299 results on '"Robert Gross"'
Search Results
252. Intermittent renewable generation and the cost of maintaining power system reliability
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Matthew Leach, Jim Skea, Robert Gross, Philip Heptonstall, Timothy C. Green, and Denis Anderson
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Maintenance engineering ,Reliability engineering ,Renewable energy ,Base load power plant ,Peak demand ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Intermittent energy source ,Electricity ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Unit cost ,Reliability (statistics) - Abstract
There have been attempts, using various approaches, to assess the additional cost of running an electricity system when intermittent renewable generation is used to provide a significant proportion of the energy. The key issues are the difference, in statistical terms, between the resource availability of the intermittent source and conventional generation and the contribution the intermittent source can make to meet the system peak demand while maintaining system reliability. There is considerable agreement over the capacity credits that can be attributed to renewable energy sources, that is the amount of conventional capacity that renewables can reliably displace, yet the implications for costs have proved more controversial. Approaches to calculate changes in overall system cost are examined and an expression for the additional cost that intermittent generation imposes on a system that is attributable to its intermittent nature is identified. Further, it is shown that this expression can be reconciled with approaches that look at intermittent renewables on a stand-alone basis and factor in the additional costs of 'standby' capacity. It is shown that the main source of divergence between estimates of the cost of intermittency is the load factor implicitly assumed for the conventional plant used as a reference. There is only one consistent way to impute the costs of intermittency when the unit cost of intermittent plant is being compared with that of baseload generation plant.
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- 2008
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253. Discussion: Renewables and the grid: understanding intermittency
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Phil Heptonstall, Matthew Leach, Jim Skea, Dennis Anderson, Robert Gross, Timothy C. Green, and Michael Laughton
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General Energy ,business.industry ,law ,Intermittency ,Environmental science ,Aerospace engineering ,business ,Grid ,Renewable energy ,law.invention - Published
- 2007
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254. Characterization of a L136P mutation in Formin-like 2 (FMNL2) from a patient with chronic inflammatory bowel disease.
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Raphael Trefzer, Orly Elpeleg, Tatyana Gabrusskaya, Polina Stepensky, Hagar Mor-Shaked, Robert Grosse, and Dominique T Brandt
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Diaphanous related formins are highly conserved proteins regulated by Rho-GTPases that act as actin nucleation and assembly factors. Here we report the functional characterization of a non-inherited heterozygous FMNL2 p.L136P mutation carried by a patient who presented with severe very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We found that the FMNL2 L136P protein displayed subcellular mislocalization and deregulated protein autoinhibition indicating gain-of-function mechanism. Expression of FMNL2 L136P impaired cell spreading as well as filopodia formation. THP-1 macrophages expressing FMNL2 L136P revealed dysregulated podosome formation and a defect in matrix degradation. Our data indicate that the L136P mutation affects cellular actin dynamics in fibroblasts and immune cells such as macrophages.
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- 2021
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255. Diagnostic accuracy of CD4 cell count increase for virologic response after initiating highly active antiretroviral therapy in Botswana
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Gregory P Bisson, Robert Gross, Jordan B Strom, Caitlin Rollins, Scarlett Bellamy, Rachel Weinstein, Harvey Friedman, Diana Dickinson, Ian Frank, Brian L Strom, Tendani Gaolathe, and Ndwapi Ndwapi
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Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Published
- 2006
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256. Policy support for innovation to secure improvements in resource productivity
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Robert Gross and Timothy J. Foxon
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Environmental Engineering ,Resource productivity ,Financial incentives ,Software deployment ,Environmental innovation ,Environmental management system ,Economics ,Environmental policy ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental economics ,Externality - Abstract
This paper presents the case for direct policy support for environmental innovation, aimed at improving resource productivity, as a complement to standard regulatory or market-based instruments of environmental policy. This case is that investments in environmental innovation create options, reduce uncertainties and give rise to positive externalities, i.e. wider benefits to society and future generations, thus reducing the long-term costs of tackling environmental problems. It is argued that these policy instruments can be classified according to: how they support basic RD help to develop markets for innovative new products or processes; or provide financial incentives for the development or deployment of cleaner technologies. The paper argues that more widespread adoption of such policy instruments is needed, together with systematic analysis and assessment of their effectiveness in stimulating environmental innovation in different industries and at different stages of the innovation cycle.
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- 2003
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257. Zygotic Nuclear F-Actin Safeguards Embryonic Development
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Tomomi Okuno, Wayne Yang Li, Yu Hatano, Atsushi Takasu, Yuko Sakamoto, Mari Yamamoto, Zenki Ikeda, Taiki Shindo, Matthias Plessner, Kohtaro Morita, Kazuya Matsumoto, Kazuo Yamagata, Robert Grosse, and Kei Miyamoto
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nuclear actin ,pronucleus ,zygote ,DNA repair ,transcription ,chromatin ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: After fertilization, sperm and oocyte nuclei are rapidly remodeled to form swollen pronuclei (PN) in mammalian zygotes, and the proper formation and function of PN are key to producing totipotent zygotes. However, how mature PN are formed has been unclear. We find that filamentous actin (F-actin) assembles in the PN of mouse zygotes and is required for fully functional PN. The perturbation of nuclear actin dynamics in zygotes results in the misregulation of genes related to genome integrity and abnormal development of mouse embryos. We show that nuclear F-actin ensures DNA damage repair, thus preventing the activation of a zygotic checkpoint. Furthermore, optogenetic control of cofilin nuclear localization reveals the dynamically regulated F-actin nucleoskeleton in zygotes, and its timely disassembly is needed for developmental progression. Nuclear F-actin is a hallmark of totipotent zygotic PN, and the temporal regulation of its polymerized state is necessary for normal embryonic development.
