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  • News Features  (18)
  • Electrochemistry Special Feature  (15)
  • National Academy of Sciences  (33)
  • Public Library of Science (PLoS)
  • Springer Nature
  • 2010-2014  (33)
  • 1980-1984
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-02-20
    Description: As recently as 2010, Forest Rohwer could be found immersed—literally—in the Pacific Ocean. Rohwer, a microbiologist at San Diego State University, has spent more than a decade researching the bacteria and viruses that inhabit coral reefs, developing ways to study the microbes, and asking how they interact with each other.Now...
    Keywords: News Features
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  • 2
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    National Academy of Sciences
    Publication Date: 2013-02-13
    Description: Drug repurposing gets a boost as academic researchers join the search for novel uses of existing drugs.In February 2011, the British drug company AstraZeneca shelved its experimental drug zibotentan, intended for the treatment of nonmetastatic prostate cancer in men who do not respond to hormonal treatments. Despite early promise, the...
    Keywords: News Features
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS and RNS) produced by macrophages are essential for protecting a human body against bacteria and viruses. Micrometer-sized electrodes coated with Pt black have previously been used for selective and sensitive detection of ROS and RNS in biological systems. To determine ROS and RNS inside macrophages, one needs smaller (i.e., nanometer-sized) sensors. In this article, the methodologies have been extended to the fabrication and characterization of Pt/Pt black nanoelectrodes. Electrodes with the metal surface flush with glass insulator, most suitable for quantitative voltammetric experiments, were fabricated by electrodeposition of Pt black inside an etched nanocavity under the atomic force microscope control. Despite a nanometer-scale radius, the true surface area of Pt electrodes was sufficiently large to yield stable and reproducible responses to ROS and RNS in vitro. The prepared nanoprobes were used to penetrate cells and detect ROS and RNS inside macrophages. Weak and very short leaks of ROS/RNS from the vacuoles into the cytoplasm were detected, which a macrophage is equipped to clean within a couple of seconds, while higher intensity oxidative bursts due to the emptying of vacuoles outside persist on the time scale of tens of seconds.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: The kinetics and thermodynamics of intramolecular electron transfer (IET) can be subjected to redox control in a bistable [2]rotaxane comprised of a dumbbell component containing an electron-rich 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) unit and an electron-poor phenylene-bridged bipyridinium (P-BIPY2+) unit and a cyclobis (paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) ring component. The [2]rotaxane exists in the ground-state co-conformation (GSCC) wherein the CBPQT4+ ring encircles the DNP unit. Reduction of the CBPQT4+ leads to the CBPQT2(•+) diradical dication while the P-BIPY2+ unit is reduced to its P-BIPY•+ radical cation. A radical-state co-conformation (RSCC) results from movement of the CBPQT2(•+) ring along the dumbbell to surround the P-BIPY•+ unit. This shuttling event induces IET to occur between the pyridinium redox centers of the P-BIPY•+ unit, a property which is absent between these redox centers in the free dumbbell and in the 1∶1 complex formed between the CBPQT2(•+) ring and the radical cation of methyl-phenylene-viologen (MPV•+). Using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, the process of IET was investigated by monitoring the line broadening at varying temperatures and determining the rate constant (kET = 1.33 × 107 s-1) and activation energy (ΔG‡ = 1.01 kcal mol-1) for electron transfer. These values were compared to the corresponding values predicted, using the optical absorption spectra and Marcus–Hush theory.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: For this special issue of PNAS, it seems appropriate to begin with a brief commentary on the path(s) leading to where the discipline of electrochemistry is today. The papers in this issue serve as a sampling of the current themes and directions; we thank the authors for their contributions. We should also point to a nice collection of historical perspectives gathered together by Leddy et al. (1).The development of the electrochemistry discipline up to the 1960s was substantially that of the physical principles of describing electrochemical reactions and electrode reactions in which current or working electrode potential was controlled in...
