Histone Methylation and Epigenetic Silencing in Breast Cancer
2008-07-01
Curr Opin Genet Dev 14(2): 155-164. Caretti, G ., Di Padova, M., Micales, B., Lyons, G.E., and Sartorelli, V. 2004. The Polycomb Ezh2...tissues. Cancer Res 66(8): 4095-4099. Egger, G ., Liang, G ., Aparicio, A., and Jones, P.A. 2004. Epigenetics in human disease and prospects for...Widschwendter, M., Fiegl, H., Egle, D., Mueller-Holzner, E., Spizzo, G ., Marth, C., Weisenberger, D.J., Campan, M., Young, J., Jacobs, I., and Laird
The Opposing Roles of Nucleophosmin and the ARF Tumor Suppressor in Breast Cancer
2005-04-01
3. Bertwistle, D ., M. Sugimoto, and C . J. Sherr. 2004. Physical and functional interactions of the Arf tumor suppressor protein with nucleophosmin...Kindbeiter, J. C . Sanchez, A. Greco, D . Hochstrasser, and J. J. Diaz. 2002. Functional proteomic analysis of human nucleolus. Mol Biol Cell 13:4100-9...21. Sherr, C . J., and J. D . Weber. 2000. The ARF/p53 pathway. Curr Opin Genet Dev 10:94-9. 22. Spector, D . L., R. L. Ochs, and H. Busch. 1984
Clinical characteristics and current therapies for inherited retinal degenerations.
Sahel, José-Alain; Marazova, Katia; Audo, Isabelle
2014-10-16
Inherited retinal degenerations (IRDs) encompass a large group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous diseases that affect approximately 1 in 3000 people (>2 million people worldwide) (Bessant DA, Ali RR, Bhattacharya SS. 2001. Molecular genetics and prospects for therapy of the inherited retinal dystrophies. Curr Opin Genet Dev 11: 307-316.). IRDs may be inherited as Mendelian traits or through mitochondrial DNA, and may affect the entire retina (e.g., rod-cone dystrophy, also known as retinitis pigmentosa, cone dystrophy, cone-rod dystrophy, choroideremia, Usher syndrome, and Bardet-Bidel syndrome) or be restricted to the macula (e.g., Stargardt disease, Best disease, and Sorsby fundus dystrophy), ultimately leading to blindness. IRDs are a major cause of severe vision loss, with profound impact on patients and society. Although IRDs remain untreatable today, significant progress toward therapeutic strategies for IRDs has marked the past two decades. This progress has been based on better understanding of the pathophysiological pathways of these diseases and on technological advances. Copyright © 2015 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; all rights reserved.
Clinical Characteristics and Current Therapies for Inherited Retinal Degenerations
Sahel, José-Alain; Marazova, Katia; Audo, Isabelle
2015-01-01
Inherited retinal degenerations (IRDs) encompass a large group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous diseases that affect approximately 1 in 3000 people (>2 million people worldwide) (Bessant DA, Ali RR, Bhattacharya SS. 2001. Molecular genetics and prospects for therapy of the inherited retinal dystrophies. Curr Opin Genet Dev 11: 307–316.). IRDs may be inherited as Mendelian traits or through mitochondrial DNA, and may affect the entire retina (e.g., rod–cone dystrophy, also known as retinitis pigmentosa, cone dystrophy, cone–rod dystrophy, choroideremia, Usher syndrome, and Bardet-Bidel syndrome) or be restricted to the macula (e.g., Stargardt disease, Best disease, and Sorsby fundus dystrophy), ultimately leading to blindness. IRDs are a major cause of severe vision loss, with profound impact on patients and society. Although IRDs remain untreatable today, significant progress toward therapeutic strategies for IRDs has marked the past two decades. This progress has been based on better understanding of the pathophysiological pathways of these diseases and on technological advances. PMID:25324231
Lang, Julien; Vigouroux, Armelle; Planamente, Sara; El Sahili, Abbas; Blin, Pauline; Aumont-Nicaise, Magali; Dessaux, Yves; Moréra, Solange; Faure, Denis
2014-10-01
By modifying the nuclear genome of its host, the plant pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens induces the development of plant tumours in which it proliferates. The transformed plant tissues accumulate uncommon low molecular weight compounds called opines that are growth substrates for A. tumefaciens. In the pathogen-induced niche (the plant tumour), a selective advantage conferred by opine assimilation has been hypothesized, but not experimentally demonstrated. Here, using genetics and structural biology, we deciphered how the pathogen is able to bind opines and use them to efficiently compete in the plant tumour. We report high resolution X-ray structures of the periplasmic binding protein (PBP) NocT unliganded and liganded with the opine nopaline (a condensation product of arginine and α-ketoglurate) and its lactam derivative pyronopaline. NocT exhibited an affinity for pyronopaline (K(D) of 0.6 µM) greater than that for nopaline (KD of 3.7 µM). Although the binding-mode of the arginine part of nopaline/pyronopaline in NocT resembled that of arginine in other PBPs, affinity measurement by two different techniques showed that NocT did not bind arginine. In contrast, NocT presented specific residues such as M117 to stabilize the bound opines. NocT relatives that exhibit the nopaline/pyronopaline-binding mode were only found in genomes of the genus Agrobacterium. Transcriptomics and reverse genetics revealed that A. tumefaciens uses the same pathway for assimilating nopaline and pyronopaline. Fitness measurements showed that NocT is required for a competitive colonization of the plant tumour by A. tumefaciens. Moreover, even though the Ti-plasmid conjugal transfer was not regulated by nopaline, the competitive advantage gained by the nopaline-assimilating Ti-plasmid donors led to a preferential horizontal propagation of this Ti-plasmid amongst the agrobacteria colonizing the plant-tumour niche. This work provided structural and genetic evidences to support the niche construction paradigm in bacterial pathogens.
Planamente, Sara; El Sahili, Abbas; Blin, Pauline; Aumont-Nicaise, Magali; Dessaux, Yves; Moréra, Solange; Faure, Denis
2014-01-01
By modifying the nuclear genome of its host, the plant pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens induces the development of plant tumours in which it proliferates. The transformed plant tissues accumulate uncommon low molecular weight compounds called opines that are growth substrates for A. tumefaciens. In the pathogen-induced niche (the plant tumour), a selective advantage conferred by opine assimilation has been hypothesized, but not experimentally demonstrated. Here, using genetics and structural biology, we deciphered how the pathogen is able to bind opines and use them to efficiently compete in the plant tumour. We report high resolution X-ray structures of the periplasmic binding protein (PBP) NocT unliganded and liganded with the opine nopaline (a condensation product of arginine and α-ketoglurate) and its lactam derivative pyronopaline. NocT exhibited an affinity for pyronopaline (KD of 0.6 µM) greater than that for nopaline (KD of 3.7 µM). Although the binding-mode of the arginine part of nopaline/pyronopaline in NocT resembled that of arginine in other PBPs, affinity measurement by two different techniques showed that NocT did not bind arginine. In contrast, NocT presented specific residues such as M117 to stabilize the bound opines. NocT relatives that exhibit the nopaline/pyronopaline-binding mode were only found in genomes of the genus Agrobacterium. Transcriptomics and reverse genetics revealed that A. tumefaciens uses the same pathway for assimilating nopaline and pyronopaline. Fitness measurements showed that NocT is required for a competitive colonization of the plant tumour by A. tumefaciens. Moreover, even though the Ti-plasmid conjugal transfer was not regulated by nopaline, the competitive advantage gained by the nopaline-assimilating Ti-plasmid donors led to a preferential horizontal propagation of this Ti-plasmid amongst the agrobacteria colonizing the plant-tumour niche. This work provided structural and genetic evidences to support the niche construction paradigm in bacterial pathogens. PMID:25299655
Genetics Home Reference: cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia
... on PubMed Marcucci G, Haferlach T, Döhner H. Molecular genetics of adult acute myeloid leukemia: prognostic and therapeutic ... on PubMed Sanders MA, Valk PJ. The evolving molecular genetic landscape in acute myeloid leukaemia. Curr Opin Hematol. ...
Marty, Loïc; Vigouroux, Armelle; Aumont-Nicaise, Magali; Dessaux, Yves; Faure, Denis; Moréra, Solange
2016-01-01
Agrobacterium tumefaciens pathogens genetically modify their host plants to drive the synthesis of opines in plant tumors. Opines are either sugar phosphodiesters or the products of condensed amino acids with ketoacids or sugars. They are Agrobacterium nutrients and imported into the bacterial cell via periplasmic-binding proteins (PBPs) and ABC-transporters. Mannopine, an opine from the mannityl-opine family, is synthesized from an intermediate named deoxy-fructosyl-glutamine (DFG), which is also an opine and abundant Amadori compound (a name used for any derivative of aminodeoxysugars) present in decaying plant materials. The PBP MotA is responsible for mannopine import in mannopine-assimilating agrobacteria. In the nopaline-opine type agrobacteria strain, SocA protein was proposed as a putative mannopine binding PBP, and AttC protein was annotated as a mannopine binding-like PBP. Structural data on mannityl-opine-PBP complexes is currently lacking. By combining affinity data with analysis of seven x-ray structures at high resolution, we investigated the molecular basis of MotA, SocA, and AttC interactions with mannopine and its DFG precursor. Our work demonstrates that AttC is not a mannopine-binding protein and reveals a specific binding pocket for DFG in SocA with an affinity in nanomolar range. Hence, mannopine would not be imported into nopaline-type agrobacteria strains. In contrast, MotA binds both mannopine and DFG. We thus defined one mannopine and two DFG binding signatures. Unlike mannopine-PBPs, selective DFG-PBPs are present in a wide diversity of bacteria, including Actinobacteria, α-,β-, and γ-proteobacteria, revealing a common role of this Amadori compound in pathogenic, symbiotic, and opportunistic bacteria. PMID:27609514
The dev Operon Regulates the Timing of Sporulation during Myxococcus xanthus Development.
Rajagopalan, Ramya; Kroos, Lee
2017-05-15
Myxococcus xanthus undergoes multicellular development when starved. Thousands of rod-shaped cells coordinate their movements and aggregate into mounds in which cells differentiate into spores. Mutations in the dev operon impair development. The dev operon encompasses a clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat-associated (CRISPR-Cas) system. Null mutations in devI , a small gene at the beginning of the dev operon, suppress the developmental defects caused by null mutations in the downstream devR and devS genes but failed to suppress defects caused by a small in-frame deletion in devT We provide evidence that the original mutant has a second-site mutation. We show that devT null mutants exhibit developmental defects indistinguishable from devR and devS null mutants, and a null mutation in devI suppresses the defects of a devT null mutation. The similarity of DevTRS proteins to components of the CRISPR-associated complex for antiviral defense (Cascade), together with our molecular characterization of dev mutants, support a model in which DevTRS form a Cascade-like subcomplex that negatively autoregulates dev transcript accumulation and prevents DevI overproduction that would strongly inhibit sporulation. Our results also suggest that DevI transiently inhibits sporulation when regulated normally. The mechanism of transient inhibition may involve MrpC, a key transcription factor, whose translation appears to be weakly inhibited by DevI. Finally, our characterization of a devI devS mutant indicates that very little exo transcript is required for sporulation, which is surprising since Exo proteins help form the polysaccharide spore coat. IMPORTANCE CRISPR-Cas systems typically function as adaptive immune systems in bacteria. The dev CRISPR-Cas system of M. xanthus has been proposed to prevent bacteriophage infection during development, but how dev controls sporulation has been elusive. Recent evidence supported a model in which DevR and DevS prevent overproduction of DevI, a predicted 40-residue inhibitor of sporulation. We provide genetic evidence that DevT functions together with DevR and DevS to prevent DevI overproduction. We also show that spores form about 6 h earlier in mutants lacking devI than in the wild type. Only a minority of natural isolates appear to have a functional dev promoter and devI , suggesting that a functional dev CRISPR-Cas system evolved recently in niches where delayed sporulation and/or protection from bacteriophage infection proved advantageous. Copyright © 2017 American Society for Microbiology.
The dev Operon Regulates the Timing of Sporulation during Myxococcus xanthus Development
Rajagopalan, Ramya
2017-01-01
ABSTRACT Myxococcus xanthus undergoes multicellular development when starved. Thousands of rod-shaped cells coordinate their movements and aggregate into mounds in which cells differentiate into spores. Mutations in the dev operon impair development. The dev operon encompasses a clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat-associated (CRISPR-Cas) system. Null mutations in devI, a small gene at the beginning of the dev operon, suppress the developmental defects caused by null mutations in the downstream devR and devS genes but failed to suppress defects caused by a small in-frame deletion in devT. We provide evidence that the original mutant has a second-site mutation. We show that devT null mutants exhibit developmental defects indistinguishable from devR and devS null mutants, and a null mutation in devI suppresses the defects of a devT null mutation. The similarity of DevTRS proteins to components of the CRISPR-associated complex for antiviral defense (Cascade), together with our molecular characterization of dev mutants, support a model in which DevTRS form a Cascade-like subcomplex that negatively autoregulates dev transcript accumulation and prevents DevI overproduction that would strongly inhibit sporulation. Our results also suggest that DevI transiently inhibits sporulation when regulated normally. The mechanism of transient inhibition may involve MrpC, a key transcription factor, whose translation appears to be weakly inhibited by DevI. Finally, our characterization of a devI devS mutant indicates that very little exo transcript is required for sporulation, which is surprising since Exo proteins help form the polysaccharide spore coat. IMPORTANCE CRISPR-Cas systems typically function as adaptive immune systems in bacteria. The dev CRISPR-Cas system of M. xanthus has been proposed to prevent bacteriophage infection during development, but how dev controls sporulation has been elusive. Recent evidence supported a model in which DevR and DevS prevent overproduction of DevI, a predicted 40-residue inhibitor of sporulation. We provide genetic evidence that DevT functions together with DevR and DevS to prevent DevI overproduction. We also show that spores form about 6 h earlier in mutants lacking devI than in the wild type. Only a minority of natural isolates appear to have a functional dev promoter and devI, suggesting that a functional dev CRISPR-Cas system evolved recently in niches where delayed sporulation and/or protection from bacteriophage infection proved advantageous. PMID:28264995
Genetics Home Reference: fragile X syndrome
... Citation on PubMed Koukoui SD, Chaudhuri A. Neuroanatomical, molecular genetic, and behavioral correlates of fragile X syndrome. Brain ... GJ, Dictenberg J. The fragile X syndrome: from molecular genetics to neurobiology. Ment Retard Dev Disabil Res Rev. ...
Jaeschke, Anja; Hartkamp, Joerg; Saitoh, Masao; Roworth, Wendy; Nobukuni, Takahiro; Hodges, Angela; Sampson, Julian; Thomas, George; Lamb, Richard
2002-01-01
The evolution of mitogenic pathways has led to the parallel requirement for negative control mechanisms, which prevent aberrant growth and the development of cancer. Principally, such negative control mechanisms are represented by tumor suppressor genes, which normally act to constrain cell proliferation (Macleod, K. 2000. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 10:81–93). Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is an autosomal-dominant genetic disorder, characterized by mutations in either TSC1 or TSC2, whose gene products hamartin (TSC1) and tuberin (TSC2) constitute a putative tumor suppressor complex (TSC1-2; van Slegtenhorst, M., M. Nellist, B. Nagelkerken, J. Cheadle, R. Snell, A. van den Ouweland, A. Reuser, J. Sampson, D. Halley, and P. van der Sluijs. 1998. Hum. Mol. Genet. 7:1053–1057). Little is known with regard to the oncogenic target of TSC1-2, however recent genetic studies in Drosophila have shown that S6 kinase (S6K) is epistatically dominant to TSC1-2 (Tapon, N., N. Ito, B.J. Dickson, J.E. Treisman, and I.K. Hariharan. 2001. Cell. 105:345–355; Potter, C.J., H. Huang, and T. Xu. 2001. Cell. 105:357–368). Here we show that loss of TSC2 function in mammalian cells leads to constitutive S6K1 activation, whereas ectopic expression of TSC1-2 blocks this response. Although activation of wild-type S6K1 and cell proliferation in TSC2-deficient cells is dependent on the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), by using an S6K1 variant (GST-ΔC-S6K1), which is uncoupled from mTOR signaling, we demonstrate that TSC1-2 does not inhibit S6K1 via mTOR. Instead, we show by using wortmannin and dominant interfering alleles of phosphatidylinositide-3-OH kinase (PI3K) that increased S6K1 activation is contingent upon the suppression of TSC2 function by PI3K in normal cells and is PI3K independent in TSC2-deficient cells. PMID:12403809
Genetics Home Reference: congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency
... Leeb T, Naim HY. Novel mutations in the human sucrase-isomaltase gene (SI) that cause congenital carbohydrate malabsorption. Hum Mutat. 2006 Jan;27(1):119. Citation on PubMed Sibley E. Carbohydrate intolerance. Curr Opin Gastroenterol. 2004 Mar;20(2):162-7. Citation on PubMed More ...
Using HexSim to link demography and genetics in animal and plant simulations
Simulation models are essential for understanding the effects of land management practices and environmental drivers, including landscape change, shape population genetic structure and persistence probabilities. The emerging field of eco-evolutionary modeling is beginning to dev...
A novel measure of ewe efficiency for breeding and benchmarking purposes.
McHugh, Nóirín; Pabiou, Thierry; McDermott, Kevin; Wall, Eamon; Berry, Donagh P
2018-06-04
Ewe efficiency has traditionally been defined as the ratio of litter weight to ewe weight; given the statistical properties of ratio traits, an alternative strategy is proposed in the present study. The concept of using the deviation in performance of an animal from the population norm has grown in popularity as a measure of animal-level efficiency. The objective of the present study was to define novel measures of efficiency for sheep, which considers the combined weight of a litter of lambs relative to the weight of their dam, and vice versa. Two novel traits, representing the deviation in total litter weight at 40 d (DEV40L) or weaning (DEVweanL), were calculated as the residuals of a statistical model, with litter weight as the dependent variable and with the fixed effects of litter rearing size, contemporary group, and ewe weight. The deviation in ewe weight at 40-d postlambing (DEV40E) or weaning (DEVweanE) was derived using a similar approach but with ewe weight and litter weight interchanged as the dependent variable. Variance components for each trait were estimated by first deriving the litter or ewe weight deviation phenotype and subsequently estimating the variance components. The phenotypic SD in DEV40L and DEVweanL was 8.46 and 15.37 kg, respectively; the mean litter weight at 40 d and weaning was 30.97 and 47.68 kg, respectively. The genetic SD and heritability for DEV40L was 2.65 kg and 0.12, respectively. For DEVweanL, the genetic SD and heritability was 4.94 kg and 0.13, respectively. The average ewe weight at 40-d postlambing and at weaning was 66.43 and 66.87 kg, respectively. The genetic SD and heritability for DEV40E was 4.33 kg and 0.24, respectively. The heritability estimated for DEVweanE was 0.31. The traits derived in the present study may be useful not only for phenotypic benchmarking of ewes within flock on performance but also for benchmarking flocks against each other; furthermore, the extent of genetic variability in all traits, coupled with the fact that the data required to generate these novel phenotypes are usually readily available, signals huge potential within sheep breeding programs.
Elucidation of a Novel Cell Death Mechanism in Prostate Epithelial Cells
2004-12-01
Biochemistry 2001, 40:3009-3015. Conclusions 4. Demetriou M, Granovsky M, Quaggin S, Dennis JW: Negative64 regulation of T-cell activation and...Dennis JW, Warren CE, Granovsky M, Demetriou M: Genetic defectsin N-glycosylation and cellular diversity in mammals. Curr Opin although the forces
Genetic and Molecular Analysis of the Mechanisms by which TSC Regulates Neuronal Differentiation
2009-03-01
2004 Programmed autophagy in the Drosophila fat body is in- duced by ecdysone through regulation of the PI3K pathway. Dev. Cell 7: 179–192. Sarbassov...embryonic Drosophila CNS. Mech. Dev. 64: 137–151. Scott, R. C., O. Schuldiner and T. P. Neufeld, 2004 Role and reg- ulation of starvation-induced autophagy ...in The Development of Drosophila melanogaster , edited by M. Bates and A. Martinez-Arias. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY
The NeuroDevNet Autism Spectrum Disorders Demonstration Project.
Zwaigenbaum, Lonnie; Scherer, Stephen; Szatmari, Peter; Fombonne, Eric; Bryson, Susan E; Hyde, Krista; Anagnostou, Evdokia; Anognostou, Evdokia; Brian, Jessica; Evans, Alan; Hall, Geoff; Nicholas, David; Roberts, Wendy; Smith, Isabel; Vaillancourt, Tracy; Volden, Joanne
2011-03-01
The NeuroDevNet Autism Spectrum Disorder Demonstration Project interfaces at many levels with the network's research themes and priorities. Our interdisciplinary team aims to improve understanding of genetic factors underlying vulnerability to autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) to develop better diagnostic strategies and, ultimately, to pinpoint molecular pathways relevant to developing biologically based treatments. Linking our existing longitudinal ASD cohorts with both genetics and neuroimaging studies will provide, for the first time, integrated data on how the genetic variation influences brain and behavioral development in ASD. Importantly, as our science progresses and we translate this information to the health care system, we will also educate policy makers, media, and business, so an informed society is prepared to capitalize on new genomic advances and effectively integrate these into health services for the broader community. We believe that this research has the potential to transform assessment and care for individuals with ASD. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Genetics Home Reference: Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy
... Fujii T, Aiba H, Toda T. Seizure-genotype relationship in Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy. Brain Dev. ... for Links Data Files & API Site Map Subscribe Customer Support USA.gov Copyright Privacy Accessibility FOIA Viewers & ...
Genetics Home Reference: CHOPS syndrome
... complex (SEC) and MLL in development and disease. Genes Dev. 2011 Apr 1;25(7):661-72. doi: 10.1101/gad.2015411. Review. Citation ... are genome editing and CRISPR-Cas9? What is precision medicine? What ...
Genetics Home Reference: Smith-Magenis syndrome
... segment most often includes approximately 3.7 million DNA building blocks (base pairs), also written as 3. ... AM, Lupski JR, Potocki L. Cognitive and adaptive behavior profiles in Smith-Magenis syndrome. J Dev Behav ...
Flores-Mireles, Ana Lidia; Eberhard, Anatol; Winans, Stephen C
2012-06-01
Agrobacterium tumefaciens incites plant tumours that produce nutrients called opines, which are utilized by the bacteria during host colonization. Various opines provide sources of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorous, but virtually nothing was previously known about how A. tumefaciens acquires sulphur during colonization. Some strains encode an operon required for the catabolism of the opine octopine. This operon contains a gene, msh, that is predicted to direct the conversion of S-methylmethionine (SMM) and homocysteine (HCys) to two equivalents of methionine. Purified Msh carried out this reaction, suggesting that SMM could be an intermediate in opine catabolism. Purified octopine synthase (Ocs, normally expressed in plant tumours) utilized SMM and pyruvate to produce a novel opine, designated sulfonopine, whose catabolism by the bacteria would regenerate SMM. Sulfonopine was produced by tobacco and Arabidopsis when colonized by A. tumefaciens and was utilized as sole source of sulphur by A. tumefaciens. Purified Ocs also used 13 other proteogenic and non-proteogenic amino acids as substrates, including three that contain sulphur. Sulfonopine and 11 other opines were tested for induction of octopine catabolic operon and all were able to do so. This is the first study of the acquisition of sulphur, an essential element, by this pathogen. © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Genetics Home Reference: dyserythropoietic anemia and thrombocytopenia
... PubMed Crispino JD. GATA1 in normal and malignant hematopoiesis. Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2005 Feb;16(1): ... GATA1 function, a paradigm for transcription factors in hematopoiesis. Mol Cell Biol. 2005 Feb;25(4):1215- ...
Kim, K S; Baek, C H; Lee, J K; Yang, J M; Farrand, S K
2001-06-01
pYDH208, a cosmid clone from the octopine-mannityl opine-type tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid pTi15955 confers utilization of mannopine (MOP) and agropine (AGR) on Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain NT1. NT1 harboring pYDH208 with an insertion mutation in mocC, which codes for MOP oxidoreductase, not only fails to utilize MOP as a sole carbon source, but also was inhibited in its growth by MOP and AGR. In contrast, the growth of mutants with insertions in other tested moc genes was not inhibited by either opine. Growth of strains NT1 or UIA5, a derivative of C58 that lacks pAtC58, was not inhibited by MOP, but growth of NT1 or UIA5 harboring pRE10, which codes for the MOP transport system, was inhibited by the opine. When a clone expressing mocC was introduced, the growth of strain NT1(pRE10) was not inhibited by MOP, although UIA5(pRE10) was still weakly inhibited. In strain NT1(pRE10, mocC), santhopine (SOP), produced by the oxidation of MOP by MocC, was further degraded by functions encoded by pAtC58. These results suggest that MOP and, to a lesser extent, SOP are inhibitory when accumulated intracellularly. The growth of NT1(pRE10), as measured by turbidity and viable cell counts, ceased upon the addition of MOP but restarted in a few hours. Regrowth was partly the result of the outgrowth of spontaneous MOP-resistant mutants and partly the adaptation of cells to MOP in the medium. Chrysopine, isochrysopine, and analogs of MOP in which the glutamine residue is substituted with other amino acids were barely taken up by NT1(pRE10) and were not inhibitory to growth of the strain. Sugar analogs of MOP were inhibitory, and those containing sugars in the D form were more inhibitory than those containing sugars in the L form. MOP analogs containing hexose sugars were more inhibitory than those containing sugars with three, four, or five carbon atoms. Mutants of NT1(pRE10) that are resistant to MOP arose in the zone of growth inhibition. Genetic and physiological analyses indicate that the mutations are located on pRE10 and abolish uptake of the opine.
DevS, a heme-containing two-component oxygen sensor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Ioanoviciu, Alexandra; Yukl, Erik T; Moënne-Loccoz, Pierre; de Montellano, Paul R Ortiz
2007-04-10
Mycobacterium tuberculosis can exist in the actively growing state of the overt disease or in a latent quiescent state that can be induced, among other things, by anaerobiosis. Eradication of the latent state is particularly difficult with the available drugs and requires prolonged treatment. DevS is a member of the DevS-DevR two-component regulatory system that is thought to mediate the cellular response to anaerobiosis. Here we report the cloning, expression, and initial characterization of a truncated version of DevS (DevS642) containing only the N-terminal GAF sensor domain (GAF-A) and of the full-length protein DevS. The DevS truncated construct quantitatively binds heme in a 1:1 stoichiometry, and the complex of the protein with ferrous heme reversibly binds O2, NO, and CO. UV-vis and resonance Raman spectroscopy of the wild-type protein and the H149A mutant confirm that His149 is the proximal ligand to the heme iron atom. While the heme-CO complex is present as two conformers in the GAF-A domain, a single set of [Fe-C-O] vibrations is observed with the full-length protein, suggesting that interactions between domains within DevS influence the distal pocket environment of the heme in the GAF-A domain.
Venter, Leonie; Jansen van Rensburg, Peet J; Loots, Du Toit; Vosloo, Andre; Lindeque, Jeremie Zander
2017-12-15
Abalone have a unique ability to use pyruvate, various amino acids and dehydrogenases, to produce opines as means to prevent the accumulation of NADH during anaerobic conditions. In this study, the theoretical masses, formulae and fragment patterns of butylated opines were used to predict which of these compounds could be found in the abalone adductor muscle using untargeted liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of flight-mass spectrometry. These findings were validated using synthesised opine standards. In essence alanopine, lysopine, strombine and tauropine produced in abalone adductor muscle could be characterised using the highest identification confidence levels. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sabino, Luis G.; Guimarães, Wellinson Gadelha; Costa, Pedro Mikael; Carepo, Marta S. P.; Gondim, Ana C. S.; Lopes, Luiz G. F.; Sousa, Eduardo H. S.
2016-03-01
The aim of this study is to investigate the structural organization and oligomerization properties of the sensory kinase protein DevS using low-angle light scattering (LALS) and gel filtration chromatography (HPLC). In addition, the structural characteristics of FixL and BSA were investigated and compared with DevS to better elucidate LALS technique. DevS is a direct and specific O2 sensing protein in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and acts as an activator of the transcription factor protein DevR. This latter triggers the latency state of tuberculosis under hypoxic conditions. DevS has been briefly evaluated under different conditions of concentration, ionic strength and temperature. LALS and gel filtration (HPLC) analysis were performed right after DevS purification process. The results of LALS for BSA proved to be highly reliable with a Rh value of c.a. 3.7 nm. Considering BSA a globular protein, the molecular weight estimative, using LALS was near 67 KDa, which is reasonably within the value reported in the literature. Preliminary LALS results showed a hydrodynamic radius (Rh) varying from 4.2-15.0 nm for DevS protein, and an average of 6.7 nm. These data supported, along with gel filtration, a dimer (~130 KDa) and tetramer (255 KDa) as the main DevS species. Additionally, it was found higher oligomeric species by gel filtration suggesting either an equilibrium of oligomers or an aggregation process that deserves further studies.
2014-09-01
get install python2.7 python- openssl python-gevent libevent-dev python2.7-dev build-essential make liblapack-dev libmysqlclient-dev python-chardet...apt-get install python-dev openssl python- openssl python-pyasn1 python-twisted • apt-get install subversion • apt-get install authbind 4
Wang, Jichun; Ge, Aimin; Xu, Mengwei; Wang, Zhisheng; Qiao, Yongfeng; Gu, Yiqi; Liu, Chang; Liu, Yamei; Hou, Jibo
2015-08-13
Highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (AIV) subtype H5N1 remains a threat to poultry. Duck enteritis virus (DEV)-vectored vaccines expressing AIV H5N1 hemagglutinin (HA) may be viable AIV and DEV vaccine candidates. To facilitate the generation and further improvement of DEV-vectored HA(H5) vaccines, we first constructed an infectious clone of DEV Chinese vaccine strain C-KCE (DEV(C-KCE)). Then, we generated a DEV-vectored HA(H5) vaccine (DEV-H5(UL55)) based on the bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) by inserting a synthesized HA(H5) expression cassette with a pMCMV IE promoter and a consensus HA sequence into the noncoding area between UL55 and LORF11. The immunogenicity and protective efficacy of the resulting recombinant vaccine against DEV and AIV H5N1 were evaluated in both ducks and chickens. The successful construction of DEV BAC and DEV-H5(UL55) was verified by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. Recovered virus from the BAC or mutants showed similar growth kinetics to their parental viruses. The robust expression of HA in chicken embryo fibroblasts infected with the DEV-vectored vaccine was confirmed by indirect immunofluorescence and western blotting analyses. A single dose of 10(6) TCID50 DEV-vectored vaccine provided 100 % protection against duck viral enteritis in ducks, and the hemagglutination inhibition (HI) antibody titer of AIV H5N1 with a peak of 8.2 log2 was detected in 3-week-old layer chickens. In contrast, only very weak HI titers were observed in ducks immunized with 10(7) TCID50 DEV-vectored vaccine. A mortality rate of 60 % (6/10) was observed in 1-week-old specific pathogen free chickens inoculated with 10(6) TCID50 DEV-vectored vaccine. We demonstrate the following in this study. (i) The constructed BAC is a whole genome clone of DEV(C-KCE). (ii) The insertion of an HA expression cassette sequence into the noncoding area between UL55 and LORF11 of DEV(C-KCE) affects neither the growth kinetics of the virus nor its protection against DEV. (iii) DEV-H5(UL55) can generate a strong humoral immune response in 3-week-old chickens, despite the virulence of this virus observed in 1-week-old chickens. (iv) DEV-H5(UL55) induces a weak HI titer in ducks. An increase in the HI titers induced by DEV-vectored HA(H5) will be required prior to its wide application.
Liu, Jinxiong; Chen, Pucheng; Jiang, Yongping; Wu, Li; Zeng, Xianying; Tian, Guobin; Ge, Jinying; Kawaoka, Yoshihiro; Bu, Zhigao; Chen, Hualan
2011-01-01
Ducks play an important role in the maintenance of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza viruses (AIVs) in nature, and the successful control of AIVs in ducks has important implications for the eradication of the disease in poultry and its prevention in humans. The inactivated influenza vaccine is expensive, labor-intensive, and usually needs 2 to 3 weeks to induce protective immunity in ducks. Live attenuated duck enteritis virus (DEV; a herpesvirus) vaccine is used routinely to control lethal DEV infections in many duck-producing areas. Here, we first established a system to generate the DEV vaccine strain by using the transfection of overlapping fosmid DNAs. Using this system, we constructed two recombinant viruses, rDEV-ul41HA and rDEV-us78HA, in which the hemagglutinin (HA) gene of the H5N1 virus A/duck/Anhui/1/06 was inserted and stably maintained within the ul41 gene or between the us7 and us8 genes of the DEV genome. Duck studies indicated that rDEV-us78HA had protective efficacy similar to that of the live DEV vaccine against lethal DEV challenge; importantly, a single dose of 106 PFU of rDEV-us78HA induced complete protection against a lethal H5N1 virus challenge in as little as 3 days postvaccination. The protective efficacy against both lethal DEV and H5N1 challenge provided by rDEV-ul41HA inoculation in ducks was slightly weaker than that provided by rDEV-us78HA. These results demonstrate, for the first time, that recombinant DEV is suitable for use as a bivalent live attenuated vaccine, providing rapid protection against both DEV and H5N1 virus infection in ducks. PMID:21865383
Liu, Jinxiong; Chen, Pucheng; Jiang, Yongping; Wu, Li; Zeng, Xianying; Tian, Guobin; Ge, Jinying; Kawaoka, Yoshihiro; Bu, Zhigao; Chen, Hualan
2011-11-01
Ducks play an important role in the maintenance of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza viruses (AIVs) in nature, and the successful control of AIVs in ducks has important implications for the eradication of the disease in poultry and its prevention in humans. The inactivated influenza vaccine is expensive, labor-intensive, and usually needs 2 to 3 weeks to induce protective immunity in ducks. Live attenuated duck enteritis virus (DEV; a herpesvirus) vaccine is used routinely to control lethal DEV infections in many duck-producing areas. Here, we first established a system to generate the DEV vaccine strain by using the transfection of overlapping fosmid DNAs. Using this system, we constructed two recombinant viruses, rDEV-ul41HA and rDEV-us78HA, in which the hemagglutinin (HA) gene of the H5N1 virus A/duck/Anhui/1/06 was inserted and stably maintained within the ul41 gene or between the us7 and us8 genes of the DEV genome. Duck studies indicated that rDEV-us78HA had protective efficacy similar to that of the live DEV vaccine against lethal DEV challenge; importantly, a single dose of 10(6) PFU of rDEV-us78HA induced complete protection against a lethal H5N1 virus challenge in as little as 3 days postvaccination. The protective efficacy against both lethal DEV and H5N1 challenge provided by rDEV-ul41HA inoculation in ducks was slightly weaker than that provided by rDEV-us78HA. These results demonstrate, for the first time, that recombinant DEV is suitable for use as a bivalent live attenuated vaccine, providing rapid protection against both DEV and H5N1 virus infection in ducks.
Ioanoviciu, Alexandra; Meharenna, Yergalem T.; Poulos, Thomas L.; Ortiz de Montellano, Paul R.
2009-01-01
DevS is one of the two sensing kinases responsible for DevR activation and the subsequent entry of Mycobacterium tuberculosis into dormancy. Full length wild-type DevS forms a stable oxy-ferrous complex. The DevS autooxidation rates are extremely low (half-lives > 24 h) in the presence of cations such as K+, Na+, Mg2+, and Ca2+. At relatively high concentrations (100 µM), Fe3+ mildly increases the autooxidation rate (six-fold increase) while Cu2+ accelerates autooxidation more than 1500-fold. Contrary to expectations, removal of the key hydrogen bond between the iron-coordinated oxygen and Tyr171 in the Y171F mutant provides a protein of comparable stability to autooxidation and similar oxygen dissociation rate. This correlates with our earlier finding that the Y171F mutant and wild-type kinase activities are similarly regulated by the binding of oxygen: namely, the ferrous 5c complex is active whereas the oxy ferrous 6c species is inactive. Our results indicate that DevS is a gas sensor in vivo rather than a redox sensor and that the stability of its ferrous-oxy complex is enhanced by inter-domain interactions. PMID:19463006
Inventory of File sref.t03z.pgrb212.spread_3hrly.grib2
ground UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 002 10 m above ground VGRD analysis V-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 003 1000 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 004 850 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 005 700 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 006 600
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ground UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 002 10 m above ground VGRD analysis V-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 003 1000 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 004 850 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 005 700 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 006 600
Inventory of File sref.t03z.pgrb243.spread_3hrly.grib2
ground UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 002 10 m above ground VGRD analysis V-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 003 1000 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 004 850 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 005 700 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 006 600
Inventory of File sref.t03z.pgrb132.spread_3hrly.grib2
ground UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 002 10 m above ground VGRD analysis V-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 003 1000 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 004 850 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 005 700 mb UGRD analysis U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 006 600
1988-07-01
0.1 400 SELF-DEVELOPMENT 176 4.8 420 DEV SELF-CONFID 15 0.4 430 DEV MATURE PERSN a 0.2 440 DEV POTENTIAL 367 10.0 450 ADVTG OVER COLLG 23 0.6 471 DEV...OVER COLLG 22 0.6 471 DEV DISCIPLINE it 0.3 481 DEVELOP PRIDE 7 0.2 500 MONEY/BENEFITS 116 3.2 600 EDUC/BENEFITS 279 7.6 700 TRAVEL 43 1.2 821 ADVENTURE...OVER COLLG 9 0.2 460 WRK HITRAIN PEOP 1 0.0 471 DEV DISCIPLINE 7 0.2 491 DEVELOP PRIDE 4 0.1 500 MONEY/BENEFITS 40 1.1 600 EDUC/BENEFITS 90 2.5 700
Driver's Enhanced Vision System (DEVS)
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1996-12-23
This advisory circular (AC) contains performance standards, specifications, and : recommendations for Drivers Enhanced Vision sSystem (DEVS). The FAA recommends : the use of the guidance in this publication for the design and installation of : DEVS e...
Software Sustainment -- Now and Future
2014-01-01
today the commercial environment is using something referred to as DevOps . What is DevOps ? What it is. A way of working that encourages the Develop...section. However, there are some major differences. DevOps seems to be the Agile community’s term for doing sustainment and opera- tions in parallel...methods in sustainment within the federal government. This research is how I came upon the term DevOps . In addition, Gene Kim provided a keynote
Chen, Ke; de Borne, François Dorlhac; Julio, Emilie; Obszynski, Julie; Pale, Patrick; Otten, Léon
2016-08-01
Previous studies have shown that Nicotiana tabacum contains three Agrobacterium-derived T-DNA sequences inherited from its paternal ancestor Nicotiana tomentosiformis. Among these, the TB locus carries an intact mannopine synthase 2' gene (TB-mas2'). This gene is similar to the Agrobacterium rhizogenes A4-mas2' gene that encodes the synthesis of the Amadori compound deoxyfructosyl-glutamine (DFG or santhopine). In this study we show that TB-mas2' is expressed at very low levels in N. tomentosiformis and in most N. tabacum cultivars; however, some cultivars show high TB-mas2' expression levels. The TB-mas2' promoter sequences of low- and high-expressing cultivars are identical. The low/high level of expression segregates as a single Mendelian factor in a cross between a low- and a high-expression cultivar. pTB-mas2'-GUS and pA4-mas2'-GUS reporter genes were stably introduced in N. benthamiana. Both were mainly expressed in the root expansion zone and leaf vasculature. Roots of tobacco cultivars with high TB-mas2' expression contain detectable levels of DFG. © 2016 The Authors The Plant Journal © 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Resource and competitive dynamics shape the benefits of public goods cooperation in a plant pathogen
Platt, Thomas G.; Fuqua, Clay; Bever, James D.
2012-01-01
Cooperative benefits depend on a variety of ecological factors. Many cooperative bacteria increase the population size of their groups by making a public good available. Increased local population size can alleviate the constraints of kin competition on the evolution of cooperation by enhancing the between-group fitness of cooperators. The cooperative pathogenesis of Agrobacterium tumefaciens causes infected plants to exude opines—resources that provide a nearly exclusive source of nutrient for the pathogen. We experimentally demonstrate that opines provide cooperative A. tumefaciens cells a within-group fitness advantage over saprophytic agrobacteria. Our results are congruent with a resource-consumer competition model, which predicts that cooperative, virulent agrobacteria are at a competitive disadvantage when opines are unavailable, but have an advantage when opines are available at sufficient levels. This model also predicts that freeloading agrobacteria that catabolize opines but cannot infect plants competitively displace the cooperative pathogen from all environments. However, we show that these cooperative public goods also promote increased local population size. A model built from the Price Equation shows that this effect on group size can contribute to the persistence of cooperative pathogenesis despite inherent kin competition for the benefits of pathogenesis. PMID:22671559
From Domain Specific Languages to DEVS Components: Application to Cognitive M&S
2011-04-01
AND SUBTITLE From Domain Specific Languages to DEVS Components: Application to Cognitive M&S 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ...that is devoid of any DEVS and programming language constructs (Figure 4). The key idea being domain specialists need not delve in the DEVS world to...DSL. DSLs can be created using many available tools and technologies such as: Generic Modeling Environment (GME) [23], Xtext, Ruby, Scala and many
Inventory of File sref.t03z.pgrb197.spread_ds_3hrly.grib2
3 hour fcst U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 002 10 m above ground VGRD 3 hour fcst V-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 003 2 m above ground TMP 3 hour fcst Temperature [K] std dev 004 2 m above ground SPFH 3 hour fcst Specific Humidity [kg/kg] std dev 005 10 m above ground WIND 3 hour fcst Wind Speed [m
Kajsík, Michal; Oslanecová, Lucia; Szemes, Tomáš; Hýblová, Michalea; Bilková, Andrea; Drahovská, Hana; Turňa, Ján
2014-11-01
Cronobacter spp. are opportunistic pathogenic bacteria that are responsible for severe infections in neonates. Powdered infant formula was confirmed to be the source in some cases. Bacteriophages offer a safe means for eliminating this pathogen. In the present study, we investigated the growth parameters and genome organization of a new bacteriophage, Dev2, isolated from sewage. The Dev2 phage contains DNA with a length of 39 kb and belongs to the T7 branch of the subfamily Autographivirinae, with the highest degree of identity to the phage K1F. The host specificity of Dev2 is limited to C. turicensis strains of the CT O:1 serotype. With a lower efficiency, this phage also infects some Salmonella and E. coli strains. The Dev2 phage can inactivate sensitive Cronobacter strains in reconstituted milk formula. The results obtained in this study are an important prerequisite for application of Dev2 in food control.
EGFR Activation by Spatially Restricted Ligands
2006-06-01
the level of ligand production, that result in human breast cancer. We have integrated genetic and biochemical methods to study (1) the effects of a...and spindle-B encode components of the RAD52 DNA repair pathway and affect meiosis and patterning in Drosophila oogenesis. Genes Dev 12, 2711-2723...findings contained in this report are those of the author(s) and should not be construed as an official Department of the Army position, policy or decision
Inventory of File sref.t03z.pgrb212.spread_1hrly.grib2
UGRD 1 hour fcst U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 002 10 m above ground VGRD 1 hour fcst V-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 003 1000 mb UGRD 1 hour fcst U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 004 850 mb UGRD 1 hour fcst U-Component of Wind [m/s] std dev 005 700 mb UGRD 1 hour fcst U-Component of Wind [m/s
A systemic approach for modeling biological evolution using Parallel DEVS.
Heredia, Daniel; Sanz, Victorino; Urquia, Alfonso; Sandín, Máximo
2015-08-01
A new model for studying the evolution of living organisms is proposed in this manuscript. The proposed model is based on a non-neodarwinian systemic approach. The model is focused on considering several controversies and open discussions about modern evolutionary biology. Additionally, a simplification of the proposed model, named EvoDEVS, has been mathematically described using the Parallel DEVS formalism and implemented as a computer program using the DEVSLib Modelica library. EvoDEVS serves as an experimental platform to study different conditions and scenarios by means of computer simulations. Two preliminary case studies are presented to illustrate the behavior of the model and validate its results. EvoDEVS is freely available at http://www.euclides.dia.uned.es. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Shen, Chanjuan; Cheng, Anchun; Wang, Mingshu; Xu, Chao; Jia, Renyong; Chen, Xiaoyue; Zhu, Dekang; Luo, Qihui; Cui, Hengmin; Zhou, Yi; Wang, Yin; Xu, Zhiwen; Chen, Zhengli; Wang, Xiaoyu
2010-06-01
To determine the expression and distribution of tegument proteins encoded by duck enteritis virus (DEV) UL51 gene in tissues of experimentally infected ducks, for the first time, an immunoperoxidase staining method to detect UL51 protein (UL51p) in paraffin-embedded tissues is reported. A rabbit anti-UL51 polyclonal serum, raised against a recombinant 6-His-UL51 fusion protein expressed in Escherichia coli, was prepared, purified, and used as primary antibodies. Fifty-eight 30-day-old DEV-free ducks were intramuscularly inoculated with the pathogenic DEV CHv strain as infection group, and two ducks were selected as preinfection group. The tissues were collected at sequential time points between 2 and 480 hr postinoculation (PI) and prepared for immunoperoxidase staining. DEV UL51p was first found in the spleen and liver at 8 hr PI; in the bursa of Fabricius and thymus at 12 hr PI; in the Harders glands, esophagus, small intestine (including the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum), and large intestine (including the caecum and rectum) at 24 hr PI; in the glandularis ventriculus at 48 hr PI; and in the pancreas, cerebrum, kidney, lung, and myocardium at 72 hr PI. Throughout the infection process, the UL51p was not seen in the muscle. Furthermore, the intensity of positive staining of DEV UL51p antigen in various tissues increased sharply from 8 to 96 hr PI, peaked during 120-144 hr PI, and then decreased steadily from 216 to 480 hr PI, suggesting that the expressional levels of DEV UL51p in systemic organs have a close correlation with the progression of duck virus enteritis (DVE) disease. A number of DEV UL51p was distributed in the bursa of Fabricius, thymus, spleen, liver, esophagus, small intestine, and large intestine of DEV-infected ducks, whereas less DEV UL51p was distributed in the Harders glands, glandularis ventriculus, cerebrum, kidney, lung, pancreas, and myocardium of DEV-infected ducks. Moreover, DEV UL51p can be expressed in the cytoplasm of various types of cells, especially most abundantly in the cytoplasm of lymphocytes, reticulum cells, macrophages, epithelial cells, and hepatocytes. The present study may be useful not only for describing the characteristics of UL51p expression and distribution in vivo but also for a greater understanding of the pathogenesis of this DVE.
