233 research outputs found
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UMass Amherst Green Building Guidelines 2013
Facilities & Campus Services, Sustainable UMass and Campus Planning support sustainability and energy conservation initiatives by providing in-house resources to campus staff as well as designers and contractors working with the University. The UMass Amherst Green Building Guidelines provide a framework for approaching new construction and major renovation projects at UMass Amherst that are undergoing LEED certification by focusing the conversation on green building aspects that are most important to the campus. They are intended to be the beginning of a dynamic conversation between designers, environmental consultants and constructors, university stakeholders, and users of new high performance buildings
Dystrophin deficiency affects human astrocyte properties andresponse to damage
In addition to progressive muscular degeneration due to dystrophin mutations, 1/3 of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients present cognitive deficits. However, there is currently an incomplete understanding about the function of the multiple dystrophin isoforms in human brains. Here, we tested the hypothesis that dystrophin deficiency affects glial function in DMD and could therefore contribute to neural impairment. We investigated human dystrophin isoform expression with development and differentiation and response to damage in human astrocytes from control and induced pluripotent stem cells from DMD patients. In control cells, short dystrophin isoforms were up-regulated with development and their expression levels changed differently upon neuronal and astrocytic differentiation, as well as in 2-dimensional versus 3-dimensional astrocyte cultures. All DMD-astrocytes tested displayed altered morphology, proliferative activity and AQP4 expression. Furthermore, they did not show any morphological change in response to inflammatory stimuli and their number was significantly lower as compared to stimulated healthy astrocytes. Finally, DMD-astrocytes appeared to be more sensitive than controls to oxidative damage as shown by their increased cell death. Behavioral and metabolic defects in DMD-astrocytes were consistent with gene pathway dysregulation shared by lines with different mutations as demonstrated by bulk RNA-seq analysis. Together, our DMD model provides evidence for altered astrocyte function in DMD suggesting that defective astrocyte responses may contribute to neural impairment and might provide additional potential therapeutic targets
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UMass Amherst Building Measurement, Verification, Coordination and Template Plan
Facilities & Campus Services, Sustainable UMass and Campus Planning support sustainability and energy conservation initiatives by providing in-house resources to campus staff as well as designers and contractors working with the University. The UMass Amherst Building Measurement, Verification, Coordination and Template Plan was begun in 2013 and finalized in 2015 as a resource to project teams that undertake the measurement and verification of building systems during the first year of occupancy of a new building and renovation project, particularly projects undergoing LEED certification
Spiral cracks in drying precipitates
We investigate the formation of spiral crack patterns during the desiccation
of thin layers of precipitates in contact with a substrate. This
symmetry-breaking fracturing mode is found to arise naturally not from torsion
forces, but from a propagating stress front induced by the fold-up of the
fragments. We model their formation mechanism using a coarse-grain model for
fragmentation and successfully reproduce the spiral cracks. Fittings of
experimental and simulation data show that the spirals are logarithmic,
corresponding to constant deviation from a circular crack path. Theoretical
aspects of the logarithmic spirals are discussed. In particular we show that
this occurs generally when the crack speed is proportional to the propagating
speed of stress front.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, RevTe
The contours of a new urban world? Megacity population growth and density since 1975
The problems posed by rapid and large-scale urbanisation are manifold, and are recognised in the UN’s New Urban Agenda; a declaration of intent that aims to meet such challenges head-on facilitated by the systematic tracking and analysis of global urban growth and change. In this context, the release in 2016 of new small area Global Human Settlement Layer (GHSL) data was said to represent a unique opportunity to facilitate comparative
global analyses of urban change dynamics and, perhaps somewhat idealistically, move forward progressive planning agendas. We therefore focus on population growth and
density in 30 major urban agglomerations using the GHSL in order to shed light on the scale and extent of global urbanisation over the past four decades and to interrogate the
potential role of the GHSL in tracking urban change
Genetic differentiation among host-associated Alebra leafhoppers (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae)
The limited importance ascribed to sympatric speciation pro cesses via host race formation is partially due to the few
cases of host races that have been reported among host
populations. This work sheds light on the taxonomy of Alebra
leafhoppers and examines the possible existence of host
races among host-associated populations. The species of
this genus show varying degrees of host association with
deciduous trees and shrubs and, frequently, host popu lations of uncertain taxonomic status coexist and occasion ally become pests. Allozyme electrophoresis of 21 Greek
populations including sympatric, local and geographically
distant samples collected on 13 different plant species, show
that they represent at least five species: A. albostriella
Falle´n, A. viridis (Rey) (sensu Gillham), A. wahlbergi Bo Keywords: host races; leafhoppers; sympatric speciation; sibling species; allozymes; Alebra
Introduction
Sympatric speciation is a controversial subject in evol utionary biology (see Mayr, 1963; Futuyma and Mayer,
1980; Paterson, 1981; Via, 2001). One of the reasons for
this controversy is that sympatric speciation seems to be
an extremely rare phenomenon occurring only in very
few groups of taxa, represented chiefly by phytophagous
insects (Tauber and Tauber, 1977; Menken, 1981; Wood,
1993; Emelianov et al, 1995; Via, 1999; Finchak et al, 2000;
Craig et al, 2001). The limited number of reported cases
among organisms with sexual reproduction can be at
least partially attributed to the fact that taxa undergoing
sympatric speciation events must fulfill very restrictive
biological and ecological requirements.