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- 2020
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258. Neural activity modulations and motor recovery following brain-exoskeleton interface mediated stroke rehabilitation
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Nikunj A. Bhagat, Nuray Yozbatiran, Jennifer L. Sullivan, Ruta Paranjape, Colin Losey, Zachary Hernandez, Zafer Keser, Robert Grossman, Gerard E. Francisco, Marcia K. O'Malley, and Jose L. Contreras-Vidal
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Brain-machine interface ,Stroke rehabilitation ,Exoskeletons ,Clinical trial ,Movement related cortical potentials ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Brain-machine interfaces (BMI) based on scalp EEG have the potential to promote cortical plasticity following stroke, which has been shown to improve motor recovery outcomes. However, the efficacy of BMI enabled robotic training for upper-limb recovery is seldom quantified using clinical, EEG-based, and kinematics-based metrics. Further, a movement related neural correlate that can predict the extent of motor recovery still remains elusive, which impedes the clinical translation of BMI-based stroke rehabilitation.To address above knowledge gaps, 10 chronic stroke individuals with stable baseline clinical scores were recruited to participate in 12 therapy sessions involving a BMI enabled powered exoskeleton for elbow training. On average, 132 ± 22 repetitions were performed per participant, per session. BMI accuracy across all sessions and subjects was 79 ± 18% with a false positives rate of 23 ± 20%.Post-training clinical assessments found that FMA for upper extremity and ARAT scores significantly improved over baseline by 3.92 ± 3.73 and 5.35 ± 4.62 points, respectively. Also, 80% participants (7 with moderate-mild impairment, 1 with severe impairment) achieved minimal clinically important difference (MCID: FMA-UE >5.2 or ARAT >5.7) during the course of the study. Kinematic measures indicate that, on average, participants’ movements became faster and smoother. Moreover, modulations in movement related cortical potentials, an EEG-based neural correlate measured contralateral to the impaired arm, were significantly correlated with ARAT scores (ρ = 0.72, p
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- 2020
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259. Structural studies of kinesin-related proteins complexed to microtubules
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Robert Gross, Keiko Hirose, Linda A. Amos, Maria C. Alonso, Sharyn A. Endow, and Toshihiko Akiba
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- 2000
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260. Method of and apparatus for analyzing and synthesizing a sound by extracting and controlling a sound parameter
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Christopher A. Williams, Erling H. Wold, Robert Gross, and Xavier Serra
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geography ,Formant ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Basis (linear algebra) ,Computer science ,Acoustics ,Waveform ,Musical ,Type (model theory) ,Sound (geography) ,Vibrato - Abstract
Analysis data are provided which are indicative of plural components making up an original sound waveform. The analysis data are analyzed to obtain a characteristic concerning a predetermined element, and then data indicative of the obtained characteristic is extracted as a sound or musical parameter. The characteristic corresponding to the extracted musical parameter is removed from the analysis data, and the original sound waveform is represented by a combination of the thus-modified analysis data and the musical parameter. These data are stored in a memory. The user can variably control the musical parameter. A characteristic corresponding to the controlled musical parameter is added to the analysis data. In this manner, a sound waveform is synthesized on the basis of the analysis data to which the controlled characteristic has been added. In such a sound synthesis technique of the analysis type, it is allowed to apply free controls to various sound elements such as a formant and a vibrato.
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- 1998
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261. Prime specialization in genus 0.
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Brian Conrad, Keith Conrad, and Robert Gross
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- 2007
262. HIV-1-Specific CD4+ T Cell Responses in Chronically HIV-1 Infected Blippers on Antiretroviral Therapy in Relation to Viral Replication Following Treatment Interruption.