Association between Antioxidant Enzyme Activities and Enterovirus-Infected Type 1 Diabetic Children.
Abdel-Moneim, Adel; El-Senousy, Waled M; Abdel-Latif, Mahmoud; Khalil, Rehab G
2018-01-01
To examine the effect of infection with Enterovirus (EV) in children with type 1 diabetes (T1D) on the activities of serum antioxidant enzymes in diabetic and nondiabetic controls. Three hundred and eighty-two diabetic and 100 nondiabetic children were tested for EV RNA using reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR. The activities of serum superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), and catalase (CAT) were also estimated in diabetic patients infected with EV (T1D-EV+), those not infected with EV (T1D-EV-), and in nondiabetic controls. The frequency of EV was higher in diabetic children (100/382; 26.2%) than in healthy controls (0/100). Levels of fasting blood glucose (FBG), glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were significantly higher but C-peptide was significantly lower in diabetic children than in controls. CRP levels were higher in the T1D-EV+ group than in the T1D-EV- group, and higher in all diabetic children than in nondiabetic controls. The activities of the antioxidant enzymes GPx, SOD, and CAT decreased significantly in diabetic children compared to in controls. Moreover, the activities of the enzymes tested were significantly reduced in the T1D-EV+ group compared to in the T1D-EV- group. Our data indicate that EV infection correlated with a decrease in the activity of antioxidant enzymes in the T1D-EV+ group compared to in the T1D-EV- group; this may contribute to β cell damage and increased inflammation. © 2018 The Author(s) Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.
PDB-Dev: a Prototype System for Depositing Integrative/Hybrid Structural Models.
Burley, Stephen K; Kurisu, Genji; Markley, John L; Nakamura, Haruki; Velankar, Sameer; Berman, Helen M; Sali, Andrej; Schwede, Torsten; Trewhella, Jill
2017-09-05
Burley et al. (leadership of the Worldwide PDB [wwPDB] Partnership [wwpdb.org] and the wwPDB Integrative/Hybrid Methods Task Force) announce public release of a prototype system for depositing integrative/hybrid structural models, PDB-Development (PDB-Dev; https://pdb-dev.wwpdb.org). Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
IT Software Development and IT Operations Strategic Alignment: An Agile DevOps Model
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hart, Michael
2017-01-01
Information Technology (IT) departments that include development and operations are essential to develop software that meet customer needs. DevOps is a term originally constructed from software development and IT operations. DevOps includes the collaboration of all stakeholders such as software engineers and systems administrators involved in the…
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Zeigler, Bernard P.
1989-01-01
It is shown how systems can be advantageously represented as discrete-event models by using DEVS (discrete-event system specification), a set-theoretic formalism. Such DEVS models provide a basis for the design of event-based logic control. In this control paradigm, the controller expects to receive confirming sensor responses to its control commands within definite time windows determined by its DEVS model of the system under control. The event-based contral paradigm is applied in advanced robotic and intelligent automation, showing how classical process control can be readily interfaced with rule-based symbolic reasoning systems.
Kimura, Tomohiro; Nakano, Toshiki; Yamaguchi, Toshiyasu; Sato, Minoru; Ogawa, Tomohisa; Muramoto, Koji; Yokoyama, Takehiko; Kan-No, Nobuhiro; Nagahisa, Eizou; Janssen, Frank; Grieshaber, Manfred K
2004-01-01
The complete complementary DNA sequences of genes presumably coding for opine dehydrogenases from Arabella iricolor (sandworm), Haliotis discus hannai (abalone), and Patinopecten yessoensis (scallop) were determined, and partial cDNA sequences were derived for Meretrix lusoria (Japanese hard clam) and Spisula sachalinensis (Sakhalin surf clam). The primers ODH-9F and ODH-11R proved useful for amplifying the sequences for opine dehydrogenases from the 4 mollusk species investigated in this study. The sequence of the sandworm was obtained using primers constructed from the amino acid sequence of tauropine dehydrogenase, the main opine dehydrogenase in A. iricolor. The complete cDNA sequence of A. iricolor, H. discus hannai, and P. yessoensis encode 397, 400, and 405 amino acids, respectively. All sequences were aligned and compared with published databank sequences of Loligo opalescens, Loligo vulgaris (squid), Sepia officinalis (cuttlefish), and Pecten maximus (scallop). As expected, a high level of homology was observed for the cDNA from closely related species, such as for cephalopods or scallops, whereas cDNA from the other species showed lower-level homologies. A similar trend was observed when the deduced amino acid sequences were compared. Furthermore, alignment of these sequences revealed some structural motifs that are possibly related to the binding sites of the substrates. The phylogenetic trees derived from the nucleotide and amino acid sequences were consistent with the classification of species resulting from classical taxonomic analyses.
A "Research" into International Student-Related Research: (Re)visualising Our Stand?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Abdullah, Doria; Abd Aziz, Mohd Ismail; Mohd Ibrahim, Abdul Latiff
2014-01-01
This paper uses Tight ("High Educ Res Dev" 23(4):395-411, 2004; "High Educ Res Dev" 31(5):723-740, 2012; "High Educ Res Dev" 32(1):136-151, 2013)'s journal analysis and review framework to review a sample of 497 journal articles on researches concerning international students over the past 30 years. It was found…
Dynamic Self-Organization and Early Lexical Development in Children
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Li, Ping; Zhao, Xiaowei; Whinney, Brian Mac
2007-01-01
In this study we present a self-organizing connectionist model of early lexical development. We call this model DevLex-II, based on the earlier DevLex model. DevLex-II can simulate a variety of empirical patterns in children's acquisition of words. These include a clear vocabulary spurt, effects of word frequency and length on age of acquisition,…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, Xiwen; Cheng, Anchun; Wang, Mingshu; Xiang, Jun
2011-10-01
In this study, the predicted information about structures and functions of VP23 encoded by the newly identified DEV UL18 gene through bioinformatics softwares and tools. The DEV UL18 was predicted to encode a polypeptide with 322 amino acids, termed VP23, with a putative molecular mass of 35.250 kDa and a predicted isoelectric point (PI) of 8.37, no signal peptide and transmembrane domain in the polypeptide. The prediction of subcellular localization showed that the DEV-VP23 located at endoplasmic reticulum with 33.3%, mitochondrial with 22.2%, extracellular, including cell wall with 11.1%, vesicles of secretory system with 11.1%, Golgi with 11.1%, and plasma membrane with 11.1%. The acid sequence of analysis showed that the potential antigenic epitopes are situated in 45-47, 53-60, 102-105, 173-180, 185-189, 260-265, 267-271, and 292-299 amino acids. All the consequences inevitably provide some insights for further research about the DEV-VP23 and also provide a fundament for further study on the the new type clinical diagnosis of DEV and can be used for the development of new DEV vaccine.
Sun, Ying; Yang, Chenghuai; Li, Junping; Li, Ling; Cao, Minghui; Li, Qihong; Li, Huijiao
2017-01-01
H9 subtype avian influenza viruses (AIVs) remain a significant burden in the poultry industry and are considered to be one of the most likely causes of any new influenza pandemic in humans. As ducks play an important role in the maintenance of H9 viruses in nature, successful control of the spread of H9 AIVs in ducks will have significant beneficial effects on public health. Duck enteritis virus (DEV) may be a promising candidate viral vector for aquatic poultry vaccination. In this study, we constructed a recombinant DEV, rDEV-∆UL2-HA, inserting the hemagglutinin (HA) gene from duck-origin H9N2 AIV into the UL2 gene by homologous recombination. One-step growth analyses showed that the HA gene insertion had no effect on viral replication and suggested that the UL2 gene was nonessential for virus growth in vitro. In vivo tests further showed that the insertion of the HA gene in place of the UL2 gene did not affect the immunogenicity of the virus. Moreover, a single dose of 10 3 TCID 50 of rDEV-∆UL2-HA induced solid protection against lethal DEV challenge and completely prevented H9N2 AIV viral shedding. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a DEV-vectored vaccine providing robust protection against both DEV and H9N2 AIV virus infections in ducks.
Jin, Sheng Chih; Benitez, Bruno A; Deming, Yuetiva; Cruchaga, Carlos
2016-01-01
Analyses of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for complex disorders usually identify common variants with a relatively small effect size that only explain a small proportion of phenotypic heritability. Several studies have suggested that a significant fraction of heritability may be explained by low-frequency (minor allele frequency (MAF) of 1-5 %) and rare-variants that are not contained in the commercial GWAS genotyping arrays (Schork et al., Curr Opin Genet Dev 19:212, 2009). Rare variants can also have relatively large effects on risk for developing human diseases or disease phenotype (Cruchaga et al., PLoS One 7:e31039, 2012). However, it is necessary to perform next-generation sequencing (NGS) studies in a large population (>4,000 samples) to detect a significant rare-variant association. Several NGS methods, such as custom capture sequencing and amplicon-based sequencing, are designed to screen a small proportion of the genome, but most of these methods are limited in the number of samples that can be multiplexed (i.e. most sequencing kits only provide 96 distinct index). Additionally, the sequencing library preparation for 4,000 samples remains expensive and thus conducting NGS studies with the aforementioned methods are not feasible for most research laboratories.The need for low-cost large scale rare-variant detection makes pooled-DNA sequencing an ideally efficient and cost-effective technique to identify rare variants in target regions by sequencing hundreds to thousands of samples. Our recent work has demonstrated that pooled-DNA sequencing can accurately detect rare variants in targeted regions in multiple DNA samples with high sensitivity and specificity (Jin et al., Alzheimers Res Ther 4:34, 2012). In these studies we used a well-established pooled-DNA sequencing approach and a computational package, SPLINTER (short indel prediction by large deviation inference and nonlinear true frequency estimation by recursion) (Vallania et al., Genome Res 20:1711, 2010), for accurate identification of rare variants in large DNA pools. Given an average sequencing coverage of 30× per haploid genome, SPLINTER can detect rare variants and short indels up to 4 base pairs (bp) with high sensitivity and specificity (up to 1 haploid allele in a pool as large as 500 individuals). Step-by-step instructions on how to conduct pooled-DNA sequencing experiments and data analyses are described in this chapter.
Genetic and Molecular Analysis of the Mechanisms by which TSC regulates Neuronal Differentiation
2008-02-01
JUHASZ, M. SASS, P. O. SEGLEN et al., 2004 Programmed autophagy in the Drosophila fat body is induced by ecdysone through regulation of the PI3K...regulation of starvation-induced autophagy in the Drosophila fat body. Dev Cell 7: 167-178. SHAH, O. J., Z. WANG and T. HUNTER, 2004 Inappropriate...The Development of Drosophila melanogaster , edited by B. M and M.- A. A. CSHL Press. 31 WULLSCHLEGER, S., R. LOEWITH and M. N. HALL, 2006 TOR
Convergent evolution of Amadori opine catabolic systems in plasmids of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
Baek, Chang-Ho; Farrand, Stephen K; Lee, Ko-Eun; Park, Dae-Kyun; Lee, Jeong Kug; Kim, Kun-Soo
2003-01-01
Deoxyfructosyl glutamine (DFG, referred to elsewhere as dfg) is a naturally occurring Amadori compound found in rotting fruits and vegetables. DFG also is an opine and is found in tumors induced by chrysopine-type strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Such strains catabolize this opine via a pathway coded for by their plasmids. NT1, a derivative of the nopaline-type A. tumefaciens strain C58 lacking pTiC58, can utilize DFG as the sole carbon source. Genes for utilization of DFG were mapped to the 543-kb accessory plasmid pAtC58. Two cosmid clones of pAtC58 allowed UIA5, a plasmid-free derivative of C58, harboring pSa-C that expresses MocC (mannopine [MOP] oxidoreductase that oxidizes MOP to DFG), to grow by using MOP as the sole carbon source. Genetic analysis of subclones indicated that the genes for utilization of DFG are located in a 6.2-kb BglII (Bg2) region adjacent to repABC-type genes probably responsible for the replication of pAtC58. This region contains five open reading frames organized into at least two transcriptional soc (santhopine catabolism) groups: socR and socABCD. Nucleotide sequence analysis and analyses of transposon-insertion mutations in the region showed that SocR negatively regulates the expression of socR itself and socABCD. SocA and SocB are responsible for transport of DFG and MOP. SocA is a homolog of known periplasmic amino acid binding proteins. The N-terminal half of SocB is a homolog of the transmembrane transporter proteins for several amino acids, and the C-terminal half is a homolog of the transporter-associated ATP-binding proteins. SocC and SocD could be responsible for the enzymatic degradation of DFG, being homologs of sugar oxidoreductases and an amadoriase from Corynebacterium sp., respectively. The protein products of socABCD are not related at the amino acid sequence level to those of the moc and mot genes of Ti plasmids responsible for utilization of DFG and MOP, indicating that these two sets of genes and their catabolic pathways have evolved convergently from independent origins.
2011-01-01
364 (1996). 10. B. Jeong, Y. H. Bae, D. S. Lee, and S. W. Kim, Biodegradable block copolymers as injectable drug-delivery systems . Nature 388, 860-862...1250-1253 (1995). 26. F. C. MacKintosh, and C. F. Schmidt, Microrheology, Curr. Opin. Colloid Interface Sci. 4, 300-307 (1999). 27. A...Mukhopadhyay, and S. Granick, Micro- and nanorheology, Curr. Opin. Colloid Interface Sci. 6, 423-429 (2001). 28. Y. Li, and T. Tanaka, Kinetics of swelling
Kravitz, Richard L.; Franks, Peter; Feldman, Mitchell D.; Tancredi, Daniel J.; Slee, Christina A.; Epstein, Ronald M.; Duberstein, Paul R.; Bell, Robert A.; Jackson-Triche, Maga; Paterniti, Debora A.; Cipri, Camille; Iosif, Ana-Maria; Olson, Sarah; Kelly-Reif, Steven; Hudnut, Andrew; Dvorak, Simon; Turner, Charles; Jerant, Anthony
2015-01-01
Importance Interventions encouraging primary care patients’ engagement with their clinicians to address depression could improve outcomes but foster unnecessary treatment. Objective Determine whether a depression engagement video (DEV) or a tailored interactive multimedia computer program (IMCP) improves initial depression care without increasing unnecessary anti-depressant prescribing. Design Randomized controlled trial comparing three interventions (DEV, IMCP, and control) conducted in two patients groups (depressed, defined by a Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ]-9 score ≥5, and non-depressed [PHQ-9<5]) conducted between June 2010 and March 2012. Setting Primary care offices at 7 sites in 2 cities. Participants Depressed (N=559) and non-depressed (N=308) adult patients of 135 primary care clinicians. Intervention(s) DEV targeted to gender and income; IMCP tailored to individual patient characteristics; a sleep hygiene video (control). Main Outcome Measure(s) Depressed patients: composite measure of antidepressant recommendation and/or mental health referral (primary outcome); 12-week mental health, measured by the PHQ-8 (secondary outcome). Non- depressed patients: clinician-reported prescribing and patient-reported antidepressant recommendation (primary outcomes, pre-specified 3.5% non-inferiority margins). Results Depressed patients: composite care outcome rates were 18%, 26%, and 16% respectively in the DEV, IMCP, and control groups (cluster-adjusted DEV-control difference = 1.1% [95% CI −6.7 to 8.9, P=.79]; IMCP-control = 9.9% [95% CI 1.6 to 18.2, P=.02]). Twelve-week PHQ-8 effects were not significant: DEV- control = −0.2 points (95% CI −1.2 to 0.8); IMCP – control = 0.9 (95% CI −0.1 to 1.9). Non-depressed patients: clinician-reported antidepressant prescribing in the DEV and IMCP groups was non-inferior to control (DEV-control = −2.2%, 90% CI −8.0 to 3.498, non-inferiority (NI) P=.0499; IMCP-control = −3.3%, 90% CI −9.1 to 2.4, NI P=.02); patient-reported antidepressant recommendation did not achieve non-inferiority: DEV-control = 0.9% (90% CI −4.9 to 6.7; NI P=.23); IMCP-control = 0.3% (90% CI −5.1 to 5.7; NI P=.16). Conclusions and Relevance A tailored IMCP increased antidepressant recommendation and/or mental health referral among depressed patients but had no effect on 12-week mental health. The possibility that the IMCP and DEV increased patient-reported antidepressant recommendations among non-depressed patients could not be excluded. Further research is needed on the benefits and harms of these interventions. PMID:24193079
Distributed Generation Renewable Energy Estimate of Costs | Energy Analysis
viability. Table 1 Costs for Electric Generating Technologies Technology Type Mean installed cost ($/kW ) Installed cost Std. Dev. (+/- $/kW) Fixed O&M ($/kW-yr) Fixed O&M Std. Dev. (+/- $/kW-yr) Variable O cost ($/kWh) Fuel and/or water Std. Dev. ($/kWh) PV <10 kW $3,897 $889 $21 $20 n/a n/a 33 11 n/a n/a
Distributed Generation Renewable Energy Estimate of Costs | Energy Analysis
viability. Table 1 Costs for Electric Generating Technologies Technology Type Mean installed cost ($/kW ) Installed cost Std. Dev. (+/- $/kW) Fixed O&M ($/kW-yr) Fixed O&M Std. Dev. (+/- $/kW-yr) Variable O cost ($/kWh) Fuel and/or water Std. Dev. ($/kWh) PV <10 kW $3,910 $921 $21 $20 n/a n/a 33 11 n/a n/a
Inventory of File spread.sref.cluster1.f03.grib2
Records: 40 Number Level/Layer Parameter Forecast Valid Description 001 2 m above ground TMP 3 hour fcst Temperature [K] std dev 002 2 m above ground TMP 3 hour fcst Temperature [K] std dev 003 2 m above ground SPFH 3 hour fcst Specific Humidity [kg/kg] std dev 004 2 m above ground RH 3 hour fcst Relative Humidity
Expression and characterization of duck enteritis virus gI gene
2011-01-01
Background At present, alphaherpesviruses gI gene and its encoding protein have been extensively studied. It is likely that gI protein and its homolog play similar roles in virions direct cell-to-cell spread of alphaherpesviruses. But, little is known about the characteristics of DEV gI gene. In this study, we expressed and presented the basic properties of the DEV gI protein. Results The special 1221-bp fragment containing complete open reading frame(ORF) of duck enteritis virus(DEV) gI gene was extracted from plasmid pMD18-T-gI, and then cloned into prokaryotic expression vector pET-32a(+), resulting in pET-32a(+)-gI. After being confirmed by PCR, restriction endonuclease digestion and sequencing, pET-32a(+)-gI was transformed into E.coli BL21(DE3) competent cells for overexpression. DEV gI gene was successfully expressed by the addition of isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside(IPTG). SDS-PAGE showed that the recombinant protein His6-tagged gI molecular weight was about 61 kDa. Subsequently, the expressed product was applied to generate specific antibody against gI protein. The specificity of the rabbit immuneserum was confirmed by its ability to react with the recombinant protein His6-tagged gI. In addition, real time-PCR was used to determine the the levels of the mRNA transcripts of gI gene, the results showed that the DEV gI gene was transcribed most abundantly during the late phase of infection. Furthermore, indirect immunofluorescence(IIF) was established to study the gI protein expression and localization in DEV-infected duck embryo fibroblasts (DEFs), the results confirmed that the protein was expressed and located in the cytoplasm of the infected cells, intensively. Conclusions The recombinant prokaryotic expression vector of DEV gI gene was constructed successfully. The gI protein was successfully expressed by E.coli BL21(DE3) and maintained its antigenicity very well. The basic information of the transcription and intracellular localization of gI gene were presented, that would be helpful to assess the possible role of DEV gI gene. The research will provide useful clues for further functional analysis of DEV gI gene. PMID:21595918
Two-Dimensional Electronic-Vibrational Spectroscopy of Chlorophyll a and b
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lewis, Nicholas H. C.; Fleming, Graham R.
2016-03-03
Presented are two-dimensional electronic-vibrational (2DEV) spectra of isolated chlorophyll a and b in deuterated ethanol. We excite the Q-band electronic transitions and measure the effects on the carbonyl and C=C double-bond stretch region of the infrared spectrum. With the aid of density functional theory calculations, we provide assignments for the major features of the spectrum. We show how the 2DEV spectra can be used to readily distinguish different solvation states of the chlorophyll, with features corresponding to the minority pentacoordinate magnesium (Mg) species being resolved along each dimension of the 2DEV spectra from the dominant hexacoordinate Mg species. These assignmentsmore » represent a crucial first step toward the application of 2DEV spectroscopy to chlorophyll-containing pigment-protein complexes.« less
Lewinska, Anna; Miedziak, Beata; Kulak, Klaudia; Molon, Mateusz; Wnuk, Maciej
2014-06-01
The nucleolus is speculated to be a regulator of cellular senescence in numerous biological systems (Guarente, Genes Dev 11(19):2449-2455, 1997; Johnson et al., Curr Opin Cell Biol 10(3):332-338, 1998). In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, alterations in nucleolar architecture, the redistribution of nucleolar protein and the accumulation of extrachromosomal ribosomal DNA circles (ERCs) during replicative aging have been reported. However, little is known regarding rDNA stability and changes in nucleolar activity during chronological aging (CA), which is another yeast aging model used. In the present study, the impact of aberrant cell cycle checkpoint control (knock-out of BUB1, BUB2, MAD1 and TEL1 genes in haploid and diploid hemizygous states) on CA-mediated changes in the nucleolus was studied. Nucleolus fragmentation, changes in the nucleolus size and the nucleolus/nucleus ratio, ERC accumulation, expression pattern changes and the relocation of protein involved in transcriptional silencing during CA were revealed. All strains examined were affected by oxidative stress, aneuploidy (numerical rather than structural aberrations) and DNA damage. However, the bub1 cells were the most prone to aneuploidy events, which may contribute to observed decrease in chronological lifespan. We postulate that chronological aging may be affected by redox imbalance-mediated chromosome XII instability leading to both rDNA instability and whole chromosome aneuploidy. CA-mediated nucleolus fragmentation may be a consequence of nucleolus enlargement and/or Nop2p upregulation. Moreover, the rDNA content of chronologically aging cells may be a factor determining the subsequent replicative lifespan. Taken together, we demonstrated that the nucleolus state is also affected during CA in yeast.
Kim, K S; Farrand, S K
1996-06-01
Agrobacterium tumefaciens NT1 harboring pSaB4, which contains the 14-kb BamHI fragment 4 from the octopine/mannityl opine-type Ti plasmid pTi15955, grew well with agropine (AGR) but slowly with mannopine (MOP) as the sole carbon source. When a second plasmid encoding a dedicated transport system for MOP was introduced, these cells grew well with both AGR and MOP. Transposon insertion mutagenesis and subcloning identified a 5.7-kb region of BamHI fragment 4 that encodes functions required for the degradation of MOP. DNA sequence analysis revealed seven putative genes in this region: mocD (moc for mannityl opine catabolism) and mocE, oriented from right to left, and mocRCBAS, oriented from left to right. Significant identities exist at the nucleotide and derived amino acid sequence levels between these moc genes and the mas genes that are responsible for opine biosynthesis in crown gall tumors. MocD is a homolog of Mas2, the anabolic conjugase encoded by mas2'. MocE and MocC are related to the amino half and the carboxyl half, respectively, of Mas1 (MOP reductase), the second enzyme for MOP biosynthesis. These results indicate that the moc and mas genes evolved from a common origin. MocR and MocS are related to each other and to a putative repressor for the AGR degradation system encoded by the rhizogenic plasmid pRiA4. MocB and MocA are homologs of 6-phosphogluconate dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, respectively. Mutations in mocD and mocE, but not mocC, are suppressed by functions encoded by the chromosome or the 450-kb megaplasmid present in many Agrobacterium isolates. We propose that moc genes derived from genes located elsewhere in the bacterial genome and that the tumor-expressed mas genes evolved from the bacterial moc genes.
Kim, K S; Farrand, S K
1996-01-01
Agrobacterium tumefaciens NT1 harboring pSaB4, which contains the 14-kb BamHI fragment 4 from the octopine/mannityl opine-type Ti plasmid pTi15955, grew well with agropine (AGR) but slowly with mannopine (MOP) as the sole carbon source. When a second plasmid encoding a dedicated transport system for MOP was introduced, these cells grew well with both AGR and MOP. Transposon insertion mutagenesis and subcloning identified a 5.7-kb region of BamHI fragment 4 that encodes functions required for the degradation of MOP. DNA sequence analysis revealed seven putative genes in this region: mocD (moc for mannityl opine catabolism) and mocE, oriented from right to left, and mocRCBAS, oriented from left to right. Significant identities exist at the nucleotide and derived amino acid sequence levels between these moc genes and the mas genes that are responsible for opine biosynthesis in crown gall tumors. MocD is a homolog of Mas2, the anabolic conjugase encoded by mas2'. MocE and MocC are related to the amino half and the carboxyl half, respectively, of Mas1 (MOP reductase), the second enzyme for MOP biosynthesis. These results indicate that the moc and mas genes evolved from a common origin. MocR and MocS are related to each other and to a putative repressor for the AGR degradation system encoded by the rhizogenic plasmid pRiA4. MocB and MocA are homologs of 6-phosphogluconate dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, respectively. Mutations in mocD and mocE, but not mocC, are suppressed by functions encoded by the chromosome or the 450-kb megaplasmid present in many Agrobacterium isolates. We propose that moc genes derived from genes located elsewhere in the bacterial genome and that the tumor-expressed mas genes evolved from the bacterial moc genes. PMID:8655509
Genetic Induction of Cytolytic Susceptibility in Breast Cancer Cells
1999-07-01
Gryka , M ., Litwak, G., Gebhardt, M ., Bressac, B., Ozturk, M ., Baker, S., Vogelstein, B., and Friend, S. (1990). p5 3 functions as a cell cycle control...Routes, C. Leu, T. Walker, K. Colvin, Exp Cell Res, Submitted for publication (1999). 3. E. White, Genes Dev 10, 1-15 (1996). 4. J. L. Cook, A. M ...6965-6969 (1986). 7. J. L. Cook, D. L. May, A. M . Lewis, Jr., T. A. Walker, J. Virol. 61, 3510-3520 (1987). 8. T. A. Walker, B. A. Wilson, A. M . Lewis
Activity Diagrams for DEVS Models: A Case Study Modeling Health Care Behavior
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Ozmen, Ozgur; Nutaro, James J
Discrete Event Systems Specification (DEVS) is a widely used formalism for modeling and simulation of discrete and continuous systems. While DEVS provides a sound mathematical representation of discrete systems, its practical use can suffer when models become complex. Five main functions, which construct the core of atomic modules in DEVS, can realize the behaviors that modelers want to represent. The integration of these functions is handled by the simulation routine, however modelers can implement each function in various ways. Therefore, there is a need for graphical representations of complex models to simplify their implementation and facilitate their reproduction. In thismore » work, we illustrate the use of activity diagrams for this purpose in the context of a health care behavior model, which is developed with an agent-based modeling paradigm.« less
Dielectric elastomer vibrissal system for active tactile sensing
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Conn, Andrew T.; Pearson, Martin J.; Pipe, Anthony G.; Welsby, Jason; Rossiter, Jonathan
2012-04-01
Rodents are able to dexterously navigate confined and unlit environments by extracting spatial and textural information with their whiskers (or vibrissae). Vibrissal-based active touch is suited to a variety of applications where vision is occluded, such as search-and-rescue operations in collapsed buildings. In this paper, a compact dielectric elastomer vibrissal system (DEVS) is described that mimics the vibrissal follicle-sinus complex (FSC) found in rodents. Like the vibrissal FSC, the DEVS encapsulates all sensitive mechanoreceptors at the root of a passive whisker within an antagonistic muscular system. Typically, rats actively whisk arrays of macro-vibrissae with amplitudes of up to +/-25°. It is demonstrated that these properties can be replicated by exploiting the characteristic large actuation strains and passive compliance of dielectric elastomers. A prototype DEVS is developed using VHB 4905 and embedded strain gauges bonded to the root of a tapered whisker. The DEVS is demonstrated to produce a maximum rotational output of +/-22.8°. An electro-mechanical model of the DEVS is derived, which incorporates a hyperelastic material model and Euler- Bernoulli beam equations. The model is shown to predict experimental measurements of whisking stroke amplitude and whisker deflection.
A Study to Identify the Transitional Training Needs for United States Army Medical Residents
1988-07-29
34 workshops in the earlv 1970s, the issues cOn tinleld to have onlv ma rg ina l interests from teach ing inst itut ions for nearlv a decade. In 1982, the...Perspectives ( PRO VIEWS): These were presentations typically given by senior physicians who occupy positions of considerable administrative...n) JCAHO std day PRO -VIFW! %td dev I NE-VIEWS std dev qPAD-VIEWS std dev CAREI std oev Family Pract 27 3.4074 0 95 35769 I 12 36296 095 35185 1.03 3
Framework for automatic information extraction from research papers on nanocrystal devices.
Dieb, Thaer M; Yoshioka, Masaharu; Hara, Shinjiro; Newton, Marcus C
2015-01-01
To support nanocrystal device development, we have been working on a computational framework to utilize information in research papers on nanocrystal devices. We developed an annotated corpus called " NaDev" (Nanocrystal Device Development) for this purpose. We also proposed an automatic information extraction system called "NaDevEx" (Nanocrystal Device Automatic Information Extraction Framework). NaDevEx aims at extracting information from research papers on nanocrystal devices using the NaDev corpus and machine-learning techniques. However, the characteristics of NaDevEx were not examined in detail. In this paper, we conduct system evaluation experiments for NaDevEx using the NaDev corpus. We discuss three main issues: system performance, compared with human annotators; the effect of paper type (synthesis or characterization) on system performance; and the effects of domain knowledge features (e.g., a chemical named entity recognition system and list of names of physical quantities) on system performance. We found that overall system performance was 89% in precision and 69% in recall. If we consider identification of terms that intersect with correct terms for the same information category as the correct identification, i.e., loose agreement (in many cases, we can find that appropriate head nouns such as temperature or pressure loosely match between two terms), the overall performance is 95% in precision and 74% in recall. The system performance is almost comparable with results of human annotators for information categories with rich domain knowledge information (source material). However, for other information categories, given the relatively large number of terms that exist only in one paper, recall of individual information categories is not high (39-73%); however, precision is better (75-97%). The average performance for synthesis papers is better than that for characterization papers because of the lack of training examples for characterization papers. Based on these results, we discuss future research plans for improving the performance of the system.
Theory of quantized systems: formal basis for DEVS/HLA distributed simulation environment
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zeigler, Bernard P.; Lee, J. S.
1998-08-01
In the context of a DARPA ASTT project, we are developing an HLA-compliant distributed simulation environment based on the DEVS formalism. This environment will provide a user- friendly, high-level tool-set for developing interoperable discrete and continuous simulation models. One application is the study of contract-based predictive filtering. This paper presents a new approach to predictive filtering based on a process called 'quantization' to reduce state update transmission. Quantization, which generates state updates only at quantum level crossings, abstracts a sender model into a DEVS representation. This affords an alternative, efficient approach to embedding continuous models within distributed discrete event simulations. Applications of quantization to message traffic reduction are discussed. The theory has been validated by DEVSJAVA simulations of test cases. It will be subject to further test in actual distributed simulations using the DEVS/HLA modeling and simulation environment.
Convergent Evolution of Amadori Opine Catabolic Systems in Plasmids of Agrobacterium tumefaciens
Baek, Chang-Ho; Farrand, Stephen K.; Lee, Ko-Eun; Park, Dae-Kyun; Lee, Jeong Kug; Kim, Kun-Soo
2003-01-01
Deoxyfructosyl glutamine (DFG, referred to elsewhere as dfg) is a naturally occurring Amadori compound found in rotting fruits and vegetables. DFG also is an opine and is found in tumors induced by chrysopine-type strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Such strains catabolize this opine via a pathway coded for by their plasmids. NT1, a derivative of the nopaline-type A. tumefaciens strain C58 lacking pTiC58, can utilize DFG as the sole carbon source. Genes for utilization of DFG were mapped to the 543-kb accessory plasmid pAtC58. Two cosmid clones of pAtC58 allowed UIA5, a plasmid-free derivative of C58, harboring pSa-C that expresses MocC (mannopine [MOP] oxidoreductase that oxidizes MOP to DFG), to grow by using MOP as the sole carbon source. Genetic analysis of subclones indicated that the genes for utilization of DFG are located in a 6.2-kb BglII (Bg2) region adjacent to repABC-type genes probably responsible for the replication of pAtC58. This region contains five open reading frames organized into at least two transcriptional soc (santhopine catabolism) groups: socR and socABCD. Nucleotide sequence analysis and analyses of transposon-insertion mutations in the region showed that SocR negatively regulates the expression of socR itself and socABCD. SocA and SocB are responsible for transport of DFG and MOP. SocA is a homolog of known periplasmic amino acid binding proteins. The N-terminal half of SocB is a homolog of the transmembrane transporter proteins for several amino acids, and the C-terminal half is a homolog of the transporter-associated ATP-binding proteins. SocC and SocD could be responsible for the enzymatic degradation of DFG, being homologs of sugar oxidoreductases and an amadoriase from Corynebacterium sp., respectively. The protein products of socABCD are not related at the amino acid sequence level to those of the moc and mot genes of Ti plasmids responsible for utilization of DFG and MOP, indicating that these two sets of genes and their catabolic pathways have evolved convergently from independent origins. PMID:12511498
Kois, Lauren; Wellbeloved-Stone, James M; Chauhan, Preeti; Warren, Janet I
2017-06-01
Combined evaluations of competency to stand trial (CST; competency) and mental state at the time of the offense (MSO; sanity) frequently co-occur. However, most research examines the 2 as discrete constructs without considering 4 potential combined evaluation outcomes: competent-sane, incompetent-sane, competent-insane, and incompetent-insane. External validity can be improved if research more closely mirrored practice. It may be incorrect to assume incompetent defendants are similar across CST-only and combined evaluations, and insane defendants are similar across MSO-only and combined evaluations. Using a sample of 2,751 combined evaluations, we examined demographic, clinical, offense, evaluation, and psycholegal characteristics associated with evaluators' combined evaluation opinions. Multinomial regression analyses revealed older defendants were more likely to be opined incompetent-insane. Defendants with psychotic disorders were more often opined insane, regardless of competency status. Affective diagnoses predicted competent-insane opinions. Developmental disorders were closely related to incompetence, regardless of sanity status. Defendants with organic disorders tended to have global psycholegal impairment, in that they were more often opined incompetent-insane, incompetent-sane, or competent-insane, relative to competent-sane. Prior hospitalization predicted competent-insane relative to competent-sane opinions. Defendants not under the influence of a substance during the offense or with no prior convictions were more likely to be opined insane, regardless of competency status. We interpret these findings in light of psycholegal theory and provide recommendations for research and practice. Collectively, results suggest incorporation of combined evaluations into CST and MSO research is an important methodological consideration not to be overlooked. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).
Microvesicles as mediators of intercellular communication in cancer.
Antonyak, Marc A; Cerione, Richard A
2014-01-01
The discovery that cancer cells generate large membrane-enclosed packets of epigenetic information, known as microvesicles (MVs), that can be transferred to other cells and influence their behavior (Antonyak et al., Small GTPases 3:219-224, 2012; Cocucci et al., Trends Cell Biol 19:43-51, 2009; Rak, Semin Thromb Hemost 36:888-906, 2010; Skog et al., Nat Cell Biol 10:1470-1476, 2008) has added a unique perspective to the classical paracrine signaling paradigm. This is largely because, in addition to growth factors and cytokines, MVs contain a variety of components that are not usually thought to be released into the extracellular environment by viable cells including plasma membrane-associated proteins, cytosolic- and nuclear-localized proteins, as well as nucleic acids, particularly RNA transcripts and micro-RNAs (Skog et al., Nat Cell Biol 10:1470-1476, 2008; Al-Nedawi et al., Nat Cell Biol 10:619-624, 2008; Antonyak et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 108:4852-4857, 2011; Balaj et al., Nat Commun 2:180, 2011; Choi et al., J Proteome Res 6:4646-4655, 2007; Del Conde et al., Blood 106:1604-1611, 2005; Gallo et al., PLoS One 7:e30679, 2012; Graner et al., FASEB J 23:1541-1557, 2009; Grange et al., Cancer Res 71:5346-5356, 2011; Hosseini-Beheshti et al., Mol Cell Proteomics 11:863-885, 2012; Martins et al., Curr Opin Oncol 25:66-75, 2013; Noerholm et al., BMC Cancer 12:22, 2012; Zhuang et al., EMBO J 31:3513-3523, 2012). When transferred between cancer cells, MVs have been shown to stimulate signaling events that promote cell growth and survival (Al-Nedawi et al., Nat Cell Biol 10:619-624, 2008). Cancer cell-derived MVs can also be taken up by normal cell types that surround the tumor, an outcome that helps shape the tumor microenvironment, trigger tumor vascularization, and even confer upon normal recipient cells the transformed characteristics of a cancer cell (Antonyak et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 108:4852-4857, 2011; Martins et al., Curr Opin Oncol 25:66-75, 2013; Al-Nedawi et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106:3794-3799, 2009; Ge et al., Cancer Microenviron 5:323-332, 2012). Thus, the production of MVs by cancer cells plays crucial roles in driving the expansion of the primary tumor. However, it is now becoming increasingly clear that MVs are also stable in the circulation of cancer patients, where they can mediate long-range effects and contribute to the formation of the pre-metastatic niche, an essential step in metastasis (Skog et al., Nat Cell Biol 10:1470-1476, 2008; Noerholm et al., BMC Cancer 12:22, 2012; Peinado et al., Nat Med 18:883-891, 2012; Piccin et al., Blood Rev 21:157-171, 2007; van der Vos et al., Cell Mol Neurobiol 31:949-959, 2011). These findings, when taken together with the fact that MVs are being aggressively pursued as diagnostic markers, as well as being considered as potential targets for intervention against cancer (Antonyak et al., Small GTPases 3:219-224, 2012; Hosseini-Beheshti et al., Mol Cell Proteomics 11:863-885, 2012; Martins et al., Curr Opin Oncol 25:66-75, 2013; Ge et al., Cancer Microenviron 5:323-332, 2012; Peinado et al., Nat Med 18:883-891, 2012; Piccin et al., Blood Rev 21:157-171, 2007; Al-Nedawi et al., Cell Cycle 8:2014-2018, 2009; Cocucci and Meldolesi, Curr Biol 21:R940-R941, 2011; D'Souza-Schorey and Clancy, Genes Dev 26:1287-1299, 2012; Shao et al., Nat Med 18:1835-1840, 2012), point to critically important roles for MVs in human cancer progression that can potentially be exploited to develop new targeted approaches for treating this disease.
Chik, William W B; Barry, M A; Malchano, Zach; Wylie, Bryan; Pouliopoulos, Jim; Huang, Kaimin; Lu, Juntang; Thavapalachandran, Sujitha; Robinson, David; Saadat, Vahid; Thomas, Stuart P; Ross, David L; Kovoor, Pramesh; Thiagalingam, Aravinda
2012-01-01
Radiofrequency (RF) ablation utilizing direct endocardial visualization (DEV) requires a "virtual electrode" to deliver RF energy while preserving visualization. This study aimed to: (1) examine the virtual electrode RF ablation efficacy; (2) determine the optimal power and duration settings; and (3) evaluate the utility of virtual electrode unipolar electrograms. The DEV catheter lesions were compared to lesions formed using a 3.5 mm open irrigated tip catheter within the right atria of 12 sheep. Generator power settings for DEV were titrated from 12W, 14W and 16W for 20, 30 and 40 seconds duration with 25 mL/min saline irrigation. Standard irrigated tip catheter settings of 30W, 50°C for 30 seconds and 30 mL/min were used. The DEV lesions were significantly greater in surface area and both major and minor axes compared to irrigated tip lesions (surface area 19.43 ± 9.09 vs 10.88 ± 4.72 mm, P<0.01) with no difference in transmurality (93/94 vs 46/47) or depth (1.86 ± 0.75 vs 1.85 ± 0.57 mm). Absolute electrogram amplitude reduction was greater for DEV lesions (1.89 ± 1.31 vs 1.49 ± 0.78 mV, P = 0.04), but no difference in percentage reduction. Pre-ablation pacing thresholds were not different between DEV (0.79 ± 0.36 mA) and irrigated tip (0.73 ± 0.25 mA) lesions. There were no complications noted during ablation with either catheter. Virtual electrode ablation consistently created wider lesions at lower power compared to irrigated tip ablation. Virtual electrode electrograms showed a comparable pacing and sensing efficacy in detecting local myocardial electrophysiological changes. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Duan-Arnold, Yi; Gyurdieva, Alexandra; Johnson, Amy; Jacobstein, Douglas A.; Danilkovitch, Alla
2015-01-01
Objective: Regulation of oxidative stress and recruitment of key cell types are activities of human amniotic membrane (hAM) that contribute to its benefits for wound treatment. Progress in tissue preservation has led to commercialization of hAM. The majority of hAM products are devitalized with various degrees of matrix alteration. Data show the importance of hAM matrix preservation, but little is known about the advantages of retaining viable endogenous cells. In this study, we compared the antioxidant and chemoattractive properties of viable intact cryopreserved hAM (int-hAM) and devitalized cryopreserved hAM (dev-hAM) to determine the benefits of cell preservation. Approach: We evaluated the ability of int-hAM and dev-hAM to protect fibroblasts from oxidant-induced cell damage, to suppress oxidants, and to recruit fibroblasts and keratinocytes in vitro. Results: Both the int-hAM–derived conditioned medium (CM) and the int-hAM tissue rescued significantly more fibroblasts from oxidant-induced damage than dev-hAM (844% and 93% more, respectively). The int-hAM CM showed a 202% greater antioxidant capacity than dev-hAM. The int-hAM CM enhanced the recruitment of fibroblasts and normal and diseased keratinocytes to a greater extent than dev-hAM (1,555%, 315%, and 151% greater, respectively). Innovation and Conclusion: Int-hAM, in which all native components are preserved, including endogenous viable cells, demonstrated a significantly greater antioxidant and fibroblast and keratinocyte chemoattractive potential compared to dev-hAM, in which viable cells are destroyed. The release of soluble factors that protect fibroblasts from oxidative injury by hAM containing viable cells is a mechanism of hAM antioxidant activity, which is a novel finding of this study. PMID:26029483
Plakins in development and disease.
Sonnenberg, Arnoud; Liem, Ronald K H
2007-06-10
Plakins are large multi-domain molecules that have various functions to link cytoskeletal elements together and to connect them to junctional complexes. Plakins were first identified in epithelial cells where they were found to connect the intermediate filaments to desmosomes and hemidesmosomes [Ruhrberg, C., and Watt, F.M. (1997). The plakin family: versatile organizers of cytoskeletal architecture. Curr Opin Genet Dev 7, 392-397.]. They were subsequently found to be important for the integrity of muscle cells. Most recently, they have been found in the nervous system, where their functions appear to be more complex, including cross-linking of microtubules (MTs) and actin filaments [Leung, C.L., Zheng, M., Prater, S.M., and Liem, R.K. (2001). The BPAG1 locus: Alternative splicing produces multiple isoforms with distinct cytoskeletal linker domains, including predominant isoforms in neurons and muscles. J Cell Biol 154, 691-697., Leung, C.L., Sun, D., Zheng, M., Knowles, D.R., and Liem, R.K. (1999). Microtubule actin cross-linking factor (MACF): a hybrid of dystonin and dystrophin that can interact with the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons. J Cell Biol 147, 1275-1286.]. These plakins have also indicated their relationship to the spectrin superfamily of proteins and the plakins appear to be evolutionarily related to the spectrins, but have diverged to perform different specialized functions. In invertebrates, a single plakin is present in both Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans, which resemble the more complex plakins found in mammals [Roper, K., Gregory, S.L., and Brown, N.H. (2002). The 'spectraplakins': cytoskeletal giants with characteristics of both spectrin and plakin families. J Cell Sci 115, 4215-4225.]. In contrast, there are seven plakins found in mammals and most of them have alternatively spliced forms leading to a very complex group of proteins with potential tissue specific functions [Jefferson, J.J., Leung, C.L., and Liem, R.K. (2004). Plakins: goliaths that link cell junctions and the cytoskeleton. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 5, 542-553.]. In this review, we will first describe the plakins, desmoplakin, plectin, envoplakin and periplakin and then describe two other mammalian plakins, Bullous pemphigoid antigen 1 (BPAG1) and microtubule actin cross-linking factor 1 (MACF1), that are expressed in multiple isoforms in different tissues. We will also describe the relationship of these two proteins to the invertebrate plakins, shortstop (shot) in Drosophila and VAB-10 in C. elegans. Finally, we will describe an unusual mammalian plakin, called epiplakin.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rallapalli, Arjun
A RET network consists of a network of photo-active molecules called chromophores that can participate in inter-molecular energy transfer called resonance energy transfer (RET). RET networks are used in a variety of applications including cryptographic devices, storage systems, light harvesting complexes, biological sensors, and molecular rulers. In this dissertation, we focus on creating a RET device called closed-diffusive exciton valve (C-DEV) in which the input to output transfer function is controlled by an external energy source, similar to a semiconductor transistor like the MOSFET. Due to their biocompatibility, molecular devices like the C-DEVs can be used to introduce computing power in biological, organic, and aqueous environments such as living cells. Furthermore, the underlying physics in RET devices are stochastic in nature, making them suitable for stochastic computing in which true random distribution generation is critical. In order to determine a valid configuration of chromophores for the C-DEV, we developed a systematic process based on user-guided design space pruning techniques and built-in simulation tools. We show that our C-DEV is 15x better than C-DEVs designed using ad hoc methods that rely on limited data from prior experiments. We also show ways in which the C-DEV can be improved further and how different varieties of C-DEVs can be combined to form more complex logic circuits. Moreover, the systematic design process can be used to search for valid chromophore network configurations for a variety of RET applications. We also describe a feasibility study for a technique used to control the orientation of chromophores attached to DNA. Being able to control the orientation can expand the design space for RET networks because it provides another parameter to tune their collective behavior. While results showed limited control over orientation, the analysis required the development of a mathematical model that can be used to determine the distribution of dipoles in a given sample of chromophore constructs. The model can be used to evaluate the feasibility of other potential orientation control techniques.
