1,952 research outputs found
Interview with Janet Butel
An Oral history interview with Janet Butel, PhD of Baylor College of Medicine
Primary investigation into the occurrence of Hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) in a range of smoked products
5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) is produced in foods through many different pathways. Recently, studies have revealed its potential mutagenic and carcinogenic properties. Determination of HMF was originally used as an indicator of both the extent of thermal processing a food had undergone and food quality. It has been identified in a variety of food products such as bread, breakfast cereals, fruit juices, milk and honey. In addition to the thermal processes that lead to the formation of HMF during thermal treatment, food smoking also creates conditions that result in the formation of HMF. This can take place within the food due to the elevated temperatures associated with hot smoking, or by the proximity of the products of the pyrolysis of the wood matrix that is used for smoking (cold smoking). This may lead to further contamination of the product by HMF over and above that associated with the rest of the preparation process. Until now, there have been no studies examining the relation between the smoking procedure and HMF contamination in smoked food. This study is a primary investigation measuring HMF levels in three categories of smoked food products; cheese, processed meat, and fish using HPLC-UV. The amount of HMF found in all three product categories supports our hypothesis that HMF levels are due to both internal pathways during processing and external contamination from smoke generation matrix (wood) employed. The results ranged from 1 ppb (Metsovone traditional Greek smoked cheese) to 4ppm (Hot-smoked ready to eat mackerel). Subsequently for smoked cheese products, a correlation was found between HMF and phenolic compounds generated by the smoking procedures and identified by SPME-GCMS. It was observed that cheese samples that had higher concentrations of HMF were also found to have higher concentrations of syringol and cresols. It is important therefore to understand the smoking procedure’s effect on HMF formation. This will aid in the development of mitigation strategies to reduce HMF formation while retaining the flavour of the smoked products
European Economies in the First Epoch of Imperialism and Mercantilism. 1415-1846.
The costs and benefits of European Imperialism from the conquest of Ceuta, 1415, to the Treaty of Lusaka, 1974.Twelfth International Economic History Congress. Madrid, 1998.Patrick K. O'Brien and Leandro Prados de la Escosura (eds.)Editada en la Fundación Empresa PúblicaJorge M. Pedreira. «To Have and To Have not». The Economic Consequences of Empire: Portugal (1415-1822).-- Bartolomé Yun-Casalilla. The American Empire and the Spanish Economy: An Institutional and Regional Perspective.-- Pieter C. Emmer. The Economic Impact of the Dutch Expansion Overseas, 1570-1870.-- Paul Butel and François Crouzet. Empire and Economic Growth: the Case of 18th Century France.-- Stanley L. Engerman. British Imperialism in a Mercantilist Age, 1492-1849: Conceptual Issues and Empirical Problems.Publicad
Viral MicroRNA Effects on Pathogenesis of Polyomavirus SV40 Infections in Syrian Golden Hamsters
Shaojie Zhang, Vojtech Sroller, Preeti Zanwar, Steven J. Halvorson, Nadim J. Ajami, Corey W. Hecksel, Jody L. Swain, Connie Wong, Janet S. Butel, Department of Molecular Virology and Microbiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of AmericaChun Jung Chen, Christopher S. Sullivan, Department of Molecular Biosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, United States of AmericaJody L. Swain, Center for Comparative Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of AmericaEffects of polyomavirus SV40 microRNA on pathogenesis of viral infections in vivo are not known. Syrian golden hamsters are the small animal model for studies of SV40. We report here effects of SV40 microRNA and influence of the structure of the regulatory region on dynamics of SV40 DNA levels in vivo. Outbred young adult hamsters were inoculated by the intracardiac route with 1×107 plaque-forming units of four different variants of SV40. Infected animals were sacrificed from 3 to 270 days postinfection and viral DNA loads in different tissues determined by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction assays. All SV40 strains displayed frequent establishment of persistent infections and slow viral clearance. SV40 had a broad tissue tropism, with infected tissues including liver, kidney, spleen, lung, and brain. Liver and kidney contained higher viral DNA loads than other tissues; kidneys were the preferred site for long-term persistent infection although detectable virus was also retained in livers. Expression of SV40 microRNA was demonstrated in wild-type SV40-infected tissues. MicroRNA-negative mutant viruses consistently produced higher viral DNA loads than wild-type SV40 in both liver and kidney. Viruses with complex regulatory regions displayed modestly higher viral DNA loads in the kidney than those with simple regulatory regions. Early viral transcripts were detected at higher levels than late transcripts in liver and kidney. Infectious virus was detected infrequently. There was limited evidence of increased clearance of microRNA-deficient viruses. Wild-type and microRNA-negative mutants of SV40 showed similar rates of transformation of mouse cells in vitro and tumor induction in weanling hamsters in vivo. This report identified broad tissue tropism for SV40 in vivo in hamsters and provides the first evidence of expression and function of SV40 microRNA in vivo. Viral microRNA dampened viral DNA levels in tissues infected by SV40 strains with simple or complex regulatory regions.This work was supported in part by research grants R01 CA134524 (JSB) and R01 AI077746 (CSS) from the National Institutes of Health. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Molecular BiosciencesEmail: [email protected]
