Search results for "Peat"

showing 10 items of 1026 documents

Probing the Folding of Peptide–Polymer Conjugates Using the π-Dimerization of Viologen End-Groups

2020

The synthesis of a foldable viologen-functionalized peptide–polymer conjugate is presented. The ABA-type triblock conjugate with a PEG polymer was capped with a FHFHF pentapeptide sequence and further modified with a viologen building block at both chain ends. The pH-responsive peptide domains fold into an intermediate structure inducing close proximity of the viologen units, which upon a reduction step form π-dimers of the radical cation. Overall the intramolecular folding and intermolecular self-assembly process leads to the formation of supramolecular nanorods. Mixing of viologen-peptide–polymer conjugates with unfunctionalized conjugates leads to crosslinking of the nanorods and hydroge…

chemistry.chemical_classificationstimuli-responsive polymerspeptide conjugation010405 organic chemistrySupramolecular chemistrytechnology industry and agricultureViologenPolymersupramolecular materials010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesPentapeptide repeat0104 chemical scienceslcsh:ChemistrychemistryRadical ionlcsh:QD1-999Intramolecular forcePolymer chemistrySelf-healing hydrogelsmedicineelectrochromismhydrogelmedicine.drugConjugateOrganic Materials
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Methacrylate ester-based monolithic columns for nano-LC separation of tocopherols in vegetable oils

2010

The separation and determination of tocopherols (Ts) in vegetable oils by nano-LC chromatography with UV-vis detection using lauryl methacrylate ester-based monolithic columns has been developed. The separation of Ts was optimized in terms of mobile phase composition on the basis of the best compromise among efficiency, resolution and analysis time. Using a mobile phase composed of ACN/methanol/water, an excellent resolution between Ts was achieved within 18 min. The LODs were lower than 0.26 μg/mL, being repeatability values of retention time and peak area below 0.15 and 3.1%, respectively. The method was applied to the quantification of Ts and tocotrienols present in several vegetable oil…

chemistry.chemical_compoundMonolithic HPLC columnVegetable oilChromatographyResolution (mass spectrometry)ChemistryFiltration and SeparationTocopherolMethanolRepeatabilityMethacrylateHigh-performance liquid chromatographyAnalytical ChemistryJournal of Separation Science
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Transferability of ASTM/NIST alanine–polyethylene recipe at ISS

2000

Abstract Alanine–polyethylene solid state dosimeters were prepared at Istituto Superiore di Sanita (ISS) following the recipe proposed by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) with the goal of testing its transferability. Dosimeters were prepared using 95% alanine and 5% polyethylene, by weight. They are rugged and of increased sensitivity, repeatability and reproducibility as respect to the ISS alanine-paraffin pellets. Reproducibility of about 1% was obtained at 10 Gy and at 3 Gy if one single pellet or a stack of five dosimeters were used, respectively.

chemistry.chemical_compoundReproducibilityRadiationMaterials sciencechemistryRecipeSingle pelletTransferabilityRadiochemistrySolid-stateNISTRepeatabilityPolyethyleneApplied Radiation and Isotopes
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SART and Individual Trial Mistake Thresholds: Predictive Model for Mobility Decline

2021

The Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) has been used to measure neurocognitive functions in older adults. However, simplified average features of this complex dataset may result in loss of primary information and fail to express associations between test performance and clinically meaningful outcomes. Here, we describe a new method to visualise individual trial (raw) information obtained from the SART test, vis-à-vis age, and groups based on mobility status in a large population-based study of ageing in Ireland. A thresholding method, based on the individual trial number of mistakes, was employed to better visualise poorer SART performances, and was statistically validated with bin…

cognitionAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyHealth (social science)timed up-and-goLogistic regressionArticlerepeated measuresTrial numberPhysical medicine and rehabilitationCovariatefallsthresholdMedicineCognitive declineSARTsustained attention to response taskbusiness.industrymobility declineRC952-954.6Repeated measures designCognitionTest (assessment)multimodal visualizationGeriatricsGeriatrics and GerontologybusinessGerontologyNeurocognitiveGeriatrics
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Genetic and Chemical Modifiers Of A CUG Toxicity Model in Drosophila

2007

Non-coding CUG repeat expansions interfere with the activity of human Muscleblind-like (MBNL) proteins contributing to myotonic dystrophy 1 (DM1). To understand this toxic RNA gain-of-function mechanism we developed a Drosophila model expressing 60 pure and 480 interrupted CUG repeats in the context of a non-translatable RNA. These flies reproduced aspects of the DM1 pathology, most notably nuclear accumulation of CUG transcripts, muscle degeneration, splicing misregulation, and diminished Muscleblind function in vivo. Reduced Muscleblind activity was evident from the sensitivity of CUG-induced phenotypes to a decrease in muscleblind genetic dosage and rescue by MBNL1 expression, and furthe…

congenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesGene Dosagelcsh:MedicineRNA-binding proteinBiologyEyechemistry.chemical_compoundTrinucleotide RepeatsAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsMyotonic DystrophyMBNL1lcsh:ScienceGeneGenetics and Genomics/Genetics of DiseaseGeneticsMessenger RNADNA Repeat ExpansionMultidisciplinaryAlternative splicinglcsh:RBrainNuclear ProteinsRNA-Binding ProteinsRNAPhenotypeCell biologyDisease Models AnimalGenetics and Genomics/Disease ModelschemistryRNA splicingDrosophilalcsh:QGenèticaResearch Article
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In vivo discovery of a peptide that prevents CUG-RNA hairpin formation and reverses RNA toxicity in myotonic dystrophy models