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Emmanouil Papasavvas, Jay Kostman, Brian Thiel, Maxwell Pistilli, Agnieszka Mackiewicz, Andrea Foulkes, Robert Gross, Kimberly Jordan, Douglas Nixon, Robert Grant, Jean-francois Poulin, Joseph Mccune, Karam Mounzer, and Luis Montaner
- Abstract
The impact of transient viral load blips on anti-HIV-1 immune responses and on HIV-1 rebound following treatment interruption (TI) is not known. Clinical and immunological parameters were measured during 40 weeks of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and following TI in an observational cohort of 16 chronically HIV-1-infected subjects with or without observed viral load blips during ART. During therapy, blips in seven subjects were associated with higher anti-HIV-1 (p24) CD4+ T cell lymphoproliferative responses (p = 0.04), without a significant difference in T cell activation or total anti-HIV-1 CD8+ T cell interferon-γ (IFN-γ) responses when compared to nine matched non-blippers. Therapy interruption resulted in a significantly higher viral rebound in blippers by 8 week despite retention of higher lymphoproliferative p24 responses (p = 0.01) and a rise in CD3+ T cell activation (p = 0.04) and anti-HIV-1 CD8+ T cell responses in blippers by week 4 when compared to non-blippers. Past week 4 of interruption, therapy re-initiation criteria were also met by a higher frequency in blippers by week 14 (p < 0.04) with no difference between groups by week 24. These data support that blippers have higher anti-HIV lymphoproliferative responses while on ART but experience equal to higher viral rebound as compared to matched non-blippers upon TI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
263. Rapidly growing Mycobacterium infections after cosmetic surgery in medical tourists: the Bronx experience and a review of the literature
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Lucas R. Cusumano, Vivy Tran, Aileen Tlamsa, Philip Chung, Robert Grossberg, Gregory Weston, and Uzma N. Sarwar
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Mycobacterium abscessus complex ,Mycobacteria chelonae ,Rapidly growing mycobacteria ,Cosmetic surgery ,Surgical site infections ,Medical tourism ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Background: Medical tourism is increasingly popular for elective cosmetic surgical procedures. However, medical tourism has been accompanied by reports of post-surgical infections due to rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM). The authors’ experience working with patients with RGM infections who have returned to the USA after traveling abroad for cosmetic surgical procedures is described here. Methods: Patients who developed RGM infections after undergoing cosmetic surgeries abroad and who presented at the Montefiore Medical Center (Bronx, New York, USA) between August 2015 and June 2016 were identified. A review of patient medical records was performed. Results: Four patients who presented with culture-proven RGM infections at the sites of recent cosmetic procedures were identified. All patients were treated with a combination of antibiotics and aggressive surgical treatment. Conclusions: This case series of RGM infections following recent cosmetic surgeries abroad highlights the risks of medical tourism. Close monitoring of affected patients by surgical and infectious disease specialties is necessary, as aggressive surgical debridement combined with appropriate antibiotic regimens is needed to achieve cure. Given the increasing reports of post-surgical RGM infections, consultants should have a low threshold for suspecting RGM, as rapid diagnosis may accelerate the initiation of targeted treatment and minimize morbidity.
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- 2017
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264. Immunosuppression in Honeybee Queens by the Neonicotinoids Thiacloprid and Clothianidin
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Annely Brandt, Katharina Grikscheit, Reinhold Siede, Robert Grosse, Marina Doris Meixner, and Ralph Büchler
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Queen health is crucial to colony survival of honeybees, since reproduction and colony growth rely solely on the queen. Queen failure is considered a relevant cause of colony losses, yet few data exist concerning effects of environmental stressors on queens. Here we demonstrate for the first time that exposure to field-realistic concentrations of neonicotinoid pesticides can severely affect the immunocompetence of queens of western honeybees (Apis mellifera L.). In young queens exposed to thiacloprid (200 µg/l or 2000 µg/l) or clothianidin (10 µg/l or 50 µg/l), the total hemocyte number and the proportion of active, differentiated hemocytes was significantly reduced. Moreover, functional aspects of the immune defence namely the wound healing/melanisation response, as well as the antimicrobial activity of the hemolymph were impaired. Our results demonstrate that neonicotinoid insecticides can negatively affect the immunocompetence of queens, possibly leading to an impaired disease resistance capacity.
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- 2017
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265. Erratum to: Methods for evaluating medical tests and biomarkers
