2,337 research outputs found
Optimization of culture conditions of Streptomyces rochei (MTCC 10109) for the production of antimicrobial metabolites
Fermentation and culture conditions were studied in shaken-flask culture to induce the production of greater amounts of antimicrobial metabolites by Streptomyces rochei (10109). Antimicrobial metabolite production started after 48 h incubation and reached its optimum level at 20% inoculum size at 120 h, at which point the metabolites showed maximum antifungal and antibacterial activity against selected human pathogenic microorganisms (Candida albicans, Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli). Optimal production occurred at pH 7.5 and temperature 32°C, with 2% glycerol and 1% peptone as the carbon and nitrogen sources respectively. The effects of adding sea water (optimum 30%) and NaCl (optimum 1%) were also evaluated.Keywords: human pathogen
Anaphylactic Shock
Anaphylaxis is a life threatening hypersensitivity reaction that can cause shock. Epidemiology studies show anaphylaxis and anaphylactic shock is relatively rare, but its incidence is increasing. A review of the pathophysiology of anaphylaxis can provide insight into clinical decisions. Diagnosing anaphylaxis can be difficult as symptoms and history are not always obvious. Diagnostic guidelines provide an objective tool to assess for anaphylaxis. Early intervention during anaphylaxis may prevent development of shock. Management is focused on circulation support with epinephrine and IV fluids, and airway maintenance. Following an acute anaphylactic reaction, patients should be provided with a referral for follow up and educated on avoidance of triggers and use of epinephrine autoinjectors
3-Hydroxy-2-[(2-hydroxy-4,4-dimethyl-6-oxocyclohex-1-en-1-yl)(3-nitrophenyl)methyl]-5,5-dimethylcyclohex-2-en-1-one
Each of the cyclohexenone rings in the title compound, C23H27NO6, adopts a half-chair (envelope) conformation with the C atom carrying the methyl groups lying out of the plane defined by the five remaining C atoms; the O atoms lie to the same side of the molecule as the respective >C(CH3)2 atoms. The hydroxy and carbonyl O atoms face each other and are orientated to allow for the formation of two intramolecular O—H⋯O hydrogen bonds. In the crystal, the presence of C—H⋯O contacts leads to the formation of supramolecular chains along the b axis. These aggregate into layers that stack along c
A Novel Assessment Method of Charging Station Planning Based on Fuzzy Matter Element Theory
Scientific and rational planning of urban electric vehicles (EVs) charging station is an important prerequisite for large scale EVs interact with smart grid friendly. This article realizes the planning assessment of EV charging station based on fuzzy matter element theory. The features of urban EV charging station are analyzed, and the evaluation index system of alternative charging station is established. The paper applies fuzzy matter element analysis method to obtain the optimal fuzzy matter element sequence with alternative points, and as a reference sequence. The weights of alternative points corresponding evaluation index are obtained by entropy method. Then, the paper applies the gray correlation analysis to calculate the gray relational weighing degree of fuzzy matter element sequence of alternative points, and determine the EV charging station plan based on the size of gray relational weighing degree. Finally, the simulation results show that the proposed method is effective and feasible for EV charging station planning
Provenance-Aware Sensor Data Storage
Sensor network data has both historical and realtime value. Making historical sensor data useful, in particular, requires storage, naming, and indexing. Sensor data presents new challenges in these areas. Such data is location-specific but also distributed; it is collected in a particular physical location and may be most useful there, but it has additional value when combined with other sensor data collections in a larger distributed system. Thus, arranging location-sensitive peer-to-peer storage is one challenge. Sensor data sets do not have obvious names, so naming them in a globally useful fashion is another challenge. The last challenge arises from the need to index these sensor data sets to make them searchable. The key to sensor data identity is provenance, the full history or lineage of the data. We show how provenance addresses the naming and indexing issues and then present a
research agenda for constructing distributed, indexed repositories of sensor data.Engineering and Applied Science
Provenance-Aware Sensor Data Storage
Sensor network data has both historical and realtime value. Making historical sensor data useful, in particular, requires storage, naming, and indexing. Sensor data presents new challenges in these areas. Such data is location-specific but also distributed; it is collected in a particular physical location and may be most useful there, but it has additional value when combined with other sensor data collections in a larger distributed system. Thus, arranging location-sensitive peer-to-peer storage is one challenge. Sensor data sets do not have obvious names, so naming them in a globally useful fashion is another challenge. The last challenge arises from the need to index these sensor data sets to make them searchable. The key to sensor data identity is provenance, the full history or lineage of the data. We show how provenance addresses the naming and indexing issues and then present a
research agenda for constructing distributed, indexed repositories of sensor data.Engineering and Applied Science
Localization dynamics in a centrally coupled system
In systems where interactions couple a central degree of freedom and a bath,
