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Community access to marketing opportunities: options for remote areas. Uganda case study (NRI report no. 2442)
The findings of this research are based on the results of a project funded by DFID's Crop Post-Harvest Research Progranune between April 1998 and March 1999, with fieldwork taking place in Uganda, Malawi, and Mali. The project was mainly concerned with policy and institutional aspects. It was concluded that holistic approaches are required to improve community access to marketing opportunities in remote areas of Sub-Saharan Africa, but that initiatives needed to be prioritised
METABOLISM OF N-HYDROXYGUANIDINES (N-HYDROXYDEBRISOQUINE) IN HUMAN AND PORCINE HEPATOCYTES: REDUCTION AND FORMATION OF GLUCURONIDES
ABSTRACT: The biotransformation of N-hydroxydebrisoquine, a model substrate for N-hydroxyguanidines, was studied in vitro with cultured and characterized porcine and human hepatocytes. The objective of the present work was to compare the N-oxidative and N-reductive metabolism of this compound using a monolayer culture system with previously described microsomal studies and to investigate the phase 2 metabolism, in particular, the glucuronidation of this class of compounds. At the same time, the suitability of pig hepatocytes as a model system for the human metabolism could be investigated. Two glucuronides of the parent compound Nhydroxydebrisoquine were analyzed. For the first time, one of these phase 2 metabolites could be identified as an O-glucuronide of an N-hydroxyguanidine by comparing it to a synthesized authentic compound. The involvement of certain human UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) was evaluated by incubating the substrate with eight human hepatic recombinant UGT enzymes. Metabolites were determined by a newly developed LC-MS (liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry) analysis using electrospray ionization (ESI). The known microsomal reduction of the N-hydroxylated compound was also demonstrated with hepatocytes. The N-hydroxylation of the corresponding reduced compound (debrisoquine), which was previously described with microsomes, could not be detected in hepatocytes. There was no qualitative difference in the formation of the described derivatives by human and porcine hepatocytes. All phase 2 metabolites identified in hepatocyte culture were also formed by glucuronosyltransferases. In culture, the N-reduction of the N-hydroxylated substrate is the dominating reaction, indicating a predominance of N-reduction in vivo
Complex evolution and epidemiology of Dobrava-Belgrade hantavirus: definition of genotypes and their characteristics.
Dobrava-Belgrade virus (DOBV) is a human pathogen that has evolved in, and is hosted by, mice of several species of the genus Apodemus. We propose a subdivision of the species Dobrava-Belgrade virus into four related genotypes â Dobrava, Kurkino, Saaremaa, and Sochi â that show characteristic differences in their phylogeny, specific host reservoirs, geographical distribution, and pathogenicity for humans
Construction and Nonclinical Testing of a Puumala Virus Synthetic M Gene-Based DNA Vaccine
Puumala virus (PUUV) is a causative agent of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS). Although PUUV-associated HFRS does not result in high case-fatality rates, the social and economic impact is considerable. There is no licensed vaccine or specific therapeutic to prevent or treat HFRS. Here we report the synthesis of a codon-optimized, full-lengthMsegment open reading frame and its cloning into a DNA vaccine vector to produce the plasmid pWRG/PUU-M(s2). pWRG/PUU-M(s2) delivered by gene gun produced high-titer neutralizing antibodies in hamsters and nonhuman primates. Vaccination with pWRG/ PUU-M(s2) protected hamsters against infection with PUUV but not against infection by related HFRS-associated hantaviruses. Unexpectedly, vaccination protected hamsters in a lethal disease model of Andes virus (ANDV) in the absence of ANDV crossneutralizing antibodies. This is the first evidence that an experimental DNA vaccine for HFRS can provide protection in a hantavirus lethal disease model
Thrombocytopenia and Acute Renal Failure in Puumala Hantavirus Infections
Low platelet counts are a novel predictive marker suitable for risk-adapted patient management
Enabling political legitimacy and conceptual integration for climate change adaptation research within an agricultural bureaucracy: a systemic inquiry
The value of using systems approaches, for situations framed as âsuper wickedâ, is examined from the perspective of research managers and stakeholders in a state-based climate change adaptation (CCA) program (CliChAP). Polycentric drivers influencing the development of CCA research pre-2010 in Victoria, Australia are reflected on, using Soft Systems Methodology (SSM) to generate a boundary critique of CCA research as a human activity system. We experienced the complexity of purpose with research practices pulling in different directions, reflected on the appropriateness of agricultural bureaucraciesâ historical new public management (NPM) practices, and focused on realigning management theory with emerging demands for adaptation research skills and capability. Our analysis conceptualised CliChAP as a subsystem, generating novelty in a wider system, concerned with socio-ecological co-evolution. Constraining/enabling conditions at the time dealing with political legitimacy and conceptual integration were observed as potential catalysts for innovation in research management towards better handling of uncertainty as a social process using systemic thinking in practice (StiP)
International study on inter-reader variability for circulating tumor cells in breast cancer
Introduction
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) have been studied in breast cancer with the CellSearchÂŽ system. Given the low CTC counts in non-metastatic breast cancer, it is important to evaluate the inter-reader agreement.
