131 results on '"A. R. Maass"'
Search Results
2. Internal nucleation tendency and crystal surface energy obtained from bond energies and crystal lattice data
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C. Tielemann, S. Reinsch, R. Maaß, J. Deubener, and R. Müller
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Glass ,Nucleation tendency ,Fracture surface energy ,Crystal lattice ,Bond energy ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
We present an easy-to-apply method to predict structural trends in the internal nucleation tendency of oxide glasses. The approach is based on calculated crystal fracture surface energies derived from easily accessible diatomic bond energy and crystal lattice data. The applicability of the method is demonstrated on literature nucleation data for isochemically crystallizing oxide glasses.
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- 2022
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3. Early stages of liquid-metal embrittlement in an advanced high-strength steel
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Y. Ikeda, R. Yuan, A. Chakraborty, H. Ghassemi-Armaki, J.M. Zuo, and R. Maaß
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Advanced high strength steels ,Liquid metal embrittlement ,Transmission electron microscopy ,4-Dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Grain-boundary degradation via liquid-metal embrittlement (LME) is a prominent and long-standing failure process in next generation advanced high-strength steels. Here we reveal, well ahead of the crack tip, the presences of nano-scale grains of intermetallic phases in Zn-infiltrated but uncracked grain boundaries with scanning- and 4D transmission electron microscopy. Instead of the often-reported Zn-rich Fe-Zn intermetallics, the nano-scale phase in the uncracked infiltrated grain boundaries is identified as the Γ-phase, and its presence reveals the local enhancement of strain heterogeneities in the grain boundary network. Based on these observations, we argue that intermetallic phase formation is not occurring after cracking and subsequent liquid Zn infiltration but is instead one of the primary nanoscopic drivers for grain-boundary weakening and crack initiation. These findings shift the focus of LME from micro- and meso-scale crack investigations to the very early stages immediately following Zn diffusion, after which secondary phase nucleation and growth emerge as the root-cause for failure.
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- 2022
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4. The Battle of Guilford Courthouse: A Most Desperate Engagement
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John R. Maass
- Published
- 2020
5. George Washington's Virginia
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John R. Maass
- Published
- 2017
6. Spatially resolved roughness exponent in polymer fracture
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M. Thuy, A. Spyrantis, M. Böhning, U. Niebergall, and R. Maaß
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Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
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7. The Road to Yorktown: Jefferson, Lafayette and the British Invasion of Virginia
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John R. Maass
- Published
- 2015
8. Intermittent microplasticity in the presence of a complex microstructure
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Q. Rizzardi, P. M. Derlet, and R. Maaß
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Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
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9. Learning Friction Estimation for Sensorless Force/Position Control in Industrial Manipulators.
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Volker Zahn, R. Maass, M. Dapper, and Rolf Eckmiller
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- 1999
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10. How to Compensate Stick-Slip Friction in Neural Velocity Force Control (NVFC) for Industrial Manipulators.
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M. Dapper, Volker Zahn, R. Maass, and Rolf Eckmiller
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- 1999
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11. Hard Contact Surface Tracking for Industrial Manipulators with (SR) Position Based Force Control.
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R. Maass, Volker Zahn, M. Dapper, and Rolf Eckmiller
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- 1999
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12. Neural Force Control (NFC) Applied to Industrial Manipulators in Interaction with Moving Rigid Objects.
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M. Dapper, R. Maass, Volker Zahn, and Rolf Eckmiller
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- 1998
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13. Neural Force Control (NFC) for Complex Manipulator Tasks.
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M. Dapper, R. Maass, Volker Zahn, and Rolf Eckmiller
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- 1997
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14. Neural force/position control in Cartesian space for a 6DOF industrial robot: concept and first results.
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R. Maass, Volker Zahn, and Rolf Eckmiller
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- 1997
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15. Viscosity and transport in a model fragile metallic glass
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P. M. Derlet, H. Bocquet, and R. Maaß
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Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,General Materials Science - Published
- 2021
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16. The French & Indian War in North Carolina: The Spreading Flames of War
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John R Maass
- Published
- 2007
17. Mild-to-wild plastic transition is governed by athermal screw dislocation slip in bcc Nb
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Q, Rizzardi, C, McElfresh, G, Sparks, D D, Stauffer, J, Marian, and R, Maaß
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Plastic deformation in crystals is mediated by the motion of line defects known as dislocations. For decades, dislocation activity has been treated as a homogeneous, smooth continuous process. However, it is now recognized that plasticity can be determined by long-range correlated and intermittent collective dislocation processes, known as avalanches. Here we demonstrate in body-centered cubic Nb how the long-range and scale-free dynamics at room temperature are progressively quenched out with decreasing temperature, eventually revealing intermittency with a characteristic length scale that approaches the Burgers vector itself. Plasticity is shown to be bimodal across the studied temperature regime, with conventional thermally-activated smooth plastic flow ('mild') coexisting with sporadic bursts ('wild') controlled by athermal screw dislocation activity, thereby violating the classical notion of temperature-dependent screw dislocation motion at low temperatures. An abrupt increase of the athermal avalanche component is identified at the critical temperature of the material. Our results indicate that plasticity at any scale can be understood in terms of the coexistence of these mild and wild modes of deformation, which could help design better alloys by suppressing one of the two modes in desired temperature windows.
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- 2021
18. In situ thermal annealing transmission electron microscopy of irradiation induced Fe nanoparticle precipitation in Fe–Si alloy
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Y. Shimada, Y. Ikeda, K. Yoshida, M. Sato, J. Chen, Y. Du, K. Inoue, R. Maaß, Y. Nagai, and T. J. Konno
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General Physics and Astronomy - Abstract
The typical experimental conditions inside a transmission electron microscope (TEM), such as ultra-high vacuum, high-energy electron irradiation, and surface effects of ultrathin TEM specimens, can be the origin of unexpected microstructural changes compared with that of bulk material during in situ thermal-annealing experiments. In this paper, we report on the microstructural changes of a Fe–15%Si alloy during in situ TEM annealing, where, in its bulk form, it exhibits an ordering transformation from D03 to B2 at 650 °C. Using a heating-pot type double tilt holder with a proportional–integral–differential control system, we observed the precipitation of α-Fe both at the sample surface and inside the sample. Surface precipitates formed via surface diffusion are markedly large, several tens of nm, whereas precipitates inside the specimen, which are surrounded by Fe-poor regions, reach a maximum size of 20 nm. This unexpected microstructural evolution could be attributed to vacancies on Si sites, which are induced due to high-energy electron irradiation before heating, as well as enhanced thermal diffusion of Fe atoms.
