2,001 research outputs found
Tearing Out the Income Tax by the (Grass)Roots
Landscapes are increasingly fragmented, and conservation programs have started to look at network approaches for maintaining populations at a larger scale. We present an agent-based model of predator–prey dynamics where the agents (i.e. the individuals of either the predator or prey population) are able to move between different patches in a landscaped network. We then analyze population level and coexistence probability given node-centrality measures that characterize specific patches. We show that both predator and prey species benefit from living in globally well-connected patches (i.e. with high closeness centrality). However, the maximum number of prey species is reached, on average, at lower closeness centrality levels than for predator species. Hence, prey species benefit from constraints imposed on species movement in fragmented landscapes since they can reproduce with a lesser risk of predation, and their need for using anti-predatory strategies decreases.authorCount :
The NAD(P)H-utilizing glutamate dehydrogenase of Bacteroides thetaiotamicron belongs to enzyme family I, and its activity is affected by trans-acting gene(s) positioned downstream of gdhA
Previous studies have suggested that regulation of the enzymes of ammonia assimilation in human colonic Bacteroides species is coordinated differently than in other eubacteria. The gene encoding an NAD(P)H-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase (gdhA) in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron was tinned and expressed in Escherichia coli by mutant complementation from the recombinant plasmid pANS100. Examination of the predicted GdhA amino acid sequence revealed that this enzyme possesses motifs typical of the family I-type hexameric GDH proteins. Northern blot analysis with a gdhA-specific probe indicated that a single transcript with an electrophoretic mobility of ~1.6 kb was produced in both B. thetaiotaomicron and E. coli gdhA transformants. Although gdhA transcription was unaffected, no GdhA enzyme activity could be detected in E. coli transformants when smaller DNA fragments from pANS100, which contained the entire gdhA gene, were analyzed. Enzyme activity was restored if these E. coli strains were cotransformed with a second plasmid, which contained a 3-kb segment of DNA located downstream of the gdhA coding region. Frameshift mutagenesis within the DNA downstream of gdhA in pANS100 also resulted in the loss of GdhA enzyme activity. Collectively, these results are interpreted as evidence for the role of an additional gene product(s) in modulating the activity of GDH enzyme activity. Insertional mutagenesis experiments which led to disruption of the gdhA gene on the B. thetaiotaomicron chromosome indicated that gdhA mutants were not glutamate auxotrophs, but attempts to isolate similar mutants with insertion mutations in the region downstream of the gdhA gene were unsuccessful
Decoding a Three-Dimensional Conformal Manifold
We study the one-dimensional complex conformal manifold that controls the
infrared dynamics of a three-dimensional supersymmetric theory
of three chiral superfields with a cubic superpotential. Two special points on
this conformal manifold are the well-known XYZ model and three decoupled copies
of the critical Wess-Zumino model. The conformal manifold enjoys a discrete
duality group isomorphic to and can be thought of as an orbifold of
. We use the expansion and the numerical
conformal bootstrap to calculate the spectrum of conformal dimensions of
low-lying operators and their OPE coefficients, and find a very good
quantitative agreement between the two approaches.Comment: 59 pages, 13 figure
A non-renormalization theorem for chiral primary 3-point functions
In this note we prove a non-renormalization theorem for the 3-point functions
of 1/2 BPS primaries in the four-dimensional N = 4 SYM and chiral primaries in
two dimensional N =(4,4) SCFTs. Our proof is rather elementary: it is based on
Ward identities and the structure of the short multiplets of the superconformal
algebra and it does not rely on superspace techniques. We also discuss some
possible generalizations to less supersymmetric multiplets.Comment: 32 pages, added references, corrected typo
Recreational Marijuana Laws and Junk Food Consumption: Evidence Using Border Analysis and Retail Sales Data
We use retail scanner data on purchases of high calorie food to study the link between recreational marijuana laws (RMLs) and consumption of high calorie food. To do this we exploit differences in the timing of introduction of marijuana laws among states and find that they are complements. Specifically, in counties located in RML states, monthly sales of high calorie food increased by 3.1 percent for ice cream, 4.1 for cookies, and 5.3 percent for chips. Results are robust to including placebo effective dates for RMLs in treated states as well as when using synthetic control methods as an alternative methodology
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