4,214 results on '"T. J. Martin"'
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2. Gen. Sigel's Grand March. By T. J. Martin, author of Persifer Smith's March.
3. Gen. Sigel's Grand March. By T. J. Martin, author of Persifer Smith's March.
4. Gen. Sigel's Grand March. By T. J. Martin, author of Persifer Smith's March.
5. Gen. Sigel's Grand March. By T. J. Martin, author of Persifer Smith's March.
6. LA 92 by Daniel Lindsay, T. J. Martin, and: Let It Fall: Los Angeles 1982–1992 by John Ridley, and: L.A. Burning: The Riots 25 Years Later by One9, Erik Parker (review)
- Author
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Jeffries, Judson L.
- Published
- 2017
7. Erratum to: The LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) radioactivity and cleanliness control programs
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D. S. Akerib, C. W. Akerlof, D. Yu. Akimov, A. Alquahtani, S. K. Alsum, T. J. Anderson, N. Angelides, H. M. Araújo, A. Arbuckle, J. E. Armstrong, M. Arthurs, H. Auyeung, S. Aviles, X. Bai, A. J. Bailey, J. Balajthy, S. Balashov, J. Bang, M. J. Barry, D. Bauer, P. Bauer, A. Baxter, J. Belle, P. Beltrame, J. Bensinger, T. Benson, E. P. Bernard, A. Bernstein, A. Bhatti, A. Biekert, T. P. Biesiadzinski, H. J. Birch, B. Birrittella, K. E. Boast, A. I. Bolozdynya, E. M. Boulton, B. Boxer, R. Bramante, S. Branson, P. Brás, M. Breidenbach, C. A. J. Brew, J. H. Buckley, V. V. Bugaev, R. Bunker, S. Burdin, J. K. Busenitz, R. Cabrita, J. S. Campbell, C. Carels, D. L. Carlsmith, B. Carlson, M. C. Carmona-Benitez, M. Cascella, C. Chan, J. J. Cherwinka, A. A. Chiller, C. Chiller, N. I. Chott, A. Cole, J. Coleman, D. Colling, R. A. Conley, A. Cottle, R. Coughlen, G. Cox, W. W. Craddock, D. Curran, A. Currie, J. E. Cutter, J. P. da Cunha, C. E. Dahl, S. Dardin, S. Dasu, J. Davis, T. J. R. Davison, L. de Viveiros, N. Decheine, A. Dobi, J. E. Y. Dobson, E. Druszkiewicz, A. Dushkin, T. K. Edberg, W. R. Edwards, B. N. Edwards, J. Edwards, M. M. Elnimr, W. T. Emmet, S. R. Eriksen, C. H. Faham, A. Fan, S. Fayer, S. Fiorucci, H. Flaecher, I. M. Fogarty Florang, P. Ford, V. B. Francis, E. D. Fraser, F. Froborg, T. Fruth, R. J. Gaitskell, N. J. Gantos, D. Garcia, V. M. Gehman, R. Gelfand, J. Genovesi, R. M. Gerhard, C. Ghag, E. Gibson, M. G. D. Gilchriese, S. Gokhale, B. Gomber, T. G. Gonda, A. Greenall, S. Greenwood, G. Gregerson, M. G. D. van der Grinten, C. B. Gwilliam, C. R. Hall, D. Hamilton, S. Hans, K. Hanzel, T. Harrington, A. Harrison, J. Harrison, C. Hasselkus, S. J. Haselschwardt, D. Hemer, S. A. Hertel, J. Heise, S. Hillbrand, O. Hitchcock, C. Hjemfelt, M. D. Hoff, B. Holbrook, E. Holtom, J. Y-K. Hor, M. Horn, D. Q. Huang, T. W. Hurteau, C. M. Ignarra, M. N. Irving, R. G. Jacobsen, O. Jahangir, S. N. Jeffery, W. Ji, M. Johnson, J. Johnson, P. Johnson, W. G. Jones, A. C. Kaboth, A. Kamaha, K. Kamdin, V. Kasey, K. Kazkaz, J. Keefner, D. Khaitan, M. Khaleeq, A. Khazov, A. V. Khromov, I. Khurana, Y. D. Kim, W. T. Kim, C. D. Kocher, D. Kodroff, A. M. Konovalov, L. Korley, E. V. Korolkova, M. Koyuncu, J. Kras, H. Kraus, S. W. Kravitz, H. J. Krebs, L. Kreczko, B. Krikler, V. A. Kudryavtsev, A. V. Kumpan, S. Kyre, A. R. Lambert, B. Landerud, N. A. Larsen, A. Laundrie, E. A. Leason, H. S. Lee, J. Lee, C. Lee, B. G. Lenardo, D. S. Leonard, R. Leonard, K. T. Lesko, C. Levy, J. Li, Y. Liu, J. Liao, F.-T. Liao, J. Lin, A. Lindote, R. Linehan, W. H. Lippincott, R. Liu, X. Liu, C. Loniewski, M. I. Lopes, E. Lopez-Asamar, B. López Paredes, W. Lorenzon, D. Lucero, S. Luitz, J. M. Lyle, C. Lynch, P. A. Majewski, J. Makkinje, D. C. Malling, A. Manalaysay, L. Manenti, R. L. Mannino, N. Marangou, D. J. Markley, P. MarrLaundrie, T. J. Martin, M. F. Marzioni, C. Maupin, C. T. McConnell, D. N. McKinsey, J. McLaughlin, D.-M. Mei, Y. Meng, E. H. Miller, Z. J. Minaker, E. Mizrachi, J. Mock, D. Molash, A. Monte, M. E. Monzani, J. A. Morad, E. Morrison, B. J. Mount, A. St. J. Murphy, D. Naim, A. Naylor, C. Nedlik, C. Nehrkorn, H. N. Nelson, J. Nesbit, F. Neves, J. A. Nikkel, J. A. Nikoleyczik, A. Nilima, J. O’Dell, H. Oh, F. G. O’Neill, K. O’Sullivan, I. Olcina, M. A. Olevitch, K. C. Oliver-Mallory, L. Oxborough, A. Pagac, D. Pagenkopf, S. Pal, K. J. Palladino, V. M. Palmaccio, J. Palmer, M. Pangilinan, N. Parveen, S. J. Patton, E. K. Pease, B. P. Penning, G. Pereira, C. Pereira, I. B. Peterson, A. Piepke, S. Pierson, S. Powell, R. M. Preece, K. Pushkin, Y. Qie, M. Racine, B. N. Ratcliff, J. Reichenbacher, L. Reichhart, C. A. Rhyne, A. Richards, Q. Riffard, G. R. C. Rischbieter, J. P. Rodrigues, H. J. Rose, R. Rosero, P. Rossiter, R. Rucinski, G. Rutherford, J. S. Saba, L. Sabarots, D. Santone, M. Sarychev, A. B. M. R. Sazzad, R. W. Schnee, M. Schubnell, P. R. Scovell, M. Severson, D. Seymour, S. Shaw, G. W. Shutt, T. A. Shutt, J. J. Silk, C. Silva, K. Skarpaas, W. Skulski, A. R. Smith, R. J. Smith, R. E. Smith, J. So, M. Solmaz, V. N. Solovov, P. Sorensen, V. V. Sosnovtsev, I. Stancu, M. R. Stark, S. Stephenson, N. Stern, A. Stevens, T. M. Stiegler, K. Stifter, R. Studley, T. J. Sumner, K. Sundarnath, P. Sutcliffe, N. Swanson, M. Szydagis, M. Tan, W. C. Taylor, R. Taylor, D. J. Taylor, D. Temples, B. P. Tennyson, P. A. Terman, K. J. Thomas, J. A. Thomson, D. R. Tiedt, M. Timalsina, W. H. To, A. Tomás, T. E. Tope, M. Tripathi, D. R. Tronstad, C. E. Tull, W. Turner, L. Tvrznikova, M. Utes, U. Utku, S. Uvarov, J. Va’vra, A. Vacheret, A. Vaitkus, J. R. Verbus, T. Vietanen, E. Voirin, C. O. Vuosalo, S. Walcott, W. L. Waldron, K. Walker, J. J. Wang, R. Wang, L. Wang, W. Wang, Y. Wang, J. R. Watson, J. Migneault, S. Weatherly, R. C. Webb, W.-Z. Wei, M. While, R. G. White, J. T. White, D. T. White, T. J. Whitis, W. J. Wisniewski, K. Wilson, M. S. Witherell, F. L. H. Wolfs, J. D. Wolfs, D. Woodward, S. D. Worm, X. Xiang, Q. Xiao, J. Xu, M. Yeh, J. Yin, I. Young, C. Zhang, and P. Zarzhitsky
- Subjects
Astrophysics ,QB460-466 ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis and routine childhood vaccinations – a self-controlled case series
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T. J. Martin, M. Fahey, M. Easton, H. J. Clothier, R. Samuel, N. W. Crawford, and J. P. Buttery
- Subjects
acute disseminated encephalomyelitis ,vaccine ,vaccination ,immunization ,adverse event ,self-controlled case series ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) is an autoimmune, central nervous system demyelinating disorder that follows antecedent immunologic challenges, such as infection or vaccination. This study aimed to investigate the potential association between routine childhood vaccinations and ADEM. Children under 7 years of age admitted to the two tertiary level pediatric hospitals in Victoria, Australia with ADEM from 2000–2015 had their clinical information linked to vaccination records from the Australian Childhood Immunization Register. Chart review was undertaken utilizing the Brighton Collaboration ADEM criteria. The self-controlled case-series (SCCS) methodology was employed to determine the relative incidences of ADEM post-vaccination in two risk intervals: 5–28 days and 2–42 days. Forty-six cases were eligible for SCCS analysis with a median age of 3.2 years. Of the forty-six cases, three were vaccine proximate cases and received vaccinations 23, 25 and 28 days before ADEM onset. Two vaccine proximate cases received their 4-year-old scheduled vaccinations (MMR and DTPa-IPV) and one vaccine proximate case the 1-year old scheduled vaccinations (MMR and Hib-MenC). The relative incidence of ADEM during the narrow and broad risk intervals were 1.041 (95% CI 0.323–3.356, p = 0.946) and 0.585 (95% CI 0.182–1.886, p = 0.370) respectively. Sensitivity analyses did not yield any substantial deviations. These results do not provide evidence of an association between vaccinations routinely provided to children aged under 7 years in Australia and the incidence of ADEM. However, these results should be interpreted with caution as the number of ADEM cases identified was limited and further research is warranted.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) radioactivity and cleanliness control programs
- Author
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D. S. Akerib, C. W. Akerlof, D. Yu. Akimov, A. Alquahtani, S. K. Alsum, T. J. Anderson, N. Angelides, H. M. Araújo, A. Arbuckle, J. E. Armstrong, M. Arthurs, H. Auyeung, S. Aviles, X. Bai, A. J. Bailey, J. Balajthy, S. Balashov, J. Bang, M. J. Barry, D. Bauer, P. Bauer, A. Baxter, J. Belle, P. Beltrame, J. Bensinger, T. Benson, E. P. Bernard, A. Bernstein, A. Bhatti, A. Biekert, T. P. Biesiadzinski, H. J. Birch, B. Birrittella, K. E. Boast, A. I. Bolozdynya, E. M. Boulton, B. Boxer, R. Bramante, S. Branson, P. Brás, M. Breidenbach, C. A. J. Brew, J. H. Buckley, V. V. Bugaev, R. Bunker, S. Burdin, J. K. Busenitz, R. Cabrita, J. S. Campbell, C. Carels, D. L. Carlsmith, B. Carlson, M. C. Carmona-Benitez, M. Cascella, C. Chan, J. J. Cherwinka, A. A. Chiller, C. Chiller, N. I. Chott, A. Cole, J. Coleman, D. Colling, R. A. Conley, A. Cottle, R. Coughlen, G. Cox, W. W. Craddock, D. Curran, A. Currie, J. E. Cutter, J. P. da Cunha, C. E. Dahl, S. Dardin, S. Dasu, J. Davis, T. J. R. Davison, L. de Viveiros, N. Decheine, A. Dobi, J. E. Y. Dobson, E. Druszkiewicz, A. Dushkin, T. K. Edberg, W. R. Edwards, B. N. Edwards, J. Edwards, M. M. Elnimr, W. T. Emmet, S. R. Eriksen, C. H. Faham, A. Fan, S. Fayer, S. Fiorucci, H. Flaecher, I. M. Fogarty Florang, P. Ford, V. B. Francis, E. D. Fraser, F. Froborg, T. Fruth, R. J. Gaitskell, N. J. Gantos, D. Garcia, V. M. Gehman, R. Gelfand, J. Genovesi, R. M. Gerhard, C. Ghag, E. Gibson, M. G. D. Gilchriese, S. Gokhale, B. Gomber, T. G. Gonda, A. Greenall, S. Greenwood, G. Gregerson, M. G. D. van der Grinten, C. B. Gwilliam, C. R. Hall, D. Hamilton, S. Hans, K. Hanzel, T. Harrington, A. Harrison, J. Harrison, C. Hasselkus, S. J. Haselschwardt, D. Hemer, S. A. Hertel, J. Heise, S. Hillbrand, O. Hitchcock, C. Hjemfelt, M. D. Hoff, B. Holbrook, E. Holtom, J. Y-K. Hor, M. Horn, D. Q. Huang, T. W. Hurteau, C. M. Ignarra, M. N. Irving, R. G. Jacobsen, O. Jahangir, S. N. Jeffery, W. Ji, M. Johnson, J. Johnson, P. Johnson, W. G. Jones, A. C. Kaboth, A. Kamaha, K. Kamdin, V. Kasey, K. Kazkaz, J. Keefner, D. Khaitan, M. Khaleeq, A. Khazov, A. V. Khromov, I. Khurana, Y. D. Kim, W. T. Kim, C. D. Kocher, D. Kodroff, A. M. Konovalov, L. Korley, E. V. Korolkova, M. Koyuncu, J. Kras, H. Kraus, S. W. Kravitz, H. J. Krebs, L. Kreczko, B. Krikler, V. A. Kudryavtsev, A. V. Kumpan, S. Kyre, A. R. Lambert, B. Landerud, N. A. Larsen, A. Laundrie, E. A. Leason, H. S. Lee, J. Lee, C. Lee, B. G. Lenardo, D. S. Leonard, R. Leonard, K. T. Lesko, C. Levy, J. Li, Y. Liu, J. Liao, F.