1,340 research outputs found

    Architectural illustrations... 1899

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    Architectural illustrations / A.W. Leh. [s.l.] : The author, 1899. 1 leaf, 23 plates ; 21 x 29 cm

    F.F. Bosworth's Advice to A.W. Tozer

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    Copyright (c) 2018 by Roscoe Barnes III#FFBosworthI have argued for over a decade that F.F. Bosworth matters, and he matters in a significant way, especially in Pentecostal Church History. This article shows how Bosworth's influence extended to church leaders outside the Pentecostal tradition. Using Lyle Dorsett's book as a reference, it presents Bosworth's advice to a young A.W. Tozer, who would go on to become a famous author of deeper life books. Both men were members of the Christian and Missionary Alliance. Bosworth spoke to Tozer about the ministry of healing and speaking in tongues.NOTE: For more information on F.F. Bosworth, please visit: http://ffbosworth.strikingly.comFor a closer look at Bosworth's counsel to Tozer, see A Passion for God: The Spiritual Journey of A.W. Tozer by Lyle Dorsett (Moody Publishers, 2008)#ChristTheHealer</div

    RNA interference: a new tool to study gene functions in adult mammalian muscle "in vivo"

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    RNA interference (RNAi) is a powerful method for sequence-specific posttranscriptional gene silencing (PTGS), which allows rapid survey of gene functions using double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). At the time when we started this work, RNAi was a recently developed tool that had been successfully applied to many organisms, in particular C. elegans and Drosophila, but not to any mammalian system. It was generally doubted that RNAi would also work in mammals in vivo, because the introduction of dsRNA can induce general shutdown of translation and apoptosis in several mammalian cell types. One excellent model system for investigating this open question is the nervemuscle synapse known as the neuromuscular junction (NMJ). Characteristic for the NMJ is the precise apposition of the neurotransmitter release machinery on the nerve terminal side and the neurotransmitter receptors on the muscle fiber membrane. At least two mechanisms underlie the formation and maintenance of a postsynaptic apparatus on the muscle fiber membrane. Both mechanisms are triggered by the heparan sulfate proteoglycan agrin, which is released by the motor neuron. First, neural agrin activates all the cellular mechanisms necessary to assemble a fully functional postsynaptic structure including aggregates of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs). Besides this redistribution of preexisting molecules, agrin signaling restricts the transcription of postsynaptic proteins to myonuclei located in the NMJ. Still little is known about the agrin signaling cascade. Therefore, once RNAi could be developed for mammals system, it will in turn provide a unique tool to address the role of