722 research outputs found
Conservation Assessment and Habitat Notes for Three Rare Alabama Crayfishes: Cambarus cracens, Cambarus scotti, and Cambarus unestami
Over seventy percent of the world\u27s freshwater crayfish species are found within the United States, and much of this diversity is concentrated in the southeastern United States. Yet many of these species remain understudied. Of particular interest is the conservation status of these understudied taxa. We conducted fieldwork in 2011 across northeastern Alabama and northwestern Georgia to review the occurrence, habitat, and in sonic cases, local population densities of three crayfish species (Cambarus scotti, C. unestami, and C. cracens) to determine current distributions in relation to historical surveys. All three species occur in flowing small to medium-sized streams with firm substrates of gravel, cobble, and bedrock. Two species (C. scotti and C. unestami) have stable populations, occurring at 79% and 90% of sites surveyed, respectively. In contrast, surveys for the third crayfish species (C. cracens) indicated a need for conservation action, with this species occurring at a single site
An Evaluation of the Sensitivity of Subjects with Peanut Allergy to Very Low Doses of Peanut Protein: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Food Challenge Study
The minimum dose of food protein to which subjects with food allergy have reacted in double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenges is between 50 and 100 mg. However, subjects with peanut allergy often report severe reactions after minimal contact with peanuts, even through intact skin. Objective: We sought to determine whether adults previously proven by challenge to be allergic to peanut react to very low doses of peanut protein. Methods: We used a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge of 14 subjects allergic to peanuts with doses of peanut ranging from 10 μg to 50 mg, administered in the form of a commercially available peanut flour. Results: One subject had a systemic reaction to 5 mg of peanut protein, and two subjects had mild objective reactions to 2 mg and 50 mg of peanut protein, respectively. Five subjects had mild subjective reactions (1 to 5 mg and 4 to 50 mg). All subjects with convincing objective reactions had short-lived subjective reactions to preceding doses, as low as 100 μg in two cases. Five subjects did not react to any dose up to 50 mg. Conclusion: Even in a group of well-characterized, highly sensitive subjects with peanut allergy, the threshold dose of peanut protein varies. As little as 100 μg of peanut protein provokes symptoms in some subjects with peanut allergy
Impact of high CO2 on the geochemistry of the coralline algae Lithothamnion glaciale
Coralline algae are a significant component of the benthic ecosystem. Their ability to withstand physical stresses in high energy environments relies on their skeletal structure which is composed of high Mg-calcite. High Mg-calcite is, however, the most soluble form of calcium carbonate and therefore potentially vulnerable to the change in carbonate chemistry resulting from the absorption of anthropogenic CO2 by the ocean. We examine the geochemistry of the cold water coralline alga Lithothamnion glaciale grown under predicted future (year 2050) high pCO2 (589 μatm) using Electron microprobe and NanoSIMS analysis. In the natural and control material, higher Mg calcite forms clear concentric bands around the algal cells. As expected, summer growth has a higher Mg content compared to the winter growth. In contrast, under elevated CO2 no banding of Mg is recognisable and overall Mg concentrations are lower. This reduction in Mg in the carbonate undermines the accuracy of the Mg/Ca ratio as proxy for past temperatures in time intervals with significantly different carbonate chemistry. Fundamentally, the loss of Mg in the calcite may reduce elasticity thereby changing the structural properties, which may affect the ability of L. glaciale to efficiently function as a habitat former in the future ocean
Investigations of three, four, and five-particle exit channels of levels in light nuclei created using a 9C beam
The interactions of a E/A=70-MeV 9C beam with a Be target was used to
populate levels in Be, B, and C isotopes which undergo decay into many-particle
exit channels. The decay products were detected in the HiRA array and the level
energies were identified from their invariant mass. Correlations between the
decay products were examined to deduce the nature of the decays, specifically
to what extent all the fragments were created in one prompt step or whether the
disintegration proceeded in a sequential fashion through long-lived
intermediate states. In the latter case, information on the spin of the level
was also obtained. Of particular interest is the 5-body decay of the 8C ground
state which was found to disintegrate in two steps of two-proton decay passing
through the 6Beg.s. intermediate state. The isobaric analog of 8Cg.s. in 8B was
also found to undergo two-proton decay to the isobaric analog of 6Beg.s. in
6Li. A 9.69-MeV state in 10C was found to undergo prompt 4-body decay to the
2p+2alpha exit channel. The two protons were found to have a strong
enhancementin the diproton region and the relative energies of all four p-alpha
pairs were consistent with the 5Lig.s. resonance
Flamingo Vol. I N 1
Anonymous. Untitled. Prose. 1.
