomethylated the Nrf2 promoter. F10 also downregulated the protein level of DNMT1, DNMT3a, DNMT3b, HDAC1, HDAC4, and HDAC7 and the activity of DNMTs and HDACs. F10 but not E10 effectively reduced the accumulation of H3k27me3 on the promoter of Nrf2. F10 and E10 can activate the Nrf2-ARE pathway and increase the level of Nrf2 and correlated phase II detoxification genes. The reactivation effect on Nrf2 by F10 in TRAMP C1 may come from demethylation, decrease of HDACs, and inhibition of H3k27me3 accumulation.
Banerjee, Bidisha; Goss, Dixie J.
2014-01-01
Eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF) 4F binding to mRNA is the first committed step in cap-dependent protein synthesis. Barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) employs a cap-independent mechanism of translation initiation that is mediated by a structural BYDV translation element (BTE) located in the 3′-UTR of its mRNA. eIF4F bound the BTE and a translationally inactive mutant with high affinity, thus questioning the role of eIF4F in translation of BYDV. To examine the effects of eIF4F in BYDV translation initiation, BTE mutants with widely different in vitro translation efficiencies ranging from 5 to 164% compared with WT were studied. Using fluorescence anisotropy to obtain quantitative data, we show 1) the equilibrium binding affinity (complex stability) correlated well with translation efficiency, whereas the “on” rate of binding did not; 2) other unidentified proteins or small molecules in wheat germ extract prevented eIF4F binding to mutant BTE but not WT BTE; 3) BTE mutant-eIF4F interactions were found to be both enthalpically and entropically favorable with an enthalpic contribution of 52–90% to ΔG° at 25 °C, suggesting that hydrogen bonding contributes to stability; and 4) in contrast to cap-dependent and tobacco etch virus internal ribosome entry site interaction with eIF4F, poly(A)-binding protein did not increase eIF4F binding. Further, the eIF4F bound to the 3′ BTE with higher affinity than for either m7G cap or tobacco etch virus internal ribosome entry site, suggesting that the 3′ BTE may play a role in sequestering host cell initiation factors and possibly regulating the switch from replication to translation. PMID:24379412
Detection of Translational Equivalence
2001-05-01
13L_6�4 1 5 68739 :;pE6 9 C:@O7365 H8735$:XF87fES>132�E6T9:> :;9`?�C:’¿ � dTÀÄE~;W9C:’> M739 E1)132x9C:@1 65$:;9;H�8;9 >ES6...Y47 @O4 HR@O739 :<JH8;-E65�7c<RAT6873eE~4ÈF> 1 5 > 73e’e?E65�9 :4C6RE~Q$H: `®�CREO;EO;’�:;9 EP@P@SH8;9 > M739 :<�TAY736�: U873e’FR
Calculations Pertaining to the Energy Balance and Plasma Motions in the Ionosphere.
1979-11-01
CFNSITY e306!O0r 36 TuTAL TUN f)FN ITY 0000000r )0 PHOTOLLFCTReN SPEC TRUM 6E12*4 o1382E 01 01116E 01 *1120SE Of’ 92qA7F Or *4!09E On o257OF 00 04936E 00...0000 01 r0r04 0 m 0cm 7 0 > Q~x zaw - a , ON a0w,nq 1 ’ CL m - - -- r 0 10 ’’&-I 4),W4’~ Ifn mteqM 0 Inn ~E.91 ak ’ PO ’a O’f)’O rO O IsL £.rX IV
1990-01-01
w ui 3j W3A b a w ww w w u i U j L A u a w Wa 4*to a o a N C4 anL (a "Cc cm em an a aD a A a GOO F6 46 404 S. >0 I.J man com 04 R 12 CM e4cc ~ m I...I WC: I co r aCCa 001 I-I 0. 0 NCJ o #1.U0 1-- 44 4 -4W C )C (JN -4~y 001 4 4 1I~ C’I1- mmcoco 44 I I. 4 C . a I- U. >- -4.- 010 00 - 1 . Za -C 4 vm...6W1-6z x. z-z- U~.L 4c -C I.--.4- z~L L W~mm 09~ ac -4- U..CI -I io ACLZ 0 U 3 0 0 (0 62 0 z I. zzz (A 6 000 Csd 314" 6 6 CA (ft 4.WU U . U A F4 F6 I I
Program Derivation by Proof Transformation
1993-10-01
variable name. InfA (rA)I-[ #e1 (A, el F vF 0’ P) 4. e2 [node(x, v) :: u/gA XsINDTS [u o v/ lA f [] = ei (1,A )F P1 P2 f(node(x’,V)::U) u’)[ 0fl/A [node(z...iforalle 1 (foralle n (md ( En ) iforall El ] implies (eq n (tisize 1)) (A 1)) (iforalli E1] impliesi [q: I- (eq zero (tisize 1)) (leq-.subst..o ( El ] A 1) (P...nl 1 q) Base-.case)) ( En [p’: I- (iforall El ] implies (eq n (tisize 1) (A 1)) (iforalli El ) iinpliesi Eq: I- (eq (succ n) (tisize 1)) (existse (Ex
The Effect of Smoking on Muscle Adaptation to Exercise
2010-12-01
FFM `R6aEbOER6_"FS5! R5! I’%L1*!GgW!e1-$!dW!=@LA’&9!I[W!]’->-1!,]5!3...5!" FFM `"REaEFbOE"SB_MT5! EE5! <*(+%-$!YW!f’%%’$8!gW!g*+L).2-!dIW!-&!*+5!I*K’A*+!-@@-$&1’@!-K-1@’%-!’$2(@-%!*!1*4! *@@(A(+*&’)$!)C!%A*++!L-*&!%L...8217&L!G7I=O!*$!(+&1*%&1(@&(1*+!*$2!’AA($)-+-@&1)$! A’@1)%@)4’@!%&(2H5!D#<%&$?4:(E4..(F#&.5!" FFM `E"EaSbO"ER_ඉ! E65!
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-09-16
... SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION [Release No. 34-70361; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2013-114] Self-Regulatory Organizations; The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of... 7015(g), and the Schedule of Fees and Rebates Under Rule 7018(a) September 10, 2013. Pursuant to...
The Interaction of Statistics and Geology -- Finite Deformations.
1980-11-01
UNCLASSIFIlED TR-178-SER-2 N 7 DIZO9 f l l ff-63f ~ l f f PRNEO VN TO TTSISF61/ EOM.’..lN 11 1 .1 2I " IIIj.5IIHL4. 1. 111 1----_III MICROCOPY RESOLUTION TEST ... Ramsey (1967). These might be the result of a sequence of linear deformations or homogeneous strains. In this section we summarize the description of...problem may be found in textbooks (see e.g. Theil (1971)) on Econometrics : y=B&+f, x=&+e where the errors of measurement e and f of x and y are
U.S. EPA, Pesticide Product Label, GOWAN PROMETRYNE 4L, 02/02/1990
2011-04-21
... l·to'"TI('''· I' t..'('lr::'· t-!!') tI-( f;~1 ~rFt Sl·.4~~f" P"'c' ,~ : _'" _ 1't,..."i(C orr'" C'''f'' po:: ... 1,'1'~"". 0' f ",~"'tt:: ~~, l"eC" .... ... l ; . " . ~IOO"'I,so"d DOM'''''f' ...
1977-02-18
Ji+ k’ W", 0 where T DIO 0 T 1tor _2 f \\ - + _3 Pz~ -dt - t f [2\\1O m+l/ ab + b Jb d and (26) T 3 (T z) i )F k j [2 (f 0i + x ~ A 1 Jd t ,., The terms...I 6b7 + A2 (0+)6 ( bjb 3 ) ItO )T Df + x AT 6b dt The end and jump conditions for A and A are 1 2 1 - A(tl 0 -) = 0 2 [Xi(tlO-) fi(tlO-)] = 0i=l...00 0 c’) 0 C’) 00 c’) 9: IAH HI ON co 0’ c a, - H 0 0 0 0 0H C1 H 0 0 000 0 Z F4 HH o 0 U C4 0 0 ’z AH H I U) -E- z 0 H ~P4 E-4 0 H H C4 C4 14 C4 C w
8111/8116 Security Police Staff Officers 8121/8124 Security Police Officers AFSC: 81XX
1992-02-01
c 6I4 .1 4 6 5 . 5 6 -6 0 m 0 60 . 0.. C afa 0 -6 0 1 0 .4 L 0 CL & f6 C 6.4 6%. 4 040E .~ ~ a 0 0.41.ft i 0 a 0w m a 2m 2 0 0. Mv 0U 4 0. L.~ 0 0ty...m ~ SC 6& Ct D0 CC Z~C)d Ř-66 64 I Ř.64C0 Ř E~ L 6660 LO U64 W . .0 C -4 0L 6 0 L 1- 4 0ŘC C #.4 f6 ൶ 0 151 6W ~ )d6I.ILC E 11 .4 6.4...L - - R~ . ( *U # ACCa .4 % 40 a - 4- 1 4 4-L 0 *-46.40 50 a .40C CL 0 Ŕ 1 0. 0 OUUCC>CU.U0C4-LSa LC .CaC CW~ift-4C .4,4f L .4 -S(( a-..CA a COC *-. 4
Deviatoric Constitutive Relationship for Anisotropic Materials
1987-06-01
SEFF = VMISES ICHECK (1) = 0 DEPSBP = 0. CALL XFORM (STR(I),STR(2),STR(3),STR(4),STR(5),STR(6), & SR2 ,SZ2 ,ST2 ,SZT2 ,SRT2 ,SRZ2,-TH) GO TO 310...END I F C c Yield h a s occured: D e t e r m i n e ALF, t h e f r a c t i o n of s t r a i n c t h a t is pre-y ie ld . C I F ( ICHECK ...c e l s e m u s t d e t e r m i n e e l a s t i c f r a c t i o n ( a l f ) (see V a v r i c k , J o h n s o n ) C ICHECK (1) = 1 TERM1 = 0
Composite-Nanoparticles Thermal History Sensors
2012-06-01
E -1 4. 214 011 X E - 2 1. 601 846 X E +1 1.000 000 X E - 2 2. 579 760 X E - 4 1 .000 000 x E - 8 1.459 390 x E +1 1. 333 22 X E -1 met ers...000 X E +1 1. 745 329 X E - 2 tk = (t0 f + 459.67)/1.8 1. 602 19 X E -19 1. 000 000 X E - 7 1. 000 000 X E - 7 3. 048 000 X E - 1 1. 355 818...ELEMENT NUMBER 5d. PROJECT NUMBER 5e. TASK NUMBER 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 8 . PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER 10. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S ACRONYM(S
Military Hydrology. Report 14. Breach Erosion of Earth-Fill Dams and Flood Routing (BEED) Model
1989-08-01
1 + 1 )-VC L(I *( HSV -V U/WIVL f 1 ) ISN 11 EN~iF ISN 12 PETURN ISN 13 END B12 I SN I SUBROUTINE COQSOI(H2,QSPL,pSD,,Sp...E71’ TI - 1 , F8F " L -,- ’-. F--- f 4-l- TH8-I., H f { ’ F- . T ’ Ii’< -4- I8- F b’ In - - 184’ a4-, ’’C->’ *A 8 r’lM LAT I V -’ 1 4~ ’ D FFT ’’ P87A...01) THEN HSY=H1-21 ELSE HSV =H2 20,90) GOSUE 44(.0,: VOL2=VL -2(9C) 1 210 COMPUTE SPILLWAYOUTLET &INFLOW DISCHARGES
Solvability of a fourth-order boundary value problem with periodic boundary conditions II
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gupta, Chaitan P.
1991-01-01
Lemore » t f : [ 0 , 1 ] × R 4 → R be a function satisfying Caratheodory's conditions and e ( x ) ∈ L 1 [ 0 , 1 ] . This paper is concerned with the solvability of the fourth-order fully quasilinear boundary value problem d 4 u d x 4 + f ( x , u ( x ) , u ′ ( x ) , u ″ ( x ) , u ‴ ( x ) ) = e ( x ) , 0 < x < 1 , with u ( 0 ) − u ( 1 ) = u ′ ( 0 ) − u ′ ( 1 ) = u ″ ( 0 ) - u ″ ( 1 ) = u ‴ ( 0 ) - u ‴ ( 1 ) = 0 . This problem was studied earlier by the author in the special case when f was of the form f ( x , u ( x ) ) , i.e., independent of u ′ ( x ) , u ″ ( x ) , u ‴ ( x ) . It turns out that the earlier methods do not apply in this general case. The conditions need to be related to both of the linear eigenvalue problems d 4 u d x 4 = λ 4 u and d 4 u d x 4 = − λ 2 d 2 u d x 2 with periodic boundary conditions.« less
Research into Traveling Wave Control in Flexible Structures
1990-06-15
Displacement is the measured variable in all of the rod examples. Y = F I s i n(k + k 0) _______________ ikEA 21- k [ (24)- -- .r k k 0 F - Choosing m = 4 in...the value of Eq. (25) function of position is given by becomes U2 for that mode. U(X)= F 4 ( 2 e + e (21) Figure 3 shows the magnitudes of the ikEA ...for providing a reasonable length sensor. ___ sin(k_ The dash-dot curve in Fig. 4 shows the ikEA 1- _ 2 1- e-as (28) magnitude and phase of a
1976-09-01
of C0 Ca 0 C2 00 ao C 00 CC C3C Q0 C. -f fta -i ft z CI, av CI" O am ame m m f m fmA ’am fu CIn I a l C l Al C l C l C "l C. C lo a D Ti C 5...i 11116 .~4 U-----------V V 3P*Pf .. - 3 F F II $~~Nc~A -1C) a - e v I F. 4.9 za A All - 3. tn 1f0 ow a :Fd ’m I-. m fu 11% 0 fmd fl Ml In -f 0. C...A l -,- - P e- 0 V.. :p ~ AE~ 0 Z 0 u ’ -A - f 1 va- ftA ’I za - .0J2 11 1 2- 0 S1 155wk3inP63 n!N VS 2iOiI -01L 41 1%3 c4 In . * g 11A sraC a
49 CFR 173.52 - Classification codes and compatibility groups of explosives.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... or hypergolic liquid) E 1.1E1.2E 1.4E Article containing a secondary detonating explosive substance...-S 1.1 1.1A 1.1B 1.1C 1.1D 1.1E 1.1F 1.1G 1.1J 1.1L 9 1.2 1.2B 1.2C 1.2D 1.2E 1.2F 1.2G 1.2H 1.2J 1...
1985-01-01
4 00 1.C~ f6 Ln N a do00 0 wa n a L 00 43n 0) -ci e4 N1 C14 00 a ~. OD.4 , c I LL. z :i% -4- j i - 0) r -- - 0 I 0 0 00 N oc 0)) co 0)01 00 0 0 ~ J...0 1 1. F6 O. II -F- . I- I .- I I. .C. . . . . . . . . "A6%4 % UU- W4 w CL8 8:0 I 4 I Wt C V 08 I 8 I I e Cl dc m I ) I I Coc (D 0 C nI 4 ( a (4t 4...tLI 0 Z am a - o -4 I I,- - a4 C 0 C-4- acca a O-c 0)( C -. Na( an1 c . -.4 N. Nm ca ’. -. %--ca4-4 0 - a E I Ua an .0- 4 C r- Na C)G I-0C 0 0 0’ 0 ) 0
Sakamoto, Kenya; Sekimoto, Kanako; Takayama, Mitsuo
2017-01-01
Hydrogen fluoride (HF) was produced by a homemade HF generator in order to investigate the properties of strong hydrogen-bonded clusters such as (HF) n . The HF molecules were ionized in the form of complex ions associated with the negative core ions Y - produced by atmospheric pressure corona discharge ionization (APCDI). The use of APCDI in combination with the homemade HF generator led to the formation of negative-ion HF clusters Y - (HF) n (Y=F, O 2 ), where larger clusters with n ≥4 were not detected. The mechanisms for the formation of the HF, F - (HF) n , and O 2 - (HF) n species were discussed from the standpoints of the HF generator and APCDI MS. By performing energy-resolved collision-induced dissociation (CID) experiments on the cluster ions F - (HF) n ( n =1-3), the energies for the loss of HF from F - (HF) 3 , F - (HF) 2 , and F - (HF) were evaluated to be 1 eV or lower, 1 eV or higher, and 2 eV, respectively, on the basis of their center-of-mass energy ( E CM ). These E CM values were consistent with the values of 0.995, 1.308, and 2.048 eV, respectively, obtained by ab initio calculations. The stability of [O 2 (HF) n ] - ( n =1-4) was discussed on the basis of the bond lengths of O 2 H-F - (HF) n and O 2 - H-F(HF) n obtained by ab initio calculations. The calculations indicated that [O 2 (HF) 4 ] - separated into O 2 H and F - (HF) 3 .
The Evaluation of Small Arms Effectiveness Criteria, Volume I
1975-05-01
UNCLASSIFIED AD NUMBER ADB004382 NEW LIMITATION CHANGE TO Approved for public release, distribution unlimited FROM Distribution authorized to U.S...aimedSand pointed fire E-14 E-4 Frequency distribution of sizes of M16 and BAR bursts of automatic fire E-16 SE-5 Percent of times each range bracket...defense range F-10 F-4 Weapon-signature simuilator F-15 1 F-5 Target components in armored target box F-17 F-6 Portable round counter for the M16 rifle
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yeung, Yau Yuen; Tanner, Peter A.
2013-12-01
The experimental free ion 4f2 energy level data sets comprising 12 or 13 J-multiplets of La+, Ce2+, Pr3+ and Nd4+ have been fitted by a semiempirical atomic Hamiltonian comprising 8, 10, or 12 freely-varying parameters. The root mean square errors were 16.1, 1.3, 0.3 and 0.3 cm-1, respectively for fits with 10 parameters. The fitted inter-electronic repulsion and magnetic parameters vary linearly with ionic charge, i, but better linear fits are obtained with (4-i)2, although the reason is unclear at present. The two-body configuration interaction parameters α and β exhibit a linear relation with [ΔE(bc)]-1, where ΔE(bc) is the energy difference between the 4f2 barycentre and that of the interacting configuration, namely 4f6p for La+, Ce2+, and Pr3+, and 5p54f3 for Nd4+. The linear fit provides the rationale for the negative value of α for the case of La+, where the interacting configuration is located below 4f2.
Letter Report on Relative Aerial Combat of the F-84E Versus the F-86A capability
1951-01-30
o_ 600 ssoo > 4 o _ _ _ 6dLi 00 CL L-L 40000 0 S0 1 iso gure 2- 6 - z oo .. 600 s_.O ••• J oo:0 O:S 0:0 0:qs O:0 0:I 1 Ld.ELFRTO "WME 4• s. . 5P.84...LEGEND F-86A ------ F-84E. 0 ALTIrlUDE , 5• 5I--- I ,OH ATT DE. 0J A I ISO zoo ?50 300 350 400 4S0 IAS - MPI- SECRET inclosure Figu.re 4...242, AFMC 01-275, & AFMC 02-005). 2. Please direct further questions to Lezora U. Nobles, AFMC CSO/SCOC, DSN 787- 8583 . L E RA LU. N OB LE S AFMC STINFO
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... following provisions: subsections (c)(3), (d)(1), (2), (3) and (4), (e)(1), (c)(4)(G), (H) and (I), and (f... of 1974 creates several methods by which individuals may learn of and obtain records containing... investigating such individuals; subsections (d)(1), (e)(4)(H) and (f)(2), (3) and (5) establish the ability of...
Benchmark for the ASALT Program; Assessment of Survivability against Laser Threats.
1981-09-01
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Bardowell, Sabrina A.; Duan, Faping; Manor, Danny; Swanson, Joy E.; Parker, Robert S.
2012-01-01
Vitamin E is a family of naturally occurring and structurally related lipophilic antioxidants, one of which, α-tocopherol (α-TOH), selectively accumulates in vertebrate tissues. The ω-hydroxylase cytochrome P450–4F2 (CYP4F2) is the only human enzyme shown to metabolize vitamin E. Using cDNA cloning, cell culture expression, and activity assays, we identified Cyp4f14 as a functional murine ortholog of CYP4F2. We then investigated the effect of Cyp4f14 deletion on vitamin E metabolism and status in vivo. Cyp4f14-null mice exhibited substrate-specific reductions in liver microsomal vitamin E-ω-hydroxylase activity ranging from 93% (γ-TOH) to 48% (γ-tocotrienol). In vivo data obtained from metabolic cage studies showed whole-body reductions in metabolism of γ-TOH of 90% and of 68% for δ- and α-TOH. This metabolic deficit in Cyp4f14−/− mice was partially offset by increased fecal excretion of nonmetabolized tocopherols and of novel ω-1- and ω-2-hydroxytocopherols. 12′-OH-γ-TOH represented 41% of whole-body production of γ-TOH metabolites in Cyp4f14−/− mice fed a soybean oil diet. Despite these counterbalancing mechanisms, Cyp4f14-null mice fed this diet for 6 weeks hyper-accumulated γ-TOH (2-fold increase over wild-type littermates) in all tissues and appeared normal. We conclude that CYP4F14 is the major but not the only vitamin E-ω-hydroxylase in mice. Its disruption significantly impairs whole-body vitamin E metabolism and alters the widely conserved phenotype of preferential tissue deposition of α-TOH. This model animal and its derivatives will be valuable in determining the biological actions of specific tocopherols and tocotrienols in vivo. PMID:22665481
Novel functions for the transcription factor E2F4 in development and disease
Sage, Julien
2016-01-01
ABSTRACT The E2F family of transcription factors is a key determinant of cell proliferation in response to extra- and intra-cellular signals. Within this family, E2F4 is a transcriptional repressor whose activity is critical to engage and maintain cell cycle arrest in G0/G1 in conjunction with members of the retinoblastoma (RB) family. However, recent observations challenge this paradigm and indicate that E2F4 has a multitude of functions in cells besides this cell cycle regulatory role, including in embryonic and adult stem cells, during regenerative processes, and in cancer. Some of these new functions are independent of the RB family and involve direct activation of target genes. Here we review the canonical functions of E2F4 and discuss recent evidence expanding the role of this transcription factor, with a focus on cell fate decisions in tissue homeostasis and regeneration. PMID:27753528
Fermi wave vector for the partially spin-polarized composite-fermion Fermi sea
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Balram, Ajit C.; Jain, J. K.
2017-12-01
The fully spin-polarized composite-fermion (CF) Fermi sea at the half-filled lowest Landau level has a Fermi wave vector kF*=√{4 π ρe } , where ρe is the density of electrons or composite fermions, supporting the notion that the interaction between composite fermions can be treated perturbatively. Away from ν =1 /2 , the area is seen to be consistent with kF*=√{4 π ρe } for ν <1 /2 but kF*=√{4 π ρh } for ν >1 /2 , where ρh is the density of holes in the lowest Landau level. This result is consistent with particle-hole symmetry in the lowest Landau level. We investigate in this article the Fermi wave vector of the spin-singlet CF Fermi sea (CFFS) at ν =1 /2 , for which particle-hole symmetry is not a consideration. Using the microscopic CF theory, we find that for the spin-singlet CFFS the Fermi wave vectors for up- and down-spin CFFSs at ν =1 /2 are consistent with kF*↑,↓=√{4 π ρe↑,↓ } , where ρe↑=ρe↓=ρe/2 , which implies that the residual interactions between composite fermions do not cause a nonperturbative correction for spin-singlet CFFS either. Our results suggest the natural conjecture that for arbitrary spin polarization the CF Fermi wave vectors are given by kF*↑=√{4 π ρe↑ } and kF*↓=√{4 π ρe↓ } .
Water Quality Data for Lake Erie Basin Tributary Mouth Sampling Stations.
1978-12-01
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Receptor Structure for F1C Fimbriae of Uropathogenic Escherichia coli
Khan, A. Salam; Kniep, Bernhard; Oelschlaeger, Tobias A.; Van Die, Irma; Korhonen, Timo; Hacker, Jörg
2000-01-01
F1C fimbriae are correlated with uropathogenic Escherichia coli strains. Although F1C fimbriae mediate binding to kidney tubular cells, their receptor is not known. In this paper, we demonstrate for the first time specific carbohydrate residues as receptor structure for F1C-fimbria-expressing E. coli. The binding of the F1C fimbriated recombinant E. coli strain HB101(pPIL110-54) and purified F1C fimbriae to reference glycolipids of different carbohydrate compositions was evaluated by using thin-layer chromatography (TLC) overlay and solid-phase binding assays. TLC fimbrial overlay analysis revealed the binding ability of purified F1C fimbriae only to glucosylceramide (GlcCer), β1-linked galactosylceramide 2 (GalCer2) with nonhydroxy fatty acids, lactosylceramide, globotriaosylceramide, paragloboside (nLc4Cer), lactotriaosylceramide, gangliotriaosylceramide (asialo-GM2 [GgO3Cer]) and gangliotetraosylceramide (asialo-GM1 [GgO4Cer]). The binding of purified F1C fimbriae as well as F1C fimbriated recombinant E. coli strain HB101(pPIL110-54) was optimal to microtiter plates coated with asialo-GM2 (GgO3Cer). The bacterial interaction with asialo-GM1 (GgO4Cer) and asialo-GM2 (GgO3Cer) was strongly inhibited only by disaccharide GalNAcβ1-4Galβ linked to bovine serum albumin. We observed no binding to globotetraosylceramide or Forssman antigen (Gb5Cer) glycosphingolipids or to sialic-acid-containing gangliosides. It was demonstrated that the presence of a GalCer or GlcCer residue alone is not sufficient for optimal binding, and additional carbohydrate residues are required for high-affinity adherence. Indeed, the binding efficiency of F1C fimbriated recombinant bacteria increased by 19-fold when disaccharide sequence GalNAcβ1-4Galβ is linked to glucosylceramide as in asialo-GM2 (GgO3Cer). Thus, it is suggested that the disaccharide sequence GalNAcβ1-4Galβ of asialo-GM2 (GgO3Cer) which is positioned internally in asialo-GM1 (GgO4Cer) is the high-affinity binding epitope for the F1C fimbriae of uropathogenic E. coli. PMID:10816509
Birth Order and Activity Level in Children.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Eaton, Warren O.; And Others
1989-01-01
Studied 7,018 children between birth and 7 years and 81 children of 5-8 years to test the hypothesis that birth order is negatively related to motor activity level. Activity level declined linearly across birth position, so that early-borns were rated as more active than later-borns. (RJC)
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-10-14
... Proposed Rule Change To Modify the Requirements To Qualify for Credits as a Designated Liquidity Provider... requirements to qualify for credits as a designated liquidity provider under Rule 7018(i) and to make a minor... Designated Liquidity Providers: Charge to Designated Liquidity Provider $0.003 per share executed entering...
Comparison of multisensory and strength training for postural control in the elderly
Alfieri, Fábio Marcon; Riberto, Marcelo; Gatz, Lucila Silveira; Ribeiro, Carla Paschoal Corsi; Lopes, José Augusto Fernandes; Battistella, Linamara Rizzo
2012-01-01
Objective The objective of this study was to analyze the efficacy of multisensory versus muscle strengthening to improve postural control in healthy community-dwelling elderly. Participants We performed a single-blinded study with 46 community-dwelling elderly allocated to strength (GS, n = 23; 70.18 ± 4.8 years 22 women and 1 man) and multisensory exercises groups (GM, n = 23; 68.8 ± 5.9 years; 22 women and 1 man) for 12 weeks. Methods We performed isokinetic evaluations of muscle groups in the ankle and foot including dorsiflexors, plantar flexors, inversion, and eversion. The oscillation of the center of pressure was assessed with a force platform. Results The GM group presented a reduction in the oscillation (66.8 ± 273.4 cm2 to 11.1 ± 11.6 cm2; P = 0.02), which was not observed in the GS group. The GM group showed better results for the peak torque and work than the GS group, but without statistical significance. Conclusion Although the GM group presented better results, it is not possible to state that one exercise regimen proved more efficacious than the other in improving balance control. PMID:22654512
Adak NAS, Alaska. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.
1983-08-24
15,000 reporting stations around the world.This is the provenance of the number (e.g., HSC 999999) which will appear or future 01-A standard products $1...SPEED (FROM HOURLY OBSERVATIONS) 4’ 45 AAV %’ k. 71-F2 j4,: ll - -011" ..T ALL -’EAT- E’ + J _,j_-__ _ D 1 3 -6 7 10 11 16 17 - 21 22 - 27 28 -33 34...mAZ PERCENTAGE FREQUENCY OF WIND DIRECTION AND SPEED (FROM HOURLY OBSERVATIONS) 7 4 4- AAV . S4A ce _ _-_ _ _ _ _ _ _IIS~o .B SfMm ALL -fLAT
E2F8 as a Novel Therapeutic Target for Lung Cancer.
Park, Sin-Aye; Platt, James; Lee, Jong Woo; López-Giráldez, Francesc; Herbst, Roy S; Koo, Ja Seok
2015-09-01
The E2F members have been divided into transcription activators (E2F1-E2F3) and repressors (E2F4-E2F8). E2F8 with E2F7 has been known to play an important physiologic role in embryonic development and cell cycle regulation by repressing E2F1. However, the function of E2F8 in cancer cells is unknown. E2F8 expression was assessed by immunoblotting or immunofluorescence staining in human lung cancer (LC) cells and tissues from LC patients (n = 45). Cell proliferation, colony formation, and invasion analysis were performed to evaluate the role of E2F8 in LC. Microarray analysis was used to determine the target genes of E2F8. The regulation of E2F8 on the expression of ubiquitin-like PHD and RING domain-containing 1 (UHRF1), one of E2F8 target genes, was determined using chromatin immunoprecipitation and promoter activity assays. Human LC xenograft models were used to determine the effects of inhibiting E2F8 by siRNAs (n = 7 per group) or antisense morpholino (n = 8 per group) on tumor growth. Survival was analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method and group differences by the Student's t test. All statistical tests were two-sided. LC tumors overexpressed E2F8 compared with normal lung tissues. Depletion of E2F8 inhibited cell proliferation and tumor growth. E2F8 knockdown statistically significantly reduced the expression of UHRF1 (~60%-70%, P < .001), and the direct binding of E2F8 on the promoter of UHRF1 was identified. Kaplan-Meier analysis with a public database showed prognostic significance of aberrant E2F8 expression in LC (HR = 1.91 95% CI = 1.21 to 3.01 in chemo-naïve patients, P = .0047). We demonstrated that E2F8 is overexpressed in LC and is required for the growth of LC cells. These findings implicate E2F8 as a novel therapeutic target for LC treatment. © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
Composite Reliability Enhancement via Preloading.
1987-06-01
LEAF’ 1150 FI’-,F "OATA REHD" 1160 E. EEF 11 0 RETUPN 2000 Id’’E 1- 4 2010 C LEAR ’? [C ’ "’ SAE C OPL I i t CE FILE" _i.’u D I ’-F’ 2020 DEP0,7’ KiP...CRFERTE N..H.26 41 AS.CIGN# I TO ’.t 41Th PRINT# I H; .E0,S.G1.K 4140 FOR I=1 TO N 415. ’ PPINT# I ; F’l I) D 1 4 1 i, NEXT I 4170 A’:’,SIGN# I TO .1 4150
Li, Yuncheng; Sturgis, Erich M; Zhu, Lijun; Cao, Xiaoli; Wei, Qingyi; Zhang, Hua; Li, Guojun
2017-04-01
Because E2F transcription factor 2 (E2F2) promoter polymorphisms have been implicated in carcinogenesis and prognosis, we investigated associations between genetic variants in five E2F2 promoter polymorphisms and recurrence risk of squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx (SCCOP) in 1 008 patients. A log-rank test and multivariable Cox models were used to assess the associations. Compared with patients with variant genotypes of E2F2-rs2742976 and E2F2-rs3218123, patients with common homozygous genotypes had better disease-free survival (both log-rank, P < 0.001) and lower SCCOP recurrence risk (HR, 0.4, 95% CI, 0.3-0.6 and HR, 0.3, 95% CI, 0.2-0.5, respectively) after multivariable adjustment. Furthermore, among patients with HPV16-positive tumors, those with common homozygous genotypes of E2F2-rs2742976 and E2F2-rs3218123 had better disease-free survival rates (both log-rank, P < 0.001) and lower recurrence risk (HR, 0.1, 95% CI, 0.1-0.4 and HR, 0.1, 95% CI, 0.0-0.2, respectively) than patients with variant genotypes. However, no significant differences were found for the other three polymorphisms. After combining the risk genotypes of the five polymorphisms and using the high-risk group (2-5 risk genotypes) as the reference group, we found that the low-risk groups (0 or 1 risk genotype) had significantly lower recurrence risk among all patients (HR, 0.4, 95% CI, 0.3-0.6) and among HPV16-positive patients (HR, 0.2, 95% CI, 0.1-0.5). Our findings suggest that E2F2 polymorphisms may individually or jointly modify SCCOP recurrence risk, particularly for SCCOP patients with HPV16-positive tumors. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-12-17
... Proposed Rule Change to Provide an Exemption from the Thirty-Day Written Notice Requirement of Rule 7018(i...-day written notice requirement applicable to a member firm seeking to withdraw as Designated Liquidity... must provide 30 days written notice if it wishes to withdraw its registration in a Qualified Security...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-09-19
... amend NASDAQ's schedule of execution fees and rebates under Rule 7018(a). As a general matter, the... in dark pools. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358 (January 14, 2010), 75 FR 3594 (January 21... market structure issues, including high frequency trading and un- displayed, or ``dark,'' liquidity. See...
Zang, Yan-Nan; Zhang, Min-Jie; Wang, Yi-Tong; Wang, Chen; Wang, Qian; Zheng, Qing-Shan; Ji, Li-Nong; Guo, Wei; Fang, Yi
2017-08-01
To investigate the population pharmacokinetics of lyophilized recombinant glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (rE-4) in Chinese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) for plasma concentration estimation and individualized treatment. Twelve patients with T2DM were enrolled to receive subcutaneous injections of rE-4 at 5 µg twice daily for 84 days. Administration dosage was adjusted from 5 µg to 10 µg twice daily at day 29 in case of glycated albumin (GA) ≥ 17%. The population pharmacokinetic model was developed in the nonlinear mixed-effects modeling software NONMEM. The data were best described by a two-compartment model with first-order absorption and elimination. The outcome parameters were as follows: apparent clearance (CL/F) 6.67 L/h, apparent distribution volume of central compartment (Vc/F) 19.4 L, absorption rate constant (Ka) 1.39 h-1, apparent distribution volume of peripheral compartment (Vp/F) 22.6 L, intercompartmental clearance (Q/F) 1.28 L/h. The interindividual variabilities for CL/F, Vc/F, Ka, and Q/F were 64.4%, 57.7%, 45.5%, and 153.3%, respectively. The intra-individual variability of proportional error model was 41.7%. No covariate was screened out that showed significant influence on the model parameters. The established two-compartment model with first-order absorption and elimination successfully described the pharmacokinetic characteristics of rE-4 in Chinese patients with T2DM. .
1990-12-01
Sample LOTUS 123 Cell Formulas for Reducing Reset Data A2: 0.0008 B2: 0.564 C2: -2.501 02: (A1-$A$1) E2: (@IF(@ABS(C2)>2,@TRUE,@FALSE)=1) F2: (@IF(E2...9 F14: (@IF( El4 =1,0,0.951*C14)) H14: (G14- 12 .492*D14) A15: 0.0034 B15: -0.248 015: 0.033 D15: (A14-$A$l) G15: @IF(El5=O, (F15+$G$1 1), (($G$1 1+Gl4...data corrected for rise rate and zero mean. I I F-4 I LOTUS 123 Cell Formulas Used to Reconstruct the Sine Data Al: 0.00324 Bi: -0.01 Cl: -0.14 D1: (Al
Liu, Jing-Hua; Zou, Yu; Chang, Wei; Wu, Jun; Zou, Yu; Xie, Yu-Chen; Lu, Yong-Ping; Wei, Jia
2017-01-01
We assessed liver fibrosis using real-time shear-wave elastography (SWE) combined with liver biopsy (LB) for patients with hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-negative chronic hepatitis B (CHB) and alanine transaminase < 2 times the upper limit of normal and hepatitis B virus DNA < 2000 IU/ml. A total of 107 patients met the inclusion criteria. Real- ime SWE and ultrasoundassisted liver biopsies were consecutively performed. Fibrosis was staged according to the METAVIR scoring system. Analyses of receiver operating characteristic curve were performed to calculate the optimal area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for F0-F1 versus F2-F4, F0-F2 versus F3-F4, and F0-F3 versus F4 for real-time SWE. The most concurrent liver fibrosis degrees were between F1 and F2 for these HBeAg-negative CHB patients. Liver stiffness increased in parallel with the degree of liver fibrosis using SWE measurements. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curves was 0.881 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.704-1.000) for SWE (p = 0.004); 0.912 (95% CI: 0.836-0.987) for SWE (p = 0.000); 0.981 (95% CI: 0.956-1.000) for SWE (p = 0.000); 0.974 (95% CI: 0.936-1.000) for SWE (p = 0.000) when comparing F0 versus F1-F4, F0-F1 versus F2-F4, F0-F2 versus F3-F4, and F0-F3 versus F4, respectively. SWE has the advantage of providing an image of liver stiffness in real-time. As an alternative to LB, the development of all these noninvasive methods for dynamic evaluation of liver fibrosis will decrease the need for LB, making clinical care safer and more convenient for patients with liver diseases.
1976-01-01
18 Py ’chologicalf operations ........ i.. . * ...... ~..,..24 Game Warden in;h the’RSSZ sete o.. & . e ........ o 99oao999*ie ooo ... a e o...o 26 Game , VWarden ih. the’ Mekong Delta o o o ** ***~o e ........... o oeoo * eoee , 4f -’. 30 The situa~tion,’in October .1968 **99*9*9*999*9*999999...H - Mekong RiVer xiierchant ship smuggling f.. * f.. e .o"f ao ..o.o H-i - H-2 Appendix I - Game Wardenchronology............... I-1-1!-is Appendi*, J
Ramachandran, Harikrishnan; Banerjee, Banani; Greenberger, Paul A.; Kelly, Kevin J.; Fink, Jordan N.; Kurup, Viswanath P.
2004-01-01
Among the several allergens cloned and expressed from Aspergillus fumigatus, Asp f 4 is a major one associated with allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA). The structure-function relationship of allergens is important in understanding the immunopathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of allergic diseases. These include the epitopes, conformational or linear, deletion of the N or C terminus or both N and C termini, and glycosylation or nonglycosylation, all of which affect immune responses. Similarly, the role of cysteine residues present in allergens may yield useful information regarding the conformational structure of allergens and the immunoglobulin E (IgE) epitope interaction. Such information may help in developing new strategies towards immunotherapy. In order to define the role of cysteine in the interaction of the antibody with Asp f 4, we have constructed mutants by selectively deleting cysteine residues from the C-terminal region of the Asp f 4. Immunological evaluation of these engineered recombinant constructs was conducted by using sera from patients with ABPA, Aspergillus skin test-positive asthmatics, and healthy controls. The results demonstrate strong IgE binding with Asp f 4 and two truncated mutants, Asp f 41-234 (amino acids [aa] 1 to 234) and Asp f 41-241 (aa 1 to 241), while another mutant, Asp f 41-196 (aa 1 to 196), showed reactivity with fewer patients. The result suggests that deletion of cysteines and the alteration of IgE epitopes at the C-terminal end resulted in conformational changes, which may have a potential role in the immunomodulation of the disease. PMID:15013973
Batanero, Belen; Barba, Fructuoso; Martin, Avelino
2013-09-20
The one-pot concomitant electrochemical reduction of phenanthrenequinones (1, 2) and arenediazonium salts (3a-f) led to the formation of 1,3,4-oxadiazol-2(3H)-ones (4a-f, 5a) and dibenzo[c,e]azepines (6a-f) when N-methylformamide was used as the solvent. A new pathway, different from those previously described with other aprotic solvents, is proposed. The experimental data support a radical mechanism for the electrochemical process followed by an internal rearrangement to give the products.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Yi-fan; Cui, Zhong-hua; Ding, Yi-hong
2014-06-01
Compounds with high electron affinity, i.e. superhalogens, have continued to attract chemists' attention, due to their potential importance in fundamental chemistry and materials science. It has now proven very effective to build up novel superhalogens with multi-positively charged centres, which are usually called 'hyperhalogens'. Herein, using AuF4- and PO3 as the model building blocks, we made the first attempt to design the Au,P-based hyperhalogen anions AuF4-n(PO3)n- (n = 1-4) at the B3LYP/6-311+G(d)&SDD and CCSD(T)/6-311+G(d)&SDD (single-point) levels (6-311+G(d) for O, F, P and SDD for Au). Notably, for all the considered Au,P systems, the ground state bears a dioxo-bonded structure with n ≤ 3, which is significantly more stable than the usually presumed mono-oxo-bonded one. Moreover, the clustering of the -PO3 moieties becomes energetically favoured for n ≥ 3. The ground states of AuP4O120,- are the first reported cage-like oxide hyperhalogens. Thus, the -PO3 moiety cannot be retained during the 'bottom-up' assembly. The vertical detachment energy (VDE) value of the most stable AuF4-n(PO3)n- (n = 1-4) ranges from 7.16 to 8.20 eV, higher than the VDE values of the corresponding building blocks AuF4- (7.08 eV) and PO3- (4.69 eV). The adiabatic detachment energy values of these four hyperhalogens exceed 6.00 eV. Possible generation routes for AuF4-n(PO3)n- (n = 1-4) were discussed. The presently designed oxyfluorides not only enriches the family of hyperhalogens, but also demonstrates the great importance of considering the structural transformation during the superhalogen → hyperhalogen design such as for the present Au-P based systems.
Statistical Inference for Quality-Adjusted Survival Time
2006-07-01
ACCA W 6 :9+ (’ &12 $ X 0,7,2 1+7$- 1w -$1(-5 &+9.5 N,& 0 17) 1. E o( +<$& 0,017 6 N1 N $33 &+9.5 +ə 07’:312 ’) 71471...W ) ’:+,$($(4 $2 X 07’%1. 1&+$2 ,+& ’) 2 1,( r Fs 6 ,(. $( *,(4 ,(. x&$,+$& T ACCA W ) 2 1.$,( 71 X 471&&$’( ’) 2 1.$-,3 -’&+& E u1 N $33 -,33...E ,(. x&$,+$& 6 F E F E T ACCA W E 1.$,( d1471&&$’( N $+< @1(&. @’&+ #,+, E JRH GJ 6 e UVX e U B E @ 6 * E
Alteri, Claudia; Surdo, Matteo; Bellocchi, Maria Concetta; Saccomandi, Patrizia; Continenza, Fabio; Armenia, Daniele; Parrotta, Lucia; Carioti, Luca; Costa, Giosuè; Fourati, Slim; Di Santo, Fabiola; Scutari, Rossana; Barbaliscia, Silvia; Fedele, Valentina; Carta, Stefania; Balestra, Emanuela; Alcaro, Stefano; Marcelin, Anne Genevieve; Calvez, Vincent; Ceccherini-Silberstein, Francesca; Artese, Anna
2015-01-01
Incomplete APOBEC3G/F neutralization by a defective HIV-1Vif protein can promote genetic diversification by inducing G-to-A mutations in the HIV-1 genome. The HIV-1 Env V3 loop, critical for coreceptor usage, contains several putative APOBEC3G/F target sites. Here, we determined if APOBEC3G/F, in the presence of Vif-defective HIV-1 virus, can induce G-to-A mutations at V3 positions critical to modulation of CXCR4 usage. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) from 2 HIV-1-negative donors were infected with CCR5-using 81.A-VifWT virus (i.e., with wild-type [WT] Vif protein), 81.A-VifE45G, or 81.A-VifK22E (known to incompletely/partially neutralize APOBEC3G/F). The rate of G-toA mutations was zero or extremely low in 81.A-VifWT- and 81.A-VifE45G-infected PBMC from both donors. Conversely, G-to-A enrichment was detected in 81.A-VifK22E-infected PBMC (prevalence ranging from 2.18% at 7 days postinfection [dpi] to 3.07% at 21 dpi in donor 1 and from 10.49% at 7 dpi to 8.69% at 21 dpi in donor 2). A similar scenario was found in MDM. G-to-A mutations occurred at 8 V3 positions, resulting in nonsynonymous amino acid substitutions. Of them, G24E and E25K strongly correlated with phenotypically/genotypically defined CXCR4-using viruses (P = 0.04 and 5.5e−7, respectively) and increased the CXCR4 N-terminal binding affinity for V3 (WT, −40.1 kcal/mol; G24E, −510 kcal/mol; E25K, −522 kcal/mol). The analysis of paired V3 and Vif DNA sequences from 84 HIV-1-infected patients showed that the presence of a Vif-defective virus correlated with CXCR4 usage in proviral DNA (P = 0.04). In conclusion, incomplete APOBEC3G/F neutralization by a single Vif amino acid substitution seeds a CXCR4-using proviral reservoir. This can have implications for the success of CCR5 antagonist-based therapy, as well as for the risk of disease progression. PMID:26055363
Premalignant Genetic and Epigenetic Alterations in Tubal Epithelium from Women with BRCA1 Mutations
2010-10-14
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External Theory for Stochastic Processes.
1985-11-01
1.2 1.4 1.8 11111125 11.I6 MICROCOP RESOLUTION TEST CHART M.. MW’ PAPI ~ W W ’W IV AV a a W 4 * S6 _ ~.. r dV . Unclassif’ DA 7 4 9JT FILE COPY...intensity measure has the Laplace : <-f Transform L (f)=exp(-x (l-e - f ) whereas a Compound Poisson Process has Laplace Transform (2.3.1) L (f...see Example 2.2.4 as an illustration of this). The result is a clustering of exceedances, leading to a compounding of events in the limiting point
Global Maps of foF2 Derived from Observations and Theoretical Values
1984-07-31
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Study of Helicopter Roll Control Effectiveness Criteria.
1986-04-01
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DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Pepe, G.J.; Albrecht, E.D.