Near-Earth Asteroid Prospector and the Commercial Development of Space Resources
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Benson, Jim
1998-01-01
With the recent bad news that there may be little or no budget money for NASA to continue funding programs aimed at the human exploration of space beyond Earth's orbit, it becomes even more important for other initiatives to be considered. SpaceDev is the world' s first commercial space exploration company, and enjoys the strong support of Dan Goldin, Wes Huntress, Carl Pilcher, Alan Ladwig, and others at NASA headquarters. SpaceDev is also supported by such scientists as Jim Arnold, Paul Coleman, John Lewis, Steve Ostro, and many others. Taxpayers cannot be expected to carry the entire burden of exploration, construction, and settlement. The private sector must be involved, and the SpaceDev Near Earth Asteroid Prospector (NEAP) venture may provide a good example of how governments and the private sector can cooperate to accomplish these goals. SpaceDev believes that the utilization of in situ resources will take place on near-Earth asteroids before the Moon or Mars because many NEOs are energetically closer than the Moon or Mars and have a highly concentrated composition. SpaceDev currently expects to perform the following three missions: NEAP (science data gathering); NEAP 2, near-Earth asteroid or short-term comet sample return mission; and NEAP 3, in situ fuel production or resource extraction and utilization. These missions could pioneer the way for in situ resources for construction.
Finkel, Deborah; Davis, Deborah Winders; Turkheimer, Eric; Dickens, William T
2015-11-01
Biometric latent growth curve models were applied to data from the LTS in order to replicate and extend Wilson's (Child Dev 54:298-316, 1983) findings. Assessments of cognitive development were available from 8 measurement occasions covering the period 4-15 years for 1032 individuals. Latent growth curve models were fit to percent correct for 7 subscales: information, similarities, arithmetic, vocabulary, comprehension, picture completion, and block design. Models were fit separately to WPPSI (ages 4-6 years) and WISC-R (ages 7-15). Results indicated the expected increases in heritability in younger childhood, and plateaus in heritability as children reached age 10 years. Heritability of change, per se (slope estimates), varied dramatically across domains. Significant genetic influences on slope parameters that were independent of initial levels of performance were found for only information and picture completion subscales. Thus evidence for both genetic continuity and genetic innovation in the development of cognitive abilities in childhood were found.
imDEV: a graphical user interface to R multivariate analysis tools in Microsoft Excel
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Interactive modules for data exploration and visualization (imDEV) is a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet embedded application providing an integrated environment for the analysis of omics data sets with a user-friendly interface. Individual modules were designed to provide toolsets to enable interactive ...
Information Ubiquity in Austere Locations
2011-01-01
are incompatible (e.g., GSM vs. CDMA ), or are insecure for one’s purposes. There might be satellite communi- cations, but its access might be...Ave. Latency (Unloaded) Ave. Latency (Overloaded) Std Dev. (Unloaded) Std Dev. (Overloaded) M ill is ec on ds AOI UAV UAV 1 UAV 2 UAV 3 Joseph
Repair of Neocortex in a Model of Cortical Dysplasia
2007-03-27
236. Dang L, Yoon K, Wang M, Gaiano N. 2006. Notch3 signaling promotes radial glial/progenitor character in the Mammalian telencephalon. Dev Neurosci...2006) Notch3 signaling promotes radial glial/progenitor character in the Mammalian telencephalon. Dev Neurosci 28:58- 69. Desai AR, McConnell SK (2000
Zhao, Yan; Cao, Yongsheng; Cui, Lihong; Ma, Bo; Mu, Xiaoyu; Li, Yanwei; Zhang, Zhihui; Li, Dan; Wei, Wei; Gao, Mingchun; Wang, Junwei
2014-01-01
DNA vaccine is a promising strategy for protection against virus infection. However, little is known on the efficacy of vaccination with two plasmids for expressing the glycoprotein D (gD) and glycoprotein B (gB) of duck enteritis virus (DEV) in inducing immune response and immunoprotection against virulent virus infection in Pekin ducks. In this study, two eukaryotic expressing plasmids of pcDNA3.1-gB and pcDNA3.1-gD were constructed. Following transfection, the gB and gD expressions in DF1 cells were detected. Groups of ducks were vaccinated with pcDNA3.1-gB and/or pcDNA3.1-gD, and boosted with the same vaccine on day 14 post primary vaccination. We found that intramuscular vaccinations with pcDNA3.1-gB and/or pcDNA3.1-gD, but not control plasmid, stimulated a high frequency of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in Pekin ducks, particularly with both plasmids. Similarly, vaccination with these plasmids, particularly with both plasmids, promoted higher levels of neutralization antibodies against DEV in Pekin ducks. More importantly, vaccination with both plasmids significantly reduced the virulent DEV-induced mortality in Pekin ducks. Our data indicated that vaccination with plasmids for expressing both gB and gD induced potent cellular and humoral immunity against DEV in Pekin ducks. Therefore, this vaccination strategy may be used for the prevention of DEV infection in Pekin ducks. PMID:24736466
Zhao, Yan; Cao, Yongsheng; Cui, Lihong; Ma, Bo; Mu, Xiaoyu; Li, Yanwei; Zhang, Zhihui; Li, Dan; Wei, Wei; Gao, Mingchun; Wang, Junwei
2014-01-01
DNA vaccine is a promising strategy for protection against virus infection. However, little is known on the efficacy of vaccination with two plasmids for expressing the glycoprotein D (gD) and glycoprotein B (gB) of duck enteritis virus (DEV) in inducing immune response and immunoprotection against virulent virus infection in Pekin ducks. In this study, two eukaryotic expressing plasmids of pcDNA3.1-gB and pcDNA3.1-gD were constructed. Following transfection, the gB and gD expressions in DF1 cells were detected. Groups of ducks were vaccinated with pcDNA3.1-gB and/or pcDNA3.1-gD, and boosted with the same vaccine on day 14 post primary vaccination. We found that intramuscular vaccinations with pcDNA3.1-gB and/or pcDNA3.1-gD, but not control plasmid, stimulated a high frequency of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in Pekin ducks, particularly with both plasmids. Similarly, vaccination with these plasmids, particularly with both plasmids, promoted higher levels of neutralization antibodies against DEV in Pekin ducks. More importantly, vaccination with both plasmids significantly reduced the virulent DEV-induced mortality in Pekin ducks. Our data indicated that vaccination with plasmids for expressing both gB and gD induced potent cellular and humoral immunity against DEV in Pekin ducks. Therefore, this vaccination strategy may be used for the prevention of DEV infection in Pekin ducks.
Framework for automatic information extraction from research papers on nanocrystal devices
Yoshioka, Masaharu; Hara, Shinjiro; Newton, Marcus C
2015-01-01
Summary To support nanocrystal device development, we have been working on a computational framework to utilize information in research papers on nanocrystal devices. We developed an annotated corpus called “ NaDev” (Nanocrystal Device Development) for this purpose. We also proposed an automatic information extraction system called “NaDevEx” (Nanocrystal Device Automatic Information Extraction Framework). NaDevEx aims at extracting information from research papers on nanocrystal devices using the NaDev corpus and machine-learning techniques. However, the characteristics of NaDevEx were not examined in detail. In this paper, we conduct system evaluation experiments for NaDevEx using the NaDev corpus. We discuss three main issues: system performance, compared with human annotators; the effect of paper type (synthesis or characterization) on system performance; and the effects of domain knowledge features (e.g., a chemical named entity recognition system and list of names of physical quantities) on system performance. We found that overall system performance was 89% in precision and 69% in recall. If we consider identification of terms that intersect with correct terms for the same information category as the correct identification, i.e., loose agreement (in many cases, we can find that appropriate head nouns such as temperature or pressure loosely match between two terms), the overall performance is 95% in precision and 74% in recall. The system performance is almost comparable with results of human annotators for information categories with rich domain knowledge information (source material). However, for other information categories, given the relatively large number of terms that exist only in one paper, recall of individual information categories is not high (39–73%); however, precision is better (75–97%). The average performance for synthesis papers is better than that for characterization papers because of the lack of training examples for characterization papers. Based on these results, we discuss future research plans for improving the performance of the system. PMID:26665057
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Factor, Reina S.; Condy, Emma E.; Farley, Julee P.; Scarpa, Angela
2016-01-01
While the function of restricted repetitive behaviors (RRBs) in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is unclear, RRBs may function as anxiety reduction strategies (Joosten et al. "J Autism Dev Disord" 39(3):521-531, 2009. Moreover, anxiety in ASD is associated with low social motivation (Swain et al. "J Autism Dev Disord," 2015. The…
El-Senousy, Waled M; Abdel-Moneim, Adel; Abdel-Latif, Mahmoud; El-Hefnawy, Mohamed H; Khalil, Rehab G
2018-03-01
This study proposed to detect the enterovirus (EV) infection in children with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) and to assess the role of insufficiently treated water and sewage as sources of viral spreading. Three hundred and eighty-two serum specimens of children with T1D, one hundred serum specimens of children who did not suffer from T1D as control, and forty-eight water and sewage samples were screened for EV RNA using nested RT-PCR. The number of genome copies and infectious units of EVs in raw and treated sewage and water samples were investigated using real-time (RT)-PCR and plaque assay, respectively. T1D markers [Fasting blood glucose (FBG), HbA1c, and C-peptide], in addition to anti-Coxsackie A & B viruses (CVs A & B) IgG, were measured in control, T1D-negative EV (T1D-EV - ), and T1D-positive EV (T1D-EV + ) children specimens. The prevalence of EV genome was significantly higher in diabetic children (26.2%, 100 out of 382) than the control children (0%, 0 out of 100). FBG and HbA1c in T1D-EV - and T1D-EV + children specimens were significantly higher than those in the control group, while c-peptide in T1D-EV - and T1D-EV + children specimens was significantly lower than that in the control (n = 100; p < 0.001). Positivity of anti-CVs A & B IgG was 70.7, 6.7, and 22.9% in T1D-EV + , T1D-EV - , and control children specimens, respectively. The prevalence of EV genome in drinking water and treated sewage samples was 25 and 33.3%, respectively. The prevalence of EV infectious units in drinking water and treated sewage samples was 8.5 and 25%, respectively. Quantification assays were performed to assess the capabilities of both wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) and water treatment plants (WTPs) to remove EV. The reduction of EV genome in Zenin WWTP ranged from 2 to 4 log 10 , while the reduction of EV infectious units ranged from 1 to 4 log 10 . The reduction of EV genome in El-Giza WTP ranged from 1 to 3 log 10 , while the reduction of EV infectious units ranged from 1 to 2 log 10 . This capability of reduction did not prevent the appearance of infectious EV in treated sewage and drinking water. Plaque purification was performed for isolation of separate EV isolates from treated and untreated water and sewage samples. Characterization of the EV amplicons by RT-PCR followed by sequencing of these isolates revealed high homology (97%) with human coxsackievirus B4 (CV B4) in 60% of the isolates, while the rest of the isolates belonged to poliovirus type 1 and type 2 vaccine strains. On the other hand, characterization of the EV amplicons by RT-PCR followed by sequencing for T1D-EV + children specimens indicated that all samples contained CV B4 with the same sequence characterized in the environmental samples. CV B4-contaminated drinking water or treated sewage may play a role as a causative agent of T1D in children.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... Ambient Particle Size Distributions F Table F-3 to Subpart F of Part 53 Protection of Environment... Ambient Particle Size Distributions Idealized Distribution Fine Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) Coarse Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) PM2.5/PM10 Ratio FRM Sampler...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... Ambient Particle Size Distributions F Table F-3 to Subpart F of Part 53 Protection of Environment... Ambient Particle Size Distributions Idealized Distribution Fine Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m 3) Coarse Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m 3) PM 2.5/PM 10 Ratio FRM Sampler...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... Ambient Particle Size Distributions F Table F-3 to Subpart F of Part 53 Protection of Environment... Ambient Particle Size Distributions Idealized Distribution Fine Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) Coarse Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) PM2.5/PM10 Ratio FRM Sampler...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... Ambient Particle Size Distributions F Table F-3 to Subpart F of Part 53 Protection of Environment... Ambient Particle Size Distributions Idealized Distribution Fine Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) Coarse Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) PM2.5/PM10 Ratio FRM Sampler...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... Ambient Particle Size Distributions F Table F-3 to Subpart F of Part 53 Protection of Environment... Ambient Particle Size Distributions Idealized Distribution Fine Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) Coarse Particle Mode MMD (µm) Geo. Std. Dev. Conc. (µg/m3) PM 2.5/PM 10 Ratio FRM Sampler...
U.S. Air Force Enlisted Accessions: Upgrading the Pipeline
2010-02-17
of State Boards of Education (NASBE) and the Association for Career and Technical Education (ACTE). Specific collaboration efforts include improving...Accessions Command and the Association for Career and Technical Education . November 20, 2009. http://dev.armyedspace.com/news-updates/news...Understanding Between the U.S. Army Accessions Command and the Association for Career and Technical Education . November 20, 2009. http://dev.armyedspace.com
SLAC Phone Directory: Search Form
Facilities LCLS Hard X-Ray LCLS IT & Networking LCLS IT Photon Systems LCLS Instrumentation Dev LCLS Delivery Dept LCLS Science Research & DevDiv LCLS Soft X-Ray LCLS Technical Support LCLS User Beam Line Ops Sup SSRL MSD Hard X-rays SSRL MSD Soft X-rays SSRL MSDBeam Line Elec SSRL MSDBeam Line
Gietzen, Dorothy W; Lindström, Sarah H; Sharp, James W; Teh, Pok Swee; Donovan, Michael J
2018-03-01
Low protein amounts are used in ketogenic diets (KDs), where an essential (indispensable) amino acid (IAA) can become limiting. Because the chemically sensitive, seizurogenic, anterior piriform cortex (APC) is excited by IAA limitation, an imbalanced KD could exacerbate seizure activity. We questioned whether dietary IAA depletion worsens seizure activity in rodents fed KDs. In a series of 6 trials, male rats or gerbils of both sexes (6-8/group) were given either control diets (CDs) appropriate for each trial, a KD, or a threonine-devoid (ThrDev) diet for ≥7 d, and tested for seizures using various stimuli. Microchip analysis of rat APCs was also used to determine if changes in transcripts for structures relevant to seizurogenesis are affected by a ThrDev diet. Glutamate release was measured in microdialysis samples from APCs during the first meal after 7 d on a CD or a ThrDev diet. Adult rats showed increased susceptibility to seizures in both chemical (58%) and electroshock (doubled) testing after 7 d on a ThrDev diet compared with CD (each trial, P ≤ 0.05). Seizure-prone Mongolian gerbils had fewer seizures after receiving a KD, but exacerbated seizures (68%) after 1 meal of KD minus Thr (KD-T compared with CD, P < 0.05). In kindled rats fed KD-T, both counts (19%) and severities (77%) of seizures were significantly elevated (KD-T compared with CD, P < 0.05). Gene transcript changes were consistent with enhanced seizure susceptibility (7-21 net-fold increases, P = 0.045-0.001) and glutamate release into the APC was increased acutely (4-fold at 20 min, 2.6-fold at 60 min, P < 0.05) after 7 d on a ThrDev diet. Seizure severity in rats and gerbils was reduced after KDs and exacerbated by ThrDev, both in KD- and CD-fed animals, consistent with the mechanistic studies. We suggest that a complete protein profile in KDs may improve IAA balance in the APC, thereby lowering the risk of seizures.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lewis, Nicholas H. C.; Gruenke, Natalie L.; Oliver, Thomas A. A.
Light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) serves a central role in light harvesting for oxygenic photosynthesis and is arguably the most important photosynthetic antenna complex. In this article, we present two-dimensional electronic–vibrational (2DEV) spectra of LHCII isolated from spinach, demonstrating the possibility of using this technique to track the transfer of electronic excitation energy between specific pigments within the complex. We assign the spectral bands via comparison with the 2DEV spectra of the isolated chromophores, chlorophyll a and b, and present evidence that excitation energy between the pigments of the complex are observed in these spectra. Lastly, we analyze the essential componentsmore » of the 2DEV spectra using singular value decomposition, which makes it possible to reveal the relaxation pathways within this complex.« less
How To Produce and Characterize Transgenic Plants.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Savka, Michael A.; Wang, Shu-Yi; Wilson, Mark
2002-01-01
Explains the process of establishing transgenic plants which is a very important tool in plant biology and modern agriculture. Produces transgenic plants with the ability to synthesize opines. (Contains 17 references.) (YDS)
A Framework for Modeling and Simulation of the Artificial
2012-01-01
y or n) >> y Name: petra Simple Aspects: face_shape/thin, nose/small, skintone/light, hair_color/black, hair_type/curly Integrated Aspects...Multiconference. Orlando, FL (2012) 23. Mittal, S., Risco- Martin , J.: Netcentric System of Systems Engineering with DEVS Unified Process. CRC Press (2012) 24...Mittal, S., Risco- Martin , J., Zeigler, B.: DEVS-based simulation web services for net-centric T&E. In: Proceedings of the 2007 summer computer
Naval Open Architecture Machinery Control Systems for Next Generation Integrated Power Systems
2012-05-01
PORTABLE) OS / RTOS ADAPTATION MIDDLEWARE (FOR OS PORTABILITY) MACHINERY CONTROLLER FRAMEWORK MACHINERY CONTROL SYSTEM SERVICES POWER CONTROL SYSTEM...SERVICES SHIP SYSTEM SERVICES TTY 0 TTY N … OPERATING SYSTEM ( OS / RTOS ) COMPUTER HARDWARE UDP IP TCP RAW DEV 0 DEV N … POWER MANAGEMENT CONTROLLER...operating systems (DOS, Windows, Linux, OS /2, QNX, SCO Unix ...) COMPUTERS: ISA compatible motherboards, workstations and portables (Compaq, Dell
Tutorial for Thermophysics Universal Research Framework
2017-07-30
DS1V are compared in Section 3.4.5. 3.4.2 Description of the Example Problem In a fluid, disturbance information is communicated within a medium at the...Universal Research Framework development (TURF-DEV) package on a case-by-case basis. Brief descriptions of the operations are provided in Tables 4.1 and...of additional experimental (E) and research (R) operations included in TURF-DEV. Module Operation Description DSMC SPDistDirectDSMCCellMergeOp (R
DEVS Unified Process for Web-Centric Development and Testing of System of Systems
2008-05-20
gathering from the user. Further, methodologies have been developed to generate DEVS models from BPMN /BPEL-based and message-based requirement specifications...27] 3. BPMN /BPEL based system specifications: Business Process Modeling Notation ( BPMN ) [bpm] or Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) provide a...information is stored in .wsdl and .bpel files for BPEL but in proprietary format for BPMN . 4. DoDAF-based requirement specifications: Department of
Reynolds, James N; Weinberg, Joanne; Clarren, Sterling; Beaulieu, Christian; Rasmussen, Carmen; Kobor, Michael; Dube, Marie-Pierre; Goldowitz, Daniel
2011-03-01
Prenatal alcohol exposure is a major, preventable cause of behavioral and cognitive deficits in children. Despite extensive research, a unique neurobehavioral profile for children affected by prenatal alcohol exposure remains elusive. A fundamental question that must be addressed is how genetic and environmental factors interact with gestational alcohol exposure to produce neurobehavioral and neurobiological deficits in children. The core objectives of the NeuroDevNet team in fetal alcohol spectrum disorders is to create an integrated research program of basic and clinical investigations that will (1) identify genetic and epigenetic modifications that may be predictive of the neurobehavioral and neurobiological dysfunctions in offspring induced by gestational alcohol exposure and (2) determine the relationship between structural alterations in the brain induced by gestational alcohol exposure and functional outcomes in offspring. The overarching hypothesis to be tested is that neurobehavioral and neurobiological dysfunctions induced by gestational alcohol exposure are correlated with the genetic background of the affected child and/or epigenetic modifications in gene expression. The identification of genetic and/or epigenetic markers that are predictive of the severity of behavioral and cognitive deficits in children affected by gestational alcohol exposure will have a profound impact on our ability to identify children at risk. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Reynolds, James N.; Weinberg, Joanne; Clarren, Sterling; Beaulieu, Christian; Rasmussen, Carmen; Kobor, Michael; Dube, Marie-Pierre; Goldowitz, Daniel
2016-01-01
Prenatal alcohol exposure is a major, preventable cause of behavioral and cognitive deficits in children. Despite extensive research, a unique neurobehavioral profile for children affected by prenatal alcohol exposure remains elusive. A fundamental question that must be addressed is how genetic and environmental factors interact with gestational alcohol exposure to produce neurobehavioral and neurobiological deficits in children. The core objectives of the NeuroDevNet team in fetal alcohol spectrum disorders is to create an integrated research program of basic and clinical investigations that will (1) identify genetic and epigenetic modifications that may be predictive of the neurobehavioral and neurobiological dysfunctions in offspring induced by gestational alcohol exposure and (2) determine the relationship between structural alterations in the brain induced by gestational alcohol exposure and functional outcomes in offspring. The overarching hypothesis to be tested is that neurobehavioral and neurobiological dysfunctions induced by gestational alcohol exposure are correlated with the genetic background of the affected child and/or epigenetic modifications in gene expression. The identification of genetic and/or epigenetic markers that are predictive of the severity of behavioral and cognitive deficits in children affected by gestational alcohol exposure will have a profound impact on our ability to identify children at risk. PMID:21575841
Metabolic Regulation of Caspase 2 in Breast Cancer
2011-04-01
S. The apoptosome: physiological, developmental, and pathological modes of regulation. Dev Cell 10, 549-61 ( 2006 ). 3. Baliga, B.C., Read, S.H...Mol Biol Cell 17, 2150-7 ( 2006 ). 9. Bergeron, L. et al. Defects in regulation of apoptosis in caspase-2-deficient mice. Genes Dev 12, 1304-14 (1998...Warburg, O. On the origin of cancer cells. Science 123, 309-14 (1956). 17. Lassus, P., Opitz- Araya , X. & Lazebnik, Y. Requirement for caspase-2 in
Wetzel, Margaret E; Asenstorfer, Robert E; Tate, Max E; Farrand, Stephen K
2018-04-10
We previously described a plasmid of Agrobacterium spp., pAoF64/95, in which the quorum-sensing system that controls conjugative transfer is induced by the opine mannopine. We also showed that the quorum-sensing regulators TraR, TraM, and TraI function similarly to their counterparts in other repABC plasmids. However, traR, unlike its counterpart on Ti plasmids, is monocistronic and not located in an operon that is inducible by the conjugative opine. Here, we report that both traR and traM are expressed constitutively and not regulated by growth with mannopine. We report two additional regulatory genes, mrtR and tmsP, that are involved in a novel mechanism of control of TraR activity. Both genes are located in the distantly linked region of pAoF64/95 encoding mannopine utilization. MrtR, in the absence of mannopine, represses the four-gene mocC operon as well as tmsP, which is the distal gene of the eight-gene motA operon. As judged by a bacterial two-hybrid analysis, TmsP, which shows amino acid sequence relatedness with the TraM-binding domain of TraR, interacts with the antiactivator. We propose a model in which mannopine, acting through the repressor MrtR, induces expression of TmsP which then titrates the levels of TraM thereby freeing TraR to activate the tra regulon. © 2018 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Han, Guodong; Zhang, Shu; Dong, Yunwei
2017-09-01
Organisms on rocky shores are frequently exposed to high temperatures, which cause impairment of cardiac function and retard cellular oxygen delivery. However, some gastropods can survive at several degrees Celsius higher than their Arrhenius break temperature of cardiac function (ABT), indicating the importance of anaerobic metabolism for their thermal tolerance. We measured the global molecular responses to heat stress in limpet Cellana toreuma using 454 GS-FLX to investigate the variations of genes involved in anaerobic metabolism at high temperatures. Next, the gene expression levels of 4 anaerobic enzymes and activity of alanopine dehydrogenase (AlDH), which is involved in opine pathway, were measured in response to elevated temperature. A total of 19 heat shock proteins (HSPs) were determined using real-time PCR at different temperatures. At high temperatures, the extensive upregulation of HSP genes was an effective but energetically expensive form of protection to prevent thermal damage. The upregulation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha mRNA indicated the condition of cellular hypoxia and the high gene expression and enzyme activity of AlDH suggested that opine pathway was the main anaerobic pathway. These results implied that anaerobic metabolism was enhanced to provide energy in the face of thermal stress. Our findings highlight the ecological significance of the anaerobic metabolism of gastropods to thermal adaptation. For predicting the ecological impact of global warming on the distribution of gastropods, the role of anaerobic pathways should be evaluated. © 2016 International Society of Zoological Sciences, Institute of Zoology/Chinese Academy of Sciences and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.
DDN (Defense Data Network) Protocol Handbook. Volume 3. Supplement
1985-12-01
the physical configuration which results from this arrangement, Michael Padlipsky has described this as the " milking machine" approach to computer...NEIRJS-3 74 NETRJS-4 75 77 79 FINGER 81 HOSTS2-NS 83 MIT-ML-DEV 85 MIT-ML-DEV 87 89 SU-MIT-TG 91 MIT-DOV 93 DCP 95 SUPDUP 97 SWIFT- RVF ...PUP QUOTE RDP RJE RLP RTELNET RVD SAT-EXPAK SAT-MON SFTT? SMTP ST SU-MIT-TG SUNRPC SUPDUP SUR-MEAS SWIFT- RVF TACACS-DS TACNEWS
2011-05-27
frameworks 4 CMMI-DEV IEEE / ISO / IEC 15288 / 12207 Quality Assurance ©2011 Walz IEEE Life Cycle Processes & Artifacts • Systems Life Cycle Processes...TAG to ISO TC 176 Quality Management • Quality: ASQ, work experience • Software: three books, consulting, work experience • Systems: Telecom & DoD...and IEEE 730 SQA need to align. The P730 IEEE standards working group has expanded the scope of the SQA process standard to align with IS 12207
Friends, friendlessness, and the social consequences of gaining a theory of mind.
Fink, Elian; Begeer, Sander; Peterson, Candida C; Slaughter, Virginia; de Rosnay, Marc
2015-03-01
Fink, Begeer, Peterson, Slaughter, and de Rosnay (2014) conducted a prospective longitudinal study showing that theory-of-mind (ToM) development at school entry (mean age 5.61 years) significantly predicted friendlessness both concurrently and 2 years later. Friendlessness (defined as lacking any friendship that is mutually reciprocated) is conceptually and empirically distinct from group popularity and independently predicts adverse mental health outcomes throughout life. Here, we respond to the thoughtful commentaries by Wellman (Brit. J. Dev. Psychol, 2015; 33, 24-26), Mizokawa and Koyasu (Brit. J. Dev. Psychol, 2015; 33, 21-23), and Lerner and Lillard (Brit. J. Dev. Psychol, 2015; 33, 18-20) with a focus on three key issues, namely (a) the definition and measurement of friendship, (b) the measurement of advanced ToM development beyond the preschool years, and (c) the exciting future potential for ToM-based training and intervention studies to combat chronic friendlessness. © 2015 The British Psychological Society.
Gnekow, Astrid K; Walker, David A; Kandels, Daniela; Picton, Susan; Giorgio Perilongo; Grill, Jacques; Stokland, Tore; Sandstrom, Per Eric; Warmuth-Metz, Monika; Pietsch, Torsten; Giangaspero, Felice; Schmidt, René; Faldum, Andreas; Kilmartin, Denise; De Paoli, Angela; De Salvo, Gian Luca
2017-08-01
The use of chemotherapy to manage newly diagnosed low grade glioma (LGG) was first introduced in the 1980s. One randomised trial has studied two- versus four-drug regimens with a duration of 12 months of treatment after resection. Within the European comprehensive treatment strategy for childhood LGG, the International Society of Paediatric Oncology-Low Grade Glioma (SIOP LGG) Committee launched a randomised trial involving 118 institutions and 11 countries to investigate the addition of etoposide (100 mg/m 2 , days 1, 2 & 3) to a four-course induction of vincristine (1.5 mg/m 2 × 10 wkly) and carboplatin (550 mg/m 2 q 3 weekly) as part of 18-month continuing treatment programme. Patients were recruited after imaging diagnosis, resection or biopsy with progressive disease/symptoms. Some 497 newly diagnosed patients (M/F 231/266; median age 4.26 years (interquartile range (IQR) 2.02-7.06)) were randomised to receive vincristine carboplatin (VC) (n = 249) or VC plus etoposide (VCE) during induction (n = 248), stratified by age and tumour site. No differences between the two arms were found in term of survival and radiological response. Response and non-progression rates at 24 weeks for VC and VCE, were 46% versus 41%, and 93% versus 91% respectively; 5-year Progression-Free Survival (PFS) and Overall Survival (OS) were 46% (StDev 3.5) versus 45% (StDev 3.5) and 89% (StDev 2.1) versus 89% (StDev 2.1) respectively. Age and diencephalic syndrome are adverse clinical risk factors for PFS and OS. 5-year OS for patients in early progression at week 24 were 46% (StDev 13.8) and 49% (StDev 16.5) in the two arms, respectively. The addition of etoposide to VC did not improve PFS or OS. High non-progression rates at 24 weeks justify retaining VC as standard first-line therapy. Infants with diencephalic syndrome and early progression need new treatments to be tested. Future trials should use neurological/visual and toxicity outcomes and be designed to discriminate between the impact on disease outcomes of 'duration of therapy' and 'age at stopping therapy'. Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
1989-01-01
necessitate de -emphasizing network interface demonstrations in favor of real-time network interface technologies and slip ICEX demonstration of...Aperture Radar target classi- fication and Fault Diagnosis issues. o Demonstrate a complete, transportable , fully functional software engineering...BLK 3 MS 3B 109D MS 3A Blk 3 MS 2 TASM Milestones MS 3A 109D IOC Flex Upgrade MS 3B SW-3 MS 3B Blk 3 IOC Blk 3 Engineering Eng Dev Eng Dev DES Rev
CMMI (registered trademark) for Services (CMMI-SVC) Overview for Workshop
2008-08-01
is from “DoD throws light on how it buys services [GCN 2006].” GAO data is from GAO report GAO-07-20. 5 CMMI for Services (CMMI-SVC) Forrester...Service Addition PAs 3 5 1 22 % of CMMI-DEV PAs are reused; % of Corporate Investments are potentially r usable! CMMI-DEV CMMI-ACQ CMMI-SVC 77...Service Modifications: • 21 amplification in 7 PAs • 5 added references • 1 modified PA (REQM) • 1 specific goal • 2 specific practices
2002-03-01
9045 4 8985 4 9001 5 8804 5 8893 Mean: 8788.8 Mean: 8925.4 Expected S.D.: 93.7 Expected S.D.: 94.5 Standard Dev.: 136.9 Standard Dev.: 107.4 Variance...subject to lit]) severe criminal penalties. Dissemination in 200204 5 042accordance with DoD Directive 5230.25" Air Force Institute for Environment...COVERED March 2002 INTERIM (2001 - 2002) 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE 5 . FUNDING NUMBERS Interim Radiological Scoping and Characterization Survey Report, 1963
Avasthi, Ajit; Grover, Sandeep; Maj, Mario; Reed, Geoffrey; Thirunavukarasu, M.; Garg, Uttam Chand
2014-01-01
Background: World Health Organization (WHO) is in the process of revising the International Classification of Diseases 10 (ICD-10). For increasing the acceptability of the ICD-11, WHO along with World Psychiatric Association (WPA), conducted a survey of psychiatrists around the world, in which 386 psychiatrists from India participated. Aim: To present the findings of “WPA-WHO Global Survey of Psychiatrists’ Attitudes toward Mental Disorders Classification” for Indian psychiatrists who participated in the survey as members of Indian Psychiatric Society. Methodology: The online survey was sent to qualified psychiatrists who are members of Indian Psychiatric Society and are residing in India. Results: Of the 1702 members who were urged to participate in the survey, 386 (22.7%) participated. Most(79%) of the psychiatrists opined that they use formal classificatory systems in their day-to-day clinical practice. ICD-10 was the most commonly (71%) followed classificatory system. Nearly half (48%) felt the need for only 10–30 categories for use in clinical settings and another 44% opined that 31-100 categories are required for use. Most of the participants (85%) suggested that a modified/simpler classificatory system should be designed for primary care practitioners. Similarly, the same number of participants (89%) argued that for maximum utility of a nosological system diagnostic criteria should provide flexible guidance that allows cultural variation and clinical judgement. About 75% opined that the diagnostic system they were using was difficult to apply across cultures. Conclusion: Findings of the survey suggest that classificatory systems are routinely used in day-to-day practice by most of the participating psychiatrists in India and most expect that future classificatory system should provide flexible guidance that allows cultural variation and clinical judgement. PMID:25568475
Experiences Supporting the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera: the Devops Model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Licht, A.; Estes, N. M.; Bowman-Cisnesros, E.; Hanger, C. D.
2013-12-01
Introduction: The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) Science Operations Center (SOC) is responsible for instrument targeting, product processing, and archiving [1]. The LROC SOC maintains over 1,000,000 observations with over 300 TB of released data. Processing challenges compound with the acquisition of over 400 Gbits of observations daily creating the need for a robust, efficient, and reliable suite of specialized software. Development Environment: The LROC SOC's software development methodology has evolved over time. Today, the development team operates in close cooperation with the systems administration team in a model known in the IT industry as DevOps. The DevOps model enables a highly productive development environment that facilitates accomplishment of key goals within tight schedules[2]. The LROC SOC DevOps model incorporates industry best practices including prototyping, continuous integration, unit testing, code coverage analysis, version control, and utilizing existing open source software. Scientists and researchers at LROC often prototype algorithms and scripts in a high-level language such as MATLAB or IDL. After the prototype is functionally complete the solution is implemented as production ready software by the developers. Following this process ensures that all controls and requirements set by the LROC SOC DevOps team are met. The LROC SOC also strives to enhance the efficiency of the operations staff by way of weekly presentations and informal mentoring. Many small scripting tasks are assigned to the cognizant operations personnel (end users), allowing for the DevOps team to focus on more complex and mission critical tasks. In addition to leveraging open source software the LROC SOC has also contributed to the open source community by releasing Lunaserv [3]. Findings: The DevOps software model very efficiently provides smooth software releases and maintains team momentum. Scientists prototyping their work has proven to be very efficient as developers do not need to spend time iterating over small changes. Instead, these changes are realized in early prototypes and implemented before the task is seen by developers. The development practices followed by the LROC SOC DevOps team help facilitate a high level of software quality that is necessary for LROC SOC operations. Application to the Scientific Community: There is no replacement for having software developed by professional developers. While it is beneficial for scientists to write software, this activity should be seen as prototyping, which is then made production ready by professional developers. When constructed properly, even a small development team has the ability to increase the rate of software development for a research group while creating more efficient, reliable, and maintainable products. This strategy allows scientists to accomplish more, focusing on teamwork, rather than software development, which may not be their primary focus. 1. Robinson et al. (2010) Space Sci. Rev. 150, 81-124 2. DeGrandis. (2011) Cutter IT Journal. Vol 24, No. 8, 34-39 3. Estes, N.M.; Hanger, C.D.; Licht, A.A.; Bowman-Cisneros, E.; Lunaserv Web Map Service: History, Implementation Details, Development, and Uses, http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2013LPICo1719.2609E.
Poly(alkylene oxide) Copolymers for Nucleic Acid Delivery
2012-07-17
biofilm infection treatments, pain control and cancer chemotherapy. Charles M. Roth is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical and...technology and engineering approaches to cancer . REFERENCES 1. Aigner A. Nonviral in vivo delivery of therapeutic small interfering RNAs. Curr Opin Mol Ther
12 CFR 715.2 - Definitions used in this part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... generally accepted auditing standards (GAAS) by an independent public accountant for the purpose of opining... approved and adopted by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants which apply when an “independent, licensed certified public accountant” audits financial statements. Auditing standards differ from...
Lee, Eugene; Rosner, Richard; Harmon, Ronnie
2014-07-01
Fitness to Stand Trial is a critical concept in the adjudication of justice-involved persons. A retrospective study was conducted to examine criminal defendants' specific psychiatric symptoms and those symptoms' associations with expert opinions on Competence to Stand Trial. One hundred charts were reviewed: 50 Cases (opined as Not Fit) were compared against 50 Controls (opined as Fit) with respect to ratings on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS). A significance level of 0.001 was selected a priori. Statistically significant differences were found in seven of the eighteen BPRS symptom constructs (with the highest differences in Conceptual Disorganization and Unusual Thought Content) and two of the four BPRS higher-order syndrome factors (Thinking Disorder and Hostile-Suspiciousness). Consistent with previous reports, psychotic symptoms are found in this study to be inversely associated with Fitness. Validity, reliability, and limitations of this study, as well as directions for future research, are discussed herein. © 2014 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.
Valdivia, R H; Wang, L; Winans, S C
1991-01-01
Neoplastic crown gall tumors incited by Agrobacterium tumefaciens release novel amino acid or sugar derivatives known as opines, whose synthesis is directed by genes transferred to plant cells. Agrobacterium cells can transport and catabolize these compounds as sources of carbon and nitrogen. This article describes a region of the pTiA6 plasmid which is required for catabolism of the opine octopine and whose transcription is induced by octopine. This region of the plasmid contains four open reading frames, occQ, occM, occP, and occJ, which show homology to the family of so-called shock-sensitive permeases. TnphoA mutagenesis demonstrated that the OccJ and OccM proteins lie fully or partly in the periplasmic space. The OccJ protein was identified by electrophoresis and found to be fully localized in the periplasmic space. When these proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli, radiolabeled octopine became cell-associated. Images FIG. 6 PMID:1655707
Turbulence and fire-spotting effects into wild-land fire simulators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kaur, Inderpreet; Mentrelli, Andrea; Bosseur, Frédéric; Filippi, Jean-Baptiste; Pagnini, Gianni
2016-10-01
This paper presents a mathematical approach to model the effects and the role of phenomena with random nature such as turbulence and fire-spotting into the existing wildfire simulators. The formulation proposes that the propagation of the fire-front is the sum of a drifting component (obtained from an existing wildfire simulator without turbulence and fire-spotting) and a random fluctuating component. The modelling of the random effects is embodied in a probability density function accounting for the fluctuations around the fire perimeter which is given by the drifting component. In past, this formulation has been applied to include these random effects into a wildfire simulator based on an Eulerian moving interface method, namely the Level Set Method (LSM), but in this paper the same formulation is adapted for a wildfire simulator based on a Lagrangian front tracking technique, namely the Discrete Event System Specification (DEVS). The main highlight of the present study is the comparison of the performance of a Lagrangian and an Eulerian moving interface method when applied to wild-land fire propagation. Simple idealised numerical experiments are used to investigate the potential applicability of the proposed formulation to DEVS and to compare its behaviour with respect to the LSM. The results show that DEVS based wildfire propagation model qualitatively improves its performance (e.g., reproducing flank and back fire, increase in fire spread due to pre-heating of the fuel by hot air and firebrands, fire propagation across no fuel zones, secondary fire generation, ...) when random effects are included according to the present formulation. The performance of DEVS and LSM based wildfire models is comparable and the only differences which arise among the two are due to the differences in the geometrical construction of the direction of propagation. Though the results presented here are devoid of any validation exercise and provide only a proof of concept, they show a strong inclination towards an intended operational use. The existing LSM or DEVS based operational simulators like WRF-SFIRE and ForeFire respectively can serve as an ideal basis for the same.
Evaluating metrics of local topographic position for multiscale geomorphometric analysis
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Newman, D. R.; Lindsay, J. B.; Cockburn, J. M. H.
2018-07-01
The field of geomorphometry has increasingly moved towards the use of multiscale analytical techniques, due to the availability of fine-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) and the inherent scale-dependency of many DEM-derived attributes such as local topographic position (LTP). LTP is useful for landform and soils mapping and numerous other environmental applications. Multiple LTP metrics have been proposed and applied in the literature; however, elevation percentile (EP) is notable for its robustness to elevation error and applicability to non-Gaussian local elevation distributions, both of which are common characteristics of DEM data sets. Multiscale LTP analysis involves the estimation of spatial patterns using a range of neighborhood sizes, traditionally achieved by applying spatial filtering techniques with varying kernel sizes. While EP can be demonstrated to provide accurate estimates of LTP, the computationally intensive method of its calculation makes it unsuited to multiscale LTP analysis, particularly at large neighborhood sizes or with fine-resolution DEMs. This research assessed the suitability of three LTP metrics for multiscale terrain characterization by quantifying their computational efficiency and by comparing their ability to approximate EP spatial patterns under varying topographic conditions. The tested LTP metrics included: deviation from mean elevation (DEV), percent elevation range (PER), and the novel relative topographic position (RTP) index. The results demonstrated that DEV, calculated using the integral image technique, offers fast and scale-invariant computation. DEV spatial patterns were strongly correlated with EP (r2 range of 0.699 to 0.967) under all tested topographic conditions. RTP was also a strong predictor of EP (r2 range of 0.594 to 0.917). PER was the weakest predictor of EP (r2 range of 0.031 to 0.801) without offering a substantial improvement in computational efficiency over RTP. PER was therefore determined to be unsuitable for most multiscale applications. It was concluded that the scale-invariant property offered by the integral image used by the DEV method counters the minor losses in robustness compared to EP, making DEV the optimal LTP metric for multiscale applications.
Differences between individual and societal health state valuations: any link with personality?
Chapman, Benjamin P; Franks, Peter; Duberstein, Paul R; Jerant, Anthony
2009-08-01
The concept of "adaptation" has been proposed to account for differences between individual and societal valuations of specific health states in patients with chronic diseases. Little is known about psychological indices of adaptational capacity, which may predict differences in individual and societal valuations of health states. We investigated whether such differences were partially explained by personality traits in chronic disease patients. Analysis of baseline data of randomized controlled trial. Three hundred seventy patients with chronic disease. The NEO-five factor inventory measure of personality, EuroQoL-5D (EQ-5D) societal-based, and the EQ visual analogue scale individually-based measures of health valuation. Regression analyses modeled Dev, a measure of difference between the EQ-Visual Analogue Scale and EQ-5D, as a function of personality traits, sociodemographic factors, and chronic diseases. Individual valuations were significantly and clinically higher than societal valuations among patients in the second and third quartile of conscientiousness (Dev = 0.08, P = 0.01); among covariates, only depression (Dev = -0.04, P = 0.046) was also associated with Dev. Compared with societal valuations of a given health state, persons at higher quartiles of conscientiousness report less disutility associated with poor health. The effect is roughly twice that of some estimates of minimally important clinical differences on the EQ-5D and of depression. Although useful at the aggregate level, societal preference measures may systematically undervalue the health states of more conscientious individuals. Future work should examine the impact this has on individual patient outcome evaluation in clinical studies.
Differences Between Individual and Societal Health State Valuations
Chapman, Benjamin P.; Franks, Peter; Duberstein, Paul R.; Jerant, Anthony
2009-01-01
Objective The concept of “adaptation” has been proposed to account for differences between individual and societal valuations of specific health states in patients with chronic diseases. Little is known about psychological indices of adaptational capacity, which may predict differences in individual and societal valuations of health states. We investigated whether such differences were partially explained by personality traits in chronic disease patients. Research Design Analysis of baseline data of randomized controlled trial. Subjects Three hundred seventy patients with chronic disease. Measures The NEO-five factor inventory measure of personality, EuroQoL-5D (EQ-5D) societal-based, and the EQ visual analogue scale individually-based measures of health valuation. Results Regression analyses modeled Dev, a measure of difference between the EQ-Visual Analogue Scale and EQ-5D, as a function of personality traits, sociodemographic factors, and chronic diseases. Individual valuations were significantly and clinically higher than societal valuations among patients in the second and third quartile of conscientiousness (Dev = 0.08, P = 0.01); among covariates, only depression (Dev = -0.04, P = 0.046) was also associated with Dev. Conclusion Compared with societal valuations of a given health state, persons at higher quartiles of conscientiousness report less disutility associated with poor health. The effect is roughly twice that of some estimates of minimally important clinical differences on the EQ-5D and of depression. Although useful at the aggregate level, societal preference measures may systematically undervalue the health states of more conscientious individuals. Future work should examine the impact this has on individual patient outcome evaluation in clinical studies. PMID:19543121
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Wilsey, Matthew; Kloser, Matthew
2015-01-01
Imagine middle and high school science classes without a science fair. Participation in science fairs is declining (Harmon 2011), a trend that some teachers, parents, and students find disturbing. The authors opine that the decline in science fairs calls for critically reviewing the potential disconnect between the aims and outcomes of science…
76 FR 10498 - Exchange Visitor Program-Fees and Charges
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-02-25
.... Another comment was from an academic institution and opined that a 54% increase in fees was such a financial burden on academic institutions that the redesignation period should also be increased. As no other academic institutions presented this view, we find that this comment does not represent the views...
Immunological Prevention of Spontaneous Mammary Carcinoma in Transgenic Mice
2001-08-01
respectively, and a sera Mouse Typer Iso- TUBO cell inhibition was found in BALB/c mice injected with typing kit (Bio-Rad, Richmond , CA) as previously described...Curr. Opin. Immunol., 6: 41. Lapp6, M. A., and Prehn . R. T. Immunologic surveillance at the macroscopic level: 414-419. 1994. nonselective
Suicide Terrorism: Deadly Tactic or Operational Art at Work?
