563 research outputs found

    Highlights from the 20th International Symposium on HIV and Emerging Infectious Diseases (ISHEID) 16-18 May 2018, Marseille, France: from HIV and comorbidities to global health.

    Get PDF
    The 20th International Symposium on HIV and Emerging Infectious Diseases took place in Marseille, France. It had a refreshing European look with reinforced partnerships with the European AIDS Clinical Society and the British HIV Association and with international speakers and participants. Topics included HIV and global health, HIV and hepatitis cure, the microbiome and immunotherapies, clinical research and methodology, as well as chemsex, pre-exposure prophylaxis, sexually transmitted infections and emerging infectious diseases. Novel areas of research were also described, such as electronic technology in order to improve HIV management, and the expert patient

    Diffusion and jump-length distribution in liquid and amorphous Cu33_{33}Zr67_{67}

    Get PDF
    Using molecular dynamics simulation, we calculate the distribution of atomic jum ps in Cu33_{33}Zr67_{67} in the liquid and glassy states. In both states the distribution of jump lengths can be described by a temperature independent exponential of the length and an effective activation energy plus a contribution of elastic displacements at short distances. Upon cooling the contribution of shorter jumps dominates. No indication of an enhanced probability to jump over a nearest neighbor distance was found. We find a smooth transition from flow in the liquid to jumps in the g lass. The correlation factor of the diffusion constant decreases with decreasing temperature, causing a drop of diffusion below the Arrhenius value, despite an apparent Arrhenius law for the jump probability

    Education and older adults at the University of the Third Age

    Get PDF
    This article reports a critical analysis of older adult education in Malta. In educational gerontology, a critical perspective demands the exposure of how relations of power and inequality, in their myriad forms, combinations, and complexities, are manifest in late-life learning initiatives. Fieldwork conducted at the University of the Third Age (UTA) in Malta uncovered the political nature of elder-learning, especially with respect to three intersecting lines of inequality - namely, positive aging, elitism, and gender. A cautionary note is, therefore, warranted at the dominant positive interpretations of UTAs since late-life learning, as any other education activity, is not politically neutral.peer-reviewe

    Effect of strain on surface diffusion in semiconductor heteroepitaxy

    Full text link
    We present a first-principles analysis of the strain renormalization of the cation diffusivity on the GaAs(001) surface. For the example of In/GaAs(001)-c(4x4) it is shown that the binding of In is increased when the substrate lattice is expanded. The diffusion barrier \Delta E(e) has a non-monotonic strain dependence with a maximum at compressive strain values (e 0) studied. We discuss the consequences of spatial variations of both the binding energy and the diffusion barrier of an adatom caused by the strain field around a heteroepitaxial island. For a simplified geometry, we evaluate the speed of growth of two coherently strained islands on the GaAs(001) surface and identify a growth regime where island sizes tend to equalize during growth due to the strain dependence of surface diffusion.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, LaTeX2e, to appear in Phys. Rev. B (2001). Other related publications can be found at http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm

    Effets d’une finition des agneaux à l’herbe sur les qualités nutritionnelles et gustatives de la viande

    Get PDF
    This study was carried out within the framework of the ECOLAGNO project which focuses on lambmeat production according to agro ecological practices. Two experiments were conducted for two successive yearsby the interregional center of information and research on ovine production (CIIRPO) in order to measure the effectof the type of lamb fattening on sensory and nutritional qualities of their meat, and on breeding performances. In2016 and 2017, three groups of 30 suckled lambs on pasture, weaned at 125 days of age, were compared. Thecontrol group was fattened with concentrated feed indoors and the other two groups were grass-fed in order tofinish lambs only on grass, either within a continuous grazing system on plots with multispecies crops such asgrass, legumes and tannin-rich plants or with cellular grazing. There were little differences between the threegroups for lamb breeding performances and carcass qualities. On average 50 kg RM of concentrated feed weresaved per lamb fattened on pasture. Grazing did not alter odor or flavor of lamb chops. However, the fatty acidprofile of meat was improved for grass-fed animals.Cette étude a été menée dans le cadre du projet ECOLAGNO s’intéressant à la production de vianded’agneau selon des pratiques agro-écologiques. Deux essais conduits sur deux années consécutives par le CentreInterrégional d’Information et de Recherche en Production Ovine (CIIRPO) avaient pour objectif de mesurerl’impact du mode de finition des agneaux, à l’herbe ou en bergerie, sur les qualités gustatives et nutritionnelles dela viande, ainsi que sur les aspects zootechniques. En 2016 et 2017, trois lots de 30 agneaux à l’herbe, allaitéspuis sevrés à 125 jours, ont été comparés. Le témoin était fini en bergerie avec un aliment concentré, les deuxautres au pâturage dans l’objectif de finir les agneaux exclusivement avec de l’herbe : l’un en pâturage continu surdes parcelles multi-espèces composées de graminées, légumineuses et plantes riches en tanins ; l’autre enpâturage cellulaire. Les performances zootechniques et les qualités de la carcasse des agneaux sont peudifférentes entre les trois lots. L’économie de concentré s’est située en moyenne à 50 kg brut par agneau avec unefinition à l’herbe. Il n’y a pas eu de dégradation de l’odeur ou de la flaveur des côtelettes lors des finitions aupâturage ; en revanche, le profil en acides gras des viandes a été amélioré

