1,065 research outputs found
Anatomical Modularity of Verbal Working Memory? Functional Anatomical Evidence from a Famous Patient with Short-Term Memory Deficits.
Cognitive skills are the emergent property of distributed neural networks. The distributed nature of these networks does not necessarily imply a lack of specialization of the individual brain structures involved. However, it remains questionable whether discrete aspects of high-level behavior might be the result of localized brain activity of individual nodes within such networks. The phonological loop of working memory, with its simplicity, seems ideally suited for testing this possibility. Central to the development of the phonological loop model has been the description of patients with focal lesions and specific deficits. As much as the detailed description of their behavior has served to refine the phonological loop model, a classical anatomoclinical correlation approach with such cases falls short in telling whether the observed behavior is based on the functions of a neural system resembling that seen in normal subjects challenged with phonological loop tasks or whether different systems have taken over. This is a crucial issue for the cross correlation of normal cognition, normal physiology, and cognitive neuropsychology. Here we describe the functional anatomical patterns of JB, a historical patient originally described by Warrington et al. (1971), a patient with a left temporo-parietal lesion and selective short phonological store deficit. JB was studied with the H2(15)O PET activation technique during a rhyming task, which primarily depends on the rehearsal system of the phonological loop. No residual function was observed in the left temporo-parietal junction, a region previously associated with the phonological buffer of working memory. However, Broca's area, the major counterpart of the rehearsal system, was the major site of activation during the rhyming task. Specific and autonomous activation of Broca's area in the absence of afferent inputs from the other major anatomical component of the phonological loop shows that a certain degree of functional independence or modularity exists in this distributed anatomical-cognitive system
Modified âone amino acid-one codonâ engineering of high GC content TaqII-coding gene from thermophilic Thermus aquaticus results in radical expression increase
BACKGROUND: An industrial approach to protein production demands maximization of cloned gene expression, balanced with the recombinant hostâs viability. Expression of toxic genes from thermophiles poses particular difficulties due to high GC content, mRNA secondary structures, rare codon usage and impairing the hostâs coding plasmid replication. TaqII belongs to a family of bifunctional enzymes, which are a fusion of the restriction endonuclease (REase) and methyltransferase (MTase) activities in a single polypeptide. The family contains thermostable REases with distinct specificities: TspGWI, TaqII, Tth111II/TthHB27I, TspDTI and TsoI and a few enzymes found in mesophiles. While not being isoschizomers, the enzymes exhibit amino acid (aa) sequence homologies, having molecular sizes of ~120 kDa share common modular architecture, resemble Type-I enzymes, cleave DNA 11/9 nt from the recognition sites, their activity is affected by S-adenosylmethionine (SAM). RESULTS: We describe the taqIIRM gene design, cloning and expression of the prototype TaqII. The enzyme amount in natural hosts is extremely low. To improve expression of the taqIIRM gene in Escherichia coli (E. coli), we designed and cloned a fully synthetic, low GC content, low mRNA secondary structure taqIIRM, codon-optimized gene under a bacteriophage lambda (λ) P( R ) promoter. Codon usage based on a modified âone amino acidâone codonâ strategy, weighted towards low GC content codons, resulted in approximately 10-fold higher expression of the synthetic gene. 718 codons of total 1105 were changed, comprising 65% of the taqIIRM gene. The reason for we choose a less effective strategy rather than a resulting in high expression yields âcodon randomizationâ strategy, was intentional, sub-optimal TaqII in vivo production, in order to decrease the high âtoxicityâ of the REase-MTase protein. CONCLUSIONS: Recombinant wt and synthetic taqIIRM gene were cloned and expressed in E. coli. The modified âone amino acidâone codonâ method tuned for thermophile-coded genes was applied to obtain overexpression of the âtoxicâ taqIIRM gene. The method appears suited for industrial production of thermostable âtoxicâ enzymes in E. coli. This novel variant of the method biased toward increasing a geneâs AT content may provide economic benefits for industrial applications
Extent of Pseudocapacitance in HighâSurface Area Vanadium Nitrides
Early transitionâmetal nitrides, especially vanadium nitride (VN), have shown promise for use in high energy density supercapacitors due to their high electronic conductivity, areal specific capacitance, and ability to be synthesized in high surface area form. Their further development would benefit from an understanding of their pseudocapacitive charge storage mechanism. In this paper, the extent of pseudocapacitance exhibited by vanadium nitride in aqueous electrolytes was investigated using cyclic voltammetry and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The pseudocapacitance contribution to the total capacitance in the nitride material was much higher than the doubleâlayer capacitance and ranged from 85â% in basic electrolyte to 87â% in acidic electrolyte. The mole of electrons transferred per VN material during pseudocapacitive charge storage was also evaluated. This pseudocapacitive chargeâstorage is the key component in the full utilization of the properties of earlyâtransition metal nitrides for highâenergy density supercapacitors.Doubleâlayer capacitance vs. pseudocapacitance: the electrostatic doubleâlayer and pseudocapacitive charge storage mechanisms in highâsurfaceâarea vanadium nitride are investigated. The magnitude of the pseudocapacitive charge storage capacity and mole of electrons transferred are reported. The pseudocapacitive chargeâstorage mechanism is the key component in maximizing the energy density of supercapacitors based on transitionâmetal nitrides.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146597/1/batt201800050.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146597/2/batt201800050_am.pd
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