14 results on '"A.B. Jones"'
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2. First Results from the VULCAN Diffractometer at the SNS
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T.M. Holden, Harley D. Skorpenske, Erik B. Iverson, Xun-Li Wang, Alexandru D. Stoica, Ke An, A.B. Jones, and George Q Rennich
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Materials science ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Neutron diffraction ,Particle accelerator ,Research opportunities ,Neutron radiation ,Condensed Matter Physics ,law.invention ,Optics ,Mechanics of Materials ,law ,Shutter ,Vulcan ,General Materials Science ,Spallation ,business ,Diffractometer - Abstract
On Friday June 26, 2009, the neutron beam shutter for the VULCAN diffractometer at the SNS was opened for the first time. Initial measurements to characterize the instrument performance are reported. It is shown that the measurement results are by and large in agreement with design calculations. New research opportunities with VULCAN are discussed.
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- 2010
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3. The efficiency and condition of oysters and macroalgae used as biological filters of shrimp pond effluent
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William C. Dennison, A.B. Jones, and Nigel P. Preston
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Oyster ,Suspended solids ,biology ,fungi ,Aquatic Science ,Pulp and paper industry ,Shrimp ,Fishery ,Nutrient ,biology.animal ,Biofilter ,Water quality ,Effluent ,Total suspended solids - Abstract
Current shrimp pond management practices generally result in elevated concentrations of nutrients, suspended solids, bacteria and phytoplankton compared with the influent water. Concerns about adverse environmental impacts caused by discharging pond effluent directly into adjacent waterways have prompted the search for cost-effective methods of effluent treatment. One potential method of effluent treatment is the use of ponds or raceways stocked with plants or animals that act as natural biofilters by removing waste nutrients. In addition to improving effluent water quality prior to discharge, the use of natural biofilters provides a method for capturing otherwise wasted nutrients. This study examined the potential of the native oyster, Saccostrea commercialis (Iredale and Roughley) and macroalgae, Gracilaria edulis (Gmelin) Silva to improve effluent water quality from a commercial Penaeus japonicus (Bate) shrimp farm, A system of raceways was constructed to permit recirculation of the effluent through the oysters to maximize the filtration of bacteria, phytoplankton and total suspended solids. A series of experiments was conducted to test the ability of oysters and macroalgae to improve effluent water quality in a flow-through system compared with a recirculating system. In the flow-through system, oysters reduced the concentration of bacteria to 35% of the initial concentration, chlorophyll a to 39%, total particulates (2.28-35.2 mum) to 29%, total nitrogen to 66% and total phosphorus to 56%. Under the recirculating flow regime, the ability of the oysters to improve water quality was significantly enhanced. After four circuits, total bacterial numbers were reduced to 12%, chlorophyll a to 4%, and total suspended solids to 16%. Efforts to increase biofiltration by adding additional layers of oyster trays and macroalgae-filled mesh bags resulted in fouling of the lower layers causing the death of oysters and senescence of macroalgae. Supplementary laboratory experiments were designed to examine the effects of high effluent concentrations of suspended particulates on the growth and condition of oysters and macroalgae. The results demonstrated that high concentrations of particulates inhibited growth and reduced the condition of oysters and macroalgae. Allowing the effluent to settle before biofiltration improved growth and reduced signs of stress in the oysters and macroalgae. A settling time of 6 h reduced particulates to a level that prevented fouling of the oysters and macroalgae.
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- 2002
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4. Integrated treatment of shrimp effluent by sedimentation, oyster filtration and macroalgal absorption: a laboratory scale study
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A.B. Jones, William C. Dennison, and Nigel P. Preston
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Oyster ,Sydney rock oyster ,biology ,fungi ,Particle (ecology) ,Aquatic Science ,Sedimentation ,biology.organism_classification ,law.invention ,Fishery ,law ,biology.animal ,Environmental chemistry ,Water quality ,Turbidity ,Effluent ,Filtration - Abstract
Effluent water from shrimp ponds typically contains elevated concentrations of dissolved nutrients and suspended particulates compared to influent water. Attempts to improve effluent water quality using filter feeding bivalves and macroalgae to reduce nutrients have previously been hampered by the high concentration of clay particles typically found in untreated pond effluent. These particles inhibit feeding in bivalves and reduce photosynthesis in macroalgae by increasing effluent turbidity. In a small-scale laboratory study, the effectiveness of a three-stage effluent treatment system was investigated. In the first stage, reduction in particle concentration occurred through natural sedimentation. In the second stage, filtration by the Sydney rock oyster, . Saccostrea commercialis Iredale and Roughley , further reduced the concentration of suspended particulates, including inorganic particles, phytoplankton, bacteria, and their associated nutrients. .
