5,840 research outputs found
systemfit: A Package for Estimating Systems of Simultaneous Equations in R
Many statistical analyses (e.g., in econometrics, biostatistics and experimental design) are based on models containing systems of structurally related equations. The systemfit package provides the capability to estimate systems of linear equations within the R programming environment. For instance, this package can be used for "ordinary least squares" (OLS), "seemingly unrelated regression" (SUR), and the instrumental variable (IV) methods "two-stage least squares" (2SLS) and "three-stage least squares" (3SLS), where SUR and 3SLS estimations can optionally be iterated. Furthermore, the systemfit package provides tools for several statistical tests. It has been tested on a variety of datasets and its reliability is demonstrated.
Efficient electrocatalytic water oxidation at neutral and high pH by adventitious nickel at nanomolar concentrations
Electrolytic water oxidation using earth-abundant elements is a key challenge in the quest to develop cheap, large surface area arrays for solar-to-hydrogen conversion. There have been numerous studies in this area in recent years, but there remains an imperative to demonstrate that the current densities reported are indeed due to the species under consideration and not due to the presence of adventitious (yet possibly highly active) contaminants at low levels. Herein, we show that adventitious nickel at concentrations as low as 17 nM can act as a water oxidation catalyst in mildly basic aqueous solutions, achieving stable (tens of hours) current densities of 1 mA cm–2 at overpotentials as low as 540 mV at pH 9.2 and 400 mV at pH 13. This nickel was not added to the electrolysis baths deliberately, but it was found to be present in the electrolytes as an impurity by ICP-MS. The presence of nickel on anodes from extended-time bulk electrolysis experiments was confirmed by XPS. In showing that such low levels of nickel can perform water oxidation at overpotentials comparable to many recently reported water oxidation catalysts, this work serves to raise the burden of proof required of new materials in this field: contamination by adventitious metal ions at trace loadings must be excluded as a possible cause of any observed water oxidation activity
A differential genome-wide transcriptome analysis : impact of cellular copper on complex biological processes like aging and development
The regulation of cellular copper homeostasis is crucial in biology. Impairments lead to severe dysfunctions and are known to affect aging and development. Previously, a loss-of-function mutation in the gene encoding the copper-sensing and copper-regulated transcription factor GRISEA of the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina was reported to lead to cellular copper depletion and a pleiotropic phenotype with hypopigmentation of the mycelium and the ascospores, affected fertility and increased lifespan by approximately 60% when compared to the wild type. This phenotype is linked to a switch from a copper-dependent standard to an alternative respiration leading to both a reduced generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). We performed a genome-wide comparative transcriptome analysis of a wild-type strain and the copper-depleted grisea mutant. We unambiguously assigned 9,700 sequences of the transcriptome in both strains to the more than 10,600 predicted and annotated open reading frames of the P. anserina genome indicating 90% coverage of the transcriptome. 4,752 of the transcripts differed significantly in abundance with 1,156 transcripts differing at least 3-fold. Selected genes were investigated by qRT-PCR analyses. Apart from this general characterization we analyzed the data with special emphasis on molecular pathways related to the grisea mutation taking advantage of the available complete genomic sequence of P. anserina. This analysis verified but also corrected conclusions from earlier data obtained by single gene analysis, identified new candidates of factors as part of the cellular copper homeostasis system including target genes of transcription factor GRISEA, and provides a rich reference source of quantitative data for further in detail investigations. Overall, the present study demonstrates the importance of systems biology approaches also in cases were mutations in single genes are analyzed to explain the underlying mechanisms controlling complex biological processes like aging and development
Human CLPP reverts the longevity phenotype of a fungal ClpP deletion strain
Mitochondrial maintenance crucially depends on the quality control of proteins by various chaperones, proteases and repair enzymes. While most of the involved components have been studied in some detail, little is known on the biological role of the CLPXP protease complex located in the mitochondrial matrix. Here we show that deletion of PaClpP, encoding the CLP protease proteolytic subunit CLPP, leads to an unexpected healthy phenotype and increased lifespan of the fungal ageing model organism Podospora anserina. This phenotype can be reverted by expression of human ClpP in the fungal deletion background, demonstrating functional conservation of human and fungal CLPP. Our results show that the biological role of eukaryotic CLP proteases can be studied in an experimentally accessible model organism
Comparison of Global and Local Adaptive Coordinates for Density Functional Calculations
A globally-adaptive curvilinear coordinate formalism is shown to be easily
convertible to a class of curvilinear transformations locally optimized around
atom sites by a few parameters. Parameter transferability is established for a
demanding test case, and the results of the two methods are shown to be
comparable. Computational efficiencies realized in the local method are
discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure
fMRI Evidence for Modality-Specific Processing of Conceptual Knowledge on Six Modalities
Traditional theories assume that amodal representations, such as feature lists and semantic
networks, represent conceptual knowledge about the world. According to this view, the
sensory, motor, and introspective states that arise during perception and action are irrelevant
to representing knowledge. Instead the conceptual system lies outside modality-specific
systems and operates according to different principles. Increasingly, however, researchers
report that modality-specific systems become active during purely conceptual tasks,
suggesting that these systems play central roles in representing knowledge (for a review, see
Martin, 2001, Handbook of Functional Neuroimaging of Cognition). In particular,
researchers report that the visual system becomes active while processing visual properties,
and that the motor system becomes active while processing action properties. The present
study corroborates and extends these findings. During fMRI, subjects verified whether or not
properties could potentially be true of concepts (e.g., BLENDER-loud). Subjects received
only linguistic stimuli, and nothing was said about using imagery. Highly related false
properties were used on false trials to block word association strategies (e.g., BUFFALOwinged).
To assess the full extent of the modality-specific hypothesis, properties were
verified on each of six modalities. Examples include GEMSTONE-glittering (vision),
BLENDER-loud (audition), FAUCET-turned (motor), MARBLE-cool (touch),
CUCUMBER-bland (taste), and SOAP-perfumed (smell). Neural activity during property
verification was compared to a lexical decision baseline. For all six sets of the modalityspecific
properties, significant activation was observed in the respective neural system.
Finding modality-specific processing across six modalities contributes to the growing
conclusion that knowledge is grounded in modality-specific systems of the brain
Improved preparation of 9-octadecenes
Organic synthesis of cis-9 and trans-9 octadecenes from oleyl alcohol and elaidyl alcohol, respectively, by conversion to tosylates followed by lithium aluminum hydride reductio
- …