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- 2022
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19. Characterisation of the biological response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to the loss of an allele of the eukaryotic initiation factor 4A
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Paul H. Teesdale-Spittle, Veronica Venturi, David R. Maass, Paul H. Atkinson, Richard Little, Peter W. Bircham, and Juliana Rodigheri Brito
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0301 basic medicine ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Biophysics ,Loss of Heterozygosity ,Ribosome biogenesis ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly ,Synthetic genetic array ,Biochemistry ,RNA Helicase A ,Cell biology ,Protein Transport ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Eukaryotic translation ,Proteostasis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Protein Biosynthesis ,eIF4A ,Eukaryotic Initiation Factor-4A ,Protein biosynthesis ,Molecular Biology ,Gene - Abstract
The translation initiation machinery is emerging as an important target for therapeutic intervention, with potential in the treatment of cancer, viral infections, and muscle wasting. Amongst the targets for pharmacological control of translation initiation is the eukaryotic initiation factor 4A (eIF4A), an RNA helicase that is essential for cap-dependent translation initiation. We set out to explore the system-wide impact of a reduction of functional eIF4A. To this end, we investigated the effect of deletion of TIF1, one of the duplicate genes that produce eIF4A in yeast, through synthetic genetic array interactions and system-wide changes in GFP-tagged protein abundances. We show that there is a biological response to deletion of the TIF1 gene that extends through the proteostasis network. Effects of the deletion are apparent in processes as distributed as chromatin remodelling, ribosome biogenesis, amino acid metabolism, and protein trafficking. The results from this study identify protein complexes and pathways that will make ideal targets for combination therapies with eIF4A inhibitors.
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- 2018
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20. Intraspecific epitopic variation in a carbohydrate antigen exposed on the surface of Trichostrongylus colubriformis infective L3 larvae.
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David R Maass, Gavin B Harrison, Warwick N Grant, Wayne R Hein, and Charles B Shoemaker
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The carbohydrate larval antigen, CarLA, is present on the exposed surface of all strongylid nematode infective L3 larvae tested, and antibodies against CarLA can promote rapid immune rejection of incoming Trichostrongylus colubriformis larvae in sheep. A library of ovine recombinant single chain Fv (scFv) antibody fragments, displayed on phage, was prepared from B cell mRNA of field-immune sheep. Phage displaying scFvs that bind to the surface of living exsheathed T. colubriformis L3 larvae were identified, and the majority of worm-binding scFvs recognized CarLA. Characterization of greater than 500 worm surface binding phage resulted in the identification of nine different anti-CarLA scFvs that recognized three distinct T. colubriformis CarLA epitopes based on blocking and additive ELISA. All anti-CarLA scFvs were specific to the T. colubriformis species of nematode. Each of the three scFv epitope classes displayed identical Western blot recognition patterns and recognized the exposed surface of living T. colubriformis exsheathed L3 larvae. Surprisingly, each of the anti-CarLA scFvs was able to bind to only a subset of worms. Double-labelling indirect immunofluorescence revealed that the three classes of anti-CarLA scFvs recognize distinct, non-overlapping, T. colubriformis sub-populations. These results demonstrate that individual T. colubriformis L3 larvae display only one of at least three distinct antigenic forms of CarLA on their surface at any given time, and suggest that antigenic variation within CarLA is likely a mechanism of immune evasion in strongylid nematodes.
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- 2009
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21. Revolutionary Brothers: Thomas Jefferson, the Marquis de Lafayette, and the Friendship That Helped Forge Two Nations by Tom Chaffin
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John R. Maass
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Friendship ,Environmental Engineering ,Forge ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art history ,Art ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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22. Identification of Targeting Peptides for Mucosal Delivery in Sheep and Mice
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David R. Maass, Charles B. Shoemaker, Jennifer Pfeil, Alf Hamann, Wayne R. Hein, Rudolf Volkmer, Ute Hoffmann, L G Moore, A. Pernthaner, Sally Cole, Sarah M. Rosanowski, Uta Lauer, Saleh Umair, and Elisabeth E. Kenngott
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0301 basic medicine ,Phage display ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Peptide ,Biology ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Intestinal mucosa ,Peptide Library ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Animals ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Peptide library ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Lamina propria ,Sheep ,Molecular biology ,Intestinal epithelium ,Small intestine ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Transcytosis ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Peptides - Abstract
In this study we identified and characterized a novel cyclic peptide that facilitates the rapid transportation of conjugated molecules across the epithelial layer of the small intestine. The peptide was initially selected from phage display libraries using a large animal experimental model, which employed consecutive in vitro and in vivo panning. The procedure was designed to enrich for peptides that facilitated transcytosis across the intestinal epithelium into the intestinal afferent lymphatic system. A small set of peptides was repeatedly isolated using this selection method; however, the cyclic nonamer CTANSSAQC, 13C, dominated. The activity of the putative targeting peptide 13C was then verified using a mouse model. These experiments showed that the 13C peptide as well as macromolecules conjugated to it were rapidly transported across the intestinal mucosa into distinct subsets of epithelial cells and CD11c+ cells located in the lamina propria and Peyer's Patches. Significant amounts of intact protein could be delivered into the systemic circulation after rectal and nasal application. Thus, peptide 13C is regarded as an attractive carrier candidate for mucosal delivery of large molecules. The preferential targeting to distinct intestinal cells may be utilized to deliver active biological drugs for the effective control of diseases of the gut.
