22,577 research outputs found

    Stress-related differential expression of multiple β-carotene ketolase genes in the unicellular green alga Haematococcus pluvialis

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    The unicellular green alga Haematococcus pluvialis is used as a biological production system for astaxanthin. It accumulates large amounts of this commercially interesting ketocarotenoid under a variety of environmental stresses. Here we report the identification and expression of three different β-carotene ketolase genes (bkt) that are involved in the biosynthesis of astaxanthin in a single strain of the alga. Bkt1 and bkt2 proved to be the crtO and bkt previously isolated from two different strains of H. pluvialis. Bkt3 is a novel third gene, which shared 95% identical nucleotide sequence with bkt2. Nitrogen deficiency alone could not induce the alga cells to produce astaxanthin in 3 days even though it enhances the expression of the bkt genes to three times of that in normal growing cells within 16 h. High light irradiation (125 μmol m -2 s -1) or 45 mM sodium acetate greatly increased the expression of bkt genes to 18 or 52 times of that in normal growing cells, resulting in an accumulation of substantial astaxanthin (about 6 mg g -1 dry biomass) in 3 days. It is suggested that the existence of the multiple bkt genes and their strong up-regulation by different stress conditions is one of the reasons that H. pluvialis accumulates large amounts of astaxanthin in an instant response to stress environments. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.postprin

    How cities prepare for climate change: Comparing Hamburg and Rotterdam

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    This paper compares the different ways in which the cities of Hamburg and Rotterdam are taking preemptive action to adapt to climate change. Literature, interviews, secondary data, official statistics, project reports and policy briefs were used to identify institutional arrangements used by the city governments to encourage innovations in climate adaptation strategies and involve the private sector in climate change policy implementation. We focus on cases that create positive opportunities; exploring how innovations are facilitated within the theoretical frameworks of the Porter hypothesis and eco-innovation. We examine two possible pathways of climate change governance, firstly strict regulation and formal enforcement, and secondly institutional eco-innovation and voluntary measures. We found that different emphasis is placed on the preferred pathway in each of the case studies. Hamburg focuses on formal enforcements while the Rotterdam city government encourages institutional eco-innovation by acting as a platform and also providing incentives. Our findings suggest that a well-designed institutional framework can enhance innovation and increase environmental and business performance. The framework could vary in instruments and patterns, using both formal constraints and incentives to increase voluntary actions to shape policy. The formal rules could be stringent or incentivising to shape the climate change measures. The research aims to contribute to both practice and science by providing examples that might motivate and inspire other cities to design appropriate institutions for climate change policy implementation

    Optimum pHs for Cr(VI) co-removal with nucleated Cu(II) precipitation in continuous-flow fluidised metal strippers

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    A compact nucleated precipitation technology using two fluidised sand columns in series was developed to pretreat model metal-plating wastewater containing high concentrations of Cu(II) and Cr(VI). Since either Cu(II) precipitation or Cr(VI) co-removal with Cu(II) precipitation was found to be highly pH dependent in batch tests, the continuous-flow studies were conducted under different pHs. Experimental results show that high pH has no positive influence on either Cr(VI) or Cu(II) removal in the continuous-flow fluidised metal stripper technology. Operation at pH 6.5 in both columns can obtain significantly higher levels of both total Cr(VI) and total Cu(II) removal compared with work at pH 9.5 in both columns and work at pH 6.5 and 9.5 in the 1st and 2nd columns, respectivel

    Isolation and characterization of a carotenoid oxygenase gene from Chlorella zofingiensis (Chlorophyta)

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    The green alga Chlorella zofingiensis produces large amounts of the valuable ketocarotenoid astaxanthin under dark, heterotrophic growth conditions, making it potentially employable for commercial production of astaxanthin as feed additives, colorants, and health products. Here, we report the identification and characterization of a β-carotene oxygenase (CRTO) gene that is directly involved in the biosynthesis of ketocarotenoids in C. zofingiensis. The open reading frame of the crtO gene, which is interrupted by three introns of 243, 318, and 351 bp, respectively, encodes a polypeptide of 312 amino acid residues. Only one crtO gene was detected in the genome of C. zofingiensis. Furthermore, the expression of the crtO gene was transiently up-regulated upon glucose treatment. Functional complementation in Escherichia coli showed that the coding protein of the crtO gene not only exhibits normal CRTO activity by converting β-carotene to canthaxanthin via echinenone, but also displays a high enzymatic activity of converting zeaxanthin to astaxanthin via adonixanthin. Based on the bifunctional CRTO, a predicted pathway for astaxanthin biosynthesis in C. zofingiensis is described, and the CRTO is termed as carotenoid 4,4′-β-ionone ring oxygenase. © Springer-Verlag 2005.postprin

    Auditory cortical responses in the cat to sounds that produce spatial illusions

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    Humans and cats can localize a sound source accurately if its spectrum is fairly broad and flat(1-3), as is typical of most natural sounds. However, if sounds are filtered to reduce the width of the spectrum, they result:in illusions of sources that are very different from the actual locations, particularly in the up/down and front/back dimensions(4-6). Such illusions reveal that the auditory system relies on specific characteristics of sound spectra to obtain cues for localization(7). In the-auditory cortex of cats, temporal firing patterns of neurons can signal the locations of broad-band sounds(8-9). Here we show that such spike patterns systematically mislocalize sounds that have been passed through a narrow-band filter. Both correct and incorrect locations signalled by neurons can be predicted quantitatively by a model of spectral processing that also predicts correct and incorrect localization judgements by human listeners(6). Similar cortical mechanisms, if present in humans, could underlie human auditory spatial perception.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/62778/1/399688a0.pd

