851 research outputs found

    The benefits system in Wales

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    This evidence supports the call for further devolution of powers in Wales, especially those that increase the ability for Wales to tackle poverty. Doing so, our work here evidence that the 10 years of austerity following the election of the Coalition Government of 2010 opened a chasm for rising socio-inequalities for Wales. This chasm has ensured that low-income people and communities in Wales were hit hard because of Covid-19 and during lockdown.In this evidence we call for further devolution of powers that will enable the Welsh Government to provide equitable financial stability for the people of Wales. Our evidence draws on our own primary research and is supported by a wealth of secondary research from academics, activists and civil society organisations who work on the frontline in supporting those in needs across Wales. This evidence discusses the current levels of poverty inWales and highlights the rising incidence of food bank use as a key identifier. Moreover, the evidence also acknowledges the potential economic impact in Wales as the pandemic dust settles and discusses the attainment (and gaps) of Local Assistance Schemes, furlough, taxation, UC, and the recent £20 uplift. Finally, we end with a significant discussion of evidence surrounding the proposal for a trial of a Universal Basic Income in Wales and discuss the link between this and the Wellbeing of Future Generations in Wales

    The solid-state photo-CIDNP effect

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    The solid-state photo-CIDNP effect is the occurrence of a non-Boltzmann nuclear spin polarization in rigid samples upon illumination. For solid-state NMR, which can detect this enhanced nuclear polarization as a strong modification of signal intensity, the effect allows for new classes of experiments. Currently, the photo- and spin-chemical machinery of various RCs is studied by photo-CIDNP MAS NMR in detail. Until now, the effect has only been observed at high magnetic fields with 13C and 15N MAS NMR and in natural photosynthetic RC preparations in which blocking of the acceptor leads to cyclic electron transfer. In terms of irreversible thermodynamics, the high-order spin structure of the initial radical pair can be considered as a transient order phenomenon emerging under non-equilibrium conditions and as a first manifestation of order in the photosynthetic process. The solid-state photo-CIDNP effect appears to be an intrinsic property of natural RCs. The conditions of its occurrence seem to be conserved in evolution. The effect may be based on the same fundamental principles as the highly optimized electron transfer. Hence, the effect may allow for guiding artificial photosynthesis

    Morphospecies and Taxonomic Species Comparison for Hymenoptera

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    The use of morphospecies as surrogates for taxonomic species has been proposed as an alternative to overcome the identification difficulties associated with many invertebrate studies, such as biodiversity surveys. Hymenoptera specimens were collected by beating and pitfall traps, and were separated into morphospecies by a non-specialist with no prior training, and later identified by an expert taxonomist. The number of Hymenoptera morphospecies and taxonomic species was 37 and 42, respectively, representing an underestimation error of 12%. Different families presented varying levels of difficulty, and although the species estimation provided by the use of morphospecies initially appeared to have a relatively minor error rate, this was actually an artefact. Splitting and lumping errors balanced each other out, wrongly suggesting that morphospecies were reasonable surrogates for taxonomic species in the Hymenoptera. The use of morphospecies should be adopted only for selected target groups, which have been assessed as reliable surrogates for taxonomic species beforehand, and some prior training to the non-specialist is likely to be of primary importance

    Arginine deficiency augments inflammatory mediator production by airway epithelial cells in vitro