    Establishing a generalized polyepigenetic biomarker for tobacco smoking

    Get PDF
    Large-scale epigenome-wide association meta-analyses have identified multiple 'signatures'' of smoking. Drawing on these findings, we describe the construction of a polyepigenetic DNA methylation score that indexes smoking behavior and that can be utilized for multiple purposes in population health research. To validate the score, we use data from two birth cohort studies: The Dunedin Longitudinal Study, followed to age-38 years, and the Environmental Risk Study, followed to age-18 years. Longitudinal data show that changes in DNA methylation accumulate with increased exposure to tobacco smoking and attenuate with quitting. Data from twins discordant for smoking behavior show that smoking influences DNA methylation independently of genetic and environmental risk factors. Physiological data show that changes in DNA methylation track smoking-related changes in lung function and gum health over time. Moreover, DNA methylation changes predict corresponding changes in gene expression in pathways related to inflammation, immune response, and cellular trafficking. Finally, we present prospective data about the link between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and epigenetic modifications; these findings document the importance of controlling for smoking-related DNA methylation changes when studying biological embedding of stress in life-course research. We introduce the polyepigenetic DNA methylation score as a tool both for discovery and theory-guided research in epigenetic epidemiology.This article is freely available via Open Access. Click on the Publisher URL to access it via the publisher's site.The Dunedin Longitudinal Study is funded by the New Zealand Health Research Council, the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment, the National Institute on Aging (AG032282), and the Medical Research Council (MR/P005918/1). The E-Risk Study is funded by the Medical Research Council (G1002190) and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (HD077482). Additional support was provided by a Distinguished Investigator Award from the American Asthma Foundation to Dr. Mill, and by the Jacobs Foundation and the Avielle Foundation. Dr. Arseneault is the Mental Health Leadership Fellow for the U.K. Economic and Social Research Council. Dr. Belsky is a Jacobs Foundation Fellow. This work used a high-performance computing facility partially supported by grant 2016-IDG-1013 (“HARDAC + : Reproducible HPC for Next-generation Genomics”) from the North Carolina Biotechnology Center. Illumina DNA methylation data are accessible from the Gene Expression Omnibus (accession code: GSE105018).pre-print, post-print, publisher's PD

    Screening of MAMLD1 Mutations in 70 Children with 46,XY DSD: Identification and Functional Analysis of Two New Mutations

    Get PDF
    More than 50% of children with severe 46,XY disorders of sex development (DSD) do not have a definitive etiological diagnosis. Besides gonadal dysgenesis, defects in androgen biosynthesis, and abnormalities in androgen sensitivity, the Mastermind-like domain containing 1 (MAMLD1) gene, which was identified as critical for the development of male genitalia, may be implicated. The present study investigated whether MAMLD1 is implicated in cases of severe 46,XY DSD and whether routine sequencing of MAMLD1 should be performed in these patients

    Zirconium oxidation under high energy heavy ion irradiation

    Get PDF
    This paper concerns the study of zirconium oxidation under irradiation with high energetic Xe ions. The irradiations were performed on the IRRSUD beam line at GANIL (Caen). The oxygen partial pressure was fixed at 103^{-3} Pa and two temperature conditions were used, either 480\circC reached by Joule effect heating or 280\circC due to Xe energy deposition. Zirconia was fully characterized by Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry, Transmission Electron Microscopy and Grazing Angle X-ray Diffraction. Apparent diffusion coefficients of oxygen in ZrO2 were determined from these experiments by using a model which takes into account a surface exchange between oxygen gas and the ZrO2 surface. These results are compared with thermal oxidation data
    corecore