3,906 research outputs found

    The Application of Molecular Orbital Calculations to Wood Chemistry. II. The Protonation of Beta-Methyl Glucopyranoside

    Get PDF
    The protonation step in the acid hydrolysis reaction of beta-methyl glucopyranoside was studied by molecular orbital techniques. The semi-empirical, self-consistent fields method of modified neglect of diatomic overlap (MNDO) was used to calculate energetic and electronic information in an attempt to determine the site of initial protonation

    On groups and counter automata

    Full text link
    We study finitely generated groups whose word problems are accepted by counter automata. We show that a group has word problem accepted by a blind n-counter automaton in the sense of Greibach if and only if it is virtually free abelian of rank n; this result, which answers a question of Gilman, is in a very precise sense an abelian analogue of the Muller-Schupp theorem. More generally, if G is a virtually abelian group then every group with word problem recognised by a G-automaton is virtually abelian with growth class bounded above by the growth class of G. We consider also other types of counter automata.Comment: 18 page

    Human amylase gene copy number variation as a determinant of metabolic state

    Get PDF
    Introduction Humans have multiple genes encoding amylase that are broadly divided into salivary (AMY1) and pancreatic (AMY2) genes. They exhibit some of the greatest copy numbers of any human gene, an expansion possibly driven by increased dietary starch intake. Within the population, amylase gene copy number is highly variable and there is evidence of an inverse association between AMY1 copy number and BMI. Areas covered We examine the evidence for the link between AMY1 and BMI, its potential mechanisms, and the metabolic effects of salivary and pancreatic amylase, both in the gastrointestinal tract and the blood. Expert commentary Salivary amylase may influence postprandial ‘cephalic phase’ insulin release, which improves glucose tolerance, while serum amylase may have insulin-sensitizing properties. This could explain the favorable metabolic status associated with higher AMY1 copy number. The association with BMI is harder to explain and is potentially mediated by increased flux of undigested starch into the ileum, with resultant effects on short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), changes in gut microbiota and effects on appetite and energy expenditure in those with low copy number. Future research on the role of amylase as a determinant of metabolic health and BMI may lead to novel therapies to target obesity

    Ordering kinetics of stripe patterns

    Full text link
    We study domain coarsening of two dimensional stripe patterns by numerically solving the Swift-Hohenberg model of Rayleigh-Benard convection. Near the bifurcation threshold, the evolution of disordered configurations is dominated by grain boundary motion through a background of largely immobile curved stripes. A numerical study of the distribution of local stripe curvatures, of the structure factor of the order parameter, and a finite size scaling analysis of the grain boundary perimeter, suggest that the linear scale of the structure grows as a power law of time with a craracteristic exponent z=3. We interpret theoretically the exponent z=3 from the law of grain boundary motion.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Assignment of Psoriasin to Human Chromosomal Band 1q21: Coordinate Overexpression of Clustered Genes is Psoriasis

    Get PDF
    Psoriasin is an abundant low molecular weight protein in keratinocytes from psoriatic lesions. Because of similarities in gene structure and expression to other genes on human chromosomal band 1q21, we hypothesized that psoriasin might also map to this region. To test this hypothesis, we identified and used a genomic λ clone (λ9.2) as a probe for fluorescent in situ hybridization. λ9.2 detected the 1q21 region in 81% of 52 chromosomes 1 examined, although it also hybridized to acrocentric chromosomes. A 9.2 DNA yielded polymerase chain reaction amplification of a 121-bp sequence colinear with psoriasin cDNA, as did genomic DNA from hybrid cell lines containing all or part of chromosome 1. The psoriasin gene was present on a 380-kb yeast artificial chromosome clone that was previously mapped to 1q21 and shown to contain calcydin; here it is also shown to contain MRP8 and CaN19. Psoriasin and several other tightly linked 1q21 genes were markedly overexpressed in psoriatic lesions, suggesting a role for these clustered genes in the regulation of epidermal proliferation

    Flame propagation in random media

    Full text link
    We introduce a phase-field model to describe the dynamics of a self-sustaining propagating combustion front within a medium of randomly distributed reactants. Numerical simulations of this model show that a flame front exists for reactant concentration c>c∗>0c > c^* > 0, while its vanishing at c∗c^* is consistent with mean-field percolation theory. For c>c∗c > c^*, we find that the interface associated with the diffuse combustion zone exhibits kinetic roughening characteristic of the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation.Comment: 4, LR541

