5,286 research outputs found
Animal cell division: a fellowship of the double ring?
Despite a century of research into the nature of animal cell division, a molecular explanation for the positioning of the actomyosin contractile ring has remained elusive. The discovery of a novel interaction between regulators of Rho family small GTPases has revealed a link between the mitotic microtubules and the contractile ring during the later stages of mitosis. The properties of the interacting Rho regulators suggest a molecular model for the positioning and initiation of contractile ring furrowing in animal cells. In this ‘double ring’ model, centralspindlin complexes, localized by the action of their kinesin-like protein component, position and activate a cortical equatorial ring of Rho GTPase exchange factors. The resulting ring of activated Rho would then trigger a cascade of events leading to formation and constriction of the contractile ring
A Needs Assessment Study for an Ongoing Professional Development Program Called Some Saint for Subs for Substitute Teachers in Florida Public School Districts
The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a need for an ongoing professional development program for substitute teachers in Florida public school districts. For some time now, many public school districts in Florida have faced huge teacher and substitute teacher shortages which has a substantial academic impact on the students who attend these schools. A survey was administered to principals, assistant principals, certified teachers, and substitute teachers who work in a public Florida school district to determine if there was a need for talented substitute teachers in their area. Some questions on the survey were modeled after Marzano evaluation questions for certified teachers to see how a talented substitute teacher could be identified as effective while other questions focus on the demographics and substitute teaching experience of those who currently work for a public school district in Florida. Findings include that Florida school districts needed and would benefit from an ongoing professional development program for substitute teachers. The researcher also found that the ongoing professional development program created for substitute teachers, Some Saint for Subs, could increase student achievement as well as solve the substitute inadequacy in Florida public school districts. Recommendations include time (a full school year) and money to thoroughly review the effectiveness of Some Saint for Subs
Spectral Features of the Proximity Effect
We calculate the local density of states (LDOS) of a superconductor-normal
metal sandwich at arbitrary impurity concentration. The presence of the
superconductor induces a gap in the normal metal spectrum that is proportional
to the inverse of the elastic mean free path for rather clean systems. For
a mean free path much shorter than the thickness of the normal metal, we find a
gap size proportional to that approaches the behavior predicted by the
Usadel equation (diffusive limit).Comment: LT22 proceeding
Nonlinear aspects of the EEG during sleep in children
Electroencephalograph (EEG) analysis enables the neuronal behavior of a
section of the brain to be examined. If the behavior is nonlinear then
nonlinear tools can be used to glean information on brain behavior, and aid in
the diagnosis of sleep abnormalities such as obstructive sleep apnea syndrome
(OSAS). In this paper the sleep EEGs of a set of normal and mild OSAS children
are evaluated for nonlinear behaviour. We consider how the behaviour of the
brain changes with sleep stage and between normal and OSAS children.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, 4 table
Full counting statistics of laser excited Rydberg aggregates in a one-dimensional geometry
We experimentally study the full counting statistics of few-body Rydberg
aggregates excited from a quasi-one-dimensional Rydberg gas. We measure
asymmetric excitation spectra and increased second and third order statistical
moments of the Rydberg number distribution, from which we determine the average
aggregate size. Direct comparisons with numerical simulations reveal the
presence of liquid-like spatial correlations, and indicate sequential growth of
the aggregates around an initial grain. These findings demonstrate the
importance of dissipative effects in strongly correlated Rydberg gases and
introduce a way to study spatio-temporal correlations in strongly-interacting
many-body quantum systems without imaging.Comment: 6 pages plus supplemen
New high-technology products for the treatment of haemophilia