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Gowri Gopalakrishna, Miranda Langendam, Rob Scholten, Patrick Bossuyt, Mariska Leeflang, Anna Noel-Storr, James Thomas, Iain Marshall, Byron Wallace, Penny Whiting, Clare Davenport, Gowri GopalaKrishna, Isabel de Salis, Sue Mallett, Robert Wolff, Richard Riley, Marie Westwood, Jos Kleinen, Gary Collins, Hans Reitsma, Karel Moons, Antonia Zapf, Annika Hoyer, Katharina Kramer, Oliver Kuss, J. Ensor, J. J. Deeks, E. C. Martin, R. D. Riley, Gerta Rücker, Susanne Steinhauser, Martin Schumacher, Joie Ensor, Kym Snell, Brian Willis, Thomas Debray, Jon Deeks, Lavinia Ferrante di Ruffano, Sian Taylor-Phillips, Chris Hyde, Stuart A. Taylor, Gauraang Batnagar, STREAMLINE COLON Investigators, STREAMLINE LUNG Investigators, METRIC Investigators, Lavinia Ferrante Di Ruffano, Farah Seedat, Aileen Clarke, Sarah Byron, Frances Nixon, Rebecca Albrow, Thomas Walker, Carla Deakin, Zhivko Zhelev, Harriet Hunt, Yaling Yang, Lucy Abel, James Buchanan, Thomas Fanshawe, Bethany Shinkins, Laure Wynants, Jan Verbakel, Sabine Van Huffel, Dirk Timmerman, Ben Van Calster, Aeliko Zwinderman, Jason Oke, Jack O’Sullivan, Rafael Perera, Brian Nicholson, Hannah L. Bromley, Tracy E. Roberts, Adele Francis, Denniis Petrie, G. Bruce Mann, Kinga Malottki, Holly Smith, Lucinda Billingham, Alice Sitch, Oke Gerke, Mie Holm-Vilstrup, Eivind Antonsen Segtnan, Ulrich Halekoh, Poul Flemming Høilund-Carlsen, Bernard G. Francq, Jac Dinnes, Julie Parkes, Walter Gregory, Jenny Hewison, Doug Altman, William Rosenberg, Peter Selby, Julien Asselineau, Paul Perez, Aïssatou Paye, Emilie Bessede, Cécile Proust-Lima, Christiana Naaktgeboren, Joris de Groot, Anne Rutjes, Johannes Reitsma, Emmanuel Ogundimu, Jonathan Cook, Yannick Le Manach, Yvonne Vergouwe, Romin Pajouheshnia, Rolf Groenwold, Karen Moons, Linda Peelen, Daan Nieboer, Bavo De Cock, Micael J. Pencina, Ewout W. Steyerberg, Jennifer Cooper, Nick Parsons, Chris Stinton, Steve Smith, Andy Dickens, Rachel Jordan, Alexandra Enocson, David Fitzmaurice, Peymane Adab, Charles Boachie, Gaj Vidmar, Karoline Freeman, Martin Connock, Rachel Court, Carl Moons, Jessica Harris, Andrew Mumford, Zoe Plummer, Kurtis Lee, Barnaby Reeves, Chris Rogers, Veerle Verheyden, Gianni D. Angelini, Gavin J. Murphy, Jeremy Huddy, Melody Ni, Katherine Good, Graham Cooke, George Hanna, Jie Ma, K. G. M. (Carl) Moons, Joris A. H. de Groot, Doug G. Altman, Johannes B. Reitsma, Gary S. Collins, Karel G. M. Moons, Douglas G. Altman, Adina Najwa Kamarudin, Ruwanthi Kolamunnage-Dona, Trevor Cox, Simone Borsci, Teresa Pérez, M.Carmen Pardo, Angel Candela-Toha, Alfonso Muriel, Javier Zamora, Sabina Sanghera, Syed Mohiuddin, Richard Martin, Jenny Donovan, Joanna Coast, Mikyung Kelly Seo, John Cairns, Elizabeth Mitchell, Alison Smith, Judy Wright, Peter Hall, Michael Messenger, Nicola Calder, Nyantara Wickramasekera, Karen Vinall-Collier, Andrew Lewington, Johanna Damen, David Cairns, Michelle Hutchinson, Cathie Sturgeon, Liz Mitchel, Rebecca Kift, Sofia Christakoudi, Manohursingh Rungall, Paula Mobillo, Rosa Montero, Tjir-Li Tsui, Sui Phin Kon, Beatriz Tucker, Steven Sacks, Chris Farmer, Terry Strom, Paramit Chowdhury, Irene Rebollo-Mesa, Maria Hernandez-Fuentes, Johanna A. A. G. Damen, Thomas P. A. Debray, Pauline Heus, Lotty Hooft, Rob J. P. M. Scholten, Ewoud Schuit, Ioanna Tzoulaki, Camille M. Lassale, George C. M. Siontis, Virginia Chiocchia, Corran Roberts, Michael Maia Schlüssel, Stephen Gerry, James A. Black, Yvonne T. van der Schouw, Linda M. Peelen, Graeme Spence, David McCartney, Ann van den Bruel, Daniel Lasserson, Gail Hayward, Werner Vach, Antoinette de Jong, Coreline Burggraaff, Otto Hoekstra, Josée Zijlstra, Henrica de Vet, Sara Graziadio, Joy Allen, Louise Johnston, Rachel O’Leary, Michael Power, Louise Johnson, Ray Waters, John Simpson, Thomas R. Fanshawe, Peter Phillips, Andrew Plumb, Emma Helbren, Steve Halligan, Alastair Gale, Peggy Sekula, Willi Sauerbrei, Julia R. Forman, Susan J. Dutton, Yemisi Takwoingi, Elizabeth M. Hensor, Thomas E. Nichols, Emmanuelle Kempf, Raphael Porcher, Jennifer de Beyer, Douglas Altman, Sally Hopewell, John Dennis, Beverley Shields, Angus Jones, William Henley, Ewan Pearson, Andrew Hattersley, on behalf of the MASTERMIND consortium, Fueloep Scheibler, Anne Rummer, Sibylle Sturtz, Robert Großelfinger, Katie Banister, Craig Ramsay, Augusto Azuara-Blanco, Jennifer Burr, Manjula Kumarasamy, Rupert Bourne, Ijeoma Uchegbu, Jennifer Murphy, Alex Carter, Jen Murphy, Joachim Marti, Julie Eatock, Julie Robotham, Maria Dudareva, Mark Gilchrist, Alison Holmes, Phillip Monaghan, Sarah Lord, Andrew StJohn, Sverre Sandberg, Christa Cobbaert, Lieselotte Lennartz, Wilma Verhagen-Kamerbeek, Christoph Ebert, Andrea Horvath, for the Test Evaluation Working Group of the European Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, Kevin Jenniskens, Jaime Peters, Bogdan Grigore, Obi Ukoumunne, Brooke Levis, Andrea Benedetti, Alexander W. Levis, John P. A. Ioannidis, Ian Shrier, Pim Cuijpers, Simon Gilbody, Lorie A. Kloda, Dean McMillan, Scott B Patten, Russell J. Steele, Roy C Ziegelstein, Charles H. Bombardier, Flavia de Lima Osório, Jesse R. Fann, Dwenda Gjerdingen, Femke Lamers, Manote Lotrakul, Sonia R Loureiro, Bernd Löwe, Juwita Shaaban, Lesley Stafford, Henk C. P. M. van Weert, Mary A. Whooley, Linda S. Williams, Karin A. Wittkampf, Albert S. Yeung, Brett D. Thombs, Chris Cooper, Tom Nieto, Claire Smith, Olga Tucker, Janine Dretzke, Andrew Beggs, Nirmala Rai, Sue Bayliss, Simon Stevens, Sue Mallet, Sudha Sundar, Emma Hall, Nuria Porta, David Lorente Estelles, Johann de Bono, and on behalf of the CTC-STOP protocol development group
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Published
- 2017
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266. Preservation of Ejaculatory Function After Postchemotherapy Retroperitoneal Lymph Node Dissection (PC-RPLND) in Patients With Testicular Cancer: Template vs. Bilateral Resection
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Andreas Hiester, Alessandro Nini, Anna Fingerhut, Robert große Siemer, Christian Winter, Peter Albers, and Achim Lusch