2009-05-04
clerical leader, opined in a 1996 interview printed in an Egyptian newspaper that “suicide puts an end to his life out of selfish considerations...attacks in support of their strategic objectives. Following the February 1994 massacre in the Tomb of the Patriarchs-Khalili Mosque perpetrated by
School Libraries and the Educational Ecosystem
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rettig, Jim
2009-01-01
Like the other industries the United States once dominated, higher education is facing increasing global competition. Any strengthening of K-12 education will strengthen higher education in turn. In this article, the author opines that higher education advocates should also urge Congress to include school libraries and librarians in NCLB when they…
Strategic Studies Quarterly. Volume 7, Number 2, Summer 2013
2013-01-01
Handbook of Asian Regionalism Edited by: Mark Beeson and Richard Stubbs Reviewed by: Yves Laberge Maritime Challenges and Priorities in Asia...and Steven E. Miller (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993), 200-2. Van Evera in particular has opined that Europe has become "primed for peace" because
Situating Student Errors: Linguistic-to-Algebra Translation Errors
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Adu-Gyamfi, Kwaku; Bossé, Michael J.; Chandler, Kayla
2015-01-01
While it is well recognized that students are prone to difficulties when performing linguistic-to-algebra translations, the nature of students' difficulties remain an issue of contention. Moreover, the literature indicates that these difficulties are not easily remediated by domain-specific instruction. Some have opined that this is the case…
Sophocles' "Oedipus Rex": A Deconstructive Study
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Akhter, Javed; Muhammad, Khair; Naz, Naila
2015-01-01
Jacques Derrida (1930-2004) is the most prominent figure in contemporary philosophical and literary debate. He originates a trend-breaking theory of deconstruction. He opines the persistence in west European philosophical tradition of what he labels is logocentric metaphysics of presence. He argues that the different theories of philosophy, from…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Solomon, Robert C.
2007-01-01
So opined Adam Cohen recently in the "International Herald Tribune", and so, too, according to a recent book by Joshua Foa Dienstag, a political scientist at the University of California at Los Angeles, "Pessimism: Philosophy, Ethic, Spirit "(Princeton University Press, 2006). In his defense of pessimism as an appropriate and realistic philosophy,…
The Importance of Being Earnest
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
O'Brien, Tom
2007-01-01
In this article, the author opines that modernist and especially postmodernist irony has gone beyond its traditional satirical function of deflating falsehood and exposing pretense. Because of certain historical complexities, irony has evolved in such a way that it has become the enemy of genuine open-mindedness. Among some American intellectuals,…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hugelius, G.; Tarnocai, C.; Broll, G.; Canadell, J. G.; Kuhry, P.; Swanson, D. K.
2012-08-01
High latitude terrestrial ecosystems are key components in the global carbon (C) cycle. Estimates of global soil organic carbon (SOC), however, do not include updated estimates of SOC storage in permafrost-affected soils or representation of the unique pedogenic processes that affect these soils. The Northern Circumpolar Soil Carbon Database (NCSCD) was developed to quantify the SOC stocks in the circumpolar permafrost region (18.7 × 106 km2). The NCSCD is a polygon-based digital database compiled from harmonized regional soil classification maps in which data on soil order coverage has been linked to pedon data (n = 1647) from the northern permafrost regions to calculate SOC content and mass. In addition, new gridded datasets at different spatial resolutions have been generated to facilitate research applications using the NCSCD (standard raster formats for use in Geographic Information Systems and Network Common Data Form files common for applications in numerical models). This paper describes the compilation of the NCSCD spatial framework, the soil sampling and soil analyses procedures used to derive SOC content in pedons from North America and Eurasia and the formatting of the digital files that are available online. The potential applications and limitations of the NCSCD in spatial analyses are also discussed. The database has the doi:10.5879/ecds/00000001. An open access data-portal with all the described GIS-datasets is available online at: http://dev1.geo.su.se/bbcc/dev/ncscd/.
Oscillatory support for rapid frequency change processing in infants.
Musacchia, Gabriella; Choudhury, Naseem A; Ortiz-Mantilla, Silvia; Realpe-Bonilla, Teresa; Roesler, Cynthia P; Benasich, April A
2013-11-01
Rapid auditory processing and auditory change detection abilities are crucial aspects of speech and language development, particularly in the first year of life. Animal models and adult studies suggest that oscillatory synchrony, and in particular low-frequency oscillations play key roles in this process. We hypothesize that infant perception of rapid pitch and timing changes is mediated, at least in part, by oscillatory mechanisms. Using event-related potentials (ERPs), source localization and time-frequency analysis of event-related oscillations (EROs), we examined the neural substrates of rapid auditory processing in 4-month-olds. During a standard oddball paradigm, infants listened to tone pairs with invariant standard (STD, 800-800 Hz) and variant deviant (DEV, 800-1200 Hz) pitch. STD and DEV tone pairs were first presented in a block with a short inter-stimulus interval (ISI) (Rapid Rate: 70 ms ISI), followed by a block of stimuli with a longer ISI (Control Rate: 300 ms ISI). Results showed greater ERP peak amplitude in response to the DEV tone in both conditions and later and larger peaks during Rapid Rate presentation, compared to the Control condition. Sources of neural activity, localized to right and left auditory regions, showed larger and faster activation in the right hemisphere for both rate conditions. Time-frequency analysis of the source activity revealed clusters of theta band enhancement to the DEV tone in right auditory cortex for both conditions. Left auditory activity was enhanced only during Rapid Rate presentation. These data suggest that local low-frequency oscillatory synchrony underlies rapid processing and can robustly index auditory perception in young infants. Furthermore, left hemisphere recruitment during rapid frequency change discrimination suggests a difference in the spectral and temporal resolution of right and left hemispheres at a very young age. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lewis, Nicholas H. C.; Dong, Hui; Oliver, Thomas A. A.
2015-09-28
Two dimensional electronic spectroscopy has proven to be a valuable experimental technique to reveal electronic excitation dynamics in photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes, nanoscale semiconductors, organic photovoltaic materials, and many other types of systems. It does not, however, provide direct information concerning the spatial structure and dynamics of excitons. 2D infrared spectroscopy has become a widely used tool for studying structural dynamics but is incapable of directly providing information concerning electronic excited states. 2D electronic-vibrational (2DEV) spectroscopy provides a link between these domains, directly connecting the electronic excitation with the vibrational structure of the system under study. In this work, we derivemore » response functions for the 2DEV spectrum of a molecular dimer and propose a method by which 2DEV spectra could be used to directly measure the electronic site populations as a function of time following the initial electronic excitation. We present results from the response function simulations which show that our proposed approach is substantially valid. This method provides, to our knowledge, the first direct experimental method for measuring the electronic excited state dynamics in the spatial domain, on the molecular scale.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lewis, Nicholas H. C.; Dong, Hui; Oliver, Thomas A. A.
2015-09-28
Two dimensional electronic spectroscopy has proved to be a valuable experimental technique to reveal electronic excitation dynamics in photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes, nanoscale semiconductors, organic photovoltaic materials, and many other types of systems. It does not, however, provide direct information concerning the spatial structure and dynamics of excitons. 2D infrared spectroscopy has become a widely used tool for studying structural dynamics but is incapable of directly providing information concerning electronic excited states. 2D electronic-vibrational (2DEV) spectroscopy provides a link between these domains, directly connecting the electronic excitation with the vibrational structure of the system under study. In this work, we derivemore » response functions for the 2DEV spectrum of a molecular dimer and propose a method by which 2DEV spectra could be used to directly measure the electronic site populations as a function of time following the initial electronic excitation. We present results from the response function simulations which show that our proposed approach is substantially valid. This method provides, to our knowledge, the first direct experimental method for measuring the electronic excited state dynamics in the spatial domain, on the molecular scale.« less
Lewis, Nicholas H C; Dong, Hui; Oliver, Thomas A A; Fleming, Graham R
2015-09-28
Two dimensional electronic spectroscopy has proved to be a valuable experimental technique to reveal electronic excitation dynamics in photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes, nanoscale semiconductors, organic photovoltaic materials, and many other types of systems. It does not, however, provide direct information concerning the spatial structure and dynamics of excitons. 2D infrared spectroscopy has become a widely used tool for studying structural dynamics but is incapable of directly providing information concerning electronic excited states. 2D electronic-vibrational (2DEV) spectroscopy provides a link between these domains, directly connecting the electronic excitation with the vibrational structure of the system under study. In this work, we derive response functions for the 2DEV spectrum of a molecular dimer and propose a method by which 2DEV spectra could be used to directly measure the electronic site populations as a function of time following the initial electronic excitation. We present results from the response function simulations which show that our proposed approach is substantially valid. This method provides, to our knowledge, the first direct experimental method for measuring the electronic excited state dynamics in the spatial domain, on the molecular scale.
Read, Talk, Play, Watch: How HRD Practitioners Like to Learn
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tyler, Jo A.
2008-01-01
While an aim of research is to inform practice, there exists a tension between scholars who undertake research and practitioners whom it might benefit. Scholars work diligently inside a system that values print for dissemination, but practitioners opine that the practicalities are embedded within ponderous articles rife with academic language and…
75 FR 21638 - Government-Owned Inventions; Availability for Licensing
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-04-26
... metabolism. Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obesity. 2010 Apr;17(2):150-155; DOI 10.1097/ MED.0b013e32833727a1... nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae have significantly increased. At some point during early childhood, otitis... influenzae have significantly increased. At some point during early childhood, otitis media affects more than...
Use of Angle Model to Understand Addition and Subtraction of Fractions
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mukwambo, Muzwangowenyu; Ngcoza, Kenneth; Ramasike, Lineo Florence
2018-01-01
Learners in lower primary and even some in upper primary grades grapple to perform mathematical operations which involve fractions. Failure to solve these mathematical operations creates a gap in the teaching and learning processes of mathematics. We opine that this is attributed to use of traditional mathematical approaches of teaching and…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rothstein, Arnold M.
2009-01-01
History teaching is fraught with the pitfall and danger of subtly instilling into the young the notion that the way history happened was inevitable. This demands the corollary that the way it happened is the "right way." In this article, the author opines that teachers should be prepared to analyze the grounds on which their judgments are made. He…
Applying Social Justice Principles through School-Based Restorative Justice
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
von der Embse, Nathan; von der Embse, Daniel; von der Embse Meghan; Levine, Ian
2009-01-01
Social justice has recently received attention within the school psychology community. Yet, social justice is a nebulous term, as opined by Connelly (2009), who cautioned against searching for what is wrong and instead striving for the highest standards and recognizing needs of every unique child. Shriberg and colleagues (2008) have sought to…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Coy, Mary
2011-01-01
Listening to people complain about the hardships of winter and the dreariness of the nearly constant gray sky prompted the author to help her sixth graders recognize and appreciate the beauty that surrounds them for nearly five months of the year in western New York. The author opines that if students could see things more artistically, the winter…
Affirmative Action on the Docket. Commentary
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Chambers, Crystal
2012-01-01
In signing off the majority opinion in "Grutter v. Bollinger," Justice Sandra Day O'Connor opined, "That 25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today" (2003, p. 342). The Supreme Court's acceptance of "Fisher v. University of Texas," however, may signal an end to affirmative…
Media Analysis as Critical Reflexology in Exploring Adult Learning Theories
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hutchins, Holly M.; Bierema, Laura
2013-01-01
Examining media artifacts as a learning method has received little attention in human resource development (HRD) despite it being a predominate form of information and influence in popular culture. As Giroux (2002) opines, media functions as a form of public pedagogy by offering situations and contexts through which viewers can vicariously…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Butcher, Jonathan
2013-01-01
One year ago, the "Wall Street Journal" dubbed 2011 "the year of school choice," opining that "this year is shaping up as the best for reformers in a very long time." School-choice laws took great strides in 2011, both in the number of programs that succeeded across states and also in the size and scope of the adopted…
Black Spaces: Examining the Writing Major at an Urban HBCU
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Taylor, Hill
2007-01-01
In "The Mis-Education of the Negro," Carter Woodson issues a mandate for a different and original program of education for African-Americans, specific to their own conditions. If educators, the author opines, are to take this mandate into consideration when designing and implementing appropriate curricula and pedagogy, then they must start paying…
What College Instructors Can Do about Student Cyber-Slacking
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Flanigan, Abraham E.; Kiewra, Kenneth A.
2018-01-01
Today's traditional-aged college students are avid users of mobile technology. Commonly referred to as the Net Generation, today's college students spend several hours each day using their smart phones, iPads, and laptops. Although some scholars initially opined that the Net Generation would grow into technologically savvy digital natives who…
2016-06-06
toxic chemicals,4 protection of steel from corrosion,5 or in bioremediation .6 Of special interest is the potential use of the exoelectrogens in... Bioremediation of Uranium-Contaminated Groundwater: A Systems Approach to Subsurface Biogeochemistry. Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 2013, 24, 489−497. (7
Kavet, Robert; Wyman, Megan T.; Klimley, A. Peter; ...
2016-02-25
Here, the Trans Bay Cable (TBC) is a ±200-kilovolt (kV), 400 MW 85-km long High Voltage Direct Current (DC) buried transmission line linking Pittsburg, CA with San Francisco, CA (SF) beneath the San Francisco Estuary. The TBC runs parallel to the migratory route of various marine species, including green sturgeon, Chinook salmon, and steelhead trout. In July and August 2014, an extensive series of magnetic field measurements were taken using a pair of submerged Geometrics magnetometers towed behind a survey vessel in four locations in the San Francisco estuary along profiles that cross the cable’s path; these included the Sanmore » Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge (BB), the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge (RSR), the Benicia- Martinez Bridge (Ben) and an area in San Pablo Bay (SP) in which a bridge is not present. In this paper, we apply basic formulas that ideally describe the magnetic field from a DC cable summed vectorially with the background geomagnetic field (in the absence of other sources that would perturb the ambient field) to derive characteristics of the cable that are otherwise not immediately observable. Magnetic field profiles from measurements taken along 170 survey lines were inspected visually for evidence of a distinct pattern representing the presence of the cable. Many profiles were dominated by field distortions unrelated to the cable caused by bridge structures or other submerged objects, and the cable’s contribution to the field was not detectable. BB, with 40 of the survey lines, did not yield usable data for these reasons. The unrelated anomalies could be up to 100 times greater than those from the cable. In total, discernible magnetic field profiles measured from 76 survey lines were regressed against the equations, representing eight days of measurement. The modeled field anomalies due to the cable (the difference between the maximum and minimum field along the survey line at the cable crossing) were virtually identical to the measured values. The modeling yielded a pooled cable depth below the bay floor of 2.06 m (±1.46 std dev), and estimated the angle to the horizontal of the imaginary line connecting the crosssectional center of the cable’s two conductors (0.1143 m apart) as 178.9° ±61.9° (std dev) for Ben, 78.6°±37.0° (std dev) for RSR, and 139.9°±27.4° (std dev) for SP. The mean of the eight daily average currents derived from the regressions was 986 ±185 amperes (A) (std dev), as compared to 722 ±95 A (std dev) provided by Trans Bay Cable LLC. Overall, the regressions based on fundamental principles (Biot Savart law) and the vectorial summation of cable and geomagnetic fields provide estimates of cable characteristics consistent with plausible expectations.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kavet, Robert; Wyman, Megan T.; Klimley, A. Peter
Here, the Trans Bay Cable (TBC) is a ±200-kilovolt (kV), 400 MW 85-km long High Voltage Direct Current (DC) buried transmission line linking Pittsburg, CA with San Francisco, CA (SF) beneath the San Francisco Estuary. The TBC runs parallel to the migratory route of various marine species, including green sturgeon, Chinook salmon, and steelhead trout. In July and August 2014, an extensive series of magnetic field measurements were taken using a pair of submerged Geometrics magnetometers towed behind a survey vessel in four locations in the San Francisco estuary along profiles that cross the cable’s path; these included the Sanmore » Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge (BB), the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge (RSR), the Benicia- Martinez Bridge (Ben) and an area in San Pablo Bay (SP) in which a bridge is not present. In this paper, we apply basic formulas that ideally describe the magnetic field from a DC cable summed vectorially with the background geomagnetic field (in the absence of other sources that would perturb the ambient field) to derive characteristics of the cable that are otherwise not immediately observable. Magnetic field profiles from measurements taken along 170 survey lines were inspected visually for evidence of a distinct pattern representing the presence of the cable. Many profiles were dominated by field distortions unrelated to the cable caused by bridge structures or other submerged objects, and the cable’s contribution to the field was not detectable. BB, with 40 of the survey lines, did not yield usable data for these reasons. The unrelated anomalies could be up to 100 times greater than those from the cable. In total, discernible magnetic field profiles measured from 76 survey lines were regressed against the equations, representing eight days of measurement. The modeled field anomalies due to the cable (the difference between the maximum and minimum field along the survey line at the cable crossing) were virtually identical to the measured values. The modeling yielded a pooled cable depth below the bay floor of 2.06 m (±1.46 std dev), and estimated the angle to the horizontal of the imaginary line connecting the crosssectional center of the cable’s two conductors (0.1143 m apart) as 178.9° ±61.9° (std dev) for Ben, 78.6°±37.0° (std dev) for RSR, and 139.9°±27.4° (std dev) for SP. The mean of the eight daily average currents derived from the regressions was 986 ±185 amperes (A) (std dev), as compared to 722 ±95 A (std dev) provided by Trans Bay Cable LLC. Overall, the regressions based on fundamental principles (Biot Savart law) and the vectorial summation of cable and geomagnetic fields provide estimates of cable characteristics consistent with plausible expectations.« less
Hong, S B; Hwang, I; Dessaux, Y; Guyon, P; Kim, K S; Farrand, S K
1997-01-01
The mechanisms that ensure that Ti plasmid T-DNA genes encoding proteins involved in the biosynthesis of opines in crown gall tumors are always matched by Ti plasmid genes conferring the ability to catabolize that set of opines on the inducing Agrobacterium strains are unknown. The pathway for the biosynthesis of the opine agropine is thought to require an enzyme, mannopine cyclase, coded for by the ags gene located in the T(R) region of octopine-type Ti plasmids. Extracts prepared from agropine-type tumors contained an activity that cyclized mannopine to agropine. Tumor cells containing a T region in which ags was mutated lacked this activity and did not contain agropine. Expression of ags from the lac promoter conferred mannopine-lactonizing activity on Escherichia coli. Agrobacterium tumefaciens strains harboring an octopine-type Ti plasmid exhibit a similar activity which is not coded for by ags. Analysis of the DNA sequence of the gene encoding this activity, called agcA, showed it to be about 60% identical to T-DNA ags genes. Relatedness decreased abruptly in the 5' and 3' untranslated regions of the genes. ags is preceded by a promoter that functions only in the plant. Expression analysis showed that agcA also is preceded by its own promoter, which is active in the bacterium. Translation of agcA yielded a protein of about 45 kDa, consistent with the size predicted from the DNA sequence. Antibodies raised against the agcA product cross-reacted with the anabolic enzyme. These results indicate that the agropine system arose by a duplication of a progenitor gene, one copy of which became associated with the T-DNA and the other copy of which remained associated with the bacterium. PMID:9244272
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ghosh, Sarmishtha; Dawka, Violet
2000-01-01
Introduces the SPICES curriculum of the Manipal College of Medical Sciences in Nepal, which is student centered, problem based, integrated, community-based, elective oriented, and systematic. Reports that the majority of students opined that the combination of didactic lectures and problem-based learning sessions were definitely beneficial.…
Musings by a Non-"Born Teacher"
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Oswald, Lynda J.
2011-01-01
In this article, the author reflects on her continual journal in regard to improving her teaching skills. She opines that this journey is a story that could resonate with other colleagues to whom teaching is also critically important but to whom it does not come naturally. She describes lessons she learned in her early years of teaching, and she…
Out of the Woods: The Making of the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kotlowski, Dean J.
2006-01-01
"Maine appears out of the woods," the editor of the "Lewiston Evening Journal" opined, after President Jimmy Carter signed the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act in 1980. That sigh of relief was heartfelt. During the 1970s, two Native American tribes, the Passamaquoddies and Penobscots, had sparked a long, statewide nightmare…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Saulnier, Bruce
2016-01-01
To more effectively meet the expectations of industry for entry-level IT employees, a case is made for the inclusion of writing throughout the Computer Information Systems (CIS) curriculum. "Writing Across the Curriculum" ("WAC") principles are explained, and it is opined that both Writing to Learn (WTL) and Writing in the…
Cultivating Effective Pedagogical Skills in In-Service Teachers: The Role of Some Teacher Variables
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Amusan, Mosunmola A.
2016-01-01
Researchers have opined that pedagogical skill of the teacher is a powerful force. This study investigated variables that are required to cultivate effective pedagogical skills for teaching basic science and technology (BST) in Ogun State Primary Schools in Nigeria. A survey research design was adopted. A total of 148 teachers across the state…
A Critique of "The Common Core Is a Change for the Better"
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Wolfe, Adam
2015-01-01
In their article, "The Common Core is a Change for the Better," Gardner and Powell (2013) make an argument in support of implementing the Common Core to improve teaching and student learning. They opine the Common Core will enable students to become more college and career ready and state the Common Core standards will provide…
Theology and Pedagogy: A Response to Sean Whittle
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cooling, Trevor; Smith, David I.
2014-01-01
In this rebuttal to Sean Whittle), Cooling and Smith opine that: 1) Whittle's key concern is with discerning the appropriate relationship between theology and education in the context of a Christian school, 2) Whittle's criticism of our work, is that it fails to achieve a proper relationship between theology and education, and 3) Whittle…
Quantitative diagnostic method for biceps long head tendinitis by using ultrasound.
Huang, Shih-Wei; Wang, Wei-Te
2013-01-01
To investigate the feasibility of grayscale quantitative diagnostic method for biceps tendinitis and determine the cut-off points of a quantitative biceps ultrasound (US) method to diagnose biceps tendinitis. Design. Prospective cross-sectional case controlled study. Outpatient rehabilitation service. A total of 336 shoulder pain patients with suspected biceps tendinitis were recruited in this prospective observational study. The grayscale pixel data of the range of interest (ROI) were obtained for both the transverse and longitudinal views of the biceps US. A total of 136 patients were classified with biceps tendinitis, and 200 patients were classified as not having biceps tendinitis based on the diagnostic criteria. Based on the Youden index, the cut-off points were determined as 26.85 for the transverse view and 21.25 for the longitudinal view of the standard deviation (StdDev) of the ROI values, respectively. When the ROI evaluation of the US surpassed the cut-off point, the sensitivity was 68% and the specificity was 90% in the StdDev of the transverse view, and the sensitivity was 81% and the specificity was 73% in the StdDev of the longitudinal view to diagnose biceps tendinitis. For equivocal cases or inexperienced sonographers, our study provides a more objective method for diagnosing biceps tendinitis in shoulder pain patients.
Prevalence, sources, and predictors of soy consumption in breast cancer
Lammersfeld, Carolyn A; King, Jessica; Walker, Sharon; Vashi, Pankaj G; Grutsch, James F; Lis, Christopher G; Gupta, Digant
2009-01-01
Background A number of components in soy appear to have anticancer properties, including the isoflavones, genistein and daidzein. The use of soy by women with breast cancer is now being questioned because of the estrogen-like effects of isoflavones and possible interactions with tamoxifen. Clinicians providing nutrition counseling to these women are concerned because the availability of soy foods has increased dramatically in the past few years. The goal of this study was to quantify the intake of isoflavones in women with breast cancer. Methods A cross-sectional study of 100 women with breast cancer treated at Cancer Treatment Centers of America® between 09/03 and 02/04. Each patient completed a soy food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) that was scored by Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. Demographic and clinical predictors of soy intake were evaluated using one-way non-parametric Mann Whitney test and non-parametric spearman's rank correlation. Results Mean age was 50.5 years (std. dev. = 9.4; range 31–70) and mean BMI was 27.3 kg/m2 (std. dev. = 6.75; range 17–59). Genistein and Daidzein consumption was limited to 65 patients with a mean intake of 11.6 mg/day (std. dev. = 21.9; range 0–97.4) and 7.6 mg/day (std. dev. = 14.1; range 0–68.9) respectively. Soy milk (37%) and pills containing soy, isoflavones, or "natural" estrogen (24%) were the two biggest contributors to isoflavone intake. Conclusion Our study suggests that the isoflavone intake of breast cancer patients at our hospital was quite variable. Thirty-five patients reported no soy intake. The mean daily intake of 11.6 mg genistein and 7.4 mg daidzein, is the equivalent of less than 1/4 cup of tofu per day. This amount is higher than what has been previously reported in non-Asian American women. PMID:19159489
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dondeynaz, C.; Carmona Moreno, C.; Céspedes Lorente, J. J.
2012-01-01
The "Integrated Water Resources Management" principle was formally laid down at the International Conference on Water and Sustainable development in Dublin 1992. One of the main results of this conference is that improving Water and Sanitation Services (WSS), being a complex and interdisciplinary issue, passes through collaboration and coordination of different sectors (environment, health, economic activities, governance, and international cooperation). These sectors influence or are influenced by the access to WSS. The understanding of these interrelations appears as crucial for decision makers in the water sector. In this framework, the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European Commission (EC) has developed a new database (WatSan4Dev database) containing 45 indicators (called variables in this paper) from environmental, socio-economic, governance and financial aid flows data in developing countries. This paper describes the development of the WatSan4Dev dataset, the statistical processes needed to improve the data quality; and, finally, the analysis to verify the database coherence is presented. At the light of the first analysis, WatSan4Dev Dataset shows the coherency among the different variables that are confirmed by the direct field experience and/or the scientific literature in the domain. Preliminary analysis of the relationships indicates that the informal urbanisation development is an important factor influencing negatively the percentage of the population having access to WSS. Health, and in particular children health, benefits from the improvement of WSS. Efficient environmental governance is also an important factor for providing improved water supply services. The database would be at the base of posterior analyses to better understand the interrelationships between the different indicators associated in the water sector in developing countries. A data model using the different indicators will be realised on the next phase of this research work.
Zhu, Hongwei; Li, Huixin; Han, Zongxi; Shao, Yuhao; Wang, Yu; Kong, Xiangang
2011-04-06
In herpesviruses, UL15 homologue is a subunit of terminase complex responsible for cleavage and packaging of the viral genome into pre-assembled capsids. However, for duck enteritis virus (DEV), the causative agent of duck viral enteritis (DVE), the genomic sequence was not completely determined until most recently. There is limited information of this putative spliced gene and its encoding protein. DEV UL15 consists of two exons with a 3.5 kilobases (kb) inron and transcribes into two transcripts: the full-length UL15 and an N-terminally truncated UL15.5. The 2.9 kb UL15 transcript encodes a protein of 739 amino acids with an approximate molecular mass of 82 kiloDaltons (kDa), whereas the UL15.5 transcript is 1.3 kb in length, containing a putative 888 base pairs (bp) ORF that encodes a 32 kDa product. We also demonstrated that UL15 gene belonged to the late kinetic class as its expression was sensitive to cycloheximide and phosphonoacetic acid. UL15 is highly conserved within the Herpesviridae, and contains Walker A and B motifs homologous to the catalytic subunit of the bacteriophage terminase as revealed by sequence analysis. Phylogenetic tree constructed with the amino acid sequences of 23 herpesvirus UL15 homologues suggests a close relationship of DEV to the Mardivirus genus within the Alphaherpesvirinae. Further, the UL15 and UL15.5 proteins can be detected in the infected cell lysate but not in the sucrose density gradient-purified virion when reacting with the antiserum against UL15. Within the CEF cells, the UL15 and/or UL15.5 localize(s) in the cytoplasm at 6 h post infection (h p. i.) and mainly in the nucleus at 12 h p. i. and at 24 h p. i., while accumulate(s) in the cytoplasm in the absence of any other viral protein. DEV UL15 is a spliced gene that encodes two products encoded by 2.9 and 1.3 kb transcripts respectively. The UL15 is expressed late during infection. The coding sequences of DEV UL15 are very similar to those of alphaherpesviruses and most similar to the genus Mardivirus. The UL15 and/or UL15.5 accumulate(s) in the cytoplasm during early times post-infection and then are translocated to the nucleus at late times.
Friedle, Simone; Kodanko, Jeremy J.; Morys, Anna J.; Hayashi, Takahiro; Moënne-Loccoz, Pierre; Lippard, Stephen J.
2009-01-01
In order to model the syn disposition of histidine residues in carboxylate-bridged non-heme diiron enzymes, we prepared a new dinucleating ligand, H2BPG2DEV, that provides this geometric feature. The ligand incorporates biologically relevant carboxylate functionalities, which have not been explored as extensively as nitrogen-only analogs. Three novel oxo-bridged diiron(III) complexes [Fe2(μ-O)(H2O)2-(BPG2DEV)](ClO4)2 (6), [Fe2(μ-O)(μ-O CAriPrO)(BPG2DEV)](ClO4) (7), and [Fe2(μ-O)(μ-CO3)(BPG2DEV)] (8) were prepared. Single crystal X-ray structural characterization confirms that two pyridines are bound syn with respect to the Fe–Fe vector in these compounds. The carbonato-bridged complex 8 forms quantitatively from 6 in a rapid reaction with gaseous CO2 in organic solvents. A common maroon-colored intermediate (λmax = 490 nm; ε = 1500 M−1 cm−1) forms in reactions of 6, 7, or 8 with H2O2 and NEt3 in CH3CN/H2O solutions. Mass spectrometric analyses of this species, formed using 18O-labeled H2O2, indicate the presence of a peroxide ligand bound to the oxo-bridged diiron(III) center. The Mössbauer spectrum at 90 K of the EPR-silent intermediate exhibits a quadrupole doublet with δ. = 0.58 mm/s and ΔEQ = 0.58 mm/s. The isomer shift is typical for a peroxodiiron(III) species, but the quadrupole splitting parameter is unusually small compared to related complexes. These Mössbauer parameters are comparable to those observed for a peroxo intermediate formed in the reaction of reduced toluene/o-xylene monooxygenase hydroxylase (ToMOH) with dioxygen. Resonance Raman studies reveal an unusually low-energy O–O stretching mode in the peroxo intermediate that is consistent with a short diiron distance. Although peroxodiiron(III) intermediates generated from 6, 7, and 8 are poor O-atom transfer catalysts, they display highly efficient catalase activity, with turnover numbers up to 10,000. In contrast to hydrogen peroxide reactions of diiron(III) complexes that lack a dinucleating ligand, the intermediates generated here could be reformed in significant quantities after a second addition of H2O2, as observed spectroscopically and by mass spectrometry. PMID:19757795
Marcus, Jeffrey M; Evans, Travis M
2008-09-01
The color patterns on the wings of butterflies have been an important model system in evolutionary developmental biology. A recent computational model tested genetic regulatory hierarchies hypothesized to underlie the formation of butterfly eyespot foci [Evans, T.M., Marcus, J.M., 2006. A simulation study of the genetic regulatory hierarchy for butterfly eyespot focus determination. Evol. Dev. 8, 273-283]. The computational model demonstrated that one proposed hierarchy was incapable of reproducing the known patterns of gene expression associated with eyespot focus determination in wild-type butterflies, but that two slightly modified alternative hierarchies were capable of reproducing all of the known gene expressions patterns. Here we extend the computational models previously implemented in Delphi 2.0 to two mutants derived from the squinting bush brown butterfly (Bicyclus anynana). These two mutants, comet and Cyclops, have aberrantly shaped eyespot foci that are produced by different mechanisms. The comet mutation appears to produce a modified interaction between the wing margin and the eyespot focus that results in a series of comet-shaped eyespot foci. The Cyclops mutation causes the failure of wing vein formation between two adjacent wing-cells and the fusion of two adjacent eyespot foci to form a single large elongated focus in their place. The computational approach to modeling pattern formation in these mutants allows us to make predictions about patterns of gene expression, which are largely unstudied in butterfly mutants. It also suggests a critical experiment that will allow us to distinguish between two hypothesized genetic regulatory hierarchies that may underlie all butterfly eyespot foci.
Evaluation of Androgen Receptor Function in Prostate Cancer Prognosis and Therapeutic Stratification
2014-10-01
Martin DN, Starks AM, Ambs S. Biological deter- minants of health disparities in prostate cancer. Curr Opin Oncol 2013; 25:235-41; PMID:23399519 34...2011.077.1) to SP, by the RO1 DK065977 to SS and by the DoD, CDMRP, PC073614 to SS and AD. We thank Thuy Nguyen and Petra Hirschmann for excellent
Reflecting on Progress in K-12 Dance Education
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Callahan-Russell, Colleen
2004-01-01
Dance as an art form is transformational to body, mind, and spirit. The author opines that public education would do just fine if dance was the "only" subject taught. This article presents the author's reflection on progress of dance in K-12 education. The author contends that progress in dance in K-12 education can perhaps be judged by the fact…
An Interesting Cause of Mechanical Small Bowel Obstruction.
Anantha Sathyanarayana, Sandeep; Deutsch, Gary B; Friedman, Barak
2015-12-01
Foreign body ingestion is a known cause of abdominal pain in pediatric population occurring between 6 months and 3 years of age (Wyllie Curr Opin Pediatr 18:563, 2006, Uyemura Am Fam Physician 72:287, 2005, Banerjee Indian J Pediatr 72:173, 2005). Most of the ingested foreign bodies pass spontaneously with 10-20 % requiring endoscopic retrieval, and <1 % of cases require a surgical intervention (Wyllie Curr Opin Pediatr 18:563, 2006, Uyemura Am Fam Physician 72:287, 2005, Shivakumar Indian J Pediatr 71:689, 2004). Presence of intestinal obstruction necessitates surgical intervention to extract the ingested foreign body. Initial abdominal plain radiograph should be obtained when foreign body ingestion is suspected, which differentiates a radiopaque from radiolucent foreign bodies. A computed tomography with 3D reconstruction (3D-CT) is recommended with radiolucent foreign bodies (Uyemura Am Fam Physician 72:287, 2005, Kazam Am J Emerg Med 23:897, 2005). After 24 h of expectant management, failure of spontaneous passage requires further intervention. Timely intervention to relieve the obstruction is pivotal to prevent undue complications. We present an interesting case of a boy who ingested a radiolucent foreign body diagnosed on 3D-CT, successfully treated with surgical extraction.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Bartlett, Roscoe A.; Baird, Mark L.; Berrill, Mark A.
This guide describes the structure and setup of the standard VERA development environment (VERA Dev Env) and standard VERA Third Party Libraries (TPLs) that need to be in place before installing many of the VERA simulation components. It describes everything from the initial setup on a new machine to the final build, testing, and installation of VERA components. The goal of this document is to describe how to create the directories and contents outlined in Standard VERA Dev Env Directory Structure and then obtain the remaining VERA source and build, test, and install any of the necessary VERA components onmore » a given system. This document describes the process both for a development version of VERA and for a released tarball of the VERA sources.« less
Update on Development of 360V, 28kWh Lithium-Ion Battery
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Davies, Francis; Darcy, Eric; Cowles, Phil; Irlbeck, Brad; Weintritt, John
2005-01-01
Engineering unit submodule batteries (EUSB) the 360V, 28kWh EAPU battery were designed and assembled by COM DEV. These submodules consist of Sony Li-Ion 18650HC cells in a 5P-41S array yielding 180V, 1.4 kWh. Tests of these and of substrings and single cells at COM DEV and at JSC under various performance and abuse conditions demonstrated that performance requirements can be met. The thermal vacuum tests demonstrated that the worst case hot condition is the design driver. Deficiencies in the initial diode protection scheme of the battery were identified as a result of test failures. Potential solutions to the scheme are under development and will be presented.
Consortium Developed Arrays Infinium Human Drug Core Array The Illumina nfinium DrugDev Consortium array drug target discovery, validation and treatment response. Detailed Information on Array Infinium Human
The feckless later reign of King David: a case of major depressive disorder?
Ruthven, P; Ruthven, J
2001-01-01
Offers a psychodiagnostic interpretation of King David's later Jerusalem reign which indicates criteria exceedingly those required for a Major Depressive Disorder as listed in the DSM-IV. Opines that whatever other political, polemical, or sociological constructs may be applied to these biblical passages, this interpretative axis supports a scientifically credible account of Yahweh's covenant faithfulness despite David's incapacitating depression.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Stoller, K. Paul
2006-01-01
This article is a synopsis of a presentation offered by the author at the recent United States Autism and Asperger Association Conference in Park City, Utah. During the USAAA conference, the author voices his concerns over the current autism epidemic. He opines that the failure of the medical profession and many governmental and other public…
Allen, J T
2000-01-01
Notes that God-talk encountered in pastoral ministry resembles the genre of apocalyptic literature and that the language and imagery is often confrontational and non-rational. Opines that caregivers need to be aware of the dynamic dimension of apocalyptic in order to understand the use of apocalyptic imagery in the pastoral encounter. Explores the background and theology of apocalyptic perspectives and suggests how it might be utilized in pastoral ministry.
The Guardian. Volume 9, Number 3, Winter 2007
2007-01-01
message correctly. Muslims will ultimately determine whether the ideology of al Qaeda, its affiliates, franchisees , and fellow travelers represents...opined that the effort would not work or would not pass the cost– benefit comparison. Others wanted to develop comprehensive NATO doctrine to guide...full BAT capability, the access-control benefits of BAT/HIIDE are a significant improvement to overall ISAF force protection, even in stand-alone mode
Hypermetabolism as a Risk Factor for ALS
2013-09-01
hIBM) and sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis (sIBM). These disorders are characterized clinically by progressive muscle degeneration and weakness that...1186–1189 (2008). 3. Lloyd, T. E. Novel therapeutic approaches for inclusion body myositis . Current Opinion in Rheumatology 22, 658–664 (2010). 4...46, 424–430 (2008). 8. Weihl, C. C. & Pestronk, A. Sporadic inclusion body myositis : possible pathogenesis inferred from biomarkers. Curr Opin
1987-01-14
Yet men are the same everywhere, intelli- gence functions in every individual according to the same principles. French philosopher Descartes , in...with Sunday work. Some 100, perhaps 200 would be affected by this, says Mega boss Friedrich. IG Metall works councilman Rene Kaufmann opines however...position of the industrial code: Sunday work only because of technical constraints or for service to the customer. 69 IG Metall works councilman Rene
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
McLoughlin, M. Padraig M. M.
2008-01-01
The author of this paper submits the thesis that learning requires doing; only through inquiry is learning achieved, and hence this paper proposes a programme of use of a modified Moore method in a Probability and Mathematical Statistics (PAMS) course sequence to teach students PAMS. Furthermore, the author of this paper opines that set theory…
1988-09-16
IEEE Trans. Electron Dev., 30, pp 1295 (1983) /2/ K.K. Ng and W.T. Lynch, IEEE Trans. Electron Dev., 34, pp 503 (1987). /3/ P.A. van der Plas, W.C.E...300 20 F Ohm I FRC I 500 170 Ohm INPNICje F 65 F 28 fI Cjc F 100 j 45 I fF hFE I 80 j 80 II IBVEB I 6.5 F 6.5 V BVCE I 6.5 6.5 vI BVCB F 18 I 18 (V I...evaluated include a -Xb RAM, a 1.6GHz universal shift register and an 8 bit DAC with a 1.2ns settling time. A micograph of the DAC is shown in figure 6
Collaborative modeling: the missing piece of distributed simulation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sarjoughian, Hessam S.; Zeigler, Bernard P.
1999-06-01
The Department of Defense overarching goal of performing distributed simulation by overcoming geographic and time constraints has brought the problem of distributed modeling to the forefront. The High Level Architecture standard is primarily intended for simulation interoperability. However, as indicated, the existence of a distributed modeling infrastructure plays a fundamental and central role in supporting the development of distributed simulations. In this paper, we describe some fundamental distributed modeling concepts and their implications for constructing successful distributed simulations. In addition, we discuss the Collaborative DEVS Modeling environment that has been devised to enable graphically dispersed modelers to collaborate and synthesize modular and hierarchical models. We provide an actual example of the use of Collaborative DEVS Modeler in application to a project involving corporate partners developing an HLA-compliant distributed simulation exercise.
The Proposed Doppler Electron Velocimeter and the Need for Nanoscale Dynamics
Reu, Phillip L.
2007-05-01
As engineering challenges grow in the ever-shrinking world of nano-design, methods of making dynamic measurements of nano-materials and systems become more important. The Doppler electron velocimeter (DEV) is a new measurement concept motivated by the increasing importance of nano-dynamics. Nano-dynamics is defined in this context as any phenomenon that causes a dynamically changing phase in an electron beam, and includes traditional mechanical motion, as well as additional phenomena including changing magnetic and electric fields. The DEV is only a theoretical device at this point. Lastly, this article highlights the importance of pursuing nano-dynamics and presents a case that the electronmore » microscope and its associated optics are a viable test bed to develop this new measurement tool.« less
Is There a Future for Teacher Ed Curriculum? An Answer from History and Moral Philosophy
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Null, J. Wesley
2008-01-01
Is there a future for teacher ed "curriculum"? The author contends that he is not sure if there is a future for teacher ed curriculum, but if such a future is to exist, the answer will come only from history and moral philosophy. In this article, the author opines that individuals cannot make good decisions about the future of teacher ed…
2014-01-21
269–278. 4 M. H. Fonseca and B. List, Curr. Opin. Chem. Biol., 2004, 8, 319–326. 5 P. Krattiger, C. McCarthy, A. Pfaltz and H. Wennemers, Angew. Chem...Benedetti, Trends Biochem. Sci., 1991, 16, 350–353. 33 C. Toniolo, A. Polese, F. Formaggio, M. Crisma and J. Kamphuis, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1996 , 118, 2744
Methodology for the placement of maintenance area headquarters.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1985-01-01
A methodology for strategically locating Virginia Department of Highways and Transportation maintenance area headquarters throughout the state was developed and pilot tested in the Charlottesville Residency (Albemarle and Greene counties). In the dev...
75 FR 57953 - Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-09-23
... announcement of the meeting was practicable. PLACE: Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board Building, 20th and... about the meeting. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, September 21, 2010. Robert deV...
Benaouda, F; Brown, M B; Shah, B; Martin, G P; Jones, S A
2012-12-15
Weak ion-ion interactions, such as those associated with ion-pair formation, are difficult to isolate and characterise in the liquid state, but they have the potential to alter significantly the physicochemical behaviour of molecules in solution. The aim of this work was to gain a better understanding of how ion-ion interactions influenced passive membrane transport. The test system was composed of propylene (PG) glycol, water and diclofenac diethylamine (DDEA). Infrared spectroscopy was employed to determine the nature of the DDEA ion-pair interactions and the drug-vehicle association. Passive transport was assessed using homogeneous synthetic membranes. Solution-state analysis demonstrated that the ion-pair was unperturbed by vehicle composition changes, but the solvent-DDEA interactions were modified. DDEA-PG/water hydrogen bonding influenced the ion-pair solubility (X(dev)) and the solvent interactions slowed transport rate in PG-rich vehicles (0.84±0.05 μg cm(-2) h(-1), at ln(X(dev))=0.57). In water-rich co-solvents, the presence of strong water structuring facilitated a significant increase (p<0.05) in transmembrane penetration rate (e.g. 4.33±0.92 μg cm(-2) h(-1), at ln(X(dev))=-0.13). The data demonstrates that weak ion-ion interactions can result in the embedding of polar entities within a stable solvent complex and spontaneous supramolecular assembly should be considered when interpreting transmembrane transport processes of ionic molecules. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Duck virus enteritis (duck plague) - a comprehensive update.
Dhama, Kuldeep; Kumar, Naveen; Saminathan, Mani; Tiwari, Ruchi; Karthik, Kumaragurubaran; Kumar, M Asok; Palanivelu, M; Shabbir, Muhammad Zubair; Malik, Yashpal Singh; Singh, Raj Kumar
2017-12-01
Duck virus enteritis (DVE), also called duck plague, is one of the major contagious and fatal diseases of ducks, geese and swan. It is caused by duck enteritis virus (DEV)/Anatid herpesvirus-1 of the genus Mardivirus, family Herpesviridae, and subfamily Alpha-herpesvirinae. Of note, DVE has worldwide distribution, wherein migratory waterfowl plays a crucial role in its transmission within and between continents. Furthermore, horizontal and/ or vertical transmission plays a significant role in disease spread through oral-fecal discharges. Either of sexes from varying age groups of ducks is vulnerable to DVE. The disease is characterized by sudden death, vascular damage and subsequent internal hemorrhage, lesions in lymphoid organs, digestive mucosal eruptions, severe diarrhea and degenerative lesions in parenchymatous organs. Huge economic losses are connected with acute nature of the disease, increased morbidity and mortality (5%-100%), condemnations of carcasses, decreased egg production and hatchability. Although clinical manifestations and histopathology can provide preliminary diagnosis, the confirmatory diagnosis involves virus isolation and detection using serological and molecular tests. For prophylaxis, both live-attenuated and killed vaccines are being used in broiler and breeder ducks above 2 weeks of age. Since DEV is capable of becoming latent as well as shed intermittently, recombinant subunit and DNA vaccines either alone or in combination (polyvalent) are being targeted for its benign prevention. This review describes DEV, epidemiology, transmission, the disease (DVE), pathogenesis, and advances in diagnosis, vaccination and antiviral agents/therapies along with appropriate prevention and control strategies.
Effects of private transportation improvements on economic development.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-09-01
In this project, we explored opportunities and effects of public-private or private-private partnerships for mobility improvements (incl. alternative fueled shuttles and IT infrastructure) and assessed their effects on local and regional economic dev...
Alcohol ignition interlock service support
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1992-12-01
Author's abstract: This Technical Report was produced under Contract No. DTNH22-89-C-07009 for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Under that same contract, a draft set of model specifications for Breath Alcohol Ignition Interlock Dev...
Evaluation of Vehicle Detection Systems for Traffic Signal Operations
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-10-16
Typical vehicle detection systems used in traffic signal operations are comprised of inductive loop detectors. Because of costs, installation challenges, and operation and maintenance issues, many alternative non-intrusive systems have been dev...
Investigation of sediment suspension technology.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-10-01
The goal of the project was to critically review existing literature to access currently available devices, the : identification of areas of improvement for future designs, and the outline of a new-generation cohesive sediment : erosion measuring dev...
Lithium Pharmacogenetics: Where Do We Stand?