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Dopamine and serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine or 5-HT) are neurotransmitters that are implicated in many psychological disorders. Although dopamine transmission in the brain has been studied extensively in vivo with fast scan cyclic voltammetry, detection of 5-HT using in vivo voltammetric methods has only recently been established. In this work we use two carbon-fiber microelectrodes to simultaneously measure dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens and 5-HT release in the substantia nigra pars reticulata, using a common stimulation in a single rat. We find that 5-HT release is profoundly restricted in comparison with dopamine release despite comparable tissue content levels. Using physiological and pharmacological analysis, we find that 5-HT transmission is mostly sensitive to uptake and metabolic degradation mechanisms. In contrast, dopamine transmission is constrained by synthesis and repackaging. Finally, we show that disruption of serotonergic regulatory mechanisms by simultaneous inhibition of uptake and metabolic degradation can have severe physiological consequences that mimic serotonin syndrome.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: The extraordinary ability of Fe- and Ni-containing enzymes to catalyze rapid and efficient H+/H2 interconversion—a property otherwise exclusive to platinum metals—has been investigated in a series of experiments combining variable-temperature protein film voltammetry with mathematical modeling. The results highlight important differences between the catalytic performance of [FeFe]-hydrogenases and [NiFe]-hydrogenases and justify a simple model for reversible catalytic electron flow in enzymes and electrocatalysts that should be widely applicable in fields as diverse as electrochemistry, catalysis, and bioenergetics. The active site of [FeFe]-hydrogenases, an intricate Fe-carbonyl complex known as the “H cluster,” emerges as a supreme catalyst.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: DNA abasic (AP) sites are one of the most frequent lesions in the genome and have a high mutagenic potential if unrepaired. After selective attachment of 2-aminomethyl-18-crown-6 (18c6), individual AP lesions are detected during electrophoretic translocation through the bacterial protein ion channel α-hemolysin (α-HL) embedded in a lipid bilayer. Interactions between 18c6 and Na+ produce characteristic pulse-like current amplitude signatures that allow the identification of individual AP sites in single molecules of homopolymeric or heteropolymeric DNA sequences. The bulky 18c6-cation complexes also dramatically slow the DNA motion to more easily recordable levels. Further, the behaviors of the AP-18c6 adduct are different with respect to the directionalities of DNA entering the protein channel, and they can be precisely manipulated by altering the cation (Li+, Na+ or K+) of the electrolyte. This method permits detection of multiple AP lesions per strand, which is unprecedented in other work. Additionally, insights into the thermodynamics and kinetics of 18c6-cation interactions at a single-molecule level are provided by the nanopore measurement.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Carbon nanotubes have attracted considerable interest for electrochemical, electrocatalytic, and sensing applications, yet there remains uncertainty concerning the intrinsic electrochemical (EC) activity. In this study, we use scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) to determine local heterogeneous electron transfer (HET) kinetics in a random 2D network of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) on an Si/SiO2 substrate. The high spatial resolution of SECCM, which employs a mobile nanoscale EC cell as a probe for imaging, enables us to sample the responses of individual portions of a wide range of SWNTs within this complex arrangement. Using two redox processes, the oxidation of ferrocenylmethyl trimethylammonium and the reduction of ruthenium (III) hexaamine, we have obtained conclusive evidence for the high intrinsic EC activity of the sidewalls of the large majority of SWNTs in networks. Moreover, we show that the ends of SWNTs and the points where two SWNTs cross do not show appreciably different HET kinetics relative to the sidewall. Using finite element method modeling, we deduce standard rate constants for the two redox couples and demonstrate that HET based solely on characteristic defects in the SWNT side wall is highly unlikely. This is further confirmed by the analysis of individual line profiles taken as the SECCM probe scans over an SWNT. More generally, the studies herein demonstrate SECCM to be a powerful and versatile method for activity mapping of complex electrode materials under conditions of high mass transport, where kinetic assignments can be made with confidence.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: An efficient BiVO4 thin film electrode for overall water splitting was prepared by dipping an F-doped SnO2 (FTO) substrate electrode in an aqueous nitric acid solution of Bi(NO3)3 and NH4VO3, and subsequently calcining it. X-ray diffraction of the BiVO4 thin film revealed that a photocatalytically active phase of scheelite-monoclinic BiVO4 was obtained. Scanning electron microscopy images showed that the surface of an FTO substrate was uniformly coated with the BiVO4 film with 300–400 nm of the thickness. The BiVO4 thin film electrode gave an excellent anodic photocurrent with 73% of an IPCE at 420 nm at 1.0 V vs. Ag/AgCl. Modification with CoO on the BiVO4 electrode improved the photoelectrochemical property. A photoelectrochemical cell consisting of the BiVO4 thin film electrode with and without CoO, and a Pt counter electrode was constructed for water splitting under visible light irradiation and simulated sunlight irradiation. Photocurrent due to water splitting to form H2 and O2 was confirmed with applying an external bias smaller than 1.23 V that is a theoretical voltage for electrolysis of water. Water splitting without applying external bias under visible light irradiation was demonstrated using a SrTiO3∶Rh photocathode and the BiVO4 photoanode.