1984-11-01
We measured uterine extraction (i.e. metabolism) and transuteroplacental interconversion of cortisol (F) and cortisone (E) to determine whether metabolism across the uterus changes during pregnancy and contributes to the MCR of these corticosteroids. On day 100 (n . 4) or 170 (n . 3) of pregnancy (term . day 184), baboons (Papio anubis; 14-18 kg) were sedated with ketamine, and a constant infusion (0.38 ml/min) of 8-12 microCi (/sup 3/H)F and 9-15 microCi (/sup 14/C)E in 80 ml 0.9% NaCl-1% ethanol was initiated (time zero) via a maternal antecubital vein. At 60 min, animals were laparotomized, and at 70, 80,more » and 90 min, blood samples were obtained from right and left uterine veins and from a maternal saphenous vein. At 95 min, a transverse incision was made in the uterus, the fetus was isolated, and blood samples were obtained from the umbilical vein and artery. The cord was then clamped, and the fetus was delivered. Radio-labeled F and E were extracted from serum and purified by sequential paper chromatography, and metabolic parameters were calculated. Endogenous F and E levels were determined by RIA. In the mother, the percent conversions of E to F at midgestation (mean +/- SE; 72 +/- 4) and late gestation (65 +/- 3) were similar and exceeded (P less than 0.01) respective values for oxidation of F to E (51 +/- 7 and 46 +/- 7, respectively), indicating that maternal corticosteroid metabolism favors F formation and is unchanged during the second half of gestation. In contrast, corticosteroid metabolism across the uterus and placenta (transuteroplacental) was altered during pregnancy. At midgestation, transuteroplacental conversion of E to F (37 +/- 9) exceeded (P less than 0.05) the reverse reaction (18 +/- 3), whereas oxidation of F to E at term (28 +/- 4) was 7-fold greater (P less than 0.05) than reduction of E to F (4 +/- 1).« less
EnviroAtlas Tree Cover Configuration and Connectivity, Water Background Web Service
This EnviroAtlas web service supports research and online mapping activities related to EnviroAtlas (https://www.epa.gov/enviroatlas). The 1-meter resolution tree cover configuration and connectivity map categorizes tree cover into structural elements (e.g. core, edge, connector, etc.). Source imagery varies by community. For specific information about methods and accuracy of each community's tree cover configuration and connectivity classification, consult their individual metadata records: Austin, TX (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7B29D2B039-905C-4825-B0B4-9315122D6A9F%7D); Cleveland, OH (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7B03cd54e1-4328-402e-ba75-e198ea9fbdc7%7D); Des Moines, IA (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7B350A83E6-10A2-4D5D-97E6-F7F368D268BB%7D); Durham, NC (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7BC337BA5F-8275-4BA8-9647-F63C443F317D%7D); Fresno, CA (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7B84B98749-9C1C-4679-AE24-9B9C0998EBA5%7D); Green Bay, WI (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7B69E48A44-3D30-4E84-A764-38FBDCCAC3D0%7D); Memphis, TN (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7BB7313ADA-04F7-4D80-ABBA-77E753AAD002%7D); Milwaukee, WI (https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?u
Sellers, W R; Rodgers, J W; Kaelin, W G
1995-01-01
An intact T/E1A-binding domain (the pocket) is necessary, but not sufficient, for the retinoblastoma protein (RB) to bind to DNA-protein complexes containing E2F and for RB to induce a G1/S block. Indirect evidence suggests that the binding of RB to E2F may, in addition to inhibiting E2F transactivation function, generate a complex capable of functioning as a transrepressor. Here we show that a chimera in which the E2F1 transactivation domain was replaced with the RB pocket could, in a DNA-binding and pocket-dependent manner, mimic the ability of RB to repress transcription and induce a cell cycle arrest. In contrast, a transdominant negative E2F1 mutant that is capable of blocking E2F-dependent transactivation did not. Fusion of the RB pocket to a heterologous DNA-binding domain unrelated to E2F likewise generated a transrepressor protein when scored against a suitable reporter. These results suggest that growth suppression by RB is due, at least in part, to transrepression mediated by the pocket domain bound to certain promoters via E2F. Images Fig. 4 Fig. 5 PMID:8524800
Viscous Effects on Blast Wave Flowfields.
1984-12-01
18 3-7 Grids used in shock-cylinder interaction calculations ....... ...................... ... 21 3-8 Pressure-time histories ...structure flow ........ .. 32 iv LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS (concluded) r ~ue Pa e 4-2 Calculated pressure-time histories for shock-field structure...written in dimensionless, conservative-law formll ,r e orf t jas without external forces as follows: : *1 t, ’ yF 1 - v 4 yFv ) (2-1) K r V --, ~ V F F j
Comparison of three dimeric 18F-AlF-NOTA-RGD tracers.
Guo, Jinxia; Lang, Lixin; Hu, Shuo; Guo, Ning; Zhu, Lei; Sun, Zhongchan; Ma, Ying; Kiesewetter, Dale O; Niu, Gang; Xie, Qingguo; Chen, Xiaoyuan
2014-04-01
RGD peptide-based radiotracers are well established as integrin αvβ3 imaging probes to evaluate tumor angiogenesis or tissue remodeling after ischemia or infarction. In order to optimize the labeling process and pharmacokinetics of the imaging probes, we synthesized three dimeric RGD peptides with or without PEGylation and performed in vivo screening. Radiolabeling was achieved through the reaction of F-18 aluminum-fluoride complex with the cyclic chelator, 1,4,7-triazacyclononane-1,4,7-triacetic acid (NOTA). Three imaging probes were synthesized as (18)F-AlF-NOTA-E[c(RGDfK)]2, (18)F-AlF-NOTA-PEG4-E[c(RGDfK)]2, and (18)F-AlF-NOTA-E[PEG4-c(RGDfk)]2. The receptor binding affinity was determined by competitive cell binding assay, and the stability was evaluated by mouse serum incubation. Tumor uptake and whole body distribution of the three tracers were compared through direct tissue sampling and PET quantification of U87MG tumor-bearing mice. All three compounds remained intact after 120 min incubation with mouse serum. They all had a rapid and relatively high tracer uptake in U87MG tumors with good target-to-background ratios. Compared with the other two tracers, (18)F-AlF-NOTA-E[PEG4-c(RGDfk)]2 had the highest tumor uptake and the lowest accumulation in the liver. The integrin receptor specificity was confirmed by co-injection of unlabeled dimeric RGD peptide. The rapid one-step radiolabeling strategy by the complexation of (18)F-aluminum fluoride with NOTA-peptide conjugates was successfully applied to synthesize three dimeric RGD peptides. Among the three probes developed, (18)F-AlF-NOTA-E[PEG4-c(RGDfk)]2 with relatively low liver uptake and high tumor accumulation appears to be a promising candidate for further translational research.
Fano Resonance of Eu2+ and Eu3+ in (Eu,Gd)Te MBE Layers
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Orlowski, B. A.; Kowalski, B. J.; Dziawa, P.; Pietrzyk, M.; Mickievicius, S.; Osinniy, V.; Taliashvili, B.; Kowalik, I. A.; Story, T.; Johnson, R. L.
2006-11-01
Resonant photoemission spectroscopy, with application of synchrotron radiation, was used to study the valence band electronic structure of clean surface of (EuGd)Te layers. Fano-type resonant photoemission spectra corresponding to the Eu 4d-4f transition were measured to determine the contribution of 4f electrons of Eu2+ and Eu3+ ions to the valence band. The resonant and antiresonant photon energies of Eu2+ ions were found as equal to 141 V and 132 eV, respectively and for Eu3+ ions were found as equal to 146 eV and 132 eV, respectively. Contribution of Eu2+4f electrons was found at the valence band edge while for Eu3+ it was located in the region between 3.5 eV and 8.5 eV below the valence band edge.
Chen, Leyun; Li, Xiaolin; Hong, Haizheng; Shi, Dalin
2018-01-01
One of the most widely used organic UV filters, 4-methylbenzylidene camphor (4-MBC), is present at high concentrations in offshore waters. The marine copepod Tigriopus japonicus was exposed to different concentrations of 4-MBC (i.e., 0, 0.5, 1, 5 and 10μgL -1 ) for 4 consecutive generations (F0-F3) to evaluate the impact of 4-MBC on marine ecosystems. The results showed that in the F0 generation, 4-MBC caused significant lethal toxicity in T. japonicas at concentrations of 5 and 10μgL -1 and the nauplii were more sensitive to 4-MBC toxicity than the adults. However in the F1-F3 generations, 4-MBC exposure did not affect the survival rate. The hatching rate and the developmental duration from the nauplii to the copepodite (N-C) and from the nauplii to adult (N-A) decreased significantly in the F1-F2 generations and in the F2-F3 generations, respectively, even at the lowest exposure concentration (0.5μgL -1 ). In the subsequent two generations (i.e., the F4-F5 generations) of recovery exposure in clean seawater, the growth rates of the original 4-MBC exposure groups were still faster than the control in both the N-C and N-A stages, suggesting possible transgenerational genetic and/or epigenetic changes upon chronic 4-MBC exposure. The expression of the ecdysone receptor gene was up-regulated by 4-MBC, which was consistent with the decrease of the N-C/N-A duration. In addition, 4-MBC may induce oxidative stress and trigger apoptosis in T. japonicas, resulting in developmental, reproductive and even lethal toxicity. A preliminary risk assessment suggested that under environmentally realistic concentrations, 4-MBC had significant potential to pose a threat to marine crustaceans and marine ecosystems. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Corrosion of Metals and Alloys in the Deep Ocean
1976-02-01
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Control of eIF4E cellular localization by eIF4E-binding proteins, 4E-BPs.
Rong, Liwei; Livingstone, Mark; Sukarieh, Rami; Petroulakis, Emmanuel; Gingras, Anne-Claude; Crosby, Katherine; Smith, Bradley; Polakiewicz, Roberto D; Pelletier, Jerry; Ferraiuolo, Maria A; Sonenberg, Nahum
2008-07-01
Eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF) 4E, the mRNA 5'-cap-binding protein, mediates the association of eIF4F with the mRNA 5'-cap structure to stimulate cap-dependent translation initiation in the cytoplasm. The assembly of eIF4E into the eIF4F complex is negatively regulated through a family of repressor proteins, called the eIF4E-binding proteins (4E-BPs). eIF4E is also present in the nucleus, where it is thought to stimulate nuclear-cytoplasmic transport of certain mRNAs. eIF4E is transported to the nucleus via its interaction with 4E-T (4E-transporter), but it is unclear how it is retained in the nucleus. Here we show that a sizable fraction (approximately 30%) of 4E-BP1 is localized to the nucleus, where it binds eIF4E. In mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) subjected to serum starvation and/or rapamycin treatment, nuclear 4E-BPs sequester eIF4E in the nucleus. A dramatic loss of nuclear 4E-BP1 occurs in c-Ha-Ras-expressing MEFs, which fail to show starvation-induced nuclear accumulation of eIF4E. Therefore, 4E-BP1 is a regulator of eIF4E cellular localization.
Control of eIF4E cellular localization by eIF4E-binding proteins, 4E-BPs
Rong, Liwei; Livingstone, Mark; Sukarieh, Rami; Petroulakis, Emmanuel; Gingras, Anne-Claude; Crosby, Katherine; Smith, Bradley; Polakiewicz, Roberto D.; Pelletier, Jerry; Ferraiuolo, Maria A.; Sonenberg, Nahum
2008-01-01
Eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF) 4E, the mRNA 5′-cap-binding protein, mediates the association of eIF4F with the mRNA 5′-cap structure to stimulate cap-dependent translation initiation in the cytoplasm. The assembly of eIF4E into the eIF4F complex is negatively regulated through a family of repressor proteins, called the eIF4E-binding proteins (4E-BPs). eIF4E is also present in the nucleus, where it is thought to stimulate nuclear-cytoplasmic transport of certain mRNAs. eIF4E is transported to the nucleus via its interaction with 4E-T (4E-transporter), but it is unclear how it is retained in the nucleus. Here we show that a sizable fraction (∼30%) of 4E-BP1 is localized to the nucleus, where it binds eIF4E. In mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) subjected to serum starvation and/or rapamycin treatment, nuclear 4E-BPs sequester eIF4E in the nucleus. A dramatic loss of nuclear 4E-BP1 occurs in c-Ha-Ras–expressing MEFs, which fail to show starvation-induced nuclear accumulation of eIF4E. Therefore, 4E-BP1 is a regulator of eIF4E cellular localization. PMID:18515545
1972-01-28
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1991-01-01
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Electrical Resistivity of Chromium, Cobalt, Iron, and Nickel.
1982-06-01
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Spectroscopic investigations of Nd3+ doped flouro- and chloro-borate glasses.
Mohan, Shaweta; Thind, Kulwant Singh; Sharma, Gopi; Gerward, Leif
2008-10-01
Spectroscopic and physical properties of Nd3+ doped sodium lead flouro- and chloro-borate glasses of the type 20NaX-30PbO-49.5B2O3-0.5Nd2O3 (X=F and Cl) have been investigated. Optical absorption spectra have been used to determine the Slater Condon (F2, F4, and F6), spin orbit xi4f and Racah parameters (E1, E2, and E3). The oscillator strengths and the intensity parameters Omega2, Omega4 and Omega6 have been determined by the Judd-Ofelt theory, which in turn provide the radiative transition probability (A), total transition probability (A(T)), radiative lifetime (tauR) and branching ratio (beta) for the fluorescent level 4F3/2. The lasing efficiency of the prepared glasses has been characterized by the spectroscopic quality factor (Omega4/Omega6), the value of which is in the range of 0.2-1.5, typical for Nd3+ in different laser hosts. Nephelauxetic effect results in a red shift in the energy levels of Nd3+ for chloroborate glass. The radiative transition probability of the potential lasing transition 4F3/2-->4I11/2 of Nd3+ ions is found to be higher for flouroborate as compared to chloroborate glass.
Word Frequency Analysis MOS: 15E. Skill Levels 1 and 2.
1982-05-01
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Archeological Excavations at Two Prehistoric Campsites Near Keystone Dam, El Paso, Texas.
1985-07-19
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ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
North Carolina State Dept. of Public Instruction, Raleigh. Div. of Vocational and Technical Education Services.
This curriculum guide was developed as a resource for teachers to use in planning and implementing a competency-based instructional program at the middle school level. It contains materials for a semester-long consumer home economics course based on the North Carolina Vocational Education Program of Studies, Revised 1992. The four units of the…
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... certain contracts with foreign entities for the conduct of ballistic missile defense research, development... foreign entities for the conduct of ballistic missile defense research, development, test, and evaluation... With Foreign Entities for the Conduct of Ballistic Missile Defense Research, Development, Test, and...
48 CFR 227.7104 - Contracts under the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, when technical data or computer software will be generated during performance of contracts under the SBIR program. (b) Under the clause at 252.227-7018, the Government obtains SBIR data rights in technical data and computer software...
48 CFR 227.7104 - Contracts under the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... Data and Computer Software—Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, when technical data or computer software will be generated during performance of contracts under the SBIR program. (b) Under the clause at 252.227-7018, the Government obtains SBIR data rights in technical data and computer software...
electric power professionals. Prior to that, Alex spent 15 years with Crain Communications' RCR Wireless @nrel.gov | 303-384-7018 As the Wind and Water Power Program Communications Team Lead, Alex serves as the primary interface to the Wind and Water Power Program management team to develop communication strategies
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-12-19
... also hopes to encourage greater use of its Closing Cross through this pricing incentive. NASDAQ further notes that the New York Stock Exchange (``NYSE'') currently offers general pricing incentives to members... changes to relocate the placement of the definitions of ``MPID'' and ``Consolidated Volume'' in Rule 7018...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-09-27
....'' The items ``design details, algorithms, processes, flow charts, formulas, and related material that describe the design, organization, or structure'' of computer software had been added to the current... 252.227-7018, which serves as the post-award complement to the pre-award identification and assertion...
Martínez-Silva, Ana Valeria; Aguirre-Martínez, César; Flores-Tinoco, Carlos E.; Alejandri-Ramírez, Naholi D.; Dinkova, Tzvetanka D.
2012-01-01
One of the most regulated steps of translation initiation is the recruitment of mRNA by the translation machinery. In eukaryotes, this step is mediated by the 5′end cap-binding factor eIF4E bound to the bridge protein eIF4G and forming the eIF4F complex. In plants, different isoforms of eIF4E and eIF4G form the antigenically distinct eIF4F and eIF(iso)4F complexes proposed to mediate selective translation. Using a microarray analysis of polyribosome- and non-polyribosome-purified mRNAs from 15 day-old Arabidopsis thaliana wild type [WT] and eIF(iso)4E knockout mutant [(iso)4E-1] seedlings we found 79 transcripts shifted from polyribosomes toward non-polyribosomes, and 47 mRNAs with the opposite behavior in the knockout mutant. The translationally decreased mRNAs were overrepresented in root-preferentially expressed genes and proteins from the endomembrane system, including several transporters such as the phosphate transporter PHOSPHATE1 (PHO1), Sucrose transporter 3 (SUC3), ABC transporter-like with ATPase activity (MRP11) and five electron transporters, as well as signal transduction-, protein modification- and transcription-related proteins. Under normal growth conditions, eIF(iso)4E expression under the constitutive promoter 35 S enhanced the polyribosomal recruitment of PHO1 supporting its translational preference for eIF(iso)4E. Furthermore, under phosphate deficiency, the PHO1 protein increased in the eIF(iso)4E overexpressing plants and decreased in the knockout mutant as compared to wild type. In addition, the knockout mutant had larger root, whereas the 35 S directed expression of eIF(iso)4E caused shorter root under normal growth conditions, but not under phosphate deficiency. These results indicate that selective translation mediated by eIF(iso)4E is relevant for Arabidopsis root development under normal growth conditions. PMID:22363683
Acta Aeronautica et Astronautica Sinica,
1983-03-04
AD A127 840 ACTA AERONAUTICA ET ASTRONAUTICA SINICA U FOREIGN TECHNOLOGY D V WRIGHT-PATTERSON AFB OH Y ZHENG ET AL.04 MAR 83 FTD-ID(RS)T-16i05-82...UNCLASSIFIED F/G 20/4 NL IhhEllElllEEEE EohEEEEEEohhEEEI///EI/E/I// Emh /hE/ahE/hihE lllllEEllllEEEE mmhhhhhmhhmh IIII1 111 1.4 MICROCOPY RESOLUTION TEST...CHART NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS-I963-A /! FTD-ID(RS)T-1605-82 FOREIGN TECHNOLOGY DIVISION ACTA AERONAUTICA ET ASTRONAUTICA SINICA ’ MAY 1 0 983 f A
1986-12-01
Y CLS$1F-.AT N OF THIS...1 MN cD jO 0 -O Ocn00 ~ c" W) 400’ rno n + a9 .9 .i , vi 4 -W cm C44. y c 000 CD %D 1% CD-. U 4 CnN C! - N ON N N TV o 00 e~. r, ML 4r WL ne 0...to N D N4 ’aN N " Nf Y N Nm 00 1C’ bq D Wc iG f". rC W C4 No N N D On ’-0 0 0 f" .4l cc W.4 LoP doE N 04 In Ins. +. V. 0 0 fn 10 C Go 0D C 00’ 4o
Powered Conveyor System for Tray Pack. Short Term Project No. 1
1991-08-28
responsibilities are de- scribed in the Technical and Cost Proposals for STP # 1 . 3.0 Short Term Project Activities 3.1 Technology Review & Preliminary...I - ------- F f~/ AD-A241 562: CMBAT RATION TECHNOLOGY DEMONSTRATION (CRAMTD) PtIwered onveyor Systein fbrfray Ph&k Short Tenn Piject # 1 -, TNAL...REPORT’ A ~~~STP Results and Acmolislssents (Odober 1989to~~ 1 91 Rpe ar.o.CRAMTDSlP #.L rR.-LO q~eO~4DTI.’ cRAi.4m CwcE~rA NO. DLA90088D-033 g ELECTb f C
Kepler-62: a five-planet system with planets of 1.4 and 1.6 Earth radii in the habitable zone.
Borucki, William J; Agol, Eric; Fressin, Francois; Kaltenegger, Lisa; Rowe, Jason; Isaacson, Howard; Fischer, Debra; Batalha, Natalie; Lissauer, Jack J; Marcy, Geoffrey W; Fabrycky, Daniel; Désert, Jean-Michel; Bryson, Stephen T; Barclay, Thomas; Bastien, Fabienne; Boss, Alan; Brugamyer, Erik; Buchhave, Lars A; Burke, Chris; Caldwell, Douglas A; Carter, Josh; Charbonneau, David; Crepp, Justin R; Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jørgen; Christiansen, Jessie L; Ciardi, David; Cochran, William D; DeVore, Edna; Doyle, Laurance; Dupree, Andrea K; Endl, Michael; Everett, Mark E; Ford, Eric B; Fortney, Jonathan; Gautier, Thomas N; Geary, John C; Gould, Alan; Haas, Michael; Henze, Christopher; Howard, Andrew W; Howell, Steve B; Huber, Daniel; Jenkins, Jon M; Kjeldsen, Hans; Kolbl, Rea; Kolodziejczak, Jeffery; Latham, David W; Lee, Brian L; Lopez, Eric; Mullally, Fergal; Orosz, Jerome A; Prsa, Andrej; Quintana, Elisa V; Sanchis-Ojeda, Roberto; Sasselov, Dimitar; Seader, Shawn; Shporer, Avi; Steffen, Jason H; Still, Martin; Tenenbaum, Peter; Thompson, Susan E; Torres, Guillermo; Twicken, Joseph D; Welsh, William F; Winn, Joshua N
2013-05-03
We present the detection of five planets--Kepler-62b, c, d, e, and f--of size 1.31, 0.54, 1.95, 1.61 and 1.41 Earth radii (R⊕), orbiting a K2V star at periods of 5.7, 12.4, 18.2, 122.4, and 267.3 days, respectively. The outermost planets, Kepler-62e and -62f, are super-Earth-size (1.25 R⊕ < planet radius ≤ 2.0 R⊕) planets in the habitable zone of their host star, respectively receiving 1.2 ± 0.2 times and 0.41 ± 0.05 times the solar flux at Earth's orbit. Theoretical models of Kepler-62e and -62f for a stellar age of ~7 billion years suggest that both planets could be solid, either with a rocky composition or composed of mostly solid water in their bulk.
Molecular Determinants for Antibody Binding on Group 1 House Dust Mite Allergens
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Chruszcz, Maksymilian; Pomés, Anna; Glesner, Jill
2012-07-11
House dust mites produce potent allergens, Der p 1 and Der f 1, that cause allergic sensitization and asthma. Der p 1 and Der f 1 are cysteine proteases that elicit IgE responses in 80% of mite-allergic subjects and have proinflammatory properties. Their antigenic structure is unknown. Here, we present crystal structures of natural Der p 1 and Der f 1 in complex with a monoclonal antibody, 4C1, which binds to a unique cross-reactive epitope on both allergens associated with IgE recognition. The 4C1 epitope is formed by almost identical amino acid sequences and contact residues. Mutations of the contactmore » residues abrogate mAb 4C1 binding and reduce IgE antibody binding. These surface-exposed residues are molecular targets that can be exploited for development of recombinant allergen vaccines.« less
Analysis of hRad1, a Human G2 Checkpoint Control Gene
2002-03-01
kinases chk1(+) and cds1(+). Genetics, 1999. 152(4): p. 1501-12. 39. Fritz , E., A.A. Friedl, R.M. Zwacka, F. Eckardt-Schupp, and M.S. Meyn, The yeast...Schiripo, M.M. Jorczak, D.C. Sgroi, J.E. Garber, F.P. Li, K.E. Nichols, J.M. Varley, A.K. Godwin, K.M. Shannon, E. Harlow, and D.A. Haber
Gutiérrez, A M; González, E; Echevarría, M; Hernández, C S; Whittembury, G
1995-02-01
Proximal straight tubules (PST) were dissected from rabbit kidneys, held by crimping pipettes in a chamber and bathed in a buffered isosmotic (295 mOsm/kg) solution containing 200 mM mannitol (MBS). Changes in tubule diameter were monitored on line with an inverted microscope, TV camera and image processor. The PST were then challenged for 20 sec with MBS made 35 mOsm/kg hyperosmotic by addition of either NaCl, KCl, mannitol (M), glycerol (G), ethylene glycol (E), glycine (g), urea (U), acetamide (A) or formamide (F). With NaCl, KCl, M, G, E, g, U, and A, tubules shrunk osmometrically within 0.5 sec and remained shrunk for as long as 20 sec without recovering their original volume (sometimes A showed some recovery). PST barely shrunk with F and quickly recovered their original volume. The permeability coefficients were 0 microns/sec (NaCl, M, g, E and U), 1 micron/sec (A), 84 microns/sec (F) and 0.02 micron/sec (G). The reflection coefficients sigma = 1.0 (NaCl, KCl, M, G, E, g and U), 0.95 (A) and 0.62 (F). Similar sigma values were obtained by substituting 200 mOsm/kg M in MBS by either NaCl, KCl, G, E, g, U, a or F. The olive oil/water partition coefficients are 5 (M), 15 (U), 85 (A) and 75 (F) (all x 10(-5)). Thus, part of F permeates the cell membrane through the lipid bilayer. The probing molecules van der Waals diameters are 7.4 x 8.2 x 12.0 (M), 3.6 x 5.2 x 5.4 (U), 3.8 x 5.2 x 5.4 (A) and (3.4 x 4.5 x 5.4 (F) A.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Lyabin, D N; Ovchinnikov, L P
2016-03-02
The Y-box binding protein 1 (YB-1) is a key regulator of gene expression at the level of both translation and transcription. The mode of its action on cellular events depends on its subcellular distribution and the amount in the cell. So far, the regulatory mechanisms of YB-1 synthesis have not been adequately studied. Our previous finding was that selective inhibition of YB-1 mRNA translation was caused by suppression of activity of the mTOR signaling pathway. It was suggested that this event may be mediated by phosphorylation of the 4E-binding protein (4E-BP). Here, we report that 4E-BP alone can only slightly inhibit YB-1 synthesis both in the cell and in vitro, although it essentially decreases binding of the 4F-group translation initiation factors to mRNA. With inhibited mTOR kinase, the level of mRNA binding to the eIF4F-group factors was decreased, while that to 4E-BP1 was increased, as was observed for both mTOR kinase-sensitive mRNAs and those showing low sensitivity. This suggests that selective inhibition of translation of YB-1 mRNA, and probably some other mRNAs as well, by mTOR kinase inhibitors is not mediated by the action of the 4E-binding protein upon functions of the 4F-group translation initiation factors.
Attar-Schneider, Oshrat; Pasmanik-Chor, Metsada; Tartakover-Matalon, Shelly
2015-01-01
Accumulating data indicate translation plays a role in cancer biology, particularly its rate limiting stage of initiation. Despite this evolving recognition, the function and importance of specific translation initiation factors is unresolved. The eukaryotic translation initiation complex eIF4F consists of eIF4E and eIF4G at a 1:1 ratio. Although it is expected that they display interdependent functions, several publications suggest independent mechanisms. This study is the first to directly assess the relative contribution of eIF4F components to the expressed cellular proteome, transcription factors, microRNAs, and phenotype in a malignancy known for extensive protein synthesis-multiple myeloma (MM). Previously, we have shown that eIF4E/eIF4GI attenuation (siRNA/Avastin) deleteriously affected MM cells' fate and reduced levels of eIF4E/eIF4GI established targets. Here, we demonstrated that eIF4E/eIF4GI indeed have individual influences on cell proteome. We used an objective, high throughput assay of mRNA microarrays to examine the significance of eIF4E/eIF4GI silencing to several cellular facets such as transcription factors, microRNAs and phenotype. We showed different imprints for eIF4E and eIF4GI in all assayed aspects. These results promote our understanding of the relative contribution and importance of eIF4E and eIF4GI to the malignant phenotype and shed light on their function in eIF4F translation initiation complex. PMID:25717031
Alteri, Claudia; Surdo, Matteo; Bellocchi, Maria Concetta; Saccomandi, Patrizia; Continenza, Fabio; Armenia, Daniele; Parrotta, Lucia; Carioti, Luca; Costa, Giosuè; Fourati, Slim; Di Santo, Fabiola; Scutari, Rossana; Barbaliscia, Silvia; Fedele, Valentina; Carta, Stefania; Balestra, Emanuela; Alcaro, Stefano; Marcelin, Anne Genevieve; Calvez, Vincent; Ceccherini-Silberstein, Francesca; Artese, Anna; Perno, Carlo Federico; Svicher, Valentina
2015-08-01
Incomplete APOBEC3G/F neutralization by a defective HIV-1Vif protein can promote genetic diversification by inducing G-to-A mutations in the HIV-1 genome. The HIV-1 Env V3 loop, critical for coreceptor usage, contains several putative APOBEC3G/F target sites. Here, we determined if APOBEC3G/F, in the presence of Vif-defective HIV-1 virus, can induce G-to-A mutations at V3 positions critical to modulation of CXCR4 usage. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) from 2 HIV-1-negative donors were infected with CCR5-using 81.A-VifWT virus (i.e., with wild-type [WT] Vif protein), 81.A-VifE45G, or 81.A-VifK22E (known to incompletely/partially neutralize APOBEC3G/F). The rate of G-toA mutations was zero or extremely low in 81.A-VifWT- and 81.A-VifE45G-infected PBMC from both donors. Conversely, G-to-A enrichment was detected in 81.A-VifK22E-infected PBMC (prevalence ranging from 2.18% at 7 days postinfection [dpi] to 3.07% at 21 dpi in donor 1 and from 10.49% at 7 dpi to 8.69% at 21 dpi in donor 2). A similar scenario was found in MDM. G-to-A mutations occurred at 8 V3 positions, resulting in nonsynonymous amino acid substitutions. Of them, G24E and E25K strongly correlated with phenotypically/genotypically defined CXCR4-using viruses (P = 0.04 and 5.5e-7, respectively) and increased the CXCR4 N-terminal binding affinity for V3 (WT, -40.1 kcal/mol; G24E, -510 kcal/mol; E25K, -522 kcal/mol). The analysis of paired V3 and Vif DNA sequences from 84 HIV-1-infected patients showed that the presence of a Vif-defective virus correlated with CXCR4 usage in proviral DNA (P = 0.04). In conclusion, incomplete APOBEC3G/F neutralization by a single Vif amino acid substitution seeds a CXCR4-using proviral reservoir. This can have implications for the success of CCR5 antagonist-based therapy, as well as for the risk of disease progression. Copyright © 2015, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Performance of Solid Fuel Ramjet Guided Projectile for USN 5 inch/54 Caliber Gun System
1982-03-01
porn .62040.5#01 0.5’)’ ’V 0. SI:1:,3.)~ 13’ 0 0. ?l04 13..1270 0.1 P’E 02 0.?V: 04 1. 21.1?04 95f t 1jfl 0. %1:1 F1’.0Ol’C)1.3 ~ 0 to 11 j :.b17...34 - 0..’’ f: fILFI Dog 0 A OV~AL V STgpi0quATlF SUM1W1.40 Mo 022o-op0.13f-0 .6?r-z 012?-ot .61T.4 FTtPR ENS A NfAVAL POTP~J~ E~li AGr Dal rC
Industrial Water Treatment Primer
1992-03-01
calculated as follows: Sulfite, ppm = (ml solution) x (factor). EXAMPLE: 2.3 ml of Potassium Iodide - Iodate Solution were required to change the color of ...8217. 4A"O aqd. nd coffOicTAq ofdne I" c ot(¶O f any.~.o W’dcmclojdn fb’e’ ~~t ,~~ P4 uOqj of 1’i 40flc~nof "fo~s~rmU l. If i Igo4 t fo, ’edvong IN% bw to...4sal g V IOA af e So ýn o irv , aw lo w inton ra ton 0w rtovr4 • a i I v j holq w- F _ O.f ,stwa. tjieI*.AI: 9 b. 1U 2 02. snd to thw Of ~e 0 ,*ot
Physical Security Modeling for the Shipboard Nuclear Weapons Security Program,
1982-04-01
I AOA1IR 396 NAVAL SURFACE WEAPONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MO F/G 15/3 PHYSICAL SECURITY MODELING FOR THE SHIPROARD NUCLEAR WEAPONS SE--ETEEU) APR A2 E ...WEAPONS SECURITY )PROGRAM 0% BY E . G. JACOUES D. L BARTUSEK R. W. MONROE M. S. SCHWARTZ WEAPONS SYSTEMS DEPARTMENT 1 APRIL 1982 A4pm lvW for p uic r...ASSIPICATIO N O F Tb IS PAGE t’W "mu Dat e E DLeT R)....... t READ W~STRUCTIoNs’ REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE BEFORE COMPLETNG FORM4 . REPiQRT NUM1e[i ja. VT
Nha Trang Apt.,Vietnam. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F
1971-01-29
DO-02 boi 647 07 $o63 yeo0 be?, 1190 lv 9@4 21.4 146 (6el 748 J-05 el 09.3 L.e 6.0 19o4 0i,9 1067 1.o i$05 25.3 13.a 603 971 0 0 hO iha - 4 3 70. 790...Temperature I ReId ti!n 32831 5) 4 II 9Z 7 2P I 5 I= 7IP -<OF I -T32F n67F 72 eO e93 F Total < wet BoI 2 99o51o 117 ’ 3, 6,11 93t i , 7POO.t~: ~?6...22 23 24 25 26 27-2829- 301 31 D B. W B FDry B.uIb Wc Bulb ew Porn ? 7t 7 all/ 87 i _,._7 a 4 834*3Is$ Ill1621 208 bo/ 79 Jll 7.0’l 3.1 2.6 7 2 194
Krogsgaard-Larsen, Niels; Storgaard, Morten; Møller, Charlotte; Demmer, Charles S; Hansen, Jeanette; Han, Liwei; Monrad, Rune N; Nielsen, Birgitte; Tapken, Daniel; Pickering, Darryl S; Kastrup, Jette S; Frydenvang, Karla; Bunch, Lennart
2015-08-13
Herein we describe the first structure-activity relationship study of the broad-range iGluR antagonist (2S,3R)-3-(3-carboxyphenyl)pyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid (1) by exploring the pharmacological effect of substituents in the 4, 4', or 5' positions and the bioisosteric substitution of the distal carboxylic acid for a phosphonic acid moiety. Of particular interest is a hydroxyl group in the 4' position 2a which induced a preference in binding affinity for homomeric GluK3 over GluK1 (Ki = 0.87 and 4.8 μM, respectively). Two X-ray structures of ligand binding domains were obtained: 2e in GluA2-LBD and 2f in GluK1-LBD, both at 1.9 Å resolution. Compound 2e induces a D1-D2 domain opening in GluA2-LBD of 17.3-18.8° and 2f a domain opening in GluK1-LBD of 17.0-17.5° relative to the structures with glutamate. The pyrrolidine-2-carboxylate moiety of 2e and 2f shows a similar binding mode as kainate. The 3-carboxyphenyl ring of 2e and 2f forms contacts comparable to those of the distal carboxylate in kainate.
Mazzega Sbovata, Silvia; Bettio, Frazia; Marzano, Christine; Tassan, Augusto; Mozzon, Mirto; Bertani, Roberta; Benetollo, Franco; Michelin, Rino A
2008-04-01
New substituted benzyl iminoether derivatives of the type cis- and trans-[PtCl(2){E-N(H)C(OMe)CH(2)-C(6)H(4)-p-R}(2)] (R=Me (1a, 2a), OMe (3a, 4a), F (5a, 6a)) have been synthesized and characterized by elemental analyses, FT-IR spectroscopy and NMR techniques. The iminoether ligands are in the E configuration, which is stable in solution and in the solid state, as confirmed by the (1)H NMR data. Complex trans-[PtCl(2){E-N(H)C(OMe)CH(2)-C(6)H(4)-p-F}(2)] (6a) was also characterized by an X-ray diffraction study. Complexes 1a-6a have been tested against a panel of human tumor cell lines in order to evaluate their cytotoxic activity. cis-Isomers were significant more potent than the corresponding trans-isomers against all tumor cell lines tested; moreover, complexes 1a and 5a showed IC(50) values from about 2-fold to 6-fold lower than those exhibited by cisplatin, used as reference platinum anticancer drug.
Free-Space Green’s Functions of the Reduced Wave Equation.
1982-09-01
1/2Z) exp(ino)!j J GF( ’n’axRo)Jn( r)exp(iaz)d~da- - - o (4.1) __8 * where the inverse transform is (F2,nr,)o) J (,R)J(;r exp(/in)-iz)rdrddz (4.2) -F...exp(im.) E ?m(cos 8) GF(,nmR (JR)E/2d• M-w n=-= 51 0 s n) -). where the inverse transform is G F(En,m,R) (2n+l)(n-m)!1/2/(4r2(n+m)!). 2w 7r ((RR )exp
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-12-06
... services that benefit specific individuals, as opposed to the general public. See OMB Circular A-25... DEPARTMENT OF STATE 22 CFR Part 22 [Public Notice 7706] RIN 1400-AC57 Schedule of Fees for... published in the Federal Register, 75 FR 28188, on May 20, 2010 (Public Notice 7018). Specifically, the rule...
A Comparison of Aircraft Maintenance Organizational Structures
1992-09-01
Outputs ... ...................... 85 Appendix E : Double Cross-Validation ........... 117 Appendix F: Exchange of Independent Variables...splits into three major production branches (6). See Figure 8. 26 Aircraf t Interm ia•’ e Maintenance Off icerzI A ssistantAIKO I 1|A/ant a A Traiing...responsible for all aircraft maintenance activities, see Figure 9 (4:3). rdor ! E •; e Techn•1i Se~rvices Wff oE r I f .1 Bass Airaraf t Iaintenanoc E
The cat lipocalin Fel d 7 and its cross-reactivity with the dog lipocalin Can f 1.
Apostolovic, D; Sánchez-Vidaurre, S; Waden, K; Curin, M; Grundström, J; Gafvelin, G; Cirkovic Velickovic, T; Grönlund, H; Thomas, W R; Valenta, R; Hamsten, C; van Hage, M
2016-10-01
We investigated the prevalence of sensitization to the cat lipocalin Fel d 7 among 140 cat-sensitized Swedish patients and elucidated its allergenic activity and cross-reactivity with the dog lipocalin Can f 1. Sixty-five of 140 patients had IgE to rFel d 7 whereof 60 also had IgE to rCan f 1. A moderate correlation between IgE levels to rFel d 7 and rCan f 1 was found. rFel d 7 activated basophils in vitro and inhibited IgE binding to rCan f 1 in 4 of 13 patients, whereas rCan f 1 inhibited IgE binding to rFel d 7 in 7 of 13 patients. Fel d 7 and Can f 1 showed high similarities in protein structure and epitopes in common were found using cross-reactive antisera. Fel d 7 is a common allergen in a Swedish cat-sensitized population that cross-reacts with Can f 1, and may contribute to symptoms in cat- but also in dog-allergic patients. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
1980-09-30
Classification 2I e. Ownership 2f. Purpose of Dam 2 g. Design and Construction History 2h. Normal Operating Procedure 2 1.3 PERTINENT DATA 2 a. Drainage...4 2.2 SUBSURFACE INVESTIGATION 4 2.3 DAM AND APPURTENANT STRUCTURES 4 2.4 CONSTRUCTION RECORDS 4 2.5 OPERATION RECORDS 2.6 EVALUATION OF DATA 5 4...12 a. Visual Observations 12 b. Design and Construction Data 12 c. Stability Analysis 12 d. Operating Records 13 e. Post- Construction Changes 13 f
Fulda AAF, Germany. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F
1972-02-08
62,21~ 62 62.2 62.2 62.6 62.6j 62,6 62 6 0.62.s2 653,.> 100 101 17,11 63 tD 03~ 15 63. 0j, 64#J t,4o^, 64.O04,C 4 ’.cl 64,9>_ ___ 51.4 56 61.7 64,9...STATION hAMi YEARSo _Te_ WET BULB TEMPERA) URE DEPRESSION (F) I 7OTAL 1 TOTAL (F) ~ ~ ~ 1 11 ___ _:_~1~ 24~2 2?2 L.9 B , l B . BbD & Po ___--- I __ __ , I...34,, lOt, Th 1$/ 37 s 44 . 4 14 - 22/_ 31 -I 11 6 / 1 2_ __ JAL 2 7Z.1. 7 .~ TD -e 214267~ 3E75 2# Is- 91 9 ___ I;~~91 90__ 1 .-..- SElm t CX) 4x ’ o 1 ~ Obs
Kwong, Huey Chong; Sim, Aijia; Chidan Kumar, C S; Then, Li Yee; Win, Yip-Foo; Quah, Ching Kheng; Naveen, S; Warad, Ismail
2017-12-01
The asymmetric unit of the title compound, C 24 H 14 F 4 O 2 , comprises of one and a half mol-ecules; the half-mol-ecule is completed by crystallographic inversion symmetry. In the crystal, mol-ecules are linked into a three-dimensional network by C-H⋯F and C-H⋯O hydrogen bonds. Some of the C-H⋯F links are unusually short (< 2.20 Å). Hirshfeld surface analyses ( d norm surfaces and two-dimensional fingerprint plots) for the title compound are presented and discussed.
Synthesis of fused 1,2,4-dithiazines and 1,2,3,5-trithiazepines.
Koyioni, Maria; Manoli, Maria; Koutentis, Panayiotis A
2014-10-17
Reacting (Z)-N-(4-chloro-5H-1,2,3-dithiazol-5-ylidene)-1H-pyrazol-5-amines 5 with Et2NH and then with concd H2SO4 gives 5H-pyrazolo[3,4-e][1,2,4]dithiazine-3-carbonitriles 7 in good yields (74-85%) and 6H-pyrazolo[3,4-f][1,2,3,5]trithiazepine-4-carbonitriles 9 as minor products (0-6%). Furthermore, the 1,3-dimethylpyrazole analogue 5a was transformed into the dithiazine 7a in two discrete steps, allowing the isolation of a disulfide intermediate (Z)-2-[(diethylamino)disulfan-yl]-2-[(1H-pyrazol-5-yl)imino]acetonitrile (8a). The one-pot, two-step reaction also worked with electron-rich hydroxy- and methoxy-substituted anilines. Thermolysis of the pyrazolo[3,4-e][1,2,4]dithiazines 7 gave the ring-contracted 1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]thiazole-5-carbonitriles 6 (94-100%). With active sulfur, 1,3-dimethyl-5H-pyrazolo[3,4-e][1,2,4]dithiazine-3-carbonitrile (7a) gave 1,3-dimethyl-6H-pyrazolo[3,4-f][1,2,3,5]trithiazepine-4-carbonitrile (9a), but on prolonged reaction times, it gave 5,7-dimethyl-5H-[1,2,3]dithiazolo[4,5-b]pyrazolo[3,4-e][1,4]thiazine (13). Finally, in the absence of acid, heating a solution of (Z)-2-[(diethylamino)disulfanyl]-2-[(1,3-dimethyl-1H-pyrazol-5-yl)imino]acetonitrile (8a) gave 4,6,10,12-tetramethyl-6H-pyrazolo[3,4-f]pyrazolo[3',4':4,5]pyrimido[6,1-d][1,2,3,5]trithiazepine-8,12b(10H)-dicarbonitrile (19) (67%).
1972-01-17
OBSERVATIONS 930 USAFETAC 0.8.5 (OLI) PRIOIS IDI ’ NS I -II FORTA D 1I ( JBS -I7f DIATA PRIKESSIN ’JVLSIfN FT (./US^, SURFACE WINDS2 L1 E.,T E E’VICE/’C...821719 7 2 , n 79, 9.n 7. e -1-9 /9 0r ."J--%l 4. :j Hh .3 7 7 Soso3 n,, ) A(~ 9).95 8)16 9 . ) 2. 9 .19 , 9, 10 4 U L 21 5 . td lt 711~ri)~ 79.7 A0.4...85.9 i. 85.3 jb .7 8.7 . 87. 4 87.4 87 . 87,4 87.4 87,4 200 0 .0 tR86 139 1 i. 900() 90 6l I l L ~ 9 ’ U 2000 r 94.~ 00 ! 8. 89]. 9O 90,8 90.9 q.,7 2 2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Enell, Carl-Fredrik; Kozlovsky, Alexander; Turunen, Tauno; Ulich, Thomas; Välitalo, Sirkku; Scotto, Carlo; Pezzopane, Michael
2016-03-01
This paper presents a comparison between standard ionospheric parameters manually and automatically scaled from ionograms recorded at the high-latitude Sodankylä Geophysical Observatory (SGO, ionosonde SO166, 64.1° geomagnetic latitude), located in the vicinity of the auroral oval. The study is based on 2610 ionograms recorded during the period June-December 2013. The automatic scaling was made by means of the Autoscala software. A few typical examples are shown to outline the method, and statistics are presented regarding the differences between manually and automatically scaled values of F2, F1, E and sporadic E (Es) layer parameters. We draw the conclusions that: 1. The F2 parameters scaled by Autoscala, foF2 and M(3000)F2, are reliable. 2. F1 is identified by Autoscala in significantly fewer cases (about 50 %) than in the manual routine, but if identified the values of foF1 are reliable. 3. Autoscala frequently (30 % of the cases) detects an E layer when the manual scaling process does not. When identified by both methods, the Autoscala E-layer parameters are close to those manually scaled, foE agreeing to within 0.4 MHz. 4. Es and parameters of Es identified by Autoscala are in many cases different from those of the manual scaling. Scaling of Es at auroral latitudes is often a difficult task.
Proposed Department of Defense Policy on Air Installations Compatible Use Zones
1973-06-01
34 F-3 HIOHT MOW • 1! F-100 afterburner 2A B-52H military 2C-5 ! F-101 F-6 C/KC-135A... afterburner F-6 F-89 MONT MOW 10 F-8 F-94 F-ll T-38 B^7 military 2D A-5 B-58 military mONT MOW • HMNT MOUP * F-SO...imlitarv 2B-5 F S4F F MG F-104 military 2A-5 F-10« F-86E, F. H F-4B. C " F-86V \\ F-K HMNT MOW 4 B-67 F-3 afterburner
Shen, Shuijie; Li, Lei; Ding, Xinxin; Zheng, Jiang
2014-01-21
Pulmonary toxicity of styrene is initiated by cytochromes P450-dependent metabolic activation. P450 2E1 and P450 2F2 are considered to be two main cytochrome P450 enzymes responsible for styrene metabolism in mice. The objective of the current study was to determine the correlation between the formation of styrene metabolites (i.e., styrene oxide and 4-vinylphenol) and pulmonary toxicity of styrene, using Cyp2e1- and Cyp2f2-null mouse models. A dramatic decrease in the formation of styrene glycol and 4-vinylphenol was found in Cyp2f2-null mouse lung microsomes relative to that in the wild-type mouse lung microsomes; however, no significant difference in the production of the styrene metabolites was observed between lung microsomes obtained from Cyp2e1-null and the wild-type mice. The knockout and wild-type mice were treated with styrene (6.0 mmol/kg, ip), and cell counts and LDH activity in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids were monitored to evaluate the pulmonary toxicity induced by styrene. Cyp2e1-null mice displayed a susceptibility to lung toxicity of styrene similar to that of the wild-type animals; however, Cyp2f2-null mice were resistant to styrene-induced pulmonary toxicity. In conclusion, both P450 2E1 and P450 2F2 are responsible for the metabolic activation of styrene. The latter enzyme plays an important role in styrene-induced pulmonary toxicity. Both styrene oxide and 4-vinylphenol are suggested to participate in the development of lung injury induced by styrene.
1982-01-18
O006 UNCLASSIFIED E-TR-58-VOL-3 NL3I~hEhE EhHEEE00000000E law 4r: 32 1 8 41 PHOTOGRAPH THIS SHEET //* LEVEL INVENTORY z ~ DOCUMENT IDENTIFICATION I I...kNPOTTN 44. 4 4F OPERATIO "MAL BASE TE48T SIT *.DeISlrNATED’%RAINING AREA I I IT R8W 0000 1 , Iv t DR V’ NG f4 12 00 W - • , .: . .i .. . i
1983-03-01
AS RlIVE A MILE 306 - - HO(, ARM SlY A l FIE M 300 51Hp#F N WAS I f DISC"ARGE Ru29 2704-" R Milk 2 AND 9bVEL 08KIHATSO 3r AI DISARtE R IA AL272 HOIG f...VZ TF (OIt.CHARCfE* RivCP Mid ?Ř ANC) 2WA RESP9C1,VELY OAONTGOe.ERY AL RVF MAIL( 285: ’NfOANCL.V-4F ;PFi A’ N. I E R MILE "U- 16 6 6 A A w- 0 .A...RIVENA M:f .F ’, 1 t50 X10 MILLERS FERRYI (rC AND DAMRIVERF Mr f 1 BF AFIU CREF. RVf P MILEF 12.3 PURFSdfY CREE RIVER MiIF III/ 90 (,LAISOPNE LOC(-K AND
Numerical Analysis of Turbulent Separated Subsonic Diffuser Flows
1977-02-01
the s u b l a y e r r eg ion when one a t t e m p t s to use a un i fo rm coord ina te s y s t e m to d e s c r i b e the p r o - f i l es ...s u m e d p ro f i l e in the v ic in i ty of s e p a r a t i o n is ques t ionable . C l e a r l y , an adequate solut ion r e q u i r e s...in an 8-dell conical diffuser. 7.15 m O ,o H l 01 O1 (O AEDC-TR-76-159 1 .0 u~ O k O 4~ eS r-4 a ~4 el 0 . 8 0 . 6 0 . 4
40 CFR 721.5185 - 2-Propen-1-one, 1-(4-morpholinyl)-.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
...), (a)(3)(ii), (a)(4), (a)(6)(v), (b) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), and (c). Safety 4/4H EVOH/PE... in accordance with the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) F739 method and found by EPA to.... Requirements as specified in § 721.72 (a), (b), (c), (d), (e) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), (f), (g)(1...