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- 2001
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5. Assessing Ecological Impacts of Shrimp and Sewage Effluent: Biological Indicators with Standard Water Quality Analyses
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A.B. Jones, William C. Dennison, M. J. O'Donohue, and James Udy
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,business.industry ,fungi ,Sewage ,Estuary ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Oceanography ,Shrimp ,Shrimp farming ,Aquaculture ,Sewage treatment ,Water quality ,business ,Effluent - Abstract
Despite evidence linking shrimp farming to several cases of environmental degradation, there remains a lack of ecologically meaningful information about the impacts of effluent on receiving waters. The aim of this study was to determine the biological impact of shrimp farm effluent, and to compare and distinguish its impacts from treated sewage effluent. Analyses included standard water quality/sediment parameters, as well as biological indicators including tissue nitrogen (N) content, stable isotope ratio of nitrogen (delta N-15) and amino acid composition of inhabitant seagrasses, mangroves and macroalgae. The study area consisted of two tidal creeks, one receiving effluent from a sewage treatment plant and the other from an intensive shrimp farm. The creeks discharged into the western side of Moreton Bay, a sub-tropical coastal embayment on the east coast of Australia. Characterization of water quality revealed significant differences between the creeks, and with unimpacted eastern Moreton Bay. The sewage creek had higher concentrations of dissolved nutrients (predominantly NO3-/NO2- and PO43-, compared to NH4+ in the shrimp creek). In contrast, the shrimp creek was more turbid and had higher phytoplankton productivity. Beyond 750 m from the creek mouths, water quality parameters were indistinguishable from eastern Moreton Bay values. Biological indicators detected significant impacts up to 4 km beyond the creek mouths (reference site). Elevated plant delta N-15 values ranged from 10.4-19.6 parts per thousand at the site of sewage discharge to 2.9-4.5 parts per thousand at the reference site. The free amino acid concentration and composition of seagrass and macroalgae was used to distinguish between the uptake of sewage and shrimp derived N. Proline (seagrass) and serine (macroalgae) were high in sewage impacted plants and glutamine (seagrass) and alanine (macroalgae) were high in plants impacted by shrimp effluent. The delta N-15 isotopic signatures and free amino acid composition of inhabitant flora indicated that sewage N extended further from the creek mouths than shrimp N. The combination of physical/chemical and biological indicators used in this study was effective in distinguishing the composition and subsequent impacts of aquaculture and sewage effluent on the receiving waters. (C) 2001 Academic Press.
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- 2001
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6. Sydney rock oyster, Saccostrea commercialis (Iredale & Roughley), filtration of shrimp farm effluent: the effects on water quality
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Nigel P. Preston and A.B. Jones
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Sydney rock oyster ,Oyster ,biology ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Shrimp ,Fishery ,Animal science ,chemistry ,biology.animal ,Organic matter ,Water quality ,Eutrophication ,Effluent ,Total suspended solids - Abstract
Shrimp pond effluent water can contain higher concentrations of dissolved nutrients and suspended particulates than the influent water. Consequently, there are concerns about adverse environmental impacts on coastal waters caused by eutrophication and increased turbidity. One potential method of improving effluent water quality prior to discharge or recirculation is to use bivalves to filter the effluent. In this study, we examined the effects of the Sydney rock oyster, Saccostrea commercialis (Iredale & Roughley), on the water quality of shrimp pond effluent. Effluent from a shrimp farm stocked with Penaeus japonicus (Bate) was pumped directly into 34-L tanks stocked with different densities of oysters. Combinations of live and dead oysters were used to test the effects of three different densities of live oysters (24, 16 and 8 live oysters per tank). The concentrations of total suspended solids, the proportion of organic and inorganic matter, total nitrogen, total phosphorous, chlorophyll a and the total number of bacteria in the pond effluent water were determined before and after filtration by oysters. The oysters significantly reduced the concentration of all the parameters examined, with the highest oyster density having the greatest effect. Shrimp pond effluent contained a higher proportion of inorganic matter (72%) than organic matter (28%). The organic component appeared to be mainly detritus, with chlorophyll a comprising only a minor proportion. Filtration by the high density of oysters reduced the effluent total suspended solids to 49% of the initial level, the bacterial numbers to 58%, total nitrogen to 80% and total phosphorous to 67%. The combined effects of settlement and oyster filtration reduced the concentration of chlorophyll a to 8% of the initial effluent value.
