1,132 research outputs found

    Sulphur content of Tennessee soils

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    The purposes of this study were: (1) to determine the sulfur content of representative Tennessee soils, (2) to correlate the total sulfur content with the organic matter content, and (3) to predict the possibility of a sulfur shortage in some areas of the state

    Model of hard spheroplatelets near a hard wall

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    A system of hard spheroplatelets near an impenetrable wall is studied in the low-density Onsager approximation. Spheroplatelets have optimal shape between rods and plates, and the direct transition from the isotropic to biaxial nematic phase is present. A simple local approximation for the one-particle distribution function is used. Analytical results for the surface tension and the entropy contributions are derived. The density and the order-parameter profiles near the wall are calculated. The preferred orientation of the short molecule axes is perpendicular to the wall. Biaxiality close to the wall can appear only if the phase is biaxial in the bulk.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, revised version published in PR

    RpoS-independent evolution reveals the importance of attenuated cAMPCRP regulation in high hydrostatic pressure resistance acquisition in E. coli

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    High hydrostatic pressure (HHP) processing is an attractive non-thermal alternative to food pasteurization. Nevertheless, the large inter- and intra-species variations in HHP resistance among foodborne pathogens and the ease by which they can acquire extreme resistance are an issue of increasing concern. Since RpoS activity has been considered as a central determinant in the HHP resistance of E. coli and its pathovars, this study probed for the potential of an E. coli MG1655 ΔrpoS mutant to acquire HHP resistance by directed evolution. Despite the higher initial HHP sensitivity of the ΔrpoS mutant compared to the wild-type strain, evolved lineages of the former readily managed to restore or even succeed wild-type levels of resistance. A number of these ΔrpoS derivatives were affected in cAMP/CRP regulation, and this could be causally related to their HHP resistance. Subsequent inspection revealed that some of previously isolated HHP-resistant mutants derived from the wild-type strain also incurred a causal decrease in cAMP/CRP regulation. cAMP/CRP attenuated HHP-resistant mutants also exhibited higher resistance to fosfomycin, a preferred treatment for STEC infections. As such, this study reveals attenuation of cAMP/CRP regulation as a relevant and RpoS-independent evolutionary route towards HHP resistance in E. coli that coincides with fosfomycin resistance

    The effect of hypobaric hypoxia on misonidazole binding in normal and tumour-bearing mice.

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    The effect of hypobaric hypoxia on the in vivo binding of misonidazole was investigated in normal mice and mice bearing T50/80 or CA NT mammary carcinomas. After the intraperitoneal injection of radiolabelled misonidazole, mice were randomised to breathe either room air or air at 0.5 atmospheres. The distribution of misonidazole in liver, kidney, heart, spleen and tumour tissue, 24 h later, was studied by scintillation counting and by autoradiography. Significantly higher misonidazole binding occurred in the livers (x2.5), kidneys (x2.4), spleens (x2.9) and hearts (x1.8) of hypoxic mice compared to controls. Hypobaric hypoxia was associated with a greater than four-fold increase in misonidazole binding within T50/80 tumours. However, significantly higher binding was not demonstrated within CA NT tumours after exposure of tumour-bearing animals to hypoxic conditions. In autoradiographs of hypoxic liver, labelling was intense in regions near to hepatic veins but sparse in areas surrounding portal tracts. This pattern was striking and consistent. In hypoxic kidney, labelling was most intense over tubular cells, less intense over glomeruli and sparse in the renal medulla. It is likely that the hepatic and renal cortical distributions of misonidazole binding reflect local oxygen gradients

    Learning From Loss After Risk: Dissociating Reward Pursuit and Reward Valuation in a Naturalistic Foraging Task

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    A fundamental feature of addiction is continued use despite high-cost losses. One possible driver of this feature is a dissociation between reward pursuit and reward valuation. To test for this dissociation, we employed a foraging paradigm with real-time delays and video rewards. Subjects made stay/skip choices on risky and non-risky offers; risky losses were operationalized as receipt of the longer delay after accepting a risky deal. We found that reward likability following risky losses predicted reward pursuit (i.e., subsequent choices), while there was no effect on reward valuation or reward pursuit in the absence of such losses. Individuals with high trait externalizing, who may be vulnerable to addiction, showed a dissociation between these phenomena: they liked videos more after risky losses but showed no decrease in choosing to stay on subsequent risky offers. This suggests that the inability to learn from mistakes is a potential component of risk for addiction
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