Pisanu, Claudia; Melis, Carla; Squassina, Alessio
2016-11-01
Preclinical Research Bipolar disorder (BPD) is a chronic and disabling psychiatric disorder with a prevalence of 0.8-1.2% in the general population. Although lithium is considered the first-line treatment, a large percentage of patients do not respond sufficiently. Moreover, lithium can induce severe side effects and has poor tolerance and a narrow therapeutic index. The genetics of lithium response has been largely investigated, but findings have so far failed to identify reliable biomarkers to predict clinical response. This has been largely determined by the highly complex phenotipic and genetic architecture of lithium response. To this regard, collaborative initiatives hold the promise to provide robust and standardized methods to disantenagle this complexity, as well as the capacity to collect large samples of patietnts, a crucial requirement to study the genetics of complex phenotypes. The International Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen) has recently published the largest study so far on lithium response reporting significant associations for two long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs). This result provides relevant insights into the pharmacogenetics of lithium supporting the involvement of the noncoding portion of the genome in modulating clinical response. Although a vast body of research is engaged in dissecting the genetic bases of response to lithium, the several drawbacks of lithium therapy have also stimulated multiple efforts to identify new safer treatments. A drug repurposing approach identified ebselen as a potential lithium mimetic, as it shares with lithium the ability to inhibit inositol monophosphatase. Ebselen, an antioxidant glutathione peroxidase mimetic, represents a valid and promising example of new potential therapeutic interventions for BD, but the paucity of data warrant further investigation to elucidate its potential efficacy and safety in the management of BPD. Nevertheless, findings provided by the growing field of pharmacogenomic research will ultimately lead to the identification of new molecular targets and safer treatments for BPD. Drug Dev Res 77 : 368-373, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Tropomyosin-1, A Putative Tumor-Suppressor and a Biomarker of Human Breast Cancer
2004-10-01
al., 1990; Cooper cells, is significantly increased in TMI-expressing cells, et al., 1985, 1987; Hendricks and Weintraub, 1981; without detectable...are very potently transformed, and penicillin and streptomycin. Cell lines derived from DT were supplemented with appropriate drugs, depending on the...3112. Ben-Ze’ev A. (1997). Curr. Opin. Cell Biol., 9, 99- 108. Hendricks M and Weintraub H. (1981). Proc. Natl. Acad. Bhattacharya B, Prasad GL
Identification of Molecular Receptors for Therapeutic Targeting in Prostate Cancer
2006-12-01
prostate cancer: potential role of androgen and ErbB receptor signal transduction crosstalk. Neoplasia. 5, 99-109 (2003). 10. Kolonin, M., Pasqualini , R...and Arap, W. Molecular addresses in blood vessels as targets for therapy. Curr. Opin. Chem. Biol. 5, 308-313 (2001). 11. Pasqualini , R., and...Ruoslahti, E. Organ targeting in vivo using phage display peptide libraries. Nature 380, 364-366 (1996). 12. Arap, W., Pasqualini , R., and Ruoslahti, E
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Suess, Gerhard J.
2016-01-01
In this commentary, Suess opines that comparing risk- and non-risk-groups, as is done in the study by Witting, Ruiz, and Ahnert (2016), is a favored approach in developmental psychopathology in order to learn more about underlying mechanisms of normal development, as well as developmental deviations. Witting and colleagues followed up this…
2008-11-01
improves our TREC 2007 dictionary -based approach by automatically building an internal opinion dictionary from the collection itself. We measure the opin...detecting opinionated documents. The first approach improves our TREC 2007 dictionary -based approach by automat- ically building an internal opinion... dictionary from the collection itself. The second approach is based on the OpinionFinder tool, which identifies subjective sentences in text. In particular
Calibration of controlling input models for pavement management system.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-07-01
The Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT) is currently using the Deighton Total Infrastructure Management System (dTIMS) software for pavement management. This system is based on several input models which are computational backbones to dev...
Journal of Transportation and Statistics
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2006-01-01
The journal serves the transportation community by increasing the understanding of the role of transportation in society, its function in the economy, and its interactions with the environment. In addition, the JTS provides a forum for the latest dev...
76 FR 39876 - Government in the Sunshine; Meeting Notice
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-07-07
... public, and no earlier announcement of the meeting was practicable. PLACE: Marriner S. Eccles Federal.... Robert deV. Frierson, Deputy Secretary of the Board. [FR Doc. 2011-17221 Filed 7-5-11; 4:15 pm] BILLING...
76 FR 40731 - Government in the Sunshine; Meeting Notice
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-07-11
... public, and no earlier announcement of the meeting was practicable. PLACE: Marriner S. Eccles Federal..., 2011. Robert deV. Frierson, Deputy Secretary of the Board. [FR Doc. 2011-17487 Filed 7-7-11; 4:15 pm...
Suppliers solve processing problems
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
The year's IFT food expo showcased numerous companies and organizations offering solutions to food processing needs and challenges. From small-scale unit operations to commercial-scale equipment lines, exhibitors highlighted both traditional and novel food processing operations fro food product dev...
Status of Advanced Propulsion Technology in Japan
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1982-03-01
This report describes the efforts of the Japanese transit industry, which includes manufacturers and transit operators, in the area of advanced propulsion systems for urban rail vehicles. It presents different chopper system designs, new ac drive dev...
imDEV: a graphical user interface to R multivariate analysis tools in Microsoft Excel.
Grapov, Dmitry; Newman, John W
2012-09-01
Interactive modules for Data Exploration and Visualization (imDEV) is a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet embedded application providing an integrated environment for the analysis of omics data through a user-friendly interface. Individual modules enables interactive and dynamic analyses of large data by interfacing R's multivariate statistics and highly customizable visualizations with the spreadsheet environment, aiding robust inferences and generating information-rich data visualizations. This tool provides access to multiple comparisons with false discovery correction, hierarchical clustering, principal and independent component analyses, partial least squares regression and discriminant analysis, through an intuitive interface for creating high-quality two- and a three-dimensional visualizations including scatter plot matrices, distribution plots, dendrograms, heat maps, biplots, trellis biplots and correlation networks. Freely available for download at http://sourceforge.net/projects/imdev/. Implemented in R and VBA and supported by Microsoft Excel (2003, 2007 and 2010).
Mapping CMMI Level 2 to Scrum Practices: An Experience Report
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Diaz, Jessica; Garbajosa, Juan; Calvo-Manzano, Jose A.
CMMI has been adopted advantageously in large companies for improvements in software quality, budget fulfilling, and customer satisfaction. However SPI strategies based on CMMI-DEV require heavy software development processes and large investments in terms of cost and time that medium/small companies do not deal with. The so-called light software development processes, such as Agile Software Development (ASD), deal with these challenges. ASD welcomes changing requirements and stresses the importance of adaptive planning, simplicity and continuous delivery of valuable software by short time-framed iterations. ASD is becoming convenient in a more and more global, and changing software market. It would be greatly useful to be able to introduce agile methods such as Scrum in compliance with CMMI process model. This paper intends to increase the understanding of the relationship between ASD and CMMI-DEV reporting empirical results that confirm theoretical comparisons between ASD practices and CMMI level2.
Hayman, G T; Beck von Bodman, S; Kim, H; Jiang, P; Farrand, S K
1993-01-01
The acc region, subcloned from pTiC58 of classical nopaline and agrocinopine A and B Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58, allowed agrobacteria to grow using agrocinopine B as the sole source of carbon and energy. acc is approximately 6 kb in size. It consists of at least five genes, accA through accE, as defined by complementation analysis using subcloned fragments and transposon insertion mutations of acc carried on different plasmids within the same cell. All five regions are required for agrocin 84 sensitivity, and at least four are required for agrocinopine and agrocin 84 uptake. The complementation results are consistent with the hypothesis that each of the five regions is separately transcribed. Maxicell experiments showed that the first of these genes, accA, encodes a 60-kDa protein. Analysis of osmotic shock fractions showed this protein to be located in the periplasm. The DNA sequence of the accA region revealed an open reading frame encoding a predicted polypeptide of 59,147 Da. The amino acid sequence encoded by this open reading frame is similar to the periplasmic binding proteins OppA and DppA of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium and OppA of Bacillus subtilis. Images PMID:8366042
The GenDev Curriculum Development Workshop.
D'cunha, J
1997-01-01
This article describes the second Curriculum Development Workshop held in May 1997 at the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT) in Bangkok, Thailand. The workshop aimed to review critically and restructure the Gender and Development Studies (GenDev) curriculum and to assess AIT's role in training gender experts for the region. Participants included 22 people from 16 countries in Asia, Europe, and the US who were teaching graduate students about gender issues and who were activists with nongovernmental organizations working on gender issues. It was determined that the following were required courses: Culture, Knowledge and Gender Relations; Gender, Technology, and Development; Principles of Gender Research and Methodology in Science and Technology; and Gender Analysis and Field Methods. Other suggested core courses included: Gender and Natural Resource Management; Enterprise Management, Technology, and Gender; Gender and Agrarian Reform; Urbanization: A Gender Perspective; Gender-Responsive Development Planning; and Gender and Economic Change: Past and Present Concerns. Participants distinguished between GenDev courses offered to anyone attending AIT and training courses designed to produce gender experts in the region. The aim of training courses for AIT graduate students was to sensitize potential managers, technologists, and others on gender issues and to create awareness of the importance of including gender perspectives within decision-making, policy formation, and implementation. Training courses to produce gender experts should be directed to those with a prior background in gender studies and include gender analysis in field methods. Participants agreed that there should be an independent and autonomous field of gender and development studies. Participants made six recommendations for such a field of study.
Making connections : intermodal links in the public transportation system
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2007-09-01
Since at least 1991, federal transportation policy has sought to encourage intermodal connections the links that allow passengers to switch from one mode of public transportation to another. The intermodal terminal is a key building block for dev...
Locomotive crashworthiness research : volume 5 : cab car crashworthiness report
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1996-03-01
Models used to analyze locomotive crashworthiness are modified for application to control cab cars of the types used for intercity and commuter rail passenger service. An existing control cab car is analyzed for crashworthiness based on scenarios dev...
Directors of Health Promotion and Education
... Dev Career Center DHPE Webinars Systems Change for Health School Employee Wellness CHES/Attendee Certificates Calendar of Events Internships ... Calendar of Events Career Center Policy Briefs School Employee Wellness Links to Other ... of Health Promotion and Education (DHPE) News & Updates more & ...
75 FR 47305 - Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-08-05
...: Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board Building, 20th and C Streets, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20551. STATUS..., 2010. Robert deV. Frierson, Deputy Secretary of the Board. [FR Doc. 2010-19471 Filed 8-3-10; 4:15 pm...
The Volpe National Transportation Systems Center : an introduction
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1997-01-01
The Volpe National Transportation Systems Center (Volpe Center) has a long and proud history of defining problems and developing solutions. For more than 25 years, the Center has been applying its unique technical knowledge in planning, research, dev...
On the Robustness of Herlihy’s Hierarchy
1993-03-01
s op ’. 5 Thus, the order...includes all complete operations in H. 2. if two operations op and op’ are in S , op < s op ’ if and only if response of op precedes the response of op...in S different from (eý’, eje), op < S op ’ if and only if the response of op precedes the response of op’ in H. It is easy to verify that (i) S is
Joint Force Quarterly. Issue 56, 1st Quarter, January 2010
2010-01-01
He opines that “building a rudi- mentary state, even a flawed one that is able to provide a modicum of security and gover - nance to its people, is...as its ethos to balance tribal elites and powerbrokers that often remain wedded to benefiting their peers. Third, the concept of official gover ...American approach. A renewed U.S. commitment to funding grassroots development and gover - nance must accompany the influx of troops. The Afghan
Gade, Shubhada; Chari, Suresh
2013-12-01
The Medical Council of India, in the recent Vision 2015 document, recommended curricular reforms for undergraduates. Case-based learning (CBL) is one method where students are motivated toward self-directed learning and to develop analytic and problem-solving skills. An overview of thyroid physiology was given in a didactic lecture. A paper-based case scenario of multinodular goiter was given to phase I Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery students in two sessions. An attitude survey of the students and teachers was done using a Likert scale ranging from strongly disagrees to strongly agree. A pretest and posttest were conducted. The students opined that CBL helped them to better their understanding of a particular topic, gave them better retention of knowledge, helped them to relate clinical conditions to basic sciences, improved soft skills such as communication skills and group dynamics, and promoted a better teacher-student relationship. There was significant improvement in student's performance when pre- and posttest scores were compared (P = 0.018). Furthermore, faculty members opined that CBL promoted self-study and problem-solving abilities of the students. In conclusion, CBL motivates students toward self-directed learning and to develop analytic and problem-solving skills; thus, CBL could be beneficial for students' entry into clinical departments and, finally, in managing patients.
Guidelines for development of the Iowa statewide transportation improvement program (STIP). Revised.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2004-01-01
The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21) continues the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991's requirement for an extensive, ongoing cooperative planning effort for programming federal funding. Iowa's STIP is dev...
Connection details for prefabricated bridge elements and systems.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-03-30
Prefabricated components of a bridge produced off-site can be assembled quickly, and can reduce design time and cost, minimizing forming, minimize lane closure time and/or possibly eliminate the need for a temporary bridge. This document has been dev...
SITE PROGRAM EVALUATION OF THE SONOTECH PULSE COMBUSTION BURNER TECHNOLOGY - TECHNICAL RESULTS
A series of demonstration tests was performed at the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) Incineration Research Facility (IRF) under the Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation (SITE) program. These tests, twelve in all, evaluated a pulse combustion burner technology dev...
Growing cooler : the evidence on urban development and climate change
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1997-10-01
This new book documents how key changes in land development patterns could help reduce vehicle : greenhouse gas emissions. Based on a comprehensive review of dozens of studies by leading urban : planning researchers, the book concludes that urban dev...
DETERMINATION OF ELEMENTAL COMPOSITIONS BY HIGH RESOLUTION MASS SPECTROMETRY WITHOUT MASS CALIBRANTS
Widely applicable mass calibrants, including perfluorokerosene, are available for gas-phase introduction of analytes ionized by electron impact (EI) prior to analysis using high resolution mass spectrometry. Unfortunately, no all-purpose calibrants are available for recently dev...
Earplug rankings based on the protector-attenuation rating (P-AR).
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1975-01-01
Forty-five attenuation spectra for earplugs were classified according to a simplified method designed to produce single-number ratings of noise reduction. The rating procedure was applied to the mean attenuation scores, to mean-minus-one-standard-dev...
Developmental mechanisms of intervertebral disc and vertebral column formation.
Lawson, Lisa Y; Harfe, Brian D
2017-11-01
The vertebral column consists of repeating units of ossified vertebrae that are adjoined by fibrocartilagenous intervertebral discs. These structures form from the embryonic notochord and somitic mesoderm. In humans, congenital malformations of the vertebral column include scoliosis, kyphosis, spina bifida, and Klippel Feil syndrome. In adulthood, a common malady affecting the vertebral column includes disc degeneration and associated back pain. Indeed, recent reports estimate that low back pain is the number one cause of disability worldwide. Our review provides an overview of the molecular mechanisms underlying vertebral column morphogenesis and intervertebral disc development and maintenance, with an emphasis on what has been gleaned from recent genetic studies in mice. The aim of this review is to provide a developmental framework through which vertebral column formation can be understood so that ultimately, research scientists and clinicians alike can restore disc health with appropriately designed gene and cell-based therapies. WIREs Dev Biol 2017, 6:e283. doi: 10.1002/wdev.283 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
The histology of Nanomia bijuga (Hydrozoa: Siphonophora)
Siebert, Stefan; Bhattacharyya, Pathikrit; Dunn, Casey W.
2015-01-01
ABSTRACT The siphonophore Nanomia bijuga is a pelagic hydrozoan (Cnidaria) with complex morphological organization. Each siphonophore is made up of many asexually produced, genetically identical zooids that are functionally specialized and morphologically distinct. These zooids predominantly arise by budding in two growth zones, and are arranged in precise patterns. This study describes the cellular anatomy of several zooid types, the stem, and the gas‐filled float, called the pneumatophore. The distribution of cellular morphologies across zooid types enhances our understanding of zooid function. The unique absorptive cells in the palpon, for example, indicate specialized intracellular digestive processing in this zooid type. Though cnidarians are usually thought of as mono‐epithelial, we characterize at least two cellular populations in this species which are not connected to a basement membrane. This work provides a greater understanding of epithelial diversity within the cnidarians, and will be a foundation for future studies on N. bijuga, including functional assays and gene expression analyses. J. Exp. Zool. (Mol. Dev. Evol.) 324B:435–449, 2015. © 2015 The Authors. Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. PMID:26036693
2010-10-28
which underlies many syndromes including mental retardation, epilepsy, schizophrenia, and autism [7,8,9]. In rodents, neurogenesis and neuronal...Jossin Y, Goffinet AM (2007) Reelin signals through phosphatidylinositol 3- kinase and Akt to control cortical development and through mTor to regulate...the PI3K-AKT- mTOR pathway: progress, pitfalls, and promises. Curr Opin Pharmacol 8(4): 393–412. 60. Nadarajah B, Alifragis P, Wong RO, Parnavelas JG
ESKIMO II. Magazine Separation Test
1974-09-01
were supported against blast loading at the hinges and at the top and bottom. Further door support was provided by bearings on stops welded to the...head of the door and by a round steel rod projecting rnwad and bearing on the steel beam. During the test the doors were dislodged and thrown to the...cOAcnlt projection abova door opining to It if fan haaowali. C 133 3180 • 75 153 Stoaf dowat to nmtt door movmint at top; »aas affactwa than door
Identification and Characterization of Genomic Amplifications in Ovarian Serous Carcinoma
2006-01-01
Wang (2005) Exploring cancer genome using innovative technologies. Curr Opin Oncol, 17:33-38. • G Singer, R Stohr, L Cope, R Dehari, A Hartmann, D -F...tions/plate × 6 plates/ d ). This high-throughput platform permits a systemic scan of cancer genome at the nucleo- tide level in a short time [35]. This...Carter D , Foellmer HG, et al.: Neu proto-oncogene amplification and expression in ovarian adenocarcinoma cell lines. Am J Pathol 1992, 140:23–31. 12
2012-04-04
Brain reserve and dementia: a systematic review . Psychol Med 2006;36:441–54. 39. Valenzuela MJ: Brain reserve and the prevention of dementia. Curr Opin...Forces Qualification Test (AFQT) score. A retrospective review was conducted to identify those with postinjury mental health disorders (ICD-9-CM codes...studies suggest the relationship between intelligence and mental health outcome may be more robust in those with MTBI, because the injury itself may
Wounds due to a modified shot gun (home-made): a case report.
Palimar, Vikram; Nayak, Vinod C; Arun, M; Kumar, Pradeep G; Bhagavath, Prashantha
2010-05-01
In a case of firearm fatality, the autopsy surgeon is required to opine as to the range of fire in addition to the cause of death which will help in reconstruction of the events. Problems may arise in estimating the range of fire based on wound ballistics when there is an alteration or modification in the internal ballistics. We encountered such a case in the department of Forensic Medicine, Kasturba Medical College, Manipal, which is discussed. Copyright (c) 2010. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Humanized in vivo Model for Autoimmune Diabetes
2010-02-01
DD-MM-YYYY) 01-02-2010 2. REPORT TYPE Annual 3. DATES COVERED (From - To) 8 JAN 2009 - 7 JAN 2010 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Humanized in vivo...possibility has already been raised by others (15). W81XWH-07-1-0121 7 KEY RESEARCH ACCOMPLISHMENTS Published peer -reviewed...4399–4405. 33. Rudolph , M. G., and I. A. Wilson. 2002. The specificity of TCR/pMHC inter- action. Curr. Opin. Immunol. 14: 52–65. 34. Riberdy, J. M., E
The Impact of Sweat Calcium Loss on Bone Health in Soldiers: A Pilot Study
2013-02-06
correlated to total calories, carbohydrate, fat , and protein intake. For Group 1 (Medical) overall diet did not have an impact on bone density. For Group...baseline heel bone density for this group we do not know if the diet , high in calories, protein, and carbohydrates, with adequate amounts of calcium...FH. (2010). Acid diet ( high -meat protein) effects on calcium metabolism and bone health. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care, 13(6):698-702. Cizza, G
Societal Interactions in Ovarian Cancer Metastases: A Quorum Sensing Hypothesis
2007-11-01
subsequent studies we found that the density of the cells in culture at the time of harvest for injection did have a significant effect on their...VJ (2003) From motility to virulence: sensing and responding to environmental signals in Vibrio chol- erae. Curr Opin Microbiol 6:186–190. doi:10.1016...of luminescence in Vibrio har- veyi: sequence and function of genes encoding a second sensory pathway. Mol Microbiol 13:273–286. doi:10.1111/j.1365
DEMONSTRATION BULLETIN: TEXACO GASIFICATION PROCESS TEXACO, INC.
The Texaco Gasification Process (TGP) has operated commercially for nearly 45 years on feeds such as natural gas, liquid petroleum fractions, coal, and petroleum coke. More than 45 plants are either operational or under development in the United States and abroad. Texaco has dev...
Load and resistance factor design of bridge foundations accounting for pile group-soil interaction.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-11-01
Pile group foundations are used in most foundation solutions for transportation structures. Rigorous and reliable pile design methods are : required to produce designs whose level of safety (probability of failure) is known. By utilizing recently dev...
A MANAGEMENT SUPPORT SYSTEM FOR GREAT LAKES COASTAL WETLANDS
The Great Lakes National Program Office in conjunction with the Great Lakes Commission and other researchers is leading a large scale collaborative effort that will yield, in unprecedented detail, a management support system for Great Lakes coastal wetlands. This entails the dev...
Aviation Mechanic General, Airframe, and Powerplant Knowledge Test Guide
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1995-01-01
The FAA has available hundreds of computer testing centers nationwide. These testing centers offer the full range of airman knowledge tests. Refer to appendix 1 in this guide for a list of computer testing designees. This knowledge test guide was dev...
Cost-Effectiveness of Aflatoxin Control Methods: Economic Incentives
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Multiple sectors in U.S. crop industries – growers, elevators, handlers/shellers, processors, distributors, and consumers – are affected by aflatoxin contamination of commodities, and have the potential to control it. Aflatoxin control methods at both preharvest and postharvest levels have been dev...
Supporting Collaborative Model and Data Service Development and Deployment with DevOps
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
David, O.
2016-12-01
Adopting DevOps practices for model service development and deployment enables a community to engage in service-oriented modeling and data management. The Cloud Services Integration Platform (CSIP) developed the last 5 years at Colorado State University provides for collaborative integration of environmental models into scalable model and data services as a micro-services platform with API and deployment infrastructure. Originally developed to support USDA natural resource applications, it proved suitable for a wider range of applications in the environmental modeling domain. While extending its scope and visibility it became apparent community integration and adequate work flow support through the full model development and application cycle drove successful outcomes.DevOps provide best practices, tools, and organizational structures to optimize the transition from model service development to deployment by minimizing the (i) operational burden and (ii) turnaround time for modelers. We have developed and implemented a methodology to fully automate a suite of applications for application lifecycle management, version control, continuous integration, container management, and container scaling to enable model and data service developers in various institutions to collaboratively build, run, deploy, test, and scale services within minutes.To date more than 160 model and data services are available for applications in hydrology (PRMS, Hydrotools, CFA, ESP), water and wind erosion prediction (WEPP, WEPS, RUSLE2), soil quality trends (SCI, STIR), water quality analysis (SWAT-CP, WQM, CFA, AgES-W), stream degradation assessment (SWAT-DEG), hydraulics (cross-section), and grazing management (GRAS). In addition, supporting data services include soil (SSURGO), ecological site (ESIS), climate (CLIGEN, WINDGEN), land management and crop rotations (LMOD), and pesticides (WQM), developed using this workflow automation and decentralized governance.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ergazaki, Marida; Alexaki, Aspa; Papadopoulou, Chrysa; Kalpakiori, Marieleni
2014-02-01
This paper aims at exploring (a) whether preschoolers recognize that offspring share physical traits with their parents due to birth and behavioural ones due to nurture, and (b) whether they seem ready to explain shared physical traits with a `pre-biological' causal model that includes the contribution of both parents and a rudimentary notion of genes. This exploration is supposed to provide evidence for our next step, which is the development of an early years' learning environment about inheritance. Conducting individual, semi-structured interviews with 90 preschoolers (age 4.5-5.5) of four public kindergartens in Patras, we attempted to trace their reasoning about (a) whether and why offspring share physical and behavioural traits with parents and (b) which mechanism could better explain the shared physical traits. The probes were a modified six-case version of Solomon et al. (Child Dev 67:151-171, 1996) `adoption task, as well as a three-case task based on Springer's (Child Dev 66:547-558, 1995) `mechanism task' and on Solomon and Johnson's (Br J Dev Psychol 18(1):81-96, 2000) idea of genes as a `conceptual placeholder'. The qualitative and quantitative analysis of the interviews showed overlapping reasoning about the origin of physical and behavioural family resemblance. Nevertheless, we did trace the `birth-driven' argument for the attribution of the offspring's physical traits to the biological parents, as well as a preference for the `pre-biological' model that introduces a rudimentary idea of genes in order to explain shared physical traits between parents and offspring. The findings of the study and the educational implications are thoroughly discussed.
Li, Chunlin; Liu, Miao; Hu, Yuanman; Han, Rongqing; Shi, Tuo; Qu, Xiuqi; Wu, Yilin
2018-02-05
As urbanization progresses, increasingly impervious surfaces have changed the hydrological processes in cities and resulted in a major challenge for urban stormwater control. This study uses the urban stormwater model to evaluate the performance and costs of low impact development (LID) scenarios in a micro urban catchment. Rainfall-runoff data of three rainfall events were used for model calibration and validation. The pre-developed (PreDev) scenario, post-developed (PostDev) scenario, and three LID scenarios were used to evaluate the hydrologic performance of LID measures. Using reduction in annual runoff as the goal, the best solutions for each LID scenario were selected using cost-effectiveness curves. The simulation results indicated that the three designed LID scenarios could effectively reduce annual runoff volumes and pollutant loads compared with the PostDev scenario. The most effective scenario (MaxPerf) reduced annual runoff by 53.4%, followed by the sponge city (SpoPerf, 51.5%) and economy scenarios (EcoPerf, 43.1%). The runoff control efficiency of the MaxPerf and SpoPerf scenarios increased by 23.9% and 19.5%, respectively, when compared with the EcoPerf scenario; however, the costs increased by 104% and 83.6%. The reduction rates of four pollutants (TSS, TN, TP, and COD) under the MaxPerf scenario were 59.8-61.1%, followed by SpoPerf (53.9-58.3%) and EcoPerf (42.3-45.4%), and the costs of the three scenarios were 3.74, 3.47, and 1.83 million yuan, respectively. These results can provide guidance to urban stormwater managers in future urban planning to improve urban water security.
Evaluating the Hydrologic Performance of Low Impact Development Scenarios in a Micro Urban Catchment
Li, Chunlin; Liu, Miao; Hu, Yuanman; Han, Rongqing; Shi, Tuo; Qu, Xiuqi; Wu, Yilin
2018-01-01
As urbanization progresses, increasingly impervious surfaces have changed the hydrological processes in cities and resulted in a major challenge for urban stormwater control. This study uses the urban stormwater model to evaluate the performance and costs of low impact development (LID) scenarios in a micro urban catchment. Rainfall-runoff data of three rainfall events were used for model calibration and validation. The pre-developed (PreDev) scenario, post-developed (PostDev) scenario, and three LID scenarios were used to evaluate the hydrologic performance of LID measures. Using reduction in annual runoff as the goal, the best solutions for each LID scenario were selected using cost-effectiveness curves. The simulation results indicated that the three designed LID scenarios could effectively reduce annual runoff volumes and pollutant loads compared with the PostDev scenario. The most effective scenario (MaxPerf) reduced annual runoff by 53.4%, followed by the sponge city (SpoPerf, 51.5%) and economy scenarios (EcoPerf, 43.1%). The runoff control efficiency of the MaxPerf and SpoPerf scenarios increased by 23.9% and 19.5%, respectively, when compared with the EcoPerf scenario; however, the costs increased by 104% and 83.6%. The reduction rates of four pollutants (TSS, TN, TP, and COD) under the MaxPerf scenario were 59.8–61.1%, followed by SpoPerf (53.9–58.3%) and EcoPerf (42.3–45.4%), and the costs of the three scenarios were 3.74, 3.47 and 1.83 million yuan, respectively. These results can provide guidance to urban stormwater managers in future urban planning to improve urban water security. PMID:29401747
Early Human Occupation on the Northeast Tibetan Plateau
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rhode, D.; Madsen, D.; Brantingham, P.; Perrault, C.
2010-12-01
The Tibetan Plateau presents great challenges for human occupation: low oxygen, high ultraviolet radiation, harsh seasonal climate, low overall biological productivity. How and when early humans were able to cope physiologically, genetically, and behaviorally with these extremes is important for understanding the history of human adaptive flexibility. Our investigations of prehistoric human settlement on the northeast Tibetan Plateau focus on (a) establishing well-dated evidence for occupation of altitudes >3000 m, (b) the environmental context of high altitude adaptation, and (c) relations of hunting and pastoralism to lower-altitude agrarian systems. We observe two major prehistoric settlement patterns in the Qinghai Lake area. The earliest, ~15,000-7500 yr old, consists of small isolated firehearths with sparse associated stone tools and wild mammal remains (1). Numerous hearths often occur in the same localities, indicating repeated short-duration occupations by small hunting parties. A second pattern, ~9000-4000 yr old, was established during the Holocene climatic optimum. These sites represent prolonged seasonal residential occupation, containing dark anthropogenic midden, hearth and pit constructions, abundant stone tools, occasional ceramics, and abundant diverse faunal remains (including medium-large mammals but lacking domestic sheep/yak)(2). These Plateau-margin base camps allowed greater intensity of use of the high Plateau. Residential occupation was strongly influenced by nearby lower-altitude farming communities; development of the socioeconomic landscape along the Yellow River likely played at least as great a role in Plateau occupation patterns as did Holocene environmental changes. Holocene vegetation changes in the NE Tibetan Plateau have been attributed to climate (3) or anthropogenic modification (4). Our results document changes in shrub/tree presence from ~12,000-4000 BP, similar to pollen records, that likely reflect climate rather than anthropogenic grazing pressure, because domestic yak/sheep remains are absent archaeologically before ~4000 BP. Our results have implications for the age of distinct Tibetan high-altitude physiological adaptations (5), suggested to be as recent as ~2750 BP. Prolonged occupation of Plateau margins commenced much earlier, but year-round occupation above 4000 m likely occurred only with the emergence of yak pastoralism (6). Genetic models need to consider which environmental factors lead to strong selection for genetic divergence (e.g., seasonal vs year-round occupation, occupation at ~3000 m vs >4000 m, etc); settlement history reconstructions such as that presented here can help. (1)Brantingham PJ, et al. 2007, Elsevier Dev Quat Sci 9:129-150; Madsen DB, et al. 2006, J Arch Sci 33:1433-1444. (2)Rhode D, et al. 2007, J Arch Sci 34:600-612. (3)Herzschuh, U, et al. 2010, Glo Ecol Biogeog 19:278-286. (4)Miehe G, et al. 2009, Palaeo Palaeo Palaeo 267:130-147.; Schlütz F., Lehmkuhl F., 2009, Quat Sci Rev 28:1449-1471. (5)Beall C, et al. 2010, PNAS 107:11459-11464; Simonson TS, et al. 2010, Science 329:72-75; Yi X. et al., 2010, Science 329:75-78. (6)Rhode D, et al. 2007, Elsevier Dev Quat Sci 9:205-226.
SPATIAL ACCURACY: A CRITICAL FACTOR IN GIS-RELATED ACTIVITIES
Onsite analyses are critical to making timely decisions. The results of these decisions may not be realized for many years. In order to increase the value of onsite analyses and to create and utilize meaningful environmental models, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) dev...
Coast Guard : update on Marine Information for Safety and Law Enforcement System
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2001-10-01
The Coast Guard is developing a web-based information system to replace an aging computer system that it uses to track safety and law-enforcement actions involving commercial and recreational vessels. In 1995 the Coast Guard awarded a contract to dev...
Development of the Comprehensive General Parenting Questionnaire for caregivers of 5-13 year olds
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Despite the large number of parenting questionnaires, considerable disagreement exists about how to best assess parenting. Most of the instruments only assess limited aspects of parenting. To overcome this shortcoming, the "Comprehensive General Parenting Questionnaire" (CGPQ) was systematically dev...
Petrotac bridge deck waterproofing membrane on Five Mile Creek Bridge : first interim report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1986-09-01
During the 1970's, the Oregon State Highway Division was involved in a Federally funded experimental program to evaluate various waterproofing membrane systems for bridge decks. Through this program, a list of approved products and/or systems was dev...
Calibration of region-specific gates pile driving formula for LRFD : final report 561.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-05-01
This research project proposes new DOTD pile driving formulas for pile capacity verification using pile driving blow : counts obtained at either end-of-initial driving (EOID) or at the beginning-of-restrike (BOR). The pile driving : formulas were dev...
Durability of certain configurations for providing skid resistance on concrete pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1974-01-01
The main objective of this study was to establish the factors that influence the durability of the surface configurations that are used or can be used to provide high and long lasting skid resistance for portland cement concrete pavements. In the dev...
Coaching for Better (Software) Buying Power in an Agile World
2013-06-01
believes that DevOps , the process of warfighters and developers work- ing together throughout the project, is superior to volumes of detailed...ride on the Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise Services (CANES) infrastructure. This transformation is not easy. It requires a change in
imDEV: a graphical user interface to R multivariate analysis tools in Microsoft Excel
Grapov, Dmitry; Newman, John W.
2012-01-01
Summary: Interactive modules for Data Exploration and Visualization (imDEV) is a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet embedded application providing an integrated environment for the analysis of omics data through a user-friendly interface. Individual modules enables interactive and dynamic analyses of large data by interfacing R's multivariate statistics and highly customizable visualizations with the spreadsheet environment, aiding robust inferences and generating information-rich data visualizations. This tool provides access to multiple comparisons with false discovery correction, hierarchical clustering, principal and independent component analyses, partial least squares regression and discriminant analysis, through an intuitive interface for creating high-quality two- and a three-dimensional visualizations including scatter plot matrices, distribution plots, dendrograms, heat maps, biplots, trellis biplots and correlation networks. Availability and implementation: Freely available for download at http://sourceforge.net/projects/imdev/. Implemented in R and VBA and supported by Microsoft Excel (2003, 2007 and 2010). Contact: John.Newman@ars.usda.gov Supplementary Information: Installation instructions, tutorials and users manual are available at http://sourceforge.net/projects/imdev/. PMID:22815358
Zebrafish embryo developmental toxicology assay.
Panzica-Kelly, Julieta M; Zhang, Cindy X; Augustine-Rauch, Karen
2012-01-01
A promising in vitro zebrafish developmental toxicology assay was generated to test compounds for their teratogenic potential. The assay's predictivity is approximately 87% in AB strain fish (Brannen KC et al., Birth Defects Res B Dev Reprod Toxicol 89:66-77, 2010). The procedure entails exposing dechorionated gastrulation-stage embryos to a range of compound concentrations for 5 days throughout embryonic and larva development. The larvae are evaluated for viability in order to identify an LC25 (the compound concentration in which 25% lethality is observed) and morphological anomalies using a numerical score system to identify the NOAEL (no observed adverse effect level). These values are used to calculate the teratogenic index (LC25/NOAEL ratio) of each compound. If the teratogenic index is equal to or greater than 10 then the compound is classified as a teratogen, and if the ratio is less than 10 then the compound is classified as a nonteratogen (Brannen KC et al., Birth Defects Res B Dev Reprod Toxicol 89:66-77, 2010).
Phenotypic plasticity and remodeling in the stress-induced Caenorhabditis elegans dauer.
Androwski, Rebecca J; Flatt, Kristen M; Schroeder, Nathan E
2017-09-01
Organisms are often capable of modifying their development to better suit their environment. Under adverse conditions, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans develops into a stress-resistant alternative larval stage called dauer. The dauer stage is the primary survival stage for C. elegans in nature. Large-scale tissue remodeling during dauer conveys resistance to harsh environments. The environmental and genetic regulation of the decision to enter dauer has been extensively studied. However, less is known about the mechanisms regulating tissue remodeling. Changes to the cuticle and suppression of feeding in dauers lead to an increased resistance to external stressors. Meanwhile reproductive development arrests during dauer while preserving the ability to reproduce once favorable environmental conditions return. Dramatic remodeling of neurons, glia, and muscles during dauer likely facilitate dauer-specific behaviors. Dauer-specific pulsation of the excretory duct likely mediates a response to osmotic stress. The power of C. elegans genetics has uncovered some of the molecular pathways regulating dauer tissue remodeling. In addition to genes that regulate single remodeling events, several mutants result in pleiotropic defects in dauer remodeling. This review details the individual aspects of morphological changes that occur during dauer formation and discusses molecular mechanisms regulating these processes. The dauer stage provides us with an excellent model for understanding phenotypic plasticity and remodeling from the individual cell to an entire animal. WIREs Dev Biol 2017, 6:e278. doi: 10.1002/wdev.278 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
BIOREMEDIATION OF HAZARDOUS WASTES - RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, AND FIELD EVALUATIONS - 1993
The proceedings of the 1993 Symposium on Bioremediation of Hazardous Wastes, hosted by the Office of Research and Development (ORD) of the EPA in Dallas, Texas The symposium was the sixth annual meeting for the presentation of research conducts (by EPA's Biosystems Technology Dev...
Lessons from Cotton: Research Projects Following Development of a Community-based Genotyping Array
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
High-throughput, cost-effective genotyping arrays provide a standardized resource for plant breeding communities that can be used for a wide range of applications at a suitable pace for integrating pertinent information into breeding programs. Traditionally, crop research communities will target dev...
Deriving novel relationships from the scientific literature is an important adjunct to datamining activities for complex datasets in genomics and high-throughput screening activities. Automated text-mining algorithms can be used to extract relevant content from the literature and...
77 FR 34392 - Government-Owned Inventions; Availability for Licensing
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-06-11
... and efficacy against renal and prostate cancer cell lines in vivo. The compound can be efficiently... sperm binding persist after replacement of mouse sperm receptors with human homologs. Dev Cell. 2003 Jul....; 301-435- 4074; [email protected] . Englerin A: A Novel Renal Cancer Therapeutic Isolated...
Harnessing the soil microbiome for increased drought resistance
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Dr. Manter is a Research Soil Scientist in the Soil Management and Sugar Beet Research Unit (SMSBRU) of the USDA-Agricultural Research Service in Fort Collins, Colorado. His research examines soil biology and plant-microbial interactions aimed at optimizing soil health. Research emphasis is on dev...
75 FR 3236 - Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-01-20
... FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Sunshine Act Meeting AGENCY HOLDING THE MEETING: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. TIME AND DATE: 12 p.m., Monday, January 25, 2010. PLACE: Marriner S. Eccles... Governors of the Federal Reserve System, January 15, 2010. Robert deV. Frierson, Deputy Secretary of the...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-10-01
This study will evaluate the video detection technologies currently adopted by the city : of Baton Rouge, LA, and DOTD with the purpose of establishing design guidelines based : on the detection needs, functionality, and cost. The study will also dev...
1998-01-01
84. [13] Germano Caronni, Hannes Lubich, Ashar Aziz, Tom Markson, Rich Skrenta, "SKIP - securing the internet," Proceedings of the fifth workshop on...perspective," Open Group Technical Paper DEV-DCE-TP6-1, June 10, 1991. [18] Alan O. Freier, Philip Karlton, Paul C. Kocher, "The SSL Protocol, Version
Hox genes, digit identities and the theropod/bird transition.
Galis, Frietson; Kundrát, Martin; Metz, Johan A J
2005-05-15
Vargas and Fallon (2005. J Exp Zool (Mol Dev Evol) 304B:86-90) propose that Hox gene expression patterns indicate that the most anterior digit in bird wings is homologous to digit 1 rather than to digit 2 in other amniotes. This interpretation is based on the presence of Hoxd13 expression in combination with the absence of Hoxd12 expression in the second digit condensation from which this digit develops (the first condensation is transiently present). This is a pattern that is similar to that in the developing digit 1 of the chicken foot and the mouse hand and foot. They have tested this new hypothesis by analysing Hoxd12 and Hoxd13 expression patterns in two polydactylous chicken mutants, Silkie and talpid2. They conclude that the data support the notion that the most anterior remaining digit of the bird wing is homologous to digit 1 in other amniotes either in a standard phylogenetic sense, or alternatively in a (limited) developmental sense in agreement with the Frameshift Hypothesis of Wagner and Gautier (1999, i.e., that the developmental pathway is homologous to the one that leads to a digit 1 identity in other amniotes, although it occurs in the second instead of the first digit condensation). We argue that the Hoxd12 and Hoxd13 expression patterns found for these and other limb mutants do not allow distinguishing between the hypothesis of Vargas and Fallon (2005. J Exp Zool (Mol Dev Evol) 304B:86-90) and the alternative one, i.e., the most anterior digit in bird wings is homologous to digit 2 in other amniotes, in a phylogenetic or developmental sense. Therefore, at the moment the data on limb mutants does not present a challenge to the hypothesis, based on other developmental data (Holmgren, 1955. Acta Zool 36:243-328; Hinchliffe, 1984. In: Hecht M, Ostrom JH, Viohl G, Wellnhofer P, editors. The beginnings of birds. Eichstätt: Freunde des Jura-Museum. p 141-147; Burke and Feduccia, 1997. Science 278:666-668; Kundrát et al., 2002. J Exp Zool (Mol Dev Evol) 294B:151-159; Larsson and Wagner, 2002. J Exp Zool (Mol Dev Evol) 294B:146-151; Feduccia and Nowicki, 2002. Naturwissenschaften 89:391-393), that the digits of bird wings are homologous to digits 2,3,4 in amniotes. We recommend further testing of the hypothesis by comparing Hoxd expression patterns in different taxa. Copyright 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc
Swain, S S; Sahu, L; Pal, A; Barik, D P; Pradhan, C; Chand, P K
2012-02-01
Transformed rhizoclones were developed from Agrobacterium-treated explants of the medicinally important twinning legume Clitoria ternatea L. Several key factors influencing transformation events were optimized. A4T was the most infectious among the strains employed. Internode segments were more responsive than leaves, outdoor-grown explants preferred to those from in vitro cultures. High frequency transformation, resulting in up to 85.8% rhizogenesis, was attained using pre-pricked internodal explants for immersion (10 min) in Agrobacterium rhizogenes suspension grown overnight with acetosyringone (100 μM) to an OD(660) ≅ 0.6, diluted to a density of 10(9) cells ml(-1), followed by 5-day co-cultivation. Roots were individually cultured in MS0 supplemented with the bacteriostatic antibiotic cefotaxime (500 μg ml(-1)). Rhizoclones were renewed through successive subcultures in MS0 under diffused illumination. The T ( L )-DNA rolB and rolC ORF were detected in rhizoclones through PCR amplification. The T ( R )-DNA gene encoding mannopine synthase (man2) was revealed by positive amplification and opine gene expression substantiated by agropine and mannopine biosynthesis in all selected transformed rhizoclones. The implication of such findings is discussed on the context of utilization of such genetically transformed root cultures towards sustainable production of medicinally useful phytocompounds, besides providing a means for plant conservation.
González-Mula, Almudena; Lang, Julien; Grandclément, Catherine; Naquin, Delphine; Ahmar, Mohammed; Soulère, Laurent; Queneau, Yves; Dessaux, Yves; Faure, Denis
2018-07-01
Agrobacterium tumefaciens constructs an ecological niche in its host plant by transferring the T-DNA from its Ti plasmid into the host genome and by diverting the host metabolism. We combined transcriptomics and genetics for understanding the A. tumefaciens lifestyle when it colonizes Arabidopsis thaliana tumors. Transcriptomics highlighted: a transition from a motile to sessile behavior that mobilizes some master regulators (Hfq, CtrA, DivK and PleD); a remodeling of some cell surface components (O-antigen, succinoglucan, curdlan, att genes, putative fasciclin) and functions associated with plant defense (Ef-Tu and flagellin pathogen-associated molecular pattern-response and glycerol-3-phosphate and nitric oxide signaling); and an exploitation of a wide variety of host resources, including opines, amino acids, sugars, organic acids, phosphate, phosphorylated compounds, and iron. In addition, construction of transgenic A. thaliana lines expressing a lactonase enzyme showed that Ti plasmid transfer could escape host-mediated quorum-quenching. Finally, construction of knock-out mutants in A. tumefaciens showed that expression of some At plasmid genes seemed more costly than the selective advantage they would have conferred in tumor colonization. We provide the first overview of A. tumefaciens lifestyle in a plant tumor and reveal novel signaling and trophic interplays for investigating host-pathogen interactions. © 2018 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2018 New Phytologist Trust.
The Effects of Low Level Prenatal Carbon Monoxide on Neocortical Development
2010-06-02
amount of NO available, which may have formed free radicals damaging the tissue and resulting in cell death. Treatment with a synthetic cGMP also failed...Watkinson B (36- and 48-month neurobehavioral follow-up of children prenatally exposed to marijuana , cigarettes, and alcohol. J Dev Behav Pediatr
Current status of Tomato chlorotic spot virus in Florida and the Caribbean
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Damaging outbreaks of Tomato chlorotic spot virus (TCSV), an emerging thrips-vectored tospovirus, and several invasive species of thrips are significantly impacting vegetable and other crops in Florida and the Caribbean. Host and geographic ranges of TCSV are continuing to expand in this region. Dev...
Does WISC-IV Underestimate the Intelligence of Autistic Children?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Nader, Anne-Marie; Courchesne, Valérie; Dawson, Michelle; Soulières, Isabelle
2016-01-01
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) is widely used to estimate autistic intelligence (Joseph in The neuropsychology of autism. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2011; Goldstein et al. in "Assessment of autism spectrum disorders." Guilford Press, New York, 2008; Mottron in "J Autism Dev Disord" 34(1):19-27, 2004).…
Alaska Railroad Alaska Maps Alaska Travel Safety Information Alaska Fish and Game Alaska Facts & Month Services How Do I? Education Health Jobs Safety How Do I? Apply for a Permanent Fund Dividend File Information More Dept. of Commerce, Comm... More Dept. of Labor & Workforce Dev. Safety 511 - Traveler
Toxcast Profiling in a Human Stem Cell Assay for Developmental Toxicity (SOT)
We correlated the ToxCast library in a metabolic biomarker-based in vitro assay (Stemina devTOXqP) utilizing human embryonic stem (hES) cells (H9 line). This assay identifies the concentration of a chemical that disrupts cellular metabolism in a manner indicative of teratogenic...
