1,432 research outputs found
The Internet and Democratic Debate
Presents findings from a survey conducted in June 2004. Looks at the role of the Internet in providing a wider awareness of political views during the 2004 campaign season
Reinsurance in State Health Reform
Based on the experiences of three states, formal modeling, quantitative estimates, and qualitative assessments, explores the impact of and issues involved in publicly funding reinsurance for insurers as a way to expand or maintain private coverage
The Urban Institute's Microsimulation Model for Reinsurance: Model Construction and State-Specific Application
Describes the Urban Institute's model for simulating the effects of using state-funded reinsurance to subsidize primary insurance premiums. Details the process of building state-specific baseline databases and modeling reinsurance policy options
Modeling of solvent flow effects in enzyme catalysis under physiological conditions
A stochastic model for the dynamics of enzymatic catalysis in explicit,
effective solvents under physiological conditions is presented.
Analytically-computed first passage time densities of a diffusing particle in a
spherical shell with absorbing boundaries are combined with densities obtained
from explicit simulation to obtain the overall probability density for the
total reaction cycle time of the enzymatic system. The method is used to
investigate the catalytic transfer of a phosphoryl group in a phosphoglycerate
kinase-ADP-bis phosphoglycerate system, one of the steps of glycolysis. The
direct simulation of the enzyme-substrate binding and reaction is carried out
using an elastic network model for the protein, and the solvent motions are
described by multiparticle collision dynamics, which incorporates hydrodynamic
flow effects. Systems where solvent-enzyme coupling occurs through explicit
intermolecular interactions, as well as systems where this coupling is taken
into account by including the protein and substrate in the multiparticle
collision step, are investigated and compared with simulations where
hydrodynamic coupling is absent. It is demonstrated that the flow of solvent
particles around the enzyme facilitates the large-scale hinge motion of the
enzyme with bound substrates, and has a significant impact on the shape of the
probability densities and average time scales of substrate binding for
substrates near the enzyme, the closure of the enzyme after binding, and the
overall time of completion of the cycle.Comment: 15 pages in double column forma
Conserve the eco-evolutionary dynamic, not the subspecies:Phenological divergence and gene flow between temporal cohorts of Euphilotes ancilla endemic to southern Nevada
Euphilotes ancilla purpura and cryptica (Lycaenidae), butterflies endemic to the Spring Mountains (Clark Co., Nevada), have been described as two univoltine, temporally isolated, sympatric taxa that utilize different early- and late-flowering larval host plant varieties (Eriogonum umbellatum). However, our results from field and laboratory indicate that this is not the case. The subspecies overlap in timing of adult reproductive flight (compilation of field records 1977 to 2018) and laboratory emergence of adults from early-season, non-diapause pupae indicate butterflies are not univoltine. Genetic samples collected from putative E. a. purpura (Early cohort) and cryptica (Late cohort) subpopulations show no evidence of genetic structure indicative of allochronic isolation in phylogenies of 26 mitochondrial DNA COI haplotypes and 18 nuclear ITS1 alleles. Analysis of molecular variance revealed 89% of mitochondrial DNA variation structured within and among subpopulations, with only 11% between the purportedly isolated subspecies. Analysis of isolation and migration indicated gene flow from the Early to Late cohort was 3 × greater than in the opposite direction. We conclude that, rather than two separate subspecies, Euphilotes ancilla exists in a network of partially interconnected subpopulations extending from 1750 to 3000 m across much of the Spring Mountains. Gene flow is related to the timing of adult flight and host plant flowering, contributing to the genetic variation in phenology necessary for evolutionary tracking of shifting flowering periods of larval host plants. Maintenance of connectivity and gene flow across the Spring Mountains is therefore essential for population persistence of both cohorts in the face of environmental change
NDRG2 Expression Correlates with Neurofibrillary Tangles and Microglial Pathology in the Ageing Brain.