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germ cell cancer ,non-seminoma ,retroperitoneal surgery ,chemotherapy ,bilateral and template resection ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Background: Post-chemotherapy retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (PC-RPLND) plays a crucial role in treatment of metastatic non-seminomatous germ cell cancer.Objective: To evaluate the functional outcome regarding the preservation of ejaculatory function comparing a bilateral vs. unilateral template resection in PC-RPLND patients. In addition, oncological safety and perioperative complications of the unilateral template resection was compared to the full bilateral one.Design/Setting/Participants: Between 2003 and 2018, 504 RPLNDs have been performed in 434 patients. The database of consecutive patients was queried to identify 171 patients with PC-RPLND after 1st line chemotherapy for a non-seminoma with or without bilateral template resection. Re-Do's, late relapse, salvage patients, and thoraco-abdominal approaches were excluded. Indication for a template resection was a unilateral residual mass mainly
- Published
- 2019
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267. BAPS in Botswana: The Thotloetso Trial (BOTS)
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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), University of Botswana, and Robert Gross, Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology Co-Director, Center for AIDS Research, Penn/CHOP/Wistar
- Published
- 2024
268. Acknowledgments
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
269. Series Page
- Author
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Robert Grosseteste
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- 2012
270. Title Page
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
271. Part One
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
272. Cover
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Robert Grosseteste
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- 2012
273. General Index
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
274. Select Bibliography
- Author
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
275. Part Three
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
276. Index of Holy Scripture
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
277. Part Four
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
278. Introduction
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Robert Grosseteste
- Published
- 2012
279. The Actin-Family Protein Arp4 Is a Novel Suppressor for the Formation and Functions of Nuclear F-Actin
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Shota Yamazaki, Christian Gerhold, Koji Yamamoto, Yuya Ueno, Robert Grosse, Kei Miyamoto, and Masahiko Harata
- Subjects
nuclear architecture ,nuclear actin ,actin-related protein ,nucleoskeleton ,epigenetics ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
The crosstalk between actin and actin-related proteins (Arps), namely Arp2 and Arp3, plays a central role in facilitating actin polymerization in the cytoplasm and also in the nucleus. Nuclear F-actin is required for transcriptional regulation, double-strand break repair, and nuclear organization. The formation of nuclear F-actin is highly dynamic, suggesting the involvement of positive and negative regulators for nuclear actin polymerization. While actin assembly factors for nuclear F-actin have been recently described, information about inhibitory factors is still limited. The actin-related protein Arp4 which is predominantly localized in the nucleus, has been previously identified as an integral subunit of multiple chromatin modulation complexes, where it forms a heterodimer with monomeric actin. Therefore, we tested whether Arp4 functions as a suppressor of nuclear F-actin formation. The knockdown of Arp4 (Arp4 KD) led to an increase in nuclear F-actin formation in NIH3T3 cells, and purified Arp4 potently inhibited F-actin formation in mouse nuclei transplanted into Xenopus laevis oocytes. Consistently, Arp4 KD facilitated F-actin-inducible gene expression (e.g., OCT4) and DNA damage repair. Our results suggest that Arp4 has a critical role in the formation and functions of nuclear F-actin.
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- 2020
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280. A Rac1-FMNL2 signaling module affects cell-cell contact formation independent of Cdc42 and membrane protrusions.
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Hanna Grobe, Andrea Wüstenhagen, Christian Baarlink, Robert Grosse, and Katharina Grikscheit
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
De novo formation of epithelial cell-cell contacts relies on actin-based protrusions as well as tightly controlled turnover of junctional actin once cells encounter each other and adhesion complexes assemble. The specific contributions of individual actin regulators on either protrusion formation or junctional actin turnover remain largely unexplored. Based on our previous findings of Formin-like 2 (FMNL2)-mediated control of junctional actin dynamics, we investigated its potential role in membrane protrusions and impact on newly forming epithelial contacts. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated loss of FMNL2 in human MCF10A cells combined with optogenetic control of Rac1 activity confirmed its critical function in the establishment of intercellular contacts. While lamellipodial protrusion rates remained unaffected, FMNL2 knockout cells were characterized by impaired filopodia formation similar to depletion of the Rho GTPase Cdc42. Silencing of Cdc42, however, failed to affect FMNL2-mediated contact formation. Hence, we propose a cell-cell contact-specific and Rac1-mediated function of FMNL2 entirely independent of Cdc42. Consistent with this, direct visualizations of native epithelial junction formation revealed a striking and specifically Rac1- and not Cdc42-dependent recruitment of FMNL2 to newly forming junctions as well as established cell-cell contacts within epithelial sheets.