40 CFR 721.5185 - 2-Propen-1-one, 1-(4-morpholinyl)-.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
...), (a)(3)(ii), (a)(4), (a)(6)(v), (b) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), and (c). Safety 4/4H EVOH/PE... in accordance with the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) F739 method and found by EPA to.... Requirements as specified in § 721.72 (a), (b), (c), (d), (e) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), (f), (g)(1...
40 CFR 721.5185 - 2-Propen-1-one, 1-(4-morpholinyl)-.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
...), (a)(3)(ii), (a)(4), (a)(6)(v), (b) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), and (c). Safety 4/4H EVOH/PE... in accordance with the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) F739 method and found by EPA to.... Requirements as specified in § 721.72 (a), (b), (c), (d), (e) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), (f), (g)(1...
40 CFR 721.5185 - 2-Propen-1-one, 1-(4-morpholinyl)-.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
...), (a)(3)(ii), (a)(4), (a)(6)(v), (b) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), and (c). Safety 4/4H EVOH/PE... in accordance with the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) F739 method and found by EPA to.... Requirements as specified in § 721.72 (a), (b), (c), (d), (e) (concentration set at 1.0 percent), (f), (g)(1...
Silencing of E2F3 suppresses tumor growth of Her2+ breast cancer cells by restricting mitosis.
Lee, Miyoung; Oprea-Ilies, Gabriela; Saavedra, Harold I
2015-11-10
The E2F transcriptional activators E2F1, E2F2 and E2F3a regulate many important cellular processes, including DNA replication, apoptosis and centrosome duplication. Previously, we demonstrated that silencing E2F1 or E2F3 suppresses centrosome amplification (CA) and chromosome instability (CIN) in Her2+ breast cancer cells without markedly altering proliferation. However, it is unknown whether and how silencing a single E2F activator, E2F3, affects malignancy of human breast cancer cells. Thus, we injected HCC1954 Her2+ breast cancer cells silenced for E2F3 into mammary fat pads of immunodeficient mice and demonstrated that loss of E2F3 retards tumor growth. Surprisingly, silencing of E2F3 led to significant reductions in mitotic indices relative to vector controls, while the percentage of cells undergoing S phase were not affected. Nek2 is a mitotic kinase commonly upregulated in breast cancers and a critical regulator of Cdk4- or E2F-mediated CA. In this report, we found that Nek2 overexpression rescued back the CA caused by silencing of shE2F3. However, the effects of Nek2 overexpression in affecting tumor growth rates of shE2F3 and shE2F3; GFP cells were inconclusive. Taken together, our results indicate that E2F3 silencing decreases mammary tumor growth by reducing percentage of cells undergoing mitosis.
Regular Inversion of the Divergence Operator with Dirichlet Boundary Conditions on a Polygon,
1987-04-01
E c- xC 0 Czt C- -- &C -nC CL C~ E C - U U C U C0 V C ( C CC C L 6- - C C- 1 -CLL r = .c L C A C *C CCC F 4 C CC> C C 4D C3 1 ZC -’ c OC.LL fUC I...Iil Moreover by Lemmna 2.1, there is a single cons aiit C such that IIIIIPpV Chi 1 /, p e < CII, 1 2/P p. holds for all such 9. Thus / . af l( I-,0)1
A Constant Percentage Bandwidth Transform for Acoustic Signal Processing
1980-01-01
t)eJwt d . 27Th (0) Equation 2.9 is not, however, the most general form for short-time Fourier synthesis, but is in fact a particular case of the...form of the analysis integral. F(Wk? t)eJwkt = f(t) * h( t)’ukt (3.4) Fourier transforming both sides of this equation (and invoking the convolution...properties. In what follows, define 38 f(t) - F(w,t) (3.24) to be an equivalent statement to equation 3.1. 3.6.1 Linearity Property If F1 w,t) and F2 (w
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gupta, Dhanoj; Song, Mi-Young; Baluja, K. L.; Choi, Heechol; Yoon, Jung-Sik
2018-06-01
We report the calculations of elastic (along with its symmetry components) and electronic excitation cross sections by electron impact of the three isomers of C4F6, namely, hexafluoro-1,3-butadiene (1,3-C4F6), hexafluoro-2-butyne (2-C4F6), and hexafluorocyclobutene (c-C4F6) belonging to the point groups C2, D3d, and C2v, respectively, using the R-matrix approach. The electron energy range is from 0.01 eV to 12 eV. We have employed the cc-pVTZ basis set for C and F atoms to generate self-consistent field molecular orbitals to construct the target states for all the isomers included in our calculations. All the target states are constructed by including correlation effects in a configuration interaction (CI) approach. The target properties such as vertical excitation energies and dipole moment of all the isomers are in reasonable agreement with the literature values. Differences in the cross sections of these isomers are strongly influenced by the effect of correlation and polarization effects and their geometrical extent. We have included the ground state and many excited states of each isomer in the trial wave function of the entire scattering system. The resulting elastic cross sections are compared with the available experimental results. The agreement is reasonably good for energies above 5 eV. The shape resonances detected at 2.57, 2.95, and 3.20 eV for c-C4F6, 1,3-C4F6, and 2-C4F6 isomers are associated with the negative anion formation of C3F3- as observed in the mass spectrometry experiments. We have also performed 1-state CI calculation for all the isomers that include only the correlated ground state. The position of resonances shifts to lower energies as the number of target states is increased compared to 1-state calculation for all the isomers. The elastic cross section for 2-C4F6 isomer is larger than the other isomers because of its larger spatial extent. The present cross section data are important for plasma simulation and modeling, especially related to fluorocarbon plasma.
Obali, Aslihan Yilmaz; Ucan, Halil Ismet
2016-09-01
Novel different substitued polypyridine ligands 4-((4-(1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline-2-yl)phenoxy)methyl)benzaldehyde (BA-PPY), (E)-N-(4-((4-(1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline-2-yl)phenoxy)methyl)benzylidene)-pyrene-4-amine (PR-PPY), (E)-N-(4-((4-(1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10] phenanthroline-2-yl)phenoxy)methyl)benzylidene)-1,10-phenanthroline-5amine (FN-PPY), 2-(4-(bromomethyl)phenyl)-1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10] phenanthroline (BR-PPY), 2-(4-(azidomethyl)phenyl)-1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline (N3-PPY) and triazole containing polypyridine ligand 3,4-bis[(4-(metoxy)-1,2,3-triazole)1-methylphenyl)-1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline)] benzaldehyde (BA-DIPPY) and Ruthenium(II) complexes were synthesized and characterized. Their photopysical properties were investigated. The complexes RuP(PR-PPY), RuB(PR-PPY, RuP(FN-PPY) and RuB(FN-PPY) exhibited a broad absorption bands at 485, 475, 476, and 453 nm, respectively, assignable to the spin-allowed MLCT (dπ-π*) transition. The emission maxima of the pyrene-appended polypyridine ligand PR-PPY was observed at λems = 616 nm and the phenanthroline-appended polypyridine ligand FN-PPY was observed at λems = 668 nm. And the emission maxima of the complexes RuP(PR-PPY), RuB(PR-PPY), RuP(FN-PPY) and RuB(FN-PPY) were observed at λems = 646, 646, 685 and 685 nm, respectively. As seen in fluorescence spectra, the fluorescence intensities of the ligands are higher than their metal complexes. This is because of quenching effect of Ruthenium(II) metal on chromophore groups.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... section 1092 of Pub. L. 108-375. (lxi) Use the provision at 252.239-7017, Notice of Supply Chain Risk, as... or as a supply. (lxii) Use the clause at 252.239-7018, Supply Chain Risk, as prescribed in 239.7306(b... development or delivery of any information technology, whether acquired as a service or as a supply. (lxiii...
1983-09-01
34 2nd. Ed. McGraw Hill , New York, 1976, p. 419. [32] Odom, E. M. and Adams, D. E.,"A Study of Polymer Matrix Fatigue Proper- ties," NADC-TR-83053-60...Compression," Ph.D. Thesis, Drexel University, Phila- delphia, PA. 1984 . [34] Crossman, F. W., Warren, W. J . and Wang, A. S. D.,"Influence of Ply...II :2 3____ 4’ F-i7-E-i- 4S-57F* II 0. 1____ 10 ’ G , - I I ’ ’ " 2!___ I ! I I I I 1tILL II I hILL J l 0. 1 1 10 G, (in-lb/in ) Figure 18. Mixed
Kazan USSR Limited Surface Observations Climatic Summary (LISOCS). Parts A-F.
1988-06-01
SUMMARY "LISOCS" KAZAN USSR MSC #275950 N 55 47 E 049 11 ELEV 210 FT PARTS A - F HOURS SUMMARIZED: SYNOPTIC HRS PERIOD OF RECORD: HOURLY OBSERVATIONS...8217 AIQ0 WA Ii1 StPVICE/VAC STATICS NUMPL: SS A T TIC, 4[: KAZA. USSR r t-(,J GF P1 COPD : 79-97 MONTH: JA,, HOURS(LSTI: 0600 0800 I.INO SPEED IN KNOTS...WPSLS WIND SPLEU A1 .R F ATi SRV ICC/ ’C STI I7 V NU ML": 2 5 1 ST-IIc. (AN E: KAOA’ USS ’.R p ’ U OF 4f COPD : 7A-87 7’OT-: APP HOURSILST): 123n-145L
Chiampanichayakul, Sawitree; Peng-in, Pakorn; Khunkaewla, Panida; Stockinger, Hannes; Kasinrerk, Watchara
2006-01-01
CD147 is a leukocyte surface molecule which belongs to the immunoglobulin superfamily. It is broadly expressed on various cell types and is a lymphocyte activation-associated molecule. In order to study the function of CD147, five CD147 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were generated: M6-2F9; M6-1D4; M6-1F3; M6-1B9; and M6-1E9. Biochemical characterizations and cross-blocking experiments indicated that M6-1B9 and M6-1E9 recognize the same or contiguous epitopes on CD147. By employing COS transfectants expressing CD147 membrane-distal domain (domain 1) and membrane-proximal domain (domain 2), mAbs M6-2F9, M6-1D4, M6-1B9, and M6-1E9 were shown to recognize epitopes located on domain 1 of the molecule. Functional studies indicated that engagement of CD147 by mAbs M6-1B9 and M6-1E9 strongly inhibited lymphocyte proliferation induced by a CD3 mAb. In contrast, mAbs M6-2F9, M6-1D4, and M6-1F3 induced U937 homotypic cell aggregation. The results indicate that CD147 contains at least two bioactive domains. Epitopes responsible for induction of cell aggregation are different from those regulating lymphocyte activation.
Overground Excess Sound Attenuation (ESA). Volume 1. Experimental Study for Flat Grassy Terrains.
1987-06-01
4 cc I It-4g A11 1 SO ON tO N 0N 2~Ot N4 .0 NO of b00 Nd 00 05 d NN PP So I~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~w .44 4.0 s’u* us m u s N IS j US MOO .. M P we. .: VON ENO...umt VO VON UN N NO 4- u8 u A I we9 ’i (W f 8 6; w ;6 eV 0 ldfi4 (0 0 WS WO 1 (A a89 a I . 0, P 0 98 as 19 1. WZ 04 0V. 0 -Mt 0f V.’ P N 0 MO 061 V D...01 0 .4 . I: x - OW U.4" WO4N M VON UO Nm N 0 0 led 104 C; 0; e OX&S I W a 0 M 14 0 .4o 1 0 1 00 Z a Zo00 *. t ~ f. 1 0 004 4 -ON 4. 4. 0O N Eq
Photoelectron spectrum of PrO{sup −}
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kafader, Jared O.; Ray, Manisha; Jarrold, Caroline Chick
The photoelectron (PE) spectrum of PrO{sup −} exhibits a short 835 ± 20 cm{sup −1} vibrational progression of doublets (210 ± 30 cm{sup −1} splitting) assigned to transitions from the 4f{sup 2} [{sup 3}H{sub 4}] σ{sub 6s}{sup 2} Ω = 4 anion ground state to the 4f{sup 2} [{sup 3}H{sub 4}] σ{sub 6s} Ω = 3.5 and 4.5 neutral states. This assignment is analogous to that of the recently reported PE spectrum of CeO{sup −}, though the 82 cm{sup −1} splitting between the 4f [{sup 2}F{sub 2.5}] σ{sub 6s} Ω = 2 and Ω = 3 CeO neutral states couldmore » not be resolved [Ray et al., J. Chem. Phys. 142, 064305 (2015)]. The origin of the transition to the Ω = 3.5 neutral ground state is 0.96 ± 0.01 eV, which is the adiabatic electron affinity of PrO. Density functional theory calculations on the anion and neutral molecules support the assignment. The appearance of multiple, irregularly spaced and low-intensity features observed ca. 1 eV above the ground state cannot be reconciled with low-lying electronic states of PrO that are accessible via one-electron detachment. However, neutral states correlated with the 4f{sup 2} [{sup 3}H{sub 4}] 5d superconfiguration are predicted to be approximately 1 eV above the 4f{sup 2} [{sup 3}H{sub 4}] σ{sub 6s} Ω = 3.5 neutral ground state, leading to the assignment of these features to shake-up transitions to the excited neutral states. Based on tentative hot band transition assignments, the term energy of the previously unobserved 4f{sup 2} [{sup 3}H{sub 4}] σ{sub 6s} Ω = 2.5 neutral state is determined to be 1840 ± 110 cm{sup −1}.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lu, Hsin-Wei; Kao, Po-Ching; Chu, Sheng-Yuan
2016-09-01
In this study, the efficiency of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) was enhanced by depositing a CeF3 film as an ultra-thin buffer layer between the ITO and NPB hole transport layer, with the structure configuration ITO/CeF3 (1 nm)/NPB (40 nm)/Alq3 (60 nm)/LiF (1 nm)/Al (150 nm). The enhancement mechanism was systematically investigated via several approaches. The work function increased from 4.8 eV (standard ITO electrode) to 5.2 eV (1-nm-thick UV-ozone treated CeF3 film deposited on the ITO electrode). The turn-on voltage decreased from 4.2 V to 4.0 V at 1 mA/cm2, the luminance increased from 7588 cd/m2 to 10820 cd/m2, and the current efficiency increased from 3.2 cd/A to 3.5 cd/A when the 1-nm-thick UV-ozone treated CeF3 film was inserted into the OLEDs.
Estimation of accuracy of time synchronization obtained by means of clock transportation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhang, Yuzhen; Ma, Dekang; Jin, Wenjing; Zhao, Gang; Huang, Peicheng
A portable clock experiment was carried out in October 1985 between Shanghai Observatory and Beijing Observatory using a small quartz clock made in Switzerland. The accuracy of time synchronization in 5 days is 70.18 microsec and the accuracy of determining the transmission time of short wave is satisfactory for reduction of the astronomical observations to the same master clock.
Margot, Nicolas A; Kitrinos, Kathryn M; Fordyce, Marshall; McCallister, Scott; Miller, Michael D; Callebaut, Christian
2016-03-01
Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF), a novel prodrug of the NtRTI tenofovir (TFV), delivers TFV-diphosphate (TFV-DP) to target cells more efficiently than the current prodrug, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), with a 90% reduction in TFV plasma exposure. TAF, within the fixed dose combination of elvitegravir /cobicistat / emtricitabine (FTC)/TAF (E/C/F/TAF), has been evaluated in one Phase 2 and two Phase 3 randomized, double-blinded studies in HIV-infected treatment-naive patients, comparing E/C/F/TAF to E/C/F/TDF. In these studies, the TAF-containing group demonstrated non-inferior efficacy to the TDF-containing comparator group with 91.9% of E/C/F/TAF patients having <50 copies/mL of HIV-1 RNA at week 48. An integrated resistance analysis across these three studies was conducted, including HIV-1 genotypic analysis at screening, and genotypic/phenotypic analysis for patients with HIV-1 RNA>400 copies/mL at virologic failure. Pre-existing primary resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) were observed at screening among the 1903 randomized and treated patients: 7.5% had NRTI-RAMs, 18.2% had NNRTI-RAMs, and 3.4% had primary PI-RAMs. Pre-treatment RAMs did not influence treatment response at Week 48. In the E/C/F/TAF group, resistance development was rare; seven patients (0.7%, 7/978) developed NRTI-RAMs, five of whom (0.5%, 5/978) also developed primary INSTI-RAMs. In the E/C/F/TDF group, resistance development was also rare; seven patients (0.8%, 7/925) developed NRTI-RAMs, four of whom (0.4%, 4/925) also developed primary INSTI-RAMs. An additional analysis by deep sequencing in virologic failures revealed minimal differences compared to population sequencing. Overall, resistance development was rare in E/C/F/TAF-treated patients, and the pattern of emergent mutations was similar to E/C/F/TDF.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ulanov, V. A.; Zhiteitcev, E. R.; Varlamov, A. G.
2007-07-01
By means of EPR method the associative [TiF 4F 4F int] 6-(C 4v) and [NiF 4F 4F int] 7-(C 4v) centers were revealed in the fluorite type SrF 2:Ti and SrF 2:Ni crystals grown by Bridgman method in helium atmosphere containing some amount of a fluorine gas. It was found that at low temperatures the local structures of these associative centers were exposed to a static rhombic distortion. The reasons of such distortions were accounted for by the assumption that the E ⊗ ( b1 + b2) vibronic interaction became effective due to that the ground orbital states of the [TiF 4F 4F int] 6-(C 4v) and [NiF 4F 4F int] 7-(C 4v) centers occurred to be doubly degenerated.
Coherent and conventional gravidynamic quantum 1/f noise
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Handel, Peter H.; George, Thomas F.
2008-04-01
Quantum 1/f noise is a fundamental fluctuation of currents, physical cross sections or process rates, caused by infrared coupling of the current carriers to very low frequency (soft) quanta, also known as infraquanta. The latter are soft gravitons in the gravidynamic case with the coupling constant g= pGM2/Nch considered here -- soft photons in the electrodynamic case and soft transversal piezo-phonons in the lattice-dynamical case. Here p=3.14 and F=psi. Quantum 1/f noise is a new aspect of quantum mechanics expressed mainly through the coherent quantum 1/f effect 2g/pf derived here for large systems, and mainly through the conventional quantum 1/f effect for small systems or individual particles. Both effects are present in general, and their effects are superposed in a first approximation with the help of a coherence (weight) parameter s" that will be derived elsewhere for the gravitational case. The spectral density of fractional fluctuations S(dj/j,f) for j=e(hk/2pm)|F|2 is S(F2,f)/<|F|2> = S(j,f)/
Icing Nozzle Element Optimization Test, January 1979
1979-08-20
71 1 iit miir -. l 6-’ 1P.Ss L-0 1 .C1IC O (W.E xW N 0.I NA UO9 I O 0 S.. U VS..4*( SS~i4.4P4 66 hi (S ~ .4.4.4..4 (5 4J 6-(55 455 PC CI +Uli I-L I A...jIP In MCr (.’ tJ m w.. * WEL (*£7 £4lw Il 0 S .1 w. 0E 0 C00 0 0 CC 0 M7.M 4L ty4llm .0:0 0.-C U.~. f4 £ U(J M w -w w w .4 .0 e *w N cm *4** In C30...0,000). .- EL 71 [WW-PKL4W’Oj 3M] AO £101 a a 2. 4-- 1 L- - .4 f- . 74 V. - 3 0 W *~~~ 74- .C? U-. 4 ~ N. 5.0 ~ U 11 0 6+0 LLW. . . . . . . . .5-40
1981-03-01
sweep wLS1vaTI GrJAVA-M*- .~--- ’- - - -t------ 7EOA FFM t ee.W?mv ~.L: 1.7.5.4/2n C.AMM~AT!: L’sftle MIMI I-- itlm . z4 ~~~as~e;.~~ i c’.1~te1...ac~e I C-s.met~ I £’A.F- ivsa ~ta I ~ acca az~Y I I tc~ ~t I tca± - e~aec N .x-c, ; cnar. ~ ;zar~a I ~i~; EC~I~ a c2r..1C:%ttI I ~t7!fl - -- rr..r
1984-07-01
PRACTICABLE. THE COPY FURNISHED TO DTIC CONTAINED A SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF PAGES WHICH DO NOT REPRODUCE LEGIBLY. ". * e ...CW July 1984 % 13. NUMBER OF PAGES• % ~~Forrestal Bldg, Stop 391 , RR E "’-虗 O Tn314 IS..nDECA IA T1ON/DDCNRAD4 1NG -% .M IOR.IN(; G ENpC3Y NAME...joK C) 1 -z $1N CL i5 - C0 -’ IN~ 0 0 Lj -f z 2 10 2 4b. La I \\ ~ E LsJ . ~’ %Q~f %V7 ~, z - %.at 0 - . V Q iJ A E / I 41 r-- 11 ;,4. 4 LLE 0c 01 q CLI
The DP-1 transcription factor is required for keratinocyte growth and epidermal stratification.
Chang, Wing Y; Bryce, Dawn M; D'Souza, Sudhir J A; Dagnino, Lina
2004-12-03
The epidermis is a stratified epithelium constantly replenished through the ability of keratinocytes in its basal layer to proliferate and self-renew. The epidermis arises from a single-cell layer ectoderm during embryogenesis. Large proliferative capacity is central to ectodermal cell and basal keratinocyte function. DP-1, a heterodimeric partner of E2F transcription factors, is highly expressed in the ectoderm and all epidermal layers during embryogenesis. To investigate the role of DP-1 in epidermal morphogenesis, we inhibited DP-1 activity through exogenous expression of a dominant-negative mutant (dnDP-1). Expression of the dnDP-1 mutant interferes with binding of E2F/DP-1 heterodimers to DNA and inhibits DNA replication, as well as cyclin A mRNA and protein expression. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis demonstrated that the cyclin A promoter is predominantly bound in proliferating keratinocytes by complexes containing E2F-3 and E2F-4. Thus, the mechanisms of decreased expression of cyclin A in the presence of dnDP-1 seem to involve inactivation of DP-1 complexes containing E2F-3 and E2F-4. To assess the consequences on epidermal morphogenesis of inhibiting DP-1 activity, we expressed dnDP-1 in rat epithelial keratinocytes in organotypic culture and observed that DP-1 inhibition negatively affected stratification of these cells. Likewise, expression of dnDP-1 in embryonic ectoderm explants produced extensive disorganization of subsequently formed epidermal basal and suprabasal layers, interfering with normal epidermal formation. We conclude that DP-1 activity is required for normal epidermal morphogenesis and ectoderm-to-epidermis transition.
Hodder, Sally; Squires, Kathleen; Kityo, Cissy; Hagins, Debbie; Avihingsanon, Anchalee; Kido, Anna; Jiang, Shuping; Kulkarni, Rima; Cheng, Andrew; Cao, Huyen
2018-06-01
The integrase inhibitor regimen [elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF)] demonstrated superior efficacy when compared with a protease inhibitor regimen [ritonavir-boosted atazanavir (ATV + RTV) and FTC/TDF] in 575 treatment-naive women at week 48. We investigated the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of switching to a TAF-based, single-tablet regimen containing elvitegravir, cobicistat, FTC, and tenofovir alafenamide (E/C/F/TAF) versus remaining on ATV + RTV plus FTC/TDF. After completing the initial randomized, blinded phase, virologically suppressed (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL) women on ATV + RTV plus FTC/TDF were rerandomized (3:1) to receive open-label E/C/F/TAF versus remaining on their current regimen. The primary end point was proportion of participants with plasma HIV-1 RNA <50 copies per milliliter at week 48 (U.S. FDA snapshot algorithm), with a prespecified noninferiority margin of 12%. Safety [adverse events (AEs)] and tolerability were also assessed. Of 575 women originally randomized and treated in the blinded phase, 159 were rerandomized to switch to E/C/F/TAF and 53 to remain on ATV + RTV plus FTC/TDF. At week 48, virologic suppression was maintained in 150 (94%) of women on E/C/F/TAF and 46 (87%) on ATV + RTV plus FTC/TDF [difference 7.5% (95% confidence interval -1.2% to 19.4%)], demonstrating noninferiority of E/C/F/TAF to ATV + RTV and FTC/TDF. Incidence of AEs was similar between groups; study drug-related AEs were more common with E/C/F/TAF (11% versus 4%). Switching to E/C/F/TAF was noninferior to continuing ATV + RTV plus FTC/TDF in maintaining virologic suppression and was well tolerated at 48 weeks.
Structure of a human cap-dependent 48S translation pre-initiation complex
Eliseev, Boris; Yeramala, Lahari; Leitner, Alexander; Karuppasamy, Manikandan; Raimondeau, Etienne; Huard, Karine; Alkalaeva, Elena; Aebersold, Ruedi
2018-01-01
Abstract Eukaryotic translation initiation is tightly regulated, requiring a set of conserved initiation factors (eIFs). Translation of a capped mRNA depends on the trimeric eIF4F complex and eIF4B to load the mRNA onto the 43S pre-initiation complex comprising 40S and initiation factors 1, 1A, 2, 3 and 5 as well as initiator-tRNA. Binding of the mRNA is followed by mRNA scanning in the 48S pre-initiation complex, until a start codon is recognised. Here, we use a reconstituted system to prepare human 48S complexes assembled on capped mRNA in the presence of eIF4B and eIF4F. The highly purified h-48S complexes are used for cross-linking/mass spectrometry, revealing the protein interaction network in this complex. We report the electron cryo-microscopy structure of the h-48S complex at 6.3 Å resolution. While the majority of eIF4B and eIF4F appear to be flexible with respect to the ribosome, additional density is detected at the entrance of the 40S mRNA channel which we attribute to the RNA-recognition motif of eIF4B. The eight core subunits of eIF3 are bound at the 40S solvent-exposed side, as well as the subunits eIF3d, eIF3b and eIF3i. elF2 and initiator-tRNA bound to the start codon are present at the 40S intersubunit side. This cryo-EM structure represents a molecular snap-shot revealing the h-48S complex following start codon recognition. PMID:29401259
1984-07-16
can use the model ing - in gpk - B[in(T/T pk)]2 [III.29] (with fit parameter B) to do the resulting integral. Car- rying out this procedure, we have e...A0- B0 2g(’) i -B02 m do- d - t- - F-, gpk e pkf CIII.303 f 0 g B f+b-aT,(e0-1) with = Zn(T/T,), A = C-’ + 2B0p, £ = gCrO, and pk# el + be - aT,(e - 1...4’ ..4’ --%" . . - % ."-: --- 7 ’.-., - -’j. "-"-.’." ’... - 0 Modeling g by gpk exp(-Bx2 ) as before and neglecting b com- pared with aT one
Chen, Je-Hsin; Tsai, Li-Chu; Huang, Hsiao-Chuan; Shyur, Lie-Fen
2010-10-01
We created 12 mutant enzymes (E11L, F40I, Y42L, N44L, N44Q, E47I, L62G, K64A, K64M, R137M, R137Q, and N139A) from the truncated Fibrobacter succinogenes 1,3-1,4-beta-D-glucanase (TF-glucanase). The enzymes were used to investigate the structural and catalytic roles of specific amino acid residues located at the catalytic pocket and having direct interactions with glucose subsites of the product beta-1,3-1,4-cellotriose (CLTR). Fluorescence spectrometry showed no discernible changes in secondary structures among purified TF-glucanase and the mutants. Kinetic analyses showed E11L, F40I, Y42L, R137M, and R137Q with a >10-fold decrease of specific activity (11.2- to 67.4-fold), and E11L, N44Q, E47I, K64M, R137M, R137Q, and N139A with a 2.17- to 4.3-fold increase of K(m) value when compared with TF-glucanase. Notably, E11L, R137Q, R137M, F40I, and N139A showed the most significant decrease in catalytic efficiency relative to TF-glucanase, by 2155-, 84.9-, 48.5-, 41.1-, and 19.1-fold, respectively; the five mutants showed the greatest changes in comparative energy DeltaDeltaG(b), with values of 1.94 to 4.92 kcal/mol. Combined with results from kinetic and structure modeling analyses of all mutant enzymes and X-ray crystallography of F40I, we elucidate that Glu11, Phe40, Arg137, and Asn139 play a crucial role in the catalysis of TF-glucanase owing to their local and direct interaction through hydrogen bonds or van der Waals stacking interaction by aromatic rings onto the glucose subsites -3, -2, and -1 of CLTR/substrate. The overall globular structures in the wild-type and mutant F40I enzymes do not differ. 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
1983-12-01
LONSlZTUDNAL STABILITY DATA FOR Nl F-15 WITH ONLY CFTJ! AND AMl F-13 WITH CFTS AND FIB STRAKES. ., 0-34 -... .4r * CL 1.4. .2 .2 .4 .6 .8 1 1.2 1.4 CO CM...CONFORMAL FUEL TANKS THESIS "AFIT/GAE/AA/83D-7 Terry A. DuncanCaptain USAF DT C SELECTE ca JAN 18 1984 DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE S AIR UNIVERSITY E AIR...DETERMINE DOMINANT FOREBODY STRAKE DESIGN CHARACTERISTICS FOR AN F-15 EQUIPPED WITH CONFORMAL FUEL TANKS THESIS AFITIGAE/AA/83D-7 Terry A. Duncan
Prabhu, S; Saadat, D; Zhang, M; Halbur, L; Fruehauf, J P; Ong, S T
2007-02-22
The oncogenic kinase Bcr-Abl is thought to cause chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) by altering the transcription of specific genes with growth- and survival-promoting functions. Recently, Bcr-Abl has also been shown to activate an important regulator of protein synthesis, the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), which suggests that dysregulated translation may also contribute to CML pathogenesis. In this study, we found that both Bcr-Abl and the rapamycin-sensitive mTORC1 complex contribute to the phosphorylation (inactivation) of 4E-BP1, an inhibitor of the eIF4E translation initiation factor. Experiments with rapamycin and the Bcr-Abl inhibitor, imatinib mesylate, in Bcr-Abl-expressing cell lines and primary CML cells indicated that Bcr-Abl and mTORC1 induced formation of the translation initiation complex, eIF4F. This was characterized by reduced 4E-BP1 binding and increased eIF4G binding to eIF4E, two events that lead to the assembly of eIF4F. One target transcript is cyclin D3, which is regulated in Bcr-Abl-expressing cells by both Bcr-Abl and mTORC1 in a translational manner. In addition, the combination of imatinib and rapamycin was found to act synergistically against committed CML progenitors from chronic and blast phase patients. These experiments establish a novel mechanism of action for Bcr-Abl, and they provide insights into the modes of action of imatinib mesylate and rapamycin in treatment of CML. They also suggest that aberrant cap-dependent mRNA translation may be a therapeutic target in Bcr-Abl-driven malignancies.
1974-11-29
6 . It is reasonable to define 0.01 < C/ 6 ( 4 ) as a boundary to the slip flow regime...stress layer. The result is 7 Z (2- aE RE 100 (42)7 2-a £1 + 7 • 1 6 aE The parameter 6 /Z is the same as that given in section 4 . Again, values below...Selective adsorption data for "He on clean NaF. After Meyers et alE., reference 30. A B 4 4 He (80K) Ho o NoFL 2wr - 6.07 -’ N = 6 . 7 K- F 1.9 2 A Kx (-) 4
Chang, Wing Y; Andrews, Joseph; Carter, David E; Dagnino, Lina
2006-08-01
E2F transcription factors are central to epidermal morphogenesis and regeneration after injury. The precise nature of E2F target genes involved in epidermal formation and repair has yet to be determined. Identification of these genes is essential to understand how E2F proteins regulate fundamental aspects of epidermal homeostasis and transformation. We have conducted a genome-wide screen using CpG island microarray analysis to identify novel promoters bound by E2F3 and E2F5 in human keratinocytes. We further characterized several of these genes, and determined that multiple E2F and retinoblastoma (pRb) family proteins associate with them in exponentially proliferating cells. We also assessed the effect on E2F and pRb binding to those genes in response to differentiation induced by bone morphogenetic protein-6 (BMP-6), or to activation of repair mechanisms induced by transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta). These studies demonstrate promoter- and cytokine-specific changes in binding profiles of E2F and/or pRb family proteins. For example, E2F1, 3, 4 and p107 were recruited to the N-myc promoter in cells treated with BMP-6, whereas E2F1, 3, 4, 5, p107 and p130 were bound to this promoter in the presence of TGF-beta. Functionally, these different interactions resulted in transcriptional repression by BMP-6 and TGF-beta of the N-myc gene, via mechanisms that involved E2F binding to the promoter and association with pRb-family proteins. Thus, multiple combinations of E2F and pRb family proteins may associate with and transcriptionally regulate a given target promoter in response to differentiation and injury-repair stimuli in epidermal keratinocytes.
Approximate Analysis of an Unreliable M/M/2 Retrial Queue
2007-03-01
F ’ corresponds to p_6|i 44 F =m^2*x^2*( l +2* a +2*m+2*x)/Den; 45 46 %Stores the above probabilities into a vector 47 CondProb = [ A B C D E F ]; 48...53 LambdaHat = x*qf*B + ( l *qa+2*x*qf)* C + ( l *qa+x*qf)*D + l *qa* F ; 54 %The ’death’ rate 55 ThetaHat = theta*( A + B + E); 56 %The level of the orbit is...2 + λ + g , (4.2) where g = λ3 2 + 3λ + 2θ · F ( a + 1, b + 1, c + 1; λ 2 ) F
Three-Dimensional Propagation and Scattering Around a Conical Seamount
2007-06-01
s) Td . I or, 71 IT +~ f E [ai’D+l + 153j n 1JDJ+Iil (rj) r7 1 ql(Z)Xpij+l[, = ZL ,i2nH1., (,)+ 1, ,, )1 k --f , 1(z) Mll qjk)I,p4z)d1. (4.45) 102...F,t )-I (DH-ljC,,,+’. flj + Ihj ,Cb+’DfIIlj ) f + (Fj) -’ (DIlh,,C a+ lj 7’+1 -, !/,.-fI/’jiC+1lDjJ I) b-’,,+ REJ+ 1 anj+ 1 + Jl R3r, ’ 1,(4|.55...80 , li ,c 400 400 ; :l 200 I/10 0 0 200 -400 -400 -00fO d00 50 50 (a) Td Los, dg) C-SNAP J 0 7 - os s (M), C-SNAP Jx 33 12012 600 110 600 110 400
1983-09-01
Hlc i-4.-I "m uw t4 4 did) iJ t-4 my i 04il *a 4 2 04 W dc"- W" 00m U) m ) 0U) .2 wp. 0 13 asH JcI 0- d Era1O E-4.344C 2h 1-4 Er W co )14 m 4 0 CD WI2...4 W3-~- > C-0 *1- Me ft %- % W go 0% 4 % % C4 M *0*. E- w = V I~eW= = N E- =E ( 1.4 F-4 -* in Wf 11-.4 P 4U 1b.-4 E- n r1 ,o E4 in~ 131 -.4 IE in fl
Word Criticality Analysis. MOS: 16B. Skill Levels 1 & 2
1981-09-01
43* 2 UI3L, 29.1 2 §CT;:It’:iLL 1.12 2 ACCA 97.1 55.1 43.1 2 2 4,CITUI L 1.1 521 21l 9i 9 P ~ 1.2 2 hA~T)U h 24.1 10-.2 58.1 2.1. 2 A.;aifl U95. 2591...2 17 SOE 16.1 3.tl z J KS ’ f1 . 942.1 4e1 I v/ k Y1 MCS WOR LIT sy rtE AT SM U-2 AG P~~~- .s...:’<.- 14o -!2 7 2~ LVRI4RO LIST 66Y 22G1 140 *17142...71. 4 d1LLY 6? f1 4 NJ51 4l 22#1, 63.1 13.?2 5.2 17,1l 16.1 4 C tM; 4 Cx:v 1::CE. 1 1 7.2 4 Ci ’IF 37. 4 C t .C V1 E It C~C-’ 4:: I! D. 4 C0,; .) 2
Voice Formants in Individuals With Congenital, Isolated, Lifetime Growth Hormone Deficiency.
Valença, Eugenia H O; Salvatori, Roberto; Souza, Anita H O; Oliveira-Neto, Luiz A; Oliveira, Alaíde H A; Gonçalves, Maria I R; Oliveira, Carla R P; D'Ávila, Jeferson S; Melo, Valdinaldo A; de Carvalho, Susana; de Andrade, Bruna M R; Nascimento, Larisse S; Rocha, Savinny B de V; Ribeiro, Thais R; Prado-Barreto, Valeria M; Melo, Enaldo V; Aguiar-Oliveira, Manuel H
2016-05-01
To analyze the voice formants (F1, F2, F3, and F4 in Hz) of seven oral vowels, in Brazilian Portuguese, [a, ε, e, i, ɔ, o, and u] in adult individuals with congenital lifetime untreated isolated growth hormone deficiency (IGHD). This is a cross-sectional study. Acoustic analysis of isolated vowels was performed in 33 individuals with IGHD, age 44.5 (17.6) years (16 women), and 29 controls, age 51.1 (17.6) years (15 women). Compared with controls, IGHD men showed higher values of F3 [i, e, and ε], P = 0.006, P = 0.022, and P = 0.006, respectively and F4 [i], P = 0.001 and lower values of F2 [u], P = 0.034; IGHD women presented higher values of F1 [i and e] P = 0.029 and P = 0.036; F2 [ɔ] P = 0.006; F4 [ɔ] P = 0.031 and lower values of F2 [i] P = 0.004. IGHD abolished most of the gender differences in formant frequencies present in controls. Congenital, severe IGHD results in higher values of most formant frequencies, suggesting smaller oral and pharyngeal cavities. In addition, it causes a reduction in the effect of gender on the structure of the formants, maintaining a prepubertal acoustic prediction. Copyright © 2016 The Voice Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
The Behaviour of Al Electrodes in Aqueous Solutions,
1981-08-01
6 -20- _2-2O4 -10. - 4 01 0-40 I / Fiure 4.3 Current density-time curves after potential...f’rom tilt figourc, Iif u rf 4 . 6 [lhtit hiOodlt cap/acit ’v (calcu- the’ ta it\\ of tlit,: t’Ictrodc dt’. 1(111( ffl) 0 the’ currentt trait- crcascs...seen. Estab/V f5tE) -09 E/V(SCE) -0.5- -13 -1". 4 .- 1,5 -2 -1 Ioqptob(Am 2 ) -3 -2 -1 6 log (j/Am - 2 ) Figure 4.9 The stabilization po- Figure
Advanced Motor-Controller Development.
1983-06-22
OUTPUTS: 16 BIT PROE:UCT IN ACCA , FiCC:B Oi:t2 -* 0011: 0172 B:7 .04E SIFY STA A MCAN:,* SF,-’E MULTIPLICAND 001t4 0175 iF CLF: A INIT RESUI_I_T AOll5...OL-:t41) 04: ELSE ACCA IS UNC:HANGED 0-142 01SF ::,A 0CI CLAMP 0’Fi A #0 TEST SIGN OF A C0It 0l91 E’E: fBM I C.LIPI EBRFNCH IF NEG 01t4 4 : : 001,15 19...ELSE S.:ET ACCA =-ACCB:1B TQJ5. 01 .’ NEG B .ESTOPE ACCE: 01155 C. l1’-9 E -9 PTI RETUR’N Al? I .9~~ _________ . .... ... | |- - - - . . rjOt :E
1983-02-28
tire, .v ,.,, DNA 5433F-2 I 1 UNIFICATION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC -’, SPECIFICATIONS AND STANDARDS Part Ih: Recommendations for Revisions of Existing...ADDRESSEE IS NO LONGER EMPLOYED BY" "• YOUR ORGANIZATION. ... : 1 ,S ::! ,.S ., UNCLASSIFIED SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (When D.e. 6.e1e..c...REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE BEFORE COMPETISRM 1 . REPORT NUMBER 2. GOVT ACCESSION NO. 3. RECIPIENT’S CATALOG NUMBER DNA 5433F-2 1 /f9 I;’,71 4. TITLE
Anthropometry of Women of the U.S. Army - 1977. Report No. 5 - Comparative Data for U.S. Army Men
1977-07-01
75-109.75 18 147 6.27 51922 74.75- 75#70 26 162 9e06 5299b 10?7S-1d8.75 22 129 7.67 44.95 73.75- 74*7:P 2? 126 3.41 43.90 1ab *?$-t~f.75 18 107 6.27...00 P4, " d L5 a .4. eI- uid 0 * (A C3 (4 %a t 4 W4* N 4 4M v4 N 4 1 -4 Z O Nr. N I.- udA V- 4 . 02 Lz V5 aA N.4 4 N N f M A V4 Ps (A :." Id -AAi
Simulating and Testing a DC-DC Half-Bridge SLR Converter
2013-06-01
45 F . TRIAL 4 ..........................................................................................................48 1. Parameters...PE:;;:RM;;,__, ~ 1500 · ! 1000 ~ - 500· 30 60 100 300 600 1000 FREQUHI(Y kHz Or~e o en is chosen, tlte <cku!Jtioo of ~fimar• f wd secondor...6 E. CLOSED FORM EQUATIONS .....................................................................8 F . TRANSFORMER THEORY
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... records only where appropriate from the following provisions: sections (c)(3); (d); (e)(1); (e)(4)(G), (e)(4)(H), and (e)(4)(I); and (f) of 5 U.S.C. 552a. (c) Reasons for claimed exemptions: (1) The Privacy Act of 1974 creates several methods by which individuals may learn of and obtain records containing...
The Relativistic Solar Proton Event of 11 June 1991
1993-01-01
A D-A 78 6 2 ATON ~ t ~e~~orForm Approved ""MB No 0, ,0188 u~ii..iuuum ii~uu u~i o zj r~1 cmments rojaraing’ -ts ouc~er *ýtjm.,te )-, ther 3ýo’ ) s...8217L1G..4f~i ,,4eC~ j . rt ’Cr ntorr-jriop6#norr jE tr~ 4Orq , ?left~f ,n IIIIIIIIIIII| |I I II ~~e-Gr .... ýC •O . ....... Ŕ .... %8...Apatity, Russia and Mawson , Antarctica recorded an - 7 percent increase while stations viewing in the probable "reverse" direction such as Tixie Bay
Kunigal, Sateesh; Ponnusamy, Moorthy P; Momi, Navneet; Batra, Surinder K; Chellappan, Srikumar P
2012-04-26
The membrane-bound mucins are thought to play an important biological role in cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, in cell signaling and in modulating biological properties of cancer cell. MUC4, a transmembrane mucin is overexpressed in pancreatic tumors, while remaining undetectable in the normal pancreas, thus indicating a potential role in pancreatic cancer pathogenesis. The molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of MUC4 gene are not yet fully understood. Smoking is strongly correlated with pancreatic cancer and in the present study; we elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which nicotine as well as agents like retinoic acid (RA) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) induce the expression of MUC4 in pancreatic cancer cell lines CD18, CAPAN2, AsPC1 and BxPC3. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays and real-time PCR showed that transcription factors E2F1 and STAT1 can positively regulate MUC4 expression at the transcriptional level. IFN-γ and RA could collaborate with nicotine in elevating the expression of MUC4, utilizing E2F1 and STAT1 transcription factors. Depletion of STAT1 or E2F1 abrogated the induction of MUC4; nicotine-mediated induction of MUC4 appeared to require α7-nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit. Further, Src and ERK family kinases also mediated the induction of MUC4, since inhibiting these signaling molecules prevented the induction of MUC4. MUC4 was also found to be necessary for the nicotine-mediated invasion of pancreatic cancer cells, suggesting that induction of MUC4 by nicotine and other agents might contribute to the genesis and progression of pancreatic cancer. Our studies show that agents that can promote the growth and invasion of pancreatic cancer cells induce the MUC4 gene through multiple pathways and this induction requires the transcriptional activity of E2F1 and STAT1. Further, the Src as well as ERK signaling pathways appear to be involved in the induction of this gene. It appears that targeting these signaling pathways might inhibit the expression of MUC4 and prevent the proliferation and invasion of pancreatic cancer cells.
2012-01-01
Background The membrane-bound mucins are thought to play an important biological role in cell–cell and cell–matrix interactions, in cell signaling and in modulating biological properties of cancer cell. MUC4, a transmembrane mucin is overexpressed in pancreatic tumors, while remaining undetectable in the normal pancreas, thus indicating a potential role in pancreatic cancer pathogenesis. The molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of MUC4 gene are not yet fully understood. Smoking is strongly correlated with pancreatic cancer and in the present study; we elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which nicotine as well as agents like retinoic acid (RA) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) induce the expression of MUC4 in pancreatic cancer cell lines CD18, CAPAN2, AsPC1 and BxPC3. Results Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays and real-time PCR showed that transcription factors E2F1 and STAT1 can positively regulate MUC4 expression at the transcriptional level. IFN-γ and RA could collaborate with nicotine in elevating the expression of MUC4, utilizing E2F1 and STAT1 transcription factors. Depletion of STAT1 or E2F1 abrogated the induction of MUC4; nicotine-mediated induction of MUC4 appeared to require α7-nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit. Further, Src and ERK family kinases also mediated the induction of MUC4, since inhibiting these signaling molecules prevented the induction of MUC4. MUC4 was also found to be necessary for the nicotine-mediated invasion of pancreatic cancer cells, suggesting that induction of MUC4 by nicotine and other agents might contribute to the genesis and progression of pancreatic cancer. Conclusions Our studies show that agents that can promote the growth and invasion of pancreatic cancer cells induce the MUC4 gene through multiple pathways and this induction requires the transcriptional activity of E2F1 and STAT1. Further, the Src as well as ERK signaling pathways appear to be involved in the induction of this gene. It appears that targeting these signaling pathways might inhibit the expression of MUC4 and prevent the proliferation and invasion of pancreatic cancer cells. PMID:22537161
Synthesis of [18F]-labelled Maltose Derivatives as PET Tracers for Imaging Bacterial Infection
Namavari, Mohammad; Gowrishankar, Gayatri; Hoehne, Aileen; Jouannot, Erwan; Gambhir, Sanjiv S
2015-01-01
Purpose To develop novel positron emission tomography (PET) agents for visualization and therapy monitoring of bacterial infections. Procedures It is known that maltose and maltodextrins are energy sources for bacteria. Hence, 18F-labelled maltose derivatives could be a valuable tool for imaging bacterial infections. We have developed methods to synthesize 4-O-(α-D-glucopyranosyl)-6-deoxy-6-[18F]fluoro-D-glucopyranoside (6-[18F]fluoromaltose) and 4-O-(α-D-glucopyranosyl)-1-deoxy-1-[18F]fluoro-D-glucopyranoside (1-[18F]fluoromaltose) as bacterial infection PET imaging agents. 6-[18F]fluoromaltose was prepared from precursor 1,2,3-tri-O-acetyl-4-O-(2′,3′,-di-O-acetyl-4′,6′-benzylidene-α-D-glucopyranosyl)-6-deoxy-6-nosyl-D-glucopranoside (5). The synthesis involved the radio-fluorination of 5 followed by acidic and basic hydrolysis to give 6-[18F]fluoromaltose. In an analogous procedure, 1-[18F]fluoromaltose was synthesized from 2,3, 6-tri-O-acetyl-4-O-(2′,3′,4′,6-tetra-O-acetyl-α-D-glucopyranosyl)-1-deoxy-1-O-triflyl-D-glucopranoside (9). Stability of 6-[18F]fluoromaltose in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and human and mouse serum at 37 °C was determined. Escherichia coli uptake of 6-[18F]fluoromaltose was examined. Results A reliable synthesis of 1- and 6-[18F]fluoromaltose has been accomplished with 4–6 and 5–8 % radiochemical yields, respectively (decay-corrected with 95 % radiochemical purity). 6-[18F]fluoromaltose was sufficiently stable over the time span needed for PET studies (~96 % intact compound after 1-h and ~65 % after 2-h incubation in serum). Bacterial uptake experiments indicated that E. coli transports 6-[18F]fluoromaltose. Competition assays showed that the uptake of 6-[18F]fluoromaltose was completely blocked by co-incubation with 1 mM of the natural substrate maltose. Conclusion We have successfully synthesized 1- and 6-[18F]fluoromaltose via direct fluorination of appropriate protected maltose precursors. Bacterial uptake experiments in E. coli and stability studies suggest a possible application of 6-[18F]fluoromaltose as a new PET imaging agent for visualization and monitoring of bacterial infections. PMID:25277604
2016-05-14
practical use. It is crucial since a i 1. ( ) i it il tauto eri resonances at the bridging C61Hα- [ ( ) ] t t f - j t - ( ) f ll r l s - r ri e si i l... i , lea i t t e f r ati f a f ll -c j ate f r f 6 acce t r ( ) a r ( ), as arke in purple. This resulted in an extended A–D conjugation length a d...absorbing properties. Scheme 1. Synthesis of C60(>CPAF-Cn) 1-Cn (n = 4, 9, 12, or 18) dyads. Reagents and conditions: i . C60, DBU, toluene, rt, 5.0 h; ii
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Air Force Foundational Cyberspace Training
2012-06-14
fileticket=zAcDCP6H2T4%3d&tabid=56&mid=415 (accessed 25 May 2012). VIT .1 Vita . U N I T E D S T A T E S A I R F O R C E MAJOR APRIL...as of May 2012) VIT .2 . U N I T E D S T A T E S A I R F O R C E MAJOR APRIL L. WIMMER ASSIGNMENTS 1. September 2000
The eIF4F and eIFiso4F Complexes of Plants: An Evolutionary Perspective
Patrick, Ryan M.; Browning, Karen S.
