621 research outputs found

    Multiple Reaction Monitoring Profiling (MRM-Profiling) of Lipids To Distinguish Strain-Level Differences in Microbial Resistance in Escherichia coli

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    The worldwide increase in antimicrobial resistance is due to antibiotic overuse in agriculture and overprescription in medicine. For appropriate and timely patient support, faster diagnosis of antimicrobial resistance is required. Current methods for bacterial identification rely on genomics and proteomics and use comparisons with databases of known strains, but the diagnostic value of metabolites and lipids has not been explored significantly. Standard mass spectrometry/chromatography methods involve multiple dilutions during sample preparation and separation. To increase the amount of chemical information acquired and the speed of analysis of lipids, multiple reaction monitoring profiling (MRM-Profiling) has been applied. The MRM-Profiling workflow includes a discovery stage and a screening stage. The discovery stage employs precursor (PREC) ion and neutral loss (NL) scans to screen representative pooled samples for functional groups associated with particular lipid classes. The information from the first stage is organized in precursor/product ion pairs, or MRMs, and the screening stage rapidly interrogates individual samples for these MRMs. In this study, we performed MRM-Profiling of lipid extracts from four different strains of Escherichia coli cultured with amoxicillin or amoxicillin/clavulanate, a β-lactam and β-lactamase inhibitor, respectively. t tests, analysis of variance and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to determine the significance of each MRM. Principal component analysis was applied to distinguish different strains cultured under conditions that allowed or disallowed development of bacterial resistance. The results demonstrate that MRM-Profiling distinguishes the lipid profiles of resistant and nonresistant E. coli strains

    On the gravitational production of superheavy dark matter

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    The dark matter in the universe can be in the form of a superheavy matter species (WIMPZILLA). Several mechanisms have been proposed for the production of WIMPZILLA particles during or immediately following the inflationary epoch. Perhaps the most attractive mechanism is through gravitational particle production, where particles are produced simply as a result of the expansion of the universe. In this paper we present a detailed numerical calculation of WIMPZILLA gravitational production in hybrid-inflation models and natural-inflation models. Generalizing these findings, we also explore the dependence of the gravitational production mechanism on various models of inflation. We show that superheavy dark matter production seems to be robust, with Omega_X h^2 ~ (M_X / (10^11 GeV))^2 (T_RH / (10^9 GeV)), so long as M_X < H_I, where M_X is the WIMPZILLA mass, T_RH is the reheat temperature, and H_I is the expansion rate of the universe during inflation.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures; LaTeX; submitted to Physical Review D; minor typographical error correcte

    Whiteness, Blackness and Settlement: Leisure and the Integration of New Migrants

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    At times of economic uncertainty the position of new migrants is subject to ever closer scrutiny. While the main focus of attention tends to be on the world of employment the research on which this paper is based started from the proposition that leisure and sport spaces can support processes of social inclusion yet may also serve to exclude certain groups. As such, these spaces may be seen as contested and racialised places that shape behaviour. The paper draws on interviews with White migrants from Poland and Black migrants from Africa to examine the normalising of whiteness. We use this paper not just to explore how leisure and sport spaces are encoded by new migrants, but how struggles over those spaces and the use of social and cultural capital are racialised

    Reform, Justice, and Sovereignty: A Food Systems Agenda for Environmental Communication

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    Food ecologies and economies are vital to the survival of communities, non-human species, and our planet. While environmental communication scholars have legitimated food as a topic of inquiry, the entangled ecological, cultural, economic, racial, colonial, and alimentary relations that sustain food systems demand greater attention. In this essay, we review literature within and beyond environmental communication, charting the landscape of critical food work in our field. We then illustrate how environmental justice commitments can invigorate interdisciplinary food systems-focused communication scholarship articulating issues of, and critical responses to, injustice and inequity across the food chain. We stake an agenda for food systems communication by mapping three orientations—food system reform, justice, and sovereignty—that can assist in our critical engagements with and interventions into the food system. Ultimately, we entreat environmental communication scholars to attend to the bends, textures, and confluences of these orientations so that we may deepen our future food-related inquiries
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