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- 2018
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281. 'The Greatest Uncertainty': The Perils of Performance in Thomas Bernhard's Der Ignorant und der Wahnsinnige
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Jr. Robert Gross
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Literature ,Psychoanalysis ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Negation ,business.industry ,Philosophy ,Omnipresence ,Event (philosophy) ,business - Abstract
Thomas Bernhard's recognition of the omnipresence of death has provided the background for all of his dramatic works to appear thus far. For Bernhard, death is not a single, unique event that occurs at the conclusion of each life, but a current of negation that runs throughout the whole of human existence, manifesting itself in sickness, exhaustion and decay. The Writer in Die Jagdgesellschaft presents the Bernhardian vision of death in its most unadorned form
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- 1981
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282. Esophageal emptying in achalasia quantitated by a radioisotope technique
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Lawrence F. Johnson, Robert Gross, and Robert J. Kaminski
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Adult ,Male ,Myotomy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Achalasia ,digestive system ,Gastroenterology ,Asymptomatic ,Eating ,Esophagus ,Internal medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Physiologic Test ,Pneumatic dilation ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Technetium ,Middle Aged ,Hepatology ,Control subjects ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Esophageal Achalasia ,Isotope Labeling ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,After treatment - Abstract
Delayed esophageal emptying of a radiolabeled meal distinguished symptomatic achalasia patients from asymptomatic controls. Esophageal emptying of the isotope meal significantly improved in ten achalasia patients after pneumatic dilation, and in one patient after surgical myotomy. The emptying curve in some patients after treatment simulated that of control subjects. Quantitation of esophageal emptying by a radiolabeled meal is a physiologic test that may be useful in evaluating results of therapy for achalasia.
- Published
- 1979
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283. WCAU-TV Modernization
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C. Robert Gross
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Rack ,Engineering drawing ,Telecine ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Television station ,Production control ,Control (management) ,Systems design ,Floor plan ,business ,Studio - Abstract
New transistorized equipment has changed many basic concepts of television station system design. The studio building of WCAU-TV was built in 1951 of steel I-beam construction with no supporting walls. The building contains 100,000 ft 2 of floor space with four studios. A floor plan was designed to provide the most efficient possible layout for operating areas. Central control, production control, announce booth, rack room, video tape, telecine and the shop are together physically and comprise the Central Technical Area. One of the outstanding features of the entire television station is its spaciousness. The entire design was human-engineered to put all necessary things within easy reach of the operator. The best available, most modern equipment was used.
- Published
- 1969
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284. Analysing Uncertainties for CCS: From Historical Analogues to Future Deployment Pathways in the UK
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Phil Heptonstall, Hannah Chalmers, Florian Kern, Nils Markusson, Stuart Haszeldine, Mark Winskel, Robert Gross, Jim Watson, Peter J. G. Pearson, and Jon Gibbins
- Subjects
Engineering ,business.industry ,020209 energy ,Environmental resource management ,Uncertainty ,Carbon capture and storage (timeline) ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,innovation ,Policy ,Carbon capture and storage ,Energy(all) ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Software deployment ,Research centre ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Innovation ,business ,uncertainty ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,policy - Abstract
Whilst carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies are now in the demonstration phase, they are still characterised by a range of technical, economic, policy, social and legal uncertainties. This paper presents the results of an interdisciplinary research project funded by the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC). The aim of the project was to analyse the main uncertainties facing potential investors in CCS and policy makers wishing to support these technologies through demonstration to commercial deployment. The paper presents a framework for the analysis of these uncertainties, and applies this framework to nine analogue case studies of CCS. These case studies have focused on historical developments in technologies and/or policy frameworks where one or more of these uncertainties has been prominent – and have, in most cases, been partly resolved. The paper also shows applies the insights from these historical case studies to develop three potential pathways for CCS deployment in the UK over the period to 2030. Finally, the paper concludes with some implications for CCS policies and strategies.
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285. Electrophysiological Biomarkers in MTLE Patients.
- Author
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Robert Gross, Professor
- Published
- 2024
286. Robust stratification of breast cancer subtypes using differential patterns of transcript isoform expression.
- Author
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Thomas P Stricker, Christopher D Brown, Chaitanya Bandlamudi, Megan McNerney, Ralf Kittler, Vanessa Montoya, April Peterson, Robert Grossman, and Kevin P White
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Breast cancer, the second leading cause of cancer death of women worldwide, is a heterogenous disease with multiple different subtypes. These subtypes carry important implications for prognosis and therapy. Interestingly, it is known that these different subtypes not only have different biological behaviors, but also have distinct gene expression profiles. However, it has not been rigorously explored whether particular transcriptional isoforms are also differentially expressed among breast cancer subtypes, or whether transcript isoforms from the same sets of genes can be used to differentiate subtypes. To address these questions, we analyzed the patterns of transcript isoform expression using a small set of RNA-sequencing data for eleven Estrogen Receptor positive (ER+) subtype and fourteen triple negative (TN) subtype tumors. We identified specific sets of isoforms that distinguish these tumor subtypes with higher fidelity than standard mRNA expression profiles. We found that alternate promoter usage, alternative splicing, and alternate 3'UTR usage are differentially regulated in breast cancer subtypes. Profiling of isoform expression in a second, independent cohort of 68 tumors confirmed that expression of splice isoforms differentiates breast cancer subtypes. Furthermore, analysis of RNAseq data from 594 cases from the TCGA cohort confirmed the ability of isoform usage to distinguish breast cancer subtypes. Also using our expression data, we identified several RNA processing factors that were differentially expressed between tumor subtypes and/or regulated by estrogen receptor, including YBX1, YBX2, MAGOH, MAGOHB, and PCBP2. RNAi knock-down of these RNA processing factors in MCF7 cells altered isoform expression. These results indicate that global dysregulation of splicing in breast cancer occurs in a subtype-specific and reproducible manner and is driven by specific differentially expressed RNA processing factors.
