437 research outputs found
Adsorption of DNA onto positively charged amidine colloidal spheres and the resultant bridging interaction
The complexation behaviour of duplex linear DNA (negatively charged) with amidine functionalised sub-micron latex spheres (positively charged) was studied using dynamic light scattering (DLS) and a PALS interferrometric zeta potential sizer. Four types of DNA-sphere complex were investigated as a function of component concentration by combining amidine functionalised polystyrene microspheres with radii of 10.5 nm and 60 nm, and herring DNA of lengths of 35 nm and 85 nm. At low DNA concentrations (cDNA), the undercharged complexes showed a small increase in measured hydrodynamic radius (Rh) and a decrease in zeta potential with increasing cDNA. Within a critical DNA concentration range Rh was seen to peak sharply, and the zeta potentials were 0 mV, corresponding to the formation of unstable neutral complexes. Immediately above this concentration region the measured Rh values became comparable with those at low cDNA, and the zeta potential became negative, indicating the formation of stable overcharged complexes. The small and large spheres formed multi-sphere and single sphere overcharged aggregates respectively, which is thought to be determined by the relative magnitude of the chain persistence length (50 nm) and the sphere radius, switching on or off the DNA bridging interaction
A 'Performative' Social Movement: The Emergence of Collective Contentions within Collaborative Governance
The enmeshment of urban movements in networks of collaborative governance has been characterised as a process of co-option in which previously disruptive contentions are absorbed by regimes and reproduced in ways that do not threaten the stability of power relations. Applying a theoretical framework drawn from feminist philosopher Judith Butler this paper directs attention to the development of collective oppositional identities that remain embedded in conventional political processes. In a case study of the English tenants' movement, it investigates the potential of regulatory discourses that draw on market theories of performative voice to offer the collectivising narratives and belief in change that can generate the emotional identification of a social movement. The paper originates the concept of the ‘performative social movement’ to denote the contentious claims that continue to emerge from urban movements that otherwise appear quiescent
Probing the excited state relaxation dynamics of pyrimidine nucleosides in chloroform solution
Toward the Control of the Smoldering Front in the Reaction-Trailing Mode in Oil Shale Semicoke Porous Media
Results of an experimental investigation on the feasibility of propagating a smoldering front in reaction-trailing mode throughout an oil shale semicoke porous medium are reported. For oil recovery applications, this mode is particularly interesting to avoid low-temperature oxidation reactions, which appear simultaneously with organic matter devolatilization in the reaction-leading mode and are responsible for oxidation of part of the heavy oil. The particularity of this mode is that, contrary to the reaction-leading mode largely studied in the literature, the heat-transfer layer precedes the combustion layer. This leads to two separated high-temperature zones: (i) a devolatilization zone (free of oxygen), where the organic matter is thermally decomposed to incondensable gases, heavy oil, andfixed carbon, also called coke in the literature, without any oxidation, followed by (ii) an oxidation zone, where thefixed carbon left by devolatilization is oxidized. The transition from reaction-leading to reaction-trailing mode was obtained using low oxygen contents in the fed air. It is shown that two distinct layers, the heat-transfer layer and the combustion layer, propagate in a stable and repeatable way. The decrease of the oxygen fraction leads to a decrease of the smoldering temperature and to strongly limit the decarbonation of the mineral matrix. The CO2 emissions are limited. Regardless of the front temperature, all of the fed oxygen is consumed and all of thefixed carbon is oxidized at the passage of the smoldering front
11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 expression in 2S FAZA hepatoma cells is hormonally regulated: A model system for the study of hepatic glucocorticoid metabolism
11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11 beta-HSD) is a key enzyme in glucocorticoid metabolism, catalysing the conversion of active glucocorticoids into their inactive 11-keto metabolites, thus regulating glucocorticoid access to intracellular receptors. The type 1 isoform (11 beta-HSD 1) (EC 1.1.1.146) is widely distributed, with particularly high levels in liver, where accumulating evidence suggests that it acts as an 11 beta-reductase, regenerating active glucocorticoids. Investigation of the function and regulation of 11 beta-HSD 1 in liver has been hampered by the lack of hepatic cell lines which express 11 beta-HSD 1. Here, we describe 11 beta-HSD 1 mRNA expression and activity in 2S FAZA cells, a continuously cultured rat liver cell line. In intact 2S FAZA cells 11 beta-HSD 1 acts predominantly as a reductase, with very low dehydrogenase activity. In 2S FAZA cells 11 beta-HSD 1 activity and mRNA expression are regulated by hormones, with dexamethasone increasing activity and insulin, forskolin and insulin-like growth factor 1 decreasing it. Transfection of 2S FAZA cells with a luciferase reporter gene driven by the proximal promoter of the rat 11 beta-HSD 1 gene demonstrates that sequences which can mediate the responses to insulin, dexamethasone and forskolin all lie within 1800 bp of the transcription start site.</p
Mechanism of covalent binding of ibrutinib to Bruton's tyrosine kinase revealed by QM/MM calculations
The interaction of meaning and sound in spoken word recognition
Models of spoken word recognition vary in the ways in which they capture the relationship between speech input and meaning. Modular accounts prohibit a word’s meaning from affecting the computation of its form-based representation, whereas interactive models allow activation at the semantic level to affect phonological processing. We tested these competing hypotheses by manipulating word familiarity and imageability, using lexical decision and repetition tasks. Responses to high-imageability words were significantly faster than those to low-imageability words. Repetition latencies were also analyzed as a function of cohort variables, revealing a significant imageability effect only for words that were members of large cohorts, suggesting that when the mapping from phonology to semantics is difficult, semantic information can help the discrimination process. Thus, these data support interactive models of spoken word recognition. Models of spoken word recognition vary in the ways in which they capture the relationship between phonology and semantics. Accounts that assume a modular architecture, in which the speech input passes through a series of stages until the meaning of the word is accesse
Determination of partition coefficients and aqueous solubilities by reverse phase chromatography--II : Evaluation of partitioning and solubility models
Part I of this series examined the chemical and thermodynamic principles underlying the solubility and partitioning characteristics of non-electrolyte organic compounds in aqueous systems. It further considered those concepts which interrelate solubility and partitioning phenomena with retentive behavior in reverse phase liquid chromatography. Conceptual and predictive models which intercorrelate solubility, octanol/water partitioning, and reverse phase retention times were developed. Part II of the series evaluates the relative predictive abilities of these models for a wide range of different classes of organic pollutants. The results reveal that the reverse phase liquid chromatography models developed in Part I provide good estimates of octanol/water coefficients and aqueous solubilities from experimentally determined chromatographic retention times. Models structured to predict aqueous solubilities from octanol/water partition coefficient data were also found to provide reasonable estimates, but require as input physical and chemical parameters which are not readily accessible.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26006/1/0000073.pd
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