4,647 research outputs found

    Agricultural Credit Under Economic Liberalization And Islamization In Sudan

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    This study uses survey data to examine the operations of the agrarian credit market,formal and informal, in Sudan under conditions of recent economic liberalization and Islamization; the latter does not allow interest rate fixing. In addition to descriptive analysis, the study specifies and estimates a model of farm household participation in the credit market. The survey results show a substantial increase in formal borrowing in agriculture, but relatively low informal credit. Implicit interest rates are found to be high in the formal segment compared with their previous levels, and the levels of formal and informal agrarian rates of interest are comparable. The research concludes that there is a need for enhanced institutional financial intermediation in the agrarian credit market as well as scope for the promotion of savings and credit associations among farmers.

    On the Consistency of the Solutions of the Space Fractional Schr\"odinger Equation

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    Recently it was pointed out that the solutions found in literature for the space fractional Schr\"odinger equation in a piecewise manner are wrong, except the case with the delta potential. We reanalyze this problem and show that an exact and a proper treatment of the relevant integral proves otherwise. We also discuss effective potential approach and present a free particle solution for the space and time fractional Schr\"odinger equation in general coordinates in terms of Fox's H-functions

    Social Media and Dentistry

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    Numerous social media platforms are accessible to healthcare professionals and to patients. The aim of this study was to determine the role of social media platforms in the academic life of undergraduate and postgraduate dental students, and general dentists and specialists working in an academic setting. A cross-sectional survey was conducted targeting 4th and 5th year dentistry students, postgraduate clinical assistants, qualified dentists, and specialists working at an Oral Health Centre. The survey questions focused on the role of social media sites in the academic setting, and how these can be used to interact on a professional basis in sharing knowledge efficiently and for teaching, as a marketing tool and the ethics related to its use. Most participants appreciated the use of social media to share and receive information for educational purposes. They indicated that online communication increases the spread of information and knowledge efficiently and timeously. They also specified taking advantage of this efficient spread amongst the population as a marketing tool to gain patients. Though there are some individuals who do not quite agree and have suspicions for ethical or personal reasons, and they explained this by indicating that once something is posted online it cannot be removed. The study concluded that the use of social media in dentistry has positive and negative aspects, thus the hesitancy to use it and suspicions expressed by participants. Information placed online should be closely monitored even after having received permission to do so

    Structure of an aliphatic amidase from Geobacillus pallidus RAPc8

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    The amidase from Geobacillus pallidus RAPc8, a moderate thermophile, is a member of the nitrilase superfamily and catalyzes the conversion of amides to the corresponding carboxylic acids and ammonia. It shows both amide-hydrolysis and acyl-transfer activities and also exhibits stereoselectivity for some enantiomeric substrates, thus making it a potentially important industrial catalyst. The crystal structure of G. pallidus RAPc8 amidase at a resolution of 1.9 A ˚ was solved by molecular replacement from a crystal belonging to the primitive cubic space group P4232. G. pallidus RAPc8 amidase is homohexameric in solution and its monomers have the typical nitrilase-superfamily α-β-β-α fold. Association in the hexamer preserves the eight-layered α-β-β-α:α-β-β-α structure across an interface which is conserved in the known members of the superfamily. The extended carboxy-terminal tail contributes to this conserved interface by interlocking the monomers. Analysis of the small active site of the G. pallidus RAPc8 amidase suggests that access of a water molecule to the catalytic triad (Cys, Glu, Lys) side chains would be impeded by the formation of the acyl intermediate. It is proposed that another active-site residue, Glu142, the position of which is conserved in the homologues, acts as a general base to catalyse the hydrolysis of this intermediate. The small size of the substrate-binding pocket also explains the specificity of this enzyme for short aliphatic amides and its asymmetry explains its enantioselectivity

    Environmental isotonicity improves cold tolerance of Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus, in Egypt

