132 research outputs found

    Results of Osteochondral Autologous Transplantation in the Knee

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    Repair of full thickness defects of articular cartilage in the knee is difficult but important to prevent progression to osteoarthritis. The purpose of this retrospective study was to evaluate the clinical results of Osteochondral Autograft Transplant System (OATS) treatment for articular defects of the knee

    The Climatic Water Balance and Topography Control Spatial Patterns of Atmospheric Demand, Soil Moisture, and Shallow Subsurface Flow

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    Catchment hydrometeorology and the organization of shallow subsurface flow are key drivers of active contributing areas and streamflow generation. However, understanding how the climatic water balance and complex topography contribute to these processes from hillslope to catchment scales remains difficult. We compared time series of vapor pressure deficits and soil moisture to the climatic water balance and topographic variables across six zero-order catchments in the Lubrecht Experimental Forest (Montana, USA). We then evaluated how local hydrometeorology (volumetric water content and atmospheric vapor pressure deficit) affected the spatial occurrence of shallow subsurface flow. Generalized linear mixed model analysis revealed significant, temporally stable (monthly and seasonal average) patterns of hydrometeorology that can be predicted by the topographic wetness index and the dynamic climatic water deficit (CWD = potential evapotranspiration - actual evapotranspiration). Intracatchment patterns were significantly correlated to the topographic wetness index, while intercatchment patterns were correlated to spatiotemporal variance in the CWD during each time period. Spatial patterns of shallow subsurface flow were related to the hydrometeorological conditions of the site. We observed persistent shallow subsurface flow in convergent hillslope positions, except when a catchment was positioned in locations with high CWDs (low elevations and southerly aspects). Alternatively, we observed persistent subsurface flow across all hillslope positions (even 70-m upslope from the hollow) when catchments were positioned in locations with especially low CWDs (northerly aspects and high elevations). These results highlight the importance of considering the superposition of the catchment-scale climatic water balance and hillslope-scale topography when characterizing hydrometeorology and shallow subsurface flow dynamics.USDA NIFA McIntire Stennis award [233327]; NSF grants [DEB-1457749, DEB-1457720]; NASA applied science program Wildland Fire award [NNH11ZDA001N-FIRES]; NSF EPSCoR through the Montana Institute on Ecosystems6 month embargo; published online: 19 February 2019This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]

    A Chinese hamster ovary leucyl-tRNA synthetase mutant with a uniquely altered high molecular weight leucyl-tRNA synthetase complex

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    The Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell culture temperature-sensitive mutant ts 025Cl with a defect in leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) does not have an inherently more thermolabile LeuRS, but instead the mutation causes the complete loss of the LeuRS high molecular weight complexes which are present in normal wild-type cells. The mutant cell LeuRS has a single 8 S enzyme form which corresponds hydrodynamically to the 8 S free form of wild-type enzyme. Both 8 S forms have the same thermostability and the same K m for leucine, indicating that there is no inherent defect in the catalytic activity of the enzyme. The temperature-sensitive phenotype can be explained by the lack of thermostable high molecular weight forms of LeuRS.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/44149/1/10528_2004_Article_BF00484233.pd
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