696 research outputs found
Promising Practices: Advanced Referral System - Illinois Division of Rehabilitation Services, BPA&O Project Human Services Center
Changes in disability policy at the state and federal level have presented many new opportunities for meaningful systems change and services delivery for people with disabilities. Since 2000, the Social Security Administration, the U.S. Department of Labor, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Rehabilitation Services Administration have issued many grants to state agencies, community-based service providers and advocates to address barriers to employment for people with disabilities. Many of these grants have competitive employment as the goal, yet very few of these grants have built in support for benefits planning and assistance – a function that many believe is critical to achieving competitive employment. In this Promising Practices, the Illinois Division of Rehabilitation Services BPA&O Project (DRS BPA&O Project) and the Human Services Center (HSC), a community-based mental health center and the recipient of a DOL Customized Employment Grant, created a model partnership to ensure that the 600 consumers with severe mental illness served by HSC under their grant would gain access to benefits planning services. They call their model partnership an “Advanced Referral System.
California Supreme Court Finds School Transportation Fees Do Not Violate the State\u27s Constitution
Antiproliferative withanolides from several Solanaceous species
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Natural Product Research in November 2014, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/14786419.2014.919286.To date, our work on Solanaceous species (Datura wrightii, Jaborosa caulescens, Physalis hispida, P. longifolia, Vassobia breviflora, and Withania somnifera) has resulted in the isolation of 65 withanolides, 31 of which were new, as well as the semi-synthesis of a further 30 withanolides. Structure identification and MTS assay-based antiproliferative evaluation of these 95 compounds revealed that a Δ2-1-oxo functionality in ring A; in conjunction with either a 5β,6β-epoxy or 5α-chloro-6β-hydroxy moiety in ring B; are the minimum structural requirements for withanolides to produce potent cytotoxic activity. Such structural-activity relationship analysis (SARA) also revealed that oxygenation (the –OH or –OR groups) at C-4, 7, 11, and 12; as well as C-14 to C-28; did not contribute toward the observed antiproliferative activity. Herein we present a complete overview of our work as it relates to the withanolides reported from 1965 to 2013
Late-time Light Curves of Type II Supernovae: Physical Properties of SNe and Their Environment
We present BVRIJHK band photometry of 6 core-collapse supernovae, SNe 1999bw,
2002hh, 2003gd, 2004et, 2005cs, and 2006bc measured at late epochs (>2 yrs)
based on Hubble Space Telescope (HST), Gemini north, and WIYN telescopes. We
also show the JHK lightcurves of a supernova impostor SN 2008S up to day 575.
Of our 43 HST observations in total, 36 observations are successful in
detecting the light from the SNe alone and measuring magnitudes of all the
targets. HST observations show a resolved scattered light echo around SN 2003gd
at day 1520 and around SN 2002hh at day 1717. Our Gemini and WIYN observations
detected SNe 2002hh and 2004et, as well. Combining our data with previously
published data, we show VRIJHK-band lightcurves and estimate decline magnitude
rates at each band in 4 different phases. Our prior work on these lightcurves
and other data indicate that dust is forming in our targets from day ~300-400,
supporting SN dust formation theory. In this paper we focus on other physical
properties derived from the late time light curves. We estimate 56Ni masses for
our targets (0.5-14 x 10^{-2} Msun) from the bolometric lightcurve of each for
days ~150-300 using SN 1987A as a standard (7.5 x 10^{-2} Msun). The flattening
or sometimes increasing fluxes in the late time light curves of SNe 2002hh,
2003gd, 2004et and 2006bc indicate the presence of light echos. We estimate the
circumstellar hydrogen density of the material causing the light echo and find
that SN 2002hh is surrounded by relatively dense materials (n(H) >400 cm^{-3})
and SNe 2003gd and 2004et have densities more typical of the interstellar
medium (~1 cm^{-3}). The 56Ni mass appears well correlated with progenitor mass
with a slope of 0.31 x 10^{-2}, supporting the previous work by Maeda et al.
(2010), who focus on more massive Type II SNe. The dust mass does not appear to
be correlated with progenitor mass.Comment: We corrected the 56Ni mass of SN2005cs and Figures 8 (a) and 8 (c
Comparison of Bioactive Secondary Metabolites in Experimental and Natural Populations of Wild Tomatillos, Physalis longifolia Nutt.
We conducted a field experiment to determine the effects of mulch, fertilizer, and mycelium on biomass and important secondary metabolite concentrations in the edible and medicinal plant Physalis longifolia Nutt., with the hypothesis that increased plant stress (i.e., no mulch, fertilizer, or mycelium) would decrease biomass production and increase secondary compound content. Experimental cultivated plots and natural populations of P. longifolia were evaluated for the abundance of major bioactive withanolides previously isolated from the species: withalongolide A (1), withaferin A (2), and withalongolide B (3). Results indicated negligible differences between experimental treatments in biomass yield and withanolide abundance. However, withanolide concentrations from wild populations varied considerably with some being much higher than the source population used in the experiment. These results suggest that variation in secondary compound concentrations among wild populations is an important consideration when selecting source material for the cultivation of medicinal plants
Parental Attitudes and Their Influence on the Medical Management of Diabetic Adolescents
Competent professional assistance can meet the challenges of keeping parents and patients on a stable and sound emotional course as the diabetic adolescent grows up.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66551/2/10.1177_000992287000900814.pd
Withanolides from Jaborosa caulescens var. bipinnatifida
Two new withanolides 2,3-dihydrotrechonolide A (1) and 2,3-dihydro-21-hydroxytrechonolide A (2) were isolated along with two known withanolides trechonolide A (3) and jaborosalactone 39 (4) from Jaborosa caulescens var. bipinnatifida (Solanaceae). The structures of 1-2 were elucidated through 2D NMR and other spectroscopic techniques. In addition, the structure of withanolide 1 was confirmed by X-ray crystallographic analysis
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