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- 2015
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23. Networks of genes modulating the pleiotropic drug response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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David S. Bellows, David R. Maass, Ploi Yibmantasiri, Paul H. Atkinson, and Peter W. Bircham
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Transcription, Genetic ,endocrine system diseases ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Cell ,Biology ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Western blot ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Atorvastatin ,medicine ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,Pyrroles ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Genetics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology.organism_classification ,Phenotype ,Drug Resistance, Multiple ,eye diseases ,Yeast ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Multiple drug resistance ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Heptanoic Acids ,ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters ,Gene Deletion ,Signal Transduction ,Transcription Factors ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The pleiotropic drug response (PDR) or multidrug resistance (MDR) are cellular defence mechanisms present in all species to deal with potential toxicity from environmental small molecule toxins or bioactives. The rapid induction of MDR by xenobiotics in mammalian cells and PDR in budding yeast (S. cerevisiae) has been well studied but how pathway specificity is achieved across different structural classes of xenobiotics is not well understood. As a novel approach to this problem we investigated the genome-wide network of genes modulating the yeast PDR. Fluorescently-tagged ABC pumps Pdr5p-GFP and Yor1p-GFP were used as real-time reporters for the Pdr1p/Pdr3p controlled response. Using the yeast non-essential gene deletion set fifty-four gene deletions that suppressed up-regulation of reporter fluorescence to the cell surface in the presence of atorvastatin were identified by high content confocal automated microscopy. Secondary validation using spot dilution assays to known PDR substrates and Western blot assays of Pdr5p expression confirmed 26 genes able to modulate the PDR phenotype. By analysis of network connectivity, an additional 10 genes that fell below the primary screen cut-off were predicted to be involved in PDR and confirmed as above. The PDR modulating genes taken together were enriched in signalling (Rho-GTPase, MAPK), Mediator complexes, and chromatin modification (subunits of ADA and SAGA complexes). Many of the gene deletions cause extra sensitivity in Δpdr1Δpdr3 strains strongly suggesting that there are alternative pathways to upregulate PDR, independently of Pdr1p/Pdr3p. We present here the first high-content microscopy screening for PDR modulators, and identify genes that are previously unsuspected regulators of PDR apparently contributing via network interactions.
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- 2014
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24. 'Too Grievous for a People to Bear': Impressment and Conscription in Revolutionary North Carolina
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John R. Maass
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History ,Spanish Civil War ,State (polity) ,Law ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Impressment ,Antipathy ,Resistance (creativity) ,Independence ,media_common - Abstract
Waging the War of American Independence (1775–83) required massive numbers of troops, weapons, and supplies in quantities most states could not readily provide. Meeting these needs were persistent challenges for the nascent state governments, all of which lacked a financial foundation, manufacturing base, and logistical network to sustain a concerted war effort. North Carolina was particularly beset by these challenges, which led state officials to adopt two of the most burdensome intrusions into the wartime routines of Carolinians: impressment and conscription. Both of these expedients produced antipathy and resistance to Patriot authorities, undermined support for the new state, and added to the disorders within the state during most of the war years.
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- 2009
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25. North Carolina and the New Nation: Reconstruction and Reconciliation Efforts in the 1780s
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John R. Maass
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Politics ,Peace treaty ,Vietnam War ,State (polity) ,Sovereignty ,Constitution ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Law ,Political science ,Public administration ,Ratification ,Independence ,media_common - Abstract
In November 1789, delegates at a state convention in Fayetteville, North Carolina voted to adopt the United States Constitution, ratification having failed the year before. North Carolina was the second to last state to vote for the Constitution due to a number of concerns and reservations its political leaders raised about the terms of the new union. The state’s history during the 1780s shows a pattern of disinclination on the part of Carolinians to wed their interests with the larger enterprise of American unity. Carolinians exhibited a strong desire to protect their own interests over national political goals. Their focus included possession of valuable western territory and the burden of financial debts; jealous concerns over the potential loss of state sovereignty; the traumatic wartime experiences of the state’s citizens; and a localism that emphasized the importance of their own communities. All of these issues came directly from the trying experience of the American War for Independence between 1775 and 1783, the rebellion of the American settlers against the British authorities. In the context of this conflict the Continental Congress declared the colonies free and independent states in July 1776. One year later these 13 states became the United States of America, a loose union under the Articles of Confederation (commonly referred to as the ‘Confederation government’). The war ended in 1783 with a peace treaty that confirmed the new nation’s separation from the British Empire.1
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- 2016
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26. Alpaca (Lama pacos) as a convenient source of recombinant camelid heavy chain antibodies (VHHs)
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Charles B. Shoemaker, David R. Maass, A. Pernthaner, and Jorge Sepulveda
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Male ,Phage display ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Immunology ,Immunoglobulin Variable Region ,Article ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,law ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Sheep ,Base Sequence ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Molecular biology ,Recombinant Proteins ,Single-domain antibody ,chemistry ,Recombinant DNA ,biology.protein ,Immunoglobulin heavy chain ,Antibody ,Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains ,Camelids, New World ,DNA ,Camelid - Abstract
Recombinant single domain antibody fragments (VHHs) that derive from the unusual camelid heavy chain only IgG class (HCAbs) have many favourable properties compared with single-chain antibodies prepared from conventional IgG. As a result, VHHs have become widely used as binding reagents and are beginning to show potential as therapeutic agents. To date, the source of VHH genetic material has been camels and llamas despite their large size and limited availability. Here we demonstrate that the smaller, more tractable and widely available alpaca is an excellent source of VHH coding DNA. Alpaca sera IgG consists of about 50% HCAbs, mostly of the short-hinge variety. Sequencing of DNA encoding more than 50 random VHH and hinge domains permitted the design of PCR primers that will amplify virtually all alpaca VHH coding DNAs for phage display library construction. Alpacas were immunized with ovine tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) and a VHH phage display library was prepared from a lymph node that drains the sites of immunizations and successfully employed in the isolation of VHHs that bind and neutralize ovine TNFalpha.
