558 research outputs found
Experimental Brain Research / The difficulty of the postural control task affects multi-muscle control during quiet standing
The aim of this study was to compare the electromyographic (EMG) coherence between the lower limb and the core muscles when carrying out two postural tasks at different difficulty levels. EMG was recorded in 20 healthy male subjects while performing two independent quiet standing tasks. The first one involved a bipedal stance with the eyes open, while the second consisted of a dominant unipedal stance also with the eyes open. The obtained EMG signals were analysed by computing estimations of EMG\u2013EMG coherence between muscle pairs, both singly (single-pair estimations) and combined (pooled estimations). Pooled and single coherence of anterior, posterior, core, antagonist and mixed pairs of muscles were significant in the 0\u20135 Hz frequency band. The results indicate that core and antagonist muscle groups, such as the anterior and posterior muscles, share low-frequency neural inputs (0\u20135 Hz) which could be responsible of the M-modes assembly. The core muscles could therefore provide the necessary synergy to maintain spine stability during the balancing exercise. Finally, differences in EMG\u2013EMG coherence suggest that the muscle synergies formed during unipedal stance tasks are different from those established during bipedal stance
Deciphering the Potential Coding of Human Cytomegalovirus: New Predicted Transmembrane Proteome
CMV is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised individuals that will benefit from the availability of a vaccine. Despite the efforts made during the last decade, no CMV vaccine is available. An ideal CMV vaccine should elicit a broad immune response against multiple viral antigens including proteins involved in virus-cell interaction and entry. However, the therapeutic use of neutralizing antibodies targeting glycoproteins involved in viral entry achieved only partial protection against infection. In this scenario, a better understanding of the CMV prote-ome potentially involved in viral entry may provide novel candidates to include in new potential vaccine design. In this study, we aimed to explore the CMV genome to identify proteins with puta-tive transmembrane domains to identify new potential viral envelope proteins. We have performed in silico analysis using the genome sequences of nine different CMV strains to predict the trans-membrane domains of the encoded proteins. We have identified 77 proteins with transmembrane domains, 39 of which were present in all the strains and were highly conserved. Among the core proteins, 17 of them such as UL10, UL139 or US33A have no ascribed function and may be good candidates for further mechanistic studies
Monolayered versus multilayered electroless NiP coatings: Impact of the plating approach on the microstructure, mechanical and corrosion properties of the coatings
Electroless nickel-phosphorous (NiP) coatings were produced on low carbon steel substrates for a total plating time of 3\u202fh. Different preparation modalities were pursued. Multilayered coatings were produced by stacking three layers of the same composition by successive electroless plating with rinsing steps in between. On the other hand, coatings termed \u2018monolayered\u2019 for the sake of comparison were deposited by one step electroless process, with and without undergoing bath replenishment of the electrolyte during plating. All the samples were subjected to thermal annealing at 400\u202f\ub0C for 1\u202fh under argon atmosphere.
The results show that the multilayer approach prevents crack propagation in the as-deposited coatings because the interfaces between layers block the advance of defects. Bath replenishment during monolayered coatings production creates pseudo-interfaces similar to those of the multilayered case but they are ineffective in terms of corrosion protection. Un-replenishment of the electrolyte promotes a change in the coating's microstructure from lamellar to columnar which severely worsens their performance. Upon annealing, the presence of interfaces, along with the recrystallization of the metallic matrix, promotes an upgrading of the corrosion performance of the multi-layered coatings. The corrosion products spread laterally at the interface where they stockpile. At a certain point, the accumulation of these by-products provokes the exfoliation of the outermost layer exposing the layer underneath to the corrosive media, thereby delaying the advancement of the corrosion attack. The results of this study highlight the importance of the plating approach selection, as well as the need for proper electrolyte maintenance during the production of high-performance electroless coatings
Mechanisms of institutional continuity in neoliberal "success stories" : developmental regimes in Chile and Estonia
© 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Several mycoplasmas, such as the emergent human pathogen Mycoplasma genitalium, developed a complex polar structure, known as the terminal organelle (TO), responsible for a new type of cellular motility, which is involved in a variety of cell functions: cell division, adherence to host cells, and virulence. The TO cytoskeleton is organized as a multisubunit dynamic motor, including three main ultrastructures: the terminal button, the electrodense core, and the wheel complex. Here, we describe the interaction between MG200 and MG491, two of the main components of the TO wheel complex that connects the TO with the cell body and the cell membrane. The interaction between MG200 and MG491 has a KD in the 80 nM range, as determined by surface plasmon resonance. The interface between the two partners was confined to the >enriched in aromatic and glycine residues> (EAGR) box of MG200, previously described as a protein-protein interaction domain, and to a 25-residue-long peptide from the C-terminal region of MG491 by surface plasmon resonance and NMR spectroscopy studies. An atomic description of the MG200 EAGR box binding surface was also provided by solution NMR. An M. genitalium mutant lacking the MG491 segment corresponding to the peptide reveals specific alterations in cell motility and cell morphology indicating that the MG200-MG491 interaction plays a key role in the stability and functioning of the TO.This work was supported by Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion Grants BFU2012-36827 (to I. F.) and BFU2010-22209-C02-01 (to E. Q.), a grant from the Centre de Referencia de R+D de Biotecnologia (Generalitat de Catalunya, Spain) (to E. Q.), and by FEDER funds through the Operational Competitiveness Programme-COMPETE and by Portuguese national funds through FCT-Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia under Project FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-027581 (EXPL/BBB-BQB/0546/2012) (to B. C.). The NMR characterization was conducted through the FP7 Access to Research Infrastructures (Bio-NMR Contract 261863) and by Instruct, which is part of the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) and supported by national member subscriptionsPeer Reviewe
