616 research outputs found
Assessing the effects of exposure timing on biomarker expression using Ī²-estradiol
Temporal and spatial variability in estrogenicity has been documented formanytreated wastewater effluents with the consequences of this variability on the expression of biomarkers of endocrine disruption being largely unknown. Laboratory exposure studies usually utilize constant exposure concentrations which may produce biological effects that differ from those observed in organisms exposed in natural environments. In this study, we investigated the effects of differential timing of exposures with 17Ī² - estradiol (E2) on a range of fathead minnow biomarkers to simulate diverse environmentally relevant exposure profiles. Two 21-day, replicate experiments were performed exposing mature male fathead minnows to E2 at time-weighted mean concentrations (similar average exposure to the contaminant during the 21-day exposure period; 17 ng E2/L experiment 1; 12 ng E2/L experiment 2) comparable to E2 equivalency values (EEQ) reported for several anthropogenically altered environments. A comparable time-weighted mean concentration of E2 was applied to five treatments which varied in the daily application schema: E2 was either applied at a steady rate (ST), in a gradual decreasing concentration (HI), a gradual increasing concentration (LO), applied intermittently (IN), or at a randomly varying concentration (VA). We assessed a range of widely used physiological (vitellogenin mRNA induction and plasma concentrations), anatomical (body and organ indices, secondary sex characteristics, and histopathology), and behavioral (nest holding) biomarkers reported to change following exposure to endocrine active compounds (EACs). All treatments responded with a rise in plasma vitellogenin concentration when compared with the ethanol carrier control. Predicatively, vitellogenin mRNA induction, which tracked closely with plasma vitellogenin concentrations in most treatments was not elevated in the HI treatment, presumably due to the lack of E2 exposure immediately prior to analysis. The ability of treatment male fish to hold nest sites in direct competition with control males was sensitive to E2 exposure and did yield statistically significant differences between treatments and carrier control. Other biological endpoints assessed in this study (organosomatic indices, secondary sex characteristics) varied little between treatments and controls. This study indicates that a broad suite of endpoints is necessary to fully assess the biological consequences of fish exposure to estrogens and that for at least field studies, a combination of vitellogenin mRNA and plasma vitellogenin analysis are most promising in deciphering exposure histories of wild-caught and caged fishes
Estimating equations for biomarker based exposure estimation under non-steady-state conditions
Unrealistic steady-state assumptions are often used to estimate toxicant exposure rates from biomarkers. A biomarker may instead be modeled as a weighted sum of historical time-varying exposures. Estimating equations are derived for a zero-inflated gamma distribution for daily exposures with a known exposure frequency. Simulation studies suggest that the estimating equations can provide accurate estimates of exposure magnitude at any reasonable sample size, and reasonable estimates of the exposure variance at larger sample sizes
On the limiting radial distribution function for hydrogenic orbitals
An exact reduced limiting expression for the generalized radial distribution function D n (r) is derived and compared with quantum distributions for various degrees of excitation. It represents the quantum result at large quantum numbers significantly better than a prior empirical representation of the universal reduced distribution and gives a somewhat larger electronic partition function for the hydrogen atom than that based on the previous distribution.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43065/1/10910_2005_Article_BF01166729.pd
Recommended from our members
Ensemble prediction for nowcasting with a convection-permitting model - II: forecast error statistics