-T. Liao, J. Lin, A. Lindote, R. Linehan, W. H. Lippincott, R. Liu, X. Liu, C. Loniewski, M. I. Lopes, E. Lopez-Asamar, B. López Paredes, W. Lorenzon, D. Lucero, S. Luitz, J. M. Lyle, C. Lynch, P. A. Majewski, J. Makkinje, D. C. Malling, A. Manalaysay, L. Manenti, R. L. Mannino, N. Marangou, D. J. Markley, P. MarrLaundrie, T. J. Martin, M. F. Marzioni, C. Maupin, C. T. McConnell, D. N. McKinsey, J. McLaughlin, D.-M. Mei, Y. Meng, E. H. Miller, Z. J. Minaker, E. Mizrachi, J. Mock, D. Molash, A. Monte, M. E. Monzani, J. A. Morad, E. Morrison, B. J. Mount, A. St. J. Murphy, D. Naim, A. Naylor, C. Nedlik, C. Nehrkorn, H. N. Nelson, J. Nesbit, F. Neves, J. A. Nikkel, J. A. Nikoleyczik, A. Nilima, J. O’Dell, H. Oh, F. G. O’Neill, K. O’Sullivan, I. Olcina, M. A. Olevitch, K. C. Oliver-Mallory, L. Oxborough, A. Pagac, D. Pagenkopf, S. Pal, K. J. Palladino, V. M. Palmaccio, J. Palmer, M. Pangilinan, N. Parveen, S. J. Patton, E. K. Pease, B. P. Penning, G. Pereira, C. Pereira, I. B. Peterson, A. Piepke, S. Pierson, S. Powell, R. M. Preece, K. Pushkin, Y. Qie, M. Racine, B. N. Ratcliff, J. Reichenbacher, L. Reichhart, C. A. Rhyne, A. Richards, Q. Riffard, G. R. C. Rischbieter, J. P. Rodrigues, H. J. Rose, R. Rosero, P. Rossiter, R. Rucinski, G. Rutherford, J. S. Saba, L. Sabarots, D. Santone, M. Sarychev, A. B. M. R. Sazzad, R. W. Schnee, M. Schubnell, P. R. Scovell, M. Severson, D. Seymour, S. Shaw, G. W. Shutt, T. A. Shutt, J. J. Silk, C. Silva, K. Skarpaas, W. Skulski, A. R. Smith, R. J. Smith, R. E. Smith, J. So, M. Solmaz, V. N. Solovov, P. Sorensen, V. V. Sosnovtsev, I. Stancu, M. R. Stark, S. Stephenson, N. Stern, A. Stevens, T. M. Stiegler, K. Stifter, R. Studley, T. J. Sumner, K. Sundarnath, P. Sutcliffe, N. Swanson, M. Szydagis, M. Tan, W. C. Taylor, R. Taylor, D. J. Taylor, D. Temples, B. P. Tennyson, P. A. Terman, K. J. Thomas, J. A. Thomson, D. R. Tiedt, M. Timalsina, W. H. To, A. Tomás, T. E. Tope, M. Tripathi, D. R. Tronstad, C. E. Tull, W. Turner, L. Tvrznikova, M. Utes, U. Utku, S. Uvarov, J. Va’vra, A. Vacheret, A. Vaitkus, J. R. Verbus, T. Vietanen, E. Voirin, C. O. Vuosalo, S. Walcott, W. L. Waldron, K. Walker, J. J. Wang, R. Wang, L. Wang, W. Wang, Y. Wang, J. R. Watson, J. Migneault, S. Weatherly, R. C. Webb, W.-Z. Wei, M. While, R. G. White, J. T. White, D. T. White, T. J. Whitis, W. J. Wisniewski, K. Wilson, M. S. Witherell, F. L. H. Wolfs, J. D. Wolfs, D. Woodward, S. D. Worm, X. Xiang, Q. Xiao, J. Xu, M. Yeh, J. Yin, I. Young, C. Zhang, and P. Zarzhitsky
- Subjects
Astrophysics ,QB460-466 ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Abstract LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) is a second-generation direct dark matter experiment with spin-independent WIMP-nucleon scattering sensitivity above $${1.4 \times 10^{-48}}\, {\hbox {cm}}^{2}$$ 1.4 × 10 - 48 cm 2 for a WIMP mass of $${40}\, \hbox {GeV}/{\hbox {c}}^{2}$$ 40 GeV / c 2 and a $${1000}\, \hbox {days}$$ 1000 days exposure. LZ achieves this sensitivity through a combination of a large $${5.6}\, \hbox {t}$$ 5.6 t fiducial volume, active inner and outer veto systems, and radio-pure construction using materials with inherently low radioactivity content. The LZ collaboration performed an extensive radioassay campaign over a period of six years to inform material selection for construction and provide an input to the experimental background model against which any possible signal excess may be evaluated. The campaign and its results are described in this paper. We present assays of dust and radon daughters depositing on the surface of components as well as cleanliness controls necessary to maintain background expectations through detector construction and assembly. Finally, examples from the campaign to highlight fixed contaminant radioassays for the LZ photomultiplier tubes, quality control and quality assurance procedures through fabrication, radon emanation measurements of major sub-systems, and bespoke detector systems to assay scintillator are presented.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Bone corticalization requires local SOCS3 activity and is promoted by androgen action via interleukin-6
- Author
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Dae-Chul Cho, Holly J. Brennan, Rachelle W. Johnson, Ingrid J. Poulton, Jonathan H. Gooi, Brett A. Tonkin, Narelle E. McGregor, Emma C. Walker, David J. Handelsman, T. J. Martin, and Natalie A. Sims
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
The strength of long bones is determined by coalescence of trabeculae during corticalization. Here the authors show that this process is regulated by SOCS3 via a mechanism dependent on IL-6 and expression of sex hormones.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis and routine childhood vaccinations – a self-controlled case series
- Author
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Hazel J Clothier, Jim Buttery, Mee Lee Easton, Nigel W Crawford, T. J. Martin, R. Samuel, and M. Fahey
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Victoria ,030231 tropical medicine ,Immunology ,Central nervous system ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pediatric hospital ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Demyelinating Disorder ,Adverse effect ,Pharmacology ,Preschool child ,Vaccines ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Encephalomyelitis, Acute Disseminated ,Vaccination ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunization ,Child, Preschool ,Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis ,business ,Research Paper - Abstract
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) is an autoimmune, central nervous system demyelinating disorder that follows antecedent immunologic challenges, such as infection or vaccination. This study aimed to investigate the potential association between routine childhood vaccinations and ADEM. Children under 7 years of age admitted to the two tertiary level pediatric hospitals in Victoria, Australia with ADEM from 2000–2015 had their clinical information linked to vaccination records from the Australian Childhood Immunization Register. Chart review was undertaken utilizing the Brighton Collaboration ADEM criteria. The self-controlled case-series (SCCS) methodology was employed to determine the relative incidences of ADEM post-vaccination in two risk intervals: 5–28 days and 2–42 days. Forty-six cases were eligible for SCCS analysis with a median age of 3.2 years. Of the forty-six cases, three were vaccine proximate cases and received vaccinations 23, 25 and 28 days before ADEM onset. Two vaccine proximate cases received their 4-year-old scheduled vaccinations (MMR and DTPa-IPV) and one vaccine proximate case the 1-year old scheduled vaccinations (MMR and Hib-MenC). The relative incidence of ADEM during the narrow and broad risk intervals were 1.041 (95% CI 0.323–3.356, p = 0.946) and 0.585 (95% CI 0.182–1.886, p = 0.370) respectively. Sensitivity analyses did not yield any substantial deviations. These results do not provide evidence of an association between vaccinations routinely provided to children aged under 7 years in Australia and the incidence of ADEM. However, these results should be interpreted with caution as the number of ADEM cases identified was limited and further research is warranted.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Basin-scale wind transport during the MILAGRO field campaign and comparison to climatology using cluster analysis
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B. de Foy, J. D. Fast, S. J. Paech, D. Phillips, J. T. Walters, R. L. Coulter, T. J. Martin, M. S. Pekour, W. J. Shaw, P. P. Kastendeuch, N. A. Marley, A. Retama, and L. T. Molina
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The MILAGRO field campaign was a multi-agency international collaborative project to evaluate the regional impacts of the Mexico City air pollution plume as a means of understanding urban impacts on the global climate. Mexico City lies on an elevated plateau with mountains on three sides and has complex mountain and surface-driven wind flows. This paper asks what the wind transport was in the basin during the field campaign and how representative it was of the climatology. Surface meteorology and air quality data, radiosondes and radar wind profiler data were collected at sites in the basin and its vicinity. Cluster analysis was used to identify the dominant wind patterns both during the campaign and within the past 10 years of operational data from the warm dry season. Our analysis shows that March 2006 was representative of typical flow patterns experienced in the basin. Six episode types were identified for the basin-scale circulation providing a way of interpreting atmospheric chemistry and particulate data collected during the campaign. Decoupling between surface winds and those aloft had a strong influence in leading to convection and poor air quality episodes. Hourly characterisation of wind circulation during the MILAGRO, MCMA-2003 and IMADA field campaigns enables the comparisons of similar air pollution episodes and the evaluation of the impact of wind transport on measurements of the atmospheric chemistry taking place in the basin.
