586 research outputs found
Remittances and inequality: a dynamic migration model
We develop a model to study the effects of migration and remittances on inequality
in the origin communities. While wealth inequality is shown to be monotonically
reduced along the time-span, the short- and the long-run impacts on income
inequality may be of opposite signs, suggesting that the dynamic relationship
between migration/remittances and inequality may well be characterized by an
inverse U-shaped pattern. This is consistent with the findings of the empirical
literature, yet offers a different interpretation from the usually assumed migration
network effects. With no need to endogenize migration costs through the role of
migration networks, we generate the same result via intergenerational wealth
accumulation
Investigation into the molecular mechanism of the antiapoptotic functions of CTCF in breast cancer cells using a proteomics approach
Measuring international skilled migration: new estimates controlling for age of entry
Recent data on international skilled migration define skilled migrants according to
education level independently of whether education has been acquired in the home
or in the host country. In this paper we use immigrants’ age of entry as a proxy for
where education has been acquired. Data on age of entry are available from a
subset of receiving countries which together represent more than 3/4 of total skilled
immigration to the OECD. Using these data and a simple gravity model, we estimate
the age-of-entry structure of skilled immigration and propose alternative brain drain
measures by excluding those arrived before age 12, 18 and 22. The results for 2000
show that on average, 68% of the global brain drain is accounted for by emigration
of people aged 22 or more upon arrival (78% and 87% for the 18 and 12 year old
thresholds, respectively). For some countries this indeed makes a substantial
difference. However, cross-country differences are globally maintained, resulting in
extremely high correlation levels between corrected and uncorrected rates. Similar
results are obtained for 1990
Biochemical characterization of the POM-1 metallo-β-lactamase from Pseudomonas otitidis
The POM-1 metallo--lactamase is a subclass B3 resident enzyme produced by Pseudomonas otitidis, a pathogen causing otic infections. The enzyme was overproduced in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3), purified by chromatography, and subjected to structural and functional analysis. The purified POM-1 is a tetrameric enzyme of broad substrate specificity with higher catalytic activities with penicillins and carbapenems than with cephalosporins
Urinary tract lesions due to SCHISTOSOMA HAEMATOBIUM infection assessed by ultrasonography in a community based study in Niger
Abstract basins of attraction
Abstract basins appear naturally in different areas of several complex
variables. In this survey we want to describe three different topics in which
they play an important role, leading to interesting open problems
Spectroscopic and Mechanistic Studies of Heterodimetallic Forms of Metallo-β-lactamase NDM-1
In an effort to characterize the roles of each metal ion in metallo-β-lactamase NDM-1, heterodimetallic analogues (CoCo-, ZnCo-, and CoCd-) of the enzyme were generated and characterized. UV–vis, 1H NMR, EPR, and EXAFS spectroscopies were used to confirm the fidelity of the metal substitutions, including the presence of a homogeneous, heterodimetallic cluster, with a single-atom bridge. This marks the first preparation of a metallo-β-lactamase selectively substituted with a paramagnetic metal ion, Co(II), either in the Zn1 (CoCd-NDM-1) or in the Zn2 site (ZnCo-NDM-1), as well as both (CoCo-NDM-1). We then used these metal-substituted forms of the enzyme to probe the reaction mechanism, using steady-state and stopped-flow kinetics, stopped-flow fluorescence, and rapid-freeze-quench EPR. Both metal sites show significant effects on the kinetic constants, and both paramagnetic variants (CoCd- and ZnCo-NDM-1) showed significant structural changes on reaction with substrate. These changes are discussed in terms of a minimal kinetic mechanism that incorporates all of the data
Multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa producing PER-1 extended-spectrum serine-beta-lactamase and VIM-2 metallo-beta-lactamase.
[No abstract available]Europena Training and Mobility of Researchers Network on Metallo-beta-Lactamases (grant no. FMRX-CT98-0232
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