Demand for Light Duty Trucks : The Wharton EFA Motor Vehicle Demand Model (Mark II).
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1981-01-01
A preliminary model of U.S. light-duty vehicle demand is presented which contains an integrated analysis of automobiles and light trucks (under 10,000 lbs. GVW). The model has been estimated using both cross-section and time-series data, and is a dev...
Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), a ubiquitous and persistent synthetic compound, has been detected in human serum. Previous studies in mice linked prenatal PFOA exposure to increased neonatal mortality and decreased pup weights, in a dose responsive manner. To determine whether dev...
Evaluation of barrier treatments on native vegetation in a southern California desert habitat
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Treating perimeters with residual insecticides to provide protection from mosquito vectors has shown promise. These barrier treatments are typically evaluated in temperate or tropical areas using lush, ambient vegetation as a substrate for the pesticide. However, there is an emerging interest to dev...
Introducing a New International Society of Aeolian Research
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Aeolian research is long-standing and rapidly growing area of study where scientists of many disciplines meet to investigate the effects of wind on the surface of the Earth and other planetary bodies, such as Mars and Titan. Fields of study in aeolian research cover a broad spectrum ranging from dev...
Stachybotrys chartarum is known to produce the hemolysin stachylysin and its detection in human serum has been proposed as a biomarker for exposure to the fungus. In this study we report the initial characterization of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against stachylysin and the dev...
75 FR 44793 - Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-07-29
... FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Sunshine Act Meeting AGENCY HOLDING THE MEETING: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. TIME AND DATE: 3:00 p.m., Tuesday, August 3, 2010. PLACE: Marriner S. Eccles... about the meeting. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, July 27, 2010. Robert deV. Frierson...
75 FR 10795 - Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-03-09
... FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Sunshine Act Meeting AGENCY HOLDING THE MEETING: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. TIME AND DATE: 12 p.m., Monday, March 15, 2010. PLACE: Marriner S. Eccles Federal... Federal Reserve System, March 5, 2010. Robert deV. Frierson, Deputy Secretary of the Board. [FR Doc. 2010...
75 FR 5322 - Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-02-02
... FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Sunshine Act Meeting AGENCY HOLDING THE MEETING: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. TIME AND DATE: 11:30 a.m., Monday, February 8, 2010. PLACE: Marriner S. Eccles... Governors of the Federal Reserve System, January 29, 2010. Robert deV. Frierson, Deputy Secretary of the...
A major benefit of trenchless rehabilitation technologies touted by many practitioners when comparing their products with tradition open cut construction methods is lower carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. In an attempt to verify these claims, multiple tools have been dev...
Visualizing Mixed Variable-Type Multidimensional Data Using Tree Distances
2015-09-01
24 1. The Regression Method .................................................. 25 2. Maximum Deviance Ratio Method... Deviance Change as a Factor of the Amount of Correlation? ................................................... 50 B. A PROPOSED SOLUTION...Splice mapping using d1 ...................... 36 Figure 18. Reduction in 2R analog ( deviance ratio-DevRat) per variable for the Splice data
Net-centric ACT-R-Based Cognitive Architecture with DEVS Unified Process
2011-04-01
effort has been spent in analyzing various forms of requirement specifications, viz, state-based, Natural Language based, UML-based, Rule- based, BPMN ...requirement specifications in one of the chosen formats such as BPMN , DoDAF, Natural Language Processing (NLP) based, UML- based, DSL or simply
Automation and Robotics in Construction: Japanese Research and Development
1989-10-01
P’rocurei’ment D5epartrnentDivisionEH Nuclear Fac. Engr. p pt. Administration Department Products Dev. Department Housing _jInformation Systems Dept. Sales ... Promotion Division Depart Figure 2. Taisei administrative structure. 13 hgtre . Tisc tehnial erch. Ioramation.Srvc Shimiznfn~~aera Secpotion bil
Self-Perceived Stability and Change in Children's Competence
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Vandenplas-Holper, Christiane; Roskam, Isabelle; Fontaine, Anne-Marie
2010-01-01
Using Harter's ("Child Dev" 53(1):87-97, 1982) perceived competence scale, this study integrates several paradigms related to the issues of self-perceived competence, stability or change and attributional theory. It examines how 268 Belgian and Portuguese fifth graders consider their scholastic, social and physical competence at present…
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Our understanding of the mechanisms controlling insect diapause has increased dramatically with the introduction of global gene expression techniques, such as RNAseq. However, little attention has been given to how ecologically relevant field conditions may affect gene expression during diapause dev...
1992-09-01
rank, social security number, and date of birth, sex , race, etc. It also keeps data on marital status, number of dependents, and whether a member’s...specification as listed in the appendix. OPINS stores similar common personnel information to that in the ADMI database, such as name, rank, sex , etc.. The...34+ NAME (comp) "+ DATE..OF-.BIRTH (comp) "+ SEX "+ BACE-MIHNIC "+ ETHNIC..GROUP "+ PAYýENTRY-.BASE..DATE (comp) "+ SERVICE "+ MOS (comp) "+ DATE-OF
Air Weather Service Support to the United States Army Tet and the Decade After
1979-08-01
than traditional air interdiction methods, and, more important, it was more humane because it saved lives. 6 1 The very nature of the project led it to...every four hours, 24 hours a day.04 Taylor stressed that he functioned primarily as a weather briefer, that the weather forecasts the 1st Cavalry... stressed to them in peacetime. "I think the Army began there," Carmell opined, "to appreciate the worth of weather in its planning," "We got our foot in
More on Darwin's illness: comment on the final diagnosis of Charles Darwin.
Sheehan, William; Meller, William H; Thurber, Steven
2008-06-20
Without the possibility of confirmatory exhumation, diagnostic inferences about Darwin's illness must remain speculative. A diagnosis of Darwin's aggregate symptoms must account for not only gastrointestinal distress but also his predominant and excessive retching and the conglomerate of other heterogeneous symptoms. We opine that Crohn's disease, posited as the 'final diagnosis', is not sufficient for subsuming his pleiomorphic symptomatology. An additional proposal is outlined that may help to explain his presentation with heterogeneous symptoms. It incorporates constitutional vulnerabilities, psychosomatic influences and Pavlovian conditioning as explanatory variables.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mackey, Glynne; Hill, Diti; De Vocht, Lia
2016-01-01
In this article, the authors opine that the introduction of an international assessment of children's early learning, such as proposed by the OECD with its planned International Early Learning Study, will shift the emphasis away from pedagogies which focus on that which is meaningful and relevant in children's lives and their learning, to an…
The Learning Effects of a Multidisciplinary Professional Development Programme
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Visser, Talitha Christine; Coenders, Fer G. M.; Pieters, Jules M.; Terlouw, Cees
2013-01-01
Professional development becomes relevant and effective when teachers are actively involved, collaborate, and when it is linked to teachers' daily school practice (Hunzicker in "Prof Dev Educ" 37:177-179, 2011). Preparation of teachers for a curriculum implementation such as the new subject Nature, Life, and Technology can be done…
Strategies for Perceiving Facial Expressions in Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Walsh, Jennifer A.; Vida, Mark D.; Rutherford, M. D.
2014-01-01
Rutherford and McIntosh (J Autism Dev Disord 37:187-196, 2007) demonstrated that individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are more tolerant than controls of exaggerated schematic facial expressions, suggesting that they may use an alternative strategy when processing emotional expressions. The current study was designed to test this finding…
The Role of Higher Level Adaptive Coding Mechanisms in the Development of Face Recognition
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Pimperton, Hannah; Pellicano, Elizabeth; Jeffery, Linda; Rhodes, Gillian
2009-01-01
DevDevelopmental improvements in face identity recognition ability are widely documented, but the source of children's immaturity in face recognition remains unclear. Differences in the way in which children and adults visually represent faces might underlie immaturities in face recognition. Recent evidence of a face identity aftereffect (FIAE),…
Brief Report: Visual Acuity in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Albrecht, Matthew A.; Stuart, Geoffrey W.; Falkmer, Marita; Ordqvist, Anna; Leung, Denise; Foster, Jonathan K.; Falkmer, Torbjorn
2014-01-01
Recently, there has been heightened interest in suggestions of enhanced visual acuity in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) which was sparked by evidence that was later accepted to be methodologically flawed. However, a recent study that claimed children with ASD have enhanced visual acuity (Brosnan et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord"…
CloudStackProjectsNContributions
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Nielsen, Roy
2017-07-12
Collection of applications and cloud templates. Project currently based on www.packer.io for automation, www.github.com/boxcutter templates and the www.github.com/csd-dev-tools/ClockworkVMs application for wrapping both of the above for easy creation of virtual systems. Will in future also contain cloud templates tuned for various services, applications and purposes.
Worldwide initiatives to screen for toxicity potential among the thousands of chemicals currently in use require inexpensive and high-throughput in vitro models to meet their goals. The devTOX quickPredict platform is an in vitro human pluripotent stem cell-based assay used to as...
Evaluation of 1066 ToxCast Chemicals in a human stem cell assay for developmental toxicity (SOT)
To increase the diversity of assays used to assess potential developmental toxicity, the ToxCast chemical library was screened in the Stemina devTOX quickPREDICT assay using human embryonic stem (hES) cells. A model for predicting teratogenicity was based on a training set of 23 ...
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
In order to satisfy the requirements of Conservation Effects Assessment Project (CEAP) Watershed Assessment Study (WAS) Objective 5 (“develop and verify regional watershed models that quantify environmental outcomes of conservation practices in major agricultural regions”), a new watershed model dev...
Adult cardiac stem cells (CSC) and progenitor cells (CPC) represent a population of cells in the heart critical for its regeneration and function over a lifetime. The impact of chemicals on adult human CSC/CPC differentiation and function is unknown. Research was conducted to dev...
Prevention of Post-Radiotherapy Failure in Prostate Cancer by Vitamin D
2005-03-01
cur- 55. Mitchell MF, Hittelman WN, Hong WK et al. The natural history cumin , a chemo preventive agent, in patients with high-risk or of cervical...chromosomal DNA loops during oxidative stress . Genes & Dev 13:1553-1560. 16 1999 Chen AY, Choy H and Rothenberg ML. DNA topoisomerase I-targeting drugs as
Factors That Effect Signal Transduction by the Estrogen Receptor.
1997-10-01
USA 92, 5386-5390. 14. Gong, J., Ardelt, B., Traganos, F. & Darzynkiewicz, Z . (1994) Cancer Res. 54, 4285-4288. 15. Loda, M., Cukor, B., Tarn, S. W...1997) Genes Dev. 11, 847-862. 36. Adamczewski , J. P., Rossignol, M., Tassan, J. P., Nigg, E. A., Moncollin, V. & Egly, J. M. (1996) EMBO J. 15
In epidemiological studies, exposure assessments to TCDD, known as a possible human carcinogen, assume mono or biphasic elimination rates. Recent data suggests a dose dependent elimination rate for TCDD. A PBPK model, which uses a body burden dependent elimination rate, was dev...
Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV)
2013-12-01
BY - Base Year DAMIR - Defense Acquisition Management Information Retrieval Dev Est - Development Estimate DoD - Department of Defense DSN - Defense...Production Estimate QR - Quantity Related Qty - Quantity RDT&E - Research, Development , Test, and Evaluation SAR - Selected Acquisition Report Sch - Schedule... Development Estimate) Defense Acquisition Executive (DAE) Approved Acquisition Program Baseline (APB) dated October 23, 2012 Approved APB Defense
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
A growth trial and fillet sensory analysis were conducted to examine the effects of replacing dietary fish meal with black soldier fly (BSF) prepupae, Hermetia illucens, in rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. A practical-type trout diet was formulated to contain 45% protein; four test diets were dev...
OPTIMIZATION OF A PULSED LIMESTONE BED REACTOR AT THE ARGO TUNNEL IN IDAHO SPRINGS, COLORADO
Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) is an unintended consequence of coal and metal mining that adversely affects thousands of miles of streams both in the eastern and western regions of the U.S. A novel AMD treatment process based on limestone based on limestone neutralization has been dev...
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Rhizobacterial biofilm development influences terrestrial carbon and nitrogen cycles with ramifications for crop and soil health. Phenazine-1-carboxylic acid (PCA) is a redox-active metabolite produced by rhizobacteria in dryland wheat fields of Washington and Oregon, USA. PCA promotes biofilm dev...
The Antiaircraft Journal. Volume 92, Number 5, September-October 1949
1949-10-01
philosophical reflections on the subject of po’werand those to whom it should be entrusted. Recall the words of much-studied Machiavelli , than whom...Leavenworth. Kan. Rauch. A. R, Comm. of Basic Phys. Sc.• Res. & Dev. Board, Pentagon. \\Vash. 25. D. C. Rawls . J. W., Jr.. AFF Liaison Off.. Boeing Aircraft
Lessons learned from a one-dimensional water quality model for the Gulf of Mexico
Hypoxia in the northern Gulf of Mexico has been a major concern for many years. Several water quality models have attempted to describe the link between high nutrient loads from the Mississippi River and hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico with varied success. Here we describe the dev...
Transformational Leadership and Organizational Change during Agile and DevOps Initiatives
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mayner, Stephen W.
2017-01-01
Organizational change initiatives are more likely to fail than to succeed, especially when the change challenges corporate culture and norms. Researchers have explored factors that contribute to change failure, to include the relationship between leadership behaviors and change success. Peer reviewed studies have yet to examine these variables in…
Literary Translation as a Tool for Critical Language Planning
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mooneeram, Roshni
2013-01-01
This paper argues that Dev Virahsawmy, an author who manipulates literary translation for the purposes of linguistic prestige formation and re-negotiation, is a critical language-policy practitioner, as his work fills an important gap in language planning scholarship. A micro-analysis of the translation of a Shakespearean sonnet into Mauritian…
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Environmental modeling framework (EMF) design goals are multi-dimensional and often include many aspects of general software framework development. Many functional capabilities offered by current EMFs are closely related to interoperability and reuse aspects. For example, an EMF needs to support dev...
Energy Saving Devices on Gas Furnaces.
1980-03-01
AO-A082 0715 JOHNS - MANVILLE SALES CORP DENVER CO RESEARCH AND DEV--ETC FIG 1311 ENERGY SAVING DEVICES ON GAS FURNACES.(U) MAR B0 T E BRISBANE, P B...DEVICES FOR GAS FURNACES THOMAS E. BRISBANE ,o"’ P. B. SHEPHERD JOHNS - MANVILLE SALES CORPORATION RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT CENTER KEN-CARYL RANCH, DENVER
An Advanced Simulation Framework for Parallel Discrete-Event Simulation
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Li, P. P.; Tyrrell, R. Yeung D.; Adhami, N.; Li, T.; Henry, H.
1994-01-01
Discrete-event simulation (DEVS) users have long been faced with a three-way trade-off of balancing execution time, model fidelity, and number of objects simulated. Because of the limits of computer processing power the analyst is often forced to settle for less than desired performances in one or more of these areas.
Managing Irritability and Aggression in Autism Spectrum Disorders in Children and Adolescents
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Robb, Adelaide S.
2010-01-01
Children with autism and autism spectrum disorders have a high rate of irritability and aggressive symptoms. In one study up to 20% of children with autism have symptoms of irritability and aggression including aggression, severe tantrums, and deliberate self injurious behavior (Lecavalier [2006] "J. Autism Dev. Disord." 36:1101-1114.). These…
Modulating EGFR Signaling by Targeting the Deacetylase HDAC6-Hsp90 Complex in Breast Tumors
2007-06-01
concomitant increase in 4 directed cell migration (15). Analysis of fibroblasts derived from WAVE2 knockout mice 5 demonstrates deficiency in ruffle...Takenawa. 2003. Differential 1 roles of WAVE1 and WAVE2 in dorsal and peripheral ruffle formation for 2 fibroblast cell migration. Dev Cell 5:595
A New GIS-Nitrogen Trading Tool Concept to Minimize Reactive Nitrogen losses to the Environment
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Nitrogen (N) is an essential element which is needed to maximize agricultural production and sustainability of worldwide agroecosystems. N losses to the environment are impacting water and air quality that has become an environmental concern for the future generations. It has led to the need for dev...
Re-Evaluation of Constant versus Varied Punishers Using Empirically Derived Consequences
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Toole, Lisa M.; DeLeon, Iser G.; Kahng, Sung Woo; Ruffin, Geri E.; Pletcher, Carrie A.; Bowman, Lynn G.
2004-01-01
Charlop, Burgio, Iwata, and Ivancic [J. Appl. Behav. Anal. 21 (1988) 89] demonstrated that varied punishment procedures produced greater or more consistent reductions of problem behavior than a constant punishment procedure. More recently, Fisher and colleagues [Res. Dev. Disabil. 15 (1994) 133; J. Appl. Behav. Anal. 27 (1994) 447] developed a…
Dong, Hui; Lewis, Nicholas H. C.; Oliver, Thomas A. A.; ...
2015-05-07
Changes in the electronic structure of pigments in protein environments and of polar molecules in solution inevitably induce a re-adaption of molecular nuclear structure. Both changes of electronic and vibrational energies can be probed with visible or infrared lasers, such as two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy or vibrational spectroscopy. The extent to which the two changes are correlated remains elusive. The recent demonstration of two-dimensional electronic-vibrational (2DEV) spectroscopy potentially enables a direct measurement of this correlation experimentally. However, it has hitherto been unclear how to characterize the correlation from the spectra. In this report, we present a theoretical formalism to demonstrate themore » slope of the nodal line between the excited state absorption and ground state bleach peaks in the spectra as a characterization of the correlation between electronic and vibrational transition energies. In conclusion, we also show the dynamics of the nodal line slope is correlated to the vibrational spectral dynamics. Additionally, we demonstrate the fundamental 2DEV spectral line-shape of a monomer with newly developed response functions« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Dong, Hui; Lewis, Nicholas H. C.; Oliver, Thomas A. A.
2015-05-07
Changes in the electronic structure of pigments in protein environments and of polar molecules in solution inevitably induce a re-adaption of molecular nuclear structure. Both changes of electronic and vibrational energies can be probed with visible or infrared lasers, such as two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy or vibrational spectroscopy. The extent to which the two changes are correlated remains elusive. The recent demonstration of two-dimensional electronic-vibrational (2DEV) spectroscopy potentially enables a direct measurement of this correlation experimentally. However, it has hitherto been unclear how to characterize the correlation from the spectra. In this paper, we present a theoretical formalism to demonstrate themore » slope of the nodal line between the excited state absorption and ground state bleach peaks in the spectra as a characterization of the correlation between electronic and vibrational transition energies. We also show the dynamics of the nodal line slope is correlated to the vibrational spectral dynamics. Additionally, we demonstrate the fundamental 2DEV spectral line-shape of a monomer with newly developed response functions.« less
IMMU-22. ADOPTIVE CELL THERAPY AGAINST DIPG USING DEVELOPMENTALLY REGULATED ANTIGENS
Flores, Catherine; Gil, Jorge; Abraham, Rebecca; Pham, Christina; Wildes, Tyler; Moore, Ginger; Drake, Jeffrey; Dyson, Kyle; Mitchell, Duane
2017-01-01
Abstract INTRODUCTION: Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) survival has remained static over decades and DIPG is now the main cause of brain tumor-related deaths in children. Immunotherapy has emerged as a treatment modality with the highest curative potential in patients with refractory malignancies. Our group has pioneered an adoptive cell therapy platform employing total tumor RNA pulsed dendritic cells to generate large amounts of polyclonal antigen-specific T cells in both human and murine systems. As DIPGs are embryonal tumors, our objective in this proposal is to identify a set of developmentally regulated antigens that are overexpressed during oncogenesis of DIPG in order to cause immunological rejection of this tumor without the need for tumor tissue. METHODS: We employ RNA-pulsed bone marrow-derived dendritic cells to ex vivo activate tumor-reactive T cells for use in adoptive cell therapy. Here we use either total RNA isolated from tumor tissue, (TTRNA) or developmental antigens (DevAg) RNA isolated from postnatal day 4 murine brain stem. Either TTRNA-T cells or DevAg-T cells were used in adoptive cell therapy against a preclinical model of DIPG. RESULTS: Pediatric brain tumors are bland relative to peripheral tumors in terms of high expression of immunogenic antigens. Since DIPG antigens remain largely uncharacterized, we used total RNA isolated from tumor cells to generate tumor-specific T cells to use for our therapeutic approach to first demonstrate that immune responses can be generated against this tumor. We also successfully generated immunity against DIPG in a preclinical model using DevAg-T cells for adoptive cell therapy. CONCLUSION: The region- and age- specific nature of DIPG suggests that the underlying pathophysiology likely involves dysregulation of a postnatal neurodevelopmental process which occurs in embryonal tumors. Here we leverage this and demonstrate that DIPG can be effectively treated using adoptive cell therapy against overexpressed developmentally regulated antigens.
The molecular and cellular basis of gonadal sex reversal in mice and humans
Warr, Nick; Greenfield, Andy
2012-01-01
The mammalian gonad is adapted for the production of germ cells and is an endocrine gland that controls sexual maturation and fertility. Gonadal sex reversal, namely, the development of ovaries in an XY individual or testes in an XX, has fascinated biologists for decades. The phenomenon suggests the existence of genetic suppressors of the male and female developmental pathways and molecular genetic studies, particularly in the mouse, have revealed controlled antagonism at the core of mammalian sex determination. Both testis and ovary determination represent design solutions to a number of problems: how to generate cells with the right properties to populate the organ primordium; how to produce distinct organs from an initially bipotential primordium; how to pattern an organ when the expression of key cell fate determinants is initiated only in a discrete region of the primordium and extends to other regions asynchronously; how to coordinate the interaction between distinct cell types in time and space and stabilize the resulting morphology; and how to maintain the differentiated state of the organ throughout the adult period. Some of these, and related problems, are common to organogenesis in general; some are distinctive to gonad development. In this review, we discuss recent studies of the molecular and cellular events underlying testis and ovary development, with an emphasis on the phenomenon of gonadal sex reversal and its causes in mice and humans. Finally, we discuss sex-determining loci and disorders of sex development in humans and the future of research in this important area. WIREs Dev Biol 2012, 1:559–577. doi: 10.1002/wdev.42 PMID:23801533
Balogun, Emmanuel O; Nok, Andrew J; Kita, Kiyoshi
2016-01-01
Human activities such as burning of fossil fuels play a role in upsetting a previously more balanced and harmonious ecosystem. Climate change-a significant variation in the usual pattern of Earth's average weather conditions is a product of this ecosystem imbalance, and the rise in the Earth's average temperature (global warming) is a prominent evidence. There is a correlation between global warming and the ease of transmission of infectious diseases. Therefore, with global health in focus, we herein opine a stepping-up of research activities regarding global warming and infectious diseases globally.
The Relationship between Sensory Sensitivity and Autistic Traits in the General Population
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Robertson, Ashley E.; Simmons, David R.
2013-01-01
Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASDs) tend to have sensory processing difficulties (Baranek et al. in J Child Psychol Psychiatry 47:591-601, 2006). These difficulties include over- and under-responsiveness to sensory stimuli, and problems modulating sensory input (Ben-Sasson et al. in J Autism Dev Disorders 39:1-11, 2009). As those…
12om Limited Objective Experiment #2: Final Results Summary and Recommendations
2014-03-31
Acronym Definition ARP CD CF CFD CG CIM COA CONOPS CSE Dev DFATD DP DRDC FGS Gov HREC IDP KR LOE LOC MA MARS NASA TLX NGO OP OPP Ops ROC SA...weight Ratings (OPP Support) Ratings (IP) Ratings (CU) Ratings (CS) Ratings (Usability) Ratings (Training T/E) Ratings (Use T/E) NASA TLX Mental demand
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The frequency of channel-forming discharges in a tributary of Upper Big Walnut Creek, Ohio
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
The goal of this study was to determine the frequency and magnitude of annual out-of-bank discharges in Sugar Creek, a tributary of the Upper Big Walnut Creek, in Ohio. To address this goal: a stream geomorphology study was conducted; measured discharge data at a downstream location were used to dev...
Supplemental Grounding of Extended EMP Collectors.
1982-01-31
G52AAXEX40602 H2590D as Contract DNA 001-80-C-0294. The program was monitored by Major Blair Williams, RAEE . The work described in this report was...ATTN: RAEE ATTN: DPOPM-COM-W-D ATTN RAAE ATTN: NATA Deputy Chief of Staff for Rsch Dev & Acq 4 cy ATTN: TITL ATTN: DAMA-CSS-N Defense Tech Info Ctr
The Lake Michigan Mass Balance Project (LMMBP) was initiated to support the development of a Lake Wide Management Plan (LaMP) for Lake Michigan. As one of the models in the LMMBP modeling framework, the Level 2 Lake Michigan containment transport and fate (LM2) model has been dev...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Zeedyk, Sasha M.; Cohen, Shana R.; Eisenhower, Abbey; Blacher, Jan
2016-01-01
Perceived loneliness and social competence were assessed for 127 children with ASD without comorbid ID, 4-7 years old, through child self-report. Using an abbreviated version of the "Loneliness and Social Dissatisfaction Questionnaire" (LSDQ; Cassidy and Asher in Child Dev 63:250-365, 1992), the majority of children reported friendships,…
Overview
The goal of the National Children's Study (NCS) is to collect information on environmental and
social factors in the lives of children, starting before birth and continuing until age 21, to inform
researchers about their effects on the health and dev...
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
The braconid wasp Fopius arisanus (Sonan) is an important biological control agent of tropical and subtropical pest fruit flies including two important global pests, the Mediterranean fruit fly (Ceratitis capitata), and the oriental fruit fly (Bactrocera dorsalis}). The goal of this study was to dev...
Spectroscopic Characterization of HAN-Based Liquid Gun Propellants and Nitrate Salt Solutions
1989-01-15
cables (0.040-in. o.d. x 2.5 ft) consisting of an Inconel sheath containing two nickel / chromium/iron wires that were insulated from each other ser...Subramanlam and M. A. McHugh , I&EC Pruc. Des. Dev. 25, 1 therefore attributed to thermal line broadening instead (1986). of to changes in the equilibrium
The path for incorporating new approach methods and technologies into quantitative chemical risk assessment poses a diverse set of scientific challenges. These challenges include sufficient coverage of toxicological mechanisms to meaningfully interpret negative test results, dev...
The Stemina devTOX quickPredict platform (STM) is a human pluripotent H9 stem cell-based assay that predicts developmental toxicants. Using the STM model, we screened 1065 ToxCast chemicals and entered the data into the ToxCast data analysis pipeline. Model performance was 83.3% ...
The Autism-Spectrum Quotient and Visual Search: Shallow and Deep Autistic Endophenotypes
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gregory, B. L.; Plaisted-Grant, K. C.
2016-01-01
A high Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ) score (Baron-Cohen et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord" 31(1):5-17, 2001) is increasingly used as a proxy in empirical studies of perceptual mechanisms in autism. Several investigations have assessed perception in non-autistic people measured for AQ, claiming the same relationship exists between…
Effectiveness of modified seminars as a teaching-learning method in pharmacology
Palappallil, Dhanya Sasidharan; Sushama, Jitha; Ramnath, Sai Nathan
2016-01-01
Context: Student-led seminars (SLS) are adopted as a teaching-learning (T-L) method in pharmacology. Previous studies assessing the feedback on T-L methods in pharmacology points out that the traditional seminars consistently received poor feedbacks as they were not favorite among the students. Aims: This study aimed to obtain feedback on traditional SLS, introduce modified SLS and compare the modified seminars with the traditional ones. Settings and Design: This was a prospective interventional study done for 2 months in medical undergraduates of fifth semester attending Pharmacology seminars at a Government Medical College in South India. Subjects and Methods: Structured questionnaire was used to elicit feedback from participants. The responses were coded on 5-point Likert scale. Modifications in seminar sessions such as role plays, quiz, tests, group discussion, and patient-oriented problem-solving exercises were introduced along with SLS. Statistical Analysis Used: The data were analyzed using SPSS version 16. The descriptive data were expressed using frequencies and percentages. Wilcoxon signed rank test, and Friedman tests were used to compare traditional with modified seminars. Results: The participants identified interaction as the most important component of a seminar. Majority opined that the teacher should summarize at the end of SLS. Student feedback shows that modified seminars created more interest, enthusiasm, and inspiration to learn the topic when compared to traditional SLS. They also increased peer coordination and group dynamics. Students opined that communication skills and teacher-student interactions were not improved with modified seminars. Conclusions: Interventions in the form of modified SLS may be adopted to break the monotony of traditional seminars through active participation, peer interaction, and teamwork. PMID:27563587
A Qualitative Study on Working Experience of Rural Doctors in Malappuram District of Kerala, India
Vallikunnu, Vinod; Kumar, S. Ganesh; Sarkar, Sonali; Kar, Sitanshu Sekhar; Harichandrakumar, K. T.
2014-01-01
Background: Improving the working conditions of rural doctors is an important issue to increase the quality of health services to target groups. Objectives: To assess the working experience of rural doctors at primary health care level. Materials and Methods: This qualitative study was conducted among 30 medical officers from 21 primary health centers in Malappuram district of Kerala, India. In-depth interview was conducted, and content analysis was performed with the identification of themes based on the responses obtained. Results: There were 19 males and 11 females belonged to 25 to 55 years age group. About 70% (21) of them were graduates with MBBS qualification, and the rest were postgraduates. About 2/3rd of them (20) had experience of less than 5 years. They expressed difficulty in managing the work in stipulated time period. However, this had never affected their OP management in anyway. They told that higher authorities were supportive, but they faced some opposition from the public in implementation of national program. Few opined that the training received was grossly insufficient in running the administrative affairs of the health center. Most of them satisfied with physical infrastructure, but manpower including medical officers and supporting staff were not sufficient. Some opined that the age of retirement is too early and should be increased. They participated in Continuing Medical Education, but expressed that it's content should suit to primary health care level. Conclusion: This study highlighted their concern to patient care and time, field work, administrative work, infrastructure, professional development, and future prospects. Further large scale evaluation studies will explore the situational analysis of it. PMID:25161972
Regulation of ATM-Dependent DNA Damage Responses in Breast Cancer by the RhoGEF Net1
2014-04-01
1998) Science 279: 509-514. 12. Harper JW, et al., (2007) The DNA Damage Response: Ten years after. Mol. Cell 28; 739-745. 13. Hill R, et al., (2010...RhoGTPases: Biochemistry and Biology. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 21:247-269. 17. Khanna KK, et al., (2001) ATM, a central controller of cellular
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Factor, Reina S.; Swain, Deanna M.; Scarpa, Angela
2018-01-01
Caregivers of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) report greater stress due to unique parenting demands (e.g.; Estes et al. in "Brain Dev" 35(2):133-138, 2013). Stress is often studied through self-report and has not been extensively studied using physiological measures. This study compared parenting stress in mothers of…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sapey-Triomphe, Laurie-Anne; Moulin, Annie; Sonié, Sandrine; Schmitz, Christina
2018-01-01
Sensory sensitivity peculiarities represent an important characteristic of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). We first validated a French language version of the Glasgow Sensory Questionnaire (GSQ) (Robertson and Simmons in "J Autism Dev Disord" 43(4):775-784, 2013). The GSQ score was strongly positively correlated with the Autism-Spectrum…
Running Gaussian16 Software Jobs on the Peregrine System | High-Performance
, parallel setup is taken care of automatically based on settings in the PBS script example below. Previous filesystem called /dev/shm. This scratch space is set automatically by the example script below. The Gaussian system. An example script for batch submission is given below. #!/bin/bash #PBS -l nodes=2 #PBS -l
2011-07-01
prevent toxic chromosome rearrangements. Because MMEJ is active throughout the cell cycle, it could pro- mote translocations when any of the following...in preserving genomic stability. Genes Dev. 24:1680–94 66. Keelagher RE, Cotton VE, Goldman AS, Borts RH. 2011. Separable roles for exonuclease I in
2011-07-01
active throughout the cell cycle, it could pro- mote translocations when any of the following aberrancies occur: (a) inhibition of C-NHEJ; (b...in preserving genomic stability. Genes Dev. 24:1680–94 66. Keelagher RE, Cotton VE, Goldman AS, Borts RH. 2011. Separable roles for exonuclease I in
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lancioni, Giulio E.; Bellini, Domenico; Oliva, Doretta; Singh, Nirbhay N.; O'Reilly, Mark F.; Lang, Russell; Didden, Robert
2011-01-01
A camera-based microswitch technology was recently used to successfully monitor small eyelid and mouth responses of two adults with profound multiple disabilities (Lancioni et al., Res Dev Disab 31:1509-1514, 2010a). This technology, in contrast with the traditional optic microswitches used for those responses, did not require support frames on…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Habayeb, Serene; Rich, Brendan; Alvord, Mary K.
2017-01-01
Background: Children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) often carry co-morbid diagnoses and present with impairing heterogeneous symptomatology (Leyfer et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord" 36(7): 849-861, 2006. doi:10.1007/s10803-006-0123-0). However, research from controlled laboratory settings often fails to examine the vast number of…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dolan, Bridget K.; Van Hecke, Amy V.; Carson, Audrey M.; Karst, Jeffrey S.; Stevens, Sheryl; Schohl, Kirsten A.; Potts, Stephanie; Kahne, Jenna; Linneman, Nina; Remmel, Rheanna; Hummel, Emily
2016-01-01
This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a randomized controlled trial of a social skills intervention, the Program for the Education and Enrichment of Relational Skills (PEERS: Laugeson et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord" 39(4): 596-606, 2009), by coding digitally recorded social interactions between adolescent participants with…
Evaluation of the ADOS Revised Algorithm: The Applicability in 558 Dutch Children and Adolescents
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
de Bildt, Annelies; Sytema, Sjoerd; van Lang, Natasja D. J.; Minderaa, Ruud B.; van Engeland, Herman; de Jonge, Maretha V.
2009-01-01
The revised ADOS algorithms, proposed by Gotham et al. (J Autism Dev Disord 37:613-627, 2007), were investigated in an independent sample of 558 Dutch children (modules 1, 2 and 3). The revised algorithms lead to better balanced sensitivity and specificity for modules 2 and 3, without losing efficiency of the classification. Including the…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Siller, Michael; Swanson, Meghan; Gerber, Alan; Hutman, Ted; Sigman, Marian
2014-01-01
The current study is a randomized clinical trial evaluating the efficacy of Focused Playtime Intervention (FPI) in a sample of 70 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder. This parent-mediated intervention has previously been shown to significantly increase responsive parental communication (Siller et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord"…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dimitrova, Nevena; Özçaliskan, Seyda; Adamson, Lauren B.
2016-01-01
Typically-developing (TD) children frequently refer to objects uniquely in gesture. Parents translate these gestures into words, facilitating children's acquisition of these words (Goldin-Meadow et al. in "Dev Sci" 10(6):778-785, 2007). We ask whether this pattern holds for children with autism (AU) and with Down syndrome (DS) who show…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Loes, Chad N.; Salisbury, Mark H.; Pascarella, Ernest T.
2015-01-01
This study utilized data from the Wabash National Study of Liberal Arts Education to test the robustness of research conducted by Pascarella et al. ("J Coll Stud Dev" 37:7-19, 1996) that explored the relationship between student perceptions of exposure to organized and clear instruction and growth in critical thinking skills among…
Investigating Young Children's Perceptions of Body Size and Healthy Habits
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Xu, Tingting; Nerren, Jannah S.
2017-01-01
Attitudes and biases toward body size perceived as fat and body size perceived as thin are present in young children (Cramer and Steinwert in "J Appl Dev Psychol" 19(3):429-451, 1998; Worobey and Worobey in "Body Image" 11:171-174, 2014). However, the information children have regarding body size and ways to modify body size…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mahoney, Gerald; Solomon, Richard
2016-01-01
This investigation is a secondary analysis of data from a randomized control trial of the PLAY Home Consultation Intervention Program which was conducted with 112 preschool children with Autism Spectrum Disorders and their parents (Solomon et al. in "J Dev Behav Pediatr" 35:475-485, 2014). Subjects were randomly assigned to either a…
Standardized ADOS Scores: Measuring Severity of Autism Spectrum Disorders in a Dutch Sample
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
de Bildt, Annelies; Oosterling, Iris J.; van Lang, Natasja D. J.; Sytema, Sjoerd; Minderaa, Ruud B.; van Engeland, Herman; Roos, Sascha; Buitelaar, Jan K.; van der Gaag, Rutger-Jan; de Jonge, Maretha V.
2011-01-01
The validity of the calibrated severity scores on the ADOS as reported by Gotham et al. (J Autism Dev Disord 39: 693-705, "2009"), was investigated in an independent sample of 1248 Dutch children with 1455 ADOS administrations (modules 1, 2 and 3). The greater comparability between ADOS administrations at different times, ages and in…
Performance Analysis of AeroRP with Ground Station Advertisements
2012-03-12
results showed that AeroRP outperforms the traditional MANET routing protocols in terms of throughput and packet delivery ra - tio (PDR) [5, 6]. AeroRP...and waiting for the source to re- send the packet increases the end-to-end delay. The AeroNP corruption indicator and HEC -CRC (header error check...Dev ID | NP HEC CRC-16 | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ \\ \\ / AeroTP Payload
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bandele, Samuel Oye; Adekunle, Adeyemi Suraju
2015-01-01
The study was conducted to design, develop and test a c++ application program CAP-QUAD for solving quadratic equation in elementary school in Nigeria. The package was developed in c++ using object-oriented programming language, other computer program that were also utilized during the development process is DevC++ compiler, it was used for…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hur, Eunhye; Buettner, Cynthia K.; Jeon, Lieny
2015-01-01
Background: Recent studies have suggested that teachers' psychological attributes can be an indicator of teacher quality (Rimm-Kaufman and Hamre in "Dev Psychol" 45(4):958-972. doi: 10.1037/a0015861 , 2010), and teachers' child-centered beliefs have been associated with children's academic achievement (Burchinal and Cryer in "Early…
Cheah, Charissa S L; Xu, Yiyuan
2015-06-01
In this commentary on Ding et al. (Brit. J. Dev. Psychol., 2015; 33, 159-173), we focus on the following: (1) the authors' use of vignettes portraying various prototypes of withdrawn children and (2) the cultural interpretation of their findings. We end with some suggestions for future research. © 2015 The British Psychological Society.
Manimekalai: The ancient Buddhist Tamil epic, its relevance to psychiatry
Somasundaram, Ottilingam; Tejus Murthy, A. G.
2016-01-01
This article refers to materials of psychiatric interest found in the Manimekalai written by the 2nd Century CE Buddhist poet Sathanar. From the early description of a wandering psychotic in the streets of Pukar, the ancient maritime capital of the Cholas it is opined that this description fits that of present-day schizophrenia. A drunkard making fun of a Jain monk and a cross-dressed individual are also found in the same streets. Manimekalai's request to the Chola king to convert the prison to a place of piety with Buddhist monks is mentioned. Lord Buddha's teachings on the compassionate way of life are presented. PMID:27385862
The genetic and developmental basis of an exaggerated craniofacial trait in East African cichlids.
Concannon, Moira R; Albertson, R Craig
2015-12-01
The evolution of an exaggerated trait can lead to a novel morphology that allows organisms to exploit new niches. The molecular bases of such phenotypes can reveal insights into the evolution of unique traits. Here, we investigate a rare morphological innovation in modern haplochromine cichlids, a flap of fibrous tissue that causes a pronounced projection of the snout, which is limited to a single genus (Labeotropheus) of Lake Malawi cichlids. We compare flap size in our focal species L. fuelleborni (LF) to homologous landmarks in other closely related cichlid species that show a range of ecological overlap with LF, and demonstrate that variation in flap size is discontinuous among Malawi cichlid species. We demonstrate further that flap development in LF begins at early juvenile stages, and scales allometrically with body size. We then used an F2 hybrid mapping population, derived via crossing LF to a close ecological competitor that lacks this trait, Tropheops "red cheek" (TRC), to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) that underlie flap development. In all, we identified four loci associated with variation in flap size, and for each the LF allele contributed to a larger flap. We next cross-referenced our QTL map with population genomic data, comparing natural populations of LF and TRC, to identify divergent polymorphisms within each QTL interval. Candidate genes for flap development are discussed. Together, these data indicate a relatively simple and tractable genetic basis for this morphological innovation, which is consistent with its apparently sudden and saltatory evolutionary history. J. Exp. Zool. (Mol. Dev. Evol.) 324B: 662-670, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Testicular lactate content is compromised in men with Klinefelter Syndrome.
Alves, Marco G; Martins, Ana D; Jarak, Ivana; Barros, Alberto; Silva, Joaquina; Sousa, Mário; Oliveira, Pedro F
2016-03-01
Klinefelter syndrome (KS) is the most common genetic cause of human infertility, but the mechanism(s) responsible for its phenotype remain largely unknown. KS is associated with alterations in body composition and with a higher risk of developing metabolic diseases. We therefore hypothesized that KS men seeking fertility treatment possess an altered testicular metabolism profile that may hamper the nutritional support of spermatogenesis. Testicular biopsies from control (46, XY) (n = 6) and KS (47, XXY) (n = 6) individuals were collected and analyzed by proton high-resolution magic-angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The mRNA and protein expression of crucial glycolysis-associated enzymes and transporters were evaluated in parallel by quantitative PCR and Western blot, respectively. Our data revealed altered regulation of glucose transporters (GLUT1 and GLUT3); phosphofructokinase 1, liver isoform (PFKL); and lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA) expression in the testis of KS patients. Moreover, we detected a severe reduction in lactate and creatine accumulation within testicular tissue from KS men. The aberrant levels of the biomarkers detected in testicular biopsies of KS men may therefore be associated with the infertility phenotypes presented by these men. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 83: 208-216, 2016. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Reliability and Maintainability Analysis: A Conceptual Design Model
1972-03-01
Elements For a System I. Research ane Development A. Preliminary design and engineering B. Fabrication of test equipment C. Test operations D...reliability racquiro:wents, little, if any, modu larzation and auto- matic test features would be incorporated in the subsystem design, limited reliability...niaintaina~ility testing and monitoring would be conducted turing dev!qopmcnt, and little Quality Control effort, in the rell ability/’uaintainalility
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ross, Steven M.; Morrison, Jennifer R.
2014-01-01
In a paper published 25 years ago, Ross and Morrison ("Educ Technol Res Dev" 37(1):19-33, 1989) called for a "happy medium" in educational technology research, to be achieved by balancing high rigor of studies (internal validity) with relevance to real-world applications (external validity). In this paper, we argue that,…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gok, Enes; Weidman, John C.
2015-01-01
This article explored the contribution of Asia Pacific Education Review (APER) to expanding the scope of research on comparative and international education in Asia. We developed a rubric based on extensive studies (Rust et al. in "Comp Educ Rev," 43(1):86-109, 1999; Foster et al. in "Int J Educ Dev" 32:711-732, 2012) of…
Reliability of the ADI-R for the Single Case-Part II: Clinical versus Statistical Significance
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cicchetti, Domenic V.; Lord, Catherine; Koenig, Kathy; Klin, Ami; Volkmar, Fred R.
2014-01-01
In an earlier investigation, the authors assessed the reliability of the ADI-R when multiple clinicians evaluated a single case, here a female 3 year old toddler suspected of having an autism spectrum disorder (Cicchetti et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord" 38:764-770, 2008). Applying the clinical criteria of Cicchetti and Sparrow ("Am J…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Williams, David M.; Jarrold, Christopher
2010-01-01
Studies of inner speech use in ASD have produced conflicting results. Lidstone et al., J "Autism Dev Disord" (2009) hypothesised that Cognitive Profile (i.e., "discrepancy" between non-verbal and verbal abilities) is a predictor of inner speech use amongst children with ASD. They suggested other, contradictory results might be explained in terms…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Marini, A.; Ferretti, F.; Chiera, A.; Magni, R.; Adornetti, I.; Nicchiarelli, S.; Vicari, S.; Valeri, G.
2016-01-01
This brief report is a partial replication of the study by Jackson and Atance ("J Dev Disabil" 14:40-45, 2008) assessing nonverbal Self-based and Mechanical-based future thinking (FT) in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). In a first step, these tasks were administered to 30 children with ASD. The two Self-based tasks were then…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Barber, Angela B.; Wetherby, Amy M.; Chambers, Nola W.
2012-01-01
The present study extended the findings of Watt et al. (J Autism Dev Disord 38:1518-1533, 2008) by investigating repetitive and stereotyped behaviors (RSB) demonstrated by children (n = 50) and typical development (TD; n = 50) matched on developmental age, gender, and parents' education level. RSB were coded from videotaped Communication and…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
de Bildt, Annelies; Sytema, Sjoerd; Meffert, Harma; Bastiaansen, Jojanneke A. C. J.
2016-01-01
This study examined the discriminative ability of the revised Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule module 4 algorithm (Hus and Lord in "J Autism Dev Disord" 44(8):1996-2012, 2014) in 93 Dutch males with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), schizophrenia, psychopathy or controls. Discriminative ability of the revised algorithm ASD cut-off…
DDG 1000 Zumwalt Class Destroyer (DDG 1000)
2013-12-01
Missile Defense Radar is the most cost-effective solution to fleet air and missile defense requirements. The Secretary of the Navy notified Congress...not reach an affordable solution and deliveries of these components for DDG 1002 were becoming time-critical. The Navy concurrently pursued a steel...DD(X) Construction (Shared) (Sunk) 2464 DD(X) Sys Design, Dev & Integration (Shared) (Sunk) 2465 DC Survivability (Shared) (Sunk) 2466 MFR
1978-09-01
AWACS EMP Guidelines presents two different models to predict the damage pcwer of the dev-ce and the circuit damage EMP voltage ( VEMP ). Neither of...calculated as K P~ I V BD 6. The damage EMP voltage ( VEMP ) is calculated KZ EMP +IZ =D +BD VBD1F 7. The damage EMP voltage is calculated for collector
78 FR 32214 - Land Acquisitions: Appeals of Land Acquisition Decisions
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-05-29
...; 134D0102DR-DS5A300000-DR.5A311.IA000113; Docket ID: BIA-2013-0005] RIN 1076-AF15 Land Acquisitions: Appeals... trust under this part, including broadening notice of any right to file an administrative appeal. DATES... the United States acquired title. See, e.g., Neighbors for Rational Dev., Inc. v. Norton, 379 F.3d 956...