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Previously we showed that reduced availability of the essential amino acid tryptophan per se attenuates post-transcriptional control of interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8 leading to hyperresponsive production of these inflammatory mediators by airway epithelial cells. Availability of the non-essential amino acid arginine in the inflamed airway mucosa of patients with asthma is reduced markedly, but it is not known whether this can also lead to an exaggerated production of IL-6 and IL-8.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>IL-6 and IL-8 were determined by ELISA in culture supernatants of NCI-H292 airway epithelial-like cells and normal bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells that were exposed to TNF-α, LPS or no stimulus, in medium with or without arginine. Arginine deficiency may also result from exposure to poly-L-arginine or major basic protein (MBP), which can block arginine uptake. Epithelial cells were exposed to these polycationic proteins and L-<sup>14</sup>C-arginine uptake was assessed as well as IL-6 and IL-8 production. To determine the mode of action, IL-6 and IL-8 mRNA profiles over time were assessed as were gene transcription and post-transcriptional mRNA degradation.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>For both NCI-H292 and NHBE cells, low arginine concentrations enhanced basal epithelial IL-6 and IL-8 production and synergized with TNF-α-induced IL-6 and IL-8 production. Poly-L-arginine enhanced the stimulus-induced IL-6 and IL-8 production, however, blocking arginine uptake and the enhanced IL-6 and IL-8 production appeared unrelated. The exaggerated IL-6 and IL-8 production due to arginine deficiency and to poly-L-arginine depend on a post-transcriptional and a transcriptional process, respectively.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We conclude that both reduced arginine availability per se and the presence of polycationic proteins may promote airway inflammation by enhanced pro-inflammatory mediator production in airway epithelial cells, but due to distinct mechanisms.</p

    Quantum physics meets biology

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    Quantum physics and biology have long been regarded as unrelated disciplines, describing nature at the inanimate microlevel on the one hand and living species on the other hand. Over the last decades the life sciences have succeeded in providing ever more and refined explanations of macroscopic phenomena that were based on an improved understanding of molecular structures and mechanisms. Simultaneously, quantum physics, originally rooted in a world view of quantum coherences, entanglement and other non-classical effects, has been heading towards systems of increasing complexity. The present perspective article shall serve as a pedestrian guide to the growing interconnections between the two fields. We recapitulate the generic and sometimes unintuitive characteristics of quantum physics and point to a number of applications in the life sciences. We discuss our criteria for a future quantum biology, its current status, recent experimental progress and also the restrictions that nature imposes on bold extrapolations of quantum theory to macroscopic phenomena.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures, Perspective article for the HFSP Journa

    Managing lifestyle change to reduce coronary risk: a synthesis of qualitative research on peoples’ experiences

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    Background Coronary heart disease is an incurable condition. The only approach known to slow its progression is healthy lifestyle change and concordance with cardio-protective medicines. Few people fully succeed in these daily activities so potential health improvements are not fully realised. Little is known about peoples’ experiences of managing lifestyle change. The aim of this study was to synthesise qualitative research to explain how participants make lifestyle change after a cardiac event and explore this within the wider illness experience. Methods A qualitative synthesis was conducted drawing upon the principles of meta-ethnography. Qualitative studies were identified through a systematic search of 7 databases using explicit criteria. Key concepts were identified and translated across studies. Findings were discussed and diagrammed during a series of audiotaped meetings. Results The final synthesis is grounded in findings from 27 studies, with over 500 participants (56% male) across 8 countries. All participants experienced a change in their self-identity from what was ‘familiar’ to ‘unfamiliar’. The transition process involved ‘finding new limits and a life worth living’ , ‘finding support for self’ and ‘finding a new normal’. Analyses of these concepts led to the generation of a third order construct, namely an ongoing process of ‘reassessing past, present and future lives’ as participants considered their changed identity. Participants experienced a strong urge to get back to ‘normal’. Support from family and friends could enable or constrain life change and lifestyle changes. Lifestyle change was but one small part of a wider ‘life’ change that occurred. Conclusions The final synthesis presents an interpretation, not evident in the primary studies, of a person-centred model to explain how lifestyle change is situated within ‘wider’ life changes. The magnitude of individual responses to a changed health status varied. Participants experienced distress as their notion of self identity shifted and emotions that reflected the various stages of the grief process were evident in participants’ accounts. The process of self-managing lifestyle took place through experiential learning; the level of engagement with lifestyle change reflected an individual’s unique view of the balance needed to manage ‘realistic change’ whilst leading to a life that was perceived as ‘worth living’. Findings highlight the importance of providing person centred care that aligns with both psychological and physical dimensions of recovery which are inextricably linked

    Decreased systemic bioavailability of L-arginine in patients with cystic fibrosis