- Published
- 2008
13. Bone corticalization requires local SOCS3 activity and is promoted by androgen action via interleukin-6
- Author
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Holly J. Brennan, Dae-Chul Cho, David J. Handelsman, Brett A. Tonkin, Jonathan H. Gooi, Rachelle W. Johnson, Emma C. Walker, Natalie A. Sims, Ingrid J Poulton, T. J. Martin, and Narelle E. McGregor
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ovariectomy ,Science ,Long bone ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Metaphysis ,Biology ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Chondrocytes ,Osteogenesis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,lcsh:Science ,Receptor ,Multidisciplinary ,Estradiol ,Interleukin-6 ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Dihydrotestosterone ,General Chemistry ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Suppressor of Cytokine Signaling 3 Protein ,Cancellous Bone ,Androgens ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Cortical bone ,Leukemia inhibitory factor ,Cancellous bone ,medicine.drug ,Hormone - Abstract
Long bone strength is determined by its outer shell (cortical bone), which forms by coalescence of thin trabeculae at the metaphysis (corticalization), but the factors that control this process are unknown. Here we show that SOCS3-dependent cytokine expression regulates bone corticalization. Young male and female Dmp1Cre.Socs3 f/f mice, in which SOCS3 has been ablated in osteocytes, have high trabecular bone volume and poorly defined metaphyseal cortices. After puberty, male mice recover, but female corticalization is still impaired, leading to a lasting defect in bone strength. The phenotype depends on sex-steroid hormones: dihydrotestosterone treatment of gonadectomized female Dmp1Cre.Socs3 f/f mice restores normal cortical morphology, whereas in males, estradiol treatment, or IL-6 deletion, recapitulates the female phenotype. This suggests that androgen action promotes metaphyseal corticalization, at least in part, via IL-6 signaling., The strength of long bones is determined by coalescence of trabeculae during corticalization. Here the authors show that this process is regulated by SOCS3 via a mechanism dependent on IL-6 and expression of sex hormones.
- Published
- 2017
14. A Partial Host Range of the High Plains Virus of Corn and Wheat
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T. J. Martin, Dallas L. Seifers, Tom L. Harvey, and Stanley G. Jensen
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Secale ,Setaria pumila ,Veterinary medicine ,Mosaic virus ,biology ,Setaria viridis ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy ,Plant virus ,Foxtail ,Poaceae ,Hordeum vulgare ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Barley (Hordeum vulgare), cheat (Bromus secalinus), corn (Zea mays), oat (Avena sativa), rye (Secale cereale), and wheat (Triticum aestivum) were infected by a Kansas isolate of the High Plains virus (HPV) in greenhouse experiments, but several other grass species were not. Infection of a host was dependent upon wheat curl mite numbers. Although both green foxtail (Setaria viridis) and yellow foxtail (S. glauca) are found naturally infected by HPV, only yellow foxtail could be infected in greenhouse experiments. Field sampling (1994 to 1996) of symptomatic yellow foxtail showed that it is a good indicator of the presence of HPV, with 252 of 278 symptomatic plants testing positive in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for HPV, 2 of 278 for American wheat striate mosaic virus, and 1 of 278 for johnson grass mosaic virus, whereas 23 of 278 symptomatic plants were negative for all viruses tested by ELISA and were not infectious in back-assays.
- Published
- 2019
15. Differential Transmission of Isolates of the High Plains virus by Different Sources of Wheat Curl Mites
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T. J. Martin, Raymond Louie, Tom L. Harvey, D. T. Gordon, and Dallas L. Seifers
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,food.ingredient ,biology ,Potyviridae ,Inoculation ,Tritimovirus ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Virus ,stomatognathic diseases ,High Plains virus ,food ,Plant virus ,Botany ,Acari ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
High Plains virus (HPV) isolates from Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Texas, and Utah were serologically related, had similar relative molecular masses (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) for the 32-kDa diagnostic HPV protein, and were transmissible and maintained free of Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) by vascular puncture inoculation. Collections of wheat curl mites (Aceria tosichella Keifer; WCM) from Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Texas differentially transmitted these isolates. For collections from South Dakota and Texas, little or no HPV transmission occurred, whereas WCM from Nebraska and Montana transmitted all five isolates. The collection from Kansas mostly transmitted only one HPV isolate. Aviruliferous or viruliferous WSMV Nebraska WCM transmitted HPV at similar rates and aviruliferous Montana WCM transmitted HPV at lower levels than viruliferous Montana WCM.
- Published
- 2019
16. Association of a Virus with Wheat Displaying Yellow Head Disease Symptoms in the Great Plains
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Dallas L. Seifers, Tom L. Harvey, S. Haber, Werner Ens, T. J. Martin, A. Gera, Kenneth G. Standing, Yi-Min She, and Raffi Salomon
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biology ,Inoculation ,viruses ,Rice hoja blanca virus ,food and beverages ,Nicotiana benthamiana ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Virus ,Botany ,Yellow-head virus ,Poaceae ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Tenuivirus ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
Wheat with yellow head disease (YHD) (yellow heads and mosaic leaf symptoms) has been observed in Kansas since 1997. A pathogen was transmitted from the infected wheat to maize by vascular puncture inoculation and to Nicotiana benthamiana by rub inoculation. The original infected wheat and infected maize and N. benthamiana test plants all produced a unique 32- to 34-kDa protein when analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Time-of-flight mass spectrometry analysis of the unique 32- to 34-kDa protein showed that the amino acid sequence was most closely related to the nucleoprotein of Rice hoja blanca virus, indicating that the virus causing YHD symptoms in wheat is a tenuivirus. Antiserum made to this protein failed to react with extracts made from healthy wheat or wheat infected with Wheat streak mosaic virus or the High Plains virus. The antiserum did react to extracts made from symptomatic wheat, maize, and N. benthamiana, shown by SDS-PAGE to contain the unique protein, and to extracts of wheat with YHD symptoms from Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Oklahoma. The name Wheat yellow head virus is proposed for this virus.
- Published
- 2019
17. Temperature-Sensitive Wheat streak mosaic virus Resistance Identified in KS03HW12 Wheat
- Author
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Tom L. Harvey, S. Haber, Dallas L. Seifers, and T. J. Martin
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Veterinary medicine ,food.ingredient ,biology ,Resistance (ecology) ,Potyviridae ,food and beverages ,Tritimovirus ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Virus ,food ,Botany ,Temperature sensitive ,Poaceae ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus ,Field conditions - Abstract
Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) infection reduces seed yield and quality in wheat. These losses can be alleviated significantly by exploiting genetic host plant resistance. A new source of temperature-sensitive resistance to WSMV, KS03HW12, and its parental lines (KS97HW29/ KS97HW131//KS96HW100-5) were evaluated in both greenhouse and field conditions. Parental wheat lines were exposed to WSMV pressure under different temperatures in growth chambers to determine the stability of the resistance, and 2 years of field yield trials were conducted to confirm effectiveness. To determine the effectiveness of its resistance against a spectrum of isolates, KS03HW12 was tested against six different WSMV isolates of different geographic origins. Among the three pedigree parents, only one, KS97HW29, was resistant. The parental lines of KS97HW29 are not available for testing; therefore, the presumed origin of the resistance could not be further confirmed. None of the six tested WSMV isolates systemically infected KS03HW12 at 18°C. Yield of KS03HW12 in field tests was not different from healthy controls. Thus, the elite winter wheat KS03HW12 appears to be a stable and effective source of temperature-sensitive resistance to WSMV and should be useful for wheat breeding programs.
