2944 research outputs found
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Folheto de cordel, "SSA JLC 1564", "Os últimos versos do poeta": digitisation
This digitisation of a Brazilian folheto de cordel (20th century) is part of the research project "Desenrollando el cordel / Untangling the Cordel / Démêler le Cordel (2020–2024)", directed by Professor Constance Carta at the University of Geneva and supported by the philanthropic foundation Sandoz Family-Monique de Meuron.
This document is currently housed at the Museum of Ethnography in Geneva (MEG). It was donated by the Swiss Society of Americanists (SSA) as part of a collection of more than 2200 chapbooks from 20th-century Brazilian cordel literature. For more information, visit
Décimas en trovos modernos y divertidos: Digital edition
Digital edition of a Spanish pliego de cordel, published by the Andalusian printer José María Moreno (19th c.). It contains the XML-TEI file of the edition, as well as the files that led to this edition, i.e. the digital facsimiles (raw and retouched), and the transcription produced by the OCR tool Transkribus (PAGE-XML). This digital edition is a part of the research project Desenrollando el cordel / Untangling the cordel / Démêler le cordel (2020-2024), led by professor Constance Carta at the University of Geneva and supported by the philanthropic Sandoz-Monique de Meuron Family Foundation
Folheto de cordel, "SSA JLC 1689", "As aventuras do Principe que foi sapateiro": digitisation
This digitisation of a Brazilian folheto de cordel (20th century) is part of the research project "Desenrollando el cordel / Untangling the Cordel / Démêler le Cordel (2020–2024)", directed by Professor Constance Carta at the University of Geneva and supported by the philanthropic foundation Sandoz Family-Monique de Meuron.
This document is currently housed at the Museum of Ethnography in Geneva (MEG). It was donated by the Swiss Society of Americanists (SSA) as part of a collection of more than 2200 chapbooks from 20th-century Brazilian cordel literature. For more information, visit
El rey Basilio de Dinamarca: Digital edition
Digital edition of a Spanish pliego de cordel, published by the Andalusian printer José María Moreno (19th c.). It contains the XML-TEI file of the edition, as well as the files that led to this edition, i.e. the digital facsimiles (raw and retouched), and the transcription produced by the OCR tool Transkribus (PAGE-XML). This digital edition is a part of the research project Desenrollando el cordel / Untangling the cordel / Démêler le cordel (2020-2024), led by professor Constance Carta at the University of Geneva and supported by the philanthropic Sandoz-Monique de Meuron Family Foundation
Folheto de cordel, "SSA JLC 1737", "Faleceu Mané Garrincha o fabricante de joãos": digitisation
This digitisation of a Brazilian folheto de cordel (20th century) is part of the research project "Desenrollando el cordel / Untangling the Cordel / Démêler le Cordel (2020–2024)", directed by Professor Constance Carta at the University of Geneva and supported by the philanthropic foundation Sandoz Family-Monique de Meuron.
This document is currently housed at the Museum of Ethnography in Geneva (MEG). It was donated by the Swiss Society of Americanists (SSA) as part of a collection of more than 2200 chapbooks from 20th-century Brazilian cordel literature. For more information, visit
Folheto de cordel, "SSA JLC 2087", "Guerra dos Bárbaros ("Peleja entre os Índios e os Colonizadores no Nordeste Brasileiro")": digitisation
This digitisation of a Brazilian folheto de cordel (20th century) is part of the research project "Desenrollando el cordel / Untangling the Cordel / Démêler le Cordel (2020–2024)", directed by Professor Constance Carta at the University of Geneva and supported by the philanthropic foundation Sandoz Family-Monique de Meuron.
This document is currently housed at the Museum of Ethnography in Geneva (MEG). It was donated by the Swiss Society of Americanists (SSA) as part of a collection of more than 2200 chapbooks from 20th-century Brazilian cordel literature. For more information, visit
Dataset for all-Heteroatom-Substituted Carbon Spiro Stereocenters: Synthesis, Resolution, Enantiomeric Stability, and Absolute Configuration
Chiral tetra heterosubstituted methanes, i.e. tetraoxa and azatrioxa carbon spiro stereocenters, are synthesized in one-step under CpRu catalysis, using cyclic carbonates and carbamates as substrates and alpha-diazo-beta-ketoesters as reagents. Single enantiomers, isolated by chiral stationary phase chromatography, display chiroptical properties, from gabs ~10–5 to ~10–4, which, together with TD-DFT calculations, provide robust absolute configuration assignments. Crystalline spiro diastere-omers were also obtained, confirming further the structural and configurational assignments. Using enantioselective dy-namic chromatography, remarkable enantiomerization barriers were determined for the ortho-carbonates and ortho-carbamates, with values up to 27.6 and 34.6 kcal/mol (half-lives 227 days and >84’000 years at 25 °C, respec-tively). DFT further elucidates the origin of this large differ-ence pointing towards preferred C-O or C-N bond cleavages in the rate-determining step of the SN1-like mechanism
R40.76 binds to the α domain of ZO-1: role of ZO-1 (α+) in epithelial differentiation and mechano-sensing
Mapping of R40.76 antibody of ZO-
Maternal obesity increases the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma in offspring through the transmission of an altered gut microbiome
Objective: The obesity pandemic leads to a rising number of obese women of reproductive age. Emerging evidence suggests that maternal obesity has a negative impact on the long-term health of offspring. Additionally, obesity is an independent risk factor for malignancies, particularly hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The aim of our study is to investigate the impact of maternal obesity on the risk for HCC in the offspring and identify potential mechanisms of transmission.
Methods: Female mice were fed either a high fat (HFD) or a normal diet (ND) before mating. Offspring received ND throughout life. In the offspring, we studied the gut microbiome, liver histology, inflammatory patterns, and tumor load in a diethylnitrosamine-induced HCC mouse model. To normalize the gut microbiome, we co-housed offspring of HFD and ND mothers after weaning. The composition of the gut microbiota was assessed through 16S rRNA sequencing