115 research outputs found
α-Conotoxin Decontamination Protocol Evaluation: What Works and What Doesn’t
Nine publically available biosafety protocols for safely handling conotoxin peptides were tested to evaluate their decontamination efficacy. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy and mass spectrometry (MS) were used to assess the effect of each chemical treatment on the secondary and primary structure of α-CTx MII (L10V, E11A). Of the nine decontamination methods tested, treatment with 1% (m/v) solution of the enzymatic detergent Contrex™ EZ resulted in a 76.8% decrease in α-helical content as assessed by the mean residue ellipticity at 222 nm, and partial peptide digestion was demonstrated using high performance liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS). Additionally, treatment with 6% sodium hypochlorite (m/v) resulted in 80.5% decrease in α-helical content and complete digestion of the peptide. The Contrex™ EZ treatment was repeated with three additional α-conotoxins (α-CTxs), α-CTxs LvIA, ImI and PeIA, which verified the decontamination method was reasonably robust. These results support the use of either 1% Contrex™ EZ solution or 6% sodium hypochlorite in biosafety protocols for the decontamination of α-CTxs in research laboratories
Zeeman Relaxation of Cold Atomic Iron and Nickel in Collisions with 3He
We have measured the ratio of the diffusion cross-section to the angular
momentum reorientation cross-section in the colliding Fe-3He and Ni-3He
systems. Nickel (Ni) and iron (Fe) atoms are introduced via laser ablation into
a cryogenically cooled experimental cell containing cold (< 1 K) 3He buffer
gas. Elastic collisions rapidly cool the translational temperature of the
ablated atoms to the helium temperature. The cross-section ratio is extracted
by measuring the decays of the atomic Zeeman sublevels. For our experimental
conditions, thermal energy is comparable to the Zeeman splitting. As a result,
thermal excitations between Zeeman sublevels significantly impact the observed
decay. To determine the cross-section ratio accurately, we introduce a model of
Zeeman state dynamics that includes thermal excitations. We find the
cross-section ratio for Ni-3He = 5 x 10^3 and Fe-3He <= 3 x 10^3 at 0.75 K in a
0.8 T magnetic field. These measurements are interpreted in the context of
submerged shell suppression of spin relaxation as studied previously in
transition metals and rare earth atoms.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev.
Structure and function of \u3ci\u3ePseudomonas aeruginosa\u3ci\u3e protein PA1324 (21–170)
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the prototypical biofilm-forming gram-negative opportunistic human pathogen. P. aeruginosa is causatively associated with nosocomial infections and with cystic fibrosis. Antibiotic resistance in some strains adds to the inherent difficulties that result from biofilm formation when treating P. aeruginosa infections. Transcriptional profiling studies suggest widespread changes in the proteome during quorum sensing and biofilm development. Many of the proteins found to be upregulated during these processes are poorly characterized from a functional standpoint. Here, we report the solution NMR structure of PA1324, a protein of unknown function identified in these studies, and provide a putative biological functional assignment based on the observed prealbumin-like fold and FAST-NMR ligand screening studies. PA1324 is postulated to be involved in the binding and transport of sugars or polysaccharides associated with the peptidoglycan matrix during biofilm formation
Interferon Alfa-2b Alone or in Combination with Ribavirin as Initial Treatment for Chronic Hepatitis C
BACKGROUND
Only 15 to 20 percent of patients with chronic hepatitis C have a sustained virologic response to interferon therapy. We compared the efficacy and safety of recombinant interferon alfa-2b alone with those of a combination of interferon alfa-2b and ribavirin for the initial treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C. METHODS
We randomly assigned 912 patients with chronic hepatitis C to receive standard-dose interferon alfa-2b alone or in combination with ribavirin (1000 or 1200 mg orally per day, depending on body weight) for 24 or 48 weeks. Efficacy was assessed by measurements of serum hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA and serum aminotransferases and by liver biopsy. RESULTS
The rate of sustained virologic response (defined as an undetectable serum HCV RNA level 24 weeks after treatment was completed) was higher among patients who received combination therapy for either 24 weeks (70 of 228 patients, 31 percent) or 48 weeks (87 of 228 patients, 38 percent) than among patients who received interferon alone for either 24 weeks (13 of 231 patients, 6 percent) or 48 weeks (29 of 225 patients, 13 percent) (P CONCLUSIONS
In patients with chronic hepatitis C, initial therapy with interferon and ribavirin was more effective than treatment with interferon alone
Architecture for the photonic integration of an optical atomic clock
Laboratory optical atomic clocks achieve remarkable accuracy (now counted to 18 digits or more), opening possibilities to explore fundamental physics and enable new measurements. However, their size and use of bulk components prevent them from being more widely adopted in applications that require precision timing. By leveraging silicon-chip photonics for integration and to reduce component size and complexity, we demonstrate a compact optical-clock architecture. Here a semiconductor laser is stabilized to an optical transition in a microfabricated rubidium vapor cell, and a pair of interlocked Kerr-microresonator frequency combs provide fully coherent optical division of the clock laser to generate an electronic 22 GHz clock signal with a fractional frequency instability of one part in 10^(13). These results demonstrate key concepts of how to use silicon-chip devices in future portable and ultraprecise optical clocks
Decoding the Molecular Universe -- Workshop Report
On August 9-10, 2023, a workshop was convened at the Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory (PNNL) in Richland, WA that brought together a group of
internationally recognized experts in metabolomics, natural products discovery,
chemical ecology, chemical and biological threat assessment, cheminformatics,
computational chemistry, cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and novel
technology development. These experts were invited to assess the value and
feasibility of a grand-scale project to create new technologies that would
allow the identification and quantification of all small molecules, or to
decode the molecular universe. The Decoding the Molecular Universe project
would extend and complement the success of the Human Genome Project by
developing new capabilities and technologies to measure small molecules
(defined as non-protein, non-polymer molecules less than 1500 Daltons) of any
origin and generated in biological systems or produced abiotically. Workshop
attendees 1) explored what new understanding of biological and environmental
systems could be revealed through the lens of small molecules; 2) characterized
the similarities in current needs and technical challenges between each science
or mission area for unambiguous and comprehensive determination of the
composition and quantities of small molecules of any sample; 3) determined the
extent to which technologies or methods currently exist for unambiguously and
comprehensively determining the small molecule composition of any sample and in
a reasonable time; and 4) identified the attributes of the ideal technology or
approach for universal small molecule measurement and identification. The
workshop concluded with a discussion of how a project of this scale could be
undertaken, possible thrusts for the project, early proof-of-principle
applications, and similar efforts upon which the project could be modeled
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