29 research outputs found

    A descriptive study of a manual therapy intervention within a randomised controlled trial for hamstring and lower limb injury prevention

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    The journal has been informed by its publisher BioMed Central that contrary to the statement in this article [Wayne Hoskins, Henry Pollard, Chiropractic & Osteopathy 2010, 18:23], they have been advised by the authors' institution Macquarie University, that its Human Research Ethics Committee did not approve this study. Because the study was conducted without institutional ethics committee approval it has been retracted

    Metagenomics of the Svalbard Reindeer Rumen Microbiome Reveals Abundance of Polysaccharide Utilization Loci

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    Lignocellulosic biomass remains a largely untapped source of renewable energy predominantly due to its recalcitrance and an incomplete understanding of how this is overcome in nature. We present here a compositional and comparative analysis of metagenomic data pertaining to a natural biomass-converting ecosystem adapted to austere arctic nutritional conditions, namely the rumen microbiome of Svalbard reindeer (Rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus). Community analysis showed that deeply-branched cellulolytic lineages affiliated to the Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes are dominant, whilst sequence binning methods facilitated the assemblage of metagenomic sequence for a dominant and novel Bacteroidales clade (SRM-1). Analysis of unassembled metagenomic sequence as well as metabolic reconstruction of SRM-1 revealed the presence of multiple polysaccharide utilization loci-like systems (PULs) as well as members of more than 20 glycoside hydrolase and other carbohydrate-active enzyme families targeting various polysaccharides including cellulose, xylan and pectin. Functional screening of cloned metagenome fragments revealed high cellulolytic activity and an abundance of PULs that are rich in endoglucanases (GH5) but devoid of other common enzymes thought to be involved in cellulose degradation. Combining these results with known and partly re-evaluated metagenomic data strongly indicates that much like the human distal gut, the digestive system of herbivores harbours high numbers of deeply branched and as-yet uncultured members of the Bacteroidetes that depend on PUL-like systems for plant biomass degradation

    Are BL Lac objects too large to be gravitationally lensed?

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    BL LACERTAEobjects are extragalactic sources, generally of low redshift, with highly variable, strongly polarized continuum emission ranging from radio wavelengths to X-rays, but with little or no evidence of line emission. It has been suggested1that BL Lacs are in fact more distant radio-loud, optically violently variable (OVV) quasars whose continuum is enhanced, relative to the line emission, by gravitational lensing caused by a star in an intervening galaxy. I argue here, however, that the spectral similarity of BL Lacs and OWs over a wide wavelength range can be explained by gravitational lensing only if the continuum-emitting region is small, a requirement that is contradicted by independent observations
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