2,073 research outputs found
A functional RNase P protein subunit of bacterial origin in some eukaryotes
RNase P catalyzes 5′-maturation of tRNAs. While bacterial RNase P comprises an RNA catalyst and a protein cofactor, the eukaryotic (nuclear) variant contains an RNA and up to ten proteins, all unrelated to the bacterial protein. Unexpectedly, a nuclear-encoded bacterial RNase P protein (RPP) homolog is found in several prasinophyte algae including Ostreococcus tauri. We demonstrate that recombinant O. tauri RPP can functionally reconstitute with bacterial RNase P RNAs (RPRs) but not with O. tauri organellar RPRs, despite the latter’s presumed bacterial origins. We also show that O. tauri PRORP, a homolog of Arabidopsis PRORP-1, displays tRNA 5′-processing activity in vitro. We discuss the implications of the striking diversity of RNase P in O. tauri, the smallest known free-living eukaryote.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación European Regional Fund BFU2007-60651Junta de Andalucía P06-CVI-01692National Science Foundation MCB-0238233 MCB-0843543European Union ASSEMBLE 22779
Correlation between prevalence rates of pulmonary tuberculosis, tuberculous infection and non-specific sensitivity
Data from the initial examination of a BCG trial have been analysed to determine mathematical relationship, if any, between the prevalence of infection and disease. Also, because non-specific sensitivity otters protection against the development of tuberculosis and because there was high prevalence of nonspecific sensitivity in the area of the study, relationship between nonspecific sensitivity and tuberculosis had also been studied.
Results of the analysis showed that relationship between prevalence of tuberculous infection and disease is not amenable to any simple mathematical quantification. However, the values of the coefficients of correlation between the two were statistically highly significant suggesting that the prevalence of one varied directly with the prevalence of the other in the community, and that preve-lence of infection may be used as an indicator for the prevalence of disease at different points of time. The analysis also showed the existence of an inverse relationship between prevalence of tuber-culosis ane prevalence of non-specific sensitivity tending to confirm the previous finding that the latter offered protection against the other
Tuberculosis in North Arcot District of Tamil Nadu – a sample survey
A sample survey was carried out in the North Arcot district of Tamil Nadu with the objective of finding out the
prevalence of bacteriologically positive and radiologically active pulmonary tuberculosis among persons aged 15 years and above
using two screening methods viz.. elicitation of suggestive symptoms and chest X-ray examination. Another objective was to
estimate the prevalence of tuberculosis infection in children aged below 10 years.
A population of 1,05,339 persons was registered in a random sample of 35 villages from the rural areas and 102 town streets
from the urban sector. All children aged 0-9 years were tuberculin tested with ITU RT23. Persons aged 15 years and above were
screened for suggestive symptoms. and one-third of the sample was screened by X-ray of chest as well. Sputum specimens from
the symptomatics and/or X-ray abnormals were subjected to bacteriological examination.
The prevalence of infection among ‘below 10 years old’ children without BCG scar was 6.7%. The prevalence of disease by
sputum smear and/or culture among symptomatics was 4.3 per thousand in population aged 15 years and above. The prevalence
rate of bacteriological positives based on symptoms and X-ray screening, in the one-third sample was 7.9 per thousand. The
prevalence of X-ray positive cases was 17.0 per 1000.