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- 2007
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27. Recent Publications
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Henry Bowles, Ashley Goodrich-Mahoney, Alexander R. Maass, and Rosalind Piggot
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Sociology and Political Science ,Geography, Planning and Development - Published
- 2007
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28. A BEHAVIORAL AND HISTOLOGICAL COMPARISON OF FLUID PERCUSSION INJURY AND CONTROLLED CORTICAL IMPACT INJURY TO THE RAT SENSORIMOTOR CORTEX
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Todd C. Peterson, Jordan R. Anderson, Michael R. Hoane, William R. Maass, and Gail D. Anderson
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Male ,Movement disorders ,Traumatic brain injury ,Poison control ,Sensory system ,Water maze ,Motor Activity ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Rotarod performance test ,Article ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Memory ,Neuroplasticity ,medicine ,Animals ,Movement Disorders ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Astrocytes ,Brain Injuries ,Rotarod Performance Test ,Nerve Degeneration ,Sensation Disorders ,Sensorimotor Cortex ,Forelimb ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Our primary goal was to evaluate the behavioral and histological outcome of fluid percussion injury (FPI) and cortical contusion injury (CCI) to the sensorimotor cortex (SMC). The SMC has been used to evaluate neuroplasticity following CCI, but has not been extensively examined with FPI. In both the CCI and FPI models, a mechanical force of 4 mm in diameter was applied over the SMC, allowing for a direct comparison to measure the relative rates of histology and recovery of function in these models. Gross behavioral deficits were found on the sensory task (tactile adhesive removal task) and multiple motor assessments (forelimb asymmetry task, forelimb placing task, and rotorod). These sensorimotor deficits occurred in the absence of cognitive deficits in the water maze. The CCI model creates focal damage with a localized injury wheras the FPI model creates a more diffuse injury causing widespread damage. Both behavioral and histological deficits ensued following both models of injury to the SMC. The neuroplastic changes and ease at which damage to this area can be measured behaviorally make this an excellent location to assess traumatic brain injury (TBI) treatments. No injury model can completely mimic the full spectrum of human TBI and any potential treatments should be validated across both focal and diffuse injury models. Both of these injury models to the SMC produce severe and enduring behavioral deficits, which are ideal for evaluating treatment options.
- Published
- 2015
29. Alb�mina humana marcada con I-131 en el control de la exsanguino transfusion en la enfermedad hemol�tica del reci�n nacido
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T. Kornhauser, G. Novelo, R. Maass, and A. Azuara
- Published
- 2015
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30. Deficits in discrimination after experimental frontal brain injury are mediated by motivation and can be improved by nicotinamide administration
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Michael R. Hoane, Cole Vonder Haar, Eric A. Jacobs, and William R. Maass
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Male ,Niacinamide ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gross motor skill ,Morris water navigation task ,Audiology ,Motor Activity ,Neuroprotection ,Task (project management) ,Discrimination Learning ,Cognition ,Discrimination, Psychological ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Long-Evans ,Discrimination learning ,Maze Learning ,Motivation ,Working memory ,Original Articles ,Frontal Lobe ,Rats ,Frontal lobe ,Brain Injuries ,Vitamin B Complex ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
One of the largest challenges in experimental neurotrauma work is the development of models relevant to the human condition. This includes both creating similar pathophysiology as well as the generation of relevant behavioral deficits. Recent studies have shown that there is a large potential for the use of discrimination tasks in rats to detect injury-induced deficits. The literature on discrimination and TBI is still limited, however. The current study investigated motivational and motor factors that could potentially contribute to deficits in discrimination. In addition, the efficacy of a neuroprotective agent, nicotinamide, was assessed. Rats were trained on a discrimination task and motivation task, given a bilateral frontal controlled cortical impact TBI (+3.0 AP, 0.0 ML from bregma), and then reassessed. They were also assessed on motor ability and Morris water maze (MWM) performance. Experiment 1 showed that TBI resulted in large deficits in discrimination and motivation. No deficits were observed on gross motor measures; however, the vehicle group showed impairments in fine motor control. Both injured groups were impaired on the reference memory MWM, but only nicotinamide-treated rats were impaired on the working memory MWM. Nicotinamide administration improved performance on discrimination and motivation measures. Experiment 2 evaluated retraining on the discrimination task and suggested that motivation may be a large factor underlying discrimination deficits. Retrained rats improved considerably on the discrimination task. The tasks evaluated in this study demonstrate robust deficits and may improve the detection of pharmaceutical effects by being very sensitive to pervasive cognitive deficits that occur after frontal TBI.
- Published
- 2014
31. Kinetochore genes are required to fully activate secretory pathway expansion in S. cerevisiae under induced ER stress
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Paul H. Atkinson, David R. Maass, Yee S. Low, and Peter W. Bircham
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Regulation of gene expression ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Secretory Pathway ,biology ,Kinetochore ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Repressor ,Carboxypeptidases ,biology.organism_classification ,Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress ,Cell biology ,Repressor Proteins ,Cytoskeletal Proteins ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Unfolded protein response ,Unfolded Protein Response ,Macrolides ,Genome, Fungal ,Cytoskeleton ,Kinetochores ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Secretory pathway ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Basal ER stress occurs when proteins misfold in normal physiological conditions and are corrected by the unfolded protein response (UPR). Elevated ER stress occurs when misfolding is refractory as found in numerous diseases such as atherosclerosis, Type II diabetes and some cancers. In elevated ER stress it is unclear whether cells utilise the same or different networks of genes as in basal levels of ER stress. To probe this question, we used secretory pathway reporters Yip3p-GFP, Erv29p-GFP, Orm2p-GFP and UPREpr-GFP placed on the yeast deletion mutant array (DMA) genetic background. The reporter's expression levels, measured by automated microscopy, at basal versus elevated ER stress induced by the over-expression of CPY* were compared. A novel group of kinetochore genes (CTF19 complex) were found to be uniquely required for full induction of all four ER stress reporters in elevated stress. A follow-up reporter screen was developed by mating the ctf19Δ kinetochore gene deletion strain into the genome-wide XXXp-GFP tagged library then testing with over-expressed CPY*. This screen identified Bcy1p and Bfr1p as possible signalling points that down-regulate the UPR and secretory pathway when kinetochore proteins are absent under elevated stress conditions. Bfr1p appears to be a checkpoint that monitors the integrity of kinetochores at increased levels of ER stress. This study concludes that functional kinetochores are required for full activation of the secretory pathway in elevated ER stress and that the responses to basal and elevated levels of ER stress require different networks of genes.