Methods
CellSearchÂŽ images (Nâ=â272) of either CTCs or white blood cells or artifacts from 109 non-metastatic (M0) and 22 metastatic (M1) breast cancer patients from reported studies were sent to 22 readers from 15 academic laboratories and 8 readers from two Veridex laboratories. Each image was scored as No CTC vs CTC HER2- vs CTC HER2+. The 8 Veridex readers were summarized to a Veridex Consensus (VC) to compare each academic reader using % agreement and kappa (Îş) statistics. Agreement was compared according to disease stage and CTC counts using the Wilcoxon signed rank test.
Results
For CTC definition (No CTC vs CTC), the median agreement between academic readers and VC was 92% (range 69 to 97%) with a median Îş of 0.83 (range 0.37 to 0.93). Lower agreement was observed in images from M0 (median 91%, range 70 to 96%) compared to M1 (median 98%, range 64 to 100%) patients (Pâ<â0.001) and from M0 and <3CTCs (median 87%, range 66 to 95%) compared to M0 and âĽ3CTCs samples (median 95%, range 77 to 99%), (Pâ<â0.001). For CTC HER2 expression (HER2- vs HER2+), the median agreement was 87% (range 51 to 95%) with a median Îş of 0.74 (range 0.25 to 0.90).
Conclusions
The inter-reader agreement for CTC definition was high. Reduced agreement was observed in M0 patients with low CTC counts. Continuous training and independent image review are require
Azimuthal anisotropy of charged particles at high transverse momenta in PbPb collisions at sqrt(s[NN]) = 2.76 TeV
The azimuthal anisotropy of charged particles in PbPb collisions at
nucleon-nucleon center-of-mass energy of 2.76 TeV is measured with the CMS
detector at the LHC over an extended transverse momentum (pt) range up to
approximately 60 GeV. The data cover both the low-pt region associated with
hydrodynamic flow phenomena and the high-pt region where the anisotropies may
reflect the path-length dependence of parton energy loss in the created medium.
The anisotropy parameter (v2) of the particles is extracted by correlating
charged tracks with respect to the event-plane reconstructed by using the
energy deposited in forward-angle calorimeters. For the six bins of collision
centrality studied, spanning the range of 0-60% most-central events, the
observed v2 values are found to first increase with pt, reaching a maximum
around pt = 3 GeV, and then to gradually decrease to almost zero, with the
decline persisting up to at least pt = 40 GeV over the full centrality range
measured.Comment: Replaced with published version. Added journal reference and DO
Combined search for the quarks of a sequential fourth generation
Results are presented from a search for a fourth generation of quarks
produced singly or in pairs in a data set corresponding to an integrated
luminosity of 5 inverse femtobarns recorded by the CMS experiment at the LHC in
2011. A novel strategy has been developed for a combined search for quarks of
the up and down type in decay channels with at least one isolated muon or
electron. Limits on the mass of the fourth-generation quarks and the relevant
Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix elements are derived in the context of a
simple extension of the standard model with a sequential fourth generation of
fermions. The existence of mass-degenerate fourth-generation quarks with masses
below 685 GeV is excluded at 95% confidence level for minimal off-diagonal
mixing between the third- and the fourth-generation quarks. With a mass
difference of 25 GeV between the quark masses, the obtained limit on the masses
of the fourth-generation quarks shifts by about +/- 20 GeV. These results
significantly reduce the allowed parameter space for a fourth generation of
fermions.Comment: Replaced with published version. Added journal reference and DO
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