73,959 research outputs found
Henry A. Wallace to John D. Feerick
Letter from Vice President Henry A. Wallace to Dean John D. Feerick, regarding his scholarly article on presidential inability.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/twentyfifth_amendment_correspondence/1009/thumbnail.jp
Strategies for studying permeation at voltage-gated ion channels
Voltage-dependent ion channels are presently thought to consist of several distinct functional regions: (a) activation gates, (b) inactivation gates, and permeation pathways. This chapter focuses on permeation pathways and may spur new ideas about experiments that use site-directed mutagenesis to probe the ion conduction pathway. Some hubris is required to attempt a survey of this field since individual families -- K^+, Na^+, or Ca^(2+) -- have been reviewed in detail (15, 68, 115, 127). My unified treatment is motivated by the structural similarity suggested by recent cDNA sequencing data on this group (see, for instance, 24). There have been many excellent previous treatments of ion channel permeation (6, 15, 34, 35, 51, 53, 68, 73, 74, 115, 127)
New Views of Multi-Ion Channels
Thus, most site-directed mutagenesis data render it untenable to consider that two or more roughly equivalent high affinity sites govern selectivity in multi-ion pores. The papers by Dang and McCleskey and Kiss et al. respond to this challenge by showing that a model with a single high affinity site, flanked by two binding sites of lower affinity close to the pore entrances, can generate much of the classical multi-ion behavior. The sites need not interact, and the two flanking sites could arise from one of several mechanisms: a featureless charged vestibule, a dehydration step, or a specific weak binding site.
The multi-ion pore remains a cornerstone of permeation theory, but the new theory features only a single high affinity site and no mutual repulsion. The high flux rate occurs because ions pause at the flanking sites and reequilibrate thermally, gaining enough energy to move over the next barrier
Evaluating the operations capability of Freedom's Data Management System
Three areas of Data Management System (DMS) performance are examined: raw processor speed, the subjective speed of the Lynx OS X-Window system, and the operational capacity of the Runtime Object Database (RODB). It is concluded that the proposed processor will operate at its specified rate of speed and that the X-Window system operates within users' subjective needs. It is also concluded that the RODB cannot provide the required level of service, even with a two-order of magnitude (100 fold) improvement in speed
The effect of isoelectric amino acids on the pH(+) of a phosphate buffer solution - A contribution in support of the "Zwitter Ion" hypothesis
The relative merits of the classical conception and of the Zwitter Ion conception of the dissociation of amphoteric electrolytes are discussed, and the following data are presented which confirm the Zwitter Ion hypothesis of Bjerrum, and which are not in accord with the classical view.
1. Amino acids in the isoelectric form resemble strong electrolytes in that they contribute to the ionic strength of the solution.
2. The dielectric constants of aqueous solutions of amino acids, like those of solutions of strong electrolytes greater than 0.02 normal, are considerably greater than that of pure water.
3. The magnitude of the dissociation constants of substituted acetic acids and of glycine, are more easily accounted for with the Zwitter Ion than with the classical conception
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