    Traffic agents for improving QoS in mixed infrastructure and ad hoc modes wireless LAN

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    As an important complement to infrastructured wireless networks, mobile ad hoc networks (MANET) are more flexible in providing wireless access services, but more difficult in meeting different quality of service (QoS) requirements for mobile customers. Both infrastructure and ad hoc network structures are supported in wireless local area networks (WLAN), which can offer high data-rate wireless multimedia services to the mobile stations (MSs) in a limited geographical area. For those out-of-coverage MSs, how to effectively connect them to the access point (AP) and provide QoS support is a challenging issue. By mixing the infrastructure and the ad hoc modes in WLAN, we propose in this paper a new coverage improvement scheme that can identify suitable idle MSs in good service zones as traffic agents (TAs) to relay traffic from those out-of-coverage MSs to the AP. The service coverage area of WLAN is then expanded. The QoS requirements (e.g., bandwidth) of those MSs are considered in the selection process of corresponding TAs. Mathematical analysis, verified by computer simulations, shows that the proposed TA scheme can effectively reduce blocking probability when traffic load is light

    Generalised risk-sensitive control with full and partial state observation

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    This paper generalises the risk-sensitive cost functional by introducing noise dependent penalties on the state and control variables. The optimal control problems for the full and partial state observation are considered. Using a change of probability measure approach, explicit closed-form solutions are found in both cases. This has resulted in a new risk-sensitive regulator and filter, which are generalisations of the well-known classical results

    Enhancement of vaccinia virus based oncolysis with histone deacetylase inhibitors

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    Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDI) dampen cellular innate immune response by decreasing interferon production and have been shown to increase the growth of vesicular stomatitis virus and HSV. As attenuated tumour-selective oncolytic vaccinia viruses (VV) are already undergoing clinical evaluation, the goal of this study is to determine whether HDI can also enhance the potency of these poxviruses in infection-resistant cancer cell lines. Multiple HDIs were tested and Trichostatin A (TSA) was found to potently enhance the spread and replication of a tumour selective vaccinia virus in several infection-resistant cancer cell lines. TSA significantly decreased the number of lung metastases in a syngeneic B16F10LacZ lung metastasis model yet did not increase the replication of vaccinia in normal tissues. The combination of TSA and VV increased survival of mice harbouring human HCT116 colon tumour xenografts as compared to mice treated with either agent alone. We conclude that TSA can selectively and effectively enhance the replication and spread of oncolytic vaccinia virus in cancer cells. © 2010 MacTavish et al

    Stable isotopic and biomarker evidence of terrigenous organic matter export to the deep sea during tropical storms

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    The global export of organic carbon (OC) is intimately linked to the total flux of terrestrial sediment to the ocean, with the continental margins receiving similar to 90% of the sediment generated by erosion on land. Recent studies suggest that a substantial amount of particulate OC (POC) might escape from the shelf and be exported to the continental slope-deep sea sector, although the mechanisms and magnitude of such deep sea POC transfer remain unknown. Here we investigate hyperpycnal flow-associated total suspended matter (TSM) collected from water depths of similar to 3000 m, near the bottom of sea floor, in the Gaoping Submarine Canyon (GSC) off southwestern Taiwan. Elemental (C, N), isotopic (delta C-13, delta N-15) and biomarker compositions of TSM were investigated to understand its biogeochemical characteristics. A two end-member delta C-13 mixing model indicates that deep sea TSM contains similar to 90% terrigenous OC, while a similar mixing model using delta N-15 reveals a lower proportion (similar to 58%). Organic biomarkers of TSM suggest contributions from a mixture of resuspended, continental-margin derived marine organic matter (OMMAR) and terrigenous sources, revealing that terrestrial OC likely mixes with nitrogen-rich marine material during rapid transport. This study documents that rapid transfer of terrigenous organic matter (OMTERR) into the deeper regions of GSC occurred within a week of typhoon Morakot, likely through hyperpycnal injection of sediment-laden, warm freshwater from southern Taiwan. Evidence from this typhoon Morakot-induced hyperpycnal plume event in Taiwan demonstrates that extreme storm events provide an efficient way to export terrigenous OC without oxidation to hitherto unknown water depths of deep sea in the Oceania region. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND licens

    Optimal Investment in the Development of Oil and Gas Field

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    Let an oil and gas field consists of clusters in each of which an investor can launch at most one project. During the implementation of a particular project, all characteristics are known, including annual production volumes, necessary investment volumes, and profit. The total amount of investments that the investor spends on developing the field during the entire planning period we know. It is required to determine which projects to implement in each cluster so that, within the total amount of investments, the profit for the entire planning period is maximum. The problem under consideration is NP-hard. However, it is solved by dynamic programming with pseudopolynomial time complexity. Nevertheless, in practice, there are additional constraints that do not allow solving the problem with acceptable accuracy at a reasonable time. Such restrictions, in particular, are annual production volumes. In this paper, we considered only the upper constraints that are dictated by the pipeline capacity. For the investment optimization problem with such additional restrictions, we obtain qualitative results, propose an approximate algorithm, and investigate its properties. Based on the results of a numerical experiment, we conclude that the developed algorithm builds a solution close (in terms of the objective function) to the optimal one
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