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  • 11
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Journal of Mathematical Physics 40 (1999), S. 1391-1399 
    ISSN: 1089-7658
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Mathematics , Physics
    Notes: In this paper we apply the theory of semigroups of operators in order to obtain the existence and uniqueness of solutions for the mixed initial-boundary value problems in thermoelasticity of dipolar bodies. The continuous dependence of the solutions upon initial data and supply terms is also proved. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1573-4919
    Keywords: protein kinase CK2 ; casein kinase 2 ; substrate recognition ; heparin ; phosphoaceptor peptides
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Protein kinase CK2 is characterized by a number of features, including substrate specificity, inhibition by polyanionic compounds and intrasteric down-regulation by its β-subunit, which denote a special aptitude to interact with negatively charged ligands. This situation may reflect the presence in CK2 catalytic subunits of several basic residues that are not conserved in the majority of other protein kinases. Some of these residues, notably K49 in the ‘Gly rich loop’, K74, K75, K76, K77, K79, R80, K83 in the ‘Lys rich segment’ and R191, R195, K198 in the ‘p+1 loop’, have been shown by mutational studies to be implicated to various extents and with distinct roles in substrate recognition, inhibition by heparin and by pseudosubstrate and instrasteric regulation. Molecular modelization based on crystallographic data provide a rationale for the biochemical observations, showing that several of these basic residues are clustered around the active site where they make contact with individual acidic residues of the peptide substrate. They can also mediate the effect of polyanionic inhibitors (e.g. heparin) and of regulatory elements present in the b-subunit, in the N terminal segment of the catalytic subunit and possibly in other proteins interacting with CK2. Our data also disclose a unique mode of binding of the phosphoacceptor substrate which bridges across the catalytic cleft making contacts with both the lower and upper lobes of CK2.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 13
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant cell reports 18 (1998), S. 350-355 
    ISSN: 1432-203X
    Keywords: Key wordsPrunus ; Malus ; Root culture ; Rootstocks
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Root cultures have been established successfully for the Prunus rootstocks Adafuel and Adarcias (Prunus×amygdalopersica), A843 (P. armeniaca), Mariana 2624 (P. cerasifera×munsoniana) and Myrobalan 605AD (P. cerasifera), and for the apple rootstock Jork 9 (Malus×domestica). High percentages of root tips grew during the first 15 days and then decreased. Root growth was affected by culture conditions and the composition of the culture medium. Liquid medium was preferable as increasing agar concentrations reduced root growth. Darkness, instead of a 16-h photoperiod, was beneficial for Adafuel, but not the other genotypes. Sucrose at 3% was better than higher concentrations. Full Murashige and Skoog salts sustained better root growth than dilutions to 1/2 or 1/4. The addition of various organic supplements such as coconut water, casein hydrolysate or malt extract did not improve root growth, and sucrose was the best carbon source tested. Data presented here support the notion that excised root culture is an efficient experimental model to study the response to various factors, since controlled variations in the culture medium, such as those studied here, had a very noticeable effect on root length.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2021-09-14
    Description: Non-specific low back pain (NSLBP) affects many people and represents a high cost for health care. Manual pressure release of myofascial trigger points is used to treat NSLBP and is very effective but difficult to standardize since it is provided by different therapists, which also suffer musculoskeletal complications from this highly repetitive activity. A robot designed for this purpose may help in reducing these problems. Here, we present data from a two-arm, single-blinded, randomized controlled clinical trial evaluating the efficiency of a therapeutic massage robot (ADAMO) in reducing NSLBP (clinicaltrials.gov, registration number: NCT04882748). Forty-four patients were randomly distributed into the two arms of the study (robot vs. control). A physician filled the Oswestry disability index (ODI) before starting the treatment and at the end of it, in a blind fashion. In addition, patients filled a visual analogue scale (VAS) after each of the 10 treatment sessions. The ODI and the VAS were analyzed as the primary and secondary outcome measures. Both treatments (robot and control) resulted in a significantly lower ODI (p 〈 0.05). On the other hand, robot-treated patients significantly reduced their VAS levels (p = 0.0001) whereas control treatment did not reach statistical significance. Patients of both sexes obtained similar benefits from either treatment. Overweight patients (body mass index ≥ 25kg/m2) in the robot arm benefited more from the treatment (p = 0.008) than patients with normal weight. In conclusion, the ADAMO robot is, at least, as efficient as regular treatment in reducing low back pain, and may be more beneficial for specific patients, such as those with excessive weight.