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- 1999
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7. A Formalisation of Automation Petri Nets for Control and Marked Matrix Logic Controllers
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A.B. Jones, D. Karimzadgan, and S.B. Kenway
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business.industry ,Computer science ,Programming language ,Concurrency ,Programmable logic controller ,Control engineering ,Petri net ,Process architecture ,computer.software_genre ,Automation ,High-level programming language ,Metric (mathematics) ,business ,computer ,Visual programming language - Abstract
Grafcet, and more recently IEC1131-3 SFC, have sought to provide a standardised, easy to interpret graphical programming technique for programming Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs). Both techniques represent attempts to modify Petri nets to make them applicable to sequential control tasks. However, both depart significantly from the Petri net paradigm. In this paper Automation Petri Nets for Control (APNC) are defined which retain more of the features of generalised Petri nets. Marked Matrix Equations are presented for APNCs which naturally generate Marked Metric Logic Controllers. These are easily implemented on industrial and embedded PC's in high level programming languages.
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- 1997
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8. Effect of pretreatment with β-naphthoflavone on tumorigenesis by N-nitrosoethylurea in five mouse strains
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A.B. Jones, Robert M. Kovatch, and Lucy M. Anderson
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C57BL/6 ,Cancer Research ,Ratón ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,medicine.disease_cause ,Mice ,beta-Naphthoflavone ,medicine ,Animals ,Inducer ,Enzyme inducer ,Carcinogen ,Benzoflavones ,Flavonoids ,Genetics ,Lung ,biology ,Neoplasms, Experimental ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Enzyme Induction ,Ethylnitrosourea ,Carcinogens ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,Female ,Tumor promotion ,Aryl Hydrocarbon Hydroxylases ,Carcinogenesis - Abstract
The non-carcinogenic inducer of the Ah locus, β-naphthoflavone (βNF), was administered to females of 5 mouse strains at a dose of 150 mg/kg 48 h before treatment with a tumorigenic dose of the direct-acting carcinogen, N-nitrosoethylurea (ENU), once weekly for 4 weeks. The strains used were C57BL 6 , C3H He and NIH Swiss (responsive to Ah locus induction) and AKR and DBA 2 (induction-non-responsive). The ENU caused primary lung tumors in all strains and in some cases smaller numbers of other neoplasms, including lymphomas, sarcomas and hepatocellular tumors. The βNF pretreatment did not reduce the numbers of any of the tumors, compared with mice given ENU alone. This result is in contrast to previous findings of a strong protective effect of βNF against tumorigenesis in Ah-responsive strains by the metabolism-dependent carcinogens, benzo[a]pyrene and 3-methylcholanthrene and confirms that this protection is directly related to enzyme induction. βNF treatment caused a significant doubling in the number of lung tumor bearers among the ENU-exposed C57BL 6 mice but in no other strain, suggesting the possibility of strain-specific tumor promotion.