A 24-member ensemble of 1-h high-resolution forecasts over the Southern United Kingdom is used to study short-range forecast error statistics. The initial conditions are found from perturbations from an ensemble transform Kalman filter. Forecasts from this system are assumed to lie within the bounds of forecast error of an operational forecast system. Although noisy, this system is capable of producing physically reasonable statistics which are analysed and compared to statistics implied from a variational assimilation system. The variances for temperature errors for instance show structures that reflect convective activity. Some variables, notably potential temperature and specific humidity perturbations, have autocorrelation functions that deviate from 3-D isotropy at the convective-scale (horizontal scales less than 10 km). Other variables, notably the velocity potential for horizontal divergence perturbations, maintain 3-D isotropy at all scales. Geostrophic and hydrostatic balances are studied by examining correlations between terms in the divergence and vertical momentum equations respectively. Both balances are found to decay as the horizontal scale decreases. It is estimated that geostrophic balance becomes less important at scales smaller than 75 km, and hydrostatic balance becomes less important at scales smaller than 35 km, although more work is required to validate these findings. The implications of these results for high-resolution data assimilation are discussed
An interferometric complementarity experiment in a bulk Nuclear Magnetic Resonance ensemble
We have experimentally demonstrated the interferometric complementarity,
which relates the distinguishability quantifying the amount of which-way
(WW) information to the fringe visibility characterizing the wave feature
of a quantum entity, in a bulk ensemble by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)
techniques. We primarily concern on the intermediate cases: partial fringe
visibility and incomplete WW information. We propose a quantitative measure of
by an alternative geometric strategy and investigate the relation between
and entanglement. By measuring and independently, it turns out that
the duality relation holds for pure quantum states of the
markers.Comment: 13 page, 5 PS figure
Spectral Shape of Relaxations in Silica Glass
Precise low-frequency light scattering experiments on silica glass are
presented, covering a broad temperature and frequency range (9 GHz < \nu < 2
THz). For the first time the spectral shape of relaxations is observed over
more than one decade in frequency. The spectra show a power-law low-frequency
wing of the relaxational part of the spectrum with an exponent
proportional to temperature in the range 30 K < T < 200 K. A comparison of our
results with those from acoustic attenuation experiments performed at different
frequencies shows that this power-law behaviour rather well describes
relaxations in silica over 9 orders of magnitude in frequency. These findings
can be explained by a model of thermally activated transitions in double well
potentials.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Polychlorinated Biphenyl (PCB) Exposure and Diabetes: Results from the Anniston Community Health Survey
Background: Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) manufactured in Anniston, Alabama, from 1929 to 1971 caused significant environmental contamination. The Anniston population remains one of the most highly exposed in the world
Reinvestigation of the structure of 1-aminocyclohexane-1-carboxylic acid hydrochloride (C 7 H 14 ClNO 2 )
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/44837/1/10870_2005_Article_BF01270623.pd
The Impact of Training on Productivity and Wages - Evidence from Belgian Firm Level Panel Data
This paper uses longitudinal data of more than 13,000 firms to analyze the effects of on-the-job training on firm level productivity and wages. Workers receiving training are on average more productive than workers not receiving training. This makes firms more productive. On-the-job training increases firm level measured productivity between 1 and 2%, compared to firms that do not provide training. The effect of training on wages is also positive, but much lower than the effect on productivity. Average wages increase only by 0.5%. Sectoral spillovers between firms that train workers are found, but only in firms active in the manufacturing sector. In non-manufacturing no spillovers seem to take place. The results are consistent with recent theories that explain on-the-job training, related to imperfect competition in the labor market, such as monopsony and union bargaining
Structural Transitions and Global Minima of Sodium Chloride Clusters
In recent experiments on sodium chloride clusters structural transitions
between nanocrystals with different cuboidal shapes were detected. Here we
determine reaction pathways between the low energy isomers of one of these
clusters, (NaCl)35Cl-. The key process in these structural transitions is a
highly cooperative rearrangement in which two parts of the nanocrystal slip
past one another on a {110} plane in a direction. In this way the
nanocrystals can plastically deform, in contrast to the brittle behaviour of
bulk sodium chloride crystals at the same temperatures; the nanocrystals have
mechanical properties which are a unique feature of their finite size. We also
report and compare the global potential energy minima for (NaCl)NCl- using two
empirical potentials, and comment on the effect of polarization.Comment: extended version, 13 pages, 8 figures, revte
- ā¦