one would expect signatures of the bath's phase to be reflected in the dynamics
of the central degree of freedom. This has been recently explored in connection
with many-body localized baths coupled with a central qubit or a single cavity
mode -- systems with growing experimental relevance in various platforms. Such
models also have an interesting connection with Floquet many-body localization
via quantizing the external drive, although this has been relatively
unexplored. Here we adapt the multilayer multiconfigurational time-dependent
Hartree (ML-MCTDH) method, a well-known tree tensor network algorithm, to
numerically simulate the dynamics of a central degree of freedom, represented
by a -level system (qudit), coupled to a disordered interacting 1D spin
bath. ML-MCTDH allows us to reach lattice sites, a far larger
system size than what is feasible with exact diagonalization or kernel
polynomial methods. From the intermediate time dynamics, we find a well-defined
thermodynamic limit for the qudit dynamics upon appropriate rescaling of the
system-bath coupling. The spin system shows similar scaling collapse in the
Edward-Anderson spin glass order parameter or entanglement entropy at
relatively short times. At longer time scales, we see slow growth of the
entanglement, which may arise from dephasing mechanisms in the localized system
or long-range interactions mediated by the central degree of freedom. Similar
signs of localization are shown to appear as well with unscaled system-bath
coupling
Muscleblind1, but Not Dmpk or Six5, Contributes to a Complex Phenotype of Muscular and Motivational Deficits in Mouse Models of Myotonic Dystrophy
Assessment of molecular defects that underlie cognitive deficits observed in mendelian disorders provides a unique opportunity to identify key regulators of human cognition. Congenital Myotonic Dystrophy 1 (cDM1), a multi-system disorder is characterized by both cognitive deficits and a spectrum of behavioral abnormalities, which include visuo-spatial memory deficits, anxiety and apathy. Decreased levels of DMPK (Dystrophia Myotonica-protein kinase), SIX5, a transcription factor or MBNL1 (Muscleblind-like 1), an RNA splice regulator have been demonstrated to contribute to distinct features of cDM1. Mouse strains in which either Dmpk, Six5 or Mbnl1 are inactivated were therefore studied to determine the relative contribution of each gene to these cognitive functions. The open field and elevated plus maze tasks were used to examine anxiety, sucrose consumption was used to assess motivation, whereas the water maze and context fear conditioning were used to examine spatial learning and memory. Cognitive and behavioral abnormalities were observed only in Mbnl1 deficient mice, which demonstrate behavior consistent with motivational deficits in the Morris water maze, a complex visuo-spatial task and in the sucrose consumption test for anhedonia. All three models of cDM1 exhibit normal spatial learning and memory. These data identify MBNL1 as a potential regulator of emotional state with decreased MBNL1 levels underlying the motivational deficits observed in cDM1
Crystal structure, superconductivity and magnetic properties of the superconducting ferromagnets Gd1.4-xDyxCe0.6Sr2RuCu2O10 (x=0 - 0.6)
The structural, electrical and magnetic properties of the superconducting
ferromagnets, Gd1.4-xDyxCe0.6Sr2RuCu2O10 (x=0-0.6) are systematically
investigated as a function of Dy doping and temperature. These compounds are
characterised by high temperature superconductivity (Tc ranging from 20-40 K
depending upon the Dy content) coexisting with weak ferromagnetism with two
magnetic transitions (TM2 ranging from 95-106 K and TM1 around 120 K). Doping
with Dy gives no significant structural changes except for a minor change in
the c/a ratio. However the superconducting transition temperature is
significantly suppressed and magnetic ordering temperature enhanced on Dy
doping. These effects are described and discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
Comparison of ibuprofen release from minitablets and capsules containing ibuprofen: β-Cyclodextrin complex
NOTICE: this is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in Eur J Pharm Biopharm. 2011 May;78(1):58-66. Epub 2010 Dec 30.Mixtures containing ibuprofen (IB) complexed with b-cyclodextrin (bCD) obtained by two complexation methods [suspension/solution (with water removed by air stream, spray- and freeze-drying) and kneading technique] were processed into pharmaceutical dosage forms (minitablets and capsules). Powders (IB, bCD and IBbCD) were characterized for moisture content, densities (true and bulk), angle of repose and Carr’s index, X-ray and NMR. From physical mixtures and IBbCD complexes without other excipients were prepared 2.5-mm-diameter minitablets and capsules. Minitablets were characterized for the energy of compaction, tensile strength, friability, density and IB release (at pH 1.0 and 7.2), whereby capsules were characterized for IB release. The results from the release of IB were analyzed using different parameters, namely, the similarity factor (f2), the dissolution efficiency (DE) and the amounts released at a certain time (30, 60 and 180 min) and compared statistically (a = 0.05). The release of IB from the minitablets showed no dependency on the amount of water used in the formation of the complexes. Differences were due to the compaction force used or the presence of a shell for the capsules. The differences observed were mostly due to the characteristics of the particles (dependent on the method considered on the formation of the complexes) and neither to the dosage form nor to the complex of the IB
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