    Electronic ISSN: 1662-5218
    Topics: Medicine , Technology
    Published by Frontiers Media
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Novel species of microfungi described in the present study include the following from South Africa: Cercosporella dolichandrae from Dolichandra unguiscati, Seiridium podocarpi from Podocarpus latifolius, Pseudocercospora parapseudarthriae from Pseudarthria hookeri, Neodevriesia coryneliae from Corynelia uberata on leaves of Afrocarpus falcatus, Ramichloridium eucleae from Euclea undulata and Stachybotrys aloeticola from Aloe sp. (South Africa), as novel member of the Stachybotriaceae fam. nov. Several species were also described from Zambia, and these include Chaetomella zambiensis on unknown Fabaceae, Schizoparme pseudogranati from Terminalia stuhlmannii, Diaporthe isoberliniae from Isoberlinia angolensis, Peyronellaea combreti from Combretum mossambiciensis, Zasmidium rothmanniae and Phaeococcomyces rothmanniae from Rothmannia engleriana, Diaporthe vangueriae from Vangueria infausta and Diaporthe parapterocarpi from Pterocarpus brenanii. Novel species from the Netherlands include: Stagonospora trichophoricola, Keissleriella trichophoricola and Dinemasporium trichophoricola from Trichophorum cespitosum, Phaeosphaeria poae, Keissleriella poagena, Phaeosphaeria poagena, Parastagonospora poagena and Pyrenochaetopsis poae from Poa sp., Septoriella oudemansii from Phragmites australis and Dendryphion europaeum from Hedera helix (Germany) and Heracleum sphondylium (the Netherlands).\nNovel species from Australia include: Anungitea eucalyptorum from Eucalyptus leaf litter, Beltraniopsis neolitseae and Acrodontium neolitseae from Neolitsea australiensis, Beltraniella endiandrae from Endiandra introrsa, Phaeophleospora parsoniae from Parsonia straminea, Penicillifer martinii from Cynodon dactylon, Ochroconis macrozamiae from Macrozamia leaf litter, Triposporium cycadicola, Circinotrichum cycadis, Cladosporium cycadicola and Acrocalymma cycadis from Cycas spp. Furthermore, Vermiculariopsiella dichapetali is described from Dichapetalum rhodesicum (Botswana), Ophiognomonia acadiensis from Picea rubens (Canada), Setophoma vernoniae from Vernonia polyanthes and Penicillium restingae from soil (Brazil), Pseudolachnella guaviyunis from Myrcianthes pungens (Uruguay) and Pseudocercospora neriicola from Nerium oleander (Italy). Novelties from Spain include: Dendryphiella eucalyptorum from Eucalyptus globulus, Conioscypha minutispora from dead wood, Diplogelasinospora moalensis and Pseudoneurospora canariensis from soil and Inocybe lanatopurpurea from reforested woodland of Pinus spp. Novelties from France include: Kellermania triseptata from Agave angustifolia, Zetiasplozna acaciae from Acacia melanoxylon, Pyrenochaeta pinicola from Pinus sp. and Pseudonectria rusci from Ruscus aculeatus.\nNew species from China include: Dematiocladium celtidicola from Celtis bungeana, Beltrania pseudorhombica, Chaetopsina beijingensis and Toxicocladosporium pini from Pinus spp. and Setophaeosphaeria badalingensis from Hemerocallis fulva. Novel genera of Ascomycetes include Alfaria from Cyperus esculentus (Spain), Rinaldiella from a contaminated human lesion (Georgia), Hyalocladosporiella from Tectona grandis (Brazil), Pseudoacremonium from Saccharum spontaneum and Melnikomyces from leaf litter (Vietnam), Annellosympodiella from Juniperus procera (Ethiopia), Neoceratosperma from Eucalyptus leaves (Thailand), Ramopenidiella from Cycas calcicola (Australia), Cephalotrichiella from air in the Netherlands, Neocamarosporium from Mesembryanthemum sp. and Acervuloseptoria from Ziziphus mucronata (South Africa) and Setophaeosphaeria from Hemerocallis fulva (China).\nSeveral novel combinations are also introduced, namely for Phaeosphaeria setosa as Setophaeosphaeria setosa, Phoma heteroderae as Peyronellaea heteroderae and Phyllosticta maydis as Peyronellaea maydis. Morphological and culture characteristics along with ITS DNA barcodes are provided for all taxa.
    Keywords: ITS DNA barcodes ; LSU ; novel fungal genera ; novel fungal species ; systematics
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Description: This dataset provides early instrumental data recovered in Latin-America and the Caribbean. Data have been retrieved from 20 countries (Argentina, Bahamas, Belize, Brazil, British Guiana, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, France (Martinique and Guadalupe), Guatemala, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico, El Salvador and Suriname) and they cover the 18th and 19th centuries. The main meteorological variables retrieved are air temperature, atmospheric pressure and precipitation but other variables, such as humidity, wind direction, or state of the sky have been retrieved when possible. In total, more than 300.000 early instrumental observations have been rescued. Each archive shows a headline with the following information: ID: 6 letters, the first three make reference to the country and the last three letters to the city/location of the observations. Country: Current name of the country where the observation were recorded. City: Current name of the city or location where the observation were recorded. Period: Time period covered by the series at monthly scale when possible. Resolution: Time resolution of the series. Observers: Name of the people that recorded the measurements. Location Observatory: Latitude and longitude of the observatory in WGS84, altitude when available. The name of the observatory or the street where it was is provided, when the location is exactly known. When the precise location is unknown a probable latitude and longitude is provided. Meteorological variables: Describe all the meteorological variables recorded, its units and the corresponding columns in the file. Data source: The complete reference of the documentary source in which the meteorological record was provided. Descriptive Name: A name of the archive that makes reference to the location and the period covered by the series. Other comments: All the metadata rescued about the observations or the observer. Also provides extreme or rare events recorded by the observer and any other information that could be useful to interpret the series. After the headline, the first columns give the temporal information of the record (year, season, month, day and hour) and the following columns show the measurements of each meteorological variable. Every column has a short descriptive title.
