45 research outputs found

    Influence of production variables and starting material on charcoal stable isotopic and molecular characteristics

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    We present a systematic study on the effect of starting species, gas composition, temperature, particle size and duration of heating upon the molecular and stable isotope composition of high density (mangrove) and low density (pine) wood. In both pine and mangrove, charcoal was depleted in o13C relative to the starting wood by up to 1.6% and 0.8%, respectively. This is attributed predominantly to the progressive loss of isotopically heavier polysaccharides, and kinetic effects of aromatization during heating. However, the pattern of o13C change was dependant upon both starting species and atmosphere, with different structural changes associated with charcoal production from each wood type elucidated by Solid-State o13C Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy. These are particularly evident at lower temperatures, where variation in the oxygen content of the production atmosphere results in differences in the thermal degradation of cellulose and lignin. It is concluded that production of charcoal from separate species in identical conditions, or from a single sample exposed to different production variables, can result in significantly different o13C of the resulting material, relative to the initial wood. These results have implications for the use of charcoal isotope composition to infer past environmental change

    Critical aspects of three-dimensional anisotropic spin-glass models

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    We study the ±J\pm J three-dimensional Ising model with a longitudinal anisotropic bond randomness on the simple cubic lattice. The random exchange interaction is applied only in the zz direction, whereas in the other two directions, xyxy - planes, we consider ferromagnetic exchange. By implementing an effective parallel tempering scheme, we outline the phase diagram of the model and compare it to the corresponding isotropic one, as well as to a previously studied anisotropic (transverse) case. We present a detailed finite-size scaling analysis of the ferromagnetic - paramagnetic and spin glass - paramagnetic transition lines, and we also discuss the ferromagnetic - spin glass transition regime. We conclude that the present model shares the same universality classes with the isotropic model, but at the symmetric point has a considerably higher transition temperature from the spin-glass state to the paramagnetic phase. Our data for the ferromagnetic - spin glass transition line are supporting a forward behavior in contrast to the reentrant behavior of the isotropic model.Comment: 10 pages, 9 eps figures, 1 table, corrected symbolis

    Generation of Recombinant Vaccinia Viruses via Green Fluorescent Protein Selection

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    We developed a rapid method to generate recombinant vaccinia viruses (rVVs) based upon a bicistronic cassette encoding the gene for green fluorescent protein (GFP) and a foreign gene of interest separated by an internal ribosome entry site (IRES). As proof-of-concept, we inserted a mutant env gene of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) into the cassette, which was cloned into the vaccinia virus (VV) insertion vector pSC59 under the control of the early-late VV synthetic promoter and flanked by disrupted tk gene sequences. To generate rVVs, 293T cells were inoculated with wild-type (wt) VV, followed by transfection of the modified pSC59 vector containing the bicistronic cassette, which allows expression of GFP and the protein of interest. Next, GFP-positive cells were isolated by flow cytometry or by picking under a fluorescent microscope. Thymidine kinase–deficient (Tk−) 143B cells were then exposed to lysates of GFP-positive 293T cells and cultured in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine. This selection allows only Tk− rVV to remain viable. We demonstrated the success of this GFP selection strategy by expressing high levels of mutant HIV Env. Our approach shortens the time needed to generate rVVs and represents a practical approach to generate recombinant proteins
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