425 research outputs found
Investigation of Cracking in Reinforced Concrete Structures by Means of Standardized Deformation Models
In this study, a detailed analysis of the use of standardized deformation models is carried out to calculate the design characteristics of reinforced concrete elements, such as crack resistance. For theoretical verification of the values of the moment of cracking, calculation methods based on the use of a nonlinear deformation model are used.A theoretical study of cracking moment using a non-linear deformation model shows that the application of a two-line diagram of concrete deformation allows to obtain the most accurate values of cracking moment
Evolution of glyoxylate cycle enzymes in Metazoa: evidence of multiple horizontal transfer events and pseudogene formation
BACKGROUND: The glyoxylate cycle is thought to be present in bacteria, protists, plants, fungi, and nematodes, but not in other Metazoa. However, activity of the glyoxylate cycle enzymes, malate synthase (MS) and isocitrate lyase (ICL), in animal tissues has been reported. In order to clarify the status of the MS and ICL genes in animals and get an insight into their evolution, we undertook a comparative-genomic study. RESULTS: Using sequence similarity searches, we identified MS genes in arthropods, echinoderms, and vertebrates, including platypus and opossum, but not in the numerous sequenced genomes of placental mammals. The regions of the placental mammals' genomes expected to code for malate synthase, as determined by comparison of the gene orders in vertebrate genomes, show clear similarity to the opossum MS sequence but contain stop codons, indicating that the MS gene became a pseudogene in placental mammals. By contrast, the ICL gene is undetectable in animals other than the nematodes that possess a bifunctional, fused ICL-MS gene. Examination of phylogenetic trees of MS and ICL suggests multiple horizontal gene transfer events that probably went in both directions between several bacterial and eukaryotic lineages. The strongest evidence was obtained for the acquisition of the bifunctional ICL-MS gene from an as yet unknown bacterial source with the corresponding operonic organization by the common ancestor of the nematodes. CONCLUSION: The distribution of the MS and ICL genes in animals suggests that either they encode alternative enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle that are not orthologous to the known MS and ICL or the animal MS acquired a new function that remains to be characterized. Regardless of the ultimate solution to this conundrum, the genes for the glyoxylate cycle enzymes present a remarkable variety of evolutionary events including unusual horizontal gene transfer from bacteria to animals. REVIEWERS: Arcady Mushegian (Stowers Institute for Medical Research), Andrey Osterman (Burnham Institute for Medical Research), Chris Ponting (Oxford University)
Comment on the proper QCD string dynamics in a heavy-light system
The string correction to the inter-quark interaction at large distances is
derived using the field theory approach to a heavy-light quark-antiquark system
in the modified Fock-Schwinger gauge.Comment: LaTeX2e, 6 pages, no figures, to appear in JETP Let
Pentaquarks in the Jaffe-Wilczek approximation
The masses of , and pentaquarks are
evaluated in a framework of both the Effective Hamiltonian approach to QCD and
spinless Salpeter using the Jaffe--Wilczek diquark approximation and the string
interaction for the diquark--diquark--antiquark system. The pentaquark masses
are found to be in the region above 2 GeV. That indicates that the Goldstone
boson exchange effects may play an important role in the light pentaquarks. The
same calculations yield the mass of pentaquark 3250 MeV
and pentaquark 6509 MeV.Comment: 14 pages, 2 tables, LaTeX2e. References correcte
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