Astrocytes play a major role in the pathogenesis of a range of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease (AD), undergoing dramatic morphological and molecular changes that can cause potentially both beneficial and detrimental effects. They comprise a heterogeneous population, requiring a panel of specific phenotype markers to identify astrocyte subtypes, changes in function and their relation to pathology. This study aimed to characterise expression of the astrocyte marker N-myc downstream regulated gene 2 (NDRG2) in the ageing brain, investigate the relationship between NDRG2 and a panel of astrocyte markers, and relate NDRG2 expression to pathology. NDRG2 specifically immunolabelled the cell body and radiating processes of astrocytes in the temporal cortex of the Cognitive Function and Ageing Study (CFAS) neuropathology cohort. Expression of NDRG2 did not correlate with other astrocyte markers, including glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), excitatory amino acid transporter 2 (EAAT2) and glutamine synthetase (GS). NDRG2 showed a relationship to AT8+ neurofibrillary tangles (p = 0.001) and CD68+ microglia (p = 0.047), but not β-amyloid plaques or astrocyte nuclear γH2AX immunoreactivity, a marker of DNA damage response. These findings provide new insight into the astrocyte response to pathology in the ageing brain, and suggest NDRG2 may be a potential target to modulate this response
Ursinus College Alumni Journal, March 1956
President\u27s page • Sigma Rho scholarship fund grows • Three Ursinus alumni honored at Founders\u27 Day ceremony • 191,400 to Ursinus College • Enrollment increases in Evening School • Notes from the Dean\u27s office • Ursinus presentation of Messiah recorded • From the Office of Admissions • Faculty corner • Philadelphia alumni to meet at Casa Conti • Plan now to return Alumni Day, June 2 • Spring banquet planned by Lehigh Valley • May 2nd, date for New York alumni • South Jersey alumni plan dinner-dance • Woman\u27s Club plans spring activities • Booster committee holds banquet for athletes • Ditter, Warden, Tredinnick, Assistant District Attorneys • Alumni invited to Varsity Club dinner • Dr. Gilbert Bayne \u2743 speaks to science societies • Isaac Norris of Norristown, PA • Alumni elections • Schoolmen\u27s Week teachers luncheon • Washington area alumni reorganize • Report of the loyalty fund campaign • Sports review: Football season 1955; Dave Burger named to All-American soccer team; Soccer season 1955; Wrestling; 1955 alumnae hockey; Heller and Dawkins excel in women\u27s hockey • News about ourselves • Births • Weddings • Necrologyhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1055/thumbnail.jp
Role of the interval from completion of neoadjuvant therapy to surgery in postoperative morbidity in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer
Increasing the interval from completion of neoadjuvant therapy to surgery beyond 8 weeks is associated with increased response of rectal cancer to neoadjuvant therapy. However, reports are conflicting on whether extending the time to surgery is associated with increased perioperative morbidity. Patients who presented with a tumor within 15 cm of the anal verge in 2009-2015 were grouped according to the interval between completion of neoadjuvant therapy and surgery: < 8 weeks, 8-12 weeks, and 12-16 weeks. Among 607 patients, the surgery was performed at < 8 weeks in 317 patients, 8-12 weeks in 229 patients, and 12-16 weeks in 61 patients. Patients who underwent surgery at 8-12 weeks and patients who underwent surgery at < 8 weeks had comparable rates of complications (37% and 44%, respectively). Univariable analysis identified male sex, earlier date of diagnosis, tumor location within 5 cm of the anal verge, open operative approach, abdominoperineal resection, and use of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy alone to be associated with higher rates of complications. In multivariable analysis, male sex, tumor location within 5 cm of the anal verge, open operative approach, and neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy administered alone were independently associated with the presence of a complication. The interval between neoadjuvant therapy and surgery was not an independent predictor of postoperative complications. Delaying surgery beyond 8 weeks from completion of neoadjuvant therapy does not appear to increase surgical morbidity in rectal cancer patients
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