2012-01-01
Translation initiation in eukaryotes requires a number of initiation factors to recruit the assembled ribosome to mRNA. The eIF4F complex plays a key role in initiation and is a common target point for regulation of protein synthesis. Most work on the translation machinery of plants to date has focused on flowering plants, which have both the eIF4F complex (eIF4E and eIF4G) as well as the plant-specific eIFiso4F complex (eIFiso4E and eIFiso4G). The increasing availability of plant genome sequence data has made it possible to trace the evolutionary history of these two complexes in plants, leading to several interesting discoveries. eIFiso4G is conserved throughout plants, while eIFiso4E only appears with the evolution of flowering plants. The eIF4G N-terminus, which has been difficult to annotate, appears to be well conserved throughout the plant lineage and contains two motifs of unknown function. Comparison of eIFiso4G and eIF4G sequence data suggests conserved features unique to eIFiso4G and eIF4G proteins. These findings have answered some questions about the evolutionary history of the two eIF4F complexes of plants, while raising new ones. PMID:22611336
1983-08-01
oocuen..ubeapr.e. f i a a s o ...,..... T;Is document has been aproe for pubic fee and Wei its dkitio is unlimited. UNCLASSIFIED 119cUmITY CLASSIFICATION...and by day 14 vascularization of the cornea and hair loss around the eye were observed. In animals 82F139 and 82F143, level 2 opacity persisted to...heavy hyperemia of circumcorneal blood vessels, and hair loss around the eye were noted. Irritation in the form of conjunctival redness and chemo3is was
Grzesiak, Malgorzata; Knapczyk-Stwora, Katarzyna; Ciereszko, Renata E; Wieciech, Iwona; Slomczynska, Maria
2014-09-15
Recently, we have found that flutamide-induced androgen deficiency altered progesterone production in the porcine corpus luteum (CL) during mid- and late pregnancy. Herein, we tested whether flutamide administration subsequently influences androgen and estrogen metabolism in the CL of pregnancy. Pregnant gilts were treated with flutamide between Days 43 and 49 (GD50F), 83 and 89 (GD90F), or 101 and 107 (GD108F) of gestation. Corpora lutea (CLs) were collected from treated and nontreated (control) pigs. The concentrations of androstenedione (A4), testosterone (T), estrone (E1), and estradiol (E2) together with the levels of expression of mRNAs and proteins for cytochrome P450 17α-hydroxylase/c17-20 lyase (CYP17A1), 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (17β-HSD1), cytochrome P450 aromatase (CYP19A1), and 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 7 (17β-HSD7) were measured in the CL of control and flutamide-treated animals. Steroidogenic enzymes were also immunolocalized in luteal tissues. The luteal concentrations of A4 and T were higher in the GD50F (P = 0.006, P = 0.03) and GD108F (P = 0.005, P = 0.035) groups, but lower in the GD90F (P = 0.004, P = 0.014) group. The E1 level was greater only in the GD90F (P = 0.03) and GD108F (P = 0.035) groups, whereas E2 concentration was not affected by flutamide treatment. Increased luteal CYP17A1 mRNA and protein expression was found in the GD50F (P = 0.002, P = 0.03) and GD108F (P = 0.0026, P = 0.03) groups, but reduced in the GD90F (P = 0.002, P = 0.03) group. mRNA of 17β-HSD1 was upregulated in the GD50F (P = 0.0005) group, but downregulated in the GD90F (P = 0.002) and GD108F (P = 0.0005) groups. In contrast, 17β-HSD1 protein expression was higher in the GD50F and GD108F (P = 0.03) groups, but lower in the GD90F (P = 0.03) group. Both CYP19A1 mRNA and protein levels were greater in the GD90F (P = 0.001, P = 0.028) and GD108F (P = 0.005, P = 0.03) groups. Neither 17β-HSD7 mRNA nor protein level were affected by flutamide exposure. Both CYP17A1 and 17β-HSD1 were immunolocalized exclusively in small luteal cells, whereas CYP19A1 and 17β-HSD7 were found in large luteal cells of control and flutamide-treated CLs. Overall, flutamide administration led to the alterations in A4, T, and E1, but not in E2, production in the CL of pregnancy in pigs, probably because of disrupted steroidogenic enzymes expression. These changes suggest that androgens are important modulators of luteal function during pregnancy in pigs. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Bush, Maxwell S.; Pierrat, Olivier; Nibau, Candida; Mikitova, Veronika; Zheng, Tao; Corke, Fiona M. K.; Mayberry, Laura K.; Browning, Karen S.
2016-01-01
Eukaryotic initiation factor 4A (eIF4A) is a highly conserved RNA-stimulated ATPase and helicase involved in the initiation of messenger RNA translation. Previously, we found that eIF4A interacts with cyclin-dependent kinase A (CDKA), the plant ortholog of mammalian CDK1. Here, we show that this interaction occurs only in proliferating cells where the two proteins coassociate with 5′-cap-binding protein complexes, eIF4F or the plant-specific eIFiso4F. CDKA phosphorylates eIF4A on a conserved threonine residue (threonine-164) within the RNA-binding motif 1b TPGR. In vivo, a phospho-null (APGR) variant of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) eIF4A1 protein retains the ability to functionally complement a mutant (eif4a1) plant line lacking eIF4A1, whereas a phosphomimetic (EPGR) variant fails to complement. The phospho-null variant (APGR) rescues the slow growth rate of roots and rosettes, together with the ovule-abortion and late-flowering phenotypes. In vitro, wild-type recombinant eIF4A1 and its phospho-null variant both support translation in cell-free wheat germ extracts dependent upon eIF4A, but the phosphomimetic variant does not support translation and also was deficient in ATP hydrolysis and helicase activity. These observations suggest a mechanism whereby CDK phosphorylation has the potential to down-regulate eIF4A activity and thereby affect translation. PMID:27388680
Computer Simulation of Digital Signal Modulation Techniques in Satellite Communications.
1985-09-01
frequency bands ate shown in Figures 2. 4 and 2. 5 ( Ref . 6] Radio frequency (9F) I Infrared (IR) 0Ptc. Microwave %100cm 10cm 1 m lomm 100um l jjm 101...1c :N-4 V- O b-I E = - -. N .. - on : aA ft - : W- W 0 39 .. q w & C3 Q1 V 4 ++ 0 a WW2 *E4 ’-.0 E-- XC-eif - 1 T.V% .H .W -1 12’z = E - =.45.4
Kim, So Yoon; Rane, Sushil G.
2011-01-01
Cell division and cell differentiation are intricately regulated processes vital to organ development. Cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) are master regulators of the cell cycle that orchestrate the cell division and differentiation programs. Cdk1 is essential to drive cell division and is required for the first embryonic divisions, whereas Cdks 2, 4 and 6 are dispensable for organogenesis but vital for tissue-specific cell development. Here, we illustrate an important role for Cdk4 in regulating early pancreas development. Pancreatic development involves extensive morphogenesis, proliferation and differentiation of the epithelium to give rise to the distinct cell lineages of the adult pancreas. The cell cycle molecules that specify lineage commitment within the early pancreas are unknown. We show that Cdk4 and its downstream transcription factor E2f1 regulate mouse pancreas development prior to and during the secondary transition. Cdk4 deficiency reduces embryonic pancreas size owing to impaired mesenchyme development and fewer Pdx1+ pancreatic progenitor cells. Expression of activated Cdk4R24C kinase leads to increased Nkx2.2+ and Nkx6.1+ cells and a rise in the number and proliferation of Ngn3+ endocrine precursors, resulting in expansion of the β cell lineage. We show that E2f1 binds and activates the Ngn3 promoter to modulate Ngn3 expression levels in the embryonic pancreas in a Cdk4-dependent manner. These results suggest that Cdk4 promotes β cell development by directing E2f1-mediated activation of Ngn3 and increasing the pool of endocrine precursors, and identify Cdk4 as an important regulator of early pancreas development that modulates the proliferation potential of pancreatic progenitors and endocrine precursors. PMID:21490060
Functional Job Analysis of Marine Personnel Employed on Offshore Supply Vessels,
1982-01-01
64 4-I CC 1) 0 03 ..- i3 4 to **1))r w0 3 30 4.4L (n C i~ uo LA’ ’J4 0 02 0 ’U U, ) z cn -4 03 02 -44 U) E-4 C aU) -’ 0i~ 0 0 wL ’i- ACca Li C -LCi...6.. (0 41, .&Jj LIZ 0>0 Air1 w ~ to.. 41 10..f 0 I 10 z*l’~ F6 0WV ’a t " ’-4 t . fa .1.4. I LA9~ 4p , -4404 m 3 E) 0) C0U) 0~ 404 t- 41. C L (o5 U Lp
Luminescence characteristics of Dy3+ activated Na 2Sr 2Mg (BO 3)2F 2: Dy 3+ phosphor
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wani, Javaid A.; Dhoble, N. S.; Dhoble, S. J.
2012-11-01
In this paper, we have reported a new Na 2Sr 2Mg (BO 3)2F 2:Dy 3+ thermoluminescence (TL) phosphor prepared via the wet chemical method. Prepared phosphor was characterized by X-ray powder diffraction, photoluminescence (PL), TL and scanning electronmicroscopy techniques. The scanning electronmicroscopic image of Na 2Sr 2Mg (BO 3)2F 2:Dy 3+ phosphor confirms the micron size of particles. Under the PL study, the characteristic emission spectrum of Dy 3+ corresponding to 4F 9/2→6H 15/2 (481 nm) and 4F 9/2→6H 13/2 (576 nm) transitions was observed. The TL property of the as prepared phosphor was also found to be good. TL intensity of Na 2Sr2Mg(BO 3)F 2:Dy 3+ phosphors at 0.99 kGy exposure of γ-irradiations was compared with standard CaSO 4:Dy phosphor. It was seen that TL intensity of Na 2Sr 2Mg (BO 3)2F 2: Dy 3+ phosphors is 1.1 times less compared with the standard CaSO 4:Dy TL dosimeter phosphor. The kinetic parameters are also discussed in detail. The values of activation energy E (eV) and frequency factor S (s -1) were found to be 0.57 eV and 1.25×106 s-1, respectively.
Application of Future State Decision Making in the Eagle Combat Model
1990-09-01
not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Government. 1 7 Cosati Codes 18 S:iDj,.ct Terms (continue on... cncd 30 40 co el C14N- LI)I E- . IC041 00 E E. C) CD 0 06. 4104 xd- .r - 1 w a S.CL U.~- 0 S.31 Cl- w cu N ~ ~ -.- - f Lin EEn LM 0f CCN. ’C4 0 4-it 0
2014-01-01
r o ps y c h o l o g ic a l T e st P e r fo r m...n = 4 1 ) p va lu e (n = 1 8 ) (n = 2 9 ) p va lu e 2 5 -f o o t w al k (s ec ) (m o to r st re n g th , b al an ce , co o rd in at io n ) 5 .2 – 2 .1...f A d u lt R ea d in g (e st im at e o f p re -i n ju ry v er b al in te ll ig en
Comparison of foE and M(3000)F2 variability at Ibadan, Singapore and Slough
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Somoye, E. O.; Onori, E. O.; Akala, A. O.
2013-01-01
The variability, VR, of critical frequency of E-layer, foE, and ionospheric propagation factor, M(3000)F2 at Ibadan (7.4°N, 3.9°E, 6°S dip) is investigated for local time, seasonal and solar cycle variations. Latitudinal influence of these characteristics is sought by comparison with foE VR and M(3000)F2 VR of Slough ( 51.5°N, 359.4°E, 66.5°N dip) in the European sector, and Singapore (1.3°N,103.8°E, 17.6°S dip) in the Asian sector. While the pattern of foE VR is similar to those of other F2 characteristics with characteristic peaks around dawn and dusk, M(3000)F2 VR shows no clear diurnal trend.A lower bound of foE VR is usually 3% while the maximum VR ranges between 8% and13% at post-sunrise and pre-sunset hours at all the epochs, M(3000)F2 VR is however lower during MSA (about 9%) than during LSA and HSA when it is 4% to about 12-14%. Generally, daytime M(3000)F2 VR is greater than that of foE VR by between 5% and 10%. Furthermore, no latitudinal difference is observed in both characteristics during both HSA and MSA. While nighttime M(3000)F2 VR is about half that of nighttime foF2 VR (the critical frequency of F2-layer ) VR, daytime VR of both characteristics are about equal during the three epochs at Ibadan. For Slough, nighttime M(3000)F2 VR and nighttime foF2 VR as well as the daytime VR of both characteristics are about equal. This difference is most likely due to latitudinal effect.
Mathematical Analysis of Random Noise - and Appendixes
1952-01-01
1 ; y) -4E- - 21- K 2F1 , x 7r T((3 10 28 2F, .-,; 1;) = 2 K~r 1- The higher terms may be corn puted from a(, -_ Z)22Ft(a + 1, a + 1; I;z ) = (2a...cos qt + Q- coB (p + q)5 + 2- cos (p - q)t + V4. the resulting current contains the dc component aQ(1 + )+ajw(f) df (4.5-16) "IA complete discussion...that it simplifies the integration. Thus, putting it in (4.9-3) and setting 2 - 7r¶- JF(iu)utJ,1 (Pu)Ce )"’ du (4.9-6) gives ,1,(r) = £ 1 pkh; 3 COB
Microwave Acoustics Handbook. Volume 4. Bulk Wave Velocities-Numerical Data.
1980-06-01
p .00 * a* *~ Ol r4 000a1 .C e e0 0 C ~ armC aeC PSFCU NU . FPS WF w N C ’O’ w N 0 0 It1 P SNF .4.64 *.4 F7 N P C L *- P U NF L 6 .184 * ff .UULUFUJ...1010 10 7.7.Nf3.7.s 34.3.3.3.3 U5 IL I 4 0 * 0t * t ** * t ** *7 * * . A 7)..00a00UN03 . f7 ) UN7.030*4 30 .4 *000 4m 0 M 3.0 030a. w tr 300a, a,7M 7... acca :00 C0 0 0 w l . r C O r . C t. . C=c c t r a r a e C N .4 *0 NNONU’ C’ 0’C N 4* P 00£.4.40 N 40’ N NU . 4w C N ’ O . N 4 N C ’t C U lo. ’ U
Ramamurthy, Vidya P; Ramalingam, Senthilmurugan; Gediya, Lalji K; Njar, Vincent C O
2018-03-01
VNLG-152 is a novel retinamide (NR) shown to suppress growth and progression of genetically diverse prostate cancer cells via inhibition of androgen receptor signaling and eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) translational machinery. Herein, we report therapeutic effects of VNLG-152 on castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) growth and metastatic phenotype in a CRPC tumor xenograft model. Administration of VNLG-152 significantly and dose-dependently suppressed the growth of aggressive CWR22Rv1 tumors by 63.4% and 76.3% at 10 and 20 mg·kg -1 bw, respectively (P < 0.0001), vs. vehicle with no host toxicity. Strikingly, the expression of full-length androgen receptor (f-AR)/androgen receptor splice variant-7 (AR-V7), mitogen-activated protein kinase-interacting kinases 1 and 2 (MNK1/2), phosphorylated eIF4E and their associated target proteins, including prostate-specific antigen, cyclin D1 and Bcl-2, were strongly decreased in VNLG-152-treated tumors signifying inhibition of f-AR/AR-V7 and MNK-eIF4E signaling in VNLG-152-treated CWR22Rv1 tumors as observed in vitro. VNLG-152 also suppressed the epithelial to mesenchymal transition in CWR22Rv1 tumors as evidenced by repression of N-cadherin, β-catenin, claudin, Slug, Snail, Twist, vimentin and matrix metalloproteinases (MMP-2 and MMP-9) with upsurge in E-cadherin. These results highlight the promising use of VNLG-152 in CRPC therapy and justify its further development towards clinical trials. © 2018 Federation of European Biochemical Societies.
Goetstouwers, Tiphanie; Van Poucke, Mario; Coddens, Annelies; Nguyen, Van Ut; Melkebeek, Vesna; Deforce, Dieter; Cox, Eric; Peelman, Luc J
2014-10-03
Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) are important membrane components composed of a carbohydrate structure attached to a hydrophobic ceramide. They can serve as specific membrane receptors for microbes and microbial products, such as F4 Escherichia coli (F4 ETEC) and isolated F4 fimbriae. The aim of this study was to investigate the hypothesis that variation in genes involved in the assembly of the F4 binding carbohydrate moiety of GSLs (i.e. ARSA, B4GALT6, GAL3ST1, GALC, GBA, GLA, GLB1, GLB1L, NEU1, NEU2, UGCG, UGT8) could account for differential binding of F4 ETEC and their fimbriae. RT-PCR could not reveal any differential expression of the 12 genes in the jejunum of F4 receptor-positive (F4R(+)) and F4 receptor-negative (F4R(-)) pigs. Sequencing the complete open reading frame of the 11 expressed genes (NEU2 was not expressed) identified 72 mutations. Although some of them might have a structural effect, none of them could be associated with a F4R phenotype. We conclude that no regulatory or structural variation in any of the investigated genes is responsible for the genetic susceptibility of pigs towards F4 ETEC.
Comprehensive study on compositional modification of Tb3+ doped zinc phosphate glass
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yaacob, S. N. S.; Sahar, M. R.; Sazali, E. S.; Mahraz, Zahra Ashur; Sulhadi, K.
2018-07-01
Series of glass composition (60-x) P2O5 -40 ZnO -(x) Tb2O3 where x = 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5 and 3.0 mol % are prepared by conventional melt quenching technique. X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), FTIR, UV-Vis-NIR and the photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy are used to characterize the physical, structural and optical behavior of the glass sample. The XRD pattern confirms the amorphous nature and DTA verified the thermal stability of all the glass samples. Glass with 1.5 mol % of Tb2O3 possesses the highest thermal stability. Glass density is found to increase proportionally with increasing amount of Tb3+ while the molar volume behaves reversely. Six main IR absorption bands centered at about 540, 748, 891, 1085 and 1294 cm- 1 are evidenced. The UV-Vis NIR absorption spectra reveals the absorption center band at about 540, 376, 488 and 1920 nm corresponding to the absorption from 7F6 ground state to various excited state of Tb3+ ion. The optical band gaps for direct and indirect transition are in the range 4.53-5.07 eV and 4.30 eV-4.56 eV respectively. The Urbach energy decreases with the increasing concentration of Tb2O3. The PL emission spectra reveals several prominent peaks at 413, 435, 457, 488, 540, 585 and 620 nm due to electronic transition from 5D3→7F5, 5D3→7F4, 5D3→7F3, 5D4→7F6, 5D4→7F5, 5D4→7F3 and 5D4→7F5 respectively.
Lactosylated casein phosphopeptides as specific indicators of heated milks.
Pinto, Gabriella; Caira, Simonetta; Cuollo, Marina; Fierro, Olga; Nicolai, Maria Adalgisa; Chianese, Lina; Addeo, Francesco
2012-02-01
Casein phosphopeptides (CPP) were identified in small amounts in milks heated at various intensities by using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) time-of-flight mass spectrometry. CPP selectively concentrated on hydroxyapatite (HA) were regenerated using phosphoric acid mixed in the matrix. Unphosphorylated peptides not retained by HA were removed by buffer washing. This procedure enhanced the MALDI signals of CPP that are ordinarily suppressed by the co-occurrence of unphosphorylated peptides. CPP, belonging to the β-casein (CN) family, i.e., (f1-29) 4P, (f1-28) 4P, and (f1-27) 4P, and the α(s2)-CN family, i.e., (f1-21) 4P and (f1-24) 4P, were observed in liquid and powder milk. The lactosylated counterparts were specific to intensely heated milks, but absent in raw and thermized/pasteurized milk. Most CPP with C-terminal lysines probably arose from the activity of plasmin; an enzyme most active in casein hydrolysis. A CPP analogue was used as the internal standard. The raw milk signature peptide β-CN (f1-28) 4P constituted ~4.3% of the total β-CN. Small amounts of lactosylated peptides, which varied with heat treatment intensity, were detected in the milk samples. The limit of detection of ultra-high-temperature milk adjunction in raw or pasteurized milk was ~10%.
Takhli AB, Thailand. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F
1971-04-06
DIR SPEED N .4 ISO 4_1 NNE t02 j t 6 4 : ENE ,A’ 2 to ,_1 _, ESE ,6 .5 .4. 1,4 4,4SE 2, z 6 .8 .0o I- , 5 SSE 5,4 7,7- 2,S al .. . 16,1 4,6S: 6,s8...ENE 1,6 I’s IsO &1 4,2 4091 E 2,g 9.9 1_ _ _ ESE , 0 2 1 SE a .9 ,2 ao__ 4#3 SSE a a- ______ 2,0 4 3. 2’s .0 2,1 . 1 0 0 4,9 4,4 SSW 1 .4 .6 .11 .1...6, 9, WNW 2 A . 2 ISO 4 a$ NW .2 6 III ... . 6 NNW ]-* o all ., 2 6 3 4 9 7 V~in1, 24, 1. q 1 1 T O T A L N U M BE R O F O B S E R V A T
Barthel, Steven R.; Antonopoulos, Aristotelis; Cedeno-Laurent, Filiberto; Schaffer, Lana; Hernandez, Gilberto; Patil, Shilpa A.; North, Simon J.; Dell, Anne; Matta, Khushi L.; Neelamegham, Sriram; Haslam, Stuart M.; Dimitroff, Charles J.
2011-01-01
Prior studies have shown that treatment with the peracetylated 4-fluorinated analog of glucosamine (4-F-GlcNAc) elicits anti-skin inflammatory activity by ablating N-acetyllactosamine (LacNAc), sialyl Lewis X (sLeX), and related lectin ligands on effector leukocytes. Based on anti-sLeX antibody and lectin probing experiments on 4-F-GlcNAc-treated leukocytes, it was hypothesized that 4-F-GlcNAc inhibited sLeX formation by incorporating into LacNAc and blocking the addition of galactose or fucose at the carbon 4-position of 4-F-GlcNAc. To test this hypothesis, we determined whether 4-F-GlcNAc is directly incorporated into N- and O-glycans released from 4-F-GlcNAc-treated human sLeX (+) T cells and leukemic KG1a cells. At concentrations that abrogated galectin-1 (Gal-1) ligand and E-selectin ligand expression and related LacNAc and sLeX structures, MALDI-TOF and MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry analyses showed that 4-F-GlcNAc 1) reduced content and structural diversity of tri- and tetra-antennary N-glycans and of O-glycans, 2) increased biantennary N-glycans, and 3) reduced LacNAc and sLeX on N-glycans and on core 2 O-glycans. Moreover, MALDI-TOF MS did not reveal any m/z ratios relating to the presence of fluorine atoms, indicating that 4-F-GlcNAc did not incorporate into glycans. Further analysis showed that 4-F-GlcNAc treatment had minimal effect on expression of 1200 glycome-related genes and did not alter the activity of LacNAc-synthesizing enzymes. However, 4-F-GlcNAc dramatically reduced intracellular levels of uridine diphosphate-N-acetylglucosamine (UDP-GlcNAc), a key precursor of LacNAc synthesis. These data show that Gal-1 and E-selectin ligand reduction by 4-F-GlcNAc is not caused by direct 4-F-GlcNAc glycan incorporation and consequent chain termination but rather by interference with UDP-GlcNAc synthesis. PMID:21493714
1985-06-01
8217 - - - .-. ’ - - ’. : - . L - • • - . " -" 21 where the supremum is taken over all finite partitions (A.) of Aointo dis - joint sets Ac C A 0and all...1 Afm (t) = Z aT 1A (t) • j=lJ j n then from (2.3.2) and the definition of sv( e Xi;A) i n 2 ni,": II~~1f A / mr(t-- di * X. (t) II Hen = II j~ l a’m...n and -fT fd 12 M(. Ci 2 Et 11 11 (lf(C k))e = lim ED iml j1 l 4 n = lir exp( fn f 2 di ) = exp(f f2d) < L.n -Ko T UTT. i= l which shows (a). Let 1,E2
Zhang, Wei; Zhu, Yao-Hong; Zhou, Dong; Wu, Qiong; Song, Dan; Dicksved, Johan; Wang, Jiu-Feng
2017-02-01
Structural disruption of the gut microbiota and impaired goblet cell function are collateral etiologic factors in enteric diseases. Low, moderate, or high doses of a Bacillus licheniformis-B. subtilis mixture (BLS mix) were orally administered to piglets of genotype MUC4 that are supposed to be F4-expressing enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli strain (F4 + ETEC) F4ab/ac receptor negative (i.e., MUC4-resistant piglets) for 1 week before F4 + ETEC challenge. The luminal contents were collected from the mucosa of the colon on day 8 after F4 + ETEC challenge. The BLS mix attenuated E. coli-induced expansion of Bacteroides uniformis, Eubacterium eligens, Acetanaerobacterium, and Sporobacter populations. Clostridium and Turicibacter populations increased following F4 + ETEC challenge in pigs pretreated with low-dose BLS mix. Lactobacillus gasseri and Lactobacillus salivarius populations increased after administration of BLS mix during E. coli infection. The beneficial effects of BLS mix were due in part to the expansion of certain Clostridium, Lactobacillus, and Turicibacter populations, with a corresponding increase in the number of goblet cells in the ileum via upregulated Atoh1 expression, in turn increasing MUC2 production and thus preserving the mucus barrier and enhancing host defenses against enteropathogenic bacteria. However, excessive BLS mix consumption may increase the risk for enteritis, partly through disruption of colonic microbial ecology, characterized by expansion of Proteobacteria and impaired goblet cell function in the ileum. Our findings suggest that oral administration of BLS mix reprograms the gut microbiota and enhances goblet cell function to ameliorate enteritis. The present study is important for improving our understanding of the protective role of probiotics against Escherichia coli infection in piglets. Structural disruption of the gut microbiota and impaired goblet cell function are collateral etiologic factors in enteric diseases. In this study, low, moderate, or high doses of a Bacillus licheniformis-B. subtilis mixture (BLS mix) were orally administered to MUC4-resistant piglets for 1 week before the F4-expressing ETEC strain (F4 + ETEC) challenge. Our findings suggest that oral administration of BLS mix reprograms the gut microbiota and enhances goblet cell function to ameliorate enteritis. Copyright © 2017 American Society for Microbiology.
Zhang, Wei; Zhou, Dong; Wu, Qiong; Song, Dan; Dicksved, Johan; Wang, Jiu-Feng
2016-01-01
ABSTRACT Structural disruption of the gut microbiota and impaired goblet cell function are collateral etiologic factors in enteric diseases. Low, moderate, or high doses of a Bacillus licheniformis-B. subtilis mixture (BLS mix) were orally administered to piglets of genotype MUC4 that are supposed to be F4-expressing enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli strain (F4+ ETEC) F4ab/ac receptor negative (i.e., MUC4-resistant piglets) for 1 week before F4+ ETEC challenge. The luminal contents were collected from the mucosa of the colon on day 8 after F4+ ETEC challenge. The BLS mix attenuated E. coli-induced expansion of Bacteroides uniformis, Eubacterium eligens, Acetanaerobacterium, and Sporobacter populations. Clostridium and Turicibacter populations increased following F4+ ETEC challenge in pigs pretreated with low-dose BLS mix. Lactobacillus gasseri and Lactobacillus salivarius populations increased after administration of BLS mix during E. coli infection. The beneficial effects of BLS mix were due in part to the expansion of certain Clostridium, Lactobacillus, and Turicibacter populations, with a corresponding increase in the number of goblet cells in the ileum via upregulated Atoh1 expression, in turn increasing MUC2 production and thus preserving the mucus barrier and enhancing host defenses against enteropathogenic bacteria. However, excessive BLS mix consumption may increase the risk for enteritis, partly through disruption of colonic microbial ecology, characterized by expansion of Proteobacteria and impaired goblet cell function in the ileum. Our findings suggest that oral administration of BLS mix reprograms the gut microbiota and enhances goblet cell function to ameliorate enteritis. IMPORTANCE The present study is important for improving our understanding of the protective role of probiotics against Escherichia coli infection in piglets. Structural disruption of the gut microbiota and impaired goblet cell function are collateral etiologic factors in enteric diseases. In this study, low, moderate, or high doses of a Bacillus licheniformis-B. subtilis mixture (BLS mix) were orally administered to MUC4-resistant piglets for 1 week before the F4-expressing ETEC strain (F4+ ETEC) challenge. Our findings suggest that oral administration of BLS mix reprograms the gut microbiota and enhances goblet cell function to ameliorate enteritis. PMID:27881419
Coddens, Annelies; Verdonck, Frank; Mulinge, Martin; Goyvaerts, Els; Miry, Cora; Goddeeris, Bruno; Duchateau, Luc; Cox, Eric
2008-01-01
F18(+)Escherichia coli infections causing post-weaning diarrhoea and/or oedema disease are a major cause of economic losses in pig industry. To date, no preventive strategy can protect pigs from F18(+)E. coli infections. One of the most attractive approaches to eliminate F18(+)E. coli infections is the selection for pigs that are resistant to F18(+)E. coli infections. However, this strategy was not believed to be favourable because of reports of genetic association with the stress-susceptibility gene in the Swiss Landrace. To investigate this potential association more thoroughly, 131 randomly selected Belgian hybrid pigs were genotyped for both the F18(+)E. coli resistance alleles (FUT1(A)) and the stress-susceptibility alleles (RYR1(T)) and their association was investigated by determining the linkage disequilibrium. This linkage disequilibrium (LD=-0.0149) is close to zero and does not differ significantly from 0 (likelihood ratio test chi(1)(2)=1.123, P=0.29), demonstrating no association between the FUT1(A) and RYR1(T) alleles. Furthermore, only a small fraction (4.6%) of the Belgian pigs was found to be resistant to F18(+)E. coli infections. Our results suggest that selection for F18(+)E. coli resistant pigs might be an attractive approach to prevent pigs from F18(+)E. coli infections, unlike to what has previously been postulated.
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-06-14
... credit of $0.0004 per share executed with respect to attributable quotes/orders that provide liquidity through such MPID, in addition to the credit that it is otherwise entitled to receive under Rule 7018. The.... (``BX'') \\3\\ in which BX introduced pricing tiers for the credit it pays to persons accessing liquidity...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-10-18
... Proposed Rule Change To Amend NASDAQ's Schedule of Execution Fees for Order Routing Under Rule 7018 October... proposed rule change as described in Items I, II, and III below, which Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change from...
1979-12-01
MLS-1, Oirect ILS Replacement Tuner L@ ’,, -_Y VOVO~F AG . MLS-2, Selectable Azimuth And Elevation Tuner/Selector ©@ MLS 032 HOG DIS DIM F CHAN ON...LIGHTS (5) / ~YELLOW /" / /GREEN - fR IIN _!4N INA iL 4 R91 .. ms 115.15 ’ 5 .s at E aG E N T C R 3 /T R N G V E R T CHAN A 0 L APPR ALA~ 0 T I0 HgA...due to the age of the aircraft, Lhe present autopilot is of an early vintage and is not recom- mended for use below 1,000 ft. unless the controls
24 CFR 16.15 - Specific exemptions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
...), (e)(1), (e)(4) (G), (H), (I), and (f). This exemption allows the Department to withhold records... under 5 U.S.C. 552(k)(5) from the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552a (c)(3), (d), (e)(1), (e)(4), (G), (H... subsection (e)(1) because it is often impossible to determine relevance or necessity of information in pre...
Electro-Spark Deposited Coatings for Replacement of Chrome Electroplating
2005-06-01
2.6 0.4 2.2 Thickness uniformity (A-F) 2.8/0.8 2.8/0.8 6.3/0 6.5/0.4 2 to 0 3.9/0.4 Coating integrity (A-F) A A- F C - D A- Defects/mm F D + F D + F B...or width of the wear scar (cm), h is the height or depth of the wear scar (cm), and c is the circumference of the wear scar (cm) where c = "rrd, and d ...inerS4C *2 Panelb MHC583010 -,,IN 3 4853 0.42 roiness 1)N32-15m x c -e sca. 3) &wN x Deb 1nQ withn sar Dein HxW 1).057n*~ 3)211200 12 ve 2 Panl 2 EJC .5 D
A Model for Estimating Nonlinear Deformation and Damage in Ceramic Matrix Composites (Preprint)
2011-07-01
composite along a fiber direction are given by 2 EEE TL1 (A3) 1 TTLL 1 E2 EE (A4) and the longitudinal (L) and transverse (T...properties of a single ply are given by fMffL v1EvEE (A5) ffTfM MfT T v1EvE EE E (A6) L fMMfff L E v1EvE (A7
Shen, Shuijie; Li, Lei; Ding, Xinxin; Zheng, Jiang
2014-01-01
Pulmonary toxicity of styrene is initiated by cytochromes P450-dependent metabolic activation. P450 2E1 and P450 2F2 are considered to be two main cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes responsible for styrene metabolism in mice. The objective of the current study was to determine the correlation between the formation of styrene metabolites (i.e. styrene oxide and 4-vinylphenol) and pulmonary toxicity of styrene, using Cyp2e1- and Cyp2f2-null mouse models. Dramatic decrease in the formation of styrene glycol and 4-vinylphenol was found in Cyp2f2-null mouse lung microsomes, relative to that in the wild-type mouse lung microsomes. However, no significant difference in the production of the styrene metabolites was observed between lung microsomes obtained from Cyp2e1-null and the wild-type mice. The knock–out and wild-type mice were treated with styrene (6.0 mmol/kg, ip), and cell counts and LDH activity in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids were monitored to evaluate the pulmonary toxicity induced by styrene. Cyp2e1-null mice displayed similar susceptibility to lung toxicity of styrene as the wild-type animals. However, Cyp2f2-null mice were resistant to styrene-induced pulmonary toxicity. In conclusion, both P450 2E1 and P450 2F2 are responsible for the metabolic activation of styrene. The latter enzyme plays an important role in styrene-induced pulmonary toxicity. Both styrene oxide and 4-vinylphenol are suggested to participate in the development of lung injury induced by styrene. PMID:24320693
Scientific and Engineering Studies, Compiled 1989. Signal Processing Studies
1989-01-01
Version W(t,f) . . . . . .......... 25 3 W(t,f) for Real Waveform s(t) ............... 25 4 Contour of WDF (72) at l/e Relative Level . . . . . . . . . 30...spectral level , (189) B Passband of filter H, figure 8 Duration of weighting v, figure 8 LFM Linear Frequency Modulation sgn(x) 1 for x > 0, -1 for x...figure 4. the area of thl parir( Iua level ellipse is 1/2 In the t.f Vifne Wher this area i *, rlt IVe! bl ty e peak height of ?[, the product Is . *ýich
Coder’s Manual: A Guide to TEPIAC Documentation.
1977-07-01
Po Polonium Am Americium Hg Mercury Pr Praseodymium *Ar Argon (Hydrargyrum) Pt Platinum (also A) Ho Holmium Pu Plutonium *As Arsenic *1 Iodine Ra...Er 20 3 208 D ChD2 110 F F 2 Fe (FeF 21 209 E C 6H1 5ErO1 2S 3[Er(C 2 HSO 4)3] III G GaO4P [GaPO4] 210 F CH3 F 112 H 1iNO 212 G C8 H20Ge [Ge(C 2 H 5...Fluidity, 69 Heat conductance (contact), 62 Fluidized bed, 27 Heat conduction, 57 Fluorescence, 125 Heat conductivity, 57 Food products, 31 Heat content
Huarte, Nerea; Lorizate, Maier; Maeso, Rubén; Kunert, Renate; Arranz, Rocio; Valpuesta, José M; Nieva, José L
2008-09-01
The broadly neutralizing 2F5 and 4E10 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) recognize epitopes within the membrane-proximal external region (MPER) that connects the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) envelope gp41 ectodomain with the transmembrane anchor. By adopting different conformations that stably insert into the virion external membrane interface, such as helical structures, a conserved aromatic-rich sequence within the MPER is thought to participate in HIV-1-cell fusion. Recent experimental evidence suggests that the neutralizing activity of 2F5 and 4E10 might correlate with the MAbs' capacity to recognize epitopes inserted into the viral membrane, thereby impairing MPER fusogenic activity. To gain new insights into the molecular mechanism underlying viral neutralization by these antibodies, we have compared the capacities of 2F5 and 4E10 to block the membrane-disorganizing activity of MPER peptides inserted into the surface bilayer of solution-diffusing unilamellar vesicles. Both MAbs inhibited leakage of vesicular aqueous contents (membrane permeabilization) and intervesicular lipid mixing (membrane fusion) promoted by MPER-derived peptides. Thus, our data support the idea that antibody binding to a membrane-inserted epitope may interfere with the function of the MPER during gp41-induced fusion. Antibody insertion into a cholesterol-containing, uncharged virion-like membrane is mediated by specific epitope recognition, and moreover, partitioning-coupled folding into a helix reduces the efficiency of 2F5 MAb binding to its epitope in the membrane. We conclude that the capacity to interfere with the membrane activity of conserved MPER sequences is best correlated with the broad neutralization of the 4E10 MAb.
ESI and MALDI Mass Spectrometry of Large POSS Oligomers (Preprint)
2010-03-10
Bryan Coughlin¦, Gunjan Gadodia¦, David F . Marten†, Julie Ray†, and Michael T. Bowers⊥* Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of...difficult or even impossible to investigate using standard matrices. ) actable o rt HO F F F F N OH FF FF N Figure 1. 4,4...n =4 n = 5 n = 6 % f 16 each sub-series(e.g. m/z ~7960, series d) grows in relative intensity and is best interpreted as the loss of a second
Piezoelectric and Electrostrictive Materials for Transducers Applications. Volume 1
1992-01-31
of the question marks which ’dog current lists of ana com (g. 3.4). 7 Cubkc L, e, W!: CO 02 a.s a 4-009 A ’ .as .-- J Iof , *I - Ot ofcl a mbi w 1...SUSWopibby0a V~ Cooft k" CaaW.W Uobavls v y An&otgl f DoW= Ss bir Lood Ordmr FamaW y SMOadog f Rhludeef 1560 OlIftitn W COObi Y V N$sWW06, bvgweibV. ud OW bb -A...of meul achieved usng differna onewllls TIMMSON JGINUUgM 34 ACrUV COMPO 91 twor w of a" ss cm 0"e a q ~mS i*2II),OW (1-3-3-0) Pl -," e w n&g 8.6 F
30 CFR 902.15 - Approval of Alaska regulatory program amendments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
...), .185(a)(3), (4), (5), .207(c)(5)(C), .213(g), (h), .323(a) through (d), .325(b), (c), (d)(1), (2), (3...), .349(2)(A), .353(a)(1), (2), (3), .371(d)(1) through (4), .373(b), (c), (d), .375(b), (e) through (h...), .491(a), (1), (6), (7), (8), (c)(4) through (8), (e), (f), .901(e), .907(c) through (h), (j). December...
30 CFR 902.15 - Approval of Alaska regulatory program amendments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
...), .185(a)(3), (4), (5), .207(c)(5)(C), .213(g), (h), .323(a) through (d), .325(b), (c), (d)(1), (2), (3...), .349(2)(A), .353(a)(1), (2), (3), .371(d)(1) through (4), .373(b), (c), (d), .375(b), (e) through (h...), .491(a), (1), (6), (7), (8), (c)(4) through (8), (e), (f), .901(e), .907(c) through (h), (j). December...
E2F1 induces p19INK4d, a protein involved in the DNA damage response, following UV irradiation.
Carcagno, Abel L; Giono, Luciana E; Marazita, Mariela C; Castillo, Daniela S; Pregi, Nicolás; Cánepa, Eduardo T
2012-07-01
Central to the maintenance of genomic integrity is the cellular DNA damage response. Depending on the type of genotoxic stress and through the activation of multiple signaling cascades, it can lead to cell cycle arrest, DNA repair, senescence, and apoptosis. p19INK4d, a member of the INK4 family of CDK inhibitors, plays a dual role in the DNA damage response, inhibiting cell proliferation and promoting DNA repair. Consistently, p19INK4d has been reported to become upregulated in response to UV irradiation and a great variety of genotoxic agents. Here, this induction is shown to result from a transcriptional stimulatory mechanism that can occur at every phase of the cell cycle except during mitosis. Moreover, evidence is presented that demonstrates that E2F1 is involved in the induction of p19INK4d following UV treatment, as it is prevented by E2F1 protein ablation and DNA-binding inhibition. Specific inhibition of this regulation using triplex-forming oligonucleotides that target the E2F response elements present in the p19INK4d promoter also block p19INK4d upregulation and sensitize cells to DNA damage. These results constitute the first description of a mechanism for the induction of p19INK4d in response to UV irradiation and demonstrate the physiological relevance of this regulation following DNA damage.
Flight Evaluation of a Linear Optical Displacement Transducer.
1983-05-01
2 EDB 2 I’s A 3 %-M . I f I Add AcŘI’s ABA te 2 I A-# A Add .16 .C..v ACCA #852 2993 2 A95 25394 3 A 1..C -A ADC CS 2 2 09 3 2 E9S5 2 F9 4 3 I...Q.. -lit w CJ0 al Lf O CD 40 0n 1 C L. z u 1u wuW L f)f- .) f3 )w003 *92 Ic Qc -I CL 0l a L&cI a I-m L mumKcd-U< -M =unju a racv 0 CM CY- 00C)C)c M4 w4
Wiesbaden AB, Germany, Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F
1972-08-16
temperatures, extreme maximum and miinimum temperatures, psychrometric sunmmary of wet-bulb temperature depression versusI dry-bulb temperature._means...14 5.1 033 MA us3 s , 33 *,~76, ~ ____ 6 5 410-0 U~i 4 6 it" 4! - 4 0 4 fl? 2 . a354,,-S 35W 11-44*0 - 3 5i f 4F1 5fu 7. 1,i 2 62M e a * _ 601_...body of the -ummary consists of a bivariate percentage frequeucy distribution of wet-bulb depression in 17 classes anread horisontally; by 2-degree
Espada, Lilia; Meo-Evoli, Nathalie; Sancho, Patricia; Real, Sebastian; Fabregat, Isabel; Ambrosio, Santiago; Tauler, Albert
2012-01-01
In this study we demonstrate that accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is essential for E2F1 mediated apoptosis in ER-E2F1 PC12 pheochromocytoma, and SH-SY5Y and SK-N-JD neuroblastoma stable cell lines. In these cells, the ER-E2F1 fusion protein is expressed in the cytosol; the addition of 4-hydroxytamoxifen (OHT) induces its translocation to the nucleus and activation of E2F1target genes. Previously we demonstrated that, in ER-E2F1 PC12 cells, OHT treatment induced apoptosis through activation of caspase-3. Here we show that caspase-8 activity did not change upon treatment with OHT. Moreover, over-expression of Bcl-xL arrested OHT-induced apoptosis; by contrast, over-expression of c-FLIP, did not have any effect on OHT-induced apoptosis. OHT addition induces BimL expression, its translocation to mitochondria and activation of Bax, which is paralleled by diminished mitochondrial enrichment of Bcl-xL. Treatment with a Bax-inhibitory peptide reduced OHT-induced apoptosis. These results point out the essential role of mitochondria on the apoptotic process driven by E2F1. ROS accumulation followed E2F1 induction and treatment with the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine, inhibited E2F1-induced Bax translocation to mitochondria and subsequent apoptosis. The role of ROS in mediating OHT-induced apoptosis was also studied in two neuroblastoma cell lines, SH-SY5Y and SK-N-JD. In SH-SY5Y cells, activation of E2F1 by the addition of OHT induced ROS production and apoptosis, whereas over-expression of E2F1 in SK-N-JD cells failed to induce either response. Transcriptional profiling revealed that many of the genes responsible for scavenging ROS were down-regulated following E2F1-induction in SH-SY5Y, but not in SK-N-JD cells. Finally, inhibition of GSK3β blocked ROS production, Bax activation and the down regulation of ROS scavenging genes. These findings provide an explanation for the apparent contradictory role of E2F1 as an apoptotic agent versus a cell cycle activator. PMID:23251571
1971-11-02
59. "i5 Jb ,++ 5 ), 4, 7_0+1,7:e 1 , 0 3500 T7 j .l 1 61..4 62.r’ 62.2 i . . ..? I . 4,2 ’.’’ 3 Z 1.4 -i 300 .I’e i~, d. 4 64.6 6.5, I t 5,9 66 .5j...8217 .4 5. 8) 0800 4 . L4 84.4 114 . 94ol 94. ,9 83,3 135 8. .6. -, ~6i M~ S500 74 14.0 .) i .) 86 86 13 ob e601 87*0 87,4l 76 7.8 tfId d A8.4 hh , * 5...34 5 i.4 U07000 4.* 04. 64 .5 04 04*5 Ř,05 4 ) L 6 J 4 4 5 It do.J 64 .5 64. t’ 4 5 t’. ’- i 14 I’., 0 6000 3,.:s hh ,5 SAeO 6F.6 68,96 61 .,6 6
Word Frequency Analysis. MOS: 51C. Skill Levels 1 & 2.
1981-05-01
FF-TCR1NG I RESTS 2 RESULT I RESJLTS I VETA I NS 3 it 0Up N I R~vERS-1L. I F E VtS ZNG I PEVELVIKG MOS WORDo LISTINGASCENDIIG SECUEME C.ATE 93259 t39...1 0 J CACCUPULATEG 1 J fiCID I * ?L4CoS 1 j & T.CrC$S 2 0 J tAnJUSTASLE I J rC.Ff ER 8 J E .11:-COflOITIOING 5 *J CALL 1 0 J LALLOM I J (A~LLOW~S 4 *J...ALCMj 3 *J &:.L" VS 1 0 3 12 0 j ...’Jo I *J W Git Z I ., 1 4 J fNVIL I ’ . lUV I J E C.PPEAJRS I I J E .*,PL! CATION 2 2 C. PPLY I 3 C.;PPPtovEo a 3
Batch Covariance Relaxation (BCR) Adaptive Processing.