- Published
- 2017
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287. Hydroxymethylation at Gene Regulatory Regions Directs Stem/Early Progenitor Cell Commitment during Erythropoiesis
- Author
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Jozef Madzo, Hui Liu, Alexis Rodriguez, Aparna Vasanthakumar, Sriram Sundaravel, Donne Bennett D. Caces, Timothy J. Looney, Li Zhang, Janet B. Lepore, Trisha Macrae, Robert Duszynski, Alan H. Shih, Chun-Xiao Song, Miao Yu, Yiting Yu, Robert Grossman, Brigitte Raumann, Amit Verma, Chuan He, Ross L. Levine, Don Lavelle, Bruce T. Lahn, Amittha Wickrema, and Lucy A. Godley
- Subjects
Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Hematopoietic stem cell differentiation involves the silencing of self-renewal genes and induction of a specific transcriptional program. Identification of multiple covalent cytosine modifications raises the question of how these derivatized bases influence stem cell commitment. Using a replicative primary human hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell differentiation system, we demonstrate dynamic changes of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC) during stem cell commitment and differentiation to the erythroid lineage. Genomic loci that maintain or gain 5-hmC density throughout erythroid differentiation contain binding sites for erythroid transcription factors and several factors not previously recognized as erythroid-specific factors. The functional importance of 5-hmC was demonstrated by impaired erythroid differentiation, with augmentation of myeloid potential, and disrupted 5-hmC patterning in leukemia patient-derived CD34+ stem/early progenitor cells with TET methylcytosine dioxygenase 2 (TET2) mutations. Thus, chemical conjugation and affinity purification of 5-hmC-enriched sequences followed by sequencing serve as resources for deciphering functional implications for gene expression during stem cell commitment and differentiation along a particular lineage.
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- 2014
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288. EEG Source Imaging Guided by Spatiotemporal Specific fMRI: Toward an Understanding of Dynamic Cognitive Processes
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Thinh Nguyen, Thomas Potter, Trac Nguyen, Christof Karmonik, Robert Grossman, and Yingchun Zhang
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Understanding the mechanism of neuroplasticity is the first step in treating neuromuscular system impairments with cognitive rehabilitation approaches. To characterize the dynamics of the neural networks and the underlying neuroplasticity of the central motor system, neuroimaging tools with high spatial and temporal accuracy are desirable. EEG and fMRI stand among the most popular noninvasive neuroimaging modalities with complementary features, yet achieving both high spatial and temporal accuracy remains a challenge. A novel multimodal EEG/fMRI integration method was developed in this study to achieve high spatiotemporal accuracy by employing the most probable fMRI spatial subsets to guide EEG source localization in a time-variant fashion. In comparison with the traditional fMRI constrained EEG source imaging method in a visual/motor activation task study, the proposed method demonstrated superior localization accuracy with lower variation and identified neural activity patterns that agreed well with previous studies. This spatiotemporal fMRI constrained source imaging method was then implemented in a “sequential multievent-related potential” paradigm where motor activation is evoked by emotion-related visual stimuli. Results demonstrate that the proposed method can be used as a powerful neuroimaging tool to unveil the dynamics and neural networks associated with the central motor system, providing insights into neuroplasticity modulation mechanism.
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- 2016
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289. COVID-19 Self-Testing Through Rapid Network Distribution (C-STRAND)
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Public Health Management Corporation and Robert Gross, Professor of Medicine
- Published
- 2023
290. COVID-19 Close Contact Self-Testing Study (CloseST)
- Author
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Public Health Management Corporation and Robert Gross, Professor of Medicine
- Published
- 2023
291. Document categorization and query generation on the World Wide Web using WebACE
- Author
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Daniel Boley, Maria Gini, Robert Gross, Eui Hong Han, Kyle Hastings, George Karypis, Vipin Kumar, Bamshad Mobasher, and Jerome Moore
292. S-integer points on elliptic curves
- Author
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Joseph H. Silverman and Robert Gross
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Discrete mathematics ,Mathematics::Number Theory ,General Mathematics ,Sato–Tate conjecture ,Hessian form of an elliptic curve ,11D25 ,Twists of curves ,Supersingular elliptic curve ,Lenstra elliptic curve factorization ,Modular elliptic curve ,Schoof's algorithm ,11G05 ,Division polynomials ,Mathematics - Abstract
We give a quantitative bound for the number of S-integral points on an elliptic curve over a number field K in terms of the number of primes dividing the denominator of the j-invariant, the degree (K : Q), and the number of primes in S.
293. G-protein-coupled receptor signaling and polarized actin dynamics drive cell-in-cell invasion
- Author
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Vladimir Purvanov, Manuel Holst, Jameel Khan, Christian Baarlink, and Robert Grosse
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cell-in-cell invasion ,entosis ,actin dynamic ,blebbing ,GPCR, LPA-receptor ,mDia1 formin ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Homotypic or entotic cell-in-cell invasion is an integrin-independent process observed in carcinoma cells exposed during conditions of low adhesion such as in exudates of malignant disease. Although active cell-in-cell invasion depends on RhoA and actin, the precise mechanism as well as the underlying actin structures and assembly factors driving the process are unknown. Furthermore, whether specific cell surface receptors trigger entotic invasion in a signal-dependent fashion has not been investigated. In this study, we identify the G-protein-coupled LPA receptor 2 (LPAR2) as a signal transducer specifically required for the actively invading cell during entosis. We find that G12/13 and PDZ-RhoGEF are required for entotic invasion, which is driven by blebbing and a uropod-like actin structure at the rear of the invading cell. Finally, we provide evidence for an involvement of the RhoA-regulated formin Dia1 for entosis downstream of LPAR2. Thus, we delineate a signaling process that regulates actin dynamics during cell-in-cell invasion.