- Published
- 2014
32. [Excretion of hormones in patients with chronic liver diseases]
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R, MAASS ESCOTO and F, GOMEZ MONT
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Liver Diseases ,Humans ,Biological Transport ,Hormones - Published
- 2014
33. [Participation of the liver in steroid hormone metabolism]
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F, GOMEZ MONT and R, MAASS ESCOTO
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Liver ,Humans ,Steroids ,Lipid Metabolism ,Hormones - Published
- 2014
34. The cellular target specificity of pateamine A
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David R. Maass, Paul H. Atkinson, Peter T. Northcote, Paul H. Teesdale-Spittle, and James H. Matthews
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Natural product ,biology ,Biological activity ,Microtubules ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,In vitro ,Cell biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Thiazoles ,Tubulin ,Biopolymers ,chemistry ,Microtubule ,Cell culture ,eIF4A ,Cell Line, Tumor ,biology.protein ,Epoxy Compounds ,Humans ,Macrolides ,Actin - Abstract
The natural product pateamine A (pateamine) from the sponge Mycale hentscheli is active against a wide range of dividing cells and has been shown to inhibit the functions of the eukaryotic initiation factor 4A (eIF4A). We have identifi ed that pateamine is additionally able to modulate the formation of actin fi laments and microtubules in vitro but at higher concentrations than required for inhibition of eIF4A. Cell cycle analysis confi rmed that actin and tubulin are not major mediators of the cellular activity of pateamine. The range of targets identifi ed demonstrates the value of multiple approaches to determining the mode of action of biologically active compounds
- Published
- 2014
35. Break-up and Coherent Photoproduction ofηMesons on the Deuteron
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L. Rosier, J. Arends, B. M. Preedom, J.P. Didelez, G. v. Edel, F. Smend, E. Hourany, R. Maass, G. Nöldeke, W. Beulertz, G. S. Blanpied, J. Hey, A. Bock, Bijan Saghai, K. Helbing, J. Ajaka, M. Breuer, M Schumacher, G. Berrier-Ronsin, Gisela Anton, M. Rigney, P. Hoffmann-Rothe, M. Krebeck, and B. Richie
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Physics ,Particle physics ,Isovector ,Meson ,Proton ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Branching fraction ,Isoscalar ,Bremsstrahlung ,General Physics and Astronomy ,01 natural sciences ,Helicity ,Nuclear physics ,0103 physical sciences ,Neutron ,010306 general physics - Abstract
We present new break-up and coherent data for $\ensuremath{\eta}$ meson photoproduction on the deuteron, using a deuterium target and tagged bremsstrahlung photons up to 1 GeV. The differential cross sections for the coherent process were measured from threshold to 800 MeV. They are much smaller than those previously reported. The break-up channel provides a direct measurement of the neutron to proton differential cross section ratios. At the ${S}_{11}(1535)$ resonance peak, ${\ensuremath{\sigma}}_{n}/{\ensuremath{\sigma}}_{p}\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}0.68\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.06$ leading to an isoscalar to isovector amplitude ratio of ${A}_{s}{/A}_{\ensuremath{\upsilon}}\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}0.096\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.02$.
- Published
- 1997
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36. The Frontier War for American Independence, and: The French and Indian War (review)
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John R. Maass
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Frontier Thesis ,History ,Frontier ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Asymmetric warfare ,Ancient history ,Independence ,Decolonization ,media_common - Published
- 2005
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37. Linking high and low temperature plasticity in bulk metallic glasses II: use of a log-normal barrier energy distribution and a mean field description of high temperature plasticity
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P. M. Derlet and R. Maass
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Materials science ,Amorphous metal ,Thermodynamics ,Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Activation energy ,Plasticity ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Kinetic energy ,Fragility ,Mean field theory ,Log-normal distribution ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,Glass transition - Abstract
A thermal activation model to describe the plasticity of bulk metallic glasses (Derlet and Maa\ss, Phil. Mag. 2013, DOI: 10.1080/14786435.2013.826396) which uses a distribution of barrier energies and some aspects of under-cooled liquid physics is developed further. In particular, a log-normal distribution is now employed to describe the statistics of barrier energies. A high temperature mean-field description of homogeneous macro-plasticity is then developed and is shown to be similar to a thermal activation picture employing a single characteristic activation energy and activation volume. In making this comparison, the activation volume is interpreted as being proportional to the average mean-square-value of the plastic shear strain magnitude within the material. Also, the kinetic fragility at the glass transition temperature is shown to represent the effective number of irreversible structural transformations available at that temperature., Comment: 28 pages, 2 figures
- Published
- 2013
38. Characterizing the laulimalide-peloruside binding site using site-directed mutagenesis of TUB2 in S. cerevisiae
- Author
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Paul H. Atkinson, David S. Bellows, John H. Miller, Peter T. Northcote, Paul H. Teesdale-Spittle, David R. Maass, and Reem Hanna
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Cell division ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Lactones ,Microtubule ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Humans ,Binding site ,Site-directed mutagenesis ,Molecular Biology ,Sequence (medicine) ,Genetics ,Binding Sites ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic ,Small molecule ,Yeast ,Biochemistry ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Mutation ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Macrolides ,Cell Division ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Baker's yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, has significant sequence conservation with a core subset of mammalian proteins and can serve as a model for disease processes. The aim of this study was to determine whether yeast could be used as a model system to identify new agents that interact with the laulimalide–peloruside binding site on β-tubulin. Agents that bind to this site cause stabilization of microtubules and interfere with cell division. Based on the location of the proposed laulimalide–peloruside binding site and of previously identified mutations shown to cause resistance in mammalian cells, we made the corresponding mutations in yeast and tested whether they conferred resistance to laulimalide and peloruside. Mutations A296T and R306H, which cause 6-fold and 40-fold increased resistance in human 1A9 ovarian carcinoma cells, respectively, also led to resistance in yeast to these compounds. Similarly, other mutations led to resistance or, in one case, increased sensitivity. Thus, we conclude that yeast is an appropriate model to screen for small molecule drugs that may be efficacious in cancer therapy in humans through the newly characterised laulimalide–peloruside binding site.
