10,333 research outputs found
Analysis of microwave radiometric measurements from Skylab
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Gene identification for the cblD defect of vitamin B12 metabolism
Background Vitamin B12 (cobalamin) is an essential cofactor in several metabolic pathways. Intracellular conversion of cobalamin to its two coenzymes, adenosylcobalamin in mitochondria and methylcobalamin in the cytoplasm, is necessary for the homeostasis of methylmalonic acid and homocysteine. Nine defects of intracellular cobalamin metabolism have been defined by means of somatic complementation analysis. One of these defects, the cblD defect, can cause isolated methylmalonic aciduria, isolated homocystinuria, or both. Affected persons present with multisystem clinical abnormalities, including developmental, hematologic, neurologic, and metabolic findings. The gene responsible for the cblD defect has not been identified.
Methods We studied seven patients with the cblD defect, and skin fibroblasts from each were investigated in cell culture. Microcell-mediated chromosome transfer and refined genetic mapping were used to localize the responsible gene. This gene was transfected into cblD fibroblasts to test for the rescue of adenosylcobalamin and methylcobalamin synthesis.
Results The cblD gene was localized to human chromosome 2q23.2, and a candidate gene, designated MMADHC (methylmalonic aciduria, cblD type, and homocystinuria), was identified in this region. Transfection of wild-type MMADHC rescued the cellular phenotype, and the functional importance of mutant alleles was shown by means of transfection with mutant constructs. The predicted MMADHC protein has sequence homology with a bacterial ATP-binding cassette transporter and contains a putative cobalamin binding motif and a putative mitochondrial targeting sequence.
Conclusions Mutations in a gene we designated MMADHC are responsible for the cblD defect in vitamin B12 metabolism. Various mutations are associated with each of the three biochemical phenotypes of the disorder
MoodBar: Increasing new user retention in Wikipedia through lightweight socialization
Socialization in online communities allows existing members to welcome and
recruit newcomers, introduce them to community norms and practices, and sustain
their early participation. However, socializing newcomers does not come for
free: in large communities, socialization can result in a significant workload
for mentors and is hard to scale. In this study we present results from an
experiment that measured the effect of a lightweight socialization tool on the
activity and retention of newly registered users attempting to edit for the
first time Wikipedia. Wikipedia is struggling with the retention of newcomers
and our results indicate that a mechanism to elicit lightweight feedback and to
provide early mentoring to newcomers improves their chances of becoming
long-term contributors.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for presentation at CSCW'1
Recommended from our members
Emission of volatile halogenated organic compounds over various Dead Sea landscapes
Volatile halogenated organic compounds (VHOCs), such as methyl halides (CH3X; X is Br, Cl and I) and very short-lived halogenated substances (VSLSs; bromoform-CHBr3, dibromomethane-CH2Br2, bromodichloromethane-CHBrCl2, trichloroethylene-C2HCl3, chloroform-CHCl3- A nd dibromochloromethane-CHBr2Cl) are well known for their significant influence on ozone concentrations and oxidation capacity of the troposphere and stratosphere and for their key role in aerosol formation. Insufficient characterization of the sources and the emission rate of VHOCs limits our ability to understand and assess their impact in both the troposphere and stratosphere. Over the last two decades, several natural terrestrial sources for VHOCs, including soil and vegetation, have been identified, but our knowledge of emission rates from these sources and their responses to changes in ambient conditions remains limited. Here we report measurements of the mixing ratios and fluxes of several chlorinated and brominated VHOCs from different landscapes and natural and agricultural vegetated sites at the Dead Sea during different seasons. Fluxes were generally positive (emission into the atmosphere), corresponding to elevated mixing ratios, but were highly variable. Fluxes (and mixing ratios) for the investigated VHOCs ranged as follows: CHBr3 from 79 to 187 nmolm2 d1 (1.9 to 22.6 pptv), CH2Br2 from 55 to 71 nmolm2 d1 (0.7 to 19 pptv), CHBr2Cl from 408 to 768 nmolm2 d1 (0.4 to 11 pptv), CHBrCl2 from 29 to 45 nmolm2 d1 (0.5 to 9.6 pptv), CHCl3 from 577 to 883 nmolm2 d1 (15 to 57 pptv), C2HCl3 from 74 to 884 nmolm2 d1 (0.4 to 11 pptv), methyl chloride (CH3Cl) from-5300 to 10,800 nmolm2 d1 (530 to 730 pptv), methyl bromide (CH3Br) from 111 to 118 nmolm2 d1 (7.5 to 14 pptv) and methyl iodide (CH3I) from 25 to 17 nmolm2 d1 (0.4 to 2.8 pptv). Taking into account statistical uncertainties, the coastal sites (particularly those where soil is mixed with salt deposits) were identified as sources of all VHOCs, but this was not statistically