6,903 research outputs found
Analisis Karakteristik Elektrik Zno Terdoping Cr2O3 Untuk Aplikasi Varistor Tegangan Rendah
ZnO is one of the main ingredients of making varistor can be used as a protective device to protect electronic and electrical equipment from the dangers of impulse over voltage. Ability to function as a varistor protective because ZnO has a resistance that is not linear. When the system did not experience over voltage fault, current does not flow from the varistor, but when over voltage fault on system, current will flow from the fault line to the ground through varistor. The addition of dopant to ZnO expected to improve non-linierity of ZnO resitance. In this research used Cr2O3 as dopant. Varistor manufacturing using the dry pressing method at a pressure of 150 kg/cm2. Sintering process performed at a temperature of 9000C with a time of detention for 2 hours. The size of the resulting varistor has a thickness ± 1.5 mm and ± 19 mm diameter. Characterization performed includes the analysis of crystal structures using X-ray diffraction, microstructure using MO and SEM, and electrical properties characterization volt-time using capacitive impulse voltage generator. Based on test results of x-ray diffraction and in accordance with PDF No. 38-1479 prove that the sample ZnCr5.0 contains Cr2O3 with ZnO compounds dominant. Microstructure obtained by SEM seems not so clear, it is because the process is not optimum preparation and etching is not performed on test samples. Pure ZnO Varistor can work cut given impulse voltage, whereas the varistor mixtures of ZnO-Cr2O3 can not work to cut the impulse voltage 900 V-1450 V provided, it is alleged to be caused sintering temperature given is not optimum and dopan provided is not sufficient to improve performance a varistor
The Chlamydia trachomatis Type III Secretion Chaperone Slc1 Engages Multiple Early Effectors, Including TepP, a Tyrosine-phosphorylated Protein Required for the Recruitment of CrkI-II to Nascent Inclusions and Innate Immune Signaling
Chlamydia trachomatis, the causative agent of trachoma and sexually transmitted infections, employs a type III secretion (T3S) system to deliver effector proteins into host epithelial cells to establish a replicative vacuole. Aside from the phosphoprotein TARP, a Chlamydia effector that promotes actin re-arrangements, very few factors mediating bacterial entry and early inclusion establishment have been characterized. Like many T3S effectors, TARP requires a chaperone (Slc1) for efficient translocation into host cells. In this study, we defined proteins that associate with Slc1 in invasive C. trachomatis elementary bodies (EB) by immunoprecipitation coupled with mass spectrometry. We identified Ct875, a new Slc1 client protein and T3S effector, which we renamed TepP (Translocated early phosphoprotein). We provide evidence that T3S effectors form large molecular weight complexes with Scl1 in vitro and that Slc1 enhances their T3S-dependent secretion in a heterologous Yersinia T3S system. We demonstrate that TepP is translocated early during bacterial entry into epithelial cells and is phosphorylated at tyrosine residues by host kinases. However, TepP phosphorylation occurs later than TARP, which together with the finding that Slc1 preferentially engages TARP in EBs leads us to postulate that these effectors are translocated into the host cell at different stages during C.trachomatis invasion. TepP co-immunoprecipitated with the scaffolding proteins CrkI-II during infection and Crk was recruited to EBs at entry sites where it remained associated with nascent inclusions. Importantly, C. trachomatis mutants lacking TepP failed to recruit CrkI-II to inclusions, providing genetic confirmation of a direct role for this effector in the recruitment of a host factor. Finally, endocervical epithelial cells infected with a tepP mutant showed altered expression of a subset of genes associated with innate immune responses. We propose a model wherein TepP acts downstream of TARP to recruit scaffolding proteins at entry sites to initiate and amplify signaling cascades important for the regulation of innate immune responses to Chlamydia.Fil: Chen, Yi-Shan. University of Duke; Estados UnidosFil: Bastidas, Robert J.. University of Duke; Estados UnidosFil: Saka, Hector Alex. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba; Argentina. University of Duke; Estados UnidosFil: Carpenter, Victoria K.. Duke University Medical Center; . University of Duke; Estados UnidosFil: Richards, Kristian L.. Miami University; Estados UnidosFil: Plano, Gregory V.. Miami University; Estados UnidosFil: Valdivia, Raphael H.. University of Duke; Estados Unido
The Influence of Marketing Mix, Perceived Risk, and Satisfaction on Word of Mouth in Xyz Clinic
The increasing need for health services, peoples who lived in the Pekayon, Bekasi City were given the opportunity to choose the right clinic. Word of mouth is a marketing technique that can be used by clinics. This study aims to analyze the effects of the marketing mix, perceived risk, and satisfaction on word of mouth at XYZ clinic. The research is a descriptive method with a survey using questionnaires and 200 respondents as the sample. Furthermore, the data analysis technique is descriptive with SPSS16.0 software and Structural Equation Model (SEM) with LISREL 8.70. Based on the results, it can be concluded that the marketing mix has a positive effect on perceived risk, marketing mix has a positive effect on satisfaction, perceived risk has a negative effect on satisfaction, marketing mix has a positive effect on word of mouth, perceived risk has a negative effect on word of mouth, and satisfaction has a positive effect on word of mouth. Referring to these conclusions, it can be confirmed that the clinical management of doctor XYZ needs to improve employee services, convenience the patient that this clinic has expert doctors, and utilizing the use of social media as a marketing strategy
Everolimus Rescue Treatment for Chronic Rejection After Pediatric Living Donor Liver Transplantation: 2 Case Reports
Ueno T., Hiwatashi S., Saka R., et al. Everolimus Rescue Treatment for Chronic Rejection After Pediatric Living Donor Liver Transplantation: 2 Case Reports. Transplantation Proceedings 50, 2872 (2018); https://doi.org/10.1016/J.TRANSPROCEED.2018.03.079.Chronic rejection (CR) remains a challenging complication after liver transplantation. Everolimus, which is a mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor, has an anti-fibrosis effect. We report here the effect of everolimus on CR. Case 1 was a 7-year-old girl who underwent living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) shortly after developing fulminant hepatitis at 10 months of age. Liver function tests (LFTs) did not improve after transplantation despite treatment with tacrolimus + mycophenolate mofetil (MMF). Antithymoglobulin (ATG) and steroid pulse therapy were also ineffective. The patient was diagnosed with CR, and everolimus was started with a target trough level of about 5 ng/mL. LFTs improved and pathological examination showed no progression of hepatic fibrosis. Case 2 was a 10-year-old girl with Alagille syndrome who underwent LDLT at 1 year of age. She had biopsy-proven acute cellular rejection with prolonged LFT abnormalities beginning 3 years after transplantation. She was treated with steroid pulse therapy, followed by MMF, tacrolimus, and prednisolone. Her condition did not improve, even after subsequent ATG administration. CR was suspected based on liver biopsy in the fourth postoperative year, and everolimus was introduced. The target trough level was around 5 ng/mL, but was reduced to 3 ng/mL due to stomatitis. Four years have passed since the initiation of everolimus, and LFTs are stable with no progression of liver biopsy fibrosis. We describe 2 cases in which everolimus was administered for CR. In both cases, LFTs improved and fibrosis did not progress, suggesting that everolimus is an effective treatment for CR after LDLT
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