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    BACKGROUND: L-arginine is the common substrate for nitric oxide synthases and arginases. Increased arginase levels in the blood of patients with cystic fibrosis may result in L-arginine deficiency and thereby contribute to low airway nitric oxide formation and impaired pulmonary function. METHODS: Plasma amino acid and arginase levels were studied in ten patients with cystic fibrosis before and after 14 days of antibiotic treatment for pulmonary exacerbation. Patients were compared to ten healthy non-smoking controls. RESULTS: Systemic arginase levels measured by ELISA were significantly increased in cystic fibrosis with exacerbation compared to controls (17.3 ± 12.0 vs. 4.3 ± 3.4 ng/ml, p < 0.02). Arginase levels normalized with antibiotic treatment. Plasma L-arginine was significantly reduced before (p < 0.05) but not after treatment. In contrast, L-ornithine, proline, and glutamic acid, all downstream products of arginase activity, were normal before, but significantly increased after antibiotic therapy. Bioavailability of L-arginine was significantly reduced in cystic fibrosis before and after exacerbation (p < 0.05, respectively). CONCLUSION: These observations provide further evidence for a disturbed balance between the L-arginine metabolic pathways in cystic fibrosis

    Spin chemistry investigation of peculiarities of photoinduced electron transfer in donor-acceptor linked system

