2,932 research outputs found

    A taxonomic study of the caddisfly Oxyethira falcata Morton, 1893 (Trichoptera: Hydroptilidae) using genital morphology and DNA barcoding

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    Taxonomists have had problems with the hydroptilid caddisfly, Oxyethira falcate Morton, in the past. Four described taxa have been synonymized with O. falcate due to considerable intra-specific morphological variation of the male genitalia, and due to misinterpretation of some of the structures of these. In the present study specimens resembling morphologically O. boreella Svensson & Tjeder, one of the synonymized taxa, were compared with the true O. falcata using DNA barcoding and studying the male genitalia. Further, a molecular examination of all the Fennoscandian Oxyethira species were carried out, including the rare O. klingstedti Nybom, O. tamperensis Malicky, and O. ecornuta Morton. The results support keeping O. boreella as a synonym of O. falcata. In addition, the DNA analyses showed the presence of monophyletic groups for all of the studied Oxyethira species

    Molecular epidemiology of Plasmodium vivax in Latin America: polymorphism and evolutionary relationships of the circumsporozoite gene

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    BACKGROUND: The origins and dispersal of Plasmodium vivax to its current worldwide distribution remains controversial. Although progress on P. vivax genetics and genomics has been achieved worldwide, information concerning New World parasites remains fragmented and largely incomplete. More information on the genetic diversity in Latin America (LA) is needed to better explain current patterns of parasite dispersion and evolution. METHODS: Plasmodium vivax circumsporozoite protein gene polymorphism was investigated using polymerase chain reaction amplification and restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP), and Sanger sequencing in isolates from the Pacific Ocean coast of Mexico, Nicaragua, and Peru. In conjunction with worldwide sequences retrieved from the Genbank, mismatch distribution analysis of central repeat region (CRR), frequency estimation of unique repeat types and phylogenetic analysis of the 3′ terminal region, were performed to obtain an integrative view of the genetic relationships between regional and worldwide isolates. RESULTS: Four RFLP subtypes, vk210a, b, c and d were identified in Southern Mexico and three subtypes vk210a, e and f in Nicaragua. The nucleotide sequences showed that Mexican vk210a and all Nicaraguan isolates were similar to other American parasites. In contrast, vk210b, c and d were less frequent, had a domain ANKKAEDA in their carboxyl end and clustered with Asian isolates. All vk247 isolates from Mexico and Peru had identical RFLP pattern. Their nucleotide sequences showed two copies of GGQAAGGNAANKKAGDAGA at the carboxyl end. Differences in mismatch distribution parameters of the CRR separate vk247 from most vk210 isolates. While vk247 isolates display a homogeneous pattern with no geographical clustering, vk210 isolates display a heterogeneous geographically clustered pattern which clearly separates LA from non-American isolates, except vk210b, c and d from Southern Mexico. CONCLUSIONS: The presence of vk210a in Mexico and vk210e, f and g in Nicaragua are consistent with other previously reported LA isolates and reflect their circulation throughout the continent. The vk210b, c and d are novel genotypes in LA. Their genetic relationships and low variability within these vk210 and/or within the vk247 parasites in Southern Mexico suggest its recent introduction and/or recent expansion to this region. The global analysis of P. vivax csp suggests this parasite introduction to the region and likely LA by different independent events

    SFCOMPO 2.0 – A relational database of spent fuel isotopic measurements, reactor operational histories, and design data

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    SFCOMPO-2.0 is a database of experimental isotopic concentrations measured in destructive radiochemical analysis of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) samples. The database includes corresponding design description of the fuel rods and assemblies, relevant operating conditions and characteristics of the host reactors necessary for modelling and simulation. Aimed at establishing a thorough, reliable, and publicly available resource for code and data validation of safety-related applications, SFCOMPO-2.0 is developed and maintained by the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA). The SFCOMPO-2.0 database is a Java application which is downloadable from the NEA website

    Bio-precipitation of uranium by two bacterial isolates recovered from extreme environments as estimated by potentiometric titration, TEM and X-ray absorption spectroscopic analyses

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    This is the post-print version of the final paper published in Journal of Hazardous Materials. The published article is available from the link below. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. Copyright @ 2011 Elsevier B.V.This work describes the mechanisms of uranium biomineralization at acidic conditions by Bacillus sphaericus JG-7B and Sphingomonas sp. S15-S1 both recovered from extreme environments. The U–bacterial interaction experiments were performed at low pH values (2.0–4.5) where the uranium aqueous speciation is dominated by highly mobile uranyl ions. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) showed that the cells of the studied strains precipitated uranium at pH 3.0 and 4.5 as a uranium phosphate mineral phase belonging to the meta-autunite group. Transmission electron microscopic (TEM) analyses showed strain-specific localization of the uranium precipitates. In the case of B. sphaericus JG-7B, the U(VI) precipitate was bound to the cell wall. Whereas for Sphingomonas sp. S15-S1, the U(VI) precipitates were observed both on the cell surface and intracellularly. The observed U(VI) biomineralization was associated with the activity of indigenous acid phosphatase detected at these pH values in the absence of an organic phosphate substrate. The biomineralization of uranium was not observed at pH 2.0, and U(VI) formed complexes with organophosphate ligands from the cells. This study increases the number of bacterial strains that have been demonstrated to precipitate uranium phosphates at acidic conditions via the activity of acid phosphatase