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: We describe voltage-switching mode scanning electrochemical microscopy (VSM-SECM), in which a single SECM tip electrode was used to acquire high-quality topographical and electrochemical images of living cells simultaneously. This was achieved by switching the applied voltage so as to change the faradaic current from a hindered diffusion feedback signal (for distance control and topographical imaging) to the electrochemical flux measurement of interest. This imaging method is robust, and a single nanoscale SECM electrode, which is simple to produce, is used for both topography and activity measurements. In order to minimize the delay at voltage switching, we used pyrolytic carbon nanoelectrodes with 6.5–100 nm radii that rapidly reached a steady-state current, typically in less than 20 ms for the largest electrodes and faster for smaller electrodes. In addition, these carbon nanoelectrodes are suitable for convoluted cell topography imaging because the RG value (ratio of overall probe diameter to active electrode diameter) is typically in the range of 1.5–3.0. We first evaluated the resolution of constant-current mode topography imaging using carbon nanoelectrodes. Next, we performed VSM-SECM measurements to visualize membrane proteins on A431 cells and to detect neurotransmitters from a PC12 cells. We also combined VSM-SECM with surface confocal microscopy to allow simultaneous fluorescence and topographical imaging. VSM-SECM opens up new opportunities in nanoscale chemical mapping at interfaces, and should find wide application in the physical and biological sciences.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Photoreduction of [P2W18O62]6-, [S2Mo18O62]4-, and [S2W18O62]4- polyoxometalate anions (POMs) and oxidation of water occurs when water–ionic liquid and water–diethylether interfaces are irradiated with white light (275–750 nm) or sunlight. The ionic liquids (ILs) employed were aprotic ([Bmim]X; Bmim = (1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium,X = BF4,PF6) and protic (DEAS = diethanolamine hydrogen sulphate; DEAP = diethanolamine hydrogen phosphate). Photochemical formation of reduced POMs at both thermodynamically stable and unstable water–IL interfaces led to their initial diffusion into the aqueous phase and subsequent extraction into the IL phase. The mass transport was monitored visually by color change and by steady-state voltammetry at microelectrodes placed near the interface and in the bulk solution phases. However, no diffusion into the organic phase was observed when [P2W18O62]6- was photo-reduced at the water–diethylether interface. In all cases, water acted as the electron donor to give the overall process: 4POM + 2H2O + hν → 4POM- + 4H+ + O2. However, more highly reduced POM species are likely to be generated as intermediates. The rate of diffusion of photo-generated POM- was dependent on the initial concentration of oxidized POM and the viscosity of the IL (or mixed phase system produced in cases in which the interface is thermodynamically unstable). In the water-DEAS system, the evolution of dioxygen was monitored in situ in the aqueous phase by using a Clark-type oxygen sensor. Differences in the structures of bulk and interfacial water are implicated in the activation of water. An analogous series of reactions occurred upon irradiation of solid POM salts in the presence of water vapor.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Electrocatalysis offers a means of electrochemical signal amplification, yet in DNA-based sensors, electrocatalysis has required high-density DNA films and strict assembly and passivation conditions. Here, we describe the use of hemoglobin as a robust and effective electron sink for electrocatalysis in DNA sensing on low-density DNA films. Protein shielding of the heme redox center minimizes direct reduction at the electrode surface and permits assays on low-density DNA films. Electrocatalysis with methylene blue that is covalently tethered to the DNA by a flexible alkyl chain linkage allows for efficient interactions with both the base stack and hemoglobin. Consistent suppression of the redox signal upon incorporation of a single cytosine-adenine (CA) mismatch in the DNA oligomer demonstrates that both the unamplified and the electrocatalytically amplified redox signals are generated through DNA-mediated charge transport. Electrocatalysis with hemoglobin is robust: It is stable to pH and temperature variations. The utility and applicability of electrocatalysis with hemoglobin is demonstrated through restriction enzyme detection, and an enhancement in sensitivity permits femtomole DNA sampling.