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- 1990
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9. A synthesis of dominant ecological processes in intensive shrimp ponds and adjacent coastal environments in NE Australia
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A.B. Jones, William C. Dennison, Michele A. Burford, Nigel P. Preston, C. J. Jackson, L.A. Trott, S. D. Costanzo, and A. D. McKinnon
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Ecological health ,Nitrogen ,Aquaculture ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Shrimp farming ,Penaeidae ,Water Movements ,Water Pollution, Chemical ,Animals ,Photosynthesis ,Water pollution ,Ecosystem ,Suspended solids ,Ecology ,business.industry ,fungi ,Pollution ,Shrimp ,Phytoplankton ,Environmental science ,Water quality ,Queensland ,business ,Bioindicator ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
One of the key environmental concerns about shrimp farming is the discharge of waters with high levels of nutrients and suspended solids into adjacent waterways. In this paper we synthesize the results of our multidisciplinary research linking ecological processes in intensive shrimp ponds with their downstream impacts in tidal, mangrove-lined creeks. The incorporation of process measurements and bioindicators, in addition to water quality measurements, improved our understanding of the effect of shrimp farm discharges on the ecological health of the receiving water bodies. Changes in water quality parameters were an oversimplification of the ecological effects of water discharges, and use of key measures including primary production rates, phytoplankton responses to nutrients, community shifts in zooplankton and delta15N ratios in marine plants have the potential to provide more integrated and robust measures. Ultimately, reduction in nutrient discharges is most likely to ensure the future sustainability of the industry.
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- 2003
10. Photoallergic contact dermatitis is uncommon
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Ian R. White, A. Darvay, R J G Rycroft, A.B. Jones, John L.M. Hawk, and John McFadden
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Allergy ,Ultraviolet Rays ,UV filter ,Photodermatosis ,Dermatology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Photosensitivity ,London ,Medicine ,Chronic actinic dermatitis ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Dermatitis, Photoallergic ,Patch test ,Octyl methoxycinnamate ,Allergens ,Middle Aged ,Patch Tests ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Dermatitis, Allergic Contact ,Female ,business ,Contact dermatitis ,Sunscreening Agents - Abstract
Background Despite the enormous increase in sunscreen use, allergic contact (AC) and photoallergic (PA) reactions to ultraviolet (UV) filters are considered rare. Objectives To analyse the data from 2715 patients who underwent photopatch testing at St John's Institute of Dermatology during the period 1983–98. Methods A retrospective analysis of all positive photopatch test episodes was undertaken with the results retrieved from the environmental dermatology database and further verified with the original archived patch test documentation for each individual patient. Results In 111 patients with positive reactions (4·1%), there were 155 AC or PA reactions to allergens in the photopatch test series. Eighty PA reactions were observed in 62 (2·3%) patients (32 men and 30 women, age range 28–75 years), with UV filters accounting for 52 positive reactions (65%), drugs 16 (20%), musk ambrette 11 (14%) and the antiseptic trichlorocarbanilide one (1%). The most common UV filter photoallergen was benzophenone-3 with 14 positive results, followed by benzophenone-10 (n = 9), isopropyl dibenzoylmethane (n = 6), p-aminobenzoic acid (PABA) (n = 5), octyl dimethyl PABA (n = 5), butyl methoxydibenzoylmethane (n = 4), isoamyl methoxycinnamate (n = 2), ethyl methoxycinnamate (n = 2), octyl methoxycinnamate (n = 2), amyl dimethyl PABA (n = 2) and phenylbenzimidazole sulphonic acid (n = 1). A similar number of AC reactions to UV filters was detected in this study. Thus 49 patients (1·8%) had a total of 75 reactions: 51 due to UV filters and 24 as a result of exposure to fragrances and therapeutic agents. Benzophenone-10 accounted for 13 AC reactions and benzophenone-3 for eight reactions. Twenty-two patients had a PA reaction alone, whereas 19 patients had chronic actinic dermatitis and 15 patients polymorphic light eruption (PLE) in addition. Thus, 34 of the 62 patients (55%) had a preceding underlying photodermatosis. Conclusions These results show a low yield of positive photopatch tests. Thus, despite the large increase in the use of UV filters over the last decade, the development of PA reactions remains rare. Furthermore, most of the common UV filter photoallergens identified in this study, including PABA, amyl dimethyl PABA and benzophenone-10, are now rarely used in sunscreen manufacture, while isopropyl dibenzoylmethane was voluntarily removed from the market in 1993. Currently, benzophenone-3 is the commonest contact photoallergen still in widespread use. In contrast, the UVB filter octyl methoxycinnamate, used in a number of sunscreens, produced only two positive PA reactions in 12 years of testing. Nevertheless, although these reactions are extremely rare, patients with photodermatoses such as PLE and chronic actinic dermatitis do represent a group of patients at increased risk of developing photoallergy. Further photopatch test series should be regularly reviewed and updated, as the relevance of individual photoallergens changes over time. Currently, there is no evidence that PA reactions represent a common clinical problem.
