33 research outputs found
Neuraminidase Activity in \u3cem\u3eDiplococcus pneumoniae\u3c/em\u3e
Kelly, R. T. (Marquette University School of Medicine, Milwaukee, Wis.), D. Greiff, and S. Farmer. Neuraminidase activity in Diplococcus pneumoniae. J. Bacteriol. 91:601–603. 1966.—A method for the quantitation of neuraminidase in the presence of N-acetylneuraminic acid aldolase is described. The neuraminidase content of Diplococcus pneumoniae was found to be dependent on the media employed for growth; the highest enzyme activity per milligram of bacterial protein was obtained with Todd-Hewitt broth. Neuraminidase production was stimulated in D. pneumoniae by the addition of N-acetylneuraminlactose, N-acetylneuraminic acid, or N-acetylmannosamine to the growth medium. Three rough strains of D. pneumoniae, which were nonpathogenic for mice, lacked neuraminidase activity. Seven of 12 smooth strains contained neuraminidase; enzyme activity was not detected in the remaining 5 smooth strains. There was no correlation between the presence of neuraminidase activity and the capsular type or between neuraminidase production and animal virulence
Smoke gets in your eyes: re-reading gender in the "nostalgia film"
Upon its release, American Graffiti (George Lucas, 1973) was much admired by critics and audiences alike. Yet, in subsequent years, the film became known for its supposed “flattening of history,” and celebration of patriarchal values. This article demonstrates that such a judgement owes much to Fredric Jameson’s historically contingent work on postmodernism, which argues that American Graffiti constitutes the paradigmatic nostalgia film. In contrast, using close textual analysis, I demonstrate that American Graffiti provides a more complex construction of the past, and of gender, than has hitherto been acknowledged. Far from blindly idealising the early 1960s, the film interrogates the processes through which the period and its gender relations come to be idealised. This article has consequences not only for our understanding of Lucas’ seminal film, but also for the American New Wave, and the “nostalgia” text
Flocculation of influenza virus by specific anti-neuraminidase antibody
1. Flocculation of purified preparations of influenza virus has been demonstrated to occur in the presence of low dilutions of specific anti-neuraminidase sera. High dilutions of the sera caused microscopic aggregation of virions. It is suggested that the effects of anti-neuraminidase antibody on the replication of influenza virus observed in vitro could be caused by antibody binding virions to infected cells, rather than by inhibition of neuraminidase enzymic activity.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/41680/1/705_2005_Article_BF01253756.pd