Information available from similar other studies in the country has been reviewed
Ipratropium/Salbutamol Comparator Versus Originator for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Exacerbations : USA Observational Cohort Study Using the Clinformatics™ Health Claims Database
Acknowledgements The authors wish to thank Priyanka Raju Konduru of Observational and Pragmatic Research Institute Pte Ltd (OPRI) for assistance with data extraction. This study was sponsored and funded by Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products, R&D, Inc. Lynanne McGuire, PhD, of MedVal Scientific Information Services, LLC (Princeton, NJ, USA) provided medical writing and editorial assistance. This manuscript was prepared according to the International Society for Medical Publication Professionals’ ‘Good Publication Practice for Communicating Company-Sponsored Medical Research: the GPP3 Guidelines.’ Funding to support medical writing assistance was provided to MedVal by Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products R&D, Inc., Frazer, PA, USA. Teva provided a full review of the article and provided funding of the journal’s article processing charges. All named authors meet the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for authorship for this manuscript, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, and have given final approval to the version to be published. All authors had full access to all of the data in this study and take complete responsibility for the integrity of the data and accuracy of the data analysis.Peer reviewe
Dehydration mechanism of a small molecular solid: 5-nitrouracil hydrate
Previous studies of the dehydration of 5-nitrouracil (5NU) have resulted in it being classified as a ‘‘channel
hydrate’’ in which dehydration proceeds principally by the exit of the water molecules along channels in
the structure. We have re-examined this proposal and found that in fact there are no continuous channels
in the 5NU structure that would contribute to such a mechanism. Product water molecules would be
immediately trapped in unlinked voids in the crystal structure and would require some additional
mechanism to break loose from the crystal. Through a detailed structural analysis of the macro and micro
structure of the 5NU as it dehydrates, we have developed a model for the dehydration process based on
the observed development of structural defects in the 5NU crystal and the basic crystallography of the
material. The model was tested against standard kinetic measurements and found to present a satisfactory
account of kinetic observations, thus defining the mechanism. Overall, the study shows the necessity of
complementing standard kinetic studies with a parallel macro and micro examination of the dehydrating
material when evaluating the mechanisms of dehydration and decomposition processes
Magnetic Phase Transitions in the double spin-chains compound
We report high-resolution x-ray diffraction, muon-spin-rotation spectroscopic
and specific heat measurements in the double spin-chains compound . The x-ray diffraction results show that the crystal structure of
~is orthorhombic down to T=10K. Anisotropic line-broadening of
the diffraction peaks is observed, indicating disorder along the spin chains.
Muon spin relaxation and specific heat measurements show that
\~undergoes a phase transition to a magnetic ordered state at .
The specific heat data exhibits a second -like peak at , which increases with increasing magnetic field similarly way to
that found in spin-ladder compounds.Comment: 6 pages, 6 fifures, to appear in Physica
Spin Gap of Two-Dimensional Antiferromagnet Representing CaVO
We examined a two-dimensional Heisenberg model with two kinds of exchange
energies, and . This model describes localized spins at vanadium
ions in a layer of CaVO, for which a spin gap is found by a recent
experiment. Comparing the high temperature expansion of the magnetic
susceptibility to experimental data, we determined the exchange energies as
610 K and 150 K. By the numerical diagonalization we
estimated the spin gap as 120 K, which consists
with the experimental value 107 K. Frustration by finite enhances the
spin gap.Comment: 12 pages of LaTex, 4 figures availavule upon reques
Electronic and Magnetic Structure of LaCuO
The recently-discovered ``ladder'' compound LaCuO has been found to
admit hole doping without altering its structure of coupled copper oxide
ladders. While susceptibility measurements on the parent compound suggest a
spin gap and a spin-liquid state, NMR results indicate magnetic order at low
temperatures. These seemingly contradictory results may be reconciled if in
fact the magnetic state is near the crossover from spin liquid to
antiferromagnet, and we investigate this possibility. From a tight-binding fit
to the valence LDA bandstructure, we deduce that the strength of the
interladder hopping term is approximately half that of intraladder hopping,
showing that the material is three-dimensional in character. A mean-field
treatment of the insulating magnetic state gives a spin-liquid phase whose spin
gap decreases with increasing interladder coupling, vanishing (signalling a
transition to the ordered phase) at a value somewhat below that obtained for
LaCuO. The introduction of an on-site repulsion term, , to the band
scheme causes a transition to an antiferromagnetic insulator for rather small
but finite values of , reflecting the predominance of (one-dimensional)
ladder behavior, and an absence of any special nesting features.Comment: 8 pages + 5 figure
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