    Keywords: Latin_America
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 674.4 kBytes
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2023-01-30
    Description: Meteorological observations made in the Malaspina Expedition from 1789 to 1794 have been retrieved. Variables such as air temperature, atmospheric pressure, wind direction and intensity, and weather conditions, were recorded in these observations. In total, nearly 17000 instrumental data were digitized.
    Keywords: Atrevida/Descubierta; climate; CT; DATE/TIME; historical data; LATITUDE; Latitude description; LONGITUDE; Longitude description; Malaspina_1789-1794; Malaspina_1789-1794-track; Malaspina Expedition; meteorological observations; Present weather; Pressure, atmospheric; Temperature, air; Underway cruise track measurements; Wind direction description; Wind force description
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 16514 data points
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Keywords: CASSIOPEE; Cassiopee-track; CT; Current velocity, east-west; Current velocity, north-south; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; GPc05; L Atalante; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Number; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 72532 data points
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  • 19
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kiko, Rainer; Biastoch, Arne; Brandt, Peter; Cravatte, Sophie; Hauss, Helena; Hummels, Rebecca; Kriest, Iris; Marin, Frédéric; McDonnell, Andrew; Oschlies, Andreas; Picheral, Marc; Schwarzkopf, Franziska; Thurnherr, Andreas M; Stemmann, Lars (2017): Biological and physical influences on marine snowfall at the equator. Nature Geoscience, https://doi.org/10.1038/NGEO3042
    Publication Date: 2023-11-09
    Description: High primary productivity in the equatorial Atlantic and Pacific oceans is one of the key features of tropical ocean biogeochemistry and fuels a substantial flux of particulate matter towards the abyssal ocean. How biological processes and equatorial current dynamics shape the particle size distribution and flux, however, is poorly understood. Here we use high-resolution size-resolved particle imaging and Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler data to assess these influences in equatorial oceans. We find an increase in particle abundance and flux at depths of 300 to 600 m at the Atlantic and Pacific equator, a depth range to which zooplankton and nekton migrate vertically in a daily cycle. We attribute this particle maximum to faecal pellet production by these organisms. At depths of 1,000 to 4,000 m, we find that the particulate organic carbon flux is up to three times greater in the equatorial belt (1° S–1° N) than in off-equatorial regions. At 3,000 m, the flux is dominated by small particles less than 0.53 mm in diameter. The dominance of small particles seems to be caused by enhanced active and passive particle export in this region, as well as by the focusing of particles by deep eastward jets found at 2° N and 2° S. We thus suggest that zooplankton movements and ocean currents modulate the transfer of particulate carbon from the surface to the deep ocean.
    Keywords: Climate - Biogeochemistry Interactions in the Tropical Ocean; SFB754
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2023-11-09
    Keywords: CASSIOPEE; CASSIOPEE_01; CASSIOPEE_02; CASSIOPEE_05; CASSIOPEE_06; CASSIOPEE_07; CASSIOPEE_11; CASSIOPEE_13; CASSIOPEE_14; CASSIOPEE_16; CASSIOPEE_20; CASSIOPEE_21; CASSIOPEE_22; CASSIOPEE_23; CASSIOPEE_24; CASSIOPEE_25; CASSIOPEE_26; CASSIOPEE_27; CASSIOPEE_28; CASSIOPEE_29; CASSIOPEE_30; CASSIOPEE_31; CASSIOPEE_32; CASSIOPEE_33; CASSIOPEE_34; CASSIOPEE_35; CASSIOPEE_36; CASSIOPEE_37; CASSIOPEE_38; CASSIOPEE_39; CASSIOPEE_40; CASSIOPEE_41; CASSIOPEE_42; CASSIOPEE_43; CASSIOPEE_44; CASSIOPEE_45; CASSIOPEE_46; CASSIOPEE_47; CASSIOPEE_48; CASSIOPEE_49; CASSIOPEE_50; CASSIOPEE_51; CASSIOPEE_52; CASSIOPEE_53; CASSIOPEE_54; CASSIOPEE_55; CASSIOPEE_56; CASSIOPEE_57; CASSIOPEE_58; CASSIOPEE_59; CASSIOPEE_60; CASSIOPEE_61; CASSIOPEE_62; CASSIOPEE_63; CASSIOPEE_64; CASSIOPEE_65; CASSIOPEE_66; CASSIOPEE_67; CASSIOPEE_68; CASSIOPEE_69; CASSIOPEE_70; CASSIOPEE_71; CASSIOPEE_72; CASSIOPEE_73; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; DATE/TIME; Event label; GPc05; Image number/name; L Atalante; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Particle concentration, fractionated; Particle volume, fractionated; Pressure, water; Profile; Sample code/label; Sample elevation; Volume
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2375700 data points
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