Most sympatric speciation models demand that there is
intraspecific genetic variation in traits that differentially
affect the fitness of individuals that colonise new habitats
or hosts (Dieckman and Doebeli, 1999; Hawthorne and
Via, 2001 but see Higashi et al, 1999 and Takimoto et al,
2000). They assume that selection acting on these traits
can prevent genetic exchange between populations
(Bush, 1975; Tauber and Tauber, 1977; Diehl and Bush,
1989). In phytophagous insects, this means that host pref erences must be genetically determined and mating
should occur on the host (Bush, 1975; Diehl and Bush,
Correspondence: D Aguin-Pombo, Department of Biology, University of
Madeira, Campus Universitario da Penteada, 9000 Funchal, Madeira,
Portugal. E-mail: aguin uma.pt
Received 12 December 2000; accepted 13 December 2001
heman and two new species. Of these, one is associated
to Quercus frainetto and other is specific to Crataegus spp.
Significant genetic differences among sympatric and local
host populations were found only in A. albostriella, between
populations on Turkey oak, beech and common alder. It is
suggested that the last two of these host populations may
represent different host races. The results show that both
the host plant and geographical distance affect the patterns
of differentiation in the genus. The formation of some spec ies seems to have been the result of allopatric speciation
events while, for others, their origin can be equally explained
either by sympatric or allopatric speciation.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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"Everything has changed, and nothing has changed in journalism": Revisiting journalistic sourcing practices and verification techniques during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution and beyond
Using the Egyptian Revolution as a case study, this paper studies journalistic sourcing and verification through in-depth interviews with journalists in the United Kingdom. While the coverage of the event in the British media was dominated by civic, unofficial sources, interviews conducted in 2014 revealed that journalists only included these if no other sources were available. In fact, journalists voiced concern with regards to verification of online sources, and rarely included these as direct, first-hand accounts. Follow-up interviews conducted in 2020 point to developments journalism practice has undergone since, particularly in relation to open-source content verification. Overall, the picture we paint of British journalists’ handling of content sourced from social media is one wedged between expressed enthusiasm and cautious scepticism
Efficient Photodynamic Therapy against Gram-Positive and Gram-Negative Bacteria Using THPTS, a Cationic Photosensitizer Excited by Infrared Wavelength
The worldwide rise in the rates of antibiotic resistance of bacteria underlines the need for alternative antibacterial agents. A promising approach to kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria uses light in combination with a photosensitizer to induce a phototoxic reaction. Concentrations of 1, 10 and 100µM of tetrahydroporphyrin-tetratosylat (THPTS) and different incubation times (30, 90 and 180min) were used to measure photodynamic efficiency against two Gram-positive strains of S.aureus (MSSA and MRSA), and two Gram-negative strains of E.coli and P.aeruginosa. We found that phototoxicity of the drug is independent of the antibiotic resistance pattern when incubated in PBS for the investigated strains. Also, an incubation with 100µM THPTS followed by illumination, yielded a 6lg (≥99.999%) decrease in the viable numbers of all bacteria strains tested, indicating that the THPTS drug has a high degree of photodynamic inactivation. We then modulated incubation time, photosensitizer concentration and monitored the effect of serum on the THPTS activity. In doing so, we established the conditions to obtain the strongest bactericidal effect. Our results suggest that this new and highly pure synthetic compound should improve the efficiency of photodynamic therapy against multiresistant bacteria and has a significant potential for clinical applications in the treatment of nosocomial infections
Nanoscale Metallic Iron for Environmental Remediation: Prospects and Limitations
The amendment of the subsurface with nanoscale metallic iron particles
(nano-Fe0) has been discussed in the literature as an efficient in situ
technology for groundwater remediation. However, the introduction of this
technology was controversial and its efficiency has never been univocally
established. This unsatisfying situation has motivated this communication whose
objective was a comprehensive discussion of the intrinsic reactivity of
nano-Fe0 based on the contemporary knowledge on the mechanism of contaminant
removal by Fe0 and a mathematical model. It is showed that due to limitations
of the mass transfer of nano-Fe0 to contaminants, available concepts cannot
explain the success of nano-Fe0 injection for in situ groundwater remediation.
It is recommended to test the possibility of introducing nano-Fe0 to initiate
the formation of roll-fronts which propagation would induce the reductive
transformation of both dissolved and adsorbed contaminants. Within a
roll-front, FeII from nano-Fe0 is the reducing agent for contaminants. FeII is
recycled by biotic or abiotic FeIII reduction. While the roll-front concept
could explain the success of already implemented reaction zones, more research
is needed for a science-based recommendation of nano- Fe0 for subsurface
treatment by roll-front
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