2011

6 pages, 5 figures. PMID:21730182[PubMed] PMCID: PMC3141925[Available on 2012/1/19]

congenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesProtein ConformationRNA-binding proteinProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesBiologyMyotonic dystrophyMyotonin-Protein Kinasedrug discoveryMicechemistry.chemical_compoundnon-coding RNA diseasePeptide Librarymedicinal chemistryDrug DiscoveryGene expressionmedicineAnimalsMyotonic DystrophyMBNL1MultidisciplinaryMusclesdisease modelAlternative splicingRNA-Binding ProteinsRNADystrophyBiological Sciencesmedicine.diseaseRNA secondary structureMolecular biologyDNA-Binding ProteinschemistryRNA splicingDrosophilaTrinucleotide Repeat ExpansionOligopeptides
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Correction: Daunorubicin reduces MBNL1 sequestration caused by CUG-repeat expansion and rescues cardiac dysfunctions in a Drosophila model of myotoni…

2018

ABSTRACT Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is a dominantly inherited neuromuscular disorder caused by expression of mutant myotonin-protein kinase (DMPK) transcripts containing expanded CUG repeats. Pathogenic DMPK RNA sequesters the muscleblind-like (MBNL) proteins, causing alterations in metabolism of various RNAs. Cardiac dysfunction represents the second most common cause of death in DM type 1 (DM1) patients. However, the contribution of MBNL sequestration in DM1 cardiac dysfunction is unclear. We overexpressed Muscleblind (Mbl), the Drosophila MBNL orthologue, in cardiomyocytes of DM1 model flies and observed a rescue of heart dysfunctions, which are characteristic of these model flies and resem…

congenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesRNA StabilityNeuroscience (miscellaneous)Medicine (miscellaneous)MuscleblindGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyImmunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)AnimalsDrosophila ProteinsMyotonic DystrophyMyocytes CardiacRNA MessengerDaunorubicinCorrectionNuclear ProteinsReproducibility of ResultsHeartSurvival AnalysisAlternative SplicingDisease Models AnimalDrosophila melanogasterTrinucleotide repeat disorderDrosophilaTrinucleotide Repeat ExpansionResearch ArticleProtein BindingDisease Models & Mechanisms
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Deregulated Splicing Is a Major Mechanism of RNA-Induced Toxicity in Huntington's Disease.

2019

Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by an expanded CAG repeat in the huntingtin (HTT) gene, translating into an elongated polyglutamine stretch. In addition to the neurotoxic mutant HTT protein, the mutant CAG repeat RNA can exert toxic functions by trapping RNA-binding proteins. While few examples of proteins that aberrantly bind to mutant HTT RNA and execute abnormal function in conjunction with the CAG repeat RNA have been described, an unbiased approach to identify the interactome of mutant HTT RNA is missing. Here, we describe the analysis of proteins that preferentially bind mutant HTT RNA using a mass spectrometry approach. We show that (I) the majority of proteins captured by mutant…

congenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesSpliceosomeHuntingtinRNA SplicingMutantRNA-binding proteinRNA-binding proteinsBiologygenetics [Huntington Disease]Structural Biologymental disordersmedicineAnimalsHumansddc:610genetics [RNA]Molecular BiologyGeneHuntingtin Proteingenetics [Spliceosomes]CAG repeat RNANeurodegenerationneurodegenerationRNAgenetics [Huntingtin Protein]medicine.diseasenervous system diseasesCell biologypolyglutamine diseaseHuntington Diseasenervous systemCardiovascular and Metabolic DiseasesRNA splicingSpliceosomesgenetics [RNA Splicing]RNATechnology PlatformsspliceosomeJournal of molecular biology
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Exposing ecological and economic costs of the research-implementation gap and compromises in decision making

2018

The frequently discussed gap between conservation science and practice is manifest in the gap between spatial conservation prioritization plans and their implementation. We analyzed the research-implementation gap of one zoning case by comparing results of a spatial prioritization analysis aimed at avoiding ecological impact of peat mining in a regional zoning process with the final zoning plan. We examined the relatively complex planning process to determine the gaps among research, zoning, and decision making. We quantified the ecological costs of the differing trade-offs between ecological and socioeconomic factors included in the different zoning suggestions by comparing the landscape-l…

conservation implementationympäristöohjelmattaloudelliset vaikutuksetreplacement costpäätöksentekoinverse resource allocation problempeat miningluonnonsuojeluimpact avoidanceZonation software
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Finnish dairy farmers’ perceptions of justice in the transition to carbon-neutral farming

2022

Highlights • Finnish dairy farmers' perceptions of issues with carbon neutrality were examined. • Concerns include farming profitability, farmer blaming, and use of peatlands. • Public policy guidance is needed for carbon-neutral, sustainable agriculture. Environmental and political debate concerning the role of agriculture in sustainability has long been on the agenda. However, owing to climate change, an analysis of the transition to a low-carbon society must also be considered from the perspective of justice. Dairy farming, in particular, faces pressure in this context, when contemplating changing consumer behaviors and reduction in the carbon footprint of dairy products. Accordingly, ma…

dairy farmingSociology and Political ScienceopinionsGeography Planning and Developmentvalues (conceptions)mielipiteetDevelopmentkestävyysmurroksetfarmingagricultural peatlandsarvot (käsitykset)ilmastopolitiikkamaatalousvaluesmilk productionturvemaatblaming farmersmaanviljelypeatlandsagriculturesustainable developmentkestävä maatalouskestävä kehitysmaanviljelijätmaatalouspolitiikkamaitotalouscarbon neutralitysustainabilityoikeudenmukaisuushiilineutraaliusfarming profitabilityjusticejust transitionmilk production (domestic animal production)kestävyyssustainability transformationmaidontuotanto (kotieläintuotanto)carbon-neutral farming
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