1981-08-01
leads to the equivalent bandpass transfer function K Pk-8) Bpp (s) =17 - 22 where C2I is the radian IF frequency normalized by wc. Assuming, tacitly...transfer function in (2-3) is given by H +(f + fE) = H+ Bpp (I + 6 ) (2-13) provided that f and f, are understood to be normalized by fc = wc/2r. In...4..J - tj, 45I2 a I a N 1A CZ~ IJ~oa 1,1 2.0 X : Z 1-3 1 a * N -- e - -o 0 (A -1- 1U z 0 8 Or I W *IA O! IU fau a :at oc- -MZ a Iaaa a a m :wU I..- 1
1989-01-01
af a>o - o CL -4 0-u< m - CLO. -4 0 WC -4 M b c CLC 0 )U"aCV C 0L > 4 .t 0 0L 0 " .0." ID0ZW W4 .0 04q 4- I- H 00CL1 0 CC, 0U) 0L >-1 ~3 CL EU ) ɜ...E0 0 E E U a 4-43H ~ U 0 MO 000 af ) H) o 00W 00 0 U) 0 00000 0 w -J f-L U- 0’ O () 00 a) Z -J cl -4 0) -1 (n <-0 40 0 -j -4 4 -l000-4 000N1 -AC 4- -4 L...uL )L)U :fL- _ L CLO CL--- CL C - 0. L1- - LUUC C CA oO0ooCL -. Cl0 C-. Ovcn0 WUC -j L0_0 $1 >L)0 U -4 Ec - 0)( ( o( af 0. CL M 2u )(1) L c ) L L
RACK1-mediated translation control promotes liver fibrogenesis
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Liu, Min; Peng, Peike; Wang, Jiajun
Activation of quiescent hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) is the central event of liver fibrosis. The translational machinery is an optimized molecular network that affects cellular homoeostasis and diseases, whereas the role of protein translation in HSCs activation and liver fibrosis is little defined. Our previous report suggests that up-regulation of receptor for activated C-kinase 1(RACK1) in HSCs is critical for liver fibrogenesis. In this study, we found that RACK1 promoted macrophage conditioned medium (MCM)-induced assembly of eIF4F and phosphorylation of eIF4E in primary HSCs. RACK1 enhanced the translation and expression of pro-fibrogenic factors collagen 1α1, snail and cyclin E1 inducedmore » by MCM. Administration of PP242 or knock-down of eIF4E suppressed RACK1-stimulated collagen 1α1 production, proliferation and migration in primary HSCs. In addition, depletion of eIF4E attenuated thioacetamide (TAA)-induced liver fibrosis in vivo. Our data suggest that RACK1-mediated stimulation of cap-dependent translation plays crucial roles in HSCs activation and liver fibrogenesis, and targeting translation initiation could be a promising strategy for the treatment of liver fibrosis. - Highlights: • RACK1 induces the assembly of eIF4F and phosphorylation of eIF4E in primary HSCs. • RACK1 stimulates the translation of collagen 1α1, snail and cyclin E1 in HSCs. • RACK1 promotes HSCs activation via cap-mediated translation. • Depletion of eIF4E suppresses liver fibrogenesis in vivo.« less
Urban Terrain Analysis Training Aids
1981-09-01
h a t o f Jeep- mounted TOW’S. These could be f i r e d from any f l o o r w i t h o u t f e a r of back b l a s t . Some cover and...stone cladding 2. Mass construction: stone 3. Mass construction: brick with stone veneer IV. Site 4: Rainier Bank 1 A. What is the class of window
Taegu AB, Korea. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A, C-F.
1981-10-07
A N STATION STATiO% NAMI YEARS MTOtH PA3E ’ .3 --- S _ NOUS (IL. S. T .1 Te.p. WET SULS TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (F) TOTAL TOTAL (F) _ 3.2 2.4 5.6 7-5 9...81 JAN___ STATION STATION NAME Y(D.RS MONTH *PAGE I-U "OURS I L. S. T . I Ten.p. ___WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (F) TOTAL ____TOTAL ___ *(F) 0 1 -2...EATHik SERVICL/ AC . 3 12 TALGU A9 KJ 69-7’,74-81 __,__,A _ STATION STATION NAk4 YEARS hOlork NOUNS (L.. S. T .1 Temp. WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (F
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ramanamma Chaudhri, Y. V.; Mahajan, C. G.
1991-02-01
High-resolution spectra of S 2 in the region of the E and F- X progressions have been used to carry out the rotational analyses of the bands at 65 869, 66 666, 65 978, 66 380, and 67 094 cm -1. The first two bands form a single progression and have been attributed to the transition E1 u( {1}/{2}, {1}/{2}) ← X0 g+. The bands at 65 978 and 66 380 cm -1 are shown to belong to the electronic transitions E'0 u+( {1}/{2}, {1}/{2}) ← X0 g+ and F1 u( {3}/{2}, {1}/{2}) ← X0 g+, respectively. The group of states E, E', and F constitutes the second member ( n = 5) of the Rydberg series ( πu3 p) 4 ( πu3 p) ( πunp) whose first member ( n = 4) is the state 3Σ u-. The band at 67 094 cm -1 has been assigned to the transition D'1 u ← X0 g+ which, when considered in the light of the state D3Π u, seems to form a second member of the Rydberg series ( πu3 p) 4 ( πg3 p) ( σunp). The vibrational and rotational constants of these electronic states have also been derived.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ishida, Junichi; Iimura, Soshi; Hosono, Hideo
2017-11-01
In this paper, the effects of cobalt substitution on the transport and electronic properties of the recently discovered iron-based superconductor KC a2F e4A s4F2 , with Tc=33 K , are reported. This material is an unusual superconductor showing intrinsic hole conduction (0.25 holes /F e2 + ). Upon doping of Co, the Tc of KC a2(Fe1-xC ox) 4A s4F2 gradually decreased, and bulk superconductivity disappeared when x ≥0.25 . Conversion of the primary carrier from p type to n type upon Co-doping was clearly confirmed by Hall measurements, and our results are consistent with the change in the calculated Fermi surface. Nevertheless, neither spin density wave (SDW) nor an orthorhombic phase, which are commonly observed for nondoped iron-based superconductors, was observed in the nondoped or electron-doped samples. The electron count in the 3 d orbitals and structural parameters were compared with those of other iron-based superconductors to show that the physical properties can be primarily ascribed to the effects of disorder.
1982-02-16
E~ __ _ 1.0 a 3 ____ __ _ 1.4 3I. 4 ENE 1.7 . . .1 4 *1 2 1 .9 5. ,e i 101 * ’ 3 e!. 203 4.3 IE 1 1.6 1.9 . 4 3.9 .3_8 Se 1.9_ It.7 194 .3 1___...SERVICL/I4AC PERCENTAGE FREQUENCY OF WINDSU FC WID DIRECTION AND SPEED (FROM HOURLY OBSERVATIONS) .23 COLUMBUS AFB MS 7C73-1__ _____ $TAT"S STATION...1 3 4 __ _ I _ __________. NNE 1.4 .2 eI _ _ _. It? 29__8 NE .8 .3 1,__ _ _ 2.s ENE .8 . _ 1 .1 194 . _,_ 395E i . 7 . 8 . l i 2 .6: , 3 . 1 ESE 4.7
Prime Contract Awards Over $25,000 by Major System, Contractor and State Part 1 (AAA-NAVY-AVG NAVY)
1990-01-01
Q-COC’) -4 M’i (a -4 c"a(aeo - ( D 0 AC 1 -ao f-.r qva 0(%Ioa.4 ()t a. c~cv(vc4 z *Za in -0f (4Jl w -44- m - .41 C,4 Ui 0 C4 IC4 P- -a l~~II I II cLE E...AO-A236 155iiiilulll l I l 1990 ANNUAL Prime Contract Awards Over $25,000 by Major System, Contractor and State Part 1 (AAA-NAVY-AVG NAVY) WHS...Special . 1 -9 __28284 pages I1 ~ . - e21 M(%I% cm -40W -4 I4 m V .. 4 mt WC)a r a- 4-r w~l w zl- qt qt V .4- 01-4 41-4 . 40 o r Lu V) c I OL 9 C U c
CCITT Study Group XVIII Work Program 1981-1984; (Integrated Services Digital Network)
1981-06-01
ecitintwrste!D teaN he1B - 72 - COM VIII-No. 1-E The points lised below require particular attention in the studies, whereby acca -t should be taken of all...l I\\ I path> muldex f, fc c f3 fre’ue’o Z. -- frequency f F=ure 2 - ttput r a line .at.. a .a = ex Section (22) -79- COMl XVI-!O -E IA dB lie at...muldex fc f3 f, cf frequency -~frequency - Figure 3 -Jitter-transfer function of a line path and a muldex section Figure I4 shows the amplitude of
Investigation of a Third Order Baro-Damped Vertical Channel of INS.
1982-12-01
SI%(TINCL3.S:*4SA-") SALP -IA = CQS(TI4CLj/Ch.Ar IF(GA"-GI! )24.25,25 25 Z-F GAM-GI.924 26 CALP..,A:SGRt4 -SA PMA.SALPHAI 32 G) T’) 2? 24...55 39 CALPHA:-iQR?(1-!ALPmA& SALP "A) C SEGUENT IAEE 24 VZ=0. 135 iS.OU?!%E TPAJ ?4/F4 0PTZ1 F4.*.564 IO/2 1..3 147 1031. V40R ZZ GAwoor.(EQ-HT) CTLAT...TSORT( COS(GA.4l.C:3(GAM8.( (ocrNL- 7#(AI-2 STLAr = S.Nc.%cJS(GI SALP ,4* = CoS(TINCL)/CTLAT 5334 :F(GA"-G1213!.3S,33 35 ChLP’m*:SOfT(1-SALPA.SALPMIAJ
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Novita, Mega; Ogasawara, Kazuyoshi
2012-02-01
We performed first-principles configuration-interaction calculations of multiplet energies for Mn4+ in K2SiF6, K2GeF6, and K2TiF6 crystals. The results indicate that corrections based on a single-electron calculation are effective for the prediction of 4A2 → 4T2 and 4A2 → 4T1a transition energies, while such corrections are not necessary for the prediction of the 4A2 → 2E transition energy. The cluster size dependence of the multiplet energies is small. However, the 4A2 → 2E transition energy is slightly improved by using larger clusters including K ions. The theoretical multiplet energies are improved further by considering the lattice relaxation effect. As a result, the characteristic multiplet energy shifts depending on the host crystal are well reproduced without using any empirical parameters. Although K2GeF6 and K2TiF6 have lower symmetry than K2SiF6, the results indicate that the variation of the multiplet energy is mainly determined by the Mn-F bond length.
Implementation of Segment Management for a Secure Archival Storage System.
1980-09-01
microprocessor operating systems from which the subset, SASS, was later derived (6]. In their work, two of the primary motivations were to provide a system...facility provided by segmentation. The ju~stification Is based on a design decision motivated by another goal of SASS -- reduction of bus contention among...1- I ’ E-4 P4 2-4 E-:t 1 P- W E-E-4&r,3- ’-4 :/I 64 t Ln i.. E-.’f2) V) : / x W~ E.4 E- $=I~ P4 X * U C - ~-4 :Pz=r- -C4 PS4 &2- I-.4 14~ PC: co E E
Biggar, Kyle K; Storey, Kenneth B
2018-01-01
In many cases, the DNA-binding activity of a transcription factor does not change, while its transcriptional activity is greatly influenced by the make-up of bound proteins. In this study, we assessed the protein composition and DNA-binding ability of the E2F transcription factor complex to provide insight into cell cycle control in an anoxia tolerant turtle through the use of a modified ELISA protocol. This modification also permits the use of custom DNA probes that are tailored to a specific DNA binding region, introducing the ability to design capture probes for non-model organisms. Through the use of EMSA and ELISA DNA binding assays, we have successfully determined the in vitro DNA binding activity and complex dynamics of the Rb/E2F cell cycle regulatory mechanisms in an anoxic turtle, Trachemys scripta elegans . Repressive cell cycle proteins (E2F4, Rb, HDAC4 and Suv39H1) were found to significantly increase at E2F DNA-binding sites upon anoxic exposure in anoxic turtle liver. The lack of p130 involvement in the E2F DNA-bound complex indicates that anoxic turtle liver may maintain G 1 arrest for the duration of stress survival.
Biggar, Kyle K.
2018-01-01
In many cases, the DNA-binding activity of a transcription factor does not change, while its transcriptional activity is greatly influenced by the make-up of bound proteins. In this study, we assessed the protein composition and DNA-binding ability of the E2F transcription factor complex to provide insight into cell cycle control in an anoxia tolerant turtle through the use of a modified ELISA protocol. This modification also permits the use of custom DNA probes that are tailored to a specific DNA binding region, introducing the ability to design capture probes for non-model organisms. Through the use of EMSA and ELISA DNA binding assays, we have successfully determined the in vitro DNA binding activity and complex dynamics of the Rb/E2F cell cycle regulatory mechanisms in an anoxic turtle, Trachemys scripta elegans. Repressive cell cycle proteins (E2F4, Rb, HDAC4 and Suv39H1) were found to significantly increase at E2F DNA-binding sites upon anoxic exposure in anoxic turtle liver. The lack of p130 involvement in the E2F DNA-bound complex indicates that anoxic turtle liver may maintain G1 arrest for the duration of stress survival. PMID:29770276
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cibulka, I.; Fontaine, J.-C.; Sosnkowska-Kehiaian, K.; Kehiaian, H. V.
This document is part of Subvolume A 'Binary Liquid Systems of Nonelectrolytes I' of Volume 26 'Heats of Mixing, Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium, and Volumetric Properties of Mixtures and Solutions' of Landolt-Börnstein Group IV 'Physical Chemistry'. It contains the Chapter 'Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium in the Mixture 1,1-Difluoroethane C2H4F2 + C4H8 2-Methylpropene (EVLM1131, LB5730_E)' providing data from direct measurement of pressure and mole fraction in vapor phase at variable mole fraction in liquid phase and constant temperature.
1980-02-14
cifs is only 3 percent of the Probable kaximum Flood (P11F) which was coi’puted to be 13,670 cfs.’ The 1 /2 PI4F is 7,046 cfs. Therefore, the darn...calnnot pass the 1 /2 P,4F without being overtopped. The downstreami hazard is a 1 ijhtly traveled road thAt travels northe] {o the cantonment area. -g ;:p...c t of t e si l a si ad.u t o l1 1 . The discharg caact oftesiia sindqa fraf1ows in excess of 3 per cent of the Nl (siiaAaaiy=40cs.~~ e spillway is
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Feil, Stefan; Märk, Tilmann D.; Mauracher, Andreas; Scheier, Paul; Mayhew, Chris A.
2008-11-01
Non-dissociative and dissociative electron attachment to a series of gas-phase perfluorocarbons (PFCs), namely octafluorocyclobutane, c-C4F8, octafluorobut-2-ene (perfluoro-2-butene), 2-C4F8, hexafluorobuta-1,3-diene (1,3 perfluorobutadiene), 1,3 C4F6, and octafluorocyclopentene (perfluorocyclopentene), c-C5F8, of importance to technological plasmas, have been investigated using two different, but complimentary, instruments available in Innsbruck over the electron energy range 0-20 eV. Anion yields as a function of electron energy have been recorded, with the positions and intensities of the electron attachment resonances being determined. One of these instruments is a double focusing sector field mass spectrometer (VG-ZAB-2SEQ), which has been used for measurements requiring high sensitivity and for obtaining accurate relative anion yields. It has also been used to determine the electron detachment lifetimes of the parent anions under various accelerating voltages, and these results are also presented. The second instrument (CELIA) is a trochoidal electron monochromator coupled to a quadrupole mass filter with a pulse counting system for detecting product anionic species. This provides a much higher energy resolution than the VG-ZAB, which makes it a better instrument to investigate narrow energy resonances close to 0 eV. The results of anion yields, peak positions and the relative intensities presented in this paper are compared with previous data of electron attachment to the above PFCs, including investigations by Professor Eugen Illenberger.
Fort Sill Oklahoma/Post Field. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations
1975-06-23
TEMPERATURE DEPRESSIO (F) TOTAL TOTAL (F) 0 t .2 3-4 5 6 7 - ,9 I 1 1 1 .1 516 17 -18119 -20 21 22 23 -2412S.26 27 -2 9 3, 1i ’’WB ~ ub e ub~ we.. 2/ 1...Temp WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSIO (F) TOTAL _ TOTAL F)/ 03 1 .2 3C 4, 0 1-1 I3- 5, 6 1 .1 9-20 2 2_3- 5-." 26 27 -28 D.B W .2 0 31b We B lle on 90
1980-11-01
3oo t-- .. .. . ..... IL. .. .j .. ... ... ....... . . ..... .............. ........ ........ .... ..i .. . ... .. . . T~UNE TULY RU~u3T...Is to it.24. 4. 40 J .i1 0 j ix a1 3 TULY ;UGJT S rrmOEsPLAE...I-- -~xp ----- ------ f -4 -i-4- i - - 4 ---- --- 4 -~ ~ F4 E4 TULY OUVS FPTfM Br2 PLATE 107 .5-- .. 5 .- -~- --- -- - -- - - - 2----- --- - - 8
Cone structure and focusing of VLF and LF electromagnetic waves at high altitudes in the ionosphere
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Alpert, Ya. L.; Green, J. L.
1994-01-01
The frequency and angle dependencies of the electric field radiated by an electric dipole E = E(sub 0) cos omega(t) are studied through numerical calculations of absolute value of E in the VLF and LF frequency bands where F is less than or equal 0.02 to 0.05 f(sub b) in a model ionosphere over an altitude region of 800-6000 km where the wave frequency and electron gyrofrequency varies between F approximately 4-500 kHz and f(sub b) is approximately equal (1.1 to 0.2) MHz respectively. It is found that the amplitudes of the electric field have large maxima in four regions: close to the direction of the Earth magnetic field line B(sub 0) (it is called the axis field E(sub 0), in the Storey E(sub St), reversed Storey E(sub RevSt), and resonance E(sub Res) cones. The maximal values of E(sub 0), E(sub Res), and E(sub RevSt) are the most pronounced close to the lower hybrid frequency, F approximately F(sub L). The flux of the electric field is concentrated in very narrow regions, with the apex angles of the cones Delta-B is approximately (0.1-1) deg. The enhancement and focusing of the electric field increases with altitude starting at Z greater than 800 km. At Z greater than or equal to 1000 up to 6000 km, the relative value of absolute value of E, in comparison with its value at Z = 800 km is about (10(exp 2) to 10(exp 4)) times larger. Thus the flux of VLF and LF electromagnetic waves generated at high altitudes in the Earth's ionosphere are trapped into very narrow conical beams similar to laser beams.
Dynamics of the Eye and Head when Switching Visual Attention Between Two Tasks
1976-10-01
EC R T CL SS47AT3 ODIIO THI PAG NOVe. 68I ateE n l ss f e unclassified................. ’i., U UITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGC(IWm &We D n task...identifi- cation for their processing task (Bartz, 1962; Neisser , 1964; Teichner and Krebs, 1974). Robinson, Koth and Ringenbach (1976) varied the...start of the trial. $4 V Ul 0 4 U 4J 0 r- 4 ) *.-4 4) 4 10 C4J 04. A 4 0 )4. U f E0 0 II . 0 41 rI030 ’no,1m Im or $4 -4 $4 Id4; tr ’, C,-4$4 4 I ir
MILES Pressure/Seismic Response Engineering Development of MILES Test Fixture.
1980-08-01
A t ditioti td t’,i o, ,,[ ’ or 44 : t ’) .0 4 ::: r-C Irr 419: 0,11 5 E+ I-E Mrl;A D ATA FAE’SUL 420: t’:r = I t,. 444: t =t tt1l N # ’’ f t o...3 17 T PA II C E R. TD ES T 58: 2 ;.rt . PI’ MERSUFEP! F112: A.ILE70 ,""",蘇_-244 EtIT": 113: [e 47it - t+ 13 -.7!1 end 5’?: l+ " ’:;.,r...34calculate "TRANSPOSI TIOS distonce bet.ee 455: for C.=1 to ’ 4t tde n transposition T-2 416: test defe s = td deviation 456: if abs(L[C+ 4ts":477: if E
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Yujie; Wang, Shuangbao; Deng, Saifu; Liu, Jianting; Zhang, Jiahui
2017-10-01
Optical glass was very important for the development of optical fiber sensor. In this paper, a new type fluoride glass of ZrF4-BaF2-AlF3-NaF-MgF2(ZBANM) was synthesized for sensing application which has low loss and high magneto-optical coefficient, and it was found that the glass system had at least 60% transmittance from 3.5 μm to 7 μm and smallest verdet constant of 4.628E-5/(rad A-1) at 632.8 nm. The relationship among the compositions of sample glass with its thermal property, optical absorptivity and magnetic-optical coefficients was respectively studied with Thermal Gravimetric-Differential Thermal Analyzer, Fourier Transform infrared spectroscopy and a home-made magneto optical bench. The study indicated that transmittance of fluoride glass structure had been obviously improved after moderate content of Mg2+ and Na+ was doped. Simultaneously, with the molar ratio of alkaline-earth ions Mg increased, the Verdet constant of fluoride glass was increased. And the glass structure with composition of 48%ZrF4-24%BaF2-6%AlF3-8%NaF-14%MgF2 exhibited a small molar absorptivity and the largest Verdet constant of 2.853E-4/(rad A-1).
Simulated Tank Anti-Armor Gunnery System (STAGS).
1981-11-01
52 PICPOINTS27 DB 410, 1710, 720, 140, 41 160 720 0, 410, 1710 770. , 410, 166 0 730,130 GiRl 79 O1R2 3P 81A3 5( OIA4 21...510, 3 @55 52 .W6 4F @1(7 52 8(86 0’ fB 4f 158 END - 159. 05,@ 160 LASTJnF-YREP L4BEL WORD i 161 162 START HORIZONTA. OE ENVELOPE 163 [, 164 HREP DO...0783 52 8784 28 8785 41 0786 49 87B7 4 8788 49 8789 4E 07BA 47 87BB 28 878C 45 078D 52 205 PREP32 I8 ±220,±220,1±70,. 220, 4@0,580
NASA's F-15B Research Testbed aircraft flies in the supersonic shock wave of a U.S. Navy F-5E as par
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
2002-01-01
NASA's F-15B Research Testbed aircraft recently flew in the supersonic shock wave of a U.S. Navy F-5E in support of the F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration (SSBD) project, part of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) program. The flights originated from the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards, California. Four flights were flown in order to measure the F-5E's near-field (close-up) sonic boom signature at Mach 1.4, during which more than 50 shockwave patterns were measured at distances as close as 100 feet below the F-5E.
Word Frequency Analysis MOS: 11H. Skill Levels 1 & 2.
1981-05-01
I k,4 L t qs 1’ F £U 19 L ’A T 19 5 S r4 19 SQUARE I 1 I i f1 ,41 0 ItLf tD ;- 1 ASSEMBLY ILtl LI’IC 0 iA!,A (.E laID Is EVERY T IC :,.% .IMUtl I nXT...1iwl15ll’G 2 1 ULEUTLR 2 uORtRNfC 2 ’L’ i ,T,.10 2 L 4:.E/14JSH 2p Ls , 01 -.A’LM NT 2 L:’ ZfOET t Te 2~ LI V1 2AL 2 L- E1TLC2 LA 2 -i’ A JAJ , At 2...11 9 .4’? S ~P ’~II9 1.$ S3 C,: y.T! ON 1; 1 LT 1:1:%L r c " tD S; FI IL 9 1,0q 9 Pq 1 !’. 9 rrInT P. ’"JlLL0 1;1 9; k.I..) J I Ptr1.CS I 9 t,! ’U1E
RAF Woodbridge, UK. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations. Parts A-F.
1988-02-01
LOPFILt I ?CKS AL L AVAI L A L c i tiATI(NS 6 "LK~ ISCL UC tS -’ CUPLY OO-rVATT! n Ns lP AP C %’ P 4r L(CEL) IIN LOLIIMSS E(-7 3, 1.4 F LLMS I / I... P "A121 N S Aw 51,0 TO 595b IR 012,1 91v S I ( . .0C . .c 3.2 3. 7. 1 3. . 3 03-G5 I .: e9.9 95. ’.0 .3 !5 06OA-0. 3 7.4 4. 33. I 2ŕ.. 19. z3 09-11...Pt:C 4 -: ION1h: S57 I fAIN FRINU SNO. A Of MOOL I % ,) HOURS IT4S LO p kAI N O HAIL !ITH ft LIAR LU. iNu 7iC A’ItH03 57:10: (LST I u’I ZLL L UI SLEET
Cespedes, Carlos L; Muñoz, Evelyn; Salazar, Juan R; Yamaguchi, Lydia; Werner, Enrique; Alarcon, Julio; Kubo, Isao
2013-12-01
Extracts, fractions and compounds from Calceolaria talcana and C. integrifolia exhibited strong inhibitory effects of the activity of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) enzymes using the in vitro Ellman's method. The most active samples were from the ethyl acetate extract, which caused a mixed-type inhibition against AChE (69.8% and 79.5% at 100 and 200 μg/ml, respectively) and against BChE (98.5% and 99.8% at 100 and 200 μg/ml, respectively) and its major components verbascoside 8 (50.9% and 70.0% at 200 μg/ml, against AChE and BChE, respectively), martynoside 9, and fraction F-7 (which corresponds to a mixture of 8, 9, and other phenylethanoids and phenolics that remain unidentified) (80.2% and 85.3% at 100 and 200 μg/ml, against AChE, respectively and 99.1% and 99.7% at 100 and 200 μg/ml, against BChE, respectively) inhibited the acetylcholinesterase enzyme competitively. The most polar fraction F-5 from n-hexane extract (a mixture of naphthoquinones: 2-hydroxy-3-(1,1-dimethylallyl-1,4-naphthoquinone) 6, α-dunnione 7 and other polar compounds that remain unidentified) showed a mixed-type inhibition (71.5% and 72.1% against AChE and BChE at 200 μg/ml, respectively). Finally, the methanol-soluble residue presented a complex, mixed-type inhibition (39.9% and 67.9% against AChE and BChE at 200 μg/ml, respectively). The mixture F-3 with diterpenes was obtained from the n-hexane extract: (1,10-cyclopropyl-9-epi-ent-isopimarol) 1, 19-α-hydroxy-abietatriene 2, and F-4 a mixture of triterpenes α-lupeol 3, β-sitosterol 4, ursolic acid 5 together with a complex mixture of terpenes that did not show activity. In summary, extracts and natural compounds from C. talcana and C. integrifolia were isolated, identified and characterized as cholinesterase inhibitors.
E2F activators signal and maintain centrosome amplification in breast cancer cells.
Lee, Mi-Young; Moreno, Carlos S; Saavedra, Harold I
2014-07-01
Centrosomes ensure accurate chromosome segregation by directing spindle bipolarity. Loss of centrosome regulation results in centrosome amplification, multipolar mitosis and aneuploidy. Since centrosome amplification is common in premalignant lesions and breast tumors, it is proposed to play a central role in breast tumorigenesis, a hypothesis that remains to be tested. The coordination between the cell and centrosome cycles is of paramount importance to maintain normal centrosome numbers, and the E2Fs may be responsible for regulating these cycles. However, the role of E2F activators in centrosome amplification is unclear. Because E2Fs are deregulated in Her2(+) cells displaying centrosome amplification, we addressed whether they signal this abnormal process. Knockdown of E2F1 or E2F3 in Her2(+) cells decreased centrosome amplification without significantly affecting cell cycle progression, whereas the overexpression of E2F1, E2F2, or E2F3 increased centrosome amplification in MCF10A mammary epithelial cells. Our results revealed that E2Fs affect the expression of proteins, including Nek2 and Plk4, known to influence the cell/centrosome cycles and mitosis. Downregulation of E2F3 resulted in cell death and delays/blocks in cytokinesis, which was reversed by Nek2 overexpression. Nek2 overexpression enhanced centrosome amplification in Her2(+) breast cancer cells silenced for E2F3, revealing a role for the E2F activators in maintaining centrosome amplification in part through Nek2.
1973-05-25
oonO. L yJab1Qps 1009100 ’A1!k 10 0ki 10.100.1( 0o l0,1, 10,110 10,1D. TOTAL NUMBER OF OBSERVATIONS ’ATA PP~i/fSS7I’% ;Ar.C; ’A ET.T CEILING VERSUS...t 52 .j 8 2@0 2 7 000 W T - 12 0 IT a? a 3 td $ 84*86 1 4? e 8 29 F2, IT~ 8612, 82 13 11. . 6 000 2* 1 Its . 0 2F 4) , 8206.~ 828~j 82.P p 2 > 5000 k
Halocarbon Recovery, Recycling, and Reclamation: Issues, Equipment, and Services
1990-05-01
CH3CCl2F 1, 1-Dichioro- 1-fluoroethane 142b 221 CH3CClF2 1 -Chioro- 1, 1 - difluoroethane 143a 23 CH3CF3 1,1,1-Tetrfluoroethane 152a 22 CH3CHF2 1,1... Difluoroethane aAs defined by the Montreal Protocol (Reference 1). ob 00 in Cqr 4 4 *na - eq -- - r- 0 r- r.- O00 00 n in 1 Us 0 m In I 000 en e en% 0% 6 C4
Training Extract Historian AFSC: 791X2.
1985-09-01
AW-RI61 I"N TRINING EXTRACT HISTORIAN AFSC: 9X2(U) RIR FORCE 1/2OCCUPATIONAL NERSURENENT CENTER RANDOLPH RFI TX SEP 05 UNCLASSIFIED F/O 519 ML ILhE...99919 :~~00 @04 0 00 mOto IIP-M’ ~ 1 1 F PIA@. .0 at0 Noost.4. NO~ -N C .ON.* 4 44 C C -Na d 0 *M -ON FM Ř ’a. fn . 10 00*0c f. - - - F 2 a. 0 ...CP.N INNN &. 4 . W! I.i. ID w~* At. *a -D x: T T. 6, +4 ao 11U a4 l.Ot I I O-AI61 IN TRAINING EXTRACT HISTORIAN AFSC: M9UM AIR FORCE 12I OCCUPATIONAL
Density Functional Study of Structures and Electron Affinities of BrO4F/BrO4F−
Gong, Liangfa; Xiong, Jieming; Wu, Xinmin; Qi, Chuansong; Li, Wei; Guo, Wenli
2009-01-01
The structures, electron affinities and bond dissociation energies of BrO4F/BrO4F− species have been investigated with five density functional theory (DFT) methods with DZP++ basis sets. The planar F-Br…O2…O2 complexes possess 3A′ electronic state for neutral molecule and 4A′ state for the corresponding anion. Three types of the neutral-anion energy separations are the adiabatic electron affinity (EAad), the vertical electron affinity (EAvert), and the vertical detachment energy (VDE). The EAad value predicted by B3LYP method is 4.52 eV. The bond dissociation energies De (BrO4F → BrO4-mF + Om) (m = 1–4) and De− (BrO4F− → BrO4-mF− + Om and BrO4F− → BrO4-mF + Om−) are predicted. The adiabatic electron affinities (EAad) were predicted to be 4.52 eV for F-Br…O2…O2 (3A′←4A′) (B3LYP method). PMID:19742128
1989-01-01
E 0 , f- ~ - el 2.0 >f ~~.- 0 V?0 ) *-’Q) Q: Z 10 1Z o Oc 4V cc o S7 - L E) o 0 0 a) .97 -L ) U c c r_ In CL M) E2 -4 CL W) > V a) C. L- L. - C V...4 -140)(m0)) 00000000000000000 ))))))))))))))) 11 a)1 W-4N,41 I N -IN m Go00 0000* 400000000000000000000000O0000000 II El W-40 1102 42 02222Z...34 :: mmmmmmimmcl3mmmmmmmm m commmmm U-4 zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz z zzzzzz M-4c,)O:: in m in m m o 0 0 In In In In In In In on In In U") In In en CY) U) In W W) 9) U"I M-4" " C14
Formulation studies for mirtazapine orally disintegrating tablets.
Yıldız, Simay; Aytekin, Eren; Yavuz, Burçin; Bozdağ Pehlivan, Sibel; Ünlü, Nurşen
2016-01-01
Orally disintegrating tablets (ODTs) recently have gained much attention to fulfill the needs for pediatric, geriatric, and psychiatric patients with dysphagia. Aim of this study was to develop new ODT formulations containing mirtazapine, an antidepressant drug molecule having bitter taste, by using simple and inexpensive preparation methods such as coacervation, direct compression and to compare their characteristics with those of reference product (Remereon SolTab). Coacervation method was chosen for taste masking of mirtazapine. In vitro characterization studies such as diameter and thickness, weight variation, tablet hardness, tablet friability and disintegration time were performed on tablet formulations. Wetting time and in vitro dissolution tests of developed ODTs also studied using 900 mL 0.1 N HCl medium, 900 mL pH 6.8 phosphate buffer or 900 mL pH 4.5 acetate buffer at 37 ± 0.2 °C as dissolution medium. Ratio of Eudragit® E-100 was chosen as 6% (w/w) since the dissolution profile of A1 (6% Eudragit® E-100) was found closer to the reference product than A2 (4% Eudragit® E-100) and A3 (8% Eudragit® E-100). Group D, E and F formulations were presented better results in terms of disintegration time. Dissolution results indicated that Group E and F formulations showed optimum properties in all three dissolution media. Formulations D1, D4, D5, E3, E4, F1 and F5 found suitable as ODT formulations due to their favorable disintegration times and dissolution profiles. Developed mirtazapine ODTs were found promising in terms of showing the similar characteristics to the original formulation.
Hedonic Price Indices for Ground Vehicles
2015-05-01
I N S T I T U T E F O R D E F E N S E A N A L Y S E S Hedonic Price Indices for Ground Vehicles David M. Tate INSTITUTE FOR DEFENSE ANALYSES 4850... Hedonic Price Indices for Ground Vehicles David M. Tate Institute for Defense Analyses (CARD) 4850 Mark Center Dr., Alexandria, VA 22311 Ph...4 1. Basic Hedonic Regression
Air Cushion Equipment Transporter (ACET) Testing. Volume 2.
1986-10-01
m: lllllhllllEEE 1.0. 1-2-5 w lw w w w w -- * e %. f~n4% AD-A188 369 AFWAL-TR-86-3088 VOLUME 11 AIR CUSHION EQ~UIPuMNT TRNSPO’jRTERi (ACET) TESTING T.D... E . COLCLOUGH, J Chief Vehicle E eupment Division .. If your address has changed, if you wish to be removed from our mailing list, or if the addressee...and ZIP CodeI 10. SOURCE OF FUNDING NOS. PROGRAM PROJECT TASK WORK UNIT ELEMENT NO. NO NO NO II TITLE (includ. Securito C f e ,,n 62201F 2402 01 34 12
1980-09-23
PAGE 1 no2IJ1L HouRs I.. S. T .) Tomp. _ _WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (F) TOTAL TOTAL (F) 0_1__2_.4 1 5. 0111- 12113.-14 15.-16117.-1S119.-20 21.22...80 JAN STATION STATION NAME YEARS MONTH PAGE 1 (13110-1 1501711 HOURS (L. S. T .) Temp. _ WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESsION (F) J TOTAL TOTAL (F) o 1. T 3...NAME YEARS MONTH PAGE 1 111nn-nAnn HOURS t . S. T ,) Temp. WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (P) TOTAL TOTAL F 0 1.? 3-4 5.6 7-S 9.10 11 1213 14 1 16
Rady, Brian; Chen, Yanmei; Vaca, Pilar; Wang, Qian; Wang, Yong; Salmon, Patrick; Oberholzer, José
2013-01-01
The mechanisms that control proliferation, or lack thereof, in adult human β cells are poorly understood. Controlled induction of proliferation could dramatically expand the clinical application of islet cell transplantation and represents an important component of regenerative approaches to a functional cure of diabetes. Adult human β cells are particularly resistant to common proliferative targets and often dedifferentiate during proliferation. Here we show that expression of the transcription factor E2F3 has a role in regulating β-cell quiescence and proliferation. We found human islets have virtually no expression of the pro-proliferative G1/S transcription factors E2F1–3, but an abundance of inhibitory E2Fs 4–6. In proliferative human insulinomas, inhibitory E2Fs were absent, while E2F3 is expressed. Using this pattern as a “roadmap” for proliferation, we demonstrated that ectopic expression of nuclear E2F3 induced significant expansion of insulin-positive cells in both rat and human islets. These cells did not undergo apoptosis and retained their glucose-responsive insulin secretion, showing the ability to reverse diabetes in mice. Our results suggest that E2F4–6 may help maintain quiescence in human β cells and identify E2F3 as a novel target to induce proliferation of functional β cells. Refinement of this approach may increase the islets available for cell-based therapies and research and could provide important cues for understanding in vivo proliferation of β cells. PMID:23907129
Hickam AFB, Hawaii Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.
1985-04-01
ZkAN~,I EATV A. TO RELATIVE HUMIDITY -- EAT’E~SE; VIC /MAL I.I 2n 4CK A A F H---- 74-337 STATION STATION NAME PERIOD CUMULATIVE PERCENTAGE FREQUENCY...AL 1 li 9 o G l O 1 0 . 1; 99 .9 7 92 -6 71.2 4 1’_.1 l S 1 67 . 72 2- ] USAFETAC F 0.87-5 (OL A) ....... -LCAIAL CL!’"ATCL3Y -sRANCM EATV - c L r TAC
1988-05-26
tD o 11 11 11 -l m N1 -0 e a, 1 0...2E z z z z 2 z z z S SO, EB S IED O-. CDI z C z z z CP TD gD 2 i 2Qaniz z z z sa -@ 2N’. Us(~ -- (XJ 3 gN( C’Ea - 2E S00 0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0 a 4...dr.f mm, 10 fd, I---_1_~a -- ______________0 5;’~ SOAP- bAL -ft VU.-a& 44L PUMPING LXVEL 4bd .’ lM" -- ) fI ... ______ @-Ph. " o0 3s....4..0 a ir a.m
da Costa, Mateus Matiuzzi; Drescher, Guilherme; Maboni, Franciele; Weber, Shana; de Avila Botton, Sônia; Vainstein, Marilene Henning; Schrank, Irene Silveira; de Vargas, Agueda Castagna
2008-01-01
The present study determined the molecular and resistance patterns of E. coli isolates from urinary tract of swine in Southern of Brazil. Molecular characterization of urinary vesicle samples was performed by PCR detection of virulence factors from ETEC, STEC and UPEC. From a total of 82 E. coli isolates, 34 (38.63%) harbored one or more virulence factors. The frequency of virulence factors genes detected by PCR were: pap (10.97%), hlyA (10.97%), iha (9.75%), lt (8.53%), sta (7.31%) sfa (6.09%), f4 (4.87%), f5 (4.87%), stb (4.87%), f6 (1.21%) and f41 (1.21%). Isolates were resistant to penicillin (95.12%), lincomycin (93.9%), erythromycin (92.68%), tetracycline (90.24%), amoxicillin (82.92%), ampicillin (74.39%), josamycin (79.26%), norfloxacin (58.53%), enrofloxacin (57.31%), gentamicin (39.02%), neomycin (37.8%), apramycin (30.48%), colistine (30.48%) and cefalexin (6.09%). A number of 32 (39.02%) E. coli isolates harbored plasmids. PMID:24031300
Weyerhaeuser Export Facility at DuPont. Volume III. Appendices R - T.
1982-05-01
o 1 0N. u -43-.Ell. in- All~ 4E-W -Sl >.41 03..l 0 -. 0.El El4 -0 00. ElE w wo El0 0 E.W a A44 l iV t 4 r A - - . 1 %9C 4 U. o U 10 ).- 3W 4 aQ 4...8217 , u =1 0.H, a t 0 El4 2-0.4 4 00 LI 40. -0 f.. N . .2 C 44 04 >, . 00 a 10 0 ~ 01 020 0 *. 20A 3. 40 04 .4 a,4 - 44 4 E 0 A2. U.~E4 Q 4 4.0 0 6.a
Methylated DNMT1 and E2F1 are targeted for proteolysis by L3MBTL3 and CRL4DCAF5 ubiquitin ligase.
Leng, Feng; Yu, Jiekai; Zhang, Chunxiao; Alejo, Salvador; Hoang, Nam; Sun, Hong; Lu, Fei; Zhang, Hui
2018-04-24
Many non-histone proteins are lysine methylated and a novel function of this modification is to trigger the proteolysis of methylated proteins. Here, we report that the methylated lysine 142 of DNMT1, a major DNA methyltransferase that preserves epigenetic inheritance of DNA methylation patterns during DNA replication, is demethylated by LSD1. A novel methyl-binding protein, L3MBTL3, binds the K142-methylated DNMT1 and recruits a novel CRL4 DCAF5 ubiquitin ligase to degrade DNMT1. Both LSD1 and PHF20L1 act primarily in S phase to prevent DNMT1 degradation by L3MBTL3-CRL4 DCAF5 . Mouse L3MBTL3/MBT-1 deletion causes accumulation of DNMT1 protein, increased genomic DNA methylation, and late embryonic lethality. DNMT1 contains a consensus methylation motif shared by many non-histone proteins including E2F1, a key transcription factor for S phase. We show that the methylation-dependent E2F1 degradation is also controlled by L3MBTL3-CRL4 DCAF5 . Our studies elucidate for the first time a novel mechanism by which the stability of many methylated non-histone proteins are regulated.
1991-01-01
C M M M M M m -0 a Iiia 0-40 e f3 00) a 2S 4ca * 0 co~ : i ag ~ :0 0 U qt 0 W U c EWI 044 U * U* * O M-4c -0 us I LJ.E)(U 0 8N 00 U 0 U -4" U0)o -4...4444~~- CY4 -404 -4-I *-40 MfI0-4"< I CC0 .d(f =:I- NNi =(n =~OOOOOOOOOf .(Al =N =CU) m ag iIn0-40 II 4.z uz uz2zz u2 uzzzzzzzzzzzz uz uZ Qz uZr H I02...0000 11 02-4NOHm 0000000 000 0 0) 0) 00 00000J a u< I IW-4CN02H 00 0 00 -W - -- 4-1 1--- fIT M4 10002W )0 1aJ4 I’ I0-40IM 440244 44 -( Ag -< -4< -00
Buxton, T B; Walsh, D S; Harvey, S B; McPherson, J C; Hartmann, J F; Plowman, K M
2004-09-01
The risk of osteomyelitis after open bone fracture may be reduced by locally applied antibiotics. ENC-41-HP (E41), which comprises ciprofloxacin linked to a 'bone seeking' bisphosphonate, loaded on to carrier Skelite calcium phosphate granules (E41-Skelite) has favourable in vitro characteristics for application to wounded bone. This study assessed E41-Skelite in a rat model of acute tibial osteomyelitis. Mechanically induced tibial troughs were contaminated with approximately log10 4 colony forming units (c.f.u.) of Staphylococcus aureus (Cowan 1 strain) 'resistant' to E41 (minimum inhibitory concentration 8-16 microg/ml), lavaged and packed with Skelite alone, or with E41-Skelite slurry. Animals were killed at 24 h (n = 62), 72 h (n = 46) or 14 days (n = 12), and each tibia was assessed for S. aureus load (c.f.u./g tibia) and histological appearance (14 days only). At 24 and 72 h, the tibias of rats treated with E41-Skelite (n = 54) had a significantly lower mean (s.e.m.) load of S. aureus than animals that received Skelite alone (n = 54): log10 3.6(0.2) versus 6.4(0.1) c.f.u./g respectively at 24 h (P < 0.001, Mann-Whitney rank sum test) and log10 4.4(0.2) versus 6.6(0.1) c.f.u./g at 72 h (P < 0.001). At 14 days, E41-Skelite-treated tibias had fewer bacteria, no signs of osteomyelitis and histological signs of healing. E41-Skelite, a prototype granulated topical antibiotic delivery system, reduced the development of infection in experimental bone wounds. Copyright 2004 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd.
1981-09-14
722 6.21 ; WeB &b 958.j11 25971 36.) 5.77 22 22.5 4 m Do-. 6 44564 20 512 2P.Q 9.261 122 .7 58.4 ,4 • . ,. - 6 1 ...,. , ., . I . . t - GL -!- AL CLI.1A...PSYCHROMETRIC SUMMARY ,E’_ . ",L ,F- C/ P’-773-3- NCV STATION STATION NAME YEARS MONT" NOURS IL. S. T.I Te.p. WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (F) TOTAL
The Primacy of Depth in Visual Perception.
1981-11-01
formulated an 4 - 1I hvothesis known as the "Adjacency principle ", which asserts, in effect. that the interaction among objects in visual snace is an inverse...f e r e f f e c o t u r s Le h r r t u e d 21 N= 5 SUBJECTS INDUCTION DISPARITY = 50 MIN Ŕ-1 STANDARD ERROR1.0- z 0. 9 - 0 o-8 Ld 0.7- LL_ z 0.6- 0 0...DISTRIBUTION LIST OS Department of the Navy CDR Paul R. Chatelier Physiology & Neuro Biology Program Office of the Deputy Under Secretary Code 441B of
1980-02-22
definition g.l = (Voc/t)(F/wt) = field/stress 2. C =KT K 1E w/t (parallel plate capacitdnce formula) ’. VL = Voc Cx’/CL for CL > Cx 4.v g/wF Kt Eoewlt...V = (g3 1 /w)F 2. V L =(Cg/c,.v oc 3. V =(Cg/CL)(g31/w)F 4. Vstd = "d3 3"/C std F 5. V L/ Vst d = (C /C ) (g ’)(C /"d " )Sg L 31 std 33 01. 6. R (in...34 and the second T " e’hicial Note No. 1 - Theory of the use of Channel Products (’DT (X() d., meteor to measure d31 direct.]y on Piezoelect.rlc Ceramic
Single Electron Delivery to Lewis Pairs: An Avenue to Anions by Small Molecule Activation.
Liu, Liu Leo; Cao, Levy L; Shao, Yue; Stephan, Douglas W
2017-07-26
Single electron transfer (SET) reactions are effected by the combination of a Lewis acid (e.g., E(C 6 F 5 ) 3 E = B or Al) with a small molecule substrate and decamethylferrocene (Cp* 2 Fe). Initially, the corresponding reactions of (PhS) 2 and (PhTe) 2 were shown to give the species [Cp* 2 Fe][PhSB(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ] 1 and [Cp* 2 Fe][(μ-PhS)(Al(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ) 2 ] 2 and [Cp* 2 Fe][(μ-PhTe)(Al(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ) 2 ] 3, respectively. Analogous reactions with di-tert-butyl peroxide yielded [Cp* 2 Fe][(μ-HO)(B(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ) 2 ] 4 with isobutene while with benzoyl peroxide afforded [Cp* 2 Fe][PhC(O)OE(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ] (E = B 5, Al 6). Evidence for a radical pathway was provided by the reaction of Ph 3 SnH and p-quinone afforded [Cp* 2 Fe][HB(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ] 7 and [Cp* 2 Fe] 2 [(μ-O 2 C 6 H 4 )(E(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ) 2 ] (E = B 8, Al 9). In addition, the reaction of TEMPO with Lewis acid and Cp* 2 Fe afforded [Cp* 2 Fe][(C 5 H 6 Me 4 NOE(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ] (E = B 10, Al 11). Finally, reactions with O 2 , Se, Te and S 8 gave [Cp* 2 Fe] 2 [((C 6 F 5 ) 2 Al(μ-O)Al(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ) 2 ] 2 12, [Cp* 2 Fe] 2 [((C 6 F 5 ) 2 Al(μ-Se)Al(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ) 2 ] 2 13, [Cp* 2 Fe][(μ-Te) 2 (Al(C 6 F 5 ) 2 ) 3 ] 14 and [Cp* 2 Fe] 2 [(μ-S 7 )B(C 6 F 5 ) 3 ) 2 ] 15, respectively. The mechanisms of these SET reactions are discussed, and the ramifications are considered.