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- 2001
11. 252 Return to work: Follow-back study of patients evaluated for latex allergy
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A.B Jones, K.P Fennelly, R Balkissoon, S Madan, D Jones, and C Dougherty
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Latex allergy ,business.industry ,Immunology ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Return to work ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2000
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12. Inhibition of thyrotropin-stimulated adenyl cyclase activity of beef thyroid membranes by low concentration of lithium ion
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S.C. Berens, A.B. Jones, and J. Wolff
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system diseases ,Lithium (medication) ,Sodium ,Thyroid Gland ,Biophysics ,Thyrotropin ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Stimulation ,Lithium ,Biochemistry ,Adenylyl Cyclase Inhibitors ,Adenine nucleotide ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Magnesium ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Molecular Biology ,Adenosine Triphosphatases ,Membranes ,Adenine Nucleotides ,Chemistry ,Osmolar Concentration ,Thyroid ,Cell Biology ,Stimulation, Chemical ,Membrane ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Depression, Chemical ,Cattle ,Adenylyl Cyclases ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Lithium inhibits the TSH-induced stimulation of adenyl cyclase activity in beef thyroid membranes without affecting basal activity. Half-inhibition occurs at 4–8 mM Li+ when the Mg++ concentration is 2.5 mM and at greater Li+ concentrations as the Mg++ concentration is raised. A relation of the inhibition to the acute antithyroid effects of Li+ is suggested.
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- 1970
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13. Size effects in E-beam fabricated MOS devices
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Michael T. Elliott, J.P. Reekstin, A.B. Jones, and M.R. Splinter
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Materials science ,Silicon ,Capacitive sensing ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Hardware_PERFORMANCEANDRELIABILITY ,RC time constant ,Ring (chemistry) ,Capacitance ,law.invention ,law ,Electronic engineering ,Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS ,Electron beam processing ,Figure of merit ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Lithography ,NMOS logic ,business.industry ,Transistor ,Doping ,Electrical engineering ,Dissipation ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Threshold voltage ,chemistry ,Optoelectronics ,business ,Hardware_LOGICDESIGN ,Communication channel - Abstract
The physical limitations imposed by geometric effects have been investigated in silicon MOS structures, n-channel silicon gate MOS devices were fabricated using electron-beam lithography and dry-processing techniques. The devices fabricated include discrete transistors, inverters, and ring oscillators. Channel length and width dimensions were independently varied from 10.0 to 0.25 µm. Static short-channel effects were observed and characterized on the discrete transistors and inverters. Dynamic characterization demonstrated stage delays of 65 × 10-12s with a delay-power dissipation figure of merit of 80 × 10-15J. The design, fabrication, and electrical characterization of the devices is described in this paper. The experimental results are shown to be in qualitative agreement with theoretical predictions. The stage delays are shown to be limited by capacitive charging effects (RC delay) and significant performance improvements can be realized with submicrometer geometries. Finally, extrapolations of the data are made in an attempt to determine the ultimate performance limitations expected from the bulk NMOS technology.
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- 1977
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14. The Actions of Insulin and Catabolic Hormones on the Plasma Membrane of the Fat Cells
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Lutz Birnbaumer, Martin Rodbell, A.B. Jones, and G.E. Chiappe De Cingolani
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Membrane ,Endocrinology ,Biochemistry ,Catabolism ,Chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Insulin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Adipose tissue ,Hormone - Published
- 1968
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