1,352 research outputs found
The Historical Development of the Port of Livorno (Italy) and Its New Port Plan 2010 in Advanced Stage of Elaboration
The geographical location makes the port of Livorno one of the most important in Italy. The port, in fact, benefits of an extended network of roads and rails connecting it with the rest of Italy, and central and southern Europe as well. The history of Livorno and its port is inextricably linked to that of Pisa and Florence, and to the complexity of events that determined the political set-up of the region along several centuries. Looking at the new port plan of Livorno has made it necessary an extensive overview of the history of both the port, and of its planning. This analysis has allowed: to understand the reason for the different choices made in the past for the development of the port, highlighting, when necessary, the errors made; to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the existing port infrastructure; to identify the works needed to boost the port in the European context. The purpose of this paper is to provide a summary of the analysis performed for the implementation of the new Livorno port plan 2010 and show how the port planning in Italy is often conditioned by hundreds of centuries of history
Generating functions of non-backtracking walks on weighted digraphs: radius of convergence and Ihara's theorem
It is known that the generating function associated with the enumeration of
non-backtracking walks on finite graphs is a rational matrix-valued function of
the parameter; such function is also closely related to graph-theoretical
results such as Ihara's theorem and the zeta function on graphs. In [P.
Grindrod, D. J. Higham, V. Noferini, The deformed graph Laplacian and its
application to network centrality analysis, SIAM J. Matrix Anal. Appl. 39(1),
310--341, 2018], the radius of convergence of the generating function was
studied for simple (i.e., undirected, unweighted and with no loops) graphs, and
shown to depend on the number of cycles in the graph. In this paper, we use
technologies from the theory of polynomial and rational matrices to greatly
extend these results by studying the radius of convergence of the corresponding
generating function for general, possibly directed and/or weighted, graphs. We
give an analogous characterization of the radius of convergence for directed
unweighted graphs, showing that it depends on the number of cycles in the
undirectization of the graph. For weighted graphs, we provide for the first
time an exact formula for the radius of convergence, improving a previous
result that exhibited a lower bound. Finally, we consider also
backtracking-downweighted walks on unweighted digraphs, and we prove a version
of Ihara's theorem in that case
Perturbation theory of transfer function matrices
Zeros of rational transfer function matrices are the eigenvalues
of associated polynomial system matrices , under minimality
conditions. In this paper we define a structured condition number for a simple
eigenvalue of a (locally) minimal polynomial system matrix
, which in turn is a simple zero of its transfer
function matrix . Since any rational matrix can be written as the
transfer function of a polynomial system matrix, our analysis yield a
structured perturbation theory for simple zeros of rational matrices
. To capture all the zeros of , regardless of whether
they are poles or not, we consider the notion of root vectors. As corollaries
of the main results, we pay particular attention to the special case of
being not a pole of since in this case the results get
simpler and can be useful in practice. We also compare our structured condition
number with Tisseur's unstructured condition number for eigenvalues of matrix
polynomials, and show that the latter can be unboundedly larger. Finally, we
corroborate our analysis by numerical experiments.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figure
Dbl oncogene expression in MCF-10 A epithelial cells disrupts mammary acinar architecture, induces EMT and angiogenic factor secretion.
The proteins of the Dbl family are guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) of Rho GTPases and are known to be involved in cell growth regulation. Alterations of the normal function of these proteins lead to pathological processes such as developmental disorders, neoplastic transformation, and tumor metastasis. We have previously demonstrated that expression of Dbl oncogene in lens epithelial cells modulates genes encoding proteins involved in epithelial-mesenchymal-transition (EMT) and induces angiogenesis in the lens. Our present study was undertaken to investigate the role of Dbl oncogene in epithelial cells transformation, providing new insights into carcinoma progression. To assess how Dbl oncogene can modulate EMT, cell migration, morphogenesis, and expression of pro-apoptotic and angiogenic factors we utilized bi- and three-dimensional cultures of MCF-10░A cells. We show that upon Dbl expression MCF-10░A cells undergo EMT. In addition, we found that Dbl overexpression sustain
Expressão de proteína capsídica recombinante do Apple stem pitting virus e produção de antissoro policlonal.