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    Photoinduced intramolecular electron transfer in linked systems, (R,S)- and (S,S)-naproxen-N-methylpyrrolidine dyads, has been studied by means of spin chemistry methods [magnetic field effect and chemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (CIDNP)]. The relative yield of the triplet state of the dyads in different magnetic field has been measured, and dependences of the high-field CIDNP of the N-methylpyrrolidine fragment on solvent polarity have been investigated. However, both (S,S)- and (R,S)-enantiomers demonstrate almost identical CIDNP effects for the entire range of polarity. It has been demonstrated that the main peculiarities of photoprocesses in this linked system are connected with the participation of singlet exciplex alongside with photoinduced intramolecular electron transfer in chromophore excited state quenching.This work was supported by the grants 08-03-00372 and 11-03-01104 of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research, and the grant of Priority Programs of the Russian Academy of Sciences, nr. 5.1.5.Magin, I.; Polyakov, N.; Khramtsova, E.; Kruppa, A.; Stepanov, A.; Purtov, P.; Leshina, T.... (2011). Spin chemistry investigation of peculiarities of photoinduced electron transfer in donor-acceptor linked system. Applied Magnetic Resonance. 41(2-4):205-220. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00723-011-0288-3S205220412-4J.S. Park, E. Karnas, K. Ohkubo, P. Chen, K.M. Kadish, S. Fukuzumi, C.W. Bielawski, T.W. Hudnall, V.M. Lynch, J.L. Sessler, Science 329, 1324–1327 (2010)S.Y. Reece, D.G. Nocera, Annu. Rev. Biochem. 78, 673–699 (2009)M.S. Afanasyeva, M.B. Taraban, P.A. Purtov, T.V. Leshina, C.B. Grissom, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 128, 8651–8658 (2006)M.A. Fox, M. Chanon, in Photoinduced Electron Transfer. C: Photoinduced Electron Transfer Reactions: Organic Substrates (Elsevier, New York, 1988), p. 754P.J. Hayball, R.L. Nation, F. Bochner, Chirality 4, 484–487 (1992)N. Suesa, M.F. Fernandez, M. Gutierrez, M.J. Rufat, E. Rotllan, L. Calvo, D. Mauleon, G. Carganico, Chirality 5, 589–595 (1993)A.M. Evans, J. Clin. Pharmacol. 36, 7–15 (1996)Y. Inoue, T. Wada, S. Asaoka, H. Sato, J.-P. Pete, Chem Commun. 4, 251–259 (2000)T. Yorozu, K. Hayashi, M. Irie, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103, 5480–5548 (1981)N.J. Turro, in Modern Molecular Photochemistry (Benjamin/Cummings, San Francisco, 1978)K.M. Salikhov, Y.N. Molin, R.Z. Sagdeev, A.L. Buchachenko, in Spin Polarization and Magnetic Field Effects in Radical Reactions (Akademiai Kiado, Budapest, 1984), p. 419E.A. Weiss, M.A. Ratner, M.R. Wasielewski, J. Phys. Chem. A 107, 3639–3647 (2003)A.S. Lukas, P.J. Bushard, E.A. Weiss, M.R. Wasielewski, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125, 3921–3930 (2003)R. Nakagaki, K. Mutai, M. Hiramatsu, H. Tukada, S. Nakakura, Can. J. Chem. 66, 1989–1996 (1988)M.C. Jim′enez, U. Pischel, M.A. Miranda, J. Photochem. Photobiol. C Photochem. Rev. 8, 128–142 (2007)S. Abad, U. Pischel, M.A. Miranda, Photochem. Photobiol. Sci. 4, 69–74 (2005)U. Pischel, S. Abad, L.R. Domingo, F. Bosca, M.A. Miranda, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 42, 2531–2534 (2003)G.L. Closs, R.J. Miller, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 101, 1639–1641 (1979)G.L. Closs, R.J. Miller, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103, 3586–3588 (1981)M. Goez, Chem. Phys. Lett. 188, 451–456 (1992)I.F. Molokov, Y.P. Tsentalovich, A.V. Yurkovskaya, R.Z. Sagdeev, J. Photochem. Photobiol. A 110, 159–165 (1997)U. Pischel, S. Abad, M.A. Miranda, Chem. Commun. 9, 1088–1089 (2003)H. Hayashi, S. Nagakura, Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 57, 322–328 (1984)Y. Sakaguchi, H. Hayashi, S. Nagakura, Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 53, 39–42 (1980)H. Yonemura, H. Nakamura, T. Matsuo, Chem. Phys. Lett. 155, 157–161 (1989)N. Hata, M. Hokawa, Chem. Lett. 10, 507–510 (1981)M. Shiotani, L. Sjoeqvist, A. Lund, S. Lunell, L. Eriksson, M.B. Huang, J. Phys. Chem. 94, 8081–8090 (1990)E. Schaffner, H. Fischer, J. Phys. Chem. 100, 1657–1665 (1996)Y. Mori, Y. Sakaguchi, H. Hayashi, Chem. Phys. Lett. 286, 446–451 (1998)I.M. Magin, A.I. Kruppa, P.A. Purtov, Chem. Phys. 365, 80–84 (2009)K.K. Barnes, Electrochemical Reactions in Nonaqueous Systems (M. Dekker, New York, 1970), p. 560J. Bargon, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 99, 8350–8351 (1977)M. Goez, I. Frisch, J. Phys. Chem. A 106, 8079–8084 (2002)A.K. Chibisov, Russ. Chem. Rev. 50, 615–629 (1981)J. Goodman, K. Peters, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107, 1441–1442 (1985)H. Cao, Y. Fujiwara, T. Haino, Y. Fukazawa, C.-H. Tung, Y. Tanimoto, Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 69, 2801–2813 (1996)P.A. Purtov, A.B. Doktorov, Chem. Phys. 178, 47–65 (1993)A.I. Kruppa, O.I. Mikhailovskaya, T.V. Leshina, Chem. Phys. Lett. 147, 65–71 (1988)M.E. Michel-Beyerle, R. Haberkorn, W. Bube, E. Steffens, H. Schröder, H.J. Neusser, E.W. Schlag, H. Seidlitz, Chem. Phys. 17, 139–145 (1976)K. Schulten, H. Staerk, A. Weller, H.-J. Werner, B. Nickel, Z. Phys. Chem. 101, 371–390 (1976)K. Gnadig, K.B. Eisenthal, Chem. Phys. Lett. 46, 339–342 (1977)T. Nishimura, N. Nakashima, N. Mataga, Chem. Phys. Lett. 46, 334–338 (1977)M.G. Kuzmin, I.V. Soboleva, E.V. Dolotova, D.N. Dogadkin, High Eng. Chem. 39, 86–96 (2005
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