DKF. Untitled. Picture. 3.
Holt, Kilburn. Untitled. Poem. 4.
Anonymous. An Ancient Reporter . Prose. 5.
Anonymous. The Neophyte\u27s Prayer . Poem. 6.
Anonymous. Gone-But Not Forgotten . Poem. 6.
R.D.B. Untitled. Picture. 6.
Anonymous. Untitled. Prose. 6.
Anonymous. Thrice Weekly . Prose. 7.
Anonymous. Yus! . Prose. 7.
Anonymous. \u27S Truth! . Prose. 8.
Anonymous. Tick-Tock: A Calamietta . Prose. 8.
Holt, Kilburn. Spring . Poem. 9.
Anonymous. Untitled. Poem. 9.
Anonymous. Which best Applies . Poem. 9.
R.D.B. Untitled. Picture. 9.
Anonymous. The Circular Hunt of 1823 . Prose. 9.
Anonymous. Sad-But True . Poem. 10.
Bovington. Sad - But True . Cartoon. 10.
Anonymous. Going to the Farm . Prose. 11.
Anonymous. Untitled. Picture. 12.
Anonymous. Untitled. Poem. 12.
Anonymous. \u27Twas Ever Thus . Prose. 12.
A.F.T. Two Triolets . Poem. 13.
Anonymous. Santa Claus Opens a Factory In Granville . Prose. 13.
Anonymous. Untitled. Picture. 14.
Anonymous. Untitled. Poem. 14.
Anonymous. So Would We . Poem. 14.
Anonymous. The Sequence of Love . Poem. 14.
Anonymous. A Letter From the Sem-And A Heartless Reply . Prose. 15.
Anonymous. Galoshes . Poem. 15.
Anonymous. Untitled. Poem. 15.
Dickerman, C.H. A Chaucer . Poem. 13.
Funk, Dorothy K. Untitled. Picture. 8.
Anonymous. Untitled. Prose. 16.
Anonymous. Add Horrors of War . Poem. 17.
Hooper, Osman C. The Song of The Spring . Poem. 18.
Flory, Walter L. The Daily Struggle . Poem. 18.
Flory, Walter L. Exasperation . Poem. 18.
MacCune, Julia Hall. On Sugar Loaf . Poem. 18.
LaRue, Fred S. Behind The Gym . Poem. 18.
Anonymous. Untitled. Picture. 19.
Anonymous. The Red Rag Doll . Poem. 19.
Anonymous. You Say It Is! . Poem. 19.
Anonymous. Untitled. Poem. 19.
Anonymous. Denison\u27s Hall of Fame . Poem. 20.
Holt, Kilburn. Tempus Fugit . Poem. 21.
Anonymous. Untitled. Prose. 21.
Widow. The War Game . Prose. 21.
Anonymous. Untitled. Picture. 21.
Widow. Ah! Cribbing! . Poem. 22.
Widow. Imposition . Poem. 22.
Widow. Untitled. Prose. 22.
Orange Peel. Untitled. Prose. 22.
Record. Untitled. Prose. 22.
Awgwan. Untitled. Prose. 22.
Purple Cow. Untitled. Prose. 22.
Anonymous. Chapel Singing School . Poem. 23.
Anonymous. Untitled. Prose. 24.
Anonymous. Three Types of Villain . Prose. 25.
Orange Peel. To a Pencil . Poem. 27.
Jester. What Men Like in Women . Prose. 27.
Burr. Untitled. Poem. 27.
Wampus. Untitled. Prose. 27.
Anonymous. Untitled. Prose. 27.
Judge. Spare Her Blushes . Prose. 27.
Awgwan. Untitled. Poem. 27.
Tiger. Untitled. Poem. 27.
Tiger. Untitled. Poem. 29.
Widow. Untitled. Prose. 29.
Orange Peel. Untitled. Prose. 29.
Anonymous. Low Cut . Prose. 29.
Jester. Fine! Fine! . Prose. 29.
Chaparal. Untitled. Prose. 31.
Sun Dodger. All In The Type . Prose. 31.
Orange Peel. Untitled. Prose. 31.
Voo-Doo. Untitled. Prose. 31.
Jester. Hot Stuff . Prose. 32.
Orange Peel. Untitled. Prose. 32.