O objetivo deste trabalho foi a expressão do gene da proteína capsidíca do ASPV em bactérias e a produção do antissoro policlonal contra a proteína expressada.Resumo
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A detailed mineralogical, petrographic, and geochemical study of the highly reduced chondrite, Acfer 370
Among the many ungrouped meteorites, Acfer 370, NWA 7135, and El Médano 301—probably along with the chondritic inclusion in Cumberland Falls and ALHA 78113—represent a homogeneous grouplet of strongly reduced forsterite‐rich chondrites characterized by common textural, chemical, mineralogical, and isotopic features. All of these meteorites are much more reduced than OCs, with a low iron content in olivine and low‐Ca pyroxene. In particular, Acfer 370 is a type 4 chondrite that has olivine and low‐Ca pyroxene compositional ranges of Fa 5.2–5.8 and Fs 9.4–33.4, respectively. The dominant phase is low‐Ca pyroxene (36.3 vol%), followed by Fe‐Ni metal (16.3 vol%) and olivine (15.5 vol%); nevertheless, considering the Fe‐oxyhydroxide (due to terrestrial weathering), the original metal content was around 29.6 vol%. Finally, the mean oxygen isotopic composition Δ17O = +0.68‰ along with the occurrence of a silica phase, troilite, Ni‐rich phosphides, chromite, and oldhamite confirms that these ungrouped meteorites have been affected by strong reduction and are different from any other group recognized so far
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Enigmatic persistence of dissolved organic matter in the ocean
Marine dissolved organic matter (DOM) contains more carbon than the combined stocks of Earth’s biota. Organisms in the ocean continuously release a myriad of molecules that become food for microheterotrophs, but, for unknown reasons, a residual fraction persists as DOM for millennia. In this Perspective, we discuss and compare two concepts that could explain this persistence. The long-standing ‘intrinsic recalcitrance’ paradigm attributes DOM stability to inherent molecular properties. In the ‘emergent recalcitrance’ concept, DOM is continuously transformed by marine microheterotrophs, with recalcitrance emerging on an ecosystems level. Both concepts are consistent with observations in the modern ocean, but they imply very different responses of the DOM pool to climate-related changes. To better understand DOM persistence, we propose a new overarching research strategy — the ecology of molecules — that integrates the concepts of intrinsic and emergent recalcitrance with the ecological and environmental context
Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria
Encounters among bacteria and their viral predators (bacteriophages) are among the most common ecological interactions on Earth. These encounters are likely to occur with regularity inside surface-bound communities that microbes most often occupy in natural environments. Such communities, termed biofilms, are spatially constrained: interactions become limited to near neighbors, diffusion of solutes and particulates can be reduced, and there is pronounced heterogeneity in nutrient access and physiological state. It is appreciated from prior theoretical work that phage-bacteria interactions are fundamentally different in spatially structured contexts, as opposed to well-mixed liquid culture. Spatially structured communities are predicted to promote the protection of susceptible host cells from phage exposure, and thus weaken selection for phage resistance. The details and generality of this prediction in realistic biofilm environments, however, are not known. Here, we explore phage-host interactions using experiments and simulations that are tuned to represent the essential elements of biofilm communities. Our simulations show that in biofilms, phage-resistant cells-as their relative abundance increases-can protect clusters of susceptible cells from phage exposure, promoting the coexistence of susceptible and phage-resistant bacteria under a large array of conditions. We characterize the population dynamics underlying this coexistence, and we show that coexistence is recapitulated in an experimental model of biofilm growth measured with confocal microscopy. Our results provide a clear view into the dynamics of phage resistance in biofilms with single-cell resolution of the underlying cell-virion interactions, linking the predictions of canonical theory to realistic models and in vitro experiments of biofilm growth.
IMPORTANCE In the natural environment, bacteria most often live in communities bound to one another by secreted adhesives. These communities, or biofilms, play a central role in biogeochemical cycling, microbiome functioning, wastewater treatment, and disease. Wherever there are bacteria, there are also viruses that attack them, called phages. Interactions between bacteria and phages are likely to occur ubiquitously in biofilms. We show here, using simulations and experiments, that biofilms will in most conditions allow phage-susceptible bacteria to be protected from phage exposure, if they are growing alongside other cells that are phage resistant. This result has implications for the fundamental ecology of phage-bacteria interactions, as well as the development of phage-based antimicrobial therapeutics
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