2011-04-01
2004). PTSD and somatization in women treated at a VA primary care clinic. Psychosomatics, 45, 291-296. Foa, E. B., Dancu, C. V., Hembree, E...were clinically significant elevations (> 70) on the Demoralization, Somatic Complaints, Low Positive Emotion of the Restructured Clinical scales and... Hypochondriasis , Psych Dev = Psychopathic Deviate, Masc-Fem = Masculinity- Femininity, Psychasth = Psychasthenia, Schizoph = Schizophrenia; Soc Introv
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ertmer, Peggy A.; Sadaf, Ayesha; Ertmer, David J.
2011-01-01
This study examined the relationships among question types and levels and students' subsequent responses/interactions in online discussion forums. Question prompts were classified both by type, as outlined by Andrews ("POD Q J Prof Organ Dev Net Higher Education" 2(34):129-163, 1980), and by levels of critical thinking, as outlined by Bloom…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Feldman, Maurice A.; Hendry, Amanda M.; Ward, Rebecca A.; Hudson, Melissa; Liu, Xudong
2015-01-01
Identification of early signs of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) could lead to earlier diagnosis and intervention. This cross-sectional study used the Parent Observation of Early Markers Scale (POEMS, Feldman et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord" 42:13-12, 2012) to identify early signs of ASD in 69 ASD high-risk (older sibling diagnosed with…
2016-07-27
is a common requirement for aircraft, rockets , and hypersonic vehicles. The Aerospace Fuels Quality Test and Model Development (AFQTMoDev) project...was initiated to mature fuel quality assurance practices for rocket grade kerosene, thereby ensuring operational readiness of conventional and...and reliability, is a common requirement for aircraft, rockets , and hypersonic vehicles. The Aerospace Fuels Quality Test and Model Development
Mucin (MUC1) Expression and Function in Prostate Cancer Cells
2001-09-01
Interactions at the Cell Surface of Mouse Uterine Epithelial Cells and Periimplantation -Stage Embryos. Trophoblast Res., 4:211-241, 1990. 37. Dutt...and Julian, J. Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycan Expression by Periimplantation Stage Embryos. Dev. Biol. 155:97-106,1993. 56. Rohde, L.H., and Carson...Modulators of Embryo-Uterine Epithelial Cell Attachment. In: S.K. Dey (ed.), Molecular and Cellular Aspects of Periimplantation Processes, Springer
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-10-21
...' Loan Act (HOLA) (12 U.S.C. 1461 et seq.), and Regulation LL (12 CFR part 238) or Regulation MM (12 CFR....54) or 239.8 of Regulation MM (12 CFR 239.8). Unless otherwise noted, these activities will be... MM. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Dated: October 17, 2011. Robert deV. Frierson...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Metzger, Stefan; Durden, David; Sturtevant, Cove; Luo, Hongyan; Pingintha-Durden, Natchaya; Sachs, Torsten; Serafimovich, Andrei; Hartmann, Jörg; Li, Jiahong; Xu, Ke; Desai, Ankur R.
2017-08-01
Large differences in instrumentation, site setup, data format, and operating system stymie the adoption of a universal computational environment for processing and analyzing eddy-covariance (EC) data. This results in limited software applicability and extensibility in addition to often substantial inconsistencies in flux estimates. Addressing these concerns, this paper presents the systematic development of portable, reproducible, and extensible EC software achieved by adopting a development and systems operation (DevOps) approach. This software development model is used for the creation of the eddy4R family of EC code packages in the open-source R language for statistical computing. These packages are community developed, iterated via the Git distributed version control system, and wrapped into a portable and reproducible Docker filesystem that is independent of the underlying host operating system. The HDF5 hierarchical data format then provides a streamlined mechanism for highly compressed and fully self-documented data ingest and output. The usefulness of the DevOps approach was evaluated for three test applications. First, the resultant EC processing software was used to analyze standard flux tower data from the first EC instruments installed at a National Ecological Observatory (NEON) field site. Second, through an aircraft test application, we demonstrate the modular extensibility of eddy4R to analyze EC data from other platforms. Third, an intercomparison with commercial-grade software showed excellent agreement (R2 = 1.0 for CO2 flux). In conjunction with this study, a Docker image containing the first two eddy4R packages and an executable example workflow, as well as first NEON EC data products are released publicly. We conclude by describing the work remaining to arrive at the automated generation of science-grade EC fluxes and benefits to the science community at large. This software development model is applicable beyond EC and more generally builds the capacity to deploy complex algorithms developed by scientists in an efficient and scalable manner. In addition, modularity permits meeting project milestones while retaining extensibility with time.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Dighe, Kalpak Arvind
Several 40+ hour data records obtained in Oct 2010 from the Los Alamos Portable Pulser Facility (LAPP) Operational clocks show variations of {approx} 27 nsec. Several 16+ hour data records obtained in Aug 2010 from non-operational clocks like those used operationally from 2005 to the present show variations of {approx} 35 nsec. SLRE variability is xxx +/- yyy sec (std dev). SLRE occasionally show unusual events such as those discussed by Pongratz. We will continue to study and monitor.
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-12-20
..., HOPEWELL, VA 23860. VA: VIRGINIA HSG REDEV AUTH.. 601 SOUTH 0 9,400 BELVIDERE ST, RICHMOND, VA 23220. VT...: HENDERSON HA 111 SOUTH ADAMS 0 17,800 ST, HENDERSON, KY 42420. KY: CYNTHIANA HA 149 FEDERAL ST, 0 4,200... 20895. MI: MICHIGAN STATE HSG DEV PO BOX 30044, 0 84,800 AUTH. LANSING, MI 48909. MN: VIRGINIA HRA PO...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dando, Coral J.; Ormerod, Thomas C.; Cooper, Penny; Marchant, Ruth; Mattison, Michelle; Milne, Rebecca; Bull, Ray
2018-01-01
Recently, Henry et al. ("J Autism Dev Disord" 8:2348-2362, 2017) found no evidence for the use of Verbal Labels, Sketch Reinstatement of Context and Registered Intermediaries by forensic practitioners when interviewing children with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder. We consider their claims, noting the limited ecological validity…
Komisaruk, Barry R
2016-12-01
Evidence is presented as an alternative to the authors' claims that in the course of evolution, a link between orgasm and ovulation has been lost in women, that evolutionary changes in clitoral anatomy underlie this loss, and that women's orgasm plays no significant role in reproduction. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Rational Design of Rho Protein Inhibitors
2006-09-01
X- ray crystallographic techniques for structure determination. This training regimen has consisted of formal training either individually from...facility (Brenda Temple, Ph.D.), members of the LDDN at Harvard University (Ross Stein, Ph.D. and Li-An Yeh, Ph.D.), the director of the X- ray core...initiation but essential for metastasis. Genes Dev, 2005. Electronic publication ahead of print. 23. Zhang J-H, Chung TDY, and Oldenburg KR. A
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Schohl, Kirsten A.; Van Hecke, Amy V.; Carson, Audrey Meyer; Dolan, Bridget; Karst, Jeffrey; Stevens, Sheryl
2014-01-01
This study aimed to evaluate the Program for the Education and Enrichment of Relational Skills (PEERS: Laugeson et al. in "J Autism Dev Disord" 39(4):596-606, 2009). PEERS focuses on improving friendship quality and social skills among adolescents with higher-functioning ASD. 58 participants aged 11-16 years-old were randomly assigned to…
Theory and Device Modeling for Nano-Structured Transistor Channels
2011-06-01
zinc oxide ( ZnO ) thin film transistors ( TFTs ) that contain nanocrystalline grains on the order of ~20nm. The authors of ref. 1 present results...problem in order to determine the threshold voltage. 15. SUBJECT TERMS nano-structured transistor , mesoscopic, zinc oxide , ZnO , field-effect...and R. Neidhard, “Microwave ZnO Thin - Film Transistors ”, IEEE Electron Dev. Lett. 29, 1024 (2008); doi: 10.1109/LED.2008.2001635.
A Research Program in Computer Technology. 1987 Annual Technical Report
1990-07-01
TITLE (Indcle Security Clanificstion) 1987 Annual Technical Report: *A Research Program in Computer Technology (Unclassified) 12. PERSONAL AUTHOR(S) IS...distributed processing, survivable networks 17. NCE: distributed processing, local networks, personal computers, workstation environment 18. SC Dev...are the auw’iors and should not be Interpreted as representIng the official opinion or policy of DARPA, the U.S. Government, or any person or agency
2013-03-01
the /bin, /sbin, /etc, /var/log, /home, /proc, /root, /dev, /tmp, and /lib directories • Describe the purpose of the /etc/shadow and /etc/ passwd ...UNLIMITED 19 2.6.2 /etc/ passwd and /etc/shadow The /etc/shadow file didn’t exist on early Linux distributions. Originally only root could access the...etc/ passwd file, which stored user names, user configuration information, and passwords. However, when common programs such as ls running under
DEVSML 2.0: The Language and the Stack
2012-03-01
problems outside it. For example, HTML for web pages, Verilog and VHDL for hardware description, etc. are DSLs for very specific domains. A DSL can be...Engineering ( MDE ) paradigm where meta-modeling allows such transformations. The metamodeling approach to Model Integrated Computing (MIC) brings...University of Arizona, 2007 [5] Mittal, S, Martin, JLR, Zeigler, BP, "DEVS-Based Web Services for Net-centric T&E", Summer Computer Simulation
2005-10-01
to be exposed to in terms of validation and research.� This is important because the game development community is used to only market validation...dev, aggressively pursuing new frontiers.� We are working on ways within our greater project and future events to explain more about game development production...technology providers that permeate the game development space. By bringing over these key leaders we can further grow the overall community of
Open Component Portability Infrastructure (OPENCPI)
2009-11-01
Disk Drive 7 1 www.antec.com P182 $120. ATX Mid Tower Computer Case 8 1 www.xilinx.com HW-V5-ML555-G $2200. Xilinx ML555 V5 Dev Kit Notes: Cost...s/ GEORGE RAMSEYER EDWARD J. JONES, Deputy Chief Work Unit Manager Advanced Computing ...uniquely positioned to meet the goals of the Software Systems Stockroom (S3) since in some sense component-based systems are computer -science’s
Executive Handbook for Financial Management.
1981-01-01
Review 3-U Section V Fund Control 3-8 Section VI Reimbursement Programs- 3-A Section VII Financing Remote Activities 3-13 Section VIII Monitoring...conduct of the dev- elopment effort. For more on this subject, see chapt er 9. k. Army procurement accounts. The reimbursable (customer) programs for...obligations. When these orders change or get lost, duplicated, or cancelled, they impact on the Army’s reimbursable obligational authority. This reimbursable
Assessment Alternatives for a High Skill MOS
1975-12-01
tests. CR measurement advocates frequently claim that variance dependent statistics are inapplicable In CR test- ing because CR test scores have...rather than statistically . The Spearman- Brown reliability coefficient was .70. 17 In 1964, Shriver, Fink and Trexler (76) modified the M-33...ATTN: ATSW-SE-L 1 USA Cmd ft General Stf C- IVge . Ft Leavenworth, ATTN: Ed Advisor 1 USA Combined Arms Cmbt Dev Act, Ft Leavenworth, ATTN: DepCdr
The Role of a Novel Myosin Isoform in Prostate Cancer Metastasis
2013-10-01
of unconventional myosin function and targeting, Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 27 (2011) 133–155. [42] W. Kliche, S. Fujita- Becker , M. Kollmar, D.J...tissue-specific diseases (laminopathies), including Emery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophy , Dunnigan-type familial partial lipodystrophy (FPLD), and...structure of the C-terminal domain of lamin A/C, mutated in muscular dystrophies , cardiomyopathy, and partial lipodystrophy. Structure 10, 811–823
The End of the Reading Age: Grade and Age Effects in Early Schooling
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Alexander, James R.M.; Martin, Frances
2004-01-01
During the school years, psychological test norms may be indexed by age or by grade. A number of studies have shown that using age-based norms appears to produce biases associated with grade assignment. Cahan and Cohen [Child Dev. 60 (1989) 1239-1249] showed that the effect of one grade was over twice the effect of 1 year of age for most verbal…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lerner, Matthew D.; Hutchins, Tiffany L.; Prelock, Patricia A.
2011-01-01
This study presents updated information on a parent-report measure of Theory of Mind (ToM), formerly called the Perception of Children's Theory of Mind Measure (Hutchins et al., "J Autism Dev Disord" 38:143-155, 2008), renamed the Theory of Mind Inventory (ToMI), for use with parents of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study…
Nimesh, Manoj; Joon, Deepali; Pathak, Anil Kumar; Saluja, Daman
2013-11-01
Indian contribution to global burden of tuberculosis is about 26%. In the present study we have developed an in-house PCR assay using primers for sdaA gene of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and evaluated against already established primers devR, IS6110, MPB64, rpoB primers for diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis. Using universal sample preparation (USP) method, DNA was extracted from sputum specimens of 412 symptomatic patients from Delhi, India. The DNA so extracted was used as template for PCR amplification using primers targeting sdaA, devR, IS6110, MPB64 and rpoB genes. Out of 412, 149 specimens were considered positive based on composite reference standard (CRS) criteria. The in-house designed sdaA PCR showed high specificity (96.5%), the high positive likelihood ratio (28), the high sensitivity (95.9%), and the very low negative likelihood ratio (0.04) in comparison to CRS. Based on our results, the sdaA PCR assay can be considered as one of the most reliable diagnostic tests in comparison to other PCR based detection methods. Copyright © 2013 The British Infection Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jung, Do Yang; Lee, Baek Haeng; Kim, Sun Wook
Electric vehicle (EV) performance is very dependent on traction batteries. For developing electric vehicles with high performance and good reliability, the traction batteries have to be managed to obtain maximum performance under various operating conditions. Enhancement of battery performance can be accomplished by implementing a battery management system (BMS) that plays an important role in optimizing the control mechanism of charge and discharge of the batteries as well as monitoring the battery status. In this study, a BMS has been developed for maximizing the use of Ni-MH batteries in electric vehicles. This system performs several tasks: the control of charging and discharging, overcharge and over-discharge protection, the calculation and display of state-of-charge (SOC), safety, and thermal management. The BMS is installed in and tested in a DEV5-5 electric vehicle developed by Daewoo Motor Co. and the Institute for Advanced Engineering in Korea. Eighteen modules of a Panasonic nickel-metal hydride (Ni-MH) battery, 12 V, 95 A h, are used in the DEV5-5. High accuracy within a range of 3% and good reliability are obtained. The BMS can also improve the performance and cycle-life of the Ni-MH battery peak, as well as the reliability and the safety of the electric vehicles.
Dey, Nandini; Krie, Amy; Klein, Jessica; Williams, Kirstin; McMillan, Amanda; Elsey, Rachel; Sun, Yuliang; Williams, Casey; De, Pradip; Leyland-Jones, Brian
2017-01-01
Down’s syndrome (DS), the most common genetic cause of significant intellectual disability in children and adults is caused by the trisomy of either all or a part of human chromosome 21 (HSA21). Patients with DS mostly suffer from characteristic tumor types. Although individual patients of DS are at a higher risk for acute leukemia and testicular cancers, other types of solid tumors including breast cancers are mostly uncommon and have significantly lower-than-expected age-adjusted incidence rates. Except for an increased risk of retinoblastomas, and lymphomas, the risk of developing solid tumors has been found to be lower in both children and adults, and breast cancer was found to be almost absent (Hasle H., The Lancet Oncology, 2001). A study conducted in the United States found only one death when 11.65 were expected (Scholl T et al., Dev Med Child Neurol. 1982). A recent study examined mammogram reports of women with DS treated in the largest medical facility specifically serving adults with DS in the United States. It was found that only 0.7% women with DS had been diagnosed with breast cancers (Chicoine B et al., Intellect Dev Disabil. 2015). Here we describe a case of breast cancer in a 25-year-old patient with DS. The disease was presented as lymph node positive carcinoma with alterations of tumor suppressor genes characteristic to the triple negative breast cancer subtype. Comprehensive Genomic Profiling (CGP) revealed a wild-type status for BRCA1. The CGP report showed a frameshift mutation, A359fs*10 of the tumor suppressor gene INPP4B and another frameshift mutation, R282fs*63 of tumor suppressor gene TP53 in the tumor biopsy as characteristically found in triple-negative breast cancers. The VUS (Variance of Unknown Significance) alteration(s) were identified in ASXL1 (L1395V), NTRK1 (G18E), DDR2 (I159T), RUNX1 (amplification), ERG (amplification), SOX2 (T26A), FAM123B (G1031D), and HNF1A (A301T). Bonafide cancer-related genes of chromosome 21 amplified in the patient’s tumor are RUNX1 and ERG genes. After the completion of the radiation, the patient was placed on everolimus which was based on the result of her CGP report. Thus, post-mastectomy radiation therapy was completed with a recommendation for everolimus for one year. During the time of writing of this report, no metastatic lesions were identified. The patient currently has no evidence of disease. PMID:28590426
The mandatory sentence and Section 2.
Dell, S
1986-01-01
Sentencing in homicide depends on how psychiatrists view the issues of Section 2. In most killings that do not involve clear-cut mental disorder, strong emotions and stress play a part. Both can be cited in aid of diminished responsibility. If doctors cite them, however tentatively, it becomes feasible for the court to review any mitigating factors and to choose an appropriate penalty. Otherwise, the mandatory penalty is imposed. Thus doctors, by opining not on the medical but on the legal and moral aspects of Section 2, decide who shall automatically get a life sentence and who shall not. Anomaly and injustice are the results. They would be remedied by the abolition of the mandatory sentence for murder. PMID:3959037
Krief, Alain; Dunkle, Melissa; Bahar, Masoud; Bultinck, Patrick; Herrebout, Wouter; Sandra, Pat
2015-07-01
The absolute configuration of rhizopine, an opine-like natural product present in nitrogen-fixing nodules of alfalfa infected by rhizobia, is elucidated using a combination of state-of-the-art analytical and semi-preparative supercritical fluid chromatography and vibrational circular dichroism spectroscopy. A synthetic peracetylated racemate was fractionated into its enantiomers and subjected to absolute configuration analysis revealing that natural rhizopine exists as a single enantiomer. The stereochemistry of non-derivatized natural rhizopine corresponds to (1R,2S,3R,4R,5S,6R)-4-amino-6-methoxycyclohexane-1,2,3,5-tetraol. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Reporting on the Holocaust: the view from Jim Crow Alabama.
Puckett, Dan J
2011-01-01
The press in Alabama covered major events taking place in Germany from the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis in 1933 through the Nuremberg Trials in 1946. Journalists in the state provided extensive coverage, and editors did not hesitate to opine on the persecution of the Jews in Europe. Yet, Alabama’s white-run press failed in the end to explain the events as a singularly Jewish tragedy. The state’s black-run press, for its part, used the news of the mass killings of the Jews to warn against the dangers of conceptions of racial superiority—a primary concern for black southerners living in the Jim Crow South.
Looking through an adolescent literacy lens at the narrow view of reading.
Ehren, Barbara J
2009-04-01
This commentary is a personal reaction to A. G. Kamhi's (2007) article on the "narrow view" of reading and his suggestion that this view be adopted as a way to address the reading problems of children and adolescents. In this article, I consider the narrow view of reading from an adolescent literacy perspective and discuss the practical implications of adopting this view in the schools. Discussion revolves around the complexities of reading comprehension, comprehension as a teachable set of complex processes, and the speech-language pathologist's role in reading comprehension. Although I acknowledge that the narrow view of reading may have merit, I opine that it may create more problems than it solves.
Annotated Bibliography of the Air Force Human Resources Laboratory Technical Reports - 1978
1980-06-01
selection of incentives for classroom use. Grade-related and non -grade-related incentives were described in this experiment in a manner designed to...information monitoring- feedback. The current piractice= materials and methods are an outgroiuth of experimental aJpproache-s to the design . dev...operated in a stand- alone mode, the R & M model can be utilized to analyze the impact of various avionics design configurations on system support
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Knuth, Randy; Sutton, Paul S.; Levias, Sheldon; Kuo, Annie Camey; Callison, Matthew
2016-01-01
The purpose of this study is to describe and examine the structures and policies a public, comprehensive high school put in place to implement problem-based learning (PBL) across content areas. Starting in 2010, the school implemented PBL in the hopes of increasing students' career and college readiness skills. The research took place at a…
Field Organizations: Unit Status Reporting
2001-11-15
3 15 PSYOP DEV DET Detachment CDR 12/8 15 TAC PSYOP DET Detachment CDR 13/8 15 TAC PSYOP team Team leader 5/3 15 UAV TBD TBD 16 MAV/ IAV TBD TBD 16 Fox...AR 600–110 Identification, Surveillance, and Administration of Personnel Infected with Human Immuno-deficiency Virus (HIV) AR 601–210 Regular Army...HIV human immunodeficiency virus HMMWV high mobility multipurpose wheeled vehicle HO hospitalized/convalescent leave category of personnel non
CVN 78 Gerald R. Ford Class Nuclear Aircraft Carrier (CVN 78)
2013-12-01
Capabil... -Follow-on Ship (CVN 79) DAB Program Review - • Start Construction - • Delivery .-:K IOT &E IOT &E Start .-:41 IOT &E Complete e(41 Follow-on...Ship (CVN 80) DAB Program Review -Platform-Level Integration D ... ....., Milestone C .. EMALS EMALS Delivery (with Ship) .-:o; IOC ..:<! IOT ...E IOT &E Start ..:<! IOT &E Complete -· Platform-Level Integration .. ...:<! CVN 78 Milestones SAR Baseline Dev Est Current APB Development
Zebrafish as a Model to Study NF1-Associated Learning Deficits
2015-05-01
deficit - hyperactivity disorder . Dev. Med. Child Neurol. 48, 973–977. Isenberg, J.C., Templer, A., Gao, F., Titus, J.B., and Gutmann, D.H. (2013). Attention ...dominant disorder associated with attention deficits and learning disabilities. The primary known function of neurofibromin, encoded by the NF1 gene, is...develop cognitive deficits . The disorder is caused by mutations in a gene neurofibromin. In normal individuals, neurofibromin regulates the activity
Performance of High Voltage Modules Under Abuse Operations
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Jeevarajan, Judith A.; Darcy, Eric C.; Irlbeck, Bradley W.
2005-01-01
The Electric Auxiliary Power Unit (EAPU) or the Advanced Hydraulic Power System (AHPS) is a Shuttle Upgrade program. Of the two battery design approaches that were considered in support of this program, the current paper concentrates on the testing performed on the small-cell approach. Testing performed at both ComDev Space, Canada and at NASA-JSC is described in this paper. Testing included those under mission profile conditions and off-nominal abusive conditions.
Analysis of United Nations Millennium Summit Speeches
2001-04-01
Development 36 46 Taiwan 14 16 Terrorism 32 60 Transnational Crime 31 40 Urban-Rural 2 12 War 65 108 Water 15 20 Weapons 36 62 Women/ Gender ...Concept Number of Countries Freq. of Mention Governance 47 59 Aid/Assistance for Dev. 44 58 Sovereignty 36 53 Women/ Gender Equality 38 50...take into consideration how different cultures consider the special status of elders and gender responsibilities. Social stability has to be considered
Transforming Growth Factor-B Receptors in Human Breast Cancer.
1998-05-01
I., Polyak, K., Iavarone, A., and Massagud, J. Kip/ Cip and Ink4 cdk inhibitors cooperate to induce cell cycle arrest in response to TGF-ß. Genes Dev...specimens. Thirdly, we have developped transient transfection assays to determine how specific TßR mutations affect affect receptor function. Using...Growth Factor-ß (TGFß) is the most potent known inhibitor of cell cycle progression of normal mammary epithelial cells; in addition, it causes cells
Conference on the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory (3rd)
1988-09-23
TREATMENT IN PARADOXICAL SLEEP I. Portell-Cortes, DEPRIVATION PLATFORMS IN RATS . Norpdo-Bernal Area do Psicobiologia Dept. de Psicologia do la Salut Univ...of California Irvine, CA 92717 Irvine, CA 92717 Dr. Robert W. Doty Dr. David Easton Center for Brain Research School of Social Sciences Univ. of...Ignacio Morgado-Bernal Dr. Georges Moroz Area de Psicobiologia CNS Development Psicologia do la Salud CIBA-GEIGY Corp. Univ. Autonoma do Barcelona DEV
Standard Port-Visit Cost Forecasting Model for U.S. Navy Husbanding Contracts
2009-12-01
Protocol (HTTP) server.35 2. MySQL . An open-source database.36 3. PHP . A common scripting language used for Web development.37 E. IMPLEMENTATION OF...Inc. (2009). MySQL Community Server (Version 5.1) [Software]. Available from http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/ 37 The PHP Group (2009). PHP (Version...Logistics Services MySQL My Structured Query Language NAVSUP Navy Supply Systems Command NC Non-Contract Items NPS Naval Postgraduate
Technologies for Energy from Biomass by Direct Combustion, Gasification, and Liquefaction.
1981-05-01
1980 1982 1984 Development Alberta Industrial Dev. X American Fyr. Feeder X Andco, Inc. X Applied Engineering Co., Inc. X Biomass Corp. X Bio-Solar x...Feeder ANDCO, Inc. Applied Engineering Company Biomass Corporation Bio-Solar Research and Development Corporation Combustion Power Company, Inc. Davy...Andco. Inc. X Applied Engineering Co., Inc. X Biomass Corp. X , Big-Solar .X I Combustion Power .. XI Davy Powergas X j Dekalb Acresearch, Inc.- x Duvant
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
de Bildt, Annelies; Sytema, Sjoerd; Zander, Eric; Bölte, Sven; Sturm, Harald; Yirmiya, Nurit; Yaari, Maya; Charman, Tony; Salomone, Erica; LeCouteur, Ann; Green, Jonathan; Bedia, Ricardo Canal; Primo, Patricia García; van Daalen, Emma; de Jonge, Maretha V.; Guðmundsdóttir, Emilía; Jóhannsdóttir, Sigurrós; Raleva, Marija; Boskovska, Meri; Rogé, Bernadette; Baduel, Sophie; Moilanen, Irma; Yliherva, Anneli; Buitelaar, Jan; Oosterling, Iris J.
2015-01-01
The current study aimed to investigate the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) algorithms for toddlers and young preschoolers (Kim and Lord, "J Autism Dev Disord" 42(1):82-93, 2012) in a non-US sample from ten sites in nine countries (n = 1,104). The construct validity indicated a good fit of the algorithms. The diagnostic…
Investigation of Radiation Effects on Semiconductor Devices and Integrated Circuits
1988-09-16
qualitativelysimilar to, and consistent with, findings at the two higher energies .) Results for irradiation of eightwhere q is the electronic charge, ni is the...COMMUNICATIONS R&D COMMAND ATTN: R BROWN ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE ATOMIC ENERGY U S ARMY ELECTRONIC TECH DEV LAB ATTN: EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT...Continue on reverse if necessary and identify by block number) Results of a study of radiation effects on electronic materials, devices, and integrated
Deciphering the balkan Enigma: Using History to Inform Policy
1993-03-01
University Press, 1973. After long experience with German interference in Serbian/Yugoslav affairs (1878, 1908, 1914 - 1918 ) it should not be surprising that... 1914 - 1918 , ed. Djordjevicý, Santa Barbara: CLID Books, 1980. 151. James Gow, "Deconstructing Yugoslavia," Survival, Vol. 33, Nc. 4, July-August 1992, p...of political institutions witnin tine Balkans anu io0w these political dev, ’ýpments intluence current events. Historical perspective gained is used
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Luyster, Rhiannon; Gotham, Katherine; Guthrie, Whitney; Coffing, Mia; Petrak, Rachel; Pierce, Karen; Bishop, Somer; Esler, Amy; Hus, Vanessa; Oti, Rosalind; Richler, Jennifer; Risi, Susan; Lord, Catherine
2009-01-01
The Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS; Lord et al., J Autism Dev Disord, 30(3):205-223, 2000) is widely accepted as a "gold standard" diagnostic instrument, but it is of restricted utility with very young children. The purpose of the current project was to modify the ADOS for use in children under 30 months of age. A modified ADOS, the…
2007-03-01
Artificial Intelligence Walter Greenleaf, Greenleaf Medical Applications in Rehabilitation Medicine Workshop 4: 12/14-5/07 SUMMIT/TATRC...Applications in Medicine; 1-day Long Beach, CA – MMVR 118 people 1/25/05 2 MEDICAL-SURGICAL TRAINING WITH VIDEOGAMES ; ½-day Portland, OR...for Modeling Virtual Patients Parvati Dev " Intelligent " characters in Virtual World Lou Halamek, Stanford Debriefing- After Action Review
Performance Evaluation of Kitchen Exhaust Draft Hoods.
1980-03-01
1-ACI827 JOHNS - MANVILLE SALES CORP DENVER CO RESEARCH AND DEV-ETC F/e 13/1 PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF KITCHEN EXHAUST DRAFT HOOOS. (U) MAR 80 P 8...ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT PROJECT. TASK AREA a WOPK UNIT NUMOERS Johns - Manville Sales Corper a, t Research & Development Center /0004...P. B. SHEPHERD, R. H. NEISEL JOHNS - MANVILLE SALES CORPORATION RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT CENTER KEN-CARYL RANCH, DENVER, COLORADO 80217 MARCH 1980 FINAL
How to Be a Better Consumer of Security Maturity Models
2014-10-21
Health Care wellcent1ve Health Care Network !Maturity IModel: Posted on July 15, 2013 by Paul D. Taylor, M.D., CMIO, Wellcentive, Inc. Time and...expectations and delivery are aligned 10 DevOps Collaboration Automation Process Initial ( Defined Measured 11 Marketing A ih ’ f·, )j ,lcp... networked systems CERT – Anticipating and solving our nation’s cybersecurity challenges • Largest technical program at SEI • Focused on internet
Ukraine: dismissal on the basis of HIV status ruled unconstitutional.
Bordunis, Tetyana
2005-04-01
On 18 October 2004 the Novosanzhary District Court in Poltava oblast ruled in favour of Olexiy Voloshyn, who had been harassed and fired by his employer on the basis of his HIV status. The court held that Voloshyn's constitutional rights to equality in choice of profession and labour activity, and respect for human honour and dignity, had been violated by Viktoriya Dev'yatko, editor-in-chief of the Novosanzhary district newspaper.
Townley, Ian K; Schuyler, Erin; Parker-Gür, Michelle; Foltz, Kathy R
2009-03-15
Egg activation at fertilization in deuterostomes requires a rise in intracellular Ca(2+), which is released from the egg's endoplasmic reticulum. In sea urchins, a Src Family Kinase (SpSFK1) is necessary for the PLCgamma-mediated signaling event that initiates this Ca(2+) release (Giusti, A.F., O'Neill, F.J., Yamasu, K., Foltz, K.R. and Jaffe, L.A., 2003. Function of a sea urchin egg Src family kinase in initiating Ca2+ release at fertilization. Dev. Biol. 256, 367-378.). Annotation of the Strongylocentrotus purpuratus genome sequence led to the identification of additional, predicted SFKs (Bradham, C.A., Foltz, D.R., Beane, W.S., Amone, M.I., Rizzo, F., Coffman, J.A., Mushegian, A., Goel, M., Morales, J., Geneviere, A.M., Lapraz, F., Robertson, A.J., Kelkar, H., Loza-Coll, M., Townley, I.K., Raisch, M., Roux, M.M., Lepage, T., Gache, C., McClay, D.R., Manning, G., 2006. The sea urchin kinome: a first look. Dev. Biol. 300, 180-193.; Roux, M.M., Townley, I.K., Raisch, M., Reade, A., Bradham, C., Humphreys, G., Gunaratne, H.J., Killian, C.E., Moy, G., Su, Y.H., Ettensohn, C.A., Wilt, F., Vacquier, V.D., Burke, R.D., Wessel, G. and Foltz, K.R., 2006. A functional genomic and proteomic perspective of sea urchin calcium signaling and egg activation. Dev. Biol. 300, 416-433.). Here, we describe the cloning and characterization of these 4 additional SFKs and test their function during the initial Ca(2+) release at fertilization using the dominant-interfering microinjection method coupled with Ca(2+) recording. While two of the new SFKs (SpFrk and SpSFK3) are necessary for Ca(2+) release, SpSFK5 appears dispensable for early egg to embryo transition events. Interestingly, SpSFK7 may be involved in preventing precocious release of Ca(2+). Binding studies indicate that only SpSFK1 is capable of direct interaction with PLCgamma. Immunolocalization studies suggest that one or more SpSFK and PLCgamma are localized to the egg cortex and at the site of sperm-egg interaction. Collectively, these data indicate that more than one SFK is involved in the Ca(2+) release pathway at fertilization.
Gene expression of matrix metalloproteinases and LH receptors in mare follicular development.
Bastos, H B A; Kretzmann, N A; Santos, G O; Esmeraldino, A T; Rechsteiner, S Fiala; Mattos, R C; Neves, A P
2014-11-01
The period from the emergence of a dominant follicle until its formation requires tissue remodeling. Enzymes promoting collagen lysis, such as matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), are fundamental for the process of extracellular matrix remodeling, which allows changes in ovarian tissue architecture during follicular growth. It has been suggested that the production of these enzymes may be affected by the rise in circulating concentrations of LH, which acts on the ovarian surface epithelium (OSE). The aim of this study was to determine the expression of MMP-1, MMP-2, and LH receptor (LHR) in the ovulation fossa and in the central portion of the equine ovary during follicular deviation and dominance. Ovaries of 12 cyclic mares were selected and subsequently divided into two groups: development (DEV) group and dominant (DOM) group. The DEV group consisted of ovaries from six animals whose follicles were less than 28 mm in diameter (follicular deviation), and the DOM group consisted of ovaries from six animals whose follicles measured 28 mm or more in diameter (dominant follicles). The latter group was divided into two subgroups: the group of ovaries with a dominant follicle (DOM-D) and the group of contralateral ovaries (DOM-C). Our results showed that mRNA for MMP-1, MMP-2, and LHR was present in the equine ovary during follicle development, in the ovulation fossa, and in the central portion of the ovary. MMP-1 and LHR gene expression was greater (P < 0.05) for the DOM-D group compared with the DOM-C group. In the DOM-D group, MMP-1, MMP-2, and LHR gene expression was greater (P < 0.05) in the ovarian stroma compared with the ovulation fossa. Using immunohistochemistry, OSE from the DOM group showed increased expression compared with the DEV group (P < 0.05). In conclusion, we demonstrated that MMP-1 and MMP-2 might be fundamental for events related to tissue remodeling, which occurs during follicular development until the formation of the dominant follicle. We also demonstrated the relationship between the gene expression of MMPs and the gene and protein expression of LHR, suggesting that LHR in the OSE might be an important factor to initiate the signaling cascade that culminates with the production of MMPs. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Determine the Role of Canonical Wnt Signaling in Ovarian Tumorigenesis
2011-10-01
oncogenic Ras. Nature, 2000. 406(6792): p. 207-10. 11 16. Kuilman, T., et al., The essence of senescence. Genes Dev, 2010. 24(22): p. 2463- 79. 17...Benjamin G. Bitler, Jasmine P. Nicodemus, Hua Li, et al. Senescence Wnt5a Suppresses Epithelial Ovarian Cancer by Promoting Cellular...Suppresses Epithelial Ovarian Cancer by Promoting Cellular Senescence Benjamin G. Bitler1, Jasmine P. Nicodemus1, Hua Li1, Qi Cai2, Hong Wu3, Xiang
A Feedforward Compensation Technique for Use in Mitigating Platform Induced Jitter
2010-05-06
Mounting Screw Holes Leveling Valve (3 per system) Control Arm 72 A P P E N D I X H : L a s e r D i o d e Class 5mW, Class IIIa Typical...8217Connected’); C4 = ’Yes’ TF1 =strcmp(C1, C2);TF2=strcmp(C3, C4); if ~ TF1 ; unload(tg); load(tg,’DEV3_rev19’); tg=xpctarget.xpc; end if
Prediction Model for Impulsive Noise on Structures
2012-09-01
construction usually have an interior wall finish of: a) gypsum wallboard (also called plasterboard or drywall), b) plaster or c) wood paneling... Gypsum Plaster , Wall Board 11,67 0.04 NA For simply-supported beams vibrating in their fundamental mode, the value of KS is needed for...Dev of log10(f0) for wood panel interior to be average for wood walls with plaster or gypsum board interior. (8) L(w) based on estimated standard
Field-Effect Spectroscopy of Interface States
1988-12-31
ed.), Physics and Chemistry of Il-V Compound Semiconductor Interfaces, Plenum, New York, 1985, p. 327. HETEROJUNCTION AND DIELECTRICALLY INSULATED GATE...Electron Devices. voi. ED-29. pp. 1059-1064, 1982. chemistry , and physics from San Diego State Uni- 131 T. H. Mies, W. M. Paulson, and M. S...1982). 40. T. Y. Chang, R. F. Leheny, R. E. Nahory, E. Silberg , A. A. Ballman, E. A. Carid’ and C. J. Harrold, IEEE Electron. Dev. Lett. EDL- 3, 56
COX-1 Suppression and Follicle Depletion in the Etiology of Menopause-Associated Ovarian Cancer
2008-10-01
form (8), and cause growth inhibition and apoptosis in ovarian cancer cell lines (9). However, the link between morphological inhibition and...of the c-kit receptor. Genes Dev 1990;4:390-400. 2. Mintz B. Embryological development of primordial germ-cells in the mouse: influence of a new...708–14. 12 Rodriguez GC, Walmer DK, Cline M, et al. Effect of progestin on the ovarian epithelium of macaques: cancer prevention through apoptosis
Eliminating NVA Requirements & Improving the Inspection System
2011-01-27
Wg ISPR Blood Pgm QA JTAC Stan/Eval Formal Joint Comm AAAHC SCI Security Pgm Review Pathologists WII Ed & Dev Inter vent. Servi ces FDA Pubs...his/her tour Balanced mix of scheduled & no-notice inspections Units will be inspected for Readiness and Compliance every 24 months Readiness...a whole IG Team Chiefs drive team effectiveness, are the most visible direct representatives of MAJCOM CCs & should be selected by CIP or a board
Waste Analysis Plan and Waste Characterization Survey, Barksdale AFB, Louisiana
1991-03-01
review to assess if analysis is needed, any analyses that are to be provided by generators, and methods to be used to meet specific waste analysis ...sampling method , sampling frequency, parameters of analysis , SW 846 test methods , Department of Transportation (DOT) shipping name and hazard class...S.e.iceA w/Atchs 2. HQ SAC/DEV Ltr, 28 Sep 90 19 119 APPENDIX B Waste Analysis Plan Rationale 21 APPENDIX B 1. SAMPLING METHOD RATIONALE: Composite Liquid
Revised RB 100-9: A Guide to the Formulation and Selection of Feasible Tactical Courses of Action.
1981-04-23
Department of Defense ATTN: M. Minnemam U.S. Army Armament Rsch Dev & Cmd ATTN: K . Hinman ATTN: DRDAR-LCN-E ATTN: Strategic & Space Sys (OS) ATTN: F...B2590D. Is. K EY WORDS (Cmnthme an rever. side it aaeceety OWd IdentIfy by Week munst) Tactical Course of Action Defensive Operations Integrated... 12 CHAPTER 2. STEPS LOADING TO FORMULATION OF COURSES OF ACTION ..........13 Section I. Introduction
Measuring the Influence of Mainstream Media on Twitter Users
2014-07-01
dataset or called from a Java code. Weka contains tools for data pre-processing, classification, regression, clustering, association rules, and...server at CAU. The command line to start Weka is: java -jar /opt/weka-3-6-9/weka.jar & The first window that appears is the Weka’s graphical user...website hosts all detailed information at the fedora website at1. We chose the 140dev streaming API to store the tweets into our fedora using MySQL
1975-06-16
dry -bulb temperature, means and standard d~viatinne nf eirg-hiiih- wM~e-.h,lh (y DD 1473 ~ UNCLASSIFIED SECURIS- CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE(Ifnon...Val. Entoted) 19. Percentqge frequency of distribution tables Dry -bulb temperature versus wet-bulb temperature Cumulative percentage frequency of...ATMOSPHERIC PHENOMENA EXTREME MAX & MIN TEMP PART B PRECIPITATION PSYCHROMETRIC- DRY VS WET BULB SNOWFALL MEAN & STD DEV - ( DRY BULB, WET BULB, & DEW
Department of Defense In-House RDT&E Activities
1979-10-30
OIVAI .. I-:JNLI’IONS/EQJIPMtN’r/CAPAt3ILIrflt.4 tNC’i4PAb-Eý, APPLO RUA INCL WRC DEV AND) SPT IN INTI:RLO got: ~ISI6 ANALYSIS. JAM,IJEtPSi(7 iNrt7L...LU*. CAPT. R. 4. tsROWN TECH1.L1R. MR. THOMAS RAMIREZ F. ~PROGRAM LJATA BY FISCAL YEAR (MILLION S PiKOtRAM 1979 IQ80fk~(ACTUJAL) (ACT + EsT) TUTAL
Mechanisms of Breast Carcinogenesis Involving Wild-Type p53
2001-09-01
Nelson, C. E., Gryka , M . A., Litwak, G., Gebhardt, M ., level of p53 that was expressed in the cells in both these studies Bressac, B., Ozturk, M ., Baker...14 Publication resulting from this research: 1. Resnick-Silverman, L., S. St Clair, M . Maurer, K...activation by the tumor suppressor protein p53. Genes Dev 12:2102-7. 2. Tang, H. Y., K. Zhao, J. F. Pizzolato, M . Fonarev, J. C. Langer, and J. J
Dielectric Constant and Loss Data Part 2
1975-12-01
fluoride, single crystal, Melamine - formaldehyde resins , Columbia Univ., P.R.-75 IV-21,22,112; V-8,88 Manganese-magnesium ferrite, Melamine GMG, IV-2i...butylperoxy) Urea - formaldehyde resins , IV-23 hexane, P.R.-197 U.S. Army Engineering Research and War Dept., Picatinny Arsenal, see Dev. Lab., Fort...IV.-36 irradiated, P.R,-161 "Bakelite" polyvinyl chloride- "Amplifilm," IV-14; V-74 acetate, see "Vinylites" Axiiliine- formaldehyde resins , IV-21
Synthesis, Characterization, and Sensitivity Analysis of Urea Nitrate (UN)
2015-04-01
of the line is the rate of the reaction for the corresponding temperature. The equations for the zero order reaction and half- life equation follow...rate law (k is rate constant; [A] is the concentration of UN) Rate = k[A]n . (1) Eq. 2 shows the half-life (t½) equation for a zero order reaction...MGMT 1 GOVT PRINTG OFC (PDF) A MALHOTRA 2 WEAPONS DEV & (PDF) INTEGRATION DIRCTRT AMRDEC RDMR WDN J NEIDERT G DRAKE
Electrochemical and Photochemical Treatment of Aqueous Waste Streams
1996-01-01
TREATMENT OF AQUEOUS WASTE STREAMS Joseph C. Farmer, Richard W. Pekala, Francis T. Wang, David V. Fix, Alan M. Volpe, Daniel D. Dietrich, William H...STREAMS Joseph C. Farmer, Richard W. Pekala, Francis T. Wang, David V. Fix, Alan M. Volpe, Daniel D. Dietrich, William H. Siegel and James F. Carley...1992). Wilbourne , C. M. Wong, , W. S. Gillam, S. Johnson, R. H. Horowitz, "Electrosorb Process for Desalting Water," Res. Dev. Prog. Rept. No. 516, 16. J
Architectural Implications of DevOps
2014-03-27
Project Management Approach Size Metrics Years In Use Release Cadence CI Cadence A Agile/ Scrum (last 2 years and traditional before...that) 1M SLOC 17 Client release available every 2 months (not all accept it) Daily CI build B Water/ Scrum /F all 3M SLOC, team size 6– 8...90,000 users 3+ Internal release every 2–3 weeks, external release as needed Daily CI build C Agile/ Scrum Team size 30 2+ Internal release every
SMC Systems Engineering: Specialty Engineering Disciplines Framework and Descriptions. Volume 2
2011-10-03
Engineering Disciplines Updale SNiEng Planning to Meet Program Objectives 1- -----:;..._- .-----------------, I Update SIW Eng T as1<s & Timing ol T asl<s...Analyses 1-Dev SNi Eng Products e.g. Assessmenls, Rills, Certs 1- ID & Manage Resources: Tools, Equip, Skills Assess Contractors’ Compian<:e to SIW Eng...Approaches to Meet SIW Ol>jeclives S1ipulale Contraclllal Risk and Actions lot Mitigations Review Contraclors’ Tech Data (Technical & Training Manuals
Nde, Chantal W; Toghrol, Freshteh; Jang, Hyeung-Jin; Bentley, William E
2011-04-01
Tuberculosis is a leading cause of death worldwide and infects thousands of Americans annually. Mycobacterium bovis causes tuberculosis in humans and several animal species. Peracetic acid is an approved tuberculocide in hospital and domestic environments. This study presents for the first time the transcriptomic changes in M. bovis BCG after treatment with 0.1 mM peracetic acid for 10 and 20 min. This study also presents for the first time a comparison among the transcriptomic responses of M. bovis BCG to three oxidative disinfectants: peracetic acid, sodium hypochlorite, and hydrogen peroxide after 10 min of treatment. Results indicate that arginine biosynthesis, virulence, and oxidative stress response genes were upregulated after both peracetic acid treatment times. Three DNA repair genes were downregulated after 10 and 20 min and cell wall component genes were upregulated after 20 min. The devR-devS signal transduction system was upregulated after 10 min, suggesting a role in the protection against peracetic acid treatment. Results also suggest that peracetic acid and sodium hypochlorite both induce the expression of the ctpF gene which is upregulated in hypoxic environments. Further, this study reveals that in M. bovis BCG, hydrogen peroxide and peracetic acid both induce the expression of katG involved in oxidative stress response and the mbtD and mbtI genes involved in iron regulation/virulence.
