10 research outputs found

    Le cartographe maltais Giovanni Miriti

    No full text
    Opusculum geographicum rarum Opusculum geographicum rarum, totius eius negotii rationem, mira industria et brevitate complectens, iam recens ex diversorum libris ac chartis, summa cura ac diligentia collectum & publicatum, per Ioannem Myritium Melitensem Clichés Malta Government Library Joannes Myritius, dit aussi Giovanni Miriti, savant maltais, a acquis une renommée internationale en 1590 avec la publication de son ouvrage scientifique Opusculum geographicum raru, imprimé à Ingolstadt, en ..

    Three newly-discovered maps by Antonio Borg at the Senglea Parish Archive

    Get PDF
    At the beginning of this current year I was approached by one of my colleagues from the Faculty of Theology to check a reference from a manuscript at the Senglea Parish Archive. The details pointed to a manuscript titled Memorie Diverse, of which I was vaguely aware due to other research I had carried out lately relating to events that took place in Senglea a century ago. Upon going through the index of the Archive, the closest title I found was Memorie Ecclesiastiche della Città Senglea, which consists of a manuscript dated 1786. The page in the reference I was given was incorrect, but while going through the manuscript’s contents, my attention was attracted by a number of hand-drawn illustrations, three of which were maps depicting Senglea and surrounding areas in three different periods: before the foundation of the city, at a time when most of the city was built and, presumably, around the time when the manuscript was compiled. All three had a particular mark which did not mean anything to me, even though I was aware I had seen it somewhere: a compass rose with an eight-pointed cross in it.peer-reviewe

    Impact of different physical activity types on knee joint structural degeneration assessed with 3-T MRI in overweight and obese subjects: data from the osteoarthritis initiative

    No full text
    ObjectiveTo assess the impact of different types of physical activity types on longitudinal knee joint structural changes over 48 months in overweight and obese subjects.Materials and methodsWe included 415 subjects with a BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2, Kellgren-Lawrence scores ≤ 3 at baseline and Whole-Organ Magnetic Resonance Imaging Score (WORMS) scores available from the Osteoarthritis Initiative cohort. Regular self-reported participation in six physical activity types was assessed: ball sports, bicycling, jogging/running, elliptical-trainer, racquet sports, and swimming. Moreover, they were classified into high- and low-impact physical activity groups. Evaluation of structural knee abnormalities was performed using WORMS obtained by two independent observers blinded to the subjects' physical activity and time point. Linear regression models were used to assess the associations between participation in different physical activity types and changes in WORMS.ResultsNo significant differences in epidemiological data were found between the groups except for gender composition, and there were no significant differences in baseline WORMS. In the cohort as a whole and most exercise groups overall WORMS significantly increased during the observational period. Highest increases compared to the remainder of the group were found in the high impact group (increase in WORMS 4.65; [95% CI] [3.94,5.35]; p = 0.040) and the racquet sports group (6.39; [95% CI] [5.13,7.60]; p ≤ 0.001). Subjects using an elliptical-trainer showed the lowest increase in WORMS (- 1.50 [- 0.21, 3.22]; p = 0.002).ConclusionProgression of knee joint degeneration was consistently higher in subjects engaging in high-impact and racquet sports while subjects using an elliptical-trainer showed the smallest changes in structural degeneration. This work was presented during the 2020 Radiological Society of North America Annual meeting

    Chromophore twisting in the excited state of a photoswitchable fluorescent protein captured by time-resolved serial femtosecond crystallography

    No full text
    International audienceChromophores absorb light in photosensitive proteins and thereby initiate fundamental biological processes such as photosynthesis, vision and biofluorescence. An important goal in their understanding is the provision of detailed structural descriptions of the ultrafast photochemical events that they undergo, in particular of the excited states that connect chemistry to biological function. Here we report on the structures of two excited states in the reversibly photoswitchable fluorescent protein rsEGFP2. We populated the states through femtosecond illumination of rsEGFP2 in its non-fluorescent off state and observed their build-up (within less than one picosecond) and decay (on the several picosecond timescale). Using an X-ray free-electron laser, we performed picosecond time-resolved crystallography and show that the hydroxybenzylidene imidazolinone chromophore in one of the excited states assumes a near-canonical twisted configuration halfway between the trans and cis isomers. This is in line with excited-state quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics and classical molecular dynamics simulations. Our new understanding of the structure around the twisted chromophore enabled the design of a mutant that displays a twofold increase in its off-to-on photoswitching quantum yield
    corecore