10,140 research outputs found
Efflux-mediated multiresistance in Gram-negative bacteria
ABSTRACTMultiresistance in Gram-negative pathogens, particularly Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Acinetobacter spp. and the Enterobacteriaceae, is a significant problem in medicine today. While multiple mechanisms often contribute to multiresistance, a broadly distributed family of three-component multidrug efflux systems is an increasingly recognised determinant of both intrinsic and acquired multiresistance in these organisms. Homologues of these efflux systems are also readily identifiable in the genome sequences of a wide range of Gram-negative organisms, pathogens and non-pathogens alike, where they probably promote efflux-mediated resistance to multiple antimicrobials. Significantly, these systems often accommodate biocides, raising the spectre of biocide-mediated selection of multiresistance in Gram-negative pathogens. While there is some debate as to the natural function of these efflux systems, only some of which are inducible by their antimicrobial substrates, their contribution to resistance in a variety of pathogens nonetheless makes them reasonable targets for therapeutic intervention. Indeed, given the incredible chemical diversity of substrates accommodated by these efflux systems, it is likely that many novel or yet to be discovered antimicrobials will themselves be efflux substrates and, as such, efflux inhibitors may become an important component of Gram-negative antimicrobial therapy
Evaluation of massless-spring modeling of suspension-line elasticity during the parachute unfurling process
A general theory on mathematical modeling of elastic parachute suspension lines during the unfurling process was developed. Massless-spring modeling of suspension-line elasticity was evaluated in detail. For this simple model, equations which govern the motion were developed and numerically integrated. The results were compared with flight test data. In most regions, agreement was satisfactory. However, poor agreement was obtained during periods of rapid fluctuations in line tension
Education as a Driver of Extinction of Experience or Conservation of Biocultural Heritage
The concept of extinction of experience has increasingly garnered attention in environmental education literature. “Extinction of experience” (EoE) is a neologism articulated by nature writer and lepidopterist Robert Michael Pyle to capture the somewhat intangible loss that occurs when biodiversity is removed from key experiences in our daily lifeworld, and it refers to the cultural and experiential loss that ultimately occurs following the abstention of nature experience. In this paper, I introduce Pyle’s landmark concept and propose that it has significant implications as an additional indirect driver within formal education. With the increasing loss of local species, the rapid extinction crises, and the impacts of climate change shifting ecological systems, there is significant loss and disruption of ecological communities. I argue that EoE is an indirect driver of biodiversity losses. Within formal school settings, knowledge of biodiversity losses and knowledge to co-exist with biodiversity in sustainable ways are not adequately addressed. Therefore, formal education contributes to losses of local ecological knowledge and nature experiences and undermining biocultural heritage. To reverse this trend, it is necessary to identify key mechanisms within formal education that can serve as drivers to protect, promote, and engage biocultural heritage. This approach can also be applied to consider ways to remediate processes that would otherwise drive EoE within dominate practices in our society for biocultural conservation
Reckoning Roanoke: A Historiographical Examination of the Lost Colony
The disappearance of the Lost Colony of Roanoke is an American mystery which has baffled historians for centuries. This paper takes a historiographical view of the works of academics Lee Miller and James Horn, comparing their research and conclusions on the topic. Miller’s belief that the colony was sabotaged by English secretary of state Sir. Francis Walsingham and Horn’s theory that an English desire for mineral wealth and poor preparation for survival in the New World brought about their demise are each analyzed for their legitimacy, research gaps, and possible biases. Through this analysis, it is concluded that the field of study on the attempted colonization of Roanoke and the settlers who disappeared there could benefit from a broader consideration for factors, outside of English politics and Native American relations, which may have contributed to the Lost Colonists\u27 disappearance
Free energy surface of ST2 water near the liquid-liquid phase transition
We carry out umbrella sampling Monte Carlo simulations to evaluate the free
energy surface of the ST2 model of water as a function two order parameters,
the density and a bond-orientational order parameter. We approximate the
long-range electrostatic interactions of the ST2 model using the reaction-field
method. We focus on state points in the vicinity of the liquid-liquid critical
point proposed for this model in earlier work. At temperatures below the
predicted critical temperature we find two basins in the free energy surface,
both of which have liquid-like bond orientational order, but differing in
density. The pressure and temperature dependence of the shape of the free
energy surface is consistent with the assignment of these two basins to the
distinct low density and high density liquid phases previously predicted to
occur in ST2 water.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Letter to the Editor - Conservation of Freshwater Mussels in Iowa
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species richness as high as is reported in North America. With nearly 300 recorded species in the U.S., mussels are key components of freshwater biodiversity playing a vital role in benthic communities. Ecologically important in biological processing and nutrient cycling, mussels are also an important food item for a variety of mammals including mink, otter, and raccoon. In addition to ecological importance, freshwater mussels have been economically important in the production of cultured pearls
Nonlinear c-axis transport in Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_(8+d) from two-barrier tunneling
Motivated by the peculiar features observed through intrinsic tunneling
spectroscopy of BiSrCaCuO mesas in the normal state,
we have extended the normal state two-barrier model for the c-axis transport
[M. Giura et al., Phys. Rev. B {\bf 68}, 134505 (2003)] to the analysis of
curves. We have found that the purely normal-state model reproduces all
the following experimental features: (a) the parabolic -dependence of
in the high- region (above the conventional pseudogap temperature),
(b) the emergence and the nearly voltage-independent position of the "humps"
from this parabolic behavior lowering the temperature, and (c) the crossing of
the absolute curves at a characteristic voltage . Our
findings indicate that conventional tunneling can be at the origin of most of
the uncommon features of the c axis transport in
BiSrCaCuO. We have compared our calculations to
experimental data taken in severely underdoped and slightly underdoped
BiSrCaCuO small mesas. We have found good agreement
between the data and the calculations, without any shift of the calculated
dI/dV on the vertical scale. In particular, in the normal state (above
) simple tunneling reproduces the experimental dI/dV quantitatively.
Below quantitative discrepancies are limited to a simple rescaling of
the voltage in the theoretical curves by a factor 2. The need for such
modifications remains an open question, that might be connected to a change of
the charge of a fraction of the carriers across the pseudogap opening.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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