Ischémie mésentérique étendue associée à la prise excessive de naratriptan et de jus de pamplemousse
We reported the case of a 61-year-old woman, who has been hospitalized in ICU because of an extensive mesenteric ischaemia, involving the small bowel, secondary to a naratriptan overuse. This mesenteric ischaemia was complicated by multiple organ failure and was responsible for extensive small bowel resection and left colectomy. A concomitant abundant absorption of grapefruit juice, a well-known P450 inhibitor, may have enhanced this naratriptan toxicity. This case underscore that an abdominal pain occurring in the context of headache treatment may be related to a mesenteric ischaemia
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Significance of gasification during oxy-fuel combustion of a lignite char in a fluidised bed using a fast UEGO sensor
In oxy-fuel combustion, fuel is combusted in a mixture of O₂ and recycled flue gas, i.e. the N₂ is replaced by CO₂ with the O₂ supplied from an air separation unit. The resulting gas consists largely of steam and CO2, which would be ready for sequestration when dried. In this work, the rate of reaction of particles of lignite char, typically 1200 μm diameter, in a fluidised bed reactor was determined using mixtures of O₂ with either CO₂ (“oxy-fuel”) or N₂. A universal exhaust-gas oxygen (UEGO) sensor enabled rapid measurements of the oxygen partial pressures in the off-gas, representing a novel application of this type of sensor. It was found that the rate of combustion of the particles in oxy-fuel is much more sensitive to temperature than in the equivalent O₂ and N₂ mixture. This is because for bed temperatures >∼1000 K particle combustion in mixtures of N₂ and O₂ is rate controlled by external mass transfer, which does not increase significantly with temperature. In contrast, using oxy-fuel, as the temperature increases, gasification by the high concentrations of CO₂ present becomes increasingly significant. At low temperatures, e.g. ∼1000 K, rates of combustion in oxy-fuel were lower than those in mixtures of O₂ and N₂ containing the same mole fraction of O₂ owing, primarily, to the lower diffusivities of O2 in CO₂ compared to O₂ in N₂ under conditions at which external mass transfer is still a significant factor in controlling the rate of reaction. At higher temperatures, e.g. 1223 K, oxy-fuel combustion rates were significantly higher than those in O₂ and N₂. The point at which oxy-fuel combustion becomes more rapid than in mixtures of O₂ and N₂ depends not only on temperature but also on the ratio of O₂ to CO₂ or N₂, respectively. A numerical model was developed to account for external mass transfer, changes in the temperature of the particle and for the effect of gasification under oxy-fuel conditions. The model confirmed that, at high temperatures, the high concentration of CO₂ at the surface of the burning particle in the oxy-fuel mixture led to an increase in the overall rate of carbon conversion via CO₂ + C → 2CO, whilst the rate of reaction with O₂ was limited by mass transfer. Good agreement was observed between the rates predicted by the numerical model and those observed experimentally.Financial support from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant reference number: EP/G063265/1) and the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT) is also acknowledged.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2014.10.02
Humanitarianism and the National Order of Things : Examining the Routinized Refugee Response in Eastern Cameroon
Despite growing academic interest in refugees and international humanitarian responses, the influx of refugees from the Central African Republic into eastern Cameroon, ongoing since 2005, has received little attention in scholarship or even in popular media. Though we know much about what can go wrong in large-scale, politicized refugee crises, less is known about how the refugee response works in more “everyday” refugee situations to effectively address the needs of refugees and their host communities. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted among humanitarian NGOs during a semester in Cameroon, I examine the implications for the host country of the routinized response to a relatively straightforward refugee crisis. I argue that the situation in eastern Cameroon contributes much to our understanding of how the international community can better assist refugees around the world.
My analysis of this response has yielded three key insights. First, a professionalized international refugee regime has responded using best practices built on experience, which suggests a cultural shift toward evidence-based approaches to humanitarian interventions. Second, integration of refugees into local communities has benefits that extend beyond the humanitarian space in which refugee services are administered. These benefits impact Cameroon’s processes of nation-building. Third, this nation-building reinforces Cameroon’s position as a state within the international community, fitting it more firmly into what scholar Liisa Malkki calls the “national order of things.
Informing the Process of the Collective-Efficacy-Mechanism- to-Action Model through Analysis of a Multilevel, Multisite Intervention: The Children's Healthy Living Program.
Ph.D. Thesis. University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa 2018
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