5 research outputs found

    The activity of protest movements in 1956-1977 in Denmark and Sweden

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    Bachelor thesis "The Activity of Protest Movements in 1956-1977 in Denmark and Sweden" deals with the activities of social movements that originated in the territory of Denmark and Sweden in connection with the Western wave of protest activism and the overall radicalization of youth in the 1960s and the 1970s. It was especially a movement against nuclear weapons and the war in Vietnam and the student revolt of 1968. The paper analyzes the circumstances, the protest actions and subsequent consequences of activity of these movements in both countries and its objective is a complex comparison of the Danish and the Swedish cases. This comparison subsequently highlights the differences between the protest movements of Denmark and Sweden in various aspects, which are described in the text. One of them is the development of left-wing movement after 1956 and the emergence of new intellectual currents that influenced the direction of the protest movements. Other parts are devoted to the course and the extent of demonstrations of particular movements and their content, goals and expressions, for example through alternative culture. The thesis also provides the characteristics of the socio-political situation in Denmark and Sweden in the given period, which imply the specifics of the development of protest..

    MALDI-TOF mass spectrum of the AMB-PEG fraction from RPC.

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    <p>The major mass peaks observed had masses corresponding to that of the AMB-PEG conjugate, thereby verifying the identity of that peak fraction. AMB-PEG mass peaks were absent from the collected unconjugated AMB fraction.</p

    Representative absorbance spectra of AMB-PEG 2 and unconjugated AMB formulations prepared in buffers with varying hydrophobicity.

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    <p>20 mM AMB-PEG 2 and unconjugated AMB formulations were prepared in DMSO and resuspended in 20% and 48% ACN buffers containing 4.3% acetic acid, as well as PBS-EDTA, to a final concentration of 2 mM AMB. As buffer hydrophobicity increases with higher ACN concentrations, the A<sub>348</sub>/A<sub>409</sub> ratio decreases, implying that AMB-PEG is increasingly in its monomeric form. As AMB-PEG 1 and 2 have similar UV-visible absorption profiles, with identical peak height ratios in all buffers tested, data for AMB-PEG 1 is not shown. AMB-PEG formulations that have been subjected to buffer exchange to PBS-EDTA through a 10 kDa centrifugal filter have the same UV-visible absorption spectra as the initial formulation of AMB-PEG in PBS-EDTA, which contains 10% DMSO.</p

    MIC<sub>50</sub> (μM) of various fungal species.

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    <p>MIC<sub>50</sub> (μM) of various fungal species.</p

    LIVE/DEAD staining of HEK293 and IMR-90 cells after exposure to AMB-PEG 1, 2 and unconjugated AMB for 24 hours.

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    <p>Live cells are stained green and dead cells stained red. AMB-PEG did not cause cell death at concentrations of 139 μM in HEK293 cells and 277 μM in IMR-90 cells. The molar ratio of AMB to PEG did not have any visible effect on cell toxicity. Conversely, unconjugated AMB caused extensive cell death at concentrations above 4.33 μM in both cell lines. Experiment was performed twice, each time with three independently prepared AMB-PEG formulations.</p
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