721 research outputs found
Quantifying Compliance Costs for Small Businesses in New Zealand
This paper reports on a small-scale study of the compliance costs of small New Zealand businesses. Participating firms were asked to keep a record of both time spent and expenditure directly incurred over a thirteen-week period. This differs from previous studies that rely on a firm's recall of how much time has been spent on compliance over the previous year. The results suggest that New Zealand small businesses on average spend less time and money on compliance than has been indicated in previous studies. However a number offirms do perceive compliance to be a major issue and in some cases this perception prevents firms from expanding
Recommended from our members
Universality of filamentous aggregation phenomena.
We use perturbative renormalization group theory to study the kinetics of protein aggregation phenomena in a unified manner across multiple timescales. Using this approach, we find that, irrespective of the specific molecular details or experimental conditions, filamentous assembly systems display universal behavior in time. Moreover, we show that the universality classes for protein aggregation correspond to simple autocatalytic processes and that the diversity of behavior in these systems is determined solely by the reaction order for secondary nucleation with respect to the protein concentration, which labels all possible universality classes. We validate these predictions on experimental data for the aggregation of several different proteins at several different initial concentrations, which by appropriate coordinate transformations we are able to collapse onto universal kinetic growth curves. These results establish the power of the perturbative renormalization group in distilling the ultimately simple temporal behavior of complex protein aggregation systems, creating the possibility to study the kinetics of general self-assembly phenomena in a unified fashion
One-particle many-body Green's function theory: Algebraic recursive definitions, linked-diagram theorem, irreducible-diagram theorem, and general-order algorithms
A thorough analytical and numerical characterization of the whole perturbation series of one-particle many-body Greenâs function (MBGF) theory is presented in a pedagogical manner. Three distinct but equivalent algebraic (first-quantized) recursive definitions of the perturbation series of the Greenâs function are derived, which can be combined with the well-known recursion for the self-energy. Six general-order algorithms of MBGF are developed, each implementing one of the three recursions, the ÎMPn method (where n is the perturbation order) [S. Hirata et al., J. Chem. Theory Comput. 11, 1595 (2015)], the automatic generation and interpretation of diagrams, or the numerical differentiation of the exact Greenâs function with a perturbation-scaled Hamiltonian. They all display the identical, nondivergent perturbation series except ÎMPn, which agrees with MBGF in the diagonal and frequency-independent approximations at 1â€nâ€3 but converges at the full-configuration-interaction (FCI) limit at n=â (unless it diverges). Numerical data of the perturbation series are presented for Koopmans and non-Koopmans states to quantify the rate of convergence towards the FCI limit and the impact of the diagonal, frequency-independent, or ÎMPn approximation. The diagrammatic linkedness and thus size-consistency of the one-particle Greenâs function and self-energy are demonstrated at any perturbation order on the basis of the algebraic recursions in an entirely time-independent (frequency-domain) framework. The trimming of external lines in a one-particle Greenâs function to expose a self-energy diagram and the removal of reducible diagrams are also justified mathematically using the factorization theorem of Frantz and Mills. Equivalence of ÎMPn and MBGF in the diagonal and frequency-independent approximations at 1â€nâ€3 is algebraically proven, also ascribing the differences at n = 4 to the so-called semi-reducible and linked-disconnected diagrams
Nanoscale click-reactive scaffolds from peptide self-assembly.
Background
Due to their natural tendency to self-assemble, proteins and peptides are important components for organic nanotechnology. One particular class of peptides of recent interest is those that form amyloid fibrils, as this self-assembly results in extremely strong, stable quasi-one-dimensional structures which can be used to organise a wide range of cargo species including proteins and oligonucleotides. However, as the amyloid state is accessible to a large number of proteins via misfolding, assembly of peptides already conjugated to proteins is limited to certain cargo species. Therefore, a general method is needed to conjugate proteins and other molecules to amyloid fibrils after the fibrils have self-assembled.
Results
Here we have designed an amyloidogenic peptide based on the TTR105-115 fragment of transthyretin to form fibrils that display an alkyne functionality, important for bioorthogonal chemical reactions, on their surface. The fibrils were formed and reacted both with an azide-containing amino acid and with an azide-functionalised dye by the Huisgen azidoalkyne cycloaddition, one of the class of âclickâ reactions. Mass spectrometry and total internal reflection fluorescence optical microscopy were used to show that peptides incorporated into the fibrils reacted with the azide while maintaining the structure of the fibril. These click-functionalised amyloid fibrils have a variety of potential uses in materials and as scaffolds for bionanotechnology.
Discussion
Although previous studies have produced peptides that can both form amyloid fibrils and undergo âclickâ-type reactions, this is the first example of amyloid fibrils that can undergo such a reaction after they have been formed. Our approach has the advantage that self-assembly takes place before click functionalization rather than pre-functionalised building blocks self-assembling. Therefore, the molecules used to functionalise the fibril do not themselves have to be exposed to harsh, amyloid-forming conditions. This means that a wider range of proteins can be used as ligands in this process. For instance, the fibrils can be functionalised with a green fluorescent protein that retains its fluorescence after it is attached to the fibrils, whereas this protein loses its fluorescence if it is exposed to the conditions used for aggregation
Quantifying Compliance Costs for Small Businesses in New Zealand
This paper reports on a small-scale study of the compliance costs of small New Zealand businesses. Participating firms were asked to keep a record of both time spent and expenditure directly incurred over a thirteen-week period. This differs from previous studies that rely on a firm's recall of how much time has been spent on compliance over the previous year. The results suggest that New Zealand small businesses on average spend less time and money on compliance than has been indicated in previous studies. However a number offirms do perceive compliance to be a major issue and in some cases this perception prevents firms from expanding
The Burden of Small Business Compliance Costs: Perception or Reality
Dr Stephen Knowles presented The Burden of Small Business Compliance Costs: Perception or Reality in Wellington in June 2004
The Burden of Small Business Compliance Costs: Perception or Reality
Dr Stephen Knowles presented The Burden of Small Business Compliance Costs: Perception or Reality in Wellington in June 2004
Recommended from our members
In situ kinetic measurements of α-synuclein aggregation reveal large population of short-lived oligomers.
Knowledge of the mechanisms of assembly of amyloid proteins into aggregates is of central importance in building an understanding of neurodegenerative disease. Given that oligomeric intermediates formed during the aggregation reaction are believed to be the major toxic species, methods to track such intermediates are clearly needed. Here we present a method, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), by which the amount of intermediates can be measured over the course of the aggregation, directly in the reacting solution, without the need for separation. We use this approach to investigate the aggregation of α-synuclein (αS), a synaptic protein implicated in Parkinson's disease and find a large population of oligomeric species. Our results show that these are primary oligomers, formed directly from monomeric species, rather than oligomers formed by secondary nucleation processes, and that they are short-lived, the majority of them dissociates rather than converts to fibrils. As demonstrated here, EPR offers the means to detect such short-lived intermediate species directly in situ. As it relies only on the change in size of the detected species, it will be applicable to a wide range of self-assembling systems, making accessible the kinetics of intermediates and thus allowing the determination of their rates of formation and conversion, key processes in the self-assembly reaction
- âŠ