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Oxidative stress induced in live HeLa cells by menadione (2-methyl-1,4-napthaquinone) was studied in real time by scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). The hydrophobic molecule menadione diffuses through a living cell membrane where it is toxic to the cell. However, in the cell it is conjugated with glutathione to form thiodione. Thiodione is then recognized and transported across the cell membrane via the ATP-driven MRP1 pump. In the extracellular environment, thiodione was detected by the SECM tip at levels of 140, 70, and 35 µM upon exposure of the cells to menadione concentrations of 500, 250, and 125 µM, respectively. With the aid of finite element modeling, the kinetics of thiodione transport was determined to be 1.6 × 10-7 m/s, about 10 times faster than menadione uptake. Selective inhibition of these MRP1 pumps inside live HeLa cells by MK571 produced a lower thiodione concentration of 50 µM in presence of 500 µM menadione and 50 µM MK571. A similar reduced (50% drop) thiodione efflux was observed in the presence of monoclonal antibody QCRL-4, a selective blocking agent of the MRP1 pumps. The reduced thiodione flux confirmed that thiodione was transported by MRP1, and that glutathione is an essential substrate for MRP1-mediated transport. This finding demonstrates the usefulness of SECM in quantitative studies of MRP1 inhibitors and suggests that monoclonal antibodies can be a useful tool in inhibiting the transport of these MDR pumps, and thereby aiding in overcoming multidrug resistance.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Molecular junctions are essentially modified electrodes familiar to electrochemists where the electrolyte is replaced by a conducting “contact.” It is generally hypothesized that changing molecular structure will alter system energy levels leading to a change in the transport barrier. Here, we show the conductance of seven different aromatic molecules covalently bonded to carbon implies a modest range (  2 eV range). These results are explained by considering the effect of bonding the molecule to the substrate. Upon bonding, electronic inductive effects modulate the energy levels of the system resulting in compression of the tunneling barrier. Modification of the molecule with donating or withdrawing groups modulate the molecular orbital energies and the contact energy level resulting in a leveling effect that compresses the tunneling barrier into a range much smaller than expected. Whereas the value of the tunneling barrier can be varied by using a different class of molecules (alkanes), using only aromatic structures results in a similar equilibrium value for the tunnel barrier for different structures resulting from partial charge transfer between the molecular layer and the substrate. Thus, the system does not obey the Schottky-Mott limit, and the interaction between the molecular layer and the substrate acts to influence the energy level alignment. These results indicate that the entire system must be considered to determine the impact of a variety of electronic factors that act to determine the tunnel barrier.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: Here we report on the effect of the mass transfer rate (kt) on the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalyzed by Pt dendrimer-encapsulated nanoparticles (DENs) comprised of 147 and 55 atoms (Pt147 and Pt55). The experiments were carried out using a dual-electrode microelectrochemical device, which enables the study of the ORR under high kt conditions with simultaneous detection of H2O2. At low kt (0.02 to 0.12 cm s-1) the effective number of electrons involved in ORR, neff, is 3.7 for Pt147 and 3.4 for Pt55. As kt is increased, the mass-transfer-limited current for the ORR becomes significantly lower than the value predicted by the Levich equation for a 4-electron process regardless of catalyst size. However, the percentage of H2O2 detected remains constant, such that neff barely changes over the entire kt range explored (0.02 cm s-1). This suggests that mass transfer does not affect neff, which has implications for the mechanism of the ORR on Pt nanoparticles. Interestingly, there is a significant difference in neff for the two sizes of Pt DENs (neff = 3.7 and 3.5 for Pt147 and Pt55, respectively) that cannot be assigned to mass transfer effects and that we therefore attribute to a particle size effect.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2012-07-18
    Description: The photochemical reactivity of osmocene in a biphasic water-organic solvent system has been investigated to probe its water splitting properties. The photoreduction of aqueous protons to hydrogen under anaerobic conditions induced by osmocene dissolved in 1,2-dichloroethane and the subsequent water splitting by the osmocenium metal-metal dimer formed during H2 production were studied by electrochemical methods, UV-visible spectrometry, gas chromatography, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Density functional theory computations were used to validate the reaction pathways.
    Keywords: Electrochemistry Special Feature
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2013-10-16
    Description: A cold day in January 1988 found biologist J. Herbert Waite collecting mussels from the Connecticut coast. Image courtesy of Herbert Waite. Byssal threads and adhesive pads are clearly visible in this photo of a mussel attached to a pane of glass. Image courtesy of Phillip B. Messersmith. Biologist Emily...
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  • 19
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    National Academy of Sciences
    Publication Date: 2014-02-12
    Description: Aided by modern sequencing techniques, scientists are discovering that microorganisms can exert a powerful influence over animal behavior. Hyenas get to know each other in Kenya’s Masai Mara National Reserve. Image courtesy of Kay Holekamp (Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI). A fungus (Ophiocordyceps camponoti-balzani) has turned this South American...