Dependence of e31,f on polar axis texture for tetragonal Pb(Zrx,Ti1-x)O3 thin films
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yeager, Charles B.; Ehara, Yoshitaka; Oshima, Naoya; Funakubo, Hiroshi; Trolier-McKinstry, Susan
2014-09-01
It was shown by Ouyang et al. [Appl. Phys. Lett. 86, 152901 (2005)] that the piezoelectric e31,f coefficient is largest parallel to the spontaneous polarization in tetragonal PbZrxTi1-xO3 (PZT) films. However, the expected piezoelectric data are typically calculated from phenomenological constants derived from data on ceramic PZT. In this work, the dependence of e31,f on c-axis texture fraction, f001, for {001}PZT thin films was measured by growing films with systematically changed f001 using CaF2, MgO, SrTiO3, and Si substrates. An approximately linear increase in e31,f with f001 was observed for compositions up to 43 mol. % Zr, and 100% c-domain properties were extrapolated. It was demonstrated that c-axis PZT films can achieve e31,f exceeding -12 C/m2 for many tetragonal compositions. The energy harvesting figure of merit, e31,f2/ɛr, for c-axis PZT films surpassed 0.8 C2/m4. This is larger than the figure of merit of gradient-free PZT films grown on Si substrates by a factor of four.
1985-01-01
U nU p U ) ( A W c AV )U IlDl00 0 (0 0 0a( 0C x III z z zzzz .II, I_ . b4 " " . Iac ) tNe x x x k~e Y e x x w f1 e h L&, ala. " " . . . . ala aL a...4 1 4 1 4 14 w4 m4 14 14 u4 14 14 w4 14 LL Z 4 " 15. x. "n 1-2111 w < f1 -40 >- co0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 z a10 LA 01 U)X 2 2 2...a a acca ala a an 1 am W n U A ( n U maA U n ( ) C U ) ( ) V )( 0ma, a 0 C Dc ( p0 . ma a D ( D C D 0 c 9 c 9 C 9 0 C amaw w w w w iu jw w L w u L L
1998-04-13
f73o* ^V^^- l^-J&4-g>- «Ajjv»^*^Y gvrg-ft^i Q^r-^vj-eJl -^TVYN ffa 3c 4*> lඑ^=> -£=r~. cgyjv-p f...fvvo H’fefat. l°3> A 13,o — £.3’ fW=> {vfi- ffa ^ os-iC 6 lza/1 *2- r^5^ to/»e(%L C83’ ISTR/METHOD: 8 jPS-g- |17^ I a«, IT N^T K... BBP -Beplieatt MST-bsmmeat
1979-09-28
DAAosrt O14.NE VRO1 H__IH_1_________1_______1 1~~hN EIl 1___________ dsknind.o ~~~importance aCCA .Is %1* NU%3E OF REODE D RATA OBTAINED FROM...9~44r £LM2 ae1s ~ Am 424~~del 4e A ~-~. f3 N w ~ Ail 2~ZV41/- t-.. c4 fz d/1,C4t let e -~4Z tz 4L~ fl~4k*1 Wed 4 4-’V 4~bf6144a- 6d>zi.i Z a~ r
2014-10-09
I N T E G R I T Y E F F I C I E N C Y A C C O U N TA B I L I T Y E XC E L L E N C E Inspector General U.S. Department of Defense Report...No. DODIG-2015-006 O C T O B E R 9 , 2 0 1 4 Policy Changes Needed at Defense Contract Management Agency to Ensure Forward Pricing Rates Result...recognized as leaders in our field. For more information about whistleblower protection, please see the inside back cover. I N T E G R I T Y E F F I C
Burkholderia pseudomallei Data Gap Analysis
2015-11-01
000 x E -10 1.013 25 x E +2 1.000 000 x E +2 1.000 000 x E -28 1.054 350 x E +3 4.184 000 4.184 000 x E -2 3.700 000 x E +1...1.745 329 x E -2 t = (t f + 459.67)/1.8 1.602 19 x E -19 1.000 000 x E -7 1.000 000 x E -7 3.048 000 x E -1 1.355 818 3.785 412 x E -3 2.540... 000 x E -2 1.000 000 x E +9 1.000 000 4.183 4.448 222 x E +3 6.894 757 x E +3 1.000 000 x E +2 1.000
Trueba, A; García-Lastra, J M; Garcia-Fernandez, P; Aramburu, J A; Barriuso, M T; Moreno, M
2011-11-24
This work is aimed at clarifying the changes on optical spectra of Cr(3+) impurities due to either a host lattice variation or a hydrostatic pressure, which can hardly be understood by means of the usual Tanabe-Sugano (TS) approach assuming that the Racah parameter, B, grows when covalency decreases. For achieving this goal, the optical properties of Cr(3+)-doped LiBaF(3) and KMgF(3) model systems have been explored by means of high level ab initio calculations on CrF(6)(3-) units subject to the electric field, E(R)(r), created by the rest of the lattice ions. These calculations, which reproduce available experimental data, indicate that the energy, E((2)E), of the (2)E(t(2g)(3)) → (4)A(2)(t(2g)(3)) emission transition is nearly independent of the host lattice. By contrast, the energy difference corresponding to (4)A(2)(t(2g)(3)) → (4)T(1)(t(2g)(2)e(g)(1)) and (4)A(2)(t(2g)(3)) → (4)T(2)(t(2g)(2)e(g)(1)) excitations, Δ((4)T(1); (4)T(2)), is shown to increase on passing from the normal to the inverted perovskite host lattice despite the increase in covalency, a fact which cannot be accounted for through the usual TS model. Similarly, when the Cr(3+)-F(-) distance, R, is reduced both Δ((4)T(1); (4)T(2)) and the covalency are found to increase. By analyzing the limitations of the usual model, we found surprising results that are shown to arise from the deformation of both 3d(Cr) and ligand orbitals in the antibonding e(g) orbital, which has a σ character and is more extended than the π t(2g) orbital. By contrast, because of the higher stiffness of the t(2g) orbital, the dependence of E((2)E) with R basically follows the corresponding variation of covalency in that level. Bearing in mind the similarities of the optical properties displayed by Cr(3+) impurities in oxides and fluorides, the present results can be useful for understanding experimental data on Cr(3+)-based gemstones where the local symmetry is lower than cubic.
On cordial labeling of double duplication for some families of graph
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shobana, L.; Remigius Perpetua Mary, F.
2018-04-01
Let G (V, E) be a simple undirected graph where V,E are its vertex set and edge set respectively. Consider a labeling where f bea function from the vertices of G to {0, 1} and for each edge xy assign the label|f(x)-f(y)|. Then f is called cordial of G if the number of vertices labeled 0 and the number of vertices labeled 1 differs by at most 1 and the number of edges labeled 0 and the number of edges labeled 1 differs by at most 1. In this paper we proved the existence of cordial labeling for double duplication of path graph Pn: n≥2, cycle graph Cn: n≥3 except for n≡2 (mod 4), wheel graph Wn:n≥5 except for n≥3 (mod 4), flower graph Fn: n≥5 and bistar graph Bm,n: m,n≥2.
Kawatsuki, A; Yasunaga, J-i; Mitobe, Y; Green, PL; Matsuoka, M
2016-01-01
Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) is an oncogenic retrovirus that induces a fatal T-cell malignancy, adult T-cell leukemia (ATL). Among several regulatory/accessory genes in HTLV-1, HTLV-1 bZIP factor (HBZ) is the only viral gene constitutively expressed in infected cells. Our previous study showed that HBZ functions in two different molecular forms, HBZ protein and HBZ RNA. In this study, we show that HBZ protein targets retinoblastoma protein (Rb), which is a critical tumor suppressor in many types of cancers. HBZ protein interacts with the Rb/E2F-1 complex and activates the transcription of E2F-target genes associated with cell cycle progression and apoptosis. Mouse primary CD4+ T cells transduced with HBZ show accelerated G1/S transition and apoptosis, and importantly, T cells from HBZ transgenic (HBZ-Tg) mice also demonstrate enhanced cell proliferation and apoptosis. To evaluate the functions of HBZ protein alone in vivo, we generated a new transgenic mouse strain that expresses HBZ mRNA altered by silent mutations but encoding intact protein. In these mice, the numbers of effector/memory and Foxp3+ T cells were increased, and genes associated with proliferation and apoptosis were upregulated. This study shows that HBZ protein promotes cell proliferation and apoptosis in primary CD4+ T cells through activation of the Rb/E2F pathway, and that HBZ protein also confers onto CD4+ T-cell immunophenotype similar to those of ATL cells, suggesting that HBZ protein has important roles in dysregulation of CD4+ T cells infected with HTLV-1. PMID:26804169
Final Report on Contract F49620-85-C-0026. Volume 1.
1987-05-01
RFOSR-TR-S?-1349-VOL-1 UNCLMSSIFIED F40-BS-C46F/ 20/4 L E.EEEEEEEEE.E. 0 0 ’El..... oso - ~L.0 3 111IL25 . MJCROC(OP RESOLUTION TEST CHARI WiloUiAl SURIAU...Yakhot, R. Panda , U. Frisch, and R.H. Kraichnan, Weak Interactions and Local Order in Strong Turbulence, Phys. Rev. Let. (1986) submitted. -3- V. Yakhot
Kallikrein and Renin in the Membrane Fractions of the Rat Kidney.
1980-05-23
Zingg, E.A. and Hedlin, A.H.: Kallikrein and plasmin as activators of inactive renin. Lancet 11:1375, 1978 32. Inagami, T ., Yokosawa , N., Takahashi, N...FRACTIONS Technical Report to 8/15/60 OF THE RAT KIDNEY, t 8/15/- 0 6 PEOPORMINS~1.RPOTNME 7/. 1 AuTN’OR/f’) B CoNfrt*C; OW ; R^R NT NJ4S._R...E’ T PSJ’ , TASK . :) A DA RE AR 5W S. UNIT 10 ELE E 4 POI~f-r University of Texas Health Science Center AREA ORKUNIT sMBES 5323 Harry Hines Blvd
DNA Electrical Overstress - Hardness Assurance Data Volume.
1980-07-28
boundaries due to its somewhat polysilicon nature. The grain boundaries and surface states increase the resistance measured for a particular structure and...1.3e0e0IE+ .go 9. 4Li,.4fE+43 1 . L0 E - ,I E -. L , * I’ LI0O IVIE-.L"-’ j . OL )0 E It .=.. flOO ’II I . 00LIL-EI00 51 .I0.’LE*.1 I.04h.IC E’".L141...8217 .Ti0E+ :.’ 1 " aOE.C 0.00000 0 0 E ,. . Ol J.AE*0 - ?.,E-0 5 -1-6100000E-0j .- o Ei1 a.. 000e0E-00a .. ,C v3E-; Q ._*, - -4E-0N 1 4 .000E001 1.1 0aOE+OI
Lin, Min-Guan; Chi, Meng-Chun; Chen, Bo-En; Wang, Tzu-Fan; Lo, Huei-Fen; Lin, Long-Liu
2015-01-01
A tryptophan-free Bacillus licheniformis nucleotide exchange factor (BlGrpE) and its Trp mutants (F70W, F103W, F149W, F70/103W, F70/149W, F103/149W and F70/103/149W) were over-expressed and purified to near homogeneity. Simultaneous addition of B. licheniformis DnaJ, NR-peptide and individual variants synergistically stimulated the ATPase activity of a recombinant DnaK (BlDnaK) from the same bacterium by 3.1-14.7-fold, which are significantly lower than the synergistic stimulation (18.9-fold) of BlGrpE. Protein-protein interaction analysis revealed that Trp mutants relevant to amino acid positions 103 and 149 lost the ability to bind BlDnaK. Circular dichroism measurements indicate that F70W displayed a comparable level of secondary structure to that of BlGrpE, and the wild-type protein and the Trp mutants as well all experienced a reversible behavior of thermal denaturation. Guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding transition for BlGrpE was calculated to be 1.25 M corresponding to ΔG(N-U) of 4.29 kcal/mol, whereas the unfolding transitions of mutant proteins were in the range of 0.77-1.31 M equivalent to ΔG(N-U) of 2.41-4.14 kcal/mol. Taken together, the introduction of tryptophan residue, especially at positions 103 and 149, into the primary structure of BlGrpE has been proven to be detrimental to structural integrity and proper function of the protein. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Gouder, T; Eloirdi, R; Caciuffo, R
2018-05-29
Thin films of the elusive intermediate uranium oxide U 2 O 5 have been prepared by exposing UO 3 precursor multilayers to atomic hydrogen. Electron photoemission spectra measured about the uranium 4f core-level doublet contain sharp satellites separated by 7.9(1) eV from the 4f main lines, whilst satellites characteristics of the U(IV) and U(VI) oxidation states, expected respectively at 6.9(1) and 9.7(1) eV from the main 4f lines, are absent. This shows that uranium ions in the films are in a pure pentavalent oxidation state, in contrast to previous investigations of binary oxides claiming that U(V) occurs only as a metastable intermediate state coexisting with U(IV) and U(VI) species. The ratio between the 5f valence band and 4f core-level uranium photoemission intensities decreases by about 50% from UO 2 to U 2 O 5 , which is consistent with the 5f 2 (UO 2 ) and 5f 1 (U 2 O 5 ) electronic configurations of the initial state. Our studies conclusively establish the stability of uranium pentoxide.
U.S. EPA, Pesticide Product Label, ROBERT'S "DIOLICE" DAIRY AND BEEF CATTLE DUST BAG, 03/08/1974
2011-04-14
, \\ , , \\ I rI.o 0 IT I , ) i\\i S C) f SA I. E " 1 \\) I' S f "''''D H()Rf\\) HY COrIJ1fHII .\\ 1. : I· 1 ... ' , LJ. !. t ,"'1 . '\\ .. I .- . • '4I' . ; , , I, , ,. " 1 . .• -" 1:' V . ,. ~ I . ...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Thiel, Charles Warren
There are a vast number of applications for rare-earth-activated materials and much of today's cutting-edge optical technology and emerging innovations are enabled by their unique properties. In many of these applications, interactions between the rare-earth ion and the host material's electronic states can enhance or inhibit performance and provide mechanisms for manipulating the optical properties. Continued advances in these technologies require knowledge of the relative energies of rare-earth and crystal band states so that properties of available materials may be fully understood and new materials may be logically developed. Conventional and resonant electron photoemission techniques were used to measure 4f electron and valence band binding energies in important optical materials, including YAG, YAlO3, and LiYF4. The photoemission spectra were theoretically modeled and analyzed to accurately determine relative energies. By combining these energies with ultraviolet spectroscopy, binding energies of excited 4fN-15d and 4fN+1 states were determined. While the 4fN ground-state energies vary considerably between different trivalent ions and lie near or below the top of the valence band in optical materials, the lowest 4f N-15d states have similar energies and are near the bottom of the conduction band. As an example for YAG, the Tb3+ 4f N ground state is in the band gap at 0.7 eV above the valence band while the Lu3+ ground state is 4.7 eV below the valence band maximum; however, the lowest 4fN-15d states are 2.2 eV below the conduction band for both ions. We found that a simple model accurately describes the binding energies of the 4fN, 4fN-1 5d, and 4fN+1 states. The model's success across the entire rare-earth series indicates that measurements on two different ions in a host are sufficient to predict the energies of all rare-earth ions in that host. This information provides new insight into electron transfer transitions, luminescence quenching, and valence stability. All of these results lead to a clearer picture for the host's effect on the rare-earth ion's electron binding energies and will motivate fundamental theoretical analysis and accelerate the development of new optical materials.
1983-06-01
50 19 F20 mi mune d o f Cry-o Hadboto swi ve I I OL~~ Hzr Har Str 5 -45 H0 Back on !4rpn -USANDY DOLQ-1rrE - Vod ’og - 2 R r Ard - ard ---5 2 r...t OFOPALC70 * C",.. 0E- ** 36.78 1466.581 R~ktt I lrAtI- SAND Str 33 19 Is.. /2 mn CEIMnq GROUT - - 1 1M *-..dd Rou. 156:22 Stem Ke 465.4 /-yecg...FCAO O . . - L o ’ str Woeror e E.-IS 533.4’ I0 Rate cont L C , Dolomite - Grey - Hard 21 nd 17rpm 57. - Silic Kelly & DH Ass: 532.9’ 50 10.2 -S, -a’i
Sen, Neelam Dabas; Zhou, Fujun; Harris, Michael S.; Ingolia, Nicholas T.
2016-01-01
DEAD-box RNA helicases eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4A (eIF4A) and Ded1 promote translation by resolving mRNA secondary structures that impede preinitiation complex (PIC) attachment to mRNA or scanning. Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4B (eIF4B) is a cofactor for eIF4A but also might function independently of eIF4A. Ribosome profiling of mutants lacking eIF4B or with impaired eIF4A or Ded1 activity revealed that eliminating eIF4B reduces the relative translational efficiencies of many more genes than does inactivation of eIF4A, despite comparable reductions in bulk translation, and few genes display unusually strong requirements for both factors. However, either eliminating eIF4B or inactivating eIF4A preferentially impacts mRNAs with longer, more structured 5′ untranslated regions (UTRs). These findings reveal an eIF4A-independent role for eIF4B in addition to its function as eIF4A cofactor in promoting PIC attachment or scanning on structured mRNAs. eIF4B, eIF4A, and Ded1 mutations also preferentially impair translation of longer mRNAs in a fashion mitigated by the ability to form closed-loop messenger ribonucleoprotein particles (mRNPs) via eIF4F–poly(A)-binding protein 1 (Pab1) association, suggesting cooperation between closed-loop assembly and eIF4B/helicase functions. Remarkably, depleting eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4G (eIF4G), the scaffold subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4F (eIF4F), preferentially impacts short mRNAs with strong closed-loop potential and unstructured 5′ UTRs, exactly the opposite features associated with hyperdependence on the eIF4B/helicases. We propose that short, highly efficient mRNAs preferentially depend on the stimulatory effects of eIF4G-dependent closed-loop assembly. PMID:27601676
Soares, Joao Henrique Neves; Carvalho, Alysson Roncally; Bergamini, Bruno Curty; Gress, Maria Alice Kuster; Jandre, Frederico Caetano; Zin, Walter Araujo; Giannella-Neto, Antonio
2018-06-01
We compared respiratory mechanics between the positive end-expiratory pressure of minimal respiratory system elastance (PEEP minErs ) and three levels of PEEP during low-tidal-volume (6 mL/kg) ventilation in rats. Twenty-four rats were anesthetized, paralyzed, and mechanically ventilated. Airway pressure (P aw ), flow (F), and volume (V) were fitted by a linear single compartment model (LSCM) P aw (t) = E rs × V(t) + R rs × F(t) + PEEP or a volume- and flow-dependent SCM (VFDSCM) P aw (t) = (E 1 + E 2 × V(t)) × V(t) + (K 1 + K 2 × |F(t)|) × F(t) + PEEP, where E rs and R rs are respiratory system elastance and resistance, respectively; E 1 and E 2 × V are volume-independent and volume-dependent E rs , respectively; and K 1 and K 2 × F are flow-independent and flow-dependent R rs , respectively. Animals were ventilated for 1 h at PEEP 0 cmH 2 O (ZEEP); PEEP minErs ; 2 cmH 2 O above PEEP minErs (PEEP minErs+2 ); or 4 cmH 2 O above PEEP minErs (PEEP minErs+4 ). Alveolar tidal recruitment/derecruitment and overdistension were assessed by the index %E 2 = 100 × [(E 2 × V T )/(E 1 + |E 2 | × V T )], and alveolar stability by the slope of E rs (t). %E 2 varied between 0 and 30% at PEEP minErs in most respiratory cycles. Alveolar Tidal recruitment/derecruitment (%E 2 < 0) and overdistension (%E 2 > 30) were predominant in the absence of PEEP and in PEEP levels higher than PEEP minErs , respectively. The slope of E rs (t) was different from zero in all groups besides PEEP minErs+4 . PEEP minErs presented the best compromise between alveolar tidal recruitment/derecruitment and overdistension, during 1 h of low-V T mechanical ventilation.
Measurement of B(Ds+→l+ν) and the decay constant fDS+
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pedlar, T. K.; Cronin-Hennessy, D.; Gao, K. Y.; Hietala, J.; Kubota, Y.; Klein, T.; Lang, B. W.; Poling, R.; Scott, A. W.; Smith, A.; Zweber, P.; Dobbs, S.; Metreveli, Z.; Seth, K. K.; Tomaradze, A.; Ernst, J.; Ecklund, K. M.; Severini, H.; Love, W.; Savinov, V.; Aquines, O.; Lopez, A.; Mehrabyan, S.; Mendez, H.; Ramirez, J.; Huang, G. S.; Miller, D. H.; Pavlunin, V.; Sanghi, B.; Shipsey, I. P. J.; Xin, B.; Adams, G. S.; Anderson, M.; Cummings, J. P.; Danko, I.; Hu, D.; Moziak, B.; Napolitano, J.; He, Q.; Insler, J.; Muramatsu, H.; Park, C. S.; Thorndike, E. H.; Yang, F.; Artuso, M.; Blusk, S.; Butt, J.; Khalil, S.; Li, J.; Menaa, N.; Mountain, R.; Nisar, S.; Randrianarivony, K.; Sia, R.; Skwarnicki, T.; Stone, S.; Wang, J. C.; Bonvicini, G.; Cinabro, D.; Dubrovin, M.; Lincoln, A.; Asner, D. M.; Edwards, K. W.; Naik, P.; Briere, R. A.; Ferguson, T.; Tatishvili, G.; Vogel, H.; Watkins, M. E.; Rosner, J. L.; Adam, N. E.; Alexander, J. P.; Cassel, D. G.; Duboscq, J. E.; Ehrlich, R.; Fields, L.; Gibbons, L.; Gray, R.; Gray, S. W.; Hartill, D. L.; Heltsley, B. K.; Hertz, D.; Jones, C. D.; Kandaswamy, J.; Kreinick, D. L.; Kuznetsov, V. E.; Mahlke-Krüger, H.; Mohapatra, D.; Onyisi, P. U. E.; Patterson, J. R.; Peterson, D.; Pivarski, J.; Riley, D.; Ryd, A.; Sadoff, A. J.; Schwarthoff, H.; Shi, X.; Stroiney, S.; Sun, W. M.; Wilksen, T.; Athar, S. B.; Patel, R.; Yelton, J.; Rubin, P.; Cawlfield, C.; Eisenstein, B. I.; Karliner, I.; Kim, D.; Lowrey, N.; Selen, M.; White, E. J.; Wiss, J.; Mitchell, R. E.; Shepherd, M. R.; Besson, D.
2007-10-01
We examine e+e-→Ds-Ds*+ and Ds*-Ds+ interactions at 4170 MeV using the CLEO-c detector in order to measure the decay constant fDs+. We use the Ds+→ℓ+ν channel, where the ℓ+ designates either a μ+ or a τ+, when the τ+→π+ν¯. Analyzing both modes independently, we determine B(Ds+→μ+ν)=(0.594±0.066±0.031)%, and B(Ds+→τ+ν)=(8.0±1.3±0.4)%. We also analyze them simultaneously to find an effective value of Beff(Ds+→μ+ν)=(0.638±0.059±0.033)% and extract fDs+=274±13±7MeV. Combining with our previous determination of B(D+→μ+ν), we also find the ratio fDs+/fD+=1.23±0.11±0.04. We compare to current theoretical estimates. Finally, we find B(Ds+→e+ν)<1.3×10-4 at 90% confidence level.
Word Frequency Analysis. MOS: 57H. Skill Levels 1 & 2.
1981-05-01
8217 . -4 1a’ _________ Palms 1t. FLL& T - VI;:.P - -- S LtrTZE5 I Lu" I rprz l * 4 2lE p:Zn.uAwn PLCU4LLE 14 Piz;* I P RTICULAR 4 PZR1S 7 J _________ 2...I’ I VIn 1 fIV 7 IaIIA!’I TIP 2 1-111 L LAlT P i;10! S II*,s , 11- 1 L Ii1! p UIIIc tInlG Z : S -W (INSf4 2 IZ 1111tE~ ;l ,’I I z a5T p Oil ’(1$I1...p --G 6 RIGGING- I~ V~. 1 5EL~ .1 50:L I SF AFY~~3!.rS_7I; 7 SAFETY I----c- 7 -- ss1 ’_F T_-------- 1 HPPI 7A! I1CEUE SCP .~LaG 3 SHUTWI ~ SC’~J’!LI
The Role of Integrin Signaling in Breast Cancer.
1997-10-01
specificity. Cell. 80:199-211. 15 Unpublished Data Shaw, L.M. 16. Wary, K.K., F . Mainiero, S.J. Isakoff, E.E. Marcantonio , and F.G. Giancotti. 1996. The...receptors: achieving specificity through cooperation. 1995. Trends in Cell Biol. 5:419-423. 8. Friedrichs, K., P. Ruiz, F . Franke, I. Gille, H.-J.Terpe, and...793. 12. Falcioni, R., V. Turchi, P. Vitullo, G. Navarra, F . Ficari, F . Cavaliere, A. Sacchi, and R. Mariani-Constantini. 1994. Integrin 1P4 expression
Phogat, S; K, Svehla; M, Tang; A, Spadaccini; J, Muller; J, Mascola; Berkower; R, Wyatt
2009-01-01
Vaccine immunogens derived from the envelope glycoproteins of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) that elicit broad neutralizing antibodies remains an elusive goal. The highly conserved 30 amino acid membrane proximal external region (MPER) of HIV gp41 contains the hydrophobic epitopes for two rare HIV-1 broad cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies, 2F5 and 4E10. Both these antibodies possess relatively hydrophobic HCDR3 loops and demonstrate enhanced binding to their epitopes in the context of the native gp160 precursor envelope glycoprotein by the intimate juxtaposition of a lipid membrane. The Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) S1 protein forms nanoparticles that can be utilized both as an immunogenic array of the MPER and to provide the lipid environment needed for enhanced 2F5 and 4E10 binding. We show that recombinant HBsAg particles with MPER (HBsAg-MPER) appended at the C-terminus of the S1 protein are recognized by 2F5 and 4E10 with high affinity compared to positioning the MPER at the N-terminus or the extracellular loop (ECL) of S1. Addition of C-terminal hydrophobic residues derived from the HIV-1 Env transmembrane region further enhances recognition of the MPER by both 2F5 and 4E10. Delipidation of the HBsAg-MPER particles decreases 2F5 and 4E10 binding and subsequent reconstitution with synthetic lipids restores optimal binding. Inoculation of the particles into small animals raised cross-reactive antibodies that recognize both the MPER and HIV-1 gp160 envelope glycoproteins expressed on the cell surface; however, no neutralizing activity could be detected. Prime:boost immunization of the HBsAg-MPER particles in sequence with HIV envelope glycoprotein proteoliposomes (Env-PLs) did not raise neutralizing antibodies that could be mapped to the MPER region. However, the Env-PLs did raise anti-Env antibodies that had the ability to neutralize selected HIV-1 isolates. The first generation HBsAg-MPER particles represent a unique means to present HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein neutralizing determinants to the immune system. PMID:18155743
2008-02-28
were found to be open-ion (A or E), unsymmetrical (B or D), or symmetrical C depending on the halogen electrophile and on the position and number of...Rearranged products 4 (Structures A-E) 1 Z = Cl 2 Z = Br 3 Z = I XY = Cl2, Br2, BrCl ICl, IBr Scheme 1 Y on the fluorine atoms of 5 shield the carbon nucleus...and 3) WITH HALOGEN ELECTROPHILES IN METHYLENE CHLORIDE F F F Z XY CH2Cl2 CF2CFZ Y X CF2CFZ X Y CF2CFY X Z + + M aM Rearranged Run Alkene (Z
The BPS spectrum of the 4d {N}=2 SCFT's H 1, H 2, D 4, E 6, E 7, E 8
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cecotti, Sergio; Del Zotto, Michele
2013-06-01
Extending results of 1112.3984, we show that all rank 1 {N}=2 SCFT's in the sequence H 1, H 2, D 4 E 6, E 7, E 8 have canonical finite BPS chambers containing precisely 2 h(F) = 12(∆ - 1) hypermultiplets. The BPS spectrum of the canonical BPS chambers saturates the conformal central charge c, and satisfies some intriguing numerology.
E2F Activators Signal and Maintain Centrosome Amplification in Breast Cancer Cells
Lee, Mi-Young; Moreno, Carlos S.
2014-01-01
Centrosomes ensure accurate chromosome segregation by directing spindle bipolarity. Loss of centrosome regulation results in centrosome amplification, multipolar mitosis and aneuploidy. Since centrosome amplification is common in premalignant lesions and breast tumors, it is proposed to play a central role in breast tumorigenesis, a hypothesis that remains to be tested. The coordination between the cell and centrosome cycles is of paramount importance to maintain normal centrosome numbers, and the E2Fs may be responsible for regulating these cycles. However, the role of E2F activators in centrosome amplification is unclear. Because E2Fs are deregulated in Her2+ cells displaying centrosome amplification, we addressed whether they signal this abnormal process. Knockdown of E2F1 or E2F3 in Her2+ cells decreased centrosome amplification without significantly affecting cell cycle progression, whereas the overexpression of E2F1, E2F2, or E2F3 increased centrosome amplification in MCF10A mammary epithelial cells. Our results revealed that E2Fs affect the expression of proteins, including Nek2 and Plk4, known to influence the cell/centrosome cycles and mitosis. Downregulation of E2F3 resulted in cell death and delays/blocks in cytokinesis, which was reversed by Nek2 overexpression. Nek2 overexpression enhanced centrosome amplification in Her2+ breast cancer cells silenced for E2F3, revealing a role for the E2F activators in maintaining centrosome amplification in part through Nek2. PMID:24797070
Kuriki, Ryo; Ichibha, Tom; Hongo, Kenta; Lu, Daling; Maezono, Ryo; Kageyama, Hiroshi; Ishitani, Osamu; Oka, Kengo; Maeda, Kazuhiko
2018-05-30
Mixed anion compounds such as oxynitrides and oxychalcogenides are recognized as potential candidates of visible-light-driven photocatalysts since, as compared with oxygen 2p orbitals, p orbitals of less electronegative anion (e.g., N 3- , S 2- ) can form a valence band that has more negative potential. In this regard, oxyfluorides appear unsuitable because of the higher electronegativity of fluorine. Here we show an exceptional case, an anion-ordered pyrochlore oxyfluoride Pb 2 Ti 2 O 5.4 F 1.2 that has a small band gap (ca. 2.4 eV). With suitable modification of Pb 2 Ti 2 O 5.4 F 1.2 by promoters such as platinum nanoparticles and a binuclear ruthenium(II) complex, Pb 2 Ti 2 O 5.4 F 1.2 worked as a stable photocatalyst for visible-light-driven H 2 evolution and CO 2 reduction. Density functional theory calculations have revealed that the unprecedented visible-light-response of Pb 2 Ti 2 O 5.4 F 1.2 arises from strong interaction between Pb-6s and O-2p orbitals, which is enabled by a short Pb-O bond in the pyrochlore lattice due to the fluorine substitution.
Hariri, Roshanak; Afshar, Zahra; Mahdavi, Mohammad; Safavi, Maliheh; Saeedi, Mina; Najafi, Zahra; Sabourian, Reyhaneh; Karimpour-Razkenari, Elahe; Edraki, Najmeh; Moghadam, Farshad Homayouni; Shafiee, Abbas; Khanavi, Mahnaz; Akbarzadeh, Tahmineh
2016-12-01
In order to develop effective anti-cholinesterase compounds, a novel series of pyrano[3',4':5,6]pyrano[2,3-b]quinolinones were designed, synthesized, and evaluated in vitro against acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE). All derivatives showed very good AChE inhibitory (AChEI) activity (IC 50 = 0.37-5.62 μM) compared with rivastigmine (IC 50 = 11.07 μM). Among them, 11-amino-12-(2,3-dichlorophenyl)-3-methyl-7,8,9,10-tetrahydropyrano[3',4':5,6]pyrano[2,3-b]quinolin-1(12H)-one (6f) displayed the best inhibitory activity. However, most of the synthesized compounds showed no anti-BChE activity and compounds 6b and 6f were found to be only moderate inhibitors. The most potent anti-AChE compound 6f had low and moderate inhibitory activity and neuroprotective effects against beta-secretase (BACE1) and oxidative stress-induced cell death, respectively. Also, kinetic and molecular docking studies of binding interactions elucidated that compound 6f bound to both the catalytic anionic site (CAS) and peripheral anionic site (PAS) of AChE. © 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Hazardous Chemical Pump Tests.
1980-07-01
hydraulic flow rate is the product of the pump speed and the pump displacement. The pump displacement for each respective pump was constant throughout...speed - rpm T - torque - ft lbs 7= 3.1416 By substituting the product of pump speed and pump displacement for the hydraulic flow rate (Q=NO) in the above...FF:iipr’: iL 40 H FLUID F-’UMPED; FPl H FVIi T’E1l ’HJO I...S Lu FL: H KFITE C F~~:ri FIGURE 2 CC E MT 2, Fi C F . c ;E’C F11 *:;_cl PF fog O ~ \\ 4 1
Escobar, Jeffery; Frank, Jason W.; Suryawan, Agus; Nguyen, Hanh V.; Davis, Teresa A.
2009-01-01
We have previously shown that a physiological increase in plasma leucine for 60- and 120-min increases translation initiation factor activation in muscle of neonatal pigs. Although muscle protein synthesis is increased by leucine at 60 min, it is not maintained at 120 min, perhaps due to the decrease in plasma amino acids (AA). In the current study, 7- and 26-day-old pigs were fasted overnight and infused with leucine (0 or 400 µmol· kg−1· h−1) for 120 min to raise leucine within the postprandial range. The leucine was infused in the presence or absence of a replacement AA mixture (without leucine) to maintain baseline plasma AA levels. AA administration prevented the leucine-induced reduction in plasma AA in both age groups. At 7 days, leucine infusion alone increased eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF) 4E binding protein-1 (4E-BP1) phosphorylation, decreased inactive 4E-BP1·eIF4E complex abundance, and increased active eIF4G·eIF4E complex formation in skeletal muscle; leucine infusion with replacement AA also stimulated these, as well as S6K1, rpS6, and eIF4G phosphorylation. At 26 days, leucine infusion alone increased 4E-BP1 phosphorylation and decreased the inactive 4E-BP1·eIF4E complex only; leucine with AA also stimulated these, as well as S6K1 and rpS6 phosphorylation. Muscle protein synthesis was increased in 7-day-old (+60%) and 26-day-old (+40%) pigs infused with leucine and replacement AA, but not with leucine alone. Thus, the ability of leucine to stimulate eIF4F formation and protein synthesis in skeletal muscle is dependent on AA availability and age. PMID:17878223
Hentati, Olfa; Oliveira, Vanessa; Sena, Clara; Bouji, Mohamed Seddik Mahmoud; Wali, Ahmed; Ksibi, Mohamed
2016-10-01
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the ecotoxicological effects of olive mill waste (OMW) on soil habitat function. To this end, soil samples from OMW evaporating ponds (S1-S5) located at Agareb (Sfax, Tunisia) and a reference soil (R) were collected. The effects of OMW on the springtails Folsomia candida (F.c.), the earthworm species Eisenia fetida (E.f.), Enchytraeus crypticus (E.c.) reproduction and on the soil living microbial communities were investigated. E.f. reproduction and tomato growth assays were performed in the reference soil amended with 0.43 to 7.60 % (w OMW /w ref-soil ) mass ratios of dried OMW. Changes in microbial function diversity were explored using sole-carbon-source utilization profiles (BiologEcoPlates ® ). E.f. absolutely avoided (100 %) the most polluted soil (S4) while the F.c. moderately avoided (37.5 ± 7.5 %) the same soil. E.c. reproduction in S4 was significantly lower than in S1, S2, S3 and S5, and was the highest in R soil. Estimated effect concentration EC 50 for juveniles' production by E.f., and for tomato fresh weight and chlorophyll content were 0.138, 0.6 and 1.13 %, respectively. Community level physiological profiles (CLPPs) were remarkably different in R and S4 and a higher similarity was observed between soils S1, S2, S3 and S5. Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed that differences between soil microbial functional diversity were mainly due to high polyphenol concentrations, while the salinity negatively affected E.c. reproduction in OMW contaminated soils. These results clearly reflect the high toxicity of dried OMW when added to agricultural soils, causing severe threats to terrestrial ecosystem functions and services provided by invertebrates and microbial communities.
Word Frequency Analysis. MOS: 51N. Skill Levels 1 & 2.
1981-05-01
C.s~ss t C: 4i,40 16 CoD.J,1U 4 I CE s!Z 26 rCLL 9 CELL ! I CEAENf. 24 CFNT;R 3 C.J7’.1-T-CENTEft 2 CtNT?-AEr’ 4 Mf~ :aL.ZWE 2 e VrAL C ^’f4 t...GOJ4LTy214I7G 27~~~Z r.4MrL2 JN 7fE43ING 26 PUT?e- CELL 26 4126 pPZPING 2 ~76 Pr, ’S U~R 26S*5INh2 P8!P(NTq25 P-.crsS 25 P.AT8 25 INCI 25 PTSVRE 15 u 5...rL 2 CPAL 11? .1 ’G 2 C IrIL2:", I DE I L 2 CIRZCJLL-, 2 CIE!Nv, 2 C~LrFCJLC LJD 2 CUA*.Ll 2 ccCoVM4UICATION 2 CELL ; A S 2 :(LLZkS 2 CO4 It~TIOE
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grach, Savely; Sergeev, Evgeny; Shindin, Alexey; Mishin, Evgeny; Watkins, Brenton
Concurrent observations of stimulated (secondary) electromagnetic emissions (SEE) and incoherent plasma line (PL) backscatter from the MUIR radar during HF pumping of the ionosphere by the HAARP heating facility (62.4(°) °N, 145.15(°) W, magnetic inclination α = 75.8^circ) with the pump wave (PW) frequency sweeps about the fourth electron gyroharmonic (4f_c) are presented. The PW frequency f0 was changed every 0.2 s in a 1-kHz step, i.e. with the rate of r_{f_0}=5 kHz/s. PW was transmitted at the magnetic zenith (MZ). Prior to sweeping, PW was transmitted continuously (CW) during 2 min at f_0 = 5730 kHz <4f_c to create the “preconditioned” ionosphere with small-scale magnetic field-aligned irregularities. During CW pumping, a typical SEE spectrum for f_0<4f_c, containing the prominent downshifted maxiμm (DM) shifted by Delta f_{DM} = f_{DM}-f_0approx-9 kHz, developed in 5-10 s after PW turn on. The PL echoes were observed during 2-3 s from the range dsim 220 km corresponding to the altitude slightly above PW reflection height. After sim5 s the PL echoes descended to dsim 210-212 km corresponding to the height h = d / (sinalpha) by sim 7 km below the height where f_0 = 4f_c. During frequency sweeps, two upshifted features appeared in the SEE spectrum for f_0> 4f_c, namely BUM_S and BUM_D. The former (stationary broad upshifted maxiμm) peaks at Delta f_{BUMs} approx f0 - nfc (d) + 15-20 kHz and is a typical SEE spectral feature. The latter, the dynamic BUM_D at smaller Delta f, is observed only at high pump powers (ERP=1.7 GW) and corresponds to artificial descending plasma layers created in the F-region ionosphere [1]. In the experiment in question, the BUM_D was present for f_0> f^*, where f^* was 5805-5815 kHz during stepping up and sim 10 kHz less for stepping down, and located 8-10 km below the background F-layer. The miniμm DM which indicated that f_0=4f_c=f_{uh} in the background ionospheric plasma, was sim 5760 kHz. The PL was observed only for f_0< f^* and mainly from altitudes h where f_0 <4f_c. The height h decreased with increasing f_0 in accordance with the altitude dependence 4f_c(h), the difference Delta f_g = f_0 - 4f_c was kept constant during either sweeping up [-(4-8 kHz)] or sweeping down [-(18-22 kHz)]. This corresponds to the difference between the altitude where f_0=4f_c and the PL generation altitude by Delta h sim 1.5-3 km and 7-8 km, respectively. During stepping up, the PL was observed also from the ranges where f_0 > 4f_c. In this case we obtained Delta f_g sim 8-13 kHz corresponding to Delta h sim - 4 km. The PL has never been observed for f_0>f^*$. \\ 1. Sergeev E., Grach S., et al. //Phys. Rev. Lett., 110 (2013), 065002.
1987-01-01
7 7ZD- AISI 9721 PffARTMENT OF THE NAVY JUffjA~j HFC S A FO L/L U I (NAUil) WASHINC ON C JAN&LNCLASS IFI ED F/G 5/1 NL I M2 I12 5 coo~ LIFJ -I LII...0 4 4)-s.. -4 4J C: 00 + ,. LI0a 4)00&.4. 00a 4)CA.V f0 4- > 1 - 1 404- 4JLA. 0- =. i.- >, 0h0 a0 cn 4 (40 s.4 > 4 24*~ (-A *.eZ---. 0. .. ., tv 4140
Ngondi, Jeremiah; Matthews, Fiona; Reacher, Mark; Baba, Samson; Brayne, Carol; Emerson, Paul
2008-04-30
Surgery, Antibiotics, Facial cleanliness and Environmental improvement (SAFE) are advocated by the World Health Organization (WHO) for trachoma control. However, few studies have evaluated the complete SAFE strategy, and of these, none have investigated the associations of Antibiotics, Facial cleanliness, and Environmental improvement (A,F,E) interventions and active trachoma. We aimed to investigate associations between active trachoma and A,F,E interventions in communities in Southern Sudan. Surveys were undertaken in four districts after 3 years of implementation of the SAFE strategy. Children aged 1-9 years were examined for trachoma and uptake of SAFE assessed through interviews and observations. Using ordinal logistic regression, associations between signs of active trachoma and A,F,E interventions were explored. Trachomatous inflammation-intense (TI) was considered more severe than trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF). A total of 1,712 children from 25 clusters (villages) were included in the analysis. Overall uptake of A,F,E interventions was: 53.0% of the eligible children had received at least one treatment with azithromycin; 62.4% children had a clean face on examination; 72.5% households reported washing faces of children two or more times a day; 73.1% households had received health education; 44.4% of households had water accessible within 30 minutes; and 6.3% households had pit latrines. Adjusting for age, sex, and district baseline prevalence of active trachoma, factors independently associated with reduced odds of a more severe active trachoma sign were: receiving three treatments with azithromycin (odds ratio [OR] = 0.1; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.0-0.4); clean face (OR = 0.3; 95% CI 0.2-0.4); washing faces of children three or more times daily (OR = 0.4; 95% CI 0.3-0.7); and presence and use of a pit latrine in the household (OR = 0.4; 95% CI 0.2-0.9). Analysis of associations between the A,F,E components of the SAFE strategy and active trachoma showed independent protective effects against active trachoma of mass systemic azithromycin treatment, facial cleanliness, face washing, and use of pit latrines in the household. This strongly argues for continued use of all the components of the SAFE strategy together.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shlyk, L.; Strobel, S.; Farmer, B.; De Long, L. E.; Niewa, R.
2018-02-01
Single-crystal x-ray diffraction refinements indicate SrS n2F e4O11 crystallizes in the hexagonal R -type ferrite structure with noncentrosymmetric space group P 63m c and lattice parameters a =5.9541 (2 )Å , c =13.5761 (5 )Å , Z =2 (R (F )=0.034 ). Octahedrally coordinated 2 a [M (1) and M (1a)] and 6 c sites [M (2 )] have random, mixed occupation by Sn and Fe; whereas the tetrahedrally coordinated 2 b sites [Fe(3) and Fe(3a)] are exclusively occupied by Fe, whose displacement from the ideal position with trigonal-bipyramidal coordination causes the loss of inversion symmetry. Our dc and ac magnetization data indicate SrS n2F e4O11 single crystals undergo a ferro- or ferri-magnetic transition below a temperature TC=630 K with very low coercive fields μoHc ⊥=0.27 Oe and μoHc ∥=1.5 Oe at 300 K, for applied field perpendicular and parallel to the c axis, respectively. The value for TC is exceptionally high, and the coercive fields exceptionally low, among the known R-type ferrites. Time-dependent dc magnetization and frequency-dependent ac magnetization data indicate the onset of short-range, spin-glass freezing below Tf=35.8 K , which results from crystallographic disorder of magnetic F e3 + and nonmagnetic S n4 + ions on a frustrated Kagome sublattice. Anomalous ac susceptibility and thermomagnetic relaxation behavior in the short-range-ordered state differs from that of conventional spin glasses. Optical measurements in the ultraviolet to visible frequency range in a diffuse reflectance geometry indicate an overall optical band gap of 0.8 eV, consistent with observed semiconducting properties.
1984-06-01
APPENDIX E GLOSSARY OF TERMINOLOGY AND ABBREVIATIONS AF: Air Force. AFESC: Air Force Engineering and Services Center. 3E AFFF : Aqueous Film Forming Foam...34U - 0 ID 0 w M ol fc a, C’ 4) Em)4 Q 4)j 0 0 0 x "a x a. 13 As W a- cu I e W 4)-~ ? 4 -04.4 4.1. jl) in -U)4 0 14)~ ~~ ~~ ~ 0 0 00.4 4 ~ 4 )4 I...8 and 3 a; fC ;arit ,:On or Ccrce E rer ierat or: US.WI~ereral Electric - ’~’Yo lwi Unkrrown :.:e ;aeid by: E.ob Steele, 1,;hn Absalon, Ernie
1993-04-01
Co -ag a 9LiC o 4 L ma o ~ %an -cc 4nm a- .& el 1 ’AU) -j mat ma -- C2~. q.ýIL1g 9L maa-. 0 IFm ma cn "ij 4A ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ r.. It C m;R .4IOa iec...am E n E n a- I E n C a g enS at ao on ~ 1 4a -w ;=- Lu -s I. LIMEn Lu d4 V. a a U a - aMC igS re aa- a-m n En - El In cc Ena LM am IL. l-S kCa En...In I! N.! cIn () n (0 a CD 0 IInl 0C el -i ca af. Ca’. C-)rJ 1 . a" r- a ý i an a’ I- a a* * aina - S~ ~~~ In ~ I’ N. - U I n InnI al f I’f InI- 5
49 CFR Appendix A to Part 214 - Schedule of Civil Penalties 1
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... use ring bouys 1,500 (f)(i) Failure to provide skiff 1,000 2,500 (ii) Failure to use skiff 1,500 214... warning signal 1,500 3,000 (f)(1) Assignment of non-qualified person as watchman/lookout 3,000 5,000 (2... charge of providing on-track safety for a roadway work group 2,000 4,000 (e) (1) (1) (f) Roadway...