Frederick, Karen E; Ivey Hatz, Julie; Lanning, Beth
2015-10-01
Equine-assisted learning (EAL) is an experiential modality which utilizes horses to provide a unique learning experience for personal growth. Research by Damon et al. (Appl Dev Sci 7:119-128, 2003) suggests a positive relationship between hope and positive developmental trajectories. Hagen et al. (Am J Orthopsychiatr 75:211-219, 2005) showed hope to be a protective factor associated with adaptive functioning in at-risk youth. Ashby et al. (J Couns Dev 89:131-139, 2011) found a significant inverse relationship between hope and depression: as hope increases, depression decreases. The current study investigates the impact of a non-riding EAL curriculum entitled L.A.S.S.O. (Leading Adolescents to Successful School Outcomes) on levels of hope and depression in at-risk youth. The study uses an experimental design with longitudinal, repeated measures. Participants were randomly assigned to treatment and control groups. Participants in the treatment received 5 weeks of EAL, while participants in the control group received treatment as usual. Repeated measures ANOVA of participants' levels of hope and depression showed statistically significant improvements in the treatment group as compared with the control group. Even a brief (5-week) intervention of EAL had a positive impact on the lives and attitudes of at-risk adolescents, with increased levels of hope and decreased levels of depression.
Valiante, Vito; Baldin, Clara; Hortschansky, Peter; Jain, Radhika; Thywißen, Andreas; Straßburger, Maria; Shelest, Ekaterina; Heinekamp, Thorsten; Brakhage, Axel A
2016-10-01
Melanins play a crucial role in defending organisms against external stressors. In several pathogenic fungi, including the human pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus, melanin production was shown to contribute to virulence. A. fumigatus produces two different types of melanins, i.e., pyomelanin and dihydroxynaphthalene (DHN)-melanin. DHN-melanin forms the gray-green pigment characteristic for conidia, playing an important role in immune evasion of conidia and thus for fungal virulence. The DHN-melanin biosynthesis pathway is encoded by six genes organized in a cluster with the polyketide synthase gene pksP as a core element. Here, cross-species promoter analysis identified specific DNA binding sites in the DHN-melanin biosynthesis genes pksP-arp1 intergenic region that can be recognized by bHLH and MADS-box transcriptional regulators. Independent deletion of two genes coding for the transcription factors DevR (bHLH) and RlmA (MADS-box) interfered with sporulation and reduced the expression of the DHN-melanin gene cluster. In vitro and in vivo experiments proved that these transcription factors cooperatively regulate pksP expression acting both as repressors and activators in a mutually exclusive manner. The dual role executed by each regulator depends on specific DNA motifs recognized in the pksP promoter region. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
A NEW DENSITY VARIANCE-MACH NUMBER RELATION FOR SUBSONIC AND SUPERSONIC ISOTHERMAL TURBULENCE
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Konstandin, L.; Girichidis, P.; Federrath, C.
The probability density function of the gas density in subsonic and supersonic, isothermal, driven turbulence is analyzed using a systematic set of hydrodynamical grid simulations with resolutions of up to 1024{sup 3} cells. We perform a series of numerical experiments with root-mean-square (rms) Mach number M ranging from the nearly incompressible, subsonic (M=0.1) to the highly compressible, supersonic (M=15) regime. We study the influence of two extreme cases for the driving mechanism by applying a purely solenoidal (divergence-free) and a purely compressive (curl-free) forcing field to drive the turbulence. We find that our measurements fit the linear relation between themore » rms Mach number and the standard deviation (std. dev.) of the density distribution in a wide range of Mach numbers, where the proportionality constant depends on the type of forcing. In addition, we propose a new linear relation between the std. dev. of the density distribution {sigma}{sub {rho}} and that of the velocity in compressible modes, i.e., the compressible component of the rms Mach number, M{sub comp}. In this relation the influence of the forcing is significantly reduced, suggesting a linear relation between {sigma}{sub {rho}} and M{sub comp}, independent of the forcing, and ranging from the subsonic to the supersonic regime.« less
Rigor mortis in an unusual position: Forensic considerations.
D'Souza, Deepak H; Harish, S; Rajesh, M; Kiran, J
2011-07-01
We report a case in which the dead body was found with rigor mortis in an unusual position. The dead body was lying on its back with limbs raised, defying gravity. Direction of the salivary stains on the face was also defying the gravity. We opined that the scene of occurrence of crime is unlikely to be the final place where the dead body was found. The clues were revealing a homicidal offence and an attempt to destroy the evidence. The forensic use of 'rigor mortis in an unusual position' is in furthering the investigations, and the scientific confirmation of two facts - the scene of death (occurrence) is different from the scene of disposal of dead body, and time gap between the two places.
Rigor mortis in an unusual position: Forensic considerations
D’Souza, Deepak H; Harish, S; Rajesh, M.; Kiran, J
2011-01-01
We report a case in which the dead body was found with rigor mortis in an unusual position. The dead body was lying on its back with limbs raised, defying gravity. Direction of the salivary stains on the face was also defying the gravity. We opined that the scene of occurrence of crime is unlikely to be the final place where the dead body was found. The clues were revealing a homicidal offence and an attempt to destroy the evidence. The forensic use of ‘rigor mortis in an unusual position’ is in furthering the investigations, and the scientific confirmation of two facts - the scene of death (occurrence) is different from the scene of disposal of dead body, and time gap between the two places. PMID:23776792
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Song, Hyun-Seob; Ramkrishna, Doraiswami
This letter concerns an article recently published in Current Opinion in Biotechnology by Baroukh et al. entitled "Mathematical modeling of unicellular microalgae and cyanobacteria metabolism for biofuel production" (2015 Mar 26; 33:198-205). The issue we wish to bring to light is the authors’ claim that dynamic metabolic models including Hybrid Cybernetic Model (HCM) (Kim et al., 2008; Song et al., 2009) and Lumped HCM (L-HCM) (Song and Ramkrishna, 2010; 2011) are based on the balanced growth hypothesis so that they are unable to simulate the accumulation of intracellular metabolites. This is a misrepresentation of these models due to the followingmore » reasons.« less
A really useful pathogen, Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
Yuan, Ze-Chun; Williams, Mary
2012-10-01
Bacteria of the genus Agrobacterium are very useful and unusual plant pathogens. Through a rare inter-kingdom DNA transfer, the bacteria move some of their genes into their host's genome, thereby inducing the host cells to proliferate and produce opines, nutrients sources for the pathogen. Agrobacterium's ability to transfer DNA makes can be adapted to introduce other genes, such as those encoding useful traits, into plant genomes. The development of Agrobacterium as a tool to transform plants is a landmark event in modern plant biology. This lecture provides an introduction to Agrobacterium tumefaciens and related species, focusing on their modes of pathogenicity, their usefulness as tools for plant transformation, and their use as a model for the study of plant-pathogen interactions.
Greenfeld, Max; van de Meent, Jan-Willem; Pavlichin, Dmitri S; Mabuchi, Hideo; Wiggins, Chris H; Gonzalez, Ruben L; Herschlag, Daniel
2015-01-16
Single-molecule techniques have emerged as incisive approaches for addressing a wide range of questions arising in contemporary biological research [Trends Biochem Sci 38:30-37, 2013; Nat Rev Genet 14:9-22, 2013; Curr Opin Struct Biol 2014, 28C:112-121; Annu Rev Biophys 43:19-39, 2014]. The analysis and interpretation of raw single-molecule data benefits greatly from the ongoing development of sophisticated statistical analysis tools that enable accurate inference at the low signal-to-noise ratios frequently associated with these measurements. While a number of groups have released analysis toolkits as open source software [J Phys Chem B 114:5386-5403, 2010; Biophys J 79:1915-1927, 2000; Biophys J 91:1941-1951, 2006; Biophys J 79:1928-1944, 2000; Biophys J 86:4015-4029, 2004; Biophys J 97:3196-3205, 2009; PLoS One 7:e30024, 2012; BMC Bioinformatics 288 11(8):S2, 2010; Biophys J 106:1327-1337, 2014; Proc Int Conf Mach Learn 28:361-369, 2013], it remains difficult to compare analysis for experiments performed in different labs due to a lack of standardization. Here we propose a standardized single-molecule dataset (SMD) file format. SMD is designed to accommodate a wide variety of computer programming languages, single-molecule techniques, and analysis strategies. To facilitate adoption of this format we have made two existing data analysis packages that are used for single-molecule analysis compatible with this format. Adoption of a common, standard data file format for sharing raw single-molecule data and analysis outcomes is a critical step for the emerging and powerful single-molecule field, which will benefit both sophisticated users and non-specialists by allowing standardized, transparent, and reproducible analysis practices.
Calpain-Dependent Proteolysis of the Androgen Receptor
2009-11-01
Cancer 1999;84:6–9. 17. Lakshmikuttyamma A, Selvakumar P, Kanthan R , Kanthan SC, Sharma RK. Overexpression of m-calpain in human colorectal...determinants of calpain cleavage. J Biol Chem 2004;279:20775–85. 10. Rios-Doria J, Day KC, Kuefer R , et al. The role of calpain in the proteolytic...prostate carcinoma cell line, 22Rv1. In vitro Cell Dev Biol 1999;35:403–9. 15. Gupta AK, Cerniglia GJ, Mick R , McKenna WG, Muschel RJ. HIV protease
Determine the Role of Canonical Wnt Signaling in Ovarian Tumorigenesis
2012-10-01
Acad Sci U S A, 1999. 96(4): p. 1603-8. 11. Kuilman, T., et al., The essence of senescence. Genes Dev, 2010. 24(22): p. 2463- 79. 12. Bernardi, R...Tu,1 Katherine M. Aird,1 Benjamin G. Bitler,1 Jasmine P. Nicodemus,1 Neil Beeharry,2 Bing Xia,3 Tim J. Yen,2 and Rugang Zhang1,2,* 1Women’s Cancer...Bitler, Jasmine P. Nicodemus, Hua Li, et al. Senescence Wnt5a Suppresses Epithelial Ovarian Cancer by Promoting Cellular Updated Version
Regulation of ATM-Dependent DNA Damage Responses in Breast Cancer by the RhoGEF Net1
2013-04-01
Science 279: 509-514. 5. Jaffe AB. et al., (2010) RhoGTPases: Biochemistry and Biology. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 21:247-269. 6. Rossman KL, et al...exchange factor Net1 is regulated by nuclear sequestration. J. Biol. Chem. 277:17, 14581-14588. 17. Harper JW, et al., (2007) The DNA Damage Response: Ten...Research (AACR) Annual Meeting and 2013 Annual Cancer Research Biochemistry Retreat Regulation of ATM-dependent DNA damage signaling in human breast
2011 Agile (Scrum) Workshop Held in Baltimore, Maryland on November 14-15, 2011
2011-11-15
have success- fully implemented Agile Development within DoD. SUSI MCKEE OC2IS Program Manager, U.S. Air Force Susana V. McKee has 25 years of DoD T...AGILE WILL WORK IN DOD: THREE EXAMPLES u Ms. Kelly Goshorn, Patriot Excalibur (PEX) Program Manager, U.S. Air Force u Ms. Susi McKee, Operational...OPS PEX Team: Internal •Devs/SMEs/Testers •Architecture Committee •Etc. none Future implementation, not Current release Big R/ Little r I n
Co-Operation Between FADD and Bin1 in Prostate Cancer Apoptosis
2006-04-01
manuscript. Research in our laboratory is supported bygrants from the National Institutes of Health, the US Army Breast Cancer and Prostate Cancer Research...Programs and the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.References [1] Wang X. Genes Dev 2001;15(22):2922–33. [2] Huang DS, Strasser A. Cell 2000;103...This work was supported by U.S. Army breast and prostate cancer research programs grants DAMD17-02-1-0612 and DAMD17- 03-1-0049. REFERENCES Ali, S
2000-08-01
SV40 early-to-late switch involves titration of cellular transcriptional repressors, Genes Dev. 7: 2206-19, 1993. 6. Bonnelye, E., Vanacker , J. M ...transcriptional regulator of the human medium-chain acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase gene, Mol Cell Biol. 17: 5400-9, 1997. 8. Vanacker , J. M ., Bonnelye, E...related receptor-alpha), Mol Endocrinol. 13: 764-73, 1999. 9. Vanacker , J. M ., Pettersson, K., Gustafsson, J. A., and Laudet, V. Transcriptional
Development of a Gimballed, dual frequency, space-based, microwave antenna for volume production
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Leckie, Martin; Laidig, Dave
1996-01-01
A dual-frequency, two-axis Gimballed, Microwave Antenna (GMA) has been developed by COM DEV and Motorola for commercial satellites. The need for volume production of over three hundred antennas at a rate of four per week, a compressed development schedule, and the commercial nature of the effort necessitated a paradigm shift to an 'overall' cost-driven design approach. The translation of these demands into antenna requirements, a description of the resulting GMA design, and examples of development issues are detailed herein.
Prediction of Aggressive Human Prostate Cancer by Cathepsin B
2008-03-01
Cancer Res 2004;10(12 Pt 1):4118-4124. 28. Munoz E, Gomez F, Paz JI, Casado I, Silva JM, Corcuera MT, Alonso MJ. Ki-67 immunolabeling in pre...detected prostate cancer. J Pathol 2002;197(2):148-154. 34. Claudio PP, Zamparelli A, Garcia FU, Claudio L, Ammirati G, Farina A, Bovicelli A, Russo G...JA. Distinct roles for cysteine cathepsin genes in multistage tumorigenesis. Genes Dev 2006;20(5):543-556. 47. Fernandez PL, Farre X, Nadal A
1994-03-01
Use of Land and Facs in Case Midwest Oklahoma Dev’t of War Authority DACA 635880313 60/30/2012 Control of Lake Front City of Fort Worth DACA 636830061...elm, American elm, hackberry, and sumac. A thick understory of trumpet vine and honeysuckle often grow along the edge of the streams. Scattered...asper Texas speargrass Stipa leucotricha "* Herbs and Shrubs Ragweed Amerosia spp. Milkweed Asciepias spp. Trumpet creeper Campsis radicans Water
2008-03-01
immortalization with the human papilloma virus (HPV) E6 and E7 proteins, which had decreased CHFR expression by RNAi did not have an altered apoptotic response...septation initiation network (SIN). Dev Cell 2002; 3:779–90. 40. Band V, Zajchowski D, Kulesa V, Sager R. Human papilloma virus DNAs immortalize normal... papilloma virus (HPV)–immortalized series of nontumorigenic mammary cell lines were developed and provided by S.P. Ethier, Karmanos Cancer Institute
Effects of Sulfur Content on the Plain Strain Fracture Toughness of Inertia Welds in 4340 Steel.
1987-09-01
and the upsetting or forging stage. Welding heat is dev loped duiring the first stage, and the weld is consolidated and cooled during the second stage...PLAIN STRAIN FRACTURE TOUGHNESS OF INERTIA WELDS IN 4340 STEEL *WILLIAM S. RICCI, ERIC B. KULA, and JAMES D. COLGATE PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY DIVISION...OF INERTIA WELDS IN 4340 STEEL S. PERFORMING ORG. REPORT UMIER 7. AUTHOR(s)" . CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMRER(,) William S. Ricci, Eric B. Kula, and James D
Analysis of Dachsous2 in Breast Cancer Progression and Recurrence
2011-10-01
Dev Dyn, 2005. 234(3): p. 747-55. 2. Casal, J ., G. Struhl, and P.A. Lawrence , Developmental compartments and planar polarity in Drosophila. Curr Biol...Schrauth, and M. Gessler, Expression of mouse dchs1, fjx1, and fat- j suggests conservation of the planar cell polarity pathway identified in Drosophila...2002. 12(14): p. 1189-98. 3. Yang, C.H., J.D. Axelrod , and M.A. Simon, Regulation of Frizzled by fat-like cadherins during planar polarity
The Naval Data Automation Command: A Case Study.
1982-12-01
34commoa service" or as a "rescurce" to be mada available to users on a reimbur - sable basis and not n-c-ssarily owned and controlled by them. This was...cost reimbursable funding. "If feasible, i- is planned that users will budgmt and pay for NDP services and DPIs and DPPSOs of NAVDAC will be operated...chargeback system where the NARDAC is reimbursed for costs incurred). Services are provided in three general areas; ADP application system dev aonuent
Realistic Fireteam Movement in Urban Environments
2010-10-01
00-2010 4 . TITLE AND SUBTITLE Realistic Fireteam Movement in Urban Environments 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER...is largely consumed by the data transfer from the GPU to the CPU of the color and stencil buffers. Since this operation would only need to be...cost is given in table 4 . Waypoints Mean Std Dev 1112 1.25ms 0.09ms 3785 4.07ms 0.20ms Table 4 : Threat Probability Model update cost (Intel Q6600
Aerosol Characteristics on the Alboran Sea, 9-18 October 1982
1983-12-01
filter-out scatter due to local aero- sol sources, passing clouds or measurement error and to provide a single value for correlation with meteorological...ifi OCTOBER 17,1982 _:.i0 20 Figure 43: Aero sol Concentrations at Three Size Intervals, 17 October 1982 7S Ul u a: D- J0& .S«a SaJt____...09501 COMFLTAIR, MEDITERRANEAN ATTN: NSAP SCIENCE ADVISOR CODE 03A FPO NEW YORK 09521 COMMANDING OFFICER 31 OCEANO . DEV. SQDN 8-VXN-8 NAVAL AIR
Dynamics of Post-Translational Modifications on Human Histone H4 Through the Cell Cycle
2006-08-11
Pesavento – my mentor, teacher, and go-to guy. Jim, because of you I now know the ins and outs of ECD, manuscript writing, and vegetarian food in CU. We...heterochromatin. Genes Dev, 2004. 18(11): p. 1251- 62. 32. Pesavento , J.J., Bullock, C.R., Streeky, J.A., Mizzen, C.A., Kelleher, N.L, 2D LC- Top Down...from the following manuscript in preparation: Bullock, CR., Pesavento , JJ., Mizzen, CA., Kelleher, NL. Methylation Dynamics of Human Histone H4
2009-03-01
www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/els031/2002038518.html [ Humphrey 1987] Watts S . Humphrey . Characterizing the Software Process: A Maturity Framework (CMU/SEI...five-stage organizational maturity scale developed by the SEI and first described in an SEI technical report authored by Watts Humphrey in 1987... Humphrey 1987]. In 2007, an additional model was released (CMMI for Acquisition, V1.2), but this technical report focuses only on CMMI-DEV, V1.2. In
2009-04-01
progenitor cells ’ ability to survive under non-attachment culture conditions, which is composed of primary mammoshpere and secondary mammosphere. Both... cell lineages in early mouse development depend on SOX2 function. Genes Dev, 17: 126-140, 2003 8. Chambers, I., Colby, D., Robertson, M., Nichols, J...Rivett, D., Jones, K., and Dalton, S. LIF/STAT3 controls ES cell self-renewal and pluripotency by a Myc-dependent mechanism. Development , 132: 885-896
Performance Evaluation of Steam Traps and Orifice Plates.
1980-10-01
ADlAO9dl 229 JOHNS - MANVILLE SALES CORP DENVER CO RESEARCH AND DEV-’ETC F/S 13/1 PERFOR1ANCE EVALUATION OF STEAM TRAPS AND ORIFICE PLATES.(U)/ OCT 80...AGENCY t REPORT FESA-TS-2085 41! PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF STEAM TRAPS AND ORIFICE PLATES P. B. SHEPHERD JOHNS - MANVILLE SALES CORPORATION w RESEARCH...PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME ANED ADDPESS!_ i lFioC’iA.TCr ’.ETPlJ A~ Johns - Manville Sales Corporation &00* 0 - Research & Development Center qOll Ken
Digging deeper into the link between socio-cognitive ability and social relationships.
Mizokawa, Ai; Koyasu, Masuo
2015-03-01
In this commentary on 'Friendlessness and theory of mind: A prospective longitudinal study' by Fink, Begeer, Peterson, Slaughter, and de Rosnay (Brit. J. Dev. Psychol, 2015; 33, 1-17) we reconsider the link between early mastery of theory of mind (ToM) and social relationships by focusing on connections with other related areas of socio-cognitive ability such as emotional competence, ToM development across age, and the effect of interventions. © 2014 The British Psychological Society.
2000-04-01
Center, Washington DC. 2. Koplovitz, I., S. Schulz, M. Shutz, et al. 1997. Memantine ef- fects on soman-induced seizures and seizure-related brain dam...neuronal culture as a model for soman-in- duced neurotoxicity and effectiveness of memantine as a neuroprotective drug. Arch. Toxicol. 69:384-390...for soman induced neurotoxicity and effectiveness of memantine as a neuroprotective drug. Drug Dev. Rev. 30:45-53. 27. Bredlow, J. D., G. F
Overview of NASA's Space Solar Power Technology Advanced Research and Development Program
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Howell, Joe; Mankins, John C.; Davis, N. Jan (Technical Monitor)
2001-01-01
Large solar power satellite (SPS) systems that might provide base load power into terrestrial markets were examined extensively in the 1970s by the US Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Following a hiatus of about 15 years, the subject of space solar power (SSP) was reexamined by NASA from 1995-1997 in the 'fresh look' study, and during 1998 in an SSP 'concept definition study', and during 1999-2000 in the SSP Exploratory Research and Technology (SERT) program. As a result of these efforts, during 2001, NASA has initiated the SSP Technology Advanced Research and Development (STAR-Dev) program based on informed decisions. The goal of the STAR-Dev program is to conduct preliminary strategic technology research and development to enable large, multi-megawatt to gigawatt-class space solar power (SSP) systems and wireless power transmission (WPT) for government missions and commercial markets (in-space and terrestrial). Specific objectives include: (1) Release a NASA Research Announcement (NRA) for SSP Projects; (2) Conduct systems studies; (3) Develop Component Technologies; (4) Develop Ground and Flight demonstration systems; and (5) Assess and/or Initiate Partnerships. Accomplishing these objectives will allow informed future decisions regarding further SSP and related research and development investments by both NASA management and prospective external partners. In particular, accomplishing these objectives will also guide further definition of SSP and related technology roadmaps including performance objectives, resources and schedules; including 'multi-purpose' applications (commercial, science, and other government).
Pannu, Ashok Kumar; Bhalla, Ashish; Singhal, Mayank; Suri, Vikas; Shafiq, Nusrat; Varma, Subhash
2017-01-01
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of a single intravenous (IV) dose of anti-D in severe thrombocytopenia (<20,000) due to dengue virus (DEV) infection. Materials and Methods: An open label, investigator-initiated, randomized interventional study was conducted that included thirty dengue patients (all positive for IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) with severe thrombocytopenia (<20,000/mm3). Patients were randomized to receive anti-D (50 μg/kg single IV dose) plus supportive therapy or supportive therapy alone. Results: The rate of rise in platelet count was significantly high in the intervention group at 24, 36, and 48 h. At the end of 48 h, 60% patients in the intervention group achieved a platelet count of ≥50,000/mm3 as compared to 6.7% in the control group (P = 0.0019). The requirement of the platelet concentrate infusion in the control group was significantly higher, i.e. 342 ml (±193) as compared to the intervention group requiring only 187 ml (±79). The intervention group showed a significant improvement in bleeding manifestations in all the patients by 24 h in Grade 2 bleed (P = 0.032) and by 48 h in Grade 1 bleed (P = 0.014). Conclusions: Severe thrombocytopenia (≤20,000/mm3) secondary to DEV infection was rapidly and safely reversed by administration of a single dose of 50 μg/kg (250 IU/kg) anti-D IV. PMID:28250602
Staron, Peter; Maldener, Iris
2012-10-01
Efflux pumps export a wide variety of proteinaceous and non-proteinaceous substrates across the Gram-negative cell wall. For the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120, the ATP-driven glycolipid efflux pump DevBCA-TolC has been shown to be crucial for the differentiation of N(2)-fixing heterocysts from photosynthetically active vegetative cells. In this study, a homologous system was described. All0809/8/7-TolC form a typical ATP-driven efflux pump as shown by surface plasmon resonance. This putative exporter is also involved in diazotrophic growth of Anabaena sp. PCC 7120. A mutant in all0809 encoding the periplasmic membrane fusion protein of the pump was not able to grow without combined nitrogen. Although heterocysts of this mutant were not distinguishable from those of the wild-type in light and electron micrographs, they were impaired in providing the microoxic environment necessary for N(2) fixation. RT-PCR of all0809 transcripts and localization studies on All0807-GFP revealed that All0809/8/7 was initially downregulated during heterocyst maturation and upregulated at later stages of heterocyst formation in all cells of the filament. A substrate of the efflux pump could not be identified in ATP hydrolysis assays. We discuss a role for All0809/8/7-TolC in maintaining the continuous periplasm and how this would be of special importance for heterocyst differentiation.
Fluorescent labeling of SNAP-tagged proteins in cells.
Lukinavičius, Gražvydas; Reymond, Luc; Johnsson, Kai
2015-01-01
One of the most prominent self-labeling tags is SNAP-tag. It is an in vitro evolution product of the human DNA repair protein O (6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (hAGT) that reacts specifically with benzylguanine (BG) and benzylchloropyrimidine (CP) derivatives, leading to covalent labeling of SNAP-tag with a synthetic probe (Gronemeyer et al., Protein Eng Des Sel 19:309-316, 2006; Curr Opin Biotechnol 16:453-458, 2005; Keppler et al., Nat Biotechnol 21:86-89, 2003; Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101:9955-9959, 2004). SNAP-tag is well suited for the analysis and quantification of fused target protein using fluorescence microscopy techniques. It provides a simple, robust, and versatile approach to the imaging of fusion proteins under a wide range of experimental conditions.
Nelson, Bradley
2018-03-01
Epidemiology originates from the Greek words "epi" meaning upon and "demos" meaning people. Hence, epidemiology is the study of what is "upon the people" or the analysis of the patterns of disease in a defined population. Epidemiological studies are important in defining "at-risk" patient populations so research can be directed toward these groups. It is important to understand that epidemiology does not determine causation. However, it is reasonable for clinicians (me) to opine on the reasons for these epidemiological trends. I believe that the major factors responsible for the changing incidence in shoulder stabilization are the use of the arthroscope and the surgical management of the first time dislocator. Copyright © 2017 Arthroscopy Association of North America. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Sources and vicissitudes of being in D. W. Winnicott's work.
Green, André
2010-01-01
The author questions the reasons for the appearance of the concept of being in Winnicott's work four years before his death. Winnicott illustrated his concept of being by describing a patient in whom he found a complete dissociation of male and female elements. Insisting on the role of the environment and the part played by the mother, Winnicott considered that the pure female element relates to the breast or the mother, in the sense that the baby is becoming the breast. He opined that instinct or drive has nothing to do with this. The present paper discusses this viewpoint at length, comparing Winnicott's and Freud's positions. It is noted that Winnicott introduced his concept of being at a time when he felt threatened by his own mortality.
Adeokun, L A; Ricketts, O L; Ajuwon, A J; Ladipo, O A
2009-12-01
Adolescence is marked by progression from the appearance of secondary sexual characteristics to sexual and reproductive maturity. Curiosity about bodily changes is heightened. However, adolescents' perceived sexuality education needs have been poorly documented. A survey of 989 adolescents from 24 North-Eastern Nigerian secondary schools yielded information on socio-demographic characteristics, reproductive health knowledge, sexual activities and sexuality education needs. Of the interviewed respondents, 72% of females had experienced menstruation. Overall, 9% were sexually active, 3.1% knew when ovulation occurs, 47% knew pregnancy could result from first coitus and 56% knew of contraception. 84% opined that adolescents should be given sexuality education but only 48.3% had received any. Sexuality education should be provided for in-school adolescents through their preferred and reliable sources of information.
Datt, Vishnu; Tempe, Deepak K; Singh, Baljit; Tomar, Akhlesh S; Banerjee, Amit; Dutta, Devesh; Bhandari, Hricha
2010-01-01
The relationship between myasthenia gravis (MG) and other autoimmune disorders like hyperthyroidism is well known. It may manifest earlier, concurrently or after the appearance of MG. The effect of treatment of hyperthyroidism on the control of MG is variable. There may be resolution or conversely, deterioration of the symptoms also. We present a patient who was diagnosed to be hyperthyroid two and half years before the appearance of myasthenic symptoms. Pharmacotherapy for three months neither improved the myasthenic symptoms nor the thyroid function tests. Thymectomy resulted in control of MG as well as hyperthyroidism. In conclusion, effective control of hyperthyroidism in the presence of MG may be difficult. The authors opine that careful peri-operative management of thymectomy is possible in a hyperthyroid state.
Apoptosis contributes to placode morphogenesis in the posterior placodal area of mice.
Washausen, Stefan; Knabe, Wolfgang
2013-05-01
In the embryonic head of vertebrates, neurogenic and non-neurogenic ectodermal placodes arise from the panplacodal primordium. Whether and how growth processes of the ectodermal layer, changes in the transcriptional precursor cell profile, or positional changes among precursor cells contribute to interplacodal boundary formation is subject to intense investigation. We demonstrate that large scale apoptosis in the multiplacodal posterior placodal area (PPA) of C57BL/6 mice assists in the segregation of otic and epibranchial placodes. Complex patterns of interplacodal apoptosis precede and parallel the structural individualization of high-grade thickened placodes, with the fundamental separation between otic and epibranchial precursor cells being seemingly prevalent. Interplacodal apoptosis between the emerging epibranchial placodes, which express Neurogenin2 prior to their complete structural individualization, comes out most strongly between the epibranchial placodes 1 and 2. Apoptosis then moves from interplacodal to intraplacodal positions in dorsal and, with a delay, ventral parts of the epibranchial placodes. Intraplacodal apoptosis appears to exert corrective actions among premigratory neuroblasts, and helps to eliminate the epibranchial placodes. The present findings confirm and extend earlier observations in Tupaia belangeri (Washausen et al. in Dev Biol 278:86-102, 2005), regarded as an intermediate between primates and other eutherian orders. Having now available maps of apoptosis in the PPA of embryonic mice, further investigations into the functions of inter- and intraplacodal apoptosis can be carried out in an experimentally and genetically more accessible mammalian model organism.
From the tumor-inducing principle to plant biotechnology and its importance for society.
Angenon, Geert; Van Lijsebettens, Mieke; Van Montagu, Marc
2013-01-01
This dialogue was held between the Guest Editors of the Special Issue on "Plant Transgenesis" of the Int. J. Dev. Biol. and Marc Van Montagu. Research in the group of Marc Van Montagu and Jeff Schell in the 1970s was essential to reveal how the phytopathogenic bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens transfers DNA to host plants to cause crown gall disease. Knowledge of the molecular mechanism underlying gene transfer, subsequently led to the development of plant transgene technology, an indispensable tool in fundamental plant research and plant improvement. In the early 1980s, Marc Van Montagu founded a start-up company, Plant Genetic Systems, which successfully developed insect-resistant plants, herbicide-tolerant plants and a hybrid seed production system based on nuclear male sterility. Even before the first transgenic plant had been produced, Marc Van Montagu realized that the less developed countries might benefit most from plant biotechnology and throughout his subsequent career, this remained a focus of his efforts. After becoming emeritus professor, he founded the Institute of Plant Biotechnology Outreach (IPBO), which aims to raise awareness of the major role that plant biotechnology can play in sustainable agricultural systems, especially in less developed countries. Marc Van Montagu has been honored with many prizes and awards, the most recent being the prestigious World Food Prize 2013. In this paper, we look to the past and present of plant biotechnology and to the promises this technology holds for the future, on the basis of the personal perspective of Marc Van Montagu.
Cell Signaling by a Novel SH2 Domain Protein that is Overexpressed with Her2 in Breast Cancer
1998-01-01
1990) Methods Enzymol. 185, 51. Wary, K. K, Mainiero, F ., Isakoff, S. J., Marcantonio , E. E., and Giancotti 527-537 F . G. (1996) Cell 87, 733-743...family of SH2 domain proteins and acts cell nonautonomously in excretory canal development. Dev. Biol. 184:150-164. 3. Pelicci, G., L. Lanfrancone, F ...Grignani, J. McGlade, F . Cavallo, G. Forni, I. Nicoletti, T. Pawson, and P. G. Pelicci. 1992. A novel transforming protein (SHC) with an SH2
A Summary/Overview of Ejector Augmentor Theory and Performance. Volume 2. Bibliography
1979-09-01
Science, Tech. Rept. TR-UTA-773, April 1977. 264 SPSF P T Covert, E. E., and Haldeman, C. W., "A One-Dimensional Model for NS Compressible Flow in the...H., "Hydrodynamics of SS vertical liquid-solids transport", Ind. & Engng. Chem. - Process Des. & Dev., 14, 3, pp 264 -9 (July, 1975). 755 SPSF A...Margolis, S. G., "Steam jet pump operation at high pressures", SS Bettis Tech. Review. WAPD -BT-14, pp. 120-141. (July, 1959). 877 SPSF A, A, Mark, L
1982-02-01
Improvements to and Construction of Government -Owned Facilities Funded by RDT&E -------------------- 57 Section 8: Project Data for Construction at... Government -Owned Facilities Funded by RDT&E --------------------------. . Section 9: Flight Simulator Programs...653,427 936.167 29 63202N AVIONICS 2 3,314 3,745 3,622 10,342 U 407 26 632n3N A0V HELICOPTER DEV 2 4,577 4,790 U 27 63207N ENVIRONENTAL APPLICATIONS 2
2016-01-04
extract four distinct quantitative features of response timing and intensity: the trajectory peak height, the peak time, the area under the curve, and...J., 2007, 21, 325–332. 16 S. L. Werner, J. D. Kearns, V. Zadorozhnaya, C. Lynch, E. O’Dea, M. P. Boldin , A. Ma, D. Baltimore and A. Hoffmann, Genes...Werner, J. D. Kearns, V. Zadorozhnaya, C. Lynch, E. O’Dea, M. P. Boldin , A. Ma, D. Baltimore and A. Hoffmann, Genes Dev., 2008, 22, 2093–2101. 58 J
2017-06-16
Prescribed Opioids in the Militarv Health System Between 2010 or 2013 presented at/published to San Antonio Militan1 Health Svstem and Universities...NO 1 D. 13 THIS M/\\TERlhL Slf5JECT TC> AN’f LEGAL REBTRICTIONB FOR PVSLICA TIO.N OR PRESENTATION THROUGH /\\ CCUA5AATl’JE RESEAACH .A.ND DEV...CUil:RENITL Y IN UBE CAN BE VS-ED BENZODIAZEPINE USE AMONG LOW BACK PAIN PATIENTS CONCURRENn Y PRESCRJBED OPIOIDS IN THE MILITARY HEAL TH SYSTEM BETWEEN
Methodology of decreasing software complexity using ontology
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
DÄ browska-Kubik, Katarzyna
2015-09-01
In this paper a model of web application`s source code, based on the OSD ontology (Ontology for Software Development), is proposed. This model is applied to implementation and maintenance phase of software development process through the DevOntoCreator tool [5]. The aim of this solution is decreasing software complexity of that source code, using many different maintenance techniques, like creation of documentation, elimination dead code, cloned code or bugs, which were known before [1][2]. Due to this approach saving on software maintenance costs of web applications will be possible.
2008-09-01
605Ð608. Srivastava, A., B . N. Nagpal, R. Saxena, V. Dev, and S. K . Subbarao . 2005. Prediction of Anopheles minimus habi- tat in India Ð a tool...global risk of inva- sion by themosquitoAedes albopictus.Vector BorneZoo- notic Dis. 7: 76Ð85. Chen, B ., R. E. Harbach, and R. K . Butlin. 2002. Molecular...Grinnell, J. 1917. The niche-relationships of the California Thrasher. Auk 34: 427Ð433. Harbach, R. E., E. Parkin, B . Chen, and R. K . Butlin. 2006
Listing of Army Fuel-Consuming Nonautomotive Ground Support Equipment.
1981-08-01
W Z(55I(00W(.J...J0((55(5 X55(S NNN. .6uu m xv~ 00d0. . -z 00 0 0a0 e~ W 0 0 1fl 0 40.28 QUf0=Q lS59uuIIIII 4 a a acca N0QgI %q c a It, 4t 0 0 0 - !3...ATDO-S FORT MONROE VA 23651 DIR US ARMY MATERIALS & MECHANICS CDR RSCH CTR US ARMY NATICK RES & DEV CMD ATTN: DRXMR-E 1 ATTN: DRDNA-YEP ( DR KAPLAN
Section 107 Detailed Project Report. Fort Gaines Channel (Government Cut) at Dauphin Island, Alabama
1990-03-01
Engineer District, Mobile AREA &WORK UNIT NUMBERS Plan Dev. Sec., Planning Div., (CESAM-PD-FP)- P. 0. Box 2-288, Mobi,L.3.a6628-OO.....,__ 11I...C’ONTAOLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS M 2 REPORT DATE US. Army Engineer District, Mobile March 1990 Pian Development Sec., Plan. Div., (CESAM-PD-FP) 13 NUMBER...OF PAGES P- 0. Box 2288, Mobile , AL 36628-0001 162 t4. MONITORING AGENCY NAME & ADORESS(11 different from Controlling Office) 15. SECURITY CLASS. (ol
Scaling Projections for Sb-based p-channel FETs
2010-01-01
the products of long-standing programs on antimonide growth by molecular beam epitaxy at the QinetiQ Corp. (for InSb) and at the Naval Research...electron mobilities in the channels of III–V HEMTs at room temperature are much higher than in Si or Ge, e.g., in InAs they are in the range of 20–30,000 cm2... HEMT structures. IEEE Trans Electron Dev 1985;32:11. [25] Awano Y, Kosugi M, Kosemura K, Mimura T, Abe M. Short-channel effects in subquarter
Kim, K S; Chilton, W S; Farrand, S K
1996-01-01
The mocC gene encoded by the octopine/mannityl opine-type Ti plasmid pTi15955 is related at the nucleotide sequence level to mas1' encoded by the T region of this plasmid. While Mas1 is required for the synthesis of mannopine (MOP) by crown gall tumor cells, MocC is essential for the utilization of MOP by Agrobacterium spp. A cosmid clone of pTi15955, pYDH208, encodes mocC and confers the utilization of MOP on strain NT1 and on strain UIA5, a derivative of NT1 lacking the 450-kb cryptic plasmid pAtC58. NT1 or UIA5 harboring pYDH208 with an insertion mutation in mocC failed to utilize MOP as the sole carbon source. Plasmid pSa-C, which encodes only mocC, complemented this mutation in both strains. This plasmid also was sufficient to confer utilization of MOP on NT1 but not on UIA5. Computer analysis showed that MocC is related at the amino acid sequence level to members of the short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase family of oxidoreductases. Lysates prepared from Escherichia coli cells expressing mocC contained an enzymatic activity that oxidizes MOP to deoxyfructosyl glutamine (santhopine [SOP]) in the presence of NAD+. The reaction catalyzed by the MOP oxidoreductase is reversible; in the presence of NADH, the enzyme reduced SOP to MOP. The apparent Km values of the enzyme for MOP and SOP were 6.3 and 1.2 mM, respectively. Among analogs of MOP tested, only N-1-(1-deoxy-D-lyxityl)-L-glutamine and N-1-(1-deoxy-D-mannityl)-L-asparagine served as substrates for MOP oxidoreductase. These results indicate that mocC encodes an oxidoreductase that, as an oxidase, is essential for the catabolism of MOP. The reductase activity of this enzyme is precisely the reaction ascribed to its T-region-encoded homolog, Mas1, which is responsible for biosynthesis of mannopine in crown gall tumors. PMID:8655510
Mogre, Victor; Stevens, Fred C J; Aryee, Paul A; Amalba, Anthony; Scherpbier, Albert J J A
2018-02-12
The provision of nutrition care by doctors is important in promoting healthy dietary habits, and such interventions can lead to reductions in disease morbidity, mortality, and medical costs. However, medical students and doctors report inadequate nutrition education and preparedness during their training at school. Previous studies investigating the inadequacy of nutrition education have not sufficiently evaluated the perspectives of students. In this study, students' perspectives on doctors' role in nutrition care, perceived barriers, and strategies to improve nutrition educational experiences are explored. A total of 23 undergraduate clinical level medical students at the 5th to final year in the School of Medicine and Health Sciences of the University for Development Studies in Ghana were purposefully selected to participate in semi-structured individual interviews. Students expressed their opinions and experiences regarding the inadequacy of nutrition education in the curriculum. Each interview was audio-recorded and later transcribed verbatim. Using the constant comparison method, key themes were identified from the data and analysis was done simultaneously with data collection. Students opined that doctors have an important role to play in providing nutrition care to their patients. However, they felt their nutrition education was inadequate due to lack of priority for nutrition education, lack of faculty to provide nutrition education, poor application of nutrition science to clinical practice and poor collaboration with nutrition professionals. Students opined that their nutrition educational experiences will be improved if the following strategies were implemented: adoption of innovative teaching and learning strategies, early and comprehensive incorporation of nutrition as a theme throughout the curriculum, increasing awareness on the importance of nutrition education, reviewing and revision of the curriculum to incorporate nutrition, and involving nutrition/dietician specialists in medical education. Though students considered nutrition care as an important role for doctors they felt incapacitated by non-prioritisation of nutrition education, lack of faculty for teaching of nutrition education, poor application of nutrition science and poor collaboration with nutrition professionals. Incorporation of nutrition as a theme in medical education, improving collaboration, advocacy and creating enabling environments for nutrition education could address some of the barriers to nutrition education.
Kim, K S; Chilton, W S; Farrand, S K
1996-06-01
The mocC gene encoded by the octopine/mannityl opine-type Ti plasmid pTi15955 is related at the nucleotide sequence level to mas1' encoded by the T region of this plasmid. While Mas1 is required for the synthesis of mannopine (MOP) by crown gall tumor cells, MocC is essential for the utilization of MOP by Agrobacterium spp. A cosmid clone of pTi15955, pYDH208, encodes mocC and confers the utilization of MOP on strain NT1 and on strain UIA5, a derivative of NT1 lacking the 450-kb cryptic plasmid pAtC58. NT1 or UIA5 harboring pYDH208 with an insertion mutation in mocC failed to utilize MOP as the sole carbon source. Plasmid pSa-C, which encodes only mocC, complemented this mutation in both strains. This plasmid also was sufficient to confer utilization of MOP on NT1 but not on UIA5. Computer analysis showed that MocC is related at the amino acid sequence level to members of the short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase family of oxidoreductases. Lysates prepared from Escherichia coli cells expressing mocC contained an enzymatic activity that oxidizes MOP to deoxyfructosyl glutamine (santhopine [SOP]) in the presence of NAD+. The reaction catalyzed by the MOP oxidoreductase is reversible; in the presence of NADH, the enzyme reduced SOP to MOP. The apparent Km values of the enzyme for MOP and SOP were 6.3 and 1.2 mM, respectively. Among analogs of MOP tested, only N-1-(1-deoxy-D-lyxityl)-L-glutamine and N-1-(1-deoxy-D-mannityl)-L-asparagine served as substrates for MOP oxidoreductase. These results indicate that mocC encodes an oxidoreductase that, as an oxidase, is essential for the catabolism of MOP. The reductase activity of this enzyme is precisely the reaction ascribed to its T-region-encoded homolog, Mas1, which is responsible for biosynthesis of mannopine in crown gall tumors.
SIMNET: an insider's perspective
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cosby, L. Neale
1995-04-01
Simulator Networking (SIMNET) began with a young scientist's idea but has ended up changing an entire industry and the way the military does business. And the story isn't over yet. SIMNET began as an advanced research project aimed at developing a core technology for networking hundreds of affordable simulators worldwide in real time to practice joint collective warfighting skills and to develop better acquisition practices. It was a daring project that proved the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) mission of doing "what cannot be done." It was a serious threat to the existing simulation industry. As it turned out, the government got what it wanted—a low-cost, high-performance virtual simulation capability that could be proliferated like consumer electronics. This paper provides an insider's view of the program history, identifies some possible lessons for future developers, and opines future growth for SIMNET technology.
Chang, Suyoung; Carr, Warner
2007-01-01
A case of urticarial vasculitis (UV) is presented. The pathogenesis, clinical characteristics, diagnosis, and management of this disease are reviewed, followed by clinical pearls and pitfalls for the practicing allergist (Venzor J, et al., Urticarial vasculitis, Clin Rev Allergy Immunol 23:201-216, 2002). The lesions in UV typically lasts > 24 hours in a fixed location, resolves with residual hyperpigmentation, and may or may not be pruritic. In contrast, standard urticaria lesions persist < 24 hours, leave no trace, and is always pruritic (Black AK, Urticarial vasculitis, Clin Dermatol 17:565-569, 1999). Since urticarial vasculitis is characterized by a variety of cutaneous, systemic, and serological features, different names of this disorder exist in the literature (Wisnieski JJ, Urticarial vasculitis, Curr Opin Rheumatol 12:24-31, 2000). A biopsy of an active lesion remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of urticarial vasculitis.
Conrad, Martina; Engelmann, Dorit; Friedrich, Michael; Scheffold, Katharina; Philipp, Rebecca; Schulz-Kindermann, Frank; Härter, Martin; Mehnert, Anja; Koranyi, Susan
2018-04-13
There are only a few valid instruments measuring couples' communication in patients with cancer for German speaking countries. The Couple Communication Scale (CCS) represents an established instrument to assess couples' communication. However, there is no evidence regarding the psychometric properties of the German version of the CCS until now and the assumed one factor structure of the CCS was not verified for patients with advanced cancer yet. The CCS was validated as a part of the study "Managing cancer and living meaningfully" (CALM) on N=136 patients with advanced cancer (≥18 years, UICC-state III/IV). The psychometric properties of the scale were calculated (factor reliability, item reliability, average variance extracted [DEV]) and a confirmatory factor analysis was conducted (Maximum Likelihood Estimation). The concurrent validity was tested against symptoms of anxiety (GAD-7), depression (BDI-II) and attachment insecurity (ECR-M16). In the confirmatory factor analysis, the one factor structure showed a low, but acceptable model fit and explained on average 49% of every item's variance (DEV). The CCS has an excellent internal consistency (Cronbachs α=0,91) and was negatively associated with attachment insecurity (ECR-M16: anxiety: r=- 0,55, p<0,01; avoidance: r=- 0,42, p<0,01) as well as with anxiety (GAD-7: r=- 0,20, p<0,05) and depression (BDI-II: r=- 0,27, p<0,01). The CCS is a reliable and valid instrument measuring couples' communication in patients with advanced cancer. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.