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2014-10-29
    Description: Laser imaging reveals long-lost traces of ancient civilizations hidden beneath tropical forest canopies. Archaeologists are known for getting their hands—and everything else—dirty. However, in April 2012, archaeologist Damian Evans boarded a helicopter and spent hours being flown over the dense foliage surrounding Angkor Wat, Cambodia’s legendary complex of ancient stone...
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2014-12-10
    Description: Many animal species have created their own pharmacies from ingredients that commonly occur in nature. Birds, bees, lizards, elephants, and chimpanzees all share a survival trait: They self-medicate. These animals eat things that make them feel better, or prevent disease, or kill parasites like flatworms, bacteria, and viruses, or just...
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2014-06-19
    Description: Imagine if astronomers had only ever detected a few dozen photons of light from the cosmos. There would be no star-strewn sky to gaze up at in wonder, no Hubble Space Telescope images to adorn your computer desktop: just a smattering of points on a plot showing the photons’ energies...
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2014-08-06
    Description: Discoveries by basic researchers are leading to new strategies for treating bacterial infections. In 1928, microbiologist Alexander Fleming returned to his laboratory in Scotland after a month-long vacation and began sifting through culture plates that he’d left behind. Colonies of Staphylococcus bacteria speckled the surface of most plates. However, one...
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2014-08-20
    Description: Astronomers are still struggling to identify the companions that help white dwarf stars self-destruct in violent supernovae explosions. Billions of years ago, an ill-fated star not so different from our Sun began to age and balloon outward. As it grew, the star’s glow darkened to a deep, foreboding red, and...
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2013-05-01
    Description: Online communities are using the power of play to solve complex research problems.The Foldit Void Crushers Group sounds more like a noisy art-rock band than a research team. However, there it is, listed as coauthor of an article in the October 2011 issue of Nature Structural 110/18/7104/UNFIG01F1unfig01Players of...
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2013-05-29
    Description: Around one-fifth of cancer deaths in the United States are associated with obesity. But how is fat fueling the growth of tumors? Most of the mice in Stephen Hursting’s laboratory at the University of Texas in Austin have cancer. However, among mice with identical genetics and the same tumor types,...
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2013-08-28
    Description: Peter Sorensen, Lawrence Livermore National Lab; Carmen Carmona, Case Western Reserve University; and Rachel Mannino, Texas A&M, look across the inner workings of the LUX dark matter experiment while it is under construction. Courtesy of Carlos Faham. A CDMS II detector. The collaboration used 30 such detectors, made of germanium...
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2013-03-13
    Description: Genetic tests show we have been mistaking a lookalike billfish for the prized white marlins—their stocks may be lower than we thought.In 1840, the English chaplain and amateur naturalist Richard Thomas Lowe published a four-line description of a proposed new species of fish. It was a billfish: a big, fast...
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2013-06-19
    Description: Needleless vaccines may immunize patients more efficiently and effectively than injections. But are these new technologies ready for prime time? At a makeshift clinic in southern Cambodia, with cows lazing on the dirt outside, children take turns sitting in a blue plastic chair, bracing themselves for the sharp pain of...
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2013-08-14
    Description: Spherical nucleic acids built from multiple strands of DNA dangling from a common center. This configuration drastically changes DNA’s physical and chemical properties. Spherical nucleic acids are revolutionizing drug delivery, gene therapy, and diagnostics. As the molecule that carries our genes and helps to define who we are, DNA’s double...
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  • 31
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    National Academy of Sciences
    Publication Date: 2013-02-27
    Description: Discovering the feeding patterns of the albatross could lead to a broader understanding of optimization strategies in human behavior and business.pnas;110/9/3202/UNFIG01F1unfig01Black-browed albatross (Diomedea melanophris) flying near Saunders Island, Falkland Islands. ©iStockphoto.com/GentooMultimediaLimited.pnas;110/9/3202/UNFIG02F2unfig02GPS foraging track of a black-browed albatross (BBA46) off the Kerguelen Islands, Southern Indian Ocean, viewed across large (100 s...
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2013-03-06
    Description: Models of complex systems have become a staple of business strategy, and now they are showing early promise for improving economic forecasts.For cargo carriers, the most direct route is not always the cheapest. In the early 2000s, Southwest Airlines adopted a new approach to shipping: Rather than switching cargo from...
    Keywords: News Features
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2013-03-27
    Description: Scientists are beginning to use crowdfunding to support their work, but don’t stop filling out those grant applications just yet.Lauren Kuehne wanted to branch into a new area of research characterizing the soundscape near freshwater lakes. Ethan Perlstein’s postdoctoral fellowship was about to expire, but he was keen to continue...
    Keywords: News Features
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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