- Published
- 2019
18. Occurrence and Yield Effects of Wheat Infected with Triticum mosaic virus in Kansas
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John P. Fellers, T. J. Martin, and Dallas L. Seifers
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Triticum mosaic virus ,Veterinary medicine ,High Plains virus ,Agronomy ,food and beverages ,Poaceae ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) infects wheat (Triticum aestivum) in the Great Plains region of the United States. This study determined the occurrence of TriMV at three locations over 3 years and yield effects of wheat mechanically infected with TriMV. Wheat infection with TriMV, Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), and the High Plains virus (HPV) was verified using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Both wheat singly infected with TriMV and doubly infected with TriMV and WSMV occurred at three, two, and one locations in 2007, 2008, and 2009, respectively. Wheat singly infected with HPV occurred at one and two locations in 2008 and 2009, respectively. Wheat doubly infected with WSMV and HPV occurred at one location in 2008 and 2009. Infection with TriMV declined at two locations each year and, at the third location, it increased the second year and was not detected the third year. WSMV infection increased, except for a decline the third year at one location. In contrast to 3.0% infection of wheat with TriMV and WSMV at one location, 85% of the wheat 1.6 km from that site was infected with TriMV and WSMV in 2009. Infection of wheat with TriMV caused significant yield and volume weight reductions in Danby, RonL, and Jagalene but not KS96HW10-3 wheat.
- Published
- 2019
19. Temperature-Sensitive Resistance to Wheat streak mosaic virus in CO960333 and KS06HW79 Wheat
- Author
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T. J. Martin, S. Haber, and Dallas L. Seifers
- Subjects
Germplasm ,Veterinary medicine ,biology ,Inoculation ,fungi ,Botany ,Intermediate temperature ,Temperature sensitive ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Gene ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
Temperature-sensitive resistance (TSR) that can protect against losses to Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) has been described in elite wheat germplasm. A TSR identified in the advanced breeding line CO960333 and its derivative KS06HW79 was examined in growth-chamber tests conducted under constant temperature regimes of 18, 21, and 24°C against an array of WSMV isolates. At 18°C, all tested isolates systemically infected the pedigree parents, while the progeny line CO960333 remained free of symptoms; at 24°C, all lines were susceptible. At the intermediate temperature of 21°C, the TSR of KS06HW79 was effective in contrast to the TSRs of KS03HW12 and ‘RonL’. In field trials conducted in 2011 and 2012, the TSR expressed in KS06HW79 conferred complete protection against yield losses from inoculation with the Sidney 81 isolate of WSMV, while the TSR of RonL conferred similar protection in 2012 but allowed small losses in 2011. The resistance expressed by KS06HW79 is likely not due to the Wsm1 gene because it did not contain the tightly linked J15 sequence-characterized amplified region (SCAR) DNA marker. These findings suggest that KS06HW79 could be an additional TSR source of value to wheat-breeding programs seeking to control losses from WSMV.
- Published
- 2019
20. Flow Topology Optimization of a Cooling Passage for a High Pressure Turbine Blade
- Author
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J. Iseler and T. J. Martin
- Subjects
Materials science ,Turbine blade ,business.industry ,Topology optimization ,Flow (psychology) ,Topology (electrical circuits) ,Mechanics ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Thermal conduction ,law.invention ,Coolant ,law ,Heat transfer ,business - Abstract
This paper deals with a topology optimization of internal cooling passages within high pressure turbine blades in order to deliver fully three dimensional designs that optimize the local flow physics. By applying the implemented optimality criteria, a new individual passage design with minimized amount of recirculation is achieved, leading to a reduced total pressure loss. In contrary to traditional parametric approaches, where a CFD run is needed after each design modification, the applied topology optimization acts as a co-simulation and is finished after a single run where the initial geometry represents the available design space. The CFD runs for optimization and the subsequent verification of the flow passages assume steady state take-off conditions. The verification includes a flow simulation to check the pressure loss of the optimized passage design. In a second step, a loosely coupled conjugate heat transfer procedure including external turbine flow, coolant flow and heat conduction of the solid (blade, platform and attachment) is applied to predict the impact on the heat transfer. By running a FEM simulation afterwards, the stresses are computed and compared with those from the reference design.
- Published
- 2017
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21. Genetic relatedness between oral and intestinal isolates of Porphyromonas endodontalis by analysis of random amplified polymorphic DNA
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Gonçalves, Reginaldo B, Väisänen, Marja-Lisa, Van Steenbergen, T. J. Martin, Sundqvist, Göran, and Mouton, Christian
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. New Sources of Temperature-Sensitive Resistance to Wheat streak mosaic virus in Wheat
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Guorong Zhang, Dallas L. Seifers, S. Haber, and T. J. Martin
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Inoculation ,Plant virus ,Temperature sensitive ,Plant Science ,Cultivar ,Biology ,Plant disease resistance ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Virology ,Wheat streak mosaic virus ,Virus - Abstract
Expressing temperature-sensitive resistance (TSR) protects wheat against yield losses from infection with Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV). In examining how 2,429 wheat accessions from the National Small Grains Collection responded to inoculation with the Sid81 isolate of WSMV, 20 candidate TSR sources were discovered. To differentiate their relative effectiveness, accession responses over 21 days to inoculation with GH95, Sid81, and PV57 virus isolates in regimes of 18 and 20°C were observed. At 18°C, all 20 candidate TSR sources were uniformly or nearly uniformly asymptomatic 21 days after inoculation with the PV57 isolate, resistance indistinguishable from resistant checks KS96HW10-3 and RonL. By contrast, the Sid81 isolate induced symptoms in low but significant proportions of plants of two candidates, and the GH95 isolate in high proportions for four candidates and low but significant proportions for two others. In the more stringent 20°C regime, the uniform or near-uniform induction of symptoms in response to inoculation with GH95 failed to differentiate among the 20 candidate TSR sources and two resistant checks, while PV57 and Sid81 identified several candidates that performed similarly to KS96HW10-3 and significantly better than RonL. By identifying new sources of resistance, this study contributes to the control of WSMV.
- Published
- 2013
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23. An Experimental Host Range for Triticum mosaic virus
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John P. Fellers, Dallas L. Seifers, and T. J. Martin
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Triticum mosaic virus ,biology ,Inoculation ,Host (biology) ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Triticale ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Virus ,Agronomy ,Plant virus ,Poaceae ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) is a newly discovered virus isolated from wheat (Triticum aestivum). This study was conducted to determine an experimental host range for TriMV and identify species that could serve as differential hosts for isolating TriMV from Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV). Plants tested were mechanically inoculated with the 06-123 isolate of TriMV or the Sidney 81 isolate of WSMV. Some plants were analyzed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using antibodies of TriMV and WSMV. Plants infected with TriMV always produced mosaic symptoms and only extracts of symptomatic plants reacted with antibodies of TriMV. Maize is not a host for TriMV but barley, oat, rye, and triticale are hosts of TriMV. Certain barley and triticale accessions are hosts for TriMV but not WSMV. These plants can be used in combination with maize to separate WSMV and TriMV in plants infected by both viruses. We also showed that 8 wild grass species were susceptible to TriMV and 25 were not. All of the grasses susceptible to infection with TriMV have been reported as susceptible to infection with WSMV. Because of their growth habits, these plant species would be less desirable for use as differential hosts than maize, barley, and triticale.
- Published
- 2010
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24. Calcitonin impairs the anabolic effect of PTH in young rats and stimulates expression of sclerostin by osteocytes
- Author
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N.H. Kulkarni, Ling Yeong Chia, Matthew T. Gillespie, T. J. Martin, Jonathan H. Gooi, Jude E. Onyia, P.W.M. Ho, Nicole C. Walsh, Ivo Kalajzic, J.M.W. Quinn, B. Han, Natalie A. Sims, S. H M McAhren, Morten A. Karsdal, and S. Pompolo
- Subjects
Calcitonin ,Genetic Markers ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Anabolism ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Parathyroid hormone ,Osteocytes ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Osteoclast ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Femur ,Cells, Cultured ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Extracellular Matrix Proteins ,Tibia ,biology ,Interleukin-6 ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Chemistry ,Computational Biology ,Phosphoproteins ,Immunohistochemistry ,Rats ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Parathyroid Hormone ,RANKL ,Osteocyte ,Bone Morphogenetic Proteins ,biology.protein ,MEPE ,Sclerostin ,Female ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
The therapeutic goal of increasing bone mass by co-treatment of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and an osteoclast inhibitor has been complicated by the undefined contribution of osteoclasts to the anabolic activity of PTH. To determine whether active osteoclasts are required at the time of PTH administration, we administered a low dose of the transient osteoclast inhibitor salmon calcitonin (sCT) to young rats receiving an anabolic PTH regimen. Co-administration of sCT significantly blunted the anabolic effect of PTH as measured by peripheral quantitative computer tomography (pQCT) and histomorphometry in the femur and tibia, respectively. To determine gene targets of sCT, we carried out quantitative real time PCR and microarray analysis of metaphyseal samples 1.5, 4 and 6.5 h after administration of a single injection of PTH, sCT or PTH + sCT. Known targets of PTH action, IL-6, ephrinB2 and RANKL, were not modified by co-administration with sCT. Surprisingly, at all time points, we noted a significant upregulation of sclerostin mRNA by sCT treatment, as well as down-regulation of two other osteocyte gene products, MEPE and DMP1. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that sCT administration increased the percentage of osteocytes expressing sclerostin, suggesting a mechanism by which sCT reduced the anabolic effect of PTH. Neither mRNA for CT receptor (Calcr) nor labeled CT binding could be detected in sclerostin-enriched cells differentiated from primary calvarial osteoblasts. In contrast, osteocytes freshly isolated from calvariae expressed a high level of Calcr mRNA. Furthermore immunohistochemistry revealed co-localization of CT receptor (CTR) and sclerostin in some osteocytes in calvarial sections. Taken together these data indicate that co-treatment with sCT can blunt the anabolic effect of PTH and this may involve direct stimulation of sclerostin production by osteocytes. These data directly implicate calcitonin as a negative regulator of bone formation through a previously unsuspected mechanism.