This review will focus on new technologies in development that promise to lead to further advances in haemophilia therapeutics. There has been continued interest in the bioengineering of recombinant factor VIII (rFVIII) and factor IX (rFIX) with improved function to overcome some of the limitations in current treatment, the high costs of therapy and to increase availability to a broader world haemophilia population. Bioengineered forms of rFVIII, rFIX or alternative haemostatic molecules may ultimately have an impact on improving the efficacy of therapeutic strategies for the haemophilias by improving biosynthesis and secretion, functional activity, half-life and immunogenicity. Preventing and suppressing inhibitors to factor (F) VIII remain a challenge for both clinicians and scientists. Recent experiments have shown that it is possible to obtain anti-idiotypic antibodies with a number of desirable properties: (i) strong binding avidity to FVIII inhibitors; (ii) neutralization of inhibitory activity both in vitro and in vivo ; (iii) cross-reactivity with antibodies from unrelated patients, and (iv) no interference with FVIII function. An alternative, although complementary approach, makes use of peptides derived from filamentous-phage random libraries. Mimotopes of FVIII can be obtained, which bind to the paratope of inhibitory activity and neutralize their activity both in vitro and in vivo . In this paper, we review advanced genetic strategies for haemophilia therapy. Until recently the traditional concept for gene transfer of inherited and acquired haematological diseases has been focused on how best to obtain stable insertion of a cDNA into a target-cell genome, allowing expression of a therapeutic protein. However, as gene-transfer vector systems continue to improve, the requirement for regulated gene transcription and hence regulated protein expression will become more critical. Inappropriate protein expression levels or expression of transferred cDNAs in non-intended cell types or tissues may lead to target-cell toxicity or activation of unwanted host immune responses. Regulated protein expression requires that the transferred gene be transferred with its own regulatory cassette that allows for gene transcription and translation approaching that of the normal gene in its endogenous context. New molecular techniques, in particular the use of RNA molecules, now allow for transcription of corrective genes that mimic the normal state.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75577/1/j.1365-2516.2004.00996.x.pd
The Persistent Sodium Current Blocker Riluzole Is Antiarrhythmic and Anti-Ischaemic in a Pig Model of Acute Myocardial Infarction
Background The potential of the cardiac persistent sodium current as a target for protection of the myocardium from ischaemia and reperfusion injury is gaining increasing interest. We have investigated the anti-ischaemic and antiarrhythmic effects of riluzole, a selective INaP blocker, in an open chest pig model of infarction. Methods and Principal Findings The left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) was ligated in 27 anesthetised pigs (landrace or large white, either sex, 20–35 kg) which had received riluzole (8 mg/kg IP; n = 6), lidocaine (2.5–12 mg/kg bolus plus 0.05–0.24 mg/kg/min; n = 11) or vehicle (n = 10) 50 min prior. Arrhythmias could be delineated into phase 1a (0 to 20 min), phase 1b (20 to 50 min) and phase 2 (from 50 min to termination at 180 min) and were classified as premature ventricular contractions (PVCs), non-sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation (VF) (spontaneously reverting within 15 s) or sustained VT or VF (ie. requiring cardioversion at 15 s). Riluzole reduced the average number of all arrhythmias in Phase 2 (PVCs from 484+/−119 to 32+/−13; non sustained arrhythmias from 8.9+/−4.4 to 0.7+/−0.5; sustained arrhythmias from 3.9+/−2.2 to 0.5+/−0.4); lidocaine reduced the average number of non-sustained and sustained arrhythmias (to 0.4+/−0.3 and 0.4+/−0.3 respectively) but not PVCs (to 390+/−234). Riluzole and lidocaine reduced the average number of sustained arrhythmias in phase 1b (from 1.8+/−0.4 to 0.17+/−0.13 (p<0.02) and to 0.55+/−0.26 (p = ns) respectively). Neither lidocaine or riluzole changed the ECG intervals: there was no statistical significance between groups at time zero (just before ligation) for any ECG measure. During the course of the 3 hour period of the ischaemia R-R, and P-R intervals shortened slightly in control and riluzole groups (not significantly different from each other) but not in the lidocaine group (significantly different from control). QRS and QTc did not change appreciably in any group Riluzole reduced the degree of histopathological tissue damage across the infarct zone considerably more than did lidocaine. Conclusions At the doses used, riluzole was at least as effective as lidocaine at reducing the number of episodes of ischaemic VT or VF in pigs, and much more effective at reducing the number of PVCs. We propose that this is related to the ability of riluzole to block cardiac persistent sodium currentSteven M. Weiss and David A. Sain
Happy Little Nigs / words by George Elliott
Cover: drawing of young African Americans dancing as an older African American male plays the banjo; description reads rag two step; Publisher: W. J. Dyer and Bro. (Saint Paul)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/sharris_a/1029/thumbnail.jp
On effective compactness and sigma-compactness
Using the Gandy -- Harrington topology and other methods of effective
descriptive set theory, we prove several theorems on compact and sigma-compact
pointsets. In particular we show that any set of the Baire
space either is covered by a countable union of compact
sets, or contains a subset closed in and homeomorphic to (and
then is not covered by a sigma-compact set, of course)
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