- Published
- 2013
39. Diuretic Agents
- Author
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EDWARD J. CRAGOE, J. C. McGIFF, P. Y-K WONG, O. B. TVAERMOSE NIELSEN, P. W. FEIT, H.-J. LANG, B. KNABE, R. MUSCHAWECK, M. HROPOT, E. LINDNER, L. H. WERNER, E. HABICHT, J. ZERGENYI, P. BESSIN, J. BONNET, M. F. MALIN, C. JACQUEMIN, N. DE BREZE, I. PELAS, L. DESGROUX, B. AGIER, M. DUTARTE, A. R. MAASS
- Published
- 1978
40. A new method for determining gastric acid output using a wireless pH-sensing capsule
- Author
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Stephanie deRijke, D. H. Weinstein, Stephen A. Wank, Xiongce Zhao, Carson C. Chow, Ladan Foruraghi, Millie Whatley, Elizabeth C. Wright, R. Maass-Moreno, and Clara C. Chen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Scintigraphy ,Gastroenterology ,Capsule Endoscopy ,Article ,Gastric Acid ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Gastric Acidity Determination ,Hepatology ,Gastric emptying ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Stomach ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Reflux ,Capsule ,Reproducibility of Results ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Middle Aged ,Models, Theoretical ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,GERD ,Gastric acid ,Female ,business - Abstract
Summary Background Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and gastric acid hypersecretion respond well to suppression of gastric acid secretion. However, clinical management and research in diseases of acid secretion have been hindered by the lack of a non-invasive, accurate and reproducible tool to measure gastric acid output (GAO). Thus, symptoms or, in refractory cases, invasive testing may guide acid suppression therapy. Aim To present and validate a novel, non-invasive method of GAO analysis in healthy subjects using a wireless pH sensor, SmartPill (SP) (SmartPill Corporation, Buffalo, NY, USA). Methods Twenty healthy subjects underwent conventional GAO studies with a nasogastric tube. Variables impacting liquid meal-stimulated GAO analysis were assessed by modelling and in vitro verification. Buffering capacity of Ensure Plus was empirically determined. SP GAO was calculated using the rate of acidification of the Ensure Plus meal. Gastric emptying scintigraphy and GAO studies with radiolabelled Ensure Plus and SP assessed emptying time, acidification rate and mixing. Twelve subjects had a second SP GAO study to assess reproducibility. Results Meal-stimulated SP GAO analysis was dependent on acid secretion rate and meal-buffering capacity, but not on gastric emptying time. On repeated studies, SP GAO strongly correlated with conventional basal acid output (BAO) (r = 0.51, P = 0.02), maximal acid output (MAO) (r = 0.72, P = 0.0004) and peak acid output (PAO) (r = 0.60, P = 0.006). The SP sampled the stomach well during meal acidification. Conclusions SP GAO analysis is a non-invasive, accurate and reproducible method for the quantitative measurement of GAO in healthy subjects. SP GAO analysis could facilitate research and clinical management of GERD and other disorders of gastric acid secretion.
- Published
- 2013
41. Nanoindentation and Nano-compresion Testing of Ni3Al Precipitates
- Author
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B. Gan, H. Murakami, R. Maaß, L. Meza, J. Greer, T. Ohmura, and S. Tin
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Retention by the endoplasmic reticulum of rotavirus VP7 is controlled by three adjacent amino-terminal residues
- Author
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Paul H. Atkinson and D R Maass
- Subjects
Rotavirus ,Signal peptide ,Glycosylation ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,viruses ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Immunology ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Protein Sorting Signals ,Biology ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Capsid ,Virology ,Animals ,Secretion ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Antigens, Viral ,Peptide sequence ,Cell Line, Transformed ,Sequence Deletion ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Base Sequence ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Biological Transport ,ER retention ,Amino acid ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Insect Science ,Capsid Proteins ,alpha-Amylases ,Glycoprotein ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,Research Article - Abstract
The rotavirus outer capsid glycoprotein, VP7, is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane-associated glycoprotein in both infected and transfected cells. It was previously demonstrated in this laboratory and by others that both the cleaved signal sequence (H2) and the first NH2-terminal 61 amino acids of VP7 are sufficient and necessary for ER retention of this molecule. Using site-specific mutagenesis and transfection techniques, we show that residues Ile-9, Thr-10, and Gly-11 were specifically necessary for ER retention. These results further define the ER retention sequence of VP7 and demonstrate that conservative changes, apparently innocuous in only three adjacent amino acids, can lead to major solubility and compartmentalization changes. It was found that placement of the first 31 mature NH2-terminal residues of VP7, in addition to the cleaved ER translocation signal sequence, was sufficient to retain the enzymatically active chimeric alpha-amylase in the ER; this enzyme is normally secreted. Deletions of the residues Ile-9, Thr-10, and Gly-11 within the amylase chimera containing 31 VP7 amino acids resulted in secretion of enzymatically active protein. It was also observed that the residues of VP7 presented in certain chimeras were able to abolish alpha-amylase enzymatic activity. These chimeras are presumably misfolded since it was demonstrated by pulse-chase experiments that these molecules are degraded in the ER. We surmise that a favorable conformation is necessary for retention since ER retention and activity of the chimeras depend on the primary sequence context.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Secretory pathway genes assessed by high-throughput microscopy and synthetic genetic array analysis
- Author
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Yee S. Low, David R. Maass, Christina A. Roberts, Cameron Jack, Paul H. Atkinson, Peter W. Bircham, James H. Matthews, Manivannan Yegambaram, and Poh Y. Kiew
- Subjects
Microscopy, Confocal ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Mutant ,Cell Membrane ,Membrane Proteins ,Tunicamycin ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Biology ,Synthetic genetic array ,Molecular biology ,Cell biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Cytoplasm ,High-content screening ,Unfolded protein response ,mCherry ,Molecular Biology ,Secretory pathway ,Biotechnology - Abstract
We developed a procedure for automated confocal microscopy to image the effect of the non-essential yeast gene deletion set on the localisation of the plasma membrane GFP-labelled protein Mrh1p-GFP. To achieve this it was necessary to devise an expression system expressing Redstar2 RFP-fluorescence specifically in the nucleus, mCherry RFP at a lower intensity in the cytoplasm and Mrh1p-GFP in the plasma membrane. This fluorescence labelling scheme utilising specifically designed image analysis scripts allowed automated segmentation of the cells into sub-regions comprising nuclei, cytoplasm and cell-surface. From this high-throughput high content screening approach we were able to determine that gene deletions including emc1Δ, emc2Δ, emc3Δ, emc4Δ, emc5Δ and emc6Δ, caused intracellular mislocalisation at the ER of a plasma membrane protein Mrh1p-GFP. CPY processing patterns were unaffected in these mutants and collectively our data suggest a transport role for the EMC genes within the early secretory pathway. HAC1 is central to the unfolded protein response (UPR) and in its absence, i.e. the absence of UPR, emc1Δ-, emc3Δ-, emc4Δ-, emc5Δ–hac1Δ double mutants were specifically hypersensitive to ER-stress (tunicamycin) lending credence to the usefulness of the high content microscope screening for discovery of functional effects of single mutants.