Plant communities and landscape diversity in NW Sicily: The MEMOLA EU FP7 Project case study
The MEMOLA EU FP7 Project case study\u201d was presented at IV International Plant Science Conference (IPSC) held in Parma (Italy) on September 20-22, 2017. The poster focuses on the contribution of botany in the interdisciplinary debate of Memola Project and underline the role plant communities play in understanding the formative processes of the Mediterranean Landscapes
Independence in CLP Languages
Studying independence of goals has proven very useful in the context of logic programming. In particular, it has provided a formal basis for powerful automatic parallelization tools, since independence ensures that two goals may be evaluated in parallel while preserving correctness and eciency. We extend the concept of independence to constraint logic programs (CLP) and
prove that it also ensures the correctness and eciency of the parallel evaluation of independent goals. Independence for CLP languages is more complex than for logic programming as search space preservation is necessary but no longer sucient for ensuring correctness and eciency. Two
additional issues arise. The rst is that the cost of constraint solving may depend upon the order constraints are encountered. The second is the need to handle dynamic scheduling. We clarify these issues by proposing various types of search independence and constraint solver independence, and show how they can be combined to allow dierent optimizations, from parallelism to intelligent
backtracking. Sucient conditions for independence which can be evaluated \a priori" at run-time are also proposed. Our study also yields new insights into independence in logic programming languages. In particular, we show that search space preservation is not only a sucient but also a necessary condition for ensuring correctness and eciency of parallel execution
Unveiling Far-Infrared Counterparts of Bright Submillimeter Galaxies Using PACS Imaging
We present a search for Herschel-PACS counterparts of dust-obscured,
high-redshift objects previously selected at submillimeter and millimeter
wavelengths in the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey North field. We
detect 22 of 56 submillimeter galaxies (39%) with a SNR of >=3 at 100 micron
down to 3.0 mJy, and/or at 160 micron down to 5.7 mJy. The fraction of SMGs
seen at 160 micron is higher than that at 100 micron. About 50% of
radio-identified SMGs are associated with PACS sources. We find a trend between
the SCUBA/PACS flux ratio and redshift, suggesting that these flux ratios could
be used as a coarse redshift indicator. PACS undetected submm/mm selected
sources tend to lie at higher redshifts than the PACS detected ones. A total of
12 sources (21% of our SMG sample) remain unidentified and the fact that they
are blank fields at Herschel-PACS and VLA 20 cm wavelength may imply higher
redshifts for them than for the average SMG population (e.g., z>3-4). The
Herschel-PACS imaging of these dust-obscured starbursts at high-redshifts
suggests that their far-infrared spectral energy distributions have
significantly different shapes than template libraries of local infrared
galaxies.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. ApJ Letters in pres
Physiological, morphological, and mannanase production studies on Aspergillus niger uam-gs1 mutants
Mutant strains from Aspergillus niger UAM-GS1 were produced by UV
radiation to increase their hemicellulolytic and cellulolytic activity
production. The mutant strains showing more enzymatic activity were
those labelled GS1-S059 and GS1-S067. These strains also showed the
largest relationship between diameter of hydrolysis zone and colony
diameter. The mutant GS1-S067 showed a colony radial extension rate and
a biomass growth rate [g biomass/(cm2 h)], 1.17 times higher than that
achieved by strain UAM-GS1. The high invasive capacity makes this
mutant strain a promising alternative for its use in solid substrate
fermentation (SSF). The morphological properties of the two mutant
strains were evaluated by using scanning electron microscopy. The
diameter of the sporangium of the mutant strains GS1-S059 and GS1-S067
was significantly larger (P < 0.05) than that found for the parental
strain. The hypha length and diameter of the mutant strains
significantly changed (P < 0.05) compared to the parental strain. A
Pearson correlation analysis on hypha length, sporangium diameter, and
cellulase and xylanase activities indicated that there was a strong
relationship among these variables in relation to mannanase activity.
Mutant strains GS1-S059 and GS1-S067 significantly increased their
level of mannanase, xylanase and cellulase production, compared to the
parental strain, improving their potential industrial applications
Callus culture development of two varieties of Tagetes erecta and carotenoid production
Background: The properties of natural pigments, such as antioxidants,
functional,medical, and nutraceutical, have demonstrated the advantages
of these natural compounds over synthetic ones. Some products are
accepted only when they are pigmented with natural, food-quality
colorants: for example poultry products (manly marigold flower
extracts). Carotenoids such as \u3b2-carotene, \u3b2-criptoxanthin
and lutein are very attractive as natural food colorants due to their
antioxidant and pro-vitamin activities which provide additional value
to the target products. Marigold ( Tagetes erecta ) is an Asteraceous
ornamental plant native to Mexico, and it is also important as a
carotenoid source for industrial and medicinal purposes but nowadays
its production is destined mainly for ornamental purposes. Results:
Friable callus of T. erecta yellow flower (YF) and white flower (WF)
varieties was induced from leaf explants on Murashige and Skoog (MS)
medium supplemented with 9.0 \u3bcM 4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid
(2,4-D) and 8.8 \u3bcM benzyladenine (BA). Calluses developed from
both varieties were different in pigmentation. Extract characterization
from callus cultures was carried out by high-performance liquid
chromatography (HPLC). This analytical process detected several
carotenoids; the main pigments in extracts from YF callus were lutein
and zeaxanthin, whereas in the extracts of the WF callus the main
pigmentswere lutein, zeaxanthin, \u3b2-cryptoxanthin and
\u3b2-carotene. Callus cultures of T. erecta accumulated pigments even
after several rounds of subculture. Conclusions: WF callus appeared to
be a suitable candidate as a source of different carotenoids, and
tested varieties could represent an alternative for further studies
about in vitro pigment production
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