1981-04-30
f --tlu Final-Report: Applicability of SREM to the Verification of Management Information System Software Requirements, wtch was prepared for the Army...MA _________ TO ________ UTA 1ASE ___________ StMZ25. 70.aC. .. 3CA, c(ie m(Sl f :~ rin I : ruq in SBII Z tSI. M 4.7/.3 69.9 . MA S U/WA0 1.241.5 96.8...IR.D iTEM B-2 C4 .4 . I.I z- 0 44 f - U l c- I ao V. a, I. vv!N0 ~ q * a - i= - a ~ ePcu m ~ bft 0 = z z z z z Uz 4 P4 -F5 zz - -4 zzz z C6 z c. 0. 4 4 v
SitaRam; Ceruso, Mariangela; Khloya, Poonam; Supuran, Claudiu T; Sharma, Pawan K
2014-12-15
A series of 24 novel heterocyclic compounds-functionalized at position 4 with aldehyde (5a-5f), carboxylic acid (6a-6f), nitrile (7a-7f) and oxime (8a-8f) functional groups-bearing 6-aminosulfonybenzothiazole moiety at position 1 of pyrazole has been synthesized and investigated for the inhibition of four isoforms of the α-class carbonic anhydrases (CAs, EC 4.2.1.1), comprising hCAs I and II (cytosolic, ubiquitous isozymes) and hCAs IX and XII (transmembrane, tumor associated isozymes). Against the human isozyme hCA I, compounds 6a-6f showed medium-weak inhibitory potential with Ki values in the range of 157-690nM with 6a showing better potential than the standard drug acetazolamide (AZA). Against hCA II, all the compounds showed excellent to moderate inhibition with Ki values of compounds 5a, 5d, 5f, 6a-6f, 8d and 8f lower than 12nM (Ki of AZA). Against hCA IX, all the compounds showed moderate inhibition with the exception of 6e which showed nearly 9 fold a better profile compared to AZA, whereas against hCA XII, four compounds 6e, 7a, 7b and 7d showed Ki in the same order as that of AZA. Carboxylic acid 6e was found to be an excellent inhibitor of both hCA IX and XII, with Ki values of 2.8nM and 5.5nM, respectively. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Ectopic expression of necdin induces differentiation of mouse neuroblastoma cells.
Kobayashi, Masakatsu; Taniura, Hideo; Yoshikawa, Kazuaki
2002-11-01
Necdin is expressed predominantly in postmitotic neurons, and ectopic expression of this protein strongly suppresses cell growth. Necdin has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Prader-Willi syndrome, a human neurodevelopmental disorder associated with genomic imprinting. Here we demonstrate that ectopic expression of necdin induces a neuronal phenotype in neuroblastoma cells. Necdin was undetectable in mouse neuroblastoma N1E-115 cells under undifferentiated and differentiated conditions. N1E-115 cells transfected with necdin cDNA showed morphological differentiation such as neurite outgrowth and expression of the synaptic marker proteins synaptotagmin and synaptophysin. In addition, Western blot analysis of the retinoblastoma protein (Rb) family members Rb, p130, and p107 revealed that necdin cDNA transfectants contained an increased level of p130 and a reduced level of p107, a pattern seen in differentiated G(0) cells. The transcription factors E2F1 and E2F4 physically interacted with necdin via their carboxyl-terminal transactivation domains, but only E2F1 abrogated necdin-induced growth arrest and neurite outgrowth of neuroblastoma cells. Overexpression of E2F1 in differentiated N1E-115 cells induced apoptosis, which was antagonized by co-expression of necdin. These results suggest that necdin promotes the differentiation and survival of neurons through its antagonistic interactions with E2F1.
Shemya AFB, Alaska Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.
1984-05-01
34.40 41 -0 4S-53 36 % WIND oil . SPEED SSE 1 ____ .7 ~~* iSE~* -E.* 16.. SSW7.,1 19.S mw c .373 17*4 1, VASIL 1.4 TOTAL HUMUS OF OILSERVATIOI4S USAFETAC 0...STATIC’K TAUT OUTS 16 cO " MISI 4I ION. SPEED .FMEAN (KNTS) 1.3 4.6 7.10 11-16 17.-21 22.27 282 33 34.40 41.0 46.5 t5 WN oil . SPUD__ ____ N .. 1 ____ NNE...p WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (F) TOTAL TOTAL (F) 12 3-4 5- 7.8 9. 10 11112,13.14 15-16 17- 14 19.20 21.22122.2425.2 27.229.30 - .1 Oil °II Wei
1981-04-01
43 696 NTIONAL FRUW FO1 INSPECTION OF NQN-FERINL HAlS in1 ADDISON PON DAN (CT.. (U) CORPS OF ENGINEERS WLTINN ANLAD I IUCLASSIFIED F/0 1311±3...S ThS A, - 7~c~ C. FA A -:Loo T A-r’o N= ,o AT/ Pip, : Eo 0-’Z’ A --’ * 5’so’ -A90/4 E~ \\ s ~c Ac F P4 A- , -S- ST~fA~~ 4!5-0- 55 /A3960O 0Q A C.-F A
Nadeau, É; Fairbrother, J M; Zentek, J; Bélanger, L; Tremblay, D; Tremblay, C-L; Röhe, I; Vahjen, W; Brunelle, M; Hellmann, K; Cvejić, D; Brunner, B; Schneider, C; Bauer, K; Wolf, R; Hidalgo, Á
2017-08-01
F4- and F18-positive enterotoxigenic E. coli strains (F4-ETEC and F18-ETEC) are important causes of post-weaning diarrhea (PWD) in pigs. F4 (antigenic variant ac) and F18 (ab and ac) fimbriae are major antigens that play an important role in the early stages of infection. Herein, the efficacy of a live oral vaccine consisting of two non-pathogenic E. coli strains, one F4ac- and one F18ac-positive, was evaluated using F4ac-ETEC and F18ab-ETEC challenge models. A randomized, masked, placebo-controlled, block design, parallel-group confirmatory study with two different vaccination-challenge intervals (7 and 21 days) was conducted for each challenge model. The vaccine was administered in one dose, to ≥18-day-old piglets via drinking water. Efficacy was assessed by evaluating diarrhea, clinical observations, weight gain and fecal shedding of F4-ETEC or F18-ETEC. Anti-F4 and anti-F18 immunoglobulins in blood were measured. The vaccination resulted in significant reductions in clinical PWD and fecal shedding of F4-ETEC and F18-ETEC after the 7- and 21-day-post-vaccination heterologous challenges, except for after the 21-day-post-vaccination F4-ETEC challenge, when the clinical PWD was too mild to demonstrate efficacy. A significant reduction of mortality and weight loss by vaccination were observed following the F18-ETEC challenge. The 7-day protection was associated with induction of anti-F4 and anti-F18 IgM, whereas the 21-day protection was mainly associated with anti-F4 and anti-F18 IgA. The 7-day onset and 21-day duration of protection induced by this vaccine administered once in drinking water to pigs of at least 18days of age were confirmed by protection against F4-ETEC and F18-ETEC, and induction of F4 and F18-specific immunity. Cross protection of the vaccine against F18ab-E. coli was demonstrated for both the 7- and 21-day F18-ETEC challenges. Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Philippe, Lucas; Vasseur, Jean-Jacques; Debart, Françoise
2018-01-01
Abstract Cell growth is a complex process shaped by extensive and coordinated changes in gene expression. Among these is the tightly regulated translation of a family of growth-related mRNAs defined by a 5′ terminal oligopyrimidine (TOP) motif. TOP mRNA translation is partly controlled via the eukaryotic initiation factor 4F (eIF4F), a translation factor that recognizes the mRNA 5′ cap structure. Recent studies have also implicated La-related protein 1 (LARP1), which competes with eIF4F for binding to mRNA 5′ ends. However, it has remained controversial whether LARP1 represses TOP mRNA translation directly and, if so, what features define its mRNA targets. Here, we show that the C-terminal half of LARP1 is necessary and sufficient to control TOP mRNA translation in cells. This fragment contains the DM15 cap-binding domain as well as an adjacent regulatory region that we identified. We further demonstrate that purified LARP1 represses TOP mRNA translation in vitro through the combined recognition of both the TOP sequence and cap structure, and that its intrinsic repressive activity and affinity for these features are subject to regulation. These results support a model whereby the translation of TOP mRNAs is controlled by a growth-regulated competition between eIF4F and LARP1 for their 5′ ends. PMID:29244122
Forniés, Juan; Fortuño, Consuelo; Ibáñez, Susana; Martín, Antonio
2008-07-07
Reaction of unsaturated (44e (-) skeleton) [PdPt 2(mu-PPh 2) 2(mu-P 2Ph 4)(R F) 4] 4 with Br (-) produces the saturated (48e (-) skeleton) complex [NBu 4][(R F) 2Pt(mu-PPh 2)(mu-Br)Pd(mu-PPh 2)(mu-P 2Ph 4)Pt(R F) 2] 5 without any M-M' bond. Attempts to eliminate Br (-) of 5 with Ag (+) in CH 2Cl 2 as a solvent gives a mixture of [(R F) 2Pt (III)(mu-PPh 2) 2Pt (III)(R F) 2] and some other unidentified products as a consequence of oxidation and partial fragmentation. However, when the reaction of 5 with Ag (+) is carried out in CH 3CN, no oxidation is observed but the elimination of Br (-) and the formation of [(R F) 2(CH 3CN)Pt(mu-PPh 2)Pd(mu-PPh 2)(mu-P 2Ph 4)Pt(R F) 2] 6 (46e (-) skeleton), a complex with a Pt-Pd bond, takes place. It is noteworthy that the reaction of 5 with TlPF 6 in CH 2Cl 2 does not precipitate TlBr but forms the adduct [(R F) 2PtTl(mu-PPh 2)(mu-Br)Pd(mu-PPh 2)(mu-P 2Ph 4)Pt(R F) 2] 7 with a Pt-Tl bond. Likewise, 5 reacts with [AgOClO 3(PPh 3)] in CH 2Cl 2 forming the adduct [AgPdPt 2(mu-Br)(mu-PPh 2) 2(mu-Ph 2P-PPh 2)(R F) 4(PPh 3)] 8, which contains a Pt-Ag bond. Both adducts are unstable in a CH 3CN solution, precipitating TlBr or AgBr and yielding the unsaturated 6. The treatment of [NBu 4] 2[(R F) 2Pt(mu-PPh 2) 2Pd(mu-PPh 2) 2Pt(R F) 2] in CH 3CN with I 2 (1:1 molar ratio) at 233 K yields a mixture of 4 and 6, which after recrystallization from CH 2Cl 2 is totally converted in 4. If the reaction with I 2 is carried out at room temperature, a mixture of the isomers [NBu 4][(R F) 2Pt(mu-PPh 2)(mu-I)Pd(mu-PPh 2)(mu-P 2Ph 4)Pt(R F) 2] 9 and [NBu 4][(R F)(PPh 2R F)Pt(mu-PPh 2)(mu-I)Pd(mu-PPh 2) 2Pt(R F) 2] 10 are obtained. The structures of the complexes have been established on the bases of NMR data, and the X-ray structures of 5- 8 have been studied. The relationship between the different complexes has been studied.
Modeling and Interpreting Construction Production Data: A Regression Approach.
1986-01-01
1 List of Data v PT P a m LR F F L F 0 L I P 4 U L A I A I u G N RCKO S x B R A R T EBPT S E 0 1 . 0 A 0 H 0 £ CUUFKA L 0 R S 0 B T A £ E S n IGMIOT...L r o LI PAUL A I A I U G H RCKO S X 3 N R a A hT EBPT S E 0 I C 0 I D R OK CUUFKA L D R S O a T A E E Sf IG IOT z 0 w I S S L y L A SP PYPXOR N H T
1991-01-01
2 - tý a .5 .= . A ’. 2 0’.. o SS ’.. . t I -. .5 :. C, 0 Oý 0 r go %C a -0 c SS 2L 2E "t-iocogo" 0 IS F6 a c So a,, 3 IL So E 2 Q Qo’ V E r r 0c c...4 ar 0 -C ’ aCCa 0 W. , US w .2 00 ~ i; E 2 ~ . o.Z-. - w a~C -0 e0 E4 Em 12 *U - -.E 2 c - act , 0 3 2. , =- b ! .. E0 E 2- ccZZ cT, w~. ýt 0 w C...00 o- c 00 F6 ~ -02 C -4 a. 71 if )A 1 G a -2 - a d= . Cc 00 -V -0 0 P- . -- Z - 2 - q 0 0J2 2 a c x -a WO.~. 0 C;W n-a- - 0 1 o ao RR 0 if * . -I
Liu, Min; Liu, Hui; Sun, Shufen; Li, Xuejiao; Zhou, Yanmin; Hou, Zhiyao; Lin, Jun
2014-02-04
Porous hydroxyapatite (HAp) composite fibers functionalized with up-conversion (UC) luminescent and magnetic Na(Y/Gd)F4:Yb(3+),Er(3+) nanocrystals (NCs) have been fabricated via electrospinning. After transferring hydrophobic oleic acid-capped Na(Y/Gd)F4:Yb(3+),Er(3+) NCs into aqueous solution, these water-dispersible NCs were dispersed into precursor electrospun solution containing CTAB. Na(Y/Gd)F4:Yb(3+),Er(3+)@HAp composite fibers were fabricated by the high temperature treatment of the electrospun Na(Y/Gd)F4:Yb(3+),Er(3+) NCs decorated precursor fibers. The biocompatibility test on MC 3T3-E1 cells using MTT assay shows that the HAp composite fibers have negligible cytotoxity, which reveals the HAp composite fibers could be a drug carrier for drug delivery. Because the contrast brightening is enhanced at increased concentrations of Gd(3+), the HAp composite fibers can serve as T1 magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents. In addition, the composites uptaken by MC 3T3-E1 cells present the UC luminescent emission of Er(3+) under the excitation of a 980 nm near-infrared laser. The above findings reveal Na(Y/Gd)F4:Yb(3+),Er(3+)@HAp composite fibers have potential applications in drug storage/release and magnetic resonance/UC luminescence imaging.
Panasonic HR-1800 Hand-Held Computer Solutions to Composite Materials Formulas.
1983-09-01
TR-83-4093 PROGRAM LISTING (Cont’d) I, : E-6 :PE*u3 D RINT 3 =U4---4*U3 gtr -BINf X)=U5-C4§U3 GS fQ :T SEXT *lJ 3 54A@ ;OSUB 6)i6’S2*U2J ,’-54 PLA... SEXT * 3’E6 ":W=X(ue) E:=E1*A(1i:E2:- * * :628800)E=6. ~.-- (33B4*A~ )2A QPmI 5 39 a@ G$=" T r4EH 310 1APUT p~~4 ~2’ -;C SUB 3800 ŗUCK!:4G (T’...u (?00
Temporal remodeling of the cell cycle accompanies differentiation in the Drosophila germline.
Hinnant, Taylor D; Alvarez, Arturo A; Ables, Elizabeth T
2017-09-01
Development of multicellular organisms relies upon the coordinated regulation of cellular differentiation and proliferation. Growing evidence suggests that some molecular regulatory pathways associated with the cell cycle machinery also dictate cell fate; however, it remains largely unclear how the cell cycle is remodeled in concert with cell differentiation. During Drosophila oogenesis, mature oocytes are created through a series of precisely controlled division and differentiation steps, originating from a single tissue-specific stem cell. Further, germline stem cells (GSCs) and their differentiating progeny remain in a predominantly linear arrangement as oogenesis proceeds. The ability to visualize the stepwise events of differentiation within the context of a single tissue make the Drosophila ovary an exceptional model for study of cell cycle remodeling. To describe how the cell cycle is remodeled in germ cells as they differentiate in situ, we used the Drosophila Fluorescence Ubiquitin-based Cell Cycle Indicator (Fly-FUCCI) system, in which degradable versions of GFP::E2f1 and RFP::CycB fluorescently label cells in each phase of the cell cycle. We found that the lengths of the G1, S, and G2 phases of the cell cycle change dramatically over the course of differentiation, and identified the 4/8-cell cyst as a key developmental transition state in which cells prepare for specialized cell cycles. Our data suggest that the transcriptional activator E2f1, which controls the transition from G1 to S phase, is a key regulator of mitotic divisions in the early germline. Our data support the model that E2f1 is necessary for proper GSC proliferation, self-renewal, and daughter cell development. In contrast, while E2f1 degradation by the Cullin 4 (Cul4)-containing ubiquitin E3 ligase (CRL4) is essential for developmental transitions in the early germline, our data do not support a role for E2f1 degradation as a mechanism to limit GSC proliferation or self-renewal. Taken together, these findings provide further insight into the regulation of cell proliferation and the acquisition of differentiated cell fate, with broad implications across developing tissues. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Cell cycle regulator E2F4 is essential for the development of the ventral telencephalon.
Ruzhynsky, Vladimir A; McClellan, Kelly A; Vanderluit, Jacqueline L; Jeong, Yongsu; Furimsky, Marosh; Park, David S; Epstein, Douglas J; Wallace, Valerie A; Slack, Ruth S
2007-05-30
Early forebrain development is characterized by extensive proliferation of neural precursors coupled with complex structural transformations; however, little is known regarding the mechanisms by which these processes are integrated. Here, we show that deficiency of the cell cycle regulatory protein, E2F4, results in the loss of ventral telencephalic structures and impaired self-renewal of neural precursor cells. The mechanism underlying aberrant ventral patterning lies in a dramatic loss of Sonic hedgehog (Shh) expression specifically in this region. The E2F4-deficient phenotype can be recapitulated by interbreeding mice heterozygous for E2F4 with those lacking one allele of Shh, suggesting a genetic interaction between these pathways. Treatment of E2F4-deficient cells with a Hh agonist rescues stem cell self-renewal and cells expressing the homeodomain proteins that specify the ventral telencephalic structures. Finally, we show that E2F4 deficiency results in impaired activity of Shh forebrain-specific enhancers. In conclusion, these studies establish a novel requirement for the cell cycle regulatory protein, E2F4, in the development of the ventral telencephalon.
Neochoritis, Constantinos G; Zarganes-Tzitzikas, Tryfon; Tsoleridis, Constantinos A; Stephanidou-Stephanatou, Julia; Kontogiorgis, Christos A; Hadjipavlou-Litina, Dimitra J; Choli-Papadopoulou, Theodora
2011-01-01
The synthesis of a number of benzimidazole Schiff bases 3 and 3-oxo-pyrimido[1,2-a]benzimidazoles 4 in excellent yields by a one-step sequence from the reaction of 2-aminobenzimidazole under green chemistry conditions is described. Structural assignments of the new compounds as well as complete assignment of (1)H and (13)C NMR signals have been unambiguously achieved based on the analysis of their (1)H and (13)C NMR (1D and 2D), IR, MS and elemental analysis data. To the synthesized Schiff bases the E-configuration was assigned on the basis of comparison of experimental and calculated (DFT) (13)C NMR chemical shifts. Compounds 3 and 4 were evaluated as inhibitors of lipoxygenase (LOX) and of lipid peroxidation (LPO). All the tested derivatives showed inhibition of lipid peroxidation, whereas most of them were found to have higher activation than the reference compound trolox; The Schiff bases 3e, 3h, and 3i, and the pyrimidobenzimidazoles 4a, 4e and 4f were found to be the most potent. The most potent LOX inhibitor within the subset of Schiff bases was found compound 3i, followed by 3f, whereas compounds 4a and 4g were found the most potent of the 3-oxo-pyrimido[1,2-a]benzimidazole group. Moreover, some cytotoxicity assessments were undertaken, whereupon it was found that Schiff base 3i and pyrimidobenzimidazoles 4e and 4f did not exhibit cytotoxicity at similar concentrations resembling thus the inhibitory activity of lipid peroxidation. The most cytotoxic Schiff base and pyrimidobenzimidazole were found to be 3d and 4c, respectively. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
An Oral DNA Vaccine Encoding Endoglin Eradicates Breast Tumors by Blocking Their Blood Supply
2007-05-01
Marcantonio , Ph.D. Research Associate Dorothy...SB *pɘ.05 0 2 0 4 0 6 0 8 0 5 :1 1 0 :1 20 :1 E:T Ratio % S p e c i f i c L y s i s 100 101 102 103 104 FL2-Height Human Endoglin C o u n t s A B...Fig3. Cytotoxicity assay of breast cancer specific CTL. 0 5000 10000 15000 F l u o r e s c e i n l e v e l s / g HuEGEmpty Vector SB * *pɘ.005 B
Software Engineering Principles.
1980-07-01
IC’ a It, It, Io It, It, o H 10 ~ Iro I0 E10 10 1 1 0 I 11. 1. 1. 10 1 0 1 0 1 c6 of a" I a f C f I 1 11 1 16 D , O f o 4 o I c1 w t I A, t I m 1 1 ca ...V. 4 4 4 I lbl. b 1 0 40 4 0 1 4 43c 4 40 ’ 10 40 4 I 10 4 4 1 4 4 40 Ic 1 011 1 If 0 . in44 3 4 4 3 4 4 I Io3 .4 4i I InI I I I 4 3 I CA I 4 I 4 3 I4...I 60 60 10 601 60. 6I I0 60 1~ 1 W 1 W 601 I3 Er- 6I 614 664;n3 6 W l. 60 l. 6 1 3 6 64 lb 46 lb l lb 6 M it I CA 0 6 lb. lbaa 1 0 r5 g m I . n lb lm
Kaczmarek, Agnieszka; Budzynska, Anna; Gospodarek, Eugenia
2012-10-01
Multiplex PCR was used to detect genes encoding selected virulence determinants associated with strains of Escherichia coli with K1 antigen (K1(+)) and non-K1 E. coli (K1(-)). The prevalence of the fimA, fimH, sfa/foc, ibeA, iutA and hlyF genes was studied for 134 (67 K1(+) and 67 K1(-)) E. coli strains isolated from pregnant women and neonates. The fimA gene was present in 83.6 % of E. coli K1(+) and in 86.6 % of E. coli K1(-) strains. The fimH gene was present in all tested E. coli K1(+) strains and in 97.0 % of non-K1 strains. E. coli K1(+) strains were significantly more likely to possess the following genes than E. coli K1(-) strains: sfa/foc (37.3 vs 16.4 %, P = 0.006), ibeA (35.8 vs 4.5 %, P<0.001), iutA (82.1 vs 35.8 %, P<0.001) and hlyF (28.4 vs 6.0 %, P<0.001). In conclusion, E. coli K1(+) seems to be more virulent than E. coli K1(-) strains in developing severe infections, thereby increasing possible sepsis or neonatal bacterial meningitis.
2016-01-01
We investigated whether intentional forgetting impacts only the likelihood of later retrieval from long-term memory or whether it also impacts the fidelity of those representations that are successfully retrieved. We accomplished this by combining an item-method directed forgetting task with a testing procedure and modeling approach inspired by the delayed-estimation paradigm used in the study of visual short-term memory (STM). Abstract or concrete colored images were each followed by a remember (R) or forget (F) instruction and sometimes by a visual probe requiring a speeded detection response (E1–E3). Memory was tested using an old–new (E1–E2) or remember-know-no (E3) recognition task followed by a continuous color judgment task (E2–E3); a final experiment included only the color judgment task (E4). Replicating the existing literature, more “old” or “remember” responses were made to R than F items and RTs to postinstruction visual probes were longer following F than R instructions. Color judgments were more accurate for successfully recognized or recollected R than F items (E2–E3); a mixture model confirmed a decrease to both the probability of retrieving the F items as well as the fidelity of the representation of those F items that were retrieved (E4). We conclude that intentional forgetting is an effortful process that not only reduces the likelihood of successfully encoding an item for later retrieval, but also produces an impoverished memory trace even when those items are retrieved; these findings draw a parallel between the control of memory representations within working and long-term memory. PMID:26709589
Fawcett, Jonathan M; Lawrence, Michael A; Taylor, Tracy L
2016-01-01
We investigated whether intentional forgetting impacts only the likelihood of later retrieval from long-term memory or whether it also impacts the fidelity of those representations that are successfully retrieved. We accomplished this by combining an item-method directed forgetting task with a testing procedure and modeling approach inspired by the delayed-estimation paradigm used in the study of visual short-term memory (STM). Abstract or concrete colored images were each followed by a remember (R) or forget (F) instruction and sometimes by a visual probe requiring a speeded detection response (E1-E3). Memory was tested using an old-new (E1-E2) or remember-know-no (E3) recognition task followed by a continuous color judgment task (E2-E3); a final experiment included only the color judgment task (E4). Replicating the existing literature, more "old" or "remember" responses were made to R than F items and RTs to postinstruction visual probes were longer following F than R instructions. Color judgments were more accurate for successfully recognized or recollected R than F items (E2-E3); a mixture model confirmed a decrease to both the probability of retrieving the F items as well as the fidelity of the representation of those F items that were retrieved (E4). We conclude that intentional forgetting is an effortful process that not only reduces the likelihood of successfully encoding an item for later retrieval, but also produces an impoverished memory trace even when those items are retrieved; these findings draw a parallel between the control of memory representations within working and long-term memory. (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Andresen, L. C.; Bode, S.; Tietema, A.; Boeckx, P.; Rütting, T.
2014-11-01
Monomeric organic nitrogen (N) such as free amino acids (fAA) is an important resource for both plants and soil microorganisms and is, furthermore, a source of ammonium (NH4+) via microbial fAA mineralization. We compared gross fAA dynamics with gross N mineralization in a Dutch heathland soil using 15N labelling. A special focus was made on the effects of climate change factors warming and drought, followed by rewetting. Our aims were to: (1) compare fAA mineralization (NH4+ production from fAAs) with gross N mineralization, (2) assess gross fAA production rate (depolymerization) and turnover time relative to gross N mineralization rate, and (3) assess the effects of warming and drought on these rates. The turnover of fAA in the soil was ca. 3 h, which is almost two orders of magnitude faster than that of NH4+ (i.e. ca. 4 days). This suggests that fAAs is an extensively used resource by soil microorganisms. In control soil (i.e. no climatic treatment), the gross N mineralization rate (10 ± 2.9 μg N g-1 day-1) was eight-times smaller than the summed gross fAA production rate of five AAs (alanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, proline: 127.4 to 25.0 μg N g-1 day-1). Gross fAA mineralization (3.4 ± 0.2 μg N g-1 day-1) contributed by 34% to the gross N mineralization rate and is, thus, an important component of N mineralization. In the drought treatment, gross fAA production was reduced by 65% and gross fAA mineralization by 41%, compared to control. On the other hand, gross N mineralization was unaffected by drought, indicating an increased mineralization of other soil organic nitrogen (SON) components. Warming did not significantly affect N transformations, even though that gross fAA production was more than halved. Overall our results suggest that heathland soil exposed to droughts has a shift in the composition of the SON being mineralized. Furthermore, compared to agricultural soils, fAA mineralization was relatively less important in the investigated heathland. This indicates a more complex mineralization dynamics in semi-natural ecosystems.
Radio-Astronomical Instruments Observations (Selected Articles),
1982-08-02
NL SIIDAUG 82 L I MATVEYENKO, G S MISEZHNIKOV UNCLASSIFIED FTO_ ID(RS) -0564-82 N FTD-ID(RS) T -0564-82 FOREIGN TECHNOLOGY DIVISION RADIO-ASTRONOMICAL...INSTR1ThMNTS OBSERVATIONS (Selected Articles) 3 71982 Approved for public release; LAJ distribuion~ urJA’nited. • I . FTD- ID(RS) T -0564-82 UNEDITED... T , t * r a yy y y 7, u F, f E # Ye, ye; E, e* X x X x Kh, kh X C Zh, zn .4 u L q Ts, ts - -. Z ,. 4 f 14 Ch ,ch U 7 H u I , i w Sh, sh 2 R ia Y, y
Tang, Ya-Jie; Zhao, Wei; Li, Hong-Mei
2011-01-01
According to the structure of podophyllotoxin and its structure-function relationship, a novel tandem biotransformation process was developed for the directional modification of the podophyllotoxin structure to directionally synthesize a novel compound, 4-(2,3,5,6-tetramethylpyrazine-1)-4′-demethylepipodophyllotoxin (4-TMP-DMEP). In this novel tandem biotransformation process, the starting substrate of podophyllotoxin was biotransformed into 4′-demethylepipodophyllotoxin (product 1) with the demethylation of the methoxyl group at the 4′ position by Gibberella fujikuroi SH-f13, which was screened out from Shennongjia prime forest humus soil (Hubei, China). 4′-Demethylepipodophyllotoxin (product 1) was then biotransformed into 4′-demethylpodophyllotoxone (product 2) with the oxidation of the hydroxyl group at the 4 position by Alternaria alternata S-f6, which was screened out from the gathered Dysosma versipellis plants in the Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Finally, 4′-demethylpodophyllotoxone (product 2) and ligustrazine were linked with a transamination reaction to synthesize the target product 4-TMP-DMEP (product 3) by Alternaria alternata S-f6. Compared with podophyllotoxin (i.e., a 50% effective concentration [EC50] of 529 μM), the EC50 of 4-TMP-DMEP against the tumor cell line BGC-823 (i.e., 0.11 μM) was significantly reduced by 5,199 times. Simultaneously, the EC50 of 4-TMP-DMEP against the normal human proximal tubular epithelial cell line HK-2 (i.e., 0.40 μM) was 66 times higher than that of podophyllotoxin (i.e., 0.006 μM). Furthermore, compared with podophyllotoxin (i.e., log P = 0.34), the water solubility of 4-TMP-DMEP (i.e., log P = 0.66) was significantly enhanced by 94%. For the first time, the novel compound 4-TMP-DMEP with superior antitumor activity was directionally synthesized from podophyllotoxin by the novel tandem biotransformation process developed in this work. PMID:21398491
CORRIGENDUM: Atoms riding Rayleigh waves Atoms riding Rayleigh waves
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Benedek, G.; Echenique, P. M.; Toennies, J. P.; Traeger, F.
2010-09-01
In the original paper the affiliation list is incorrect. The correct address list is as follows: G Benedek1, 5, P M Echenique1, 2, J P Toennies3 and F Traeger4 1 Donostia International Physics Center (DIPC), Paseo Manuel de Lardizábal 4, 20018 Donostia—San Sebastián, Spain 2 Departamento de Física de Materiales and CFM (CSIC-UPV/EHU), Universidad del País Vasco/Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, E-20018 San Sebastián/Donostia, Spain 3 Max Planck-Institut für Dynamik und Selbstorganisation, Bunsenstraße 10 D-37073 Göttingen, Germany 4 Fakultät für Chemie und Biochemie, Ruhr-Universität Bochum Universitätsstraße 150, 44801 Bochum, Germany 5 Permanent address: Dipartimento di Scienza dei Materiali, Universitá di Milano-Bicocca, Via Cozzi 53, 20125 Milano, Italy
Energetic Diagrams and Structural Properties of Monohaloacetylenes HC≡CX (X = F, Cl, Br).
Khiri, D; Hochlaf, M; Chambaud, G
2016-08-04
Highly correlated electronic wave functions within the Multi Reference Configuration Interaction (MRCI) approach are used to study the stability and the formation processes of the monohaloacetylenes HCCX and monohalovinylidenes C2HX (X = F, Cl, Br) in their electronic ground state. These tetra-atomics can be formed through the reaction of triatomic fragments C2F, C2Cl, and C2Br with a hydrogen atom or of C2H with halogen atoms via barrierless reactions, whereas the reactions between the diatomics [C2 + HX] need to overcome barriers of 1.70, 0.89, and 0.58 eV for X = F, Cl, and Br. It is found that the linear HCCX isomers, in singlet symmetry, are more stable than the singlet C2HX iso-forms by 1.995, 2.083, and 1.958 eV for X = F, Cl, and Br. The very small isomerization barriers from iso to linear forms are calculated 0.067, 0.044, and 0.100 eV for F, Cl, and Br systems. The dissociation energies of the HCCX systems (without ZPE corrections), resulting from the breaking of the CX bond, are calculated to be 5.647, 4.691, and 4.129 eV for X = F, Cl, Br, respectively. At the equilibrium geometry of the X(1)Σ(+) state of HCCX, the vertical excitation energies in singlet and triplet symmetries are all larger than the respective dissociation energies. Stable excited states are found only as (3)A', (3)A″, and (1)A″ monohalovinylidene structures.
Improvement and Optimization of Internal Damping in Fiber Reinforced Composite Materials
1986-03-03
Resin Casting ............. 61 5.0 TESTS ON DISCONTINUOUS ALIGNED FIBER REINFORCED COMPOSITES . . . ...................... 63 5.1 Experimental...After some :x..iipulation [ 61 , the longitudinal storage modulus is given by: Vf -+-- -~V (2.9) Eý Eý E P9. t z[(R /r) - ] + cosha.t I-. . 10 where 1...the storage moduluii were fitted with a linear regression given by E . . 61 E’ = 571252.737 + 55.647 x f (psi) (4.1) m Where f is the frequency in
1997-01-01
Version 1 .0 )9-/77 Background data analysis Az. CdB . C t_ I eF2 G S21.4 Cal-Ba Method• detection limit Mediki czi.ii- 23.6 Cl-B O.. 13.9ol DATA15 Ca...E F G H T2 4124 CoI-Cr TTL5 i.2 305 0-0 Ca=Lonomllmen97.534 Create ineprt 41.1 Cal-Cr ENTER DATA 7 J42,8251 Histogram 41.2 Wa-0 IT 42.1 Cdct Ditibto
1972-10-27
FROM HOURLY OBSERVATIONS) 148b__ (- td ,4uTs, ,A-g ILL IN ,IS/RANTQIJL 17-70 F F 1)STATION STATION RARE YEARS NORTH C ALL ;lN IT14FR 1200-1400 CLASS...SPEED MEAN (KNTS) 1 • 3 4.*6 7 - 10 11 •16 17 -. 21 22 *27 28 • 33 34.• 40 41 •47 48 •55 ->56 % I WIND DIR. t . SPEED N _ 0 .2 . 0 5 8,4 NrE , td 1.4...PERCENTAGE FREQUENCY OF WIND *DIRECTION AND SPEED (FROM HOURLY OBSERVATIONS) S Ij) CAjhitblf td - i ILLINJUS/pA1T;JL 37-70 _ - L STATION STATION RAMS TZAIS
Mori, Munemasa; Hazan, Renin; Danielian, Paul S.; Mahoney, John E.; Li, Huijun; Lu, Jining; Miller, Emily S.; Zhu, Xueliang; Lees, Jacqueline A.; Cardoso, Wellington V.
2017-01-01
Abnormal development of multiciliated cells is a hallmark of a variety of human conditions associated with chronic airway diseases, hydrocephalus and infertility. Multiciliogenesis requires both activation of a specialized transcriptional program and assembly of cytoplasmic structures for large-scale centriole amplification that generates basal bodies. It remains unclear, however, what mechanism initiates formation of these multiprotein complexes in epithelial progenitors. Here we show that this is triggered by nucleocytoplasmic translocation of the transcription factor E2f4. After inducing a transcriptional program of centriole biogenesis, E2f4 forms apical cytoplasmic organizing centres for assembly and nucleation of deuterosomes. Using genetically altered mice and E2F4 mutant proteins we demonstrate that centriole amplification is crucially dependent on these organizing centres and that, without cytoplasmic E2f4, deuterosomes are not assembled, halting multiciliogenesis. Thus, E2f4 integrates nuclear and previously unsuspected cytoplasmic events of centriole amplification, providing new perspectives for the understanding of normal ciliogenesis, ciliopathies and cancer. PMID:28675157
Altus AFB, Oklahoma Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.
1985-09-01
4 _ 2; 4, InI Air Weather Service ( MAC) Aft 1 REVISED UNIFOCM SUMMAARY CW SC IL!8k 2 SURFACE WATHER OBE3RVATION$ 2b1l__ ALTUS m~F3 OK.MC 732 4 40 99...BRANCH PERCENIA6E FRECQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE OF CEILING VERSUS VISIBILIIV USAFTEAC FRON HOURLY OBSERVATIONS AIR WATHER SERVICE/HAC STATION NUMBER: 123520
Kao, Michelle; Columbus, Daniel A.; Suryawan, Agus; Steinhoff-Wagner, Julia; Hernandez-Garcia, Adriana; Nguyen, Hanh V.; Fiorotto, Marta L.
2016-01-01
Many low-birth weight infants are at risk for poor growth due to an inability to achieve adequate protein intake. Administration of the amino acid leucine stimulates protein synthesis in skeletal muscle of neonates. To determine the effects of enteral supplementation of the leucine metabolite β-hydroxy-β-methylbutyrate (HMB) on protein synthesis and the regulation of translation initiation and degradation pathways, overnight-fasted neonatal pigs were studied immediately (F) or fed one of five diets for 24 h: low-protein (LP), high-protein (HP), or LP diet supplemented with 4 (HMB4), 40 (HMB40), or 80 (HMB80) μmol HMB·kg body wt−1·day−1. Cell replication was assessed from nuclear incorporation of BrdU in the longissimus dorsi (LD) muscle and jejunum crypt cells. Protein synthesis rates in LD, gastrocnemius, rhomboideus, and diaphragm muscles, lung, and brain were greater in HMB80 and HP and in brain were greater in HMB40 compared with LP and F groups. Formation of the eIF4E·eIF4G complex and S6K1 and 4E-BP1 phosphorylation in LD, gastrocnemius, and rhomboideus muscles were greater in HMB80 and HP than in LP and F groups. Phosphorylation of eIF2α and eEF2 and expression of SNAT2, LAT1, MuRF1, atrogin-1, and LC3-II were unchanged. Numbers of BrdU-positive myonuclei in the LD were greater in HMB80 and HP than in the LP and F groups; there were no differences in jejunum. The results suggest that enteral supplementation with HMB increases skeletal muscle protein anabolism in neonates by stimulation of protein synthesis and satellite cell proliferation. PMID:27143558
1992-12-01
steel Hr 14x117: A = 34.4 in E - 29,000,000 psi From plans provided: L - 708 in k - 1.25(34.4...El 5 U.M. il IIl I E1~ E16 40I " , _j* tool cn toA LI LL E17 Iiin Ii i cc, LL E18 11- - - U.a. U.T. ’-3 1-4 LIJ ri m q O E19 61 Uj p41’ I WI m- 14 LL...4 ’o 4 4 Ca L ~Ln 04 :L H13 00 cc I.- 1 cn LU c’J 0I z CLoZ 1A1 J: , f * 1:T T--/ CC LIL 4-4J H5l Cr) A A 1 .1, , +,-C +~ + CL H6 L1 Ul LMz WA0
Brown, Benjamin; Balatsoukas, Panos; Williams, Richard; Sperrin, Matthew; Buchan, Iain
2016-10-01
Audit and Feedback (A&F) is a widely used quality improvement technique that measures clinicians' clinical performance and reports it back to them. Computerised A&F (e-A&F) system interfaces may consist of four key components: (1) Summaries of clinical performance; (2) Patient lists; (3) Patient-level data; (4) Recommended actions. There is a lack of evidence regarding how to best design e-A&F interfaces; establishing such evidence is key to maximising usability, and in turn improving patient safety. To evaluate the usability of a novel theoretically-informed and research-led e-A&F system for primary care (the Performance Improvement plaN GeneratoR: PINGR). (1) Describe PINGR's design, rationale and theoretical basis; (2) Identify usability issues with PINGR; (3) Understand how these issues may interfere with the cognitive goals of end-users; (4) Translate the issues into recommendations for the user-centred design of e-A&F systems. Eight experienced health system evaluators performed a usability inspection using an innovative hybrid approach consisting of five stages: (1) Development of representative user tasks, Goals, and Actions; (2) Combining Heuristic Evaluation and Cognitive Walkthrough methods into a single protocol to identify usability issues; (3) Consolidation of issues; (4) Severity rating of consolidated issues; (5) Analysis of issues according to usability heuristics, interface components, and Goal-Action structure. A final list of 47 issues were categorised into 8 heuristic themes. The most error-prone heuristics were 'Consistency and standards' (13 usability issues; 28% of the total) and 'Match between system and real world' (n=10, 21%). The recommended actions component of the PINGR interface had the most usability issues (n=21, 45%), followed by patient-level data (n=5, 11%), patient lists (n=4, 9%), and summaries of clinical performance (n=4, 9%). The most error-prone Actions across all user Goals were: (1) Patient selection from a list; (2) Data identification from a figure (both population-level and patient-level); (3) Disagreement with a system recommendation. By contextualising our findings within the wider literature on health information system usability, we provide recommendations for the design of e-A&F system interfaces relating to their four key components, in addition to how they may be integrated within a system. Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.
Structure and properties of the anions MF4-, MCl4- and MBr4- (M = C, Si, Ge)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grein, Friedrich
2015-04-01
Density functional theory (DFT), Møller-Plesset (MP2) and coupled cluster with single and double substitutions including non-iterative triple excitations (CCSD(T)) calculations on the anions MX4-, with M = C, Si, Ge and X = F, Cl, Br, show that GeF4-, SiCl4-, GeCl4- and SiBr4- prefer a C2v conformation, but CCl4- is an elongated C3v structure. CBr4- has Td symmetry in MP2, but is slightly more stable in elongated C3v form with DFT and CCSD(T). GeBr4- has Td symmetry. CF4- and SiF4- are unstable with respect to loss of an electron. Vertical electron affinities (EAs) are negative also for CCl4 and SiCl4, and close to zero for GeF4 and SiBr4. Adiabatic EAs range from 0.47 eV for SiCl4 to 1.78 eV for GeBr4. The lowest excited states at Td symmetry are 2T2 resonances with energies of 2.1-3.5 eV, resulting from excitation of the a1 singly occupied molecular orbital to vacant t2 orbitals. Vertical excitation energies (VEEs) and vibrational frequencies are given for the most stable anionic geometries. Comparison with experimental VEEs for CCl4- is made. From dissociation energies of MX4, MX4-, MX3 and MX3-, appearance energies of X-, MX3-, X2- and MX2- were calculated. Most were found to be in reasonable agreement with experimental values. Theoretical spin densities and g-factors have been compared with experimental results available for CCl4-, SiCl4- and GeCl4-.
Kwangju, K-57, Korea. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.
1974-03-06
JtTHER I 5fU -17 o CLSS HOURS (L S T. SPEED Mi..EAN (KNTS) 1 -3 4 6 7. 10 11 16 17 - 21 22 - 27 28 33 34 - 40 41 47 48- 55 56 % WIND DIR. S _ _ PEED E .3...the summary consists of a bivariate percentage frequency distribution of wet-bulb depression in 17 classes spread horizontally; by 2-degree intervals...AC 4)25f. K4{bNC() ILIA K-57 3-59,A 4 .72 ALL N STATION NAME YEARS., PArF I ~R ALL-- T5 L .T. WET BULB TEMPERATURE DEPRESSION (F) I_ TOTAL TOTAL (F
75 FR 34126 - Notice of Receipt of Requests to Voluntarily Cancel Certain Pesticide Registrations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-06-16
... Imida E-AG 5 F ST Imidacloprid Insecticide 000228-00656 ETI 105 28 I Imidacloprid 000228-00668 Imida E-Pro 4F Pre/ Imidacloprid Post Construction Insecticide 000228-00682 ETI 105 12 I Imidacloprid 000228-00691 Imida E-Pro 0.5 - Imidacloprid Turf Insecticide 000228-00692 Imida E-Pro 1% G - Imidacloprid ORN...
Planning, Programming, and Budgeting System (PPBS)/Multi-year Programming: Reading Guide
2010-09-01
51 B -4 Potter, Barry H ., and Jack Diamond. Guidelines for Public Expenditure...IS PA GE 1 9 b . TE LE P H ON E N U M B E R ( I n c l u d e A r e a C o d e ) U U U ...I N S T I T U T E F O R D E F E N S E A N A LY S E S IDA Document D-4057 Log: H 10-000982 September 2010 Planning, Programming, and Budgeting
1978-02-01
6 .- 6 a . I a- S 0 I I C3 uI nm0 14 * N N nInA C3 f6 - ~ S C3S00 0c h )4 a1 SnI S i LU 14 0 I0 w 1 .- 4 1- pejz I C SW4 - #N0Wa*% 0( IW -W~ x...m #a CAC3 * DtoKIDft4 lp 3 I f6 . lt-C3 lat *0- IL 0 19 9 9 999 **9 U% .49 9999 I (A o3 0-1.1 N N .80* us-Ia. , NF0In m UN O.4 " 0.2 4% 1 I 1 WI "i I4...G OPIA0 0* N.4C " DI 0.3, 0=6s (A 6 4 6 4 .4 *L 7 I I f6 1 0 CLx 2 W N M9 0% *ON 40 MNca.4t C3 GON 00’p.*!fU ON N I o x11 j eS .4 4 I 6& ILI’N I L5
Characterization of blaCTX-M IncFII plasmids and clones of Escherichia coli from pets in France.
Dahmen, Safia; Haenni, Marisa; Châtre, Pierre; Madec, Jean-Yves
2013-12-01
To characterize bla(CTX-M) IncFII plasmids and clones of Escherichia coli from cats and dogs and to compare them with bla(CTX-M) IncFII plasmids reported in humans. From December 2006 to April 2010, 518 E. coli isolates from clinical infections in cats and dogs were screened for extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) production. Antimicrobial susceptibility was performed by disc diffusion and resistance genes were identified by PCR and sequencing. Plasmids were characterized using PCR-based replicon typing and sub-typing schemes, restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, S1-PFGE and Southern hybridization. Isolates were characterized by PFGE, phylogenetic grouping, O25b typing and multilocus sequence typing. Nineteen E. coli isolates (3.7%) produced ESBLs, of which 14 (74%) carried bla(CTX-M) IncFII plasmids. The bla(CTX-M) gene was predominant and located on F31:A4:B1, F36:A4:B1 or F36:A1:B20 plasmids, abundantly reported in humans. The bla(CTX-M) F22:A1:B20 or F2:A2:B20 plasmids were also found. Different sequence types (STs) were identified, such as ST10, ST410, ST359, ST617 and ST224. Only one E. coli isolate belonged to the ST131 E. coli clone and carried a bla(CTX-M) F2:A2:B20 plasmid. This is the first known extensive study on ESBL-producing E. coli isolates from pets in France. The ST131 clone was rare. However, the predominance of human-like bla(CTX-M) IncFII plasmids suggests exchanges of these plasmids with the human reservoir.
Advanced Hydrofoil Development Trials Program Documentation Review.
1978-10-01
fl 0 a c3za o .9 0 a J 0 .I 8 .~ m 20. - 0w 0 Ko .-K z ac 40c4 K A I" UP 0 4 42 .9 cc w w . rI- - KGUO 0 UW U- 3 =i 0 % 0 4 0.. 00~ 0 #A a- CiK 4j ai...40 04 i44 :4 20 Chit 304 in lat Iaw3 4 ’ Bu Um~~~ 4 in ouru ns 2 IAS W, a A0~~~u 2- 245 f pin 0! 0 1-I4lo W mj 29 WO 0 onc I-~u 0 - in o o It o4 a...Lp I 1 09 4 t4 41 D f i t x- 8 - U, 6- U, 00 2 . *Z t 10 0 0 O 0 or 00 I-0 a. u Oh ) V ..0 f,fl de ko U.J -C utI ( o f E 0 ’u 0 ! .4 1 a# hf 2 ma’. i
Resource Recovery Technology Application Document.
1982-06-01
B-6 Electrostatic Precipitator (APC-C) ......................B-1O Venturi Scrubber (APC D) B-15 C Combustion Equipment (CE) C-1 Modular... Scrubber APC-D P. 1 of 4 CONTROLIII COMPONENT DESCRIPTION Types Available - Competing Components Type a. Venturi e. Moving bed Venturi b. Flooded disc f...Clean Gas to Demister (Used Separate Liquid from Gas Stream) / F C Scrubber Wall Liquid Inlet D Scrubber Liquid at Venturi Throat Inlet B E Venturi
Caira, Simonetta; Pinto, Gabriella; Nicolai, Maria Adalgisa; Chianese, Lina; Addeo, Francesco
2016-08-01
Water buffalo (WB) casein (CN) and curd samples from indigenous Italian and international breeds were examined with the objective of identifying signature peptides that could function as an indicator to determine the origin of their milk products. CN in complex mixtures were digested with trypsin, and peptide fragments were subsequently identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). The unique presence of a β-CN A variant and an internally deleted αs1-CN (f35-42) variant in international WB milk samples was ascertained by identifying signature tryptic peptides from either dephosphorylated or native CN. Four signature unphosphorylated peptides derived from β-CN A, i.e. (f49-68) Asn(68) (2223.6 Da), (f1-28) Ser(10) (3169.4 Da), (f1-29) Ser(10) (3297.4 Da) and (f33-48) Thr(41) (1982 Da) and two from αs1-CN (f35-42) deleted fragments, i.e. (f23-34) Met(31) (1415.7 Da) and (f43-58) Val(44) (1752.7 Da), were identified. Two signature casein phosphopeptides (CPPs), i.e. β-CN (f1-28) 4P (3489.1 Da) and β-CN (f33-48) 1P (2062.0 Da), were identified in the tryptic hydrolysate of native casein or curd and cheese samples using in-batch hydroxyapatite (HA) chromatography. All these fragments functioned as analytical surrogates of two αs1- and β-casein variants that specifically occur in the milk of international WB breeds. Furthermore, the bovine peptide β-CN (f1-28) 4P had a distinct and lower molecular mass compared with the WB counterpart and functioned as a species-specific marker for all breeds of WB. Advantages of this analytical approach are that (i) peptides are easier to separate than proteins, (ii) signature peptide probes originating from specific casein variants allow for the targeting of all international WB milk, curd and cheese samples and (iii) bovine and WB casein in mixtures can be simultaneously determined in protected designation of origin (PDO) "Mozzarella di Bufala Campana" cheese. This analytical method enabled the specific detection of international WB and bovine casein with a sensitivity threshold of 2 and 0.78 %, respectively. Graphical Abstract Monitoring of prototypic tryptic CPPs by MALDI-TOF analysis in Mediterranean (A), Romanian (B), Indian (C), Polish (D) and Canadian (E) curd samples to guarantee the authenticity of the PDO "Mozzarella di Bufala Campana" cheese.