- Published
- 2011
44. The Integrated Gmelin Information System
- Author
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A. Nebel, G. Olbrich, P. Lister, U. Tölle, R. Maass, and R. Deplanque
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Engineering drawing ,GeneralLiterature_INTRODUCTORYANDSURVEY ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Software tool ,Information processing ,computer.file_format ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Software ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,Information system ,Environmental Chemistry ,business ,SGML ,computer ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
The Gmelin Information System consists of the Gmelin Handbook of Inorganic and Organometallic Chemistry and the Gmelin Factual Database. This information system is constructed such that the factual database is used as the primary source for the handbook production process. The development of some novel software tools is described. These software tools enable the handbook authors to examine the factual data from the database and to add text; in a further step these parts are processed to form a draft manuscript. The completed handbook manuscripts are transferred to the printer using a newly implemented SGML procedure. These developments enable the direct creation of a printed handbook volume from the Gmelin Factual Database.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Intermediate width resonances via pole-to-pole configurations in24Mg+24Mg scattering
- Author
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W Schneid and R Maass
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Formalism (philosophy of mathematics) ,Scattering ,Atomic physics ,Excitation - Abstract
Molecular states with pole-to-pole-like configurations appropriate for 24Mg-24Mg scattering are incorporated in a multichannel scattering calculation by means of the R-matrix formalism. The nonresonant part of the S-matrix is obtained from a coupled channel calculation. The resulting excitation functions show resonance structures in good agreement with the measured ones.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Intraspecific Epitopic Variation in a Carbohydrate Antigen Exposed on the Surface of Trichostrongylus colubriformis Infective L3 Larvae
- Author
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G.B.L. Harrison, David R. Maass, Charles B. Shoemaker, Wayne R. Hein, and Warwick N. Grant
- Subjects
lcsh:Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,Infectious Diseases/Gastrointestinal Infections ,Trichostrongylus ,Immunology ,Blotting, Western ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Carbohydrates ,Immunoglobulin Variable Region ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Microbiology ,Epitope ,law.invention ,Epitopes ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Species Specificity ,law ,Peptide Library ,Virology ,Immunology/Immunity to Infections ,Genetics ,Antigenic variation ,medicine ,Animals ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Biology ,B cell ,Infectious Diseases/Helminth Infections ,Sheep ,biology ,fungi ,Genetic Variation ,Trichostrongylosis ,biology.organism_classification ,Nematode ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Antigens, Helminth ,Larva ,Immunology/Immune Response ,biology.protein ,Recombinant DNA ,Parasitology ,Antibody ,lcsh:RC581-607 ,Research Article - Abstract
The carbohydrate larval antigen, CarLA, is present on the exposed surface of all strongylid nematode infective L3 larvae tested, and antibodies against CarLA can promote rapid immune rejection of incoming Trichostrongylus colubriformis larvae in sheep. A library of ovine recombinant single chain Fv (scFv) antibody fragments, displayed on phage, was prepared from B cell mRNA of field-immune sheep. Phage displaying scFvs that bind to the surface of living exsheathed T. colubriformis L3 larvae were identified, and the majority of worm-binding scFvs recognized CarLA. Characterization of greater than 500 worm surface binding phage resulted in the identification of nine different anti-CarLA scFvs that recognized three distinct T. colubriformis CarLA epitopes based on blocking and additive ELISA. All anti-CarLA scFvs were specific to the T. colubriformis species of nematode. Each of the three scFv epitope classes displayed identical Western blot recognition patterns and recognized the exposed surface of living T. colubriformis exsheathed L3 larvae. Surprisingly, each of the anti-CarLA scFvs was able to bind to only a subset of worms. Double-labelling indirect immunofluorescence revealed that the three classes of anti-CarLA scFvs recognize distinct, non-overlapping, T. colubriformis sub-populations. These results demonstrate that individual T. colubriformis L3 larvae display only one of at least three distinct antigenic forms of CarLA on their surface at any given time, and suggest that antigenic variation within CarLA is likely a mechanism of immune evasion in strongylid nematodes., Author Summary Strongylid nematode worm parasites currently infect hundreds of millions of people, and most farmed animals, causing enormous morbidity and economic loss. These parasites commonly produce chronic gastrointestinal infections that are highly refractory to immune clearance mechanisms. Mucosal antibodies against a carbohydrate surface antigen (CarLA) can cause rapid expulsion of incoming larval nematodes. Sheep develop strong anti-strongylid immunity following long-term grazing on contaminated pasture. From these sheep, we identified and characterized recombinant antibodies that recognize CarLA on living L3 stage infective larvae of the strongylid parasite, Trichostrongylus colubriformis. The selected antibodies are specific only to larvae of the T. colubriformis species and, surprisingly, recognize only a subset of these worms. Three different anti-CarLA antibody classes were found and each recognizes different, non-overlapping subsets of worms which, together, comprise virtually the entire population. These results are the first demonstration of “intraspecific epitopic variation” within strongylid nematodes and suggest that these parasites have a mechanism that permits the surface presentation of at least three different antigenic forms of CarLA to avoid immune clearance.