    Oxygen cost of dynamic or isometric exercise relative to recruited muscle mass

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Oxygen cost of different muscle actions may be influenced by different recruitment and rate coding strategies. The purpose of this study was to account for these strategies by comparing the oxygen cost of dynamic and isometric muscle actions relative to the muscle mass recruited via surface electrical stimulation of the knee extensors. METHODS: Comparisons of whole body pulmonary Δ [Formula: see text] O(2 )were made in seven young healthy adults (1 female) during 3 minutes of dynamic or isometric knee extensions, both induced by surface electrical stimulation. Recruited mass was quantified in T(2 )weighted spin echo magnetic resonance images. RESULTS: The Δ [Formula: see text] O(2 )for dynamic muscle actions, 242 ± 128 ml ‱ min(-1 )(mean ± SD) was greater (p = 0.003) than that for isometric actions, 143 ± 99 ml ‱ min(-1). Recruited muscle mass was also greater (p = 0.004) for dynamic exercise, 0.716 ± 282 versus 0.483 ± 0.139 kg. The rate of oxygen consumption per unit of recruited muscle ([Formula: see text]) was similar in dynamic and isometric exercise (346 ± 162 versus 307 ± 198 ml ‱ kg(-1 )‱ min(-1); p = 0.352), but the [Formula: see text] calculated relative to initial knee extensor torque was significantly greater during dynamic exercise 5.1 ± 1.5 versus 3.6 ± 1.6 ml ‱ kg(-1 )‱ Nm(-1 )‱ min(-1 )(p = 0.019). CONCLUSION: These results are consistent with the view that oxygen cost of dynamic and isometric actions is determined by different circumstances of mechanical interaction between actin and myosin in the sarcomere, and that muscle recruitment has only a minor role

    Interviewing suspects: examining the association between skills, questioning, evidence disclosure, and interview outcomes

    Get PDF
    The interviewing of suspects is an important element in the investigation of crime. However, studies concerning actual performance of investigators when undertaking such interviews remain sparse. Nevertheless, in England and Wales, since the introduction of a prescribed framework over 20 years ago, field studies have generally shown an improvement in interviewing performance, notwithstanding ongoing concerns largely relating to the more demanding aspects (such as building/maintaining rapport, intermittent summarising and the logical development of topics). Using a sample of 70 real-life interviews, the present study examined questioning and various evidence disclosure strategies (which have also been found demanding), examining their relationships between interview skills and interview outcomes. It was found that when evidence was disclosed gradually (but revealed later), interviews were generally both more skilled and involved the gaining of comprehensive accounts, whereas when evidence was disclosed either early or very late, interviews were found to be both less skilled and less likely to involve this outcome. These findings contribute towards an increased research base for the prescribed framework

    Grain boundary pinning and glassy dynamics in stripe phases

    Full text link
    We study numerically and analytically the coarsening of stripe phases in two spatial dimensions, and show that transient configurations do not achieve long ranged orientational order but rather evolve into glassy configurations with very slow dynamics. In the absence of thermal fluctuations, defects such as grain boundaries become pinned in an effective periodic potential that is induced by the underlying periodicity of the stripe pattern itself. Pinning arises without quenched disorder from the non-adiabatic coupling between the slowly varying envelope of the order parameter around a defect, and its fast variation over the stripe wavelength. The characteristic size of ordered domains asymptotes to a finite value $R_g \sim \lambda_0\ \epsilon^{-1/2}\exp(|a|/\sqrt{\epsilon}),where, where \epsilon\ll 1isthedimensionlessdistanceawayfromthreshold, is the dimensionless distance away from threshold, \lambda_0thestripewavelength,and the stripe wavelength, and a$ a constant of order unity. Random fluctuations allow defect motion to resume until a new characteristic scale is reached, function of the intensity of the fluctuations. We finally discuss the relationship between defect pinning and the coarsening laws obtained in the intermediate time regime.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. Corrected version with one new figur
    • 

    corecore