Virginia Reel. Untitled. Prose. 32.
Burr. Untitled. Prose. 32.
Tiger. Untitled. Prose. 32.
Keeler, Clyde. Untitled. Picture. 15
Keeler, Clyde. Untitled. Picture. 23
TPOAb and thyroid function are not associated with breast cancer outcome: evidence from a large-scale study using data from the Taxotere as Adjuvant Chemotherapy Trial (TACT, CRUK01/001)
Background: Small-scale studies correlated the presence of thyroid autoimmunity with both improved or worsened breast cancer outcome. Objectives: We aimed to clarify this association in a large cohort using the phase III, randomized, controlled Taxotere as Adjuvant Chemotherapy Trial (TACT, CRUK01/001). Methods: TACT women >18 years old with node-positive or high-risk node-negative early breast cancer (pT1–3a, pN0–1, M0), with stored plasma (n = 1,974), taken 15.5 (median; IQR 7.0–24.0) months after breast surgery were studied. Patients had also received chemotherapy (100%), radiotherapy (1,745/1,974; 88.4%), hormonal therapy (1,378/ 1,974; 69.8%), or trastuzumab (48/1,974; 2.4%). History of thyroid diseases and/or related treatments was not available. The prognostic significance of autoantibodies to thyroid peroxidase (TPOAb; positive ≥6 kIU/L), free-thyroxine and thyrotropin (combined: euthyroid, hypothyroid, hyperthyroid) was evaluated for disease-free survival (DFS), overall-survival (OS), and time-to-recurrence (TTR), with Cox regression models in univariate and multivariable analyses. The extended median follow-up was 97.5 months. Results: No difference in DFS was found by TPOAb status (unadjusted hazard ratio [HR]: 0.97, 95%CI: 0.78–1.19; p = 0.75) and/or thyroid function (unadjusted HR [hypothyroid vs. euthyroid]: 1.15, 95% CI: 0.79–1.68; p = 0.46; unadjusted HR [hyperthyroid vs. euthyroid]: 1.14, 95% CI: 0.82–1.61; p = 0.44). Similar results were obtained for OS, TTR, multivariable analyses, when TPOAb titre by tertiles was considered, and in a subgroup of 123 patients with plasma collected before adjuvant treatments. Conclusions: No evidence for a prognostic role of TPOAb and/or thyroid function in moderate-to-high-risk early breast cancer was found in the largest and longest observational study to date
Crowding Promotes the Switch from Hairpin to Pseudoknot Conformation in Human Telomerase RNA
Formation of a pseudoknot in the conserved RNA core domain in the
ribonucleoprotein human telomerase is required for function. In vitro
experiments show that the pseudoknot (PK) is in equilibrium with an extended
hairpin (HP) structure. We use molecular simulations of a coarse-grained model,
which reproduces most of the salient features of the experimental melting
profiles of PK and HP, to show that crowding enhances the stability of PK
relative to HP in the wild type and in a mutant associated with dyskeratosis
congenita. In monodisperse suspensions, small crowding particles increase the
stability of compact structures to a greater extent than larger crowders. If
the sizes of crowders in a binary mixture are smaller than the unfolded RNA,
the increase in melting temperature due to the two components is additive. In a
ternary mixture of crowders that are larger than the unfolded RNA, which mimics
the composition of ribosome, large enzyme complexes and proteins in E. coli,
the marginal increase in stability is entirely determined by the smallest
component. We predict that crowding can restore partially telomerase activity
in mutants, which dramatically decrease the PK stability.Comment: File "JACS_MAIN_archive_PDF_from_DOC.pdf" (PDF created from DOC)
contains the main text of the paper File JACS_SI_archive.tex + 7 figures are
the supplementary inf
Learning to manage and share data: jump-starting the research methods curriculum
Researchers? responsibilities towards their research data are changing across all domains of social scientific endeavour. Government, funders and publishers expect greater transparency of, open access to, and re-use of research data, and fears over data loss call for more robust information security practices. Researchers must develop, enhance and professionalise their research data management skills to meet these challenges and to deal with a rapidly changing data sharing environment. This paper sets out how we have contributed to jump-starting the research methods training curriculum in this field by translating high-level needs into practical guidance and training activities. Our pedagogical approach involves applicable, easy-to-digest, modules based on best practice guidance for managing and sharing research data. In line with recent findings on successful practices in methods teaching, we work on the principle of embedding grounded learning activities within existing narratives of research design and implementation
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