- Published
- 2009
47. Hepatic venular pressures of rats, dogs, and rabbits
- Author
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R. Maass-Moreno, C. F. Rothe, and H. G. Bohlen
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Portal venous pressure ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Inferior vena cava ,Muscle, Smooth, Vascular ,Norepinephrine ,Dogs ,Species Specificity ,Venules ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Venule ,Hepatology ,Portal Vein ,business.industry ,Models, Cardiovascular ,Gastroenterology ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,Rats ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood pressure ,medicine.vein ,Circulatory system ,Cardiology ,Vascular resistance ,Vascular Resistance ,Rabbits ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Vasoconstriction ,Liver Circulation - Abstract
We tested the hypotheses that the hepatic venule pressures (Phv), just downstream from the hepatic sinusoids, are closely similar (less than 2 mmHg) either to the portal venous pressure (Ppv), indicating a high hepatic venous resistance, or to the inferior vena cava (Pivc) pressure, indicating a high portal-sinusoidal venous resistance, as reported by previous investigators. A micropipette servo-null pressure measurement technique was used with rats, dogs, and rabbits. Phv, referred to the anatomic level of the vena cava, averaged 5.1 +/- 1.0, 6.4 +/- 1.1, and 5.4 +/- 1.0 (SD) mmHg in the rats, puppies, and rabbits, respectively. Ppv averaged 8.0 +/- 1.4, 10.8 +/- 2.2, and 7.4 +/- 1.5 mmHg, respectively. Norepinephrine infusion into the portal vein (1-5 micrograms.min-1.kg-1) caused Ppv to increase and the portal venous flow to decrease but did not significantly affect Phv. The hepatic venous circuit contributed 44 +/- 17% (rats) and 31 +/- 26% (dogs) of the total liver venous vascular resistance under control conditions. We conclude that the portal and sinusoidal vasculatures are the dominant, but not exclusive, resistance sites of the liver venous vasculature both at rest and during norepinephrine-induced vasoconstriction.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Calcium depletion blocks the maturation of rotavirus by altering the oligomerization of virus-encoded proteins in the ER
- Author
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M S Poruchynsky, Paul H. Atkinson, and D R Maass
- Subjects
Rotavirus ,Glycosylation ,Macromolecular Substances ,Viral protein ,viruses ,Biology ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virus ,Cell Line ,Viral Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Virus maturation ,medicine ,Animals ,Egtazic Acid ,Calcimycin ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Tunicamycin ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Articles ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,Microscopy, Electron ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Capsid ,Calcium ,Glycoprotein ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational - Abstract
Maturation of rotavirus occurs in the ER. The virus transiently acquires an ER-derived membrane surrounding the virus particle before the eventual formation of double-shelled particles. The maturation process includes the retention and selective loss of specific viral protein(s) as well as the ER-derived membrane during formation of the outer capsid of the mature virus. When infected cells were depleted of Ca++ by use of the ionophore A23187 in calcium-free medium, membrane-enveloped intermediates were seen to accumulate. When Mn++, an efficient Ca++ competitor, was used to replace Ca++ in the medium, the accumulation of the enveloped intermediate was again observed, pointing to an absolute requirement of Ca++ in the maturation process. It was previously demonstrated in this laboratory that a hetero-oligomeric complex of NS28, VP7, and VP4 exists which may participate in the budding of the single-shelled particle into the ER (Maass, D. R., and P. H. Atkinson, 1990. J. Virol. 64:2632-2641). The present study demonstrates that either in the absence of Ca++ or in the presence of tunicamycin, a glycosylation inhibitor, VP7 is excluded from these hetero-oligomers. In the presence of Mn++, VP4 was blocked in forming a hetero-oligomeric complex with NS28 and VP7. The electrophoretic mobility of the viral glycoproteins synthesized in the presence of the ionophore were found to be altered. This size difference was attributed to altered N-linked glycosylation and carbohydrate processing of the viral glycoproteins. These results imply a major role for calcium and the state of glycosylation of NS28 in the assembly and acquisition of specific viral protein conformations necessary for the correct association of proteins during virus maturation in the ER.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The zone of Badenweiler-Lenzkirch - a Carboniferous accretionary wedge?
- Author
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D. Schuler, R. Maass, and T. Prosch
- Subjects
Paleontology ,Accretionary wedge ,Carboniferous ,Geology - Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Three surface antigens dominate the mucosal antibody response to gastrointestinal L3-stage strongylid nematodes in field immune sheep
- Author
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Charles B. Shoemaker, David R. Maass, G.B.L. Harrison, and Warwick N. Grant
- Subjects
Sheep ,biology ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Sheep Diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Teladorsagia circumcincta ,Infectious Diseases ,Nematode ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Immunity ,Peptide Library ,Antigens, Helminth ,Antigens, Surface ,biology.protein ,Helminths ,Animals ,Strongylida ,Parasitology ,Antibody ,Immunity, Mucosal ,Haemonchus contortus ,Strongylida Infections - Abstract
Although gastrointestinal nematode parasites are a major human and veterinary health problem, little is known about how the host is sometimes able to mount an effective immune rejection response. In previous work, we identified a carbohydrate larval surface antigen (CarLA) as the target of mucosal antibodies that can elicit rejection of Trichostrongylus colubriformis L3s in sheep. Here we characterise the natural mucosal antibody responses to L3s from three major strongylid gastrointestinal parasites of sheep, Trichostrongylus colubriformis, Haemonchus contortus and Teladorsagia circumcincta. The mucosal antibody repertoire of naturally field-immune sheep was displayed on bacteriophage as single-chain antibodies (scFvs) and phage were selected for the ability to bind to the surface of living L3s of the three nematode species. All nematode-binding scFvs were found to recognize one of three different antigen classes that are each found in the three strongylid species. These three antigen classes appear to represent all of the major antigens recognized on Western blots by pooled mucosal antibodies from field-immune sheep. One of the antigen classes is a heterogeneous, high molecular weight molecule that is protease-sensitive. The scFvs recognizing this surface antigen also recognize a similar antigen in all strongylids tested. A second antigen class is a protease-insensitive, low molecular weight antigen found only in sheaths and scFvs recognizing this antigen cross-react with a similar molecule found in all strongylids tested. The third surface antigen class is CarLA and all of the anti-CarLA scFvs obtained from the field-immune sheep repertoire were specific to L3s of only one species and often recognized only a subset of the worms. Thus three different L3-stage surface antigens, two that lack a protein component, dominate the natural mucosal antibody response to L3-stage gastrointestinal strongylid nematodes in sheep.
- Published
- 2006
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