372 research outputs found

    The Dutch conservative revolution: the consequences for Europe

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    After the terrorist attacks of 11 September, the United States have become more inward-looking and more sentimentally patriotic. Videos of unsavoury characters like Osama bin Laden have given rise to fears of the unknown and strengthened the call for a return to “American values”. Although responsible policymakers have carefully avoided any hint of anti-Islamic sentiment, the return of values and culture as essential and core elements of national identity are part of a wave of conservative thinking that now also seems to have reached Europe

    Mejorar la imagen de EEUU tras el 11-S: el papel de la diplomacia pĂşblica

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    La diplomacia pública se ha convertido en una herramienta de “poder blando” fundamental en la lucha de los Estados Unidos contra el terrorismo. La decisión de utilizar la imagen del país, su credibilidad y sus medios y técnicas de comunicación puede considerarse como un pago con la misma moneda ante la guerra desproporcionada que comenzó el 11-S

    Carbon-13 n.m.r. investigation on the nitrogen methylation of the mono- and diazanaphthalenes

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    The 13C n.m.r. spectra of the N-methylated mono- and diazanaphthalenes have been recorded and analysed. It has been shown that N-methylation as well as N-protonation in cinnoline occur predominantly at the -nitrogen atom. N-methylation and N-protonation show a similar effect on the 13C chemical shift

    Antimony as a raw material in ancient metal and glass making: provenancing Georgian LBA metallic Sb by isotope analysis

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    Sb was frequently used as a raw material, both in ancient glass-making (as an opacifier and decolouriser) and metallurgy (either as an alloying element or as a pure metal). Despite this ubiquity, antimony production has only occasionally been studied and questions concerning its provenance are still not satisfactorily answered. This study evaluates the suitability of Sb isotope analysis for provenance determination purposes, as experiments under lab conditions have revealed fractionation occurring during redox processes in oxidising stibnites and in making opacified glasses. The results of this paper help to evaluate the possible influence of the pyrotechnological processes on the antimony isotope composition of glass artefacts. This paper focuses on the Caucasus as case study by applying mineralogical, geochemical and isotopic analysis to Georgian ores (mainly from the Racha-Lechkumi district) and Late Bronze Age (LBA; 15th–10th century BCE) metallic Sb objects found at the sites of Brili and Chalpiragorebi

    Industrial Process Design for the Production of Aniline by Direct Amination

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    The objective is to design a plant from raw material to product for the production of aniline by direct amination of benzene. The process design is started on a conceptual level and ended on a basic engineering level as well as a techno-economical evaluation. The amination of benzene by hydroxylamine was used as basis. For the production of hydroxylamine four routes are proposed. The most promising route is the chemical reduction of nitric oxide with hydrogen. The process evaluation shows that 27 % of the atomic nitrogen is lost. The atomic carbon efficiency is close to unity. Furthermore, a significant amount of steam can be produced. From an economical perspective, there is still room for improvement because the return of investment is quite low and the payback period is quite high

    Allermatch™, a webtool for the prediction of potential allergenicity according to current FAO/WHO Codex alimentarius guidelines

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    BACKGROUND: Novel proteins entering the food chain, for example by genetic modification of plants, have to be tested for allergenicity. Allermatch™ is a webtool for the efficient and standardized prediction of potential allergenicity of proteins and peptides according to the current recommendations of the FAO/WHO Expert Consultation, as outlined in the Codex alimentarius. DESCRIPTION: A query amino acid sequence is compared with all known allergenic proteins retrieved from the protein databases using a sliding window approach. This identifies stretches of 80 amino acids with more than 35% similarity or small identical stretches of at least six amino acids. The outcome of the analysis is presented in a concise format. The predictive performance of the FAO/WHO criteria is evaluated by screening sets of allergens and non-allergens against the Allermatch databases. Besides correct predictions, both methods are shown to generate false positive and false negative hits and the outcomes should therefore be combined with other methods of allergenicity assessment, as advised by the FAO/WHO. CONCLUSIONS: Allermatch™ provides an accessible, efficient, and useful webtool for analysis of potential allergenicity of proteins introduced in genetically modified food prior to market release that complies with current FAO/WHO guidelines

    Supercritical Fluids for Higher Extraction Yields of Lipids from Archeological Ceramics

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    The extraction and study of organic residues from ceramics has been a subject of interest for the last 50 years in archeology and archeological science. Lipids are among the best-preserved organic substances in archeological contexts and can provide information about the diets of ancient populations as well as past environments. Here, we present a method which demonstrates significantly improved extraction of lipids from archeological pots by replacing liquid organic solvents with supercritical fluids. Optimization of the procedure using response surface methodology (RSM) approach showed that, on our system, optimal conditions for supercritical extraction of lipids from synthetic fired clay ceramics could be achieved using carbon dioxide with 16 vol % of cosolvent EtOH–H2O (95:5 v/v) in 90 min at a flow rate of 2.3 mL/min, for a pressure of 30 MPa and a temperature of 50 °C. For all reference and archeological samples included in this study, lipid yields obtained by supercritical fluid extraction under these optimal conditions were systematically higher than by conventional solvent extraction. This study also highlighted a variability of the ratio of unsaturated versus saturated fatty acids depending on the extraction method. This can have important implications in the identification of the residue(s). The increased extraction efficiency provided by supercritical fluids, as well as their minimally destructive nature, enable new and refined approaches to residue analysis and dating of archeological ceramics

    Immunohistochemical detection of somatostatin receptor subtypes sst1 and sst2A in human somatostatin receptor positive tumors

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    Although in situ hybridization has been used to examine the distribution of messenger RNA for somatostatin receptor subtypes (sst) in human tumors, the cellular localization of sst1 and sst2A receptors has not been reported. In this study, we describe the cellular localization of human sst1 and sst2A receptor proteins in both cryostat- and paraffin-embedded sections of 25 human tumor tissues using two recently developed polyclonal antibodies. Six somatostatin (SS) receptor (SSR) positive tumors (two gastrinomas, three carcinoids, one pheochromocytoma) and one SSR negative tumor (renal cell carcinoma), selected by positive and negative SSR autoradiography, respectively, were studied by both immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis. The six SSR positive tumors expressed sst2A, while 4 of 5 expressed sst1 as well. The SSR negative tumor did not express either sst1 or sst2A. Western blot analysis of wheat germ agglutinin purified membrane proteins confirmed the presence of the sst1 and sst2A glycosylated receptors. The paraffin-embedded sections gave best information with respect to the subcellular localization. Sst1 immunoreactivity was observed both on the membrane and in the cytoplasm, while sst2A showed predominantly membrane-associated immunoreactivity. This subcellular distribution of sst1 or sst2A receptors was confirmed in paraffin-embedded sections of 8 additional intestinal carcinoids, 5 gastrinomas and 5 pheochromocytomas. Sst1 receptors were detected in 7 out of 8 carcinoids, in all gastrinomas, and in 4 out of 5 pheochromocytomas, while 6 out of 8 carcinoids, all gastrinomas, and 3 out of 5 pheochromocytomas expressed sst2A receptors. In conclusion, sst1 and sst2A receptors show a differential subcellular localization in human SSR positive tumors. The use of SSR subtype selective antibodies to detect the subcellular distribution of SSR subtypes in individual tumor cells is an important step forward to understand more about the pathophysiological role of the different SSR subtypes in human tumors
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