- Published
- 2010
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25. Parathyroid hormone-related protein: Immunohistochemical localization in cancers and in normal skin
- Author
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J. Dunlop, T. J. Martin, Bruce E. Kemp, Peter R. Ebeling, S. T. Chou, Jane M. Moseley, Janine A. Danks, and John A. Hayman
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parathyroid hormone-related protein ,Immunoperoxidase ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Melanoma ,Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein ,Parathyroid hormone ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Small-cell carcinoma ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Parathyroid Hormone ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Adenocarcinoma ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Skin - Abstract
An immunoperoxidase method has been developed to detect parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) in histological specimens of tumors and of normal skin. A rabbit polyclonal antiserum against PTHrP-(1-16) was used that did not cross-react with PTH-(1-34) either under radioimmunoassay conditions or at the high antiserum concentrations used in neutralizing biologic activity. PTHrP antigen was detected in the keratinocyte layer of normal skin and in 100% of 34 samples of squamous cell cancers but in only one of six breast cancers, and none of 15 other adenocarcinomata. It was also detected in four of four samples of renal cortical carcinoma and two of two of melanoma, both of which can be associated with hypercalcemia, and three of three small cell carcinomata of the lung. Immunologic detection of PTHrP could be useful in the diagnosis of tumors of squamous cell origin, particularly in the cytological differentiation of lung cancers, where it may be of value in distinguishing between squamous cell and small cell carcinoma on the one hand and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma on the other.
- Published
- 2009
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26. Identification of Variants of the High Plains virus Infecting Wheat in Kansas
- Author
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Victor Spicer, Stephen M. Ying, Dallas L. Seifers, Kenneth G. Standing, T. J. Martin, Tom L. Harvey, S. Haber, and Oleg V. Krokhin
- Subjects
Antiserum ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Virus ,Microbiology ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Capsid ,Botany ,Sodium dodecyl sulfate ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ,Peptide sequence ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
The properties of two virus isolates (U04-82 and U04-83) obtained from two wheat (Triticum aestivum) plants expressing mosaic symptoms were investigated using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), time-of-flight mass spectrometry (TOFMS), and infection of wheat with resistance to Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV). The coat protein mass was estimated by SDS-PAGE as approximately 32 kDa for U04-82 and 30 kDa for U04-83. The amino acid sequence of the coat protein of U04-82 was 99.6 and 85.5% identical to two isolates, ABC58222 and TX96, respectively, of High Plains virus (HPV) described from Texas. U04-82 was transmitted by wheat curl mites and caused significant yield reductions in wheat resistant to WSMV. U04-83 was actually two distinct virus isolates whose capsid protein amino acid sequences were only 57 and 50% similar to that of TX96. Antiserum prepared to a synthetic peptide from the sequence of the U04-83 isolate recognized the two U04-83 isolates, but not the U04-82 isolate.
- Published
- 2009
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27. Wheat– Thinopyrum Intermedium Recombinants Resistant to Wheat Streak Mosaic Virus and Triticum Mosaic Virus
- Author
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Lili Qi, D. L. Wilson, Allan K. Fritz, Dallas L. Seifers, Bikram S. Gill, T. J. Martin, Bernd Friebe, and Z. J. Chang
- Subjects
Genetics ,Gene mapping ,biology ,Potyviridae ,Plant virus ,Thinopyrum intermedium ,food and beverages ,Chromosomal translocation ,Plant disease resistance ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus ,Virus - Abstract
To date, only one gene conferring resistance to Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) designated as Wsm1 was transferred from Thinopyrum intermedium (Host) Barkworth and Dewey to wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in the form of a compensating Robertsonian translocation T4DL·4J s S. Wsm1 confers high levels of resistance to WSMV under fi eld conditions; however, in certain genetic backgrounds and environments, the presence of the T4DL·4J s S translocation reduces agronomic performance. The objective of this study was to shorten the Th. intermedium segment in the T4DL·4J s S translocation. We recovered one proximal (rec36) and four distal (rec45, rec64, rec87, rec213) primary recombinants. Genomic in situ hybridization and molecular marker analyses determined the size of the Th. intermedium segments in the distal recombinants to be about 20% of the 4DS-4J s S arm. All primary recombinant stocks, together with appropriate controls, were evaluated for their resistance to WSMV and Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) in greenhouse tests. Whereas the distal recombinants rec45, rec64, rec87, and rec213 were resistant to both WSMV and TriMV at low temperatures of 18°C, the proximal recombinant rec36 reacted susceptible, which mapped the Wsm1 gene to the distal 20% of the 4DS-4J s S arm. We successfully shortened the Th. intermedium segment while still retaining the Wsm1 gene. The T4DL·4DS4J s S recombinant chromosome of the rec213 stock was transferred to adapted Kansas hard red winter wheat cultivars.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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28. Identification of the Wheat Curl Mite as the Vector of Triticum mosaic virus
- Author
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J. P. Michaud, T. J. Martin, Dallas L. Seifers, John P. Fellers, and Tom L. Harvey
- Subjects
Aphid ,food.ingredient ,biology ,food and beverages ,Tritimovirus ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Bird cherry ,Virus ,food ,Agronomy ,Rhopalosiphum padi ,Mite ,Poacevirus ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) is a newly discovered virus found infecting wheat (Triticum aestivum) in Kansas. This study was conducted to determine if the wheat curl mite (WCM, Aceria tosichella) and the bird cherry oat aphid (Rhopalosiphum padi) could transmit TriMV. Using different sources of WCM and two different isolates of TriMV, we were able to show the WCM is the vector of TriMV. Field analysis by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) demonstrated natural infection patterns of wheat infected with TriMV, Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), or both TriMV and WSMV, putatively infected by viruliferous WCM from a volunteer source growing adjacent to the wheat. Moreover, by single WCM transfers using WCM obtained from different wheat plants naturally infected with TriMV and WSMV and naturally infested with WCM, we showed that these WCM also transmitted TriMV only to wheat or transmitted both TriMV and WSMV to wheat. The infection rates of wheat with TriMV only using WCM transmission was low in both laboratory and field analyses. However, field analyses by ELISA showed that levels of infection of wheat by both TriMV and WSMV were high. No transmission of TriMV to wheat by R. padi occurred in our studies.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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29. Endogenous Gs-Coupled Receptors in Smooth Muscle Exhibit Differential Susceptibility to GRK2/3-Mediated Desensitization
- Author
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Uma Gandhi, Raymond B. Penn, Deepak A. Deshpande, Anna M. Misior, Kok Choi Kong, Rodolfo M. Pascual, Candace B. Anz, T. J. Martin, and Huandong Yan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,G-Protein-Coupled Receptor Kinase 3 ,G-Protein-Coupled Receptor Kinase 2 ,Prostaglandin E2 receptor ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled ,5-HT7 receptor ,Internal medicine ,Cyclic AMP ,GTP-Binding Protein alpha Subunits, Gs ,medicine ,Humans ,5-HT5A receptor ,RNA, Messenger ,RNA, Small Interfering ,Receptor ,Cells, Cultured ,G protein-coupled receptor ,G protein-coupled receptor kinase ,Muscle, Smooth ,Adenosine receptor ,Cell biology ,Endocrinology ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,5-HT1 receptor - Abstract
Although G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) kinases (GRKs) have been shown to mediate desensitization of numerous GPCRs in studies using cellular expression systems, their function under physiological conditions is less well understood. In the current study, we employed various strategies to assess the effect of inhibiting endogenous GRK2/3 on signaling and function of endogenously expressed G s-coupled receptors in human airway smooth muscle (ASM) cells. GRK2/3 inhibition by expression of a Gbetagamma sequestrant, a GRK2/3 dominant-negative mutant, or siRNA-mediated knockdown increased intracellular cAMP accumulation mediated via beta-agonist stimulation of the beta-2-adrenergic receptor (beta 2AR). Conversely, neither 5'-( N-ethylcarboxamido)-adenosine (NECA; activating the A2b adenosine receptor) nor prostaglandin E2 (PGE 2; activating EP2 or EP4 receptors)-stimulated cAMP was significantly increased by GRK2/3 inhibition. Selective knockdown using siRNA suggested the majority of PGE 2-stimulated cAMP in ASM was mediated by the EP2 receptor. Although a minor role for EP3 receptors in influencing PGE 2-mediated cAMP was determined, the GRK2/3-resistant nature of EP2 receptor signaling in ASM was confirmed using the EP2-selective agonist butaprost. Somewhat surprisingly, GRK2/3 inhibition did not augment the inhibitory effect of the beta-agonist on mitogen-stimulated increases in ASM growth. These findings demonstrate that with respect to G s-coupled receptors in ASM, GRK2/3 selectively attenuates beta 2AR signaling, yet relief of GRK2/3-dependent beta 2AR desensitization does not influence at least one important physiological function of the receptor.
