1,226 research outputs found

    John A. Love to Senator James O. Eastland, 15 November 1973

    Get PDF
    Typed letter signed dated 15 November 1973 from John A. Love, Assistant to the President, to Eastland, re: distillate fuel, Office of Oil and Gas.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/joecorr_f/1069/thumbnail.jp

    John A. Love to Senator James O. Eastland, 23 October 1973

    Get PDF
    Typed letter signed dated 23 October 1973 from John A. Love to Eastland, re: mandatory propane allocation program.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/joecorr_f/1078/thumbnail.jp

    John A. Love to Senator James O. Eastland, 27 August 1973

    Get PDF
    Typed letter signed dated 27 August 1973 from John A. Love, Assistant to the President, to Eastland, re: shortage of propane, Federal Power Commission, natural gas, Cost of Living Council; 3 pages.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/joecorr_f/1075/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from John A. Love, Governor, to Dean Yegge

    Get PDF

    The experiences of women with polycystic ovary syndrome on a very low-calorie diet

    Get PDF
    The research was funded by an educational grant from LighterLife. Broom was the Medical Director for LighterLife at the time of the research. Johnson is the Head of Nutrition and Research at LighterLife. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Effects of solvent additive on "s-shaped" curves in solution-processed small molecule solar cells.

    Get PDF
    A novel molecular chromophore, p-SIDT(FBTThCA8)2, is introduced as an electron-donor material for bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells with broad absorption and near ideal energy levels for the use in combination with common acceptor materials. It is found that films cast from chlorobenzene yield devices with strongly s-shaped current-voltage curves, drastically limiting performance. We find that addition of the common solvent additive diiodooctane, in addition to facilitating crystallization, leads to improved vertical phase separation. This yields much better performing devices, with improved curve shape, demonstrating the importance of morphology control in BHJ devices and improving the understanding of the role of solvent additives

    Modification of kraft wood-pulp fibre with silica for surface functionalisation

    Get PDF
    A new science strategy for natural fibre modification was devised in which glass surface properties would be imparted to wood-derived fibre. The enhancements known from addition of silane reagents to glass fibre–polymer composites could therefore be realised for modified cellulose fibre–polymer composites. A process is described whereby the internal void spaces and micropores of never-dried Kraft pulp fibre walls were impregnated with silica. This was achieved by initial dehydration of never-dried fibre through azeotropic distillation to achieve substitution of fibre water with the silicon chemical solution over a range of concentrations. Kraft fibres were stiffened and made resistant to collapse from the effect of the azeotrope drying. Specific chemical reaction of azeotrope-dried fibre with the reagent ClSi(OEt)3 followed by base-catalysed hydrolysis of the ester groups formed a fibre-bound silica composite. The physico-chemical substitution of water from micropores and internal voids of never-dried fibre with property-modifying chemicals offers possibilities in the development of new fibre characteristics, including fibres which may be hardened, plasticised, and/or stabilised against moisture, biodegradation or fire. The embedded silica may also be used as sites of attachment for coupling agents to modify the hydrophilic character of the fibre or to functionalise the fibre surface

    Development of a High-Throughput Functional Screen Using Nanowell-Assisted Cell Patterning

    Get PDF
    Living-cell-based screens can facilitate lead discovery of functional therapeutics of interest. A versatile and scalable method is reported that uses dense arrays of nanowells for imparting defined patterns on monolayers of cells. It is shown that this approach can coordinate a multi-component biological assay by designing and implementing a high-throughput, functional nanoliter-scale neutralization assay to identify neutra­lizing antibodies against HIV.National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (P30-CA14051

    Automated pipeline for rapid production and screening of HIV-specific monoclonal antibodies using pichia pastoris

    Get PDF
    Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that bind and neutralize human pathogens have great therapeutic potential. Advances in automated screening and liquid handling have resulted in the ability to discover antigen-specific antibodies either directly from human blood or from various combinatorial libraries (phage, bacteria or yeast). There remain, however, bottlenecks in the cloning, expression and evaluation of such lead antibodies identified in primary screens that hinder high-throughput screening. As such, ‘hit-to-lead identification’ remains both expensive and time-consuming. By combining the advantages of overlap extension PCR (OE-PCR) and a genetically stable yet easily manipulatable microbial expression host Pichia pastoris, we have developed an automated pipeline for the rapid production and screening of full-length antigenspecific mAbs. Here, we demonstrate the speed, feasibility and cost-effectiveness of our approach by generating several broadly neutralizing antibodies against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationUnited States. Defense Advanced Research Projects AgencySpace and Naval Warfare Systems Center San Diego (U.S.) (Contract N66001-13-C-4025)W. M. Keck FoundationNational Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (U.S.) (U19AI090970).National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT. Support (Core) Grant P30-CA14051
    corecore