Testing of Fire Fighting Foam.
1980-11-01
for Fresh and Sea Water ( MIL - F - 24385 ); -(C) Underwriters Laboratories Inc. S andard for Air Foam Equipment and Liquid Con- centrates (UL162);4D...C. Test Facilities 6 D. Test Procedures 7 III. Results of Tests A. FRN-1007 33 B. MIL - F - 24385 34 C. UL 162 34 D. O- F -555C 35 E. Foam Quality 35 IV...1 gpm) H N-heptane in. inch (25.4 mm = 1 in.) ipm liters per minute M Motor Octane Rating MIL MIL - F - 24385 Test Method NFPA National Fire Protection
Chang, Yih Chung; Luo, Zhihong; Pan, Yi; Zhang, Zheng; Song, Ying-Nan; Kuang, Sophie Yajin; Yin, Qing Zhu; Lau, Kai-Chung; Ng, C Y
2015-04-21
By employing two-color visible (VIS)-ultraviolet (UV) laser photoionization and pulsed field ionization-photoelectron (PFI-PE) techniques, we have obtained highly rotationally resolved photoelectron spectra for vanadium monocarbide cations (VC(+)). The state-to-state VIS-UV-PFI-PE spectra thus obtained allow unambiguous assignments for the photoionization rotational transitions, resulting in a highly precise value for the adiabatic ionization energy (IE) of vanadium monocarbide (VC), IE(VC) = 57512.0 ± 0.8 cm(-1) (7.13058 ± 0.00010 eV), which is defined as the energy of the VC(+)(X(3)Δ1; v(+) = 0; J(+) = 1) ← VC(X(2)Δ3/2; v'' = 0; J'' = 3/2) photoionization transition. The spectroscopic constants for VC(+)(X(3)Δ1) determined in the present study include the harmonic vibrational frequency ωe(+) = 896.4 ± 0.8 cm(-1), the anharmonicity constant ωe(+)xe(+) = 5.7 ± 0.8 cm(-1), the rotational constants Be(+) = 0.6338 ± 0.0025 cm(-1) and αe(+) = 0.0033 ± 0.0007 cm(-1), the equilibrium bond length re(+) = 1.6549 ± 0.0003 Å, and the spin-orbit coupling constant A = 75.2 ± 0.8 cm(-1) for VC(+)(X(3)Δ1,2,3). These highly precise energetic and spectroscopic data are used to benchmark state-of-the-art CCSDTQ/CBS calculations. In general, good agreement is found between the theoretical predictions and experimental results. The theoretical calculations yield the values, IE(VC) = 7.126 eV; the 0 K bond dissociation energies: D0(V-C) = 4.023 eV and D0(V(+)-C) = 3.663 eV; and heats of formation: ΔH°(f0)(VC) = 835.2, ΔH°(f298)(VC) = 840.4, ΔH°(f0)(VC(+)) = 1522.8, and ΔH°(f298)(VC(+)) = 1528.0 kJ mol(-1).
Grafenwohr AAF, Germany. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations. Parts A-F.
1987-10-01
76.4 78.2 582 2553 1 29.7 37.8 54.4 62.3 64.7 68.2 73.7 74.2 76.4 76.4 76.6 76.9 77,6 78.2 85.5 6 E 27001 70. 5 J.2_ Sb_ O 64.4 66.9 70.6 76.3 76.8 79.1...G1 bt GF GE GE bE GL Gr 6E GE iE GE GL (E GL GE r(ET I ISO 9 86 -6 98 4L 32 29 20 16 12 lI 8 s 4 C
Immune-Mediated Eradication of Cancer Stem Cells via Polyspherex Microsphere-based Vaccination
2011-09-01
EEE !%-4&,1!GHG!34-/!!8*5,6!,:.,4*/,6&?! 1,%.*&,!&+,!3&!&+’&!A,!A,4,!2%*68!),?!1!"[!=>"!&2/-4%!.--),1!34-/!"TC#E! *61*5*12’)!/*0...4!,:.,4*/,6&9!!L3&,4!D!/-6&+%!-3!%-4&C.24*3*0’&*-6?!A,!+! 0-)),0&,1!)7%’&,%!34-/!\\!DEE? EEE !%-4&,1!GHG?!A+*0+!7*,)1,1!!*6%233*0*,6&!’/-26&!-3! .4...2/-4!0,))%!’%!’!%-240,!-3!&*8,6B%F!*6!1,614*&*0!0,))C(’%,1! *//26*R’&*-69!9*+$):’(!T&?!["ETC["Ef!B# EE "F9! =9!
Peasant Protest in Kyrgyzstan: Standing Up Next to a Mountain
2007-06-01
featuresarticle/2006/2/A0E19880-2D66-4263-9291-142E6A5B00D1.html (accessed June 15, 2007). 94 Amanov Taalaibek, “Kyrgyz Opposition Rally Looms...548A391224F1.html (accessed January 15, 2007); Taalaibek Amanov , “No Give and Take in Kyrgyz Stand-off,” Institute for War and Peace Reporting...2002, http://iwpr.net/?p=rca&s=f&o=177731&apc_state=henirca4796f1d50976863fd92 b4a29c882becb (accessed June 15, 2007). Amanov , Taalaibek. “Kyrgyz
Reliability Test and Evaluation of MIL-M-38510 Linear Microcircuits
1979-07-01
KIKLMNALL V ;ILI,, IN AuAI? 0. LXCLs’.SIV. AuAI2 GROWTH DJURING BOWIN)G A. 0111N PIN I OR 3 102000 1@6 6.2 3 . B1•’• EN fITENRNAL IEA C. MIECHANICAL...JC U- 0 CDI 0 09 c C L C4 C" CA .-. 0. C IN U- Ci3 e 0. .-4 CD C5 0c oc i en 0c, O~ - LUi C. co m 0 (0F59 TABLE F8- 3 - IB VcM = OV) HISTORY OF THE...F64 Gl through G4 LIST OF FIGURES FIGURE PAGE 1 LINEAR MICROCIRCUIT TEST PROGRAM .......... ............... 3 2 ACCELERATED LIFE TEST BIAS CIRCUITS
Regulation of host translational machinery by African swine fever virus.
Castelló, Alfredo; Quintas, Ana; Sánchez, Elena G; Sabina, Prado; Nogal, Marisa; Carrasco, Luis; Revilla, Yolanda
2009-08-01
African swine fever virus (ASFV), like other complex DNA viruses, deploys a variety of strategies to evade the host's defence systems, such as inflammatory and immune responses and cell death. Here, we analyse the modifications in the translational machinery induced by ASFV. During ASFV infection, eIF4G and eIF4E are phosphorylated (Ser1108 and Ser209, respectively), whereas 4E-BP1 is hyperphosphorylated at early times post infection and hypophosphorylated after 18 h. Indeed, a potent increase in eIF4F assembly is observed in ASFV-infected cells, which is prevented by rapamycin treatment. Phosphorylation of eIF4E, eIF4GI and 4E-BP1 is important to enhance viral protein production, but is not essential for ASFV infection as observed in rapamycin- or CGP57380-treated cells. Nevertheless, eIF4F components are indispensable for ASFV protein synthesis and virus spread, since eIF4E or eIF4G depletion in COS-7 or Vero cells strongly prevents accumulation of viral proteins and decreases virus titre. In addition, eIF4F is not only activated but also redistributed within the viral factories at early times of infection, while eIF4G and eIF4E are surrounding these areas at late times. In fact, other components of translational machinery such as eIF2alpha, eIF3b, eIF4E, eEF2 and ribosomal P protein are enriched in areas surrounding ASFV factories. Notably, the mitochondrial network is polarized in ASFV-infected cells co-localizing with ribosomes. Thus, translation and ATP synthesis seem to be coupled and compartmentalized at the periphery of viral factories. At later times after ASFV infection, polyadenylated mRNAs disappear from the cytoplasm of Vero cells, except within the viral factories. The distribution of these pools of mRNAs is similar to the localization of viral late mRNAs. Therefore, degradation of cellular polyadenylated mRNAs and recruitment of the translation machinery to viral factories may contribute to the inhibition of host protein synthesis, facilitating ASFV protein production in infected cells.
Regulation of Host Translational Machinery by African Swine Fever Virus
Castelló, Alfredo; Quintas, Ana; Sánchez, Elena G.; Sabina, Prado; Nogal, Marisa; Carrasco, Luis; Revilla, Yolanda
2009-01-01
African swine fever virus (ASFV), like other complex DNA viruses, deploys a variety of strategies to evade the host's defence systems, such as inflammatory and immune responses and cell death. Here, we analyse the modifications in the translational machinery induced by ASFV. During ASFV infection, eIF4G and eIF4E are phosphorylated (Ser1108 and Ser209, respectively), whereas 4E-BP1 is hyperphosphorylated at early times post infection and hypophosphorylated after 18 h. Indeed, a potent increase in eIF4F assembly is observed in ASFV-infected cells, which is prevented by rapamycin treatment. Phosphorylation of eIF4E, eIF4GI and 4E-BP1 is important to enhance viral protein production, but is not essential for ASFV infection as observed in rapamycin- or CGP57380-treated cells. Nevertheless, eIF4F components are indispensable for ASFV protein synthesis and virus spread, since eIF4E or eIF4G depletion in COS-7 or Vero cells strongly prevents accumulation of viral proteins and decreases virus titre. In addition, eIF4F is not only activated but also redistributed within the viral factories at early times of infection, while eIF4G and eIF4E are surrounding these areas at late times. In fact, other components of translational machinery such as eIF2α, eIF3b, eIF4E, eEF2 and ribosomal P protein are enriched in areas surrounding ASFV factories. Notably, the mitochondrial network is polarized in ASFV-infected cells co-localizing with ribosomes. Thus, translation and ATP synthesis seem to be coupled and compartmentalized at the periphery of viral factories. At later times after ASFV infection, polyadenylated mRNAs disappear from the cytoplasm of Vero cells, except within the viral factories. The distribution of these pools of mRNAs is similar to the localization of viral late mRNAs. Therefore, degradation of cellular polyadenylated mRNAs and recruitment of the translation machinery to viral factories may contribute to the inhibition of host protein synthesis, facilitating ASFV protein production in infected cells. PMID:19714237
1987-12-01
Appendix D: Macro Listings D-1 Appendix E: MATRIXx Simulation E-1 Bibiliography Vita iv e List of Figures Figure Page 1-1 Self -Tuning Regulator 6 2-1 AFTI...Command 59 4-25 Yaw Rate Command - Three Pulses 60 4-26 Adaptive Yaw Rate Respose - Three Pulses 61 4-27 Adaptive Pitch Angle Response - Three Pulses 62 4...several types of adaptive controllers (regulators). Three of the simplest controllers are gain scheduling, model reference, and self -tuning
RADHOT: A Radiation Hydrodynamics Code for Weapon Effects Calculation.
1981-03-01
h4A ( :: [ l), t.110 )" *- 7470 -C - C... C LUMI1LTI A F ’ :: ISUfI ----- --------------- 7480= P2 GM I ’: ;,,l. II 7490C:, A ......... ’ R..E I:I ’ S...AD-AlO 637 AIR FORCE INST OF TECH WRIGHTPATTERSON AFL O SCHOOETC F /8 12/ RADHOT: A RADIATION HYDRODYNAMICS CODE FOR WEAPON EFFECTS CALCU--ETC(U...change of internal energy due to radiation atj rad F monochromatic flux V F -, F inward and outward-going monochromatic fluxes at Va cell boundary F -, F1
40 CFR Table 5 of Subpart Aaaaaaa... - Applicability of General Provisions to Subpart AAAAAAA
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... must be conducted. § 63.7(e)(2)-(4) Conduct of Performance Tests and Data Reduction Yes. § 63.7(f)-(h) Use of Alternative Test Method; Data Analysis, Recordkeeping, and Reporting; and Waiver of Performance... CMS requirements. § 63.8(e)-(f) CMS Performance Evaluation Yes. § 63.8(g)(1)-(4) Data Reduction...
Ankers, John M; Awais, Raheela; Jones, Nicholas A; Boyd, James; Ryan, Sheila; Adamson, Antony D; Harper, Claire V; Bridge, Lloyd; Spiller, David G; Jackson, Dean A; Paszek, Pawel; Sée, Violaine; White, Michael RH
2016-01-01
Dynamic cellular systems reprogram gene expression to ensure appropriate cellular fate responses to specific extracellular cues. Here we demonstrate that the dynamics of Nuclear Factor kappa B (NF-κB) signalling and the cell cycle are prioritised differently depending on the timing of an inflammatory signal. Using iterative experimental and computational analyses, we show physical and functional interactions between NF-κB and the E2 Factor 1 (E2F-1) and E2 Factor 4 (E2F-4) cell cycle regulators. These interactions modulate the NF-κB response. In S-phase, the NF-κB response was delayed or repressed, while cell cycle progression was unimpeded. By contrast, activation of NF-κB at the G1/S boundary resulted in a longer cell cycle and more synchronous initial NF-κB responses between cells. These data identify new mechanisms by which the cellular response to stress is differentially controlled at different stages of the cell cycle. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.10473.001 PMID:27185527
1983-11-01
C )a IaI Ř aa 36 14 14 o* f iAt NJ *. 4 I E .3 .4 .4 C4 CE .4.4CE @ . ev 13.4 *0 a 4**m r m...NA C 0407 / /1 N 0 E ,. E hh IDETEhEEhE L.6 1.8:(1111_25 JllO MICROCOPY RESOLUTION TEST CHART NATIONAL SuRfAL) PA ,JANDARD t A PERSONNEL TECHNOLOGY 00...A MEANS OF CONFIRMING CULTURAL DIFFERENCES H. C . Triandis, Y. Kashima, E . Shimada & M. Villareal Technical Report ONR-27 NAVY RECRUIT’S
The Use of Statistical Measures to Validate System Dynamics Models
1992-03-01
C15: (T) [W15] +[FORMMSE]CI4 D15: (T) [W12] +B15-$B$19 E15: (T) +C15-$C$19 F15: (T) (W30] +D15*E15 A16: (T) [W15] +[FORMMSE]AI5 B16 : (T) (W331...FORMMSE]BI5 C16: (T) [W151 +[FORMMSE]C15 D16: (T) [W121 + B16 -$B$19 E16: (T) +C16-$C$19 46 F16: (T) [W30] +D16*El6 A17: (T) [W15] +[FORMMSE]A16 F17: (T...W30] @SUM(F7. .F16) A19: (T) CW151 "Mean= B19: (T) [W331 @AVG(B7. . Bl6 ) C19: (T) [W153 QAVG(C7. .C16) E19: (T) 11r= F19: (T) [W30] ((1/A17)*(F17))/((B20
Analysis of Geophysical Data Bases and Models for Spacecraft Interactions.
1986-10-31
Comp. Phys., 12, 124 (1973). 4. A. B. Langdon and B. F. Lasinski, in "Methods in Computational Physics", Volume 9, B. Alder et al, eds., Academic Press...ADA174441. 7. Chen, F.F., Electric Probes, in "Plasma Diagnostic Techniques", ed. by R.H. Huddlestone and L.L. Lennard, Academic Press, N.Y. 1965. 8...q~. i-o raf t p4)51 t i i n , the -"fj’P I f o,A it** t hat p< in1 the spa-Puraft ’- Attitude anid sp, p A~ta t tie I’ ielt iti1,ai .,f IheP maqn e
Stelitano, Debora; Leticia, Yamila Peche; Dalla, Emiliano; Monte, Martin; Piazza, Silvano; Schneider, Claudio
2017-01-01
GTSE1 over-expression has been reported as a potential marker for metastasis in various types of malignancies, including breast cancer. Despite this, the transcriptional regulation of this protein and the causes of its misregulation in tumors remain largely unknown. The aims of this work were to elucidate how GTSE1 is regulated at the transcriptional level and to clarify the mechanism underlying GTSE1-dependent cell functions in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Here, we identified GTSE1 as a novel target gene of the TEAD4 transcription factor, highlighting a role for the YAP and TAZ coactivators in the transcriptional regulation of GTSE1. Moreover, we found that TEAD4 controls the formation of cell protrusions required for cell migration through GTSE1, unveiling a relevant effector role for this protein in the TEAD-dependent cellular functions and confirming TEAD4 role in promoting invasion and metastasis in breast cancer. Finally, we highlighted a role for the pRb-E2F1 pathway in the control of GTSE1 transcription and observed that treatment with drugs targeting the pRb-E2F1 or YAP/TAZ-TEAD pathways dramatically downregulated the expression levels of GTSE1 and of other genes involved in the formation of metastasis, suggesting their potential use in the treatment of TNBC. PMID:28978043
Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) Technical Report Summaries. Third Quarter (CY).
1984-10-01
Iy ?A ’ C .- * tD ’ 0 ~ E 0 41 3nv *i ; I-t u s4*Cw I *0 *L4 . 0 0u -C 0.0 -Az Z%- LL C .I ;; L’v > . --.0 g L’ a LC - L . L! >LI in 06 i E c) I i I...a) In~~~ 111C 0 .I Cto 01 04 4 C U)0 C4 0 0f 0 - I- m 0~ tD X*~ 4** L* C4 0.*aOC n L, .4 1’X ’ 01- 0 0)4 40’ EC M L. (. L1t- CO f 0o Si 04 l 11111...lx 0- 03 0E i( Vu ox ’- 0 I 0IJ. L. .59 M SE 0 i 0 SEh*~~~U hi4 . . td I IA. 2 4, 0 C3 StL 0 an C 64(4 0 0- m *0 0 ScSt h Im 0 m- 0 0-L- SE E, 0x V.C a
30 CFR 943.15 - Approval of Texas regulatory program amendments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
...), (f), .195(a); 785.200(a), (b), (c), (f) through (i); 786.216(p); 788.230(a)(4), (5), (6); 788.232(c...), (4), (b); .129, (a), (b), (1), (3); 780.141(g), (h); .142(b)(11), (c), (d), .146 (a) through (e...; 12.77; 12.111(1)(H); 12.112(b)(4); 12.113(a); 12.118(a) and (c); 12.151(a)(2); 12.158(a) and (c); 12...
1974-08-31
AD-AG G 60 TECHN0141CS INC OAKTON VA F/G 5/9 A SYSTEM APPROACH TO NA Y M4EDICAL EDUCATION AND TRAINING. APPEN--ETC(Ul AUG 74 N00014-69-C-026...nf0 f -4 n -9 i n ISe-rial N"- 0233 _________ 5 i.1 1 NAME R y , n-M TASK ANALYSIS BACKGROUND ,NTN 6- DATA SHEET , 2S . "I S13 •6 - 1. Use No. 2 pencil...n f f t nftft nI= .4 .- i i 0193466760i01A- E Y 1 5 . ...N ! 2 9 2j 7- U u~ U U ’U -U M S D U U . W M 2 MU.U~ .t . • I I s. U, -.UM
Neutronics Investigations for the Lower Part of a Westinghouse SVEA-96+ Assembly
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Murphy, M.F.; Luethi, A.; Seiler, R.
2002-05-15
Accurate critical experiments have been performed for the validation of total fission (F{sub tot}) and {sup 238}U-capture (C{sub 8}) reaction rate distributions obtained with CASMO-4, HELIOS, BOXER, and MCNP4B for the lower axial region of a real Westinghouse SVEA-96+ fuel assembly. The assembly comprised fresh fuel with an average {sup 235}U enrichment of 4.02 wt%, a maximum enrichment of 4.74 wt%, 14 burnable-absorber fuel pins, and full-density water moderation. The experimental configuration investigated was core 1A of the LWR-PROTEUS Phase I project, where 61 different fuel pins, representing {approx}64% of the assembly, were gamma-scanned individually. Calculated (C) and measured (E)more » values have been compared in terms of C/E distributions. For F{sub tot}, the standard deviations are 1.2% for HELIOS, 0.9% for CASMO-4, 0.8% for MCNP4B, and 1.7% for BOXER. Standard deviations of 1.1% for HELIOS, CASMO-4, and MCNP4B and 1.2% for BOXER were obtained in the case of C{sub 8}. Despite the high degree of accuracy observed on the average, it was found that the five burnable-absorber fuel pins investigated showed a noticeable underprediction of F{sub tot}, quite systematically, for the deterministic codes evaluated (average C/E for the burnable-absorber fuel pins in the range 0.974 to 0.988, depending on the code)« less
1975-10-31
A335 Line c~ O AF " Par, Rt ,; L109 4F PFrs, Release. A116 e AM SolIeAoid- $’,’&t &Np "A uG6 4 )6 JI -4? 7*4 194 -S~2-23 A .o0 PROJECT TITLE " 2 -P...ra, DATE ANLYST DATE NODAL SET "od#0 Afff Wf AINOSPACI COMPANY. - ousoN. TtxM B-79 D2-118576 2 SNEAK CIRCUITS NETWORK TREE REV t .10 PROJECT TITLE...TITLE QcDATE ANALYST DATE ]NODAL ...... H0U4705 AIMm fC $FAC( COMPANY NqOU$1Ct., :TM.’$ B-1 22 cc 10~ z -1 in ’ cz d q’ 1.4’ %On 4C -JJ J51r4 =oPc s-e
1983-01-01
M15 0 INC TEXARKANA TEXAS 093818 7840 44 147-83-C0101 D C E 1 2 2 Y129 000 C2 CONSTRUCTION/OTHER AIRFIELD 8 A 3 4 J 018 1 B J 1 1 76 JOWETT INC 147...RENTAL OF EQ/ADP EQUIP 8 A 4 5 J 1013 5 B J 1 I 3u. KETRON INC ION TOTAL 3 825 2 F D2701 1053 N00039-8, 2 D PAlO 1345 N00140- TEXARKANA TEXAS 029859...F4265C KIEBCO FOODS INC 1 4 J 0013H 2017 DLA131 4 J 0013H 2026 DLA13) .1STING OCTOBER - SEPTEMBER FY 83. PAGE 4137 MPC613 ALPHABETIC I I SM 222 V 0
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sorokin, N. I.
2018-04-01
The frequency (ν = 10-1-107 Hz) dependences of electrical conductivity σ(ν) of single crystals of superionic conductor Pb0.9Sc0.1F2.1 (10 mol % ScF3) with fluorite type structure (CaF2) in the temperature range 153-410 K have been investigated. The static bulk conductivity σ dc =1.5 × 10-4 S/cm and average hopping frequency ν h = 1.5 × 107 Hz of charge carriers (mobile ions F-) at room temperature (293 K) have been defined from the σ dc (ν) experimental curves. Enthalpies of thermoactivated processes of ionic conductivity σ dc ( T) (Δ H σ = 0.393 ± 0.005 eV) and dielectric relaxation ν h ( T) (Δ H h = 0.37 ± 0.03 eV) coincide within their errors. A crystal-physical model of fluorine-ion transport in a Pb0.9Sc0.1F2.1 crystal lattice has been proposed. The characteristic parameters of charge carriers have been calculated: concentration n mob = 2.0 × 1021 cm-3, the distance of the hopping d ≈ 0.5 nm and mobility μmob = 4.5 × 10-7 cm2/s V (293 K).
Brize Norton RAF UK. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations. Parts A-F.
1987-11-01
NORTON RAF UK MSC 036490 N 51 45 W 001 35 ELEV 285 FT EBVN PARTS A - F HOURS SUMMARIZED 0000 - 2300 LST PERIOD OF RECORD: HOURLY OBSERVATIONS: AUG 77...cccccc ppp p aa 8 *g"Afi *geaf frfT cce ccI 9 .8 8 tIt cc cpp r as 40 n Recc 999t 99 88 AA so O 11 9pppp,a& &a :"Not vicc pp UCE cc p A9 &a so SO Utif...E 3 i Ll . f T ( Ff I -’Otl 1L V OFSrOll AI 10I%" A Al’ 1 S PV-L’t/M AC II .". N1.1 fU : Z: ,,4 9 SIl I". NPtML .: R .- .4 RaF U4 pLnIOL OF P( COPD
YB-1, the E2F Pathway, and Regulation of Tumor Cell Growth
Samuel, Weini; Cao, Helen; Patel, Rachna; Mehta, Reena; Stern, J. Lewis; Reid, Glen; Woolley, Adele G.; Miller, Lance D.; Black, Michael A; Shelling, Andrew N.; Print, Cristin G.; Braithwaite, Antony W.
2012-01-01
Background Y-box binding factor 1 (YB-1) has been associated with prognosis in many tumor types. Reduced YB-1 expression inhibits tumor cell growth, but the mechanism is unclear. Methods YB-1 mRNA levels were compared with tumor grade and histology using microarray data from 771 breast cancer patients and with disease-free survival and distant metastasis–free survival using data from 375 of those patients who did not receive adjuvant therapy. Microarrays were further searched for genes that had correlated expression with YB-1 mRNA. Small interfering RNA (siRNA) was used to study the effects of reduced YB-1 expression on growth of three tumor cell lines (MCF-7 breast, HCT116 colon, and A549 lung cancer cells), on tumorigenesis by A549 cells in nude mice, and on global transcription in the three cancer cell lines. Reporter gene assays were used to determine whether YB-1 siRNAs affected the expression of E2F1, and chromatin immunoprecipitation was used to determine whether YB-1 bound to various E2F promoters as well as E2F1-regulated promoters. All P values were from two-sided tests. Results YB-1 levels were elevated in more aggressive tumors and were strongly associated with poor disease-free survival and distant metastasis–free survival. YB-1 expression was often associated with the expression of genes with E2F sites in their promoters. Cells expressing YB-1 siRNA grew substantially more slowly than control cells and formed tumors less readily in nude mice. Transcripts that were altered in cancer cell lines with YB-1 siRNA included 32 genes that are components of prognostic gene expression signatures. YB-1 regulated expression of an E2F1 promoter–reporter construct in A549 cells (eg, relative E2F1 promoter activity with control siRNA = 4.04; with YB-1 siRNA = 1.40, difference= −2.64, 95% confidence interval = −3.57 to −1.71, P < .001) and bound to the promoters of several well-defined E2F1 target genes. Conclusion YB-1 expression is associated with the activity of E2F transcription factors and may control tumor cell growth by this mechanism. PMID:22205655
Systems Defense Games: Colonel Blotto, Command and Control
1978-03-30
problems.* 2. SYST ~~EAS ? FRAI.217- E AX,, 2Z1E C4AE:7T :~C~ At. n-person game in coalitional form is described by a chara•ý•,r- i.s•;. fzr..’icn v...be described es (1) €,: - I-7 S b P l. .’[:, j ,- , S I Consider the 3-person game with a characteristic function as follows* Shapley (1959). e *The... game . Specifically, assume that t& e same outcome function f(-,’) de- scribes thesituationatall n targets (battlefields), and further assume that f Is
1979-03-01
Range : 5.9 million kilometers (3.66 million miles) Europa is Jupiter's 2nd Galilean satellite from the planet. Photo taken early morning and through a violet filter. Faint swirls and Linear Patterns show in the equarorial region(which is darker than the poles). The hemisphere shown always faces Jupiter. North is up. Europa is the brightest of the Galilian satellites but shows low contrast on this hemisphere. Density and size is similar to Earth's Moon. Indications of water ice or ground water on surface is shown
Advanced Concepts Theory Annual Report 1986.
1987-08-12
8217(’ . I’ lie o~ f I go veta e Ti TC 1 4 J i t ’’i’i I IIII I I ’e’TT I tlr ’. e I 1tun’ I ll <...i , r i’ alux [l. i i I I t , A 140, . flIT W ,I ’ r F...9 NL EhlhlhhhlhhhhI IIIIIIIIIIIIIIfflfflf EEEEEEEEEEEEEH lllllElllllllE EllllllllhE-EE E /UhiEl/EEEEEI 11111 .0 125 A _j MiCROCOPY RESOLUTIN TEST CHART...ZIPPERING NOZZLE IMPLOSION CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR IMPORTANCE TO UNIFORMITY IN A Z-PINCH ............................... 42 E . OPENING SWITCH AND
Lin, Tsu-Kung; Lin, Hung-Yu; Chen, Shang-Der; Chuang, Yao-Chung; Chuang, Jiin-Haur; Wang, Pei-Wen; Huang, Sheng-Teng; Tiao, Mao-Meng; Chen, Jin-Bor; Liou, Chia-Wei
2012-01-01
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups may contribute to the development of aging-related diseases. A reliable in vitro cellular system for investigating the physiologic significance of mtDNA haplogroups is essential. This study aims to construct and characterize a series of cybrid cell lines harboring variant mtDNA haplogroups collected from healthy Taiwanese volunteers. Cybrid cells harboring different mtDNA haplogroups like B4a, B4b, B4c, B4d, B5, R, F1a, F2, D4e, D4a, D5b, D5a, E, M8, C, and N9a were prepared. Luminex 1000 and full-length mtDNA sequencing were used to confirm that mtDNA haplogroups of transmitochondrial cybrids were identical to their original donors. Cybrid B4b had a significantly lower oxygen consumption rate and higher mitochondrial membrane potential compared to F1a, B5, D5a, D4a, and N9a but had more susceptibility to H(2)O(2)-induced oxidative stress than cybrid F1a, D4a, and N9a. Cybrid N9a had better oxygen consumption and H(2)O(2)-challenged viability compared to B4b, F1a, B5, D5a, and D4a. A series of cybrid cells harboring the main haplogroups of the Taiwanese population with ethnic Chinese background has been developed in vitro. With this mtDNA haplogroup population, the underlying mechanisms of aging-related diseases may be better understood, and therapeutic interventions can be accelerated.
1979-07-01
ARo 1lQ=4,!l1*4TJ 14 152 A; ’AI = 42;k-A\\RD I I t4T j,!. APZVA 42; AAP INT62etO C CH ECK F Pi L~& C CAL Ir #AT I 10k AN%. INT C4 213 I1 08’-- 1L T.A...TC 15.e Lu T%;34J 15C AkRA~kLA INTG235O AR2RJaAA c1k INTO)2j63 15 i 16sA2-ji’sj 14 TC23 I -AA%Arc2A kP2 N f~..e4 J C Ch ECK FC ; L Cv k r 6AL IF... ECK # FOR IAI1k4tJIAT IR1sMT INTERSECTIONtEVALJATE IF RECJIAEU IIT c _c 51 182 JFIIS9..NE.1J) C) T-1 IC2 INTJ;060 * ASoxi INJ TL3C iC GO TOJ I 14- 3
Targeting the eIF4F translation initiation complex: a critical nexus for cancer development.
Pelletier, Jerry; Graff, Jeremy; Ruggero, Davide; Sonenberg, Nahum
2015-01-15
Elevated protein synthesis is an important feature of many cancer cells and often arises as a consequence of increased signaling flux channeled to eukaryotic initiation factor 4F (eIF4F), the key regulator of the mRNA-ribosome recruitment phase of translation initiation. In many cellular and preclinical models of cancer, eIF4F deregulation results in changes in translational efficiency of specific mRNA classes. Importantly, many of these mRNAs code for proteins that potently regulate critical cellular processes, such as cell growth and proliferation, enhanced cell survival and cell migration that ultimately impinge on several hallmarks of cancer, including increased angiogenesis, deregulated growth control, enhanced cellular survival, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, invasion, and metastasis. By being positioned as the molecular nexus downstream of key oncogenic signaling pathways (e.g., Ras, PI3K/AKT/TOR, and MYC), eIF4F serves as a direct link between important steps in cancer development and translation initiation. Identification of mRNAs particularly responsive to elevated eIF4F activity that typifies tumorigenesis underscores the critical role of eIF4F in cancer and raises the exciting possibility of developing new-in-class small molecules targeting translation initiation as antineoplastic agents. ©2014 American Association for Cancer Research.
The Ada (Trade Name) Compiler Validation Capability Implementers’ Guide. Version 1,
1986-12-01
f ADA20.ISI.EDU using the same format as for comments on the RM: Isection x.y.z(pp) Commenter’s Name YY-MM-". Iversion v Itopic brief description of...Operations (Integer) .............. 4-63 4.5.2.e Reltionl and Membership Operations (FixedtFloat) ........... 4-64 4.5.2. f Relational and Membership...Absolute Value Operator (PIxe&M ) .................. 4 4.5.6. Scalar Negation Operator 4.9 " 4.5.6. f Array Negation Operator
Magnetic Trapping of Atomic Nitrogen (14N) and Cotrapping of NH (X3sigma)
2008-11-12
online Diagram of trapping apparatus. The...rb .u ni ts ) Wave number - 48375 (cm-1) In te gr at ed N itr og en F lu or es ce nc e (a rb .u ni ts ) FIG. 2. Color online Integrated nitrogen...nsec) N F lu or es ce nc e (a rb .u ni ts ) (a) (b) N H F lu or es ce nc e (a rb .u ni ts ) FIG. 4. Color online Cotrapping of N and NH, a
Suzuki, Hirokazu; Furusho, Yasuhide; Higashi, Tatsuichiro; Ohnishi, Yasuo; Horinouchi, Sueharu
2006-01-13
Grixazone contains a phenoxazinone chromophore and is a secondary metabolite produced by Streptomyces griseus. In the grixazone biosynthesis gene cluster, griF (encoding a tyrosinase homolog) and griE (encoding a protein similar to copper chaperons for tyrosinases) are encoded. An expression study of GriE and GriF in Escherichia coli showed that GriE activated GriF by transferring copper ions to GriF, as has been observed for a Streptomyces melanogenesis system in which the MelC1 copper chaperon transfers copper ions to MelC2 tyrosinase. In contrast with tyrosinases, GriF showed no monophenolase activity, although it oxidized various o-aminophenols as preferable substrates rather than catechol-type substrates. Deletion of the griEF locus on the chromosome resulted in accumulation of 3-amino-4-hydroxybenzaldehyde (3,4-AHBAL) and its acetylated compound, 3-acetylamino-4-hydroxybenzaldehyde. GriF oxidized 3,4-AHBAL to yield an o-quinone imine derivative, which was then non-enzymatically coupled with another molecule of the o-quinone imine to form a phenoxazinone. The coexistence of N-acetylcysteine in the in vitro oxidation of 3,4-AH-BAL by GriF resulted in the formation of grixazone A, suggesting that the -SH group of N-acetylcysteine is conjugated to the o-quinone imine formed from 3,4-AHBAL and that the conjugate is presumably coupled with another molecule of the o-quinone imine. GriF is thus a novel o-aminophenol oxidase that is responsible for the formation of the phenoxazinone chromophore in the grixazone biosynthetic pathway.
1974-10-01
8217.ypes cf * Surface area analyzer, Quantachreme Corporation, 337 Glen Cove Road, Grcenvale, N.Y. 27 1 1 ^M—^—— 1 1 *m ■ o a* en 00...courtesy of Dr. Joseph Gebhardt. 2. Powder supplied through the courtesy of Mr. William Flock. 3. A. F. McLean, E. A. Fisher and R. J. Bratton, " Brittle ...Materials Design, High Temperature Turbine." AMMRC CTR74-26, Interim Report, April, 1974. 4. A. F. McLean, E. A. Fisher and R. J. Bratton," Brittle
1980-08-01
drain and the 8-inch pipeline are in good operating condition and appear to be well maintained. e. Reservoir Area There are neither slides, rockfalls ...Stability fOpcrc c- ,k- I p. Miscellaneous 1 1I I L Project ._Dheet___ _.. Subject ABy Gi ___ A _ A _Chk. by I 0 Q I 40 CiQI /" e6dn-r-f/aa /Ortf e / 7, 4 o
Chi, Wei-Jie; Li, Quan-Song; Li, Ze-Sheng
2016-03-21
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) with organic small molecules as hole transport materials (HTMs) have attracted considerable attention due to their power conversion efficiencies as high as 20%. In the present work, three new spiro-type hole transport materials with spiro-cores, i.e. Spiro-F1, Spiro-F2 and Spiro-F3, are investigated by using density functional theory combined with the Marcus theory and Einstein relation. Based on the calculated and experimental highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) levels of 30 reference molecules, an empirical equation, which can predict the HOMO levels of hole transport materials accurately, is proposed. Moreover, a simplified method, in which the hole transport pathways are simplified to be one-dimensional, is presented and adopted to qualitatively compare the molecular hole mobilities. The calculated results show that the perovskite solar cells with the new hole transport materials can have higher open-circuit voltages due to the lower HOMO levels of Spiro-F1 (-5.31 eV), Spiro-F2 (-5.42 eV) and Spiro-F3 (-5.10 eV) compared with that of Spiro-OMeTAD (-5.09 eV). Furthermore, the hole mobilities of Spiro-F1 (1.75 × 10(-2) cm(2) V(-1) s(-1)) and Spiro-F3 (7.59 × 10(-3) cm(2) V(-1) s(-1)) are 3.1 and 1.4 times that of Spiro-OMeTAD (5.65 × 10(-3) cm(2) V(-1) s(-1)) respectively, due to small reorganization energies and large transfer integrals. Interestingly, the stability properties of Spiro-F1 and Spiro-F2 are shown to be comparable to that of Spiro-OMeTAD, and the dimers of Spiro-F2 and Spiro-F3 possess better stability than that of Spiro-OMeTAD. Taking into consideration the appropriate HOMO level, improved hole mobility and enhanced stability, Spiro-F1 and Spiro-F3 may become the most promising alternatives to Spiro-OMeTAD. The present work offers a new design strategy and reliable calculation methods towards the development of excellent organic small molecules as HTMs for highly efficient and stable PSCs.
E2F transcription factors and digestive system malignancies: how much do we know?
Xanthoulis, Athanasios; Tiniakos, Dina G
2013-06-07
E2F family of transcription factors regulates various cellular functions related to cell cycle and apoptosis. Its individual members have traditionally been classified into activators and repressors, based on in vitro studies. However their contribution in human cancer is more complicated and difficult to predict. We review current knowledge on the expression of E2Fs in digestive system malignancies and its clinical implications for patient prognosis and treatment. E2F1, the most extensively studied member and the only one with prognostic value, exhibits a tumor-suppressing activity in esophageal, gastric and colorectal adenocarcinoma, and in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), whereas in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma may function as a tumor-promoter. In the latter malignancies, E2F1 immunohistochemical expression has been correlated with higher tumor grade and worse patient survival, whereas in esophageal, gastric and colorectal adenocarcinomas is a marker of increased patient survival. E2F2 has only been studied in colorectal cancer, where its role is not considered significant. E2F4's role in colorectal, gastric and hepatic carcinogenesis is tumor-promoting. E2F8 is strongly upregulated in human HCC, thus possibly contributing to hepatocarcinogenesis. Adenoviral transfer of E2F as gene therapy to sensitize pancreatic cancer cells for chemotherapeutic agents has been used in experimental studies. Other therapeutic strategies are yet to be developed, but it appears that targeted approaches using E2F-agonists or antagonists should take into account the tissue-dependent function of each E2F member. Further understanding of E2Fs' contribution in cellular functions in vivo would help clarify their role in carcinogenesis.
Anty, R; Favre, G; Coilly, A; Rossignol, E; Houssel-Debry, P; Duvoux, C; De Ledinghen, V; Di Martino, V; Leroy, V; Radenne, S; Kamar, N; Canva, V; D'Alteroche, L; Durand, F; Dumortier, J; Lebray, P; Besch, C; Tran, A; Canivet, C M; Botta-Fridlund, D; Montialoux, H; Moreno, C; Conti, F; Silvain, C; Perré, P; Habersetzer, F; Abergel, A; Debette-Gratien, M; Dharancy, S; Esnault, V L M; Fougerou-Leurent, C; Cagnot, C; Diallo, A; Veislinger, A; Danjou, H; Samuel, D; Pageaux, G-P; Duclos-Vallée, J-C
2018-06-01
In liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus recurrence, there is concern about renal safety of sofosbuvir-based regimens. Changes in serum creatinine or in the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) under treatment are used to look for possible renal toxicity. However, serum creatinine and eGFR are highly variable. To analyse renal function trajectory with numerous assays of serum creatinine over a long period of time. In a multicentre cohort of 139 patients, the eGFR was obtained from serum creatinine using the Chronic Kidney Disease-Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equation. Slopes of eGFR were defined as a change in eGFR during a period divided by time. Pre-treatment, on-treatment and post-treatment periods were 9 months, 3-9 months and 4.5 months. Interactions between eGFR slopes and the pre-treatment eGFR, use of ribavirin or mycophenolate mofetil, and stage of fibrosis were addressed. On-treatment eGFR slopes were separated in tertiles. Pre- and post-treatment eGFR slopes were compared globally and according to tertiles. The post-treatment eGFR slope was significantly better than pre-treatment eGFR slope (+0.18 (IQR -0.76 to +1.32) vs -0.11 (IQR -1.01 to +0.73) mL/min/1.73 m 2 /month, P = 0.03) independently of the pre-treatment eGFR (P = 0.99), ribavirin administration (P = 0.26), mycophenolate mofetil administration (P = 0.51) and stage of fibrosis (F3 and F4 vs lower stages, P = 0.18; F4 vs lower stages, P = 0.08; F4 Child-Pugh B and C vs lower stages, P = 0.38). Tertiles of on-treatment eGFR slopes were -1.71 (IQR -2.54 to -1.48), -0.78 (IQR -1.03 to -0.36) and +0.75 (IQR +0.28 to +1.47) mL/min/1.73 m 2 /month. Pre- and post-treatment eGFR slopes were not significantly different according to tertiles (respectively, P = 0.34, 0.08, 0.73). The eGFR varies during treatment and gives a confusing picture of the renal safety of sofosbuvir-based regimens. In contrast, longitudinal assessment of the eGFR shows a rising trajectory over longer time, meaning that these therapies are safe for the kidneys in our cohort of liver transplant recipients. © 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Izydore, Robert A; Jones, Joseph T; Mogesa, Benjamin; Swain, Ira N; Davis-Ward, Ronda G; Daniels, Dwayne L; Kpakima, Felicia Frazier; Spaulding-Phifer, Sharnelle T
2014-04-04
The synthesis of the title compounds was carried out by reacting dicarboxylic acid chlorides with oximes in the presence of excess triethylamine. Disubstituted malonyl chlorides gave 2-alkenyl-4,4-dialkyl-3,5-isoxazolidinediones (8a-f) and 2,2'-ethylidene-bis[4,4-dialkyl-3,5-isoxazolidinedione]s (9a-f). Compounds 9 were formed from 8 and its N-unsubstituted 3,5-isoxazolidinedione decomposition product. Phthaloyl chlorides reacted with acetone oxime to yield 3-(1-methylethenyl)-1H-2,3-benzoxazine-1,4(3H)-diones (16a-e). Products 16 spontaneously decomposed to give N-unsubstituted 1H-2,3-benzoxazine-1,4(3H)-diones (17a-e) at rates that were dependent on temperature and solvent. Kinetic studies showed that two of the compounds decomposed by zero-order kinetics under neutral conditions. Butanedioyl chloride did not produce a cyclic product.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knight, Lon B., Jr.; Gregory, Brian W.; Hill, Devon W.; Arrington, C. A.; Momose, Takamasa; Shida, Tadamasa
1991-01-01
Various isotopic forms of the methyl fluoride cation 12CH3F+, 13CH3F+, and 12CH2DF+ have been generated by photoionization at 16.8 eV and separately by electron bombardment at 50 eV. The first electron-spin-resonance (ESR) results are reported for this radical cation which was isolated in neon matrices at 4 K. The measured A tensors or nuclear hyperfine parameters were compared with the results obtained from various computational approaches. Surprising observations were the large amounts of spin density on the methyl group, especially the hydrogen atoms, and the extreme differences in the deuterated spectra compared to the nondeuterated case. The presence of a single D atom apparently acts to prevent dynamic Jahn-Teller averaging which makes the methyl hydrogens equivalent on the ESR time scale. Such a dramatic Jahn-Teller effect has been previously observed for the similar methane cations CH+4 and CH2D+2. The magnetic parameters for CH2DF+ in neon at 4 K are gX=2.0032(5), gY=2.0106(8), and gZ=2.0120(5); for H: AX = 483(1), AY=476(1), and AZ=483(1) MHz; for D: ‖AX‖=5.0(3), ‖AY‖<3, and ‖AZ‖=7.1(3) MHz; for 19F : AX=965(1), AY=-130(2), and AZ=-166(1) MHz. For CH3F+, the g tensor and 19F A tensor were similar to those above but the H atoms were equivalent with values of AX=317(1), AY=323(2), and AZ=312 MHz.
Shikonin Derivative DMAKO-05 Inhibits Akt Signal Activation and Melanoma Proliferation.
Yang, Yao-Yao; He, Hui-Qiong; Cui, Jia-Hua; Nie, Yun-Juan; Wu, Ya-Xian; Wang, Rui; Wang, Gang; Zheng, Jun-Nian; Ye, Richard D; Wu, Qiong; Li, Shao-Shun; Qian, Feng
2016-06-01
DMAKO-05((S)-1-((5E,8E)-5,8-bis(hydroxyimino)-1,4-dimethoxy-5,8-dihydronaphthalen-2-yl)-4-methylpent-3-enyl 3-methylbutanoate) is a novel oxime derivative of shikonin, the major component extracted from Chinese herb Lithospermun erythrorhizon. Here, we report that DMAKO-05 had an antitumor activity against mouse melanoma cell line B16F0. Our studies indicated that DMAKO-05 not only inhibited B16F0 proliferation and migration but also led to cell cycle arrest at G1 phase and cell apoptosis, in which DMAKO-05 triggered mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis signal including caspase-9/3 and PARP. In response to DMAKO-05 treatment, the Akt-mediated survival signals were remarkably attenuated in B16F0 cells. Collectively, DMAKO-05 has a strong cytotoxicity in B16F0 cells via inhibiting Akt activation, inducing G1 arrest, and promoting B16F0 cell apoptosis. DMAKO-05 might serve as a potential candidate lead compound for melanoma. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S.
1980-03-01
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Evaluation of Lubrication Systems for Isothermal Forging of Alpha-Beta and Beta Titanium Alloys.
1977-11-01
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Installation Restoration Program Records Search for Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada.
1982-06-01
VPAL3C CZaer:ori Sabt~rv* 1 0.22 (’tus qU~ijy PFA TWP"th’..y CSwbscore 2 0.30 plus .’.C.121 tieSakscoro x 0.24 plusTHIS ?AaE I’S B3SI QU . Fw.TV .r...Negative 4A.1 tion. Chicago 6. Illinois.) Flash Point. Tag Closed Cup. min 100’ F. 1380 F. 4.4.1 3. REQUIREMENTS1 Sulfuric add ab- sorption . max. ..- 5% 9