- Published
- 2008
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30. Triticum mosaic virus: A New Virus Isolated from Wheat in Kansas
- Author
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Tom L. Harvey, S. Haber, Dallas L. Seifers, James P. Stack, Nicole Lovat, John P. Fellers, Oleg V. Krokhin, Victor Spicer, Kenneth G. Standing, Andrej Yamchuk, T. J. Martin, and Marietta Ryba-White
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,biology ,Potyviridae ,viruses ,Potyvirus ,Tritimovirus ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Virus ,food ,Sugarcane mosaic virus ,Plant virus ,Geminiviridae ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
In 2006, a mechanically-transmissible and previously uncharacterized virus was isolated in Kansas from wheat plants with mosaic symptoms. The physiochemical properties of the virus were examined by purification on cesium chloride density gradients, electron microscopy, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), sequencing of the nucleotides and amino acids of the coat protein, and immunological reactivity. Purified preparations contained flexuous, rod-shaped particles that resembled potyviruses. The coat protein was estimated from SDS-PAGE to have a mass of approximately 35 kDa. Its amino acid sequence, as deduced from DNA sequencing of cloned, reverse-transcribed viral RNA and separately determined by time-of-flight mass spectrometry, was most closely related (49% similarity) to Sugarcane streak mosaic virus, a member of the Tritimovirus genus of the family Potyviridae. The virus gave strong positive reactions during enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays using polyclonal antibodies raised against purified preparations of the cognate virus but gave consistent negative reactions against antibodies to Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), other wheat potyviruses, and the High Plains virus. When the virus was inoculated on the WSMV-resistant wheat cv. RonL, systemic symptoms appeared and plant growth was diminished significantly in contrast with WSMV-inoculated RonL. Taken together, the data support consideration of this virus as a new potyvirus, and the name Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) is proposed.
- Published
- 2008
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31. Rotation shear and drift wave stability
- Author
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T J Martin and J W Connor
- Subjects
Physics ,Wavelength ,Wave model ,Classical mechanics ,Toroid ,Quadratic equation ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Dispersion relation ,Mathematical analysis ,Plasma ,Growth rate ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Eigenvalues and eigenvectors - Abstract
The stability of short wavelength (high n, where n is the toroidal mode number) drift eigenmodes in toroidally confined plasma is conventionally analysed using the ballooning transformation. In lowest order in 1/n there is a local eigenvalue, λ(x, k), where k is a parameter representing the radial wave-number. Usually profile variation defines a radial position where the growth rate is a maximum. In next order one finds that this position determines the mode's radial location and that the parameter k is such as to maximise the growth rate. However, if the effects of sheared plasma rotation, dΩ/dq, dominate other profile variation, the growth rate is smaller and, instead, involves an average over a period of k. In this paper we consider a generic drift wave model that generates a local eigenvalue having quadratic radial variations of frequency, ω(x), and growth rate, γ(x), and a periodic variation with k. We derive an analytic dispersion relation for the global eigenvalue, ω. Although requiring numerical solution, this shows that there is a continuous evolution between these two limits as dΩ/dq increases, the transition being quite sharp for high n. The transition can be associated with a critical rotation shear, dΩcrit/dq ~ O(1/n). The detailed character of the results depends on which of the radial variations, ω(x) or γ(x), dominates.
- Published
- 2007
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32. Paper-Based Electrical Respiration Sensor
- Author
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Julia Redston, George M. Whitesides, Ana C. Glavan, Bobak Mosadegh, T. J. Martin, Alar Ainla, and Firat Güder
- Subjects
Paper ,Chemistry, Multidisciplinary ,digital health ,02 engineering and technology ,sensors ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,Tablet computer ,Electricity ,Respiration ,OBSTRUCTIVE SLEEP-APNEA ,Humans ,Electronics ,Exercise ,THERMISTOR ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,010405 organic chemistry ,Thermistor ,Organic Chemistry ,Electrical engineering ,VITAL SIGN ,Humidity ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,General Chemistry ,Paper based ,General Medicine ,CARE ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,internet of things ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemistry ,Physical Sciences ,Breathing ,sense organs ,Smartphone ,Current (fluid) ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,03 Chemical Sciences ,Wireless Technology - Abstract
Current methods of monitoring breathing require cumbersome, inconvenient, and often expensive devices; this requirement sets practical limitations on the frequency and duration of measurements. This article describes a paper-based moisture sensor that uses the hygroscopic character of paper (i.e. the ability of paper to adsorb water reversibly from the surrounding environment) to measure patterns and rate of respiration by converting the changes in humidity caused by cycles of inhalation and exhalation to electrical signals. The changing level of humidity that occurs in a cycle causes a corresponding change in the ionic conductivity of the sensor, which can be measured electrically. By combining the paper sensor with conventional electronics, data concerning respiration can be transmitted to a nearby smartphone or tablet computer for post-processing, and subsequently to a cloud server. This means of sensing provides a new, practical method of recording and analyzing patterns of breathing.
- Published
- 2015
33. Radioligand binding and functional responses of ligands for human recombinant adenosine A3 receptors
- Author
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T. J. Martin, L. Yates, Kenneth J. Broadley, Emma Jane Kidd, S. James, and J. H. Clark
- Subjects
Agonist ,Adenosine ,medicine.drug_class ,Magnesium Chloride ,GTPgammaS ,CHO Cells ,Ligands ,Transfection ,Binding, Competitive ,Iodine Radioisotopes ,Radioligand Assay ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cricetinae ,Cyclic AMP ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptor ,G protein-coupled receptor ,Pharmacology ,Chemistry ,Chinese hamster ovary cell ,Receptor, Adenosine A3 ,Triazoles ,Adenosine receptor ,Molecular biology ,Recombinant Proteins ,Guanosine 5'-O-(3-Thiotriphosphate) ,Quinazolines ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The binding and functional properties of adenosine receptor ligands were compared in Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with human adenosine A(3) receptors. Inhibition of [(125)I]-aminobenzyl-5'-N-methylcarboamidoadenosine ([(125)I]-AB-MECA) binding by adenosine receptor ligands was examined in membrane preparations. Inhibition of forskolin-induced cAMP accumulation by agonists was measured using a cAMP enzyme immunoassay. The rank order of agonist potency for both assays was N(6)-(3-iodobenzyl)-adenosine-5'-N-methyluronamide (IB-MECA) > 5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine (NECA) > (-)-N(6)-[(R)-phenylisopropyl] adenosine (R-PIA) > 4-aminobenzyl-5'-N-methylcarboxamidoadenosine (AB-MECA) > N(6)-cyclopentyl adenosine (CPA) > adenosine. The radioligand binding rank order of antagonist potency was N-[9-chloro-2-(2-furanyl)[1,2,4]-triazolo[1,5-c]quinazolin-5-benzeneacetamide (MRS1220) > 1,3-dipropyl-8-cyclopentylxanthine (DPCPX) > 8-phenyltheophylline (8-PT) > 8-(p-sulfophenyl)-theophylline (8-SPT). MRS1220 competitively inhibited the effect of IB-MECA on cAMP production, with a K(B) value of 0.35 nm. These data are characteristic of adenosine A(3) receptors. The absence of Mg(2+) and presence of guanosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate (GTPgammaS) significantly reduced agonist binding inhibition potency, indicating binding to high- and low-affinity states. The IB-MECA, NECA and R-PIA IC(50) values were greater for the cAMP assay than for radioligand binding, suggesting an efficient stimulus-response transduction pathway.
- Published
- 2006
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34. Resistance to Biotype 2 Russian Wheat Aphid (Homoptera: Aphididae) in Two Wheat Lines
- Author
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Jawwad A. Qureshi, J. P. Michaud, and T. J. Martin
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Ecology ,Insect Science ,General Medicine - Published
- 2006
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35. Virulence of Two Russian Wheat Aphid Biotypes to Eight Wheat Cultivars at Two Temperatures
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J. P. Michaud, Jawwad A. Qureshi, T. J. Martin, and J. L. Jyoti
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Homoptera ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Virulence ,Aphididae ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,Agronomy ,Infestation ,medicine ,Poaceae ,Cultivar ,PEST analysis ,Russian wheat aphid ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Biotype 2 of the Russian wheat aphid, Diuraphis noxia (Mordvilko), is virulent to both sources of resistance presently available in commercial wheat, Triticum aestivum L. The performance of biotype 2 was compared with that of biotype 1 on eight wheat cultivars at two constant temperatures, and the plants were evaluated for overall damage and leaf rolling. Colonies of biotype 2 grew an average of 2.3 and 24.9 times faster in the first and second generation, respectively, than did their biotype 1 counterparts at 20°C, reaching 80 to 125 aphids per plant after 20 d, compared with 10 to 31. The no. of aphids per plant at 10 and 20 d after infestation displayed a significant biotype-temperature interaction. There was also a biotype-temperature interaction for plant damage at 10 d, and for damage and leaf rolling at 30 d. After 20 d at 24°C, damage ratings ranged from 7.3 to 8.6 on a scale of 1.0 to 9.0, and leaf rolling ranged from 2.4 to 2.9 on a scale of 1.0 to 3.0 for biotype 2, whereas values for biotype 1 ranged from 2.8 to 5.1 and 1.4 to 2.2, respectively. There were no differences among cultivars in plant damage or leaf rolling induced by biotype 2, and ratings of both were higher than for biotype 1 in all cultivar-temperature combinations. Biotype 2 D. noxia has overcome both Dn4- and Dny-based sources of resistance, was more virulent than biotype 1 to all the cultivars tested, and induced plant injury more rapidly than biotype 1, especially at higher temperatures.
- Published
- 2006
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36. Niche separation in Ambassis (Pisces: Perciformes) species co-existing in estuaries of south-east Africa
- Author
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T. J. Martin
- Subjects
Ambassidae ,Water column ,biology ,Ecology ,Euryhaline ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Stenohaline ,Ambassis ,Zooplankton ,Gymnocephalus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Trophic level - Abstract
Ambassidae in the estuaries of south-east Africa are represented by three species which belong to the same trophic level and are similar in external appearance and feeding ecology. Investigations of osmoregulatory capabilities, salinity tolerances and temperature tolerances showed that, under local estuarine conditions, Ambassis productus is a euryhaline species with the ability to maintain a stable internal osmotic concentration in salinities less than 10%o. A. gymnocephalus is essentially stenohaline and is able to maintain internal stability only in salinities greater than 28%o. A. natalensis is moderately euryhaline and is incapable of maintaining a constant blood osmolality in salinities above 30%o and below about 7%o. Feeding ecology studies show that all three species feed mainly on zooplankton, but when physical conditions in estuaries allow overlap in the distribution of two or more species, certain mechanisms increase separation. A. productus feeds mainly on suspended and benthic organisms during the night and early morning, whereas A. natalensis feeds mainly during the day and early evening on insects at the water surface. A. gymnocephalus excludes insects from its diet and preys almost exclusively on zooplankton in the water column.