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- 2014
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294. A New Film-Handling System
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Robert Gross
- Subjects
Handling system ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Process engineering ,business - Published
- 1965
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295. Functional interaction of SCAI with the SWI/SNF complex for transcription and tumor cell invasion.
- Author
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Camilla Kreßner, Peter Nollau, Robert Grosse, and Dominique T Brandt
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
We have recently characterized SCAI (Suppressor of Cancer Cell Invasion), a transcriptional modulator regulating cancer cell motility through suppression of MAL/SRF dependent gene transcription. We show here that SCAI is expressed in a wide range of normal human tissues and its expression is diminished in a large array of primary human breast cancer samples indicating that SCAI expression might be linked to the etiology of human cancer. To establish a functional link between SCAI and tumorigenesis we performed affinity columns to identify SCAI-interacting proteins. Our data show that SCAI interacts with the tumor suppressing SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex to promote changes in gene expression and the invasive capacities of human tumor cells. Moreover our data implicate a functional hierarchy between SCAI and BRM, since SCAI function is abrogated in the absence of BRM expression.
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- 2013
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296. Sickle cell patient with an acute chest syndrome and a negative chest X-ray: Potential role of the ventilation and perfusion (V/Q) lung scan.
- Author
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Lawrence Feldman, Robert Gross, Jack Garon, Anitha Nallari, Navleen Kaur, Bharat Motwani, Sunitha Sukumaran, Sandra Allen, and Maxwell Westerman
- Published
- 2003
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297. Managed Problem Solving to Increase Treatment Adherence in Individuals With HIV (MAPS)
- Author
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National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and Robert Gross, Associate Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology
- Published
- 2012
298. Marshall Plan Help to the Airline Sector and its Impact on the Development of Tourism in the Italian Regions
- Author
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Patrizia Battilani, Francesca Fauri, Martin Knoll, Katharina Scharf, Robert Groß, Patrizia Battilani, and Francesca Fauri
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Marshall Plan, tourism, Italy, air transport - Abstract
In 1948, the U.S. government passed the Economic Cooperation Act, a four-year multilateral recovery program which also provided loans to industry to import modern American machinery and technology, which increased Italian productivity especially in the engineering sectors. For various reasons, the aircraft industry did not receive much support, the only substantial European Recovery Program (ERP) dollar loan to aircraft manufacturers was given to Fiat, many small private producers were refused a loan and, in general, most were left on their own and failed. The few survivors were either nationalized or started manufacturing something else. The aircraft industry, blooming in the 1930s as far as production and flying records were concerned, and supported by a clear-cut policy promoting the multiplication of airfields and clubs and the establishment of national and international air routes, “almost disappeared” from the national productive context after the conflict. As a matter of fact, we should also take into consideration that wartime destruction had reduced its capacity by forty percent and all aircraft companies were forbidden from accepting new orders until the signing of the peace Treaty (10 February 1947). These provisions obviously paralyzed their activity, while the government decided to import American and English aircraft to furnish aviation companies – LAI, Alitalia and ALI – in the meantime. That said, the weakness of civil aviation and the decline of the Italian aircraft industry did not delay the successful development of tourism. The endorsement of mass motorization and the building of road networks and facilities provided the means and infrastructure to allow Italian and foreign tourists to conveniently reach the most renowned central-north tourist destinations. Increasing tourist flows could well rely on affordable mass-produced motor vehicles and newly built motorways. As we shall see, this had two important consequences. As to the first one, or missed opportunity, the lack of Italian charter airlines left it to foreign companies to choose their targets of investment. They preferred to focus on already established destinations such as the Romagna Riviera and Rimini in particular, and the Veneto coast (for the seaside holidays), as well as the main cities of art as Rome, Venice or Florence. The second consequence was that Southern Italy was left out, which was too far and not so well connected by road transport and did not air trrepresent a priority for foreign charter airline companies at the time.
- Published
- 2020
299. Tentorial dural arteriovenous fistula presenting as myelopathy: Case series and review of literature.
- Author
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Gross R, Ali R, Kole M, Dorbeistein C, Jayaraman MV, and Khan M
- Abstract
Dural arteriovenous fistula (DAVF) is a rare type of cerebral arteriovenous malformation. Common presenting symptoms are related to hemorrhage. However, rarely these patients may present with myelopathy. We present two cases of DAVF presenting as rapidly progressive myelopathy. Two treatment options are available: microsurgical interruption of the fistula and endovascular embolization. These treatment options of DAVFs have improved significantly in the last decade. The optimal treatment of DAVFs remains controversial, and there is an ongoing debate as to whether primary endovascular or primary microsurgical treatment is the optimal management for these lesions. However, despite treatment a high percentage of patients are still left with severe disability. The potential for functional ambulation in patients with DAVF is related to the time of intervention. This emphasizes the important of early diagnosis and early intervention in DAVF. The eventual outcome may depend on several factors, such as the duration of symptoms, the degree of disability before treatment, and the success of the initial procedure to close the fistula. The usage of magnetic resonance imaging and selective angiography has significantly improved the ability to characterize DAVFs, however, these lesions remain inefficiently diagnosed. If intervention is delayed even prolonged time in rehabilitation does not change the grave prognosis. This review outlines the presentation, classication and management of DAVF as well as discussing patient outcomes.
- Published
- 2014
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