    Solucionando necesidades específicas con nethserver

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    En el presente artículo se implementa la utilización del sistema GNU/Linux, mediante la utilización de la herramienta Nethserver 7.9.200. En donde se tomó como base principal la maquina VirtualBox, la cual junto con la herramienta Nethserver nos sirvió para la configuración y administración del funcionamiento de los servicios de: DHCP server, DNS server, controlador de dominio, servidor proxy, firewall, FTP server, Impresoras compartidas y VPN.In this article, the use of the GNU/Linux system is implemented, through the use of the Nethserver 7.9.200 tool. Where the Virtualbox machine was taken as the main base, which together with the Nethserver tool served us for the configuration and administration of the operation of the services of: DHCP server, DNS server, domain controller, proxy server, firewall, FTP server, Shared printers and VPN

    Generalized exponential function and discrete growth models

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    Here we show that a particular one-parameter generalization of the exponential function is suitable to unify most of the popular one-species discrete population dynamics models into a simple formula. A physical interpretation is given to this new introduced parameter in the context of the continuous Richards model, which remains valid for the discrete case. From the discretization of the continuous Richards' model (generalization of the Gompertz and Verhuslt models), one obtains a generalized logistic map and we briefly study its properties. Notice, however that the physical interpretation for the introduced parameter persists valid for the discrete case. Next, we generalize the (scramble competition) θ\theta-Ricker discrete model and analytically calculate the fixed points as well as their stability. In contrast to previous generalizations, from the generalized θ\theta-Ricker model one is able to retrieve either scramble or contest models.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures and 2 table

    Smart Solar Micro-exchangers for Sustainable Mobility of University Camps

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    Publicado el resumen en: https://www.wmcaus.org/files/WMCAUS2020_Book.pdf. Pendiente de publicación de las contribuciones en IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering.A significant number of universities have several campuses located in urban or rural settings, or with scattered university buildings that require the use of means of transportation. This implies the mobility and potential displacement of a large community of students, professors and researchers. The use of electric bicycles (e-bikes) is an intermediate alternative between the bicycle and electric cars. It can be an important stimulus for the promotion of the decarbonisation of the University Campus, avoiding the traffic congestion and reducing space requirements for parking. This paper presents the smart solar micro-exchanger model managed through a sustainable mobility web platform, applied to the case study of the University of Malaga (Spain). It is a solar charging station for e-bike, whose design is based on the principles of solar architecture (providing great security to e-bike). It managed by a web platform and app that allows the user to make reservations and learn about the savings in CO2 emissions. The system allows performing an aerobic sports activity without sweating problems when you reach the job. The platform also incorporates a database of quiet and safe routes for e-bike users.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tec

    CSA06 Computing, Software and Analysis challenge at the Spanish Tier-1 and Tier-2 sites

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    This note describes the participation of the Spanish centres PIC, CIEMAT and IFCA as Tier-1 and Tier-2 sites in the CMS CSA06 Computing, Software and Analysis challenge. A number of the facilities, services and workflows have been demonstrated at the 2008 25% scale. Very valuable experience has been gained running the complex computing system under realistic conditions at a significant scale. The focus of this note is on presenting achieved results, operational experience and lessons learnt during the challenge

    Basal oxidation of conserved cysteines modulates cardiac titin stiffness and dynamics

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    Titin, as the main protein responsible for the passive stiffness of the sarcomere, plays a key role in diastolic function and is a determinant factor in the etiology of heart disease. Titin stiffness depends on unfolding and folding transitions of immunoglobulin-like (Ig) domains of the I-band, and recent studies have shown that oxidative modifications of cryptic cysteines belonging to these Ig domains modulate their mechanical properties in vitro. However, the relevance of this mode of titin mechanical modulation in vivo remains largely unknown. Here, we describe the high evolutionary conservation of titin mechanical cysteines and show that they are remarkably oxidized in murine cardiac tissue. Mass spectrometry analyses indicate a similar landscape of basal oxidation in murine and human myocardium. Monte Carlo simulations illustrate how disulfides and S-thiolations on these cysteines increase the dynamics of the protein at physiological forces, while enabling load- and isoform-dependent regulation of titin stiffness. Our results demonstrate the role of conserved cysteines in the modulation of titin mechanical properties in vivo and point to potential redox-based pathomechanisms in heart disease.This work was supported by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación grants BIO2014-54768-P, BIO2017-83640-P, RYC-2014-16604 to JAC and PGC2018-097019-B-I00 to JV, the Regional Government of Madrid grants S2018/NMT-4443 and PEJ16/MED/TL-1593 to JAC and the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria grant PRB3 (PT17/0019/0003- ISCIII-SGEFI /ERDF, ProteoRed), and “la Caixa” Banking Foundation (project code HR17-00247) to JV. We acknowledge funding from the European Research Area Network on Cardiovascular Disease through grant MINOTAUR to SS (The Austrian Science Fund – FWF, I3301) and JAC (ISCIII-AC16/00045). The CNIC is supported by ISCIII, the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación and the Pro CNIC Foundation, and was a Severo Ochoa Center of Excellence (SEV-2015-0505). IMM was the recipient of a CNIC-ACCIONA Masters Fellowship and holds a fellowship from “La Caixa” Foundation (ID 100010434, fellowship code LCF/BQ/DR20/11790009). CSC is the recipient of an FPI-SO predoctoral fellowship BES-2016-076638. We thank Wolfgang A. Linke and Pablo García-Pavía for critical feedback. We are also thankful for the insights of three anonymous reviewers.S

    Continuous growth models in terms of generalized logarithm and exponential functions

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    Consider the one-parameter generalizations of the logarithmic and exponential functions which are obtained from the integration of non-symmetrical hyperboles. These generalizations coincide to the one obtained in the context of non-extensive thermostatistics. We show that these functions are suitable to describe and unify the great majority of continuous growth models, which we briefly review. Physical interpretation to the generalization function parameter is given for the Richards' model, which has an underlying microscopic model to justify it.Comment: 7 pages, 1 table and 1 figur
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