- Published
- 2006
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37. Larval Preference for a Wheat Cultivar in the Army Cutworm (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
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J. L. Jyoti, T. J. Martin, and J. P. Michaud
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Lepidoptera genitalia ,Larva ,biology ,Army cutworm ,Agronomy ,Insect Science ,Noctuidae ,Instar ,Cultivar ,biology.organism_classification ,Euxoa ,Cutworm - Abstract
Late instar larvae of the army cutworm, Euxoa auxiliaris (Grote), infested replicated test plots of 43 wheat varieties in Hays, Kansas in early April, 2004. Five varieties, Trego, 2147, Betty, Thunderbolt, and Jagger, were selected for sampling cutworm defoliation and larval densities. Damage was lowest in Trego (12–41 damaged tillers/m of row), and highest in Betty (128–285 damaged tillers/m). Plots of Betty averaged 105 cutworms/m2, significantly more than plots of other varieties where densities ranged from 13 to 42 cutworms/m2. Plots of Thunderbolt sustained significantly more damage than plots of 2137, Trego or Jagger, but did not have significantly more larvae. The small size of the test plots appeared to facilitate aggregation of cutworms in plots of the preferred variety Betty. Grain yields of all varieties in 2004 were average for the region and the final grain yield of Betty plots averaged 20% less than that of Thunderbolt and Trego plots. This compares to an average of 10% lower yield ...
- Published
- 2006
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38. Agronomic and Quality Attributes of Winter Durum Wheat in the Central Great Plains
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V. Marque, T. J. Martin, Gary M. Paulsen, and Allan K. Fritz
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Crop ,Biomass (ecology) ,Agronomy ,Yield (wine) ,Winter wheat ,Growing season ,Poaceae ,Cultivar ,Biology ,Hardiness (plants) ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Most durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. var. durum) in the USA is spring type grown in North Dakota, Montana, and Arizona. Winter durums are becoming available, and they are expected to have a major advantage because of their inherently higher yield potential than spring wheats. Our objectives were to evaluate adaptation of winter durum wheat to Kansas in the central Great Plains, identify agronomic traits that needed improvement, and determine the quality of the grain for pasta. Experimental lines (28) were compared with Maier, a spring durum cultivar, and Jagger, a popular hard red winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivar, at three Kansas locations during the 2000-2001 growing season. Severe winter injury occurred at one location; at the other locations, yields of winter durums ranged from 2.97 to 5.25 and 0.50 to 6.24 Mg ha -1 compared with 0.65 and 5.18 Mg ha -1 for Maier and 6.35 and 6.33 Mg ha -1 for Jagger. Agronomic characteristics (plant height, lodging, biomass, and harvest index), yield components (spike density, kernels per spike, kernel weight), and quality traits (SDS sedimentation, protein concentration, hardness index) were generally favorable and indicated potential for high yields of high quality grain by the winter durums. The major deficiencies of the winter durums were inadequate winter hardiness, which ranged widely and could be remedied by breeding, and late maturity, which might be more difficult to redress because of lack of variability among the lines. We concluded that winter durum wheat is a promising crop for the central Great Plains, but some deficiencies must be corrected for it to be adapted to the region.
- Published
- 2004
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39. Mediators of adenosine- and ovalbumen-induced bronchoconstriction of sensitized guinea-pig isolated airways
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T. J. Martin and Kenneth J. Broadley
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adenosine ,Diclofenac ,Ovalbumin ,Bronchoconstriction ,Guinea Pigs ,Mepyramine ,Histamine H1 receptor ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Zafirlukast ,Lung ,Pyrilamine ,Pharmacology ,Leukotriene ,Chemistry ,Zileuton ,respiratory system ,Adenosine receptor ,Trachea ,Endocrinology ,Immunization ,medicine.symptom ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The mediators of bronchoconstriction of isolated lungs and trachea from ovalbumen sensitized guinea-pigs to adenosine and ovalbumen were examined using relevant antagonists. Changes in perfusion pressure and tension of paired lung halves and tracheal spiral strips, respectively, were recorded in response to adenosine (1 mM lung, 300 microM trachea), histamine (10 microM), methacholine (10 microM) and ovalbumen (10 microg). One half was perfused with antagonist while the other received vehicle. Tracheal strips were superfused throughout with the P(1) receptor antagonist 8-phenyltheophylline, to examine 8-phenyltheophylline-resistant responses. The histamine H(1) receptor antagonist, mepyramine (1.5 mM), the cyclooxygenase inhibitors, indomethacin (5 mM) and diclofenac (5 mM), the leukotriene receptor antagonist, zafirlukast (1 mM), and the lipoxygenase inhibitor, zileuton (20 mM), alone failed to inhibit bronchoconstriction by adenosine and ovalbumen of the lung and trachea. When two antagonists were combined, only mepyramine and zafirlukast significantly reduced the lung responses to adenosine and ovalbumen. The tracheal adenosine response was substantially reduced, although not significantly, while ovalbumen was significantly reduced. When mepyramine, indomethacin and zafirlukast were combined, the lung constriction by adenosine and ovalbumen were virtually abolished. Similarly, the combination of mepyramine, diclofenac and zafirlukast significantly attenuated the lung responses to adenosine and ovalbumen. Thus, histamine, cyclooxygenase products and leukotrienes alone are not responsible for the bronchoconstriction of isolated sensitized lung tissues to adenosine or ovalbumen, which appears to be due to the release of all three mediators.
- Published
- 2002
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- View/download PDF
40. Osteoclast Secretes Stage-Specific Key Molecules for Modulating Osteoclast-Osteoblast Communication.
- Author
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Fu YF, Shi SW, Wu JJ, Yuan ZD, Wang LS, Nie H, Zhang ZY, Wu X, Chen YC, Ti HB, Zhang KY, Mao D, Ye JX, Li X, and Yuan FL
- Abstract
In most cases of bone metabolic disorders, such as osteoporosis and osteomalacia, these conditions are often attributed to dysfunctional osteoclasts, leading to their common characterization as "destructors." In addition to the widely documented regulatory process where osteoblasts direct osteoclastic bone resorption, there is increasing evidence suggesting that osteoclasts also in turn influence osteoblastic bone formation through direct and indirect mechanisms. It is well-known that differentiation of osteoclasts involves several stages, each characterized by specific cellular features and functions. Stage-specific key molecules secreted during these stages play a critical role in mediating osteoclast-osteoblast communication. In this review, we described the different stages of osteoclast differentiation and reviewed stage-specific key molecules involved in osteoclasts-osteoblasts communication. We highlighted that a detailed understanding of these processes and molecular mechanism could facilitate the development of novel treatments for bone metabolic disorders., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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41. Transient Thermal Analysis and Viscoplastic Damage Model for Life Prediction of Turbine Components
- Author
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Alexander Staroselsky, Brice N. Cassenti, and T. J. Martin
- Subjects
Physics ,Turbine blade ,Viscoplasticity ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Constitutive equation ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Aerospace Engineering ,Structural engineering ,Deformation (meteorology) ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Turbine ,Finite element method ,law.invention ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Fuel Technology ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,law ,Turbomachinery ,business - Abstract
This paper reports the process and computer methodology for a physics-based prediction of overall deformation and local failure modes in cooled turbine airfoils, blade outer air seals, and other turbomachinery parts operating in severe high temperature and high stress environments. The computational analysis work incorporated time-accurate, coupled aerothermal computational fluid dynamics (CFD) with nonlinear deformation thermal-structural finite element model (FEM) with a slip-based constitutive model, evaluated at real engine characteristic mission times, and flight points for part life prediction. The methodology utilizes a fully coupled elastic-viscoplastic model that was based on crystal morphology, and a semi-empirical life prediction model introduced the use of dissipated energy to estimate the remaining part life in terms of cycles to failure. The method was effective for use with three-dimensional FEMs of realistic turbine airfoils using commercial finite element applications. The computationally predicted part life was calibrated and verified against test data for deformation and crack growth. [DOI: 10.1115/1.4028568]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Transient Thermal Analysis and Visco-Plastic Damage Model for Life Prediction of Turbine Components
- Author
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A. Staroselsky, T. J. Martin, and B. Cassenti
- Abstract
This paper reports the process and computer methodology for a physics-based prediction of overall deformation and local failure modes in cooled turbine airfoils, blade outer air seals, and other turbomachinery parts operating in severe high temperature and high stress environments. The computational analysis work incorporated time-accurate, coupled aerothermal CFD with non-linear deformation thermal-structural FEM with a slip-based constitutive model, evaluated at real engine characteristic mission times and flight points for part life prediction. The methodology utilizes a fully-coupled elastic-viscoplastic model that was based on crystal morphology, and a semi-empirical lifing model introduced the use of dissipated energy to estimate the remaining part life in terms of cycles to failure. The method was effective for use with three-dimensional finite element models of realistic turbine airfoils using commercial finite element applications. The computationally predicted part life was calibrated and verified against test data for deformation and crack growth.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Catabolic Effects of Continuous Human PTH (1–38) in Vivo Is Associated with Sustained Stimulation of RANKL and Inhibition of Osteoprotegerin and Gene-Associated Bone Formation
- Author
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R. L. Cain, Jude E. Onyia, David L. Halladay, Srinivasan Chandrasekhar, Yanfei L. Ma, T J Martin, Qingqiang Zeng, Xuhao Yang, and Rebecca R. Miles
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Bone sialoprotein ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear ,Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor ,Bone resorption ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Endocrinology ,Osteoprotegerin ,Osteogenesis ,Osteoclast ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Femur ,RNA, Messenger ,Bone Resorption ,Infusion Pumps ,Glycoproteins ,Osteoblasts ,biology ,Chemistry ,Osteoblast ,Peptide Fragments ,Rats ,Resorption ,Phenotype ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Parathyroid Hormone ,RANKL ,Osteocalcin ,biology.protein ,Female - Abstract
Continuous infusion of PTH in vivo results in active bone resorption. To investigate the molecular basis of the catabolic effect of PTH in vivo, we evaluated the role of OPG and RANKL, which are known to influence osteoclast formation and function. Weanling rats fed a calcium-free diet were parathyroidectomized and infused with PTH via an Alzet pump to examine: 1) the changes of serum-ionized calcium and osteoclast number, 2) the expression of OPG/RANKL mRNA and protein, and 3) the expression of osteoblast phenotype bone formation-associated genes such as osteoblast specific transcription factor, osteocalcin, bone sialoprotein, and type I collagen. PTH (1–38) (0.01–20 μg/100 g) continuous infusion for 1–24 h resulted in a dose-dependent increase in serum-ionized calcium in parathyroidectomized rats and a corresponding dose-dependent increase in osteoclast number, indicating an increased bone resorption. At 20 μg/100 g PTH dose level, serum-ionized calcium was 2.1-fold of the vehicle control and not different from the Sham-parathyroidectomized rats, and osteoclast number was 3-fold of the vehicle control and 1.7-fold of the Sham-parathyroidectomized rats. In the distal femur, RANKL mRNA expression was increased (27-fold) and OPG mRNA expression was decreased (4.6-fold). The changes in RANKL and OPG mRNA levels were rapid (as early as 1 h), dose dependent, and sustained over a 24-h period that was examined. Immunohistochemical evaluation of bone sections confirmed that OPG level was reduced in proximal tibial metaphysis upon PTH infusion. Circulating OPG protein level was also decreased by 32% when compared with the parathyroidectomized control. The expression of genes that mark the osteoblast phenotype was significantly decreased [osteoblast specific transcription factor (2.3-fold), osteocalcin (3-fold), bone sialoprotein (2.8-fold), and type I collagen (5-fold)]. These results suggest that the catabolic effect of PTH infusion in vivo in this well-established resorption model is associated with a reciprocal expression of OPG/RANKL and a co-ordinate decrease in the expression of bone formation-related genes. We propose that the rapid and sustained increase in RANKL and decrease in OPG initiate maintain and favor the cascade of events in the differentiation/recruitment and activation of osteoclasts.