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    AbstractThe limited ability of Oreochromis niloticus to tolerate low temperatures during winter in temperate and some subtropical region, such as in Egypt, is of major economic concern. The present study was aimed to improve the cold tolerance of Nile tilapia, O. niloticus, by using the well documented phenomena of saving energy consumption for osmoregulation in isotonic medium to decrease the physiological response to cold stress at winter months and may solve the Winter Stress Syndrome (WSS) and the over-wintering problems. Fish which were either pre-acclimated to freshwater or isotonic salinity at 25°C were transferred directly to freshwater or isotonic medium (12‰) at 14°C. Fish were killed 3, 6, 24, 48, 72 and 168h after transfer. In the isotonic medium pre-acclimated fish, it is shown that the effect of cold stress on the increment of plasma glucose level was much lower than that in fresh water. From the observations of Na+, K+, Mg2+-ATPase enzyme activity we conclude that less disturbance of ionic balance caused by cold tolerance was occurred in the isotonic point water than in the fresh water. The results of the acetylcholinesterase specific activity showed that, brain enzyme was inhibited by cold stress, and that the disruption of the cholinergic function induced by cold stress was much more pronounced in fresh water pre-acclimated tilapia than in isotonic point water pre-acclimated fish. Results from this study recommend that pre-acclimation of Nile tilapia, O. niloticus, to an environmental salinity close to the isotonicity, before winter onset, may improve their cold tolerance

    The combined effect of environmental thermal drop and isotonicity on metabolic stores of the teleost, Oreochromis niloticus

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    AbstractFour experimental regimes were designed to test the capacity of the Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus to make use of the energy saved form osmoregulation in an isotonic medium in overcoming the Winter Stress Syndrome (WSS). Fish either pre- acclimated to freshwater or isotonic salinity at 25°C were transferred directly to freshwater or an isotonic medium (ca. 12‰) at 14°C. Fish were killed 3, 6, 24, 48, 72 and 168h after transfer. The mobilisation and use of lipids from perivisceral and muscle fat observed in the study seem to be a direct response to cold stress as well as the associated fasting, these effects were salinity dependent being lesser at the isotonic salinity. The energy needs of fish diminish in cold conditions when the salinity of the environment approaches the isotonicity. The absence of any significant changes in muscle and water content indicated that the changes of muscle lipid are true and lipid was the sole source of energy upon thermal drop. The changes of blood haemoglobin levels throughout the four experimental regimes may indicate that the isotonic medium acclimated tilapia showed less haematological disturbance due to cold stress. Results from this experimental study recommend that the pre-acclimation of the Egyptian strain of Nile tilapia, O. niloticus, to an environmental salinity close to the isotonicity may improve fish cold tolerance

    The quaternary structure of the amidase from Geobacillus pallidus RAPc8 is revealed by its crystal packing

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    The amidase from Geobacillus pallidus RAPc8, a moderate thermophile, is a member of the nitrilase enzyme superfamily. It converts amides to the corresponding acids and ammonia and has application as an industrial catalyst. RAPc8 amidase has been cloned and functionally expressed in Escherichia coli and has been purified by heat treatment and a number of chromatographic steps. The enzyme was crystallized using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. Crystals produced in the presence of 1.2 M sodium citrate, 400 mM NaCl, 100 mM sodium acetate pH 5.6 were selected for X-ray diffraction studies. A data set having acceptable statistics to 1.96 Å resolution was collected under cryoconditions using an in-house X-ray source. The space group was determined to be primitive cubic P4232, with unit-cell parameter a = 130.49 (±0.05) Å. The structure was solved by molecular replacement using the backbone of the hypothetical protein PH0642 from Pyrococcus horikoshii (PDB code 1j31 ) with all non-identical side chains substituted with alanine as a probe. There is one subunit per asymmetric unit. The subunits are packed as trimers of dimers with D3 point-group symmetry around the threefold axis in such a way that the dimer interface seen in the homologues is preserved
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