significant for CHCl3. Further away from the coastal area, the bare soil sites were sources for CHBrCl2, CHBr2Cl, CHCl3, and probably also for CH2Br2 and CH3I, and the agricultural sites were sources for CHBr3, CHBr2Cl and CHBrCl2. In contrast to previous reports, we also observed emissions of brominated trihalomethanes, with net molar fluxes ordered as follows: CHBr2Cl > CHCl3 > CHBr3 > CHBrCl2 and lowest positive flux incidence for CHCl3 among all trihalomethanes; this finding can be explained by the soil's enrichment with Br. Correlation analysis, in agreement with recent studies, indicated common controls for the emission of CHBr2Cl and CHBrCl2 and likely also for CHBr3. There were no indications for correlation of the brominated trihalomethanes with CHCl3. Also in line with previous reports, we observed elevated emissions of CHCl3 and C2HCl3 from mixtures of soil and different salt-deposited structures; the flux correlations between these compounds and methyl halides (particularly CH3I) suggested that at least CH3I is also emitted via similar mechanisms or is subjected to similar controls. Overall, our results indicate elevated emission of VHOCs from bare soil under semiarid conditions. Along with other recent studies, our findings point to the strong emission potential of a suite of VHOCs from saline soils and salt lakes and call for additional studies of emission rates and mechanisms of VHOCs from saline soils and salt lakes
Cosine and Sine Operators Related with Orthogonal Polynomial Sets on the Intervall [-1,1]
The quantization of phase is still an open problem. In the approach of
Susskind and Glogower so called cosine and sine operators play a fundamental
role. Their eigenstates in the Fock representation are related with the
Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind. Here we introduce more general cosine
and sine operators whose eigenfunctions in the Fock basis are related in a
similar way with arbitrary orthogonal polynomial sets on the intervall [-1,1].
To each polynomial set defined in terms of a weight function there corresponds
a pair of cosine and sine operators. Depending on the symmetry of the weight
function we distinguish generalized or extended operators. Their eigenstates
are used to define cosine and sine representations and probability
distributions. We consider also the inverse arccosine and arcsine operators and
use their eigenstates to define cosine-phase and sine-phase distributions,
respectively. Specific, numerical and graphical results are given for the
classical orthogonal polynomials and for particular Fock and coherent states.Comment: 1 tex-file (24 pages), 11 figure
Concentration dependence of the transition temperature in metallic spin glasses
The dependence of the transition temperature in terms of the
concentration of magnetic impurities in spin glasses is explained on the
basis of a screened RKKY interaction. The two observed power laws, at
low and for intermediate , are described in a unified
approach.Comment: 4 page
Ejection Energy of Photoelectrons in Strong Field Ionization
We show that zero ejection energy of the photoelectrons is classically
impossible for hydrogen-like ions, even when field ionization occurs
adiabatically. To prove this we transform the basic equations to those
describing two 2D anharmonic oscillators. The same method yields an alternative
way to derive the anomalous critical field of hydrogen-like ions. The
analytical results are confirmed and illustrated by numerical simulations. PACS
Number: 32.80.RmComment: 7 pages, REVTeX, postscript file including the figures is available
at http://www.physik.th-darmstadt.de/tqe/dieter/publist.html or via anonymous
ftp from ftp://tqe.iap.physik.th-darmstadt.de/pub/dieter/publ_I_pra_pre.ps,
accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
On Conformal Infinity and Compactifications of the Minkowski Space
Using the standard Cayley transform and elementary tools it is reiterated
that the conformal compactification of the Minkowski space involves not only
the "cone at infinity" but also the 2-sphere that is at the base of this cone.
We represent this 2-sphere by two additionally marked points on the Penrose
diagram for the compactified Minkowski space. Lacks and omissions in the
existing literature are described, Penrose diagrams are derived for both,
simple compactification and its double covering space, which is discussed in
some detail using both the U(2) approach and the exterior and Clifford algebra
methods. Using the Hodge * operator twistors (i.e. vectors of the
pseudo-Hermitian space H_{2,2}) are realized as spinors (i.e., vectors of a
faithful irreducible representation of the even Clifford algebra) for the
conformal group SO(4,2)/Z_2. Killing vector fields corresponding to the left
action of U(2) on itself are explicitly calculated. Isotropic cones and
corresponding projective quadrics in H_{p,q} are also discussed. Applications
to flat conformal structures, including the normal Cartan connection and
conformal development has been discussed in some detail.Comment: 38 pages, 8 figures, late
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