- Published
- 2001
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- View/download PDF
44. Modeling the effect of an inhomogeneous surface albedo on incident UV radiation in mountainous terrain: Determination of an effective surface albedo
- Author
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Stana Simic, E. Pougatch, T. J. Martin, Rolf Philipona, C. Sergent, Dominique Masserot, Mario Blumthaler, Daniel A. Schmucki, Philipp Weihs, Julian Gröbner, A. de La Casinière, Gunther Seckmeyer, G. Rengarajan, T. Cabot, Jacqueline Lenoble, and T. Pichler
- Subjects
Surface (mathematics) ,Geophysics ,Mountainous terrain ,Cloud albedo ,Spectral slope ,Irradiance ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Albedo ,Radiation ,Reflectivity ,Remote sensing - Abstract
We compare three different methods for determining an average ‘effective‧ UV albedo. These methods are applied to spectral irradiance data from a measurement campaign held in the German Alps during the spring of 1999. The first method is based on the comparison of measurements of absolute levels of UV irradiance with model calculations. The second method takes advantage of changes in the spectral slope of spectral UV irradiance, which is a function of the surface albedo. In the third method, the surrounding area is partitioned into snow-covered and snow-free regions, and the effective albedo estimated by applying a higher or lower reflectivity to each facet before integrating over the surroundings. We present the differences and the correlations between the various methods as well as the results for the different locations.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Variability of spectral solar ultraviolet irradiance in an Alpine environment
- Author
-
C. Sergent, G. Rengarajan, Gunther Seckmeyer, T. J. Martin, Rolf Philipona, Astrid Albold, Daniel A. Schmucki, T. Pichler, T. Cabot, E. Pougatch, Dominique Masserot, M. L. Touré, Martin Müller, Jacqueline Lenoble, Philipp Weihs, Julian Gröbner, A. de La Casinière, Mario Blumthaler, and Publica
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Ozone ,Ecology ,Solar zenith angle ,Irradiance ,Paleontology ,Soil Science ,Forestry ,Aquatic Science ,Albedo ,Oceanography ,Atmospheric sciences ,Aerosol ,Troposphere ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Geophysics ,Altitude ,chemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Environmental science ,Tropospheric ozone ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Seven spectroradiorneters measured simultaneous surface UV irradiances at six different sites in the vicinity of Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, during spring 1999. The measured clear-sky irradiance variability between the sites was analyzed with respect to altitude, aerosol optical depth, solar zenith angle, effective albedo, and tropospheric ozone. For conditions of low aerosol loading the increase of irradiance per 1000 m altitude difference was 9% at 400 nm. 20% at 320 nm, and 30% at 300 nm in this season. Effective albedo differences of 0.15, 0.29, and 0.65 were found between the snow-covered stations and the snow-free ground station with the higher effective albedo values determined at the two mountain stations. Clean continental aerosols with a single-scatter albedo of 0.95 were observed during this campaign. The measurements and the observed variations between the sites should enable more accurate modeling studies to be performed for an Alpine environment.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Calcitonin
- Author
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P. M. Sexton, D. M. Findlay, and T. J. Martin
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Drug Discovery ,Organic Chemistry ,Molecular Medicine ,Biochemistry - Abstract
The peptide calcitonin (CT) was initially discovered in 1962 as a novel hypocalcemic hormone. This hypocalcemic response was principally due to a potent inhibitory action of CT on osteoclast mediated bone resorption and it is this action which underlies its widespread clinical use for the treatment of bone disorders, including Paget's disease, osteoporosis and hypercalcemia of malignancy. In this article we review the basic physiology of CT action, structure-function studies on CT peptides, cloning of CT receptors and the identification of isoforms of the receptor derived from alterative splicing of the receptor mRNA. We also review the state of understanding on CT receptor mediated signaling and receptor regulation, along with developing concepts of how CT peptides interact with the receptor, including how the receptors may interact with receptor activity modifying proteins to produce novel phenotypes. Finally, current therapeutic use is reviewed, and the potential for expanded use that may come with advances in delivery of peptides or CT mimetics.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Measurement and interpretation of interaction of MeV energy protons with lower hybrid waves in JET plasmas
- Author
-
M. J. Mantsinen, L.-G. Eriksson, A. Gondhalekar, D. Testa, C. N. Lashmore-Davies, and T. J. Martin
- Subjects
Physics ,education.field_of_study ,Proton ,Population ,Plasma ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Charged particle ,Ion ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,Dispersion relation ,Landau damping ,Atomic physics ,education ,Ion cyclotron resonance - Abstract
Experiments with simultaneous lower hybrid (LH) current drive and ion cyclotron resonance frequency heating of minority protons in JET deuterium plasmas showed efficient coupling of LH power to the MeV energy anisotropic protons. Such an interaction represents parasitic loss of LH power, intended for electron current drive, to the proton population, with important implications for the efficiency of LH current drive schemes in fusion devices containing high-energy charged fusion products. We solve the hot-plasma dispersion relation in the LH range of frequencies for plasmas containing high-energy minority anisotropic protons and electrons, and find that multiple solutions of the dispersion relation with perpendicular refractive index exist in the plasma centre due to the presence of the protons. These hot-plasma modes give damping of LH input power onto the protons by perpendicular Landau damping. Combinations of background plasma and LH antenna parameters exist for which no solutions of the LH dispersion relation are found with , thus reducing damping of LH power to the protons to . This suggests ways of reducing the parasitic loss of LH power to high-energy charged fusion products.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Identification of the Wheat Curl Mite as the Vector of the High Plains Virus of Corn and Wheat
- Author
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Dallas L. Seifers, T. J. Martin, Tom L. Harvey, and Stanley G. Jensen
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,food.ingredient ,Emaravirus ,food and beverages ,Tritimovirus ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Virus ,food ,Agronomy ,Plant virus ,Mite ,Poaceae ,Hordeum vulgare ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Wheat streak mosaic virus - Abstract
Wheat with virus-like symptoms (extracts containing a 33-kDa protein in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, negative in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to wheat streak mosaic virus, and not infectious in a backassay to other wheat) reacted positively to antiserum made against a protein purified from symptomatic corn infected with the High Plains virus (HPV), indicating a serological relationship between the corn and wheat pathogens. The wheat curl mite (WCM, Aceria tosichella Keifer) was identified as the vector of the virus and caused persistent infection of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in greenhouse experiments. The HPV was recovered in the field from naturally infected wheat where the number of HPV-infected plants decreased with increasing distance from the WCM source in volunteer wheat.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Cytokines in the pathogenesis of osteoporosis
- Author
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E. Romas and T. J. Martin
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Stromal cell ,T-Lymphocytes ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Osteoporosis ,Osteoclasts ,Bone resorption ,Bone remodeling ,Pathogenesis ,Colony-Stimulating Factors ,Cytokines metabolism ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Interleukin-6 ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,business.industry ,Estrogens ,Interleukin-11 ,medicine.disease ,Rheumatology ,Immunology ,Cytokines ,Female ,Bone Remodeling ,Signal transduction ,business ,Interleukin-1 ,Signal Transduction - Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Variation in Polyphenol Oxidase Activity and Quality Characteristics Among Hard White Wheat and Hard Red Winter Wheat Samples
- Author
-
S. D. Kachman, W. J. Park, Randy L. Wehling, T. J. Martin, C. J. Peterson, and D. R. Shelton
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Chemistry ,fungi ,Organic Chemistry ,Winter wheat ,Population ,food and beverages ,Polyphenol oxidase activity ,Polyphenol oxidase ,White (mutation) ,Horticulture ,Botany ,education ,Quality characteristics ,Food Science - Abstract
Polyphenol oxidase (PPO) has been related to an undesirable brown discoloration of wheat-based end products. Consumer acceptance and product quality are generally decreased by the darkening phenomena. Two sets of wheat samples (Triticum aestivum L.) were investigated for variation in grain and flour PPO levels. Samples included 40 advanced experimental hard white winter wheat lines grown at two Kansas locations and 10 hard red winter wheat genotypes grown at three Nebraska locations. The variability in grain and flour PPO activities was influenced by growing location and population for the hard white wheat samples. There also was a significant influence of population by growing location interactions on PPO activity in both grain and flour. Genotype and growing location both contributed to variability in flour PPO activity among the hard red wheat samples. The variation in flour PPO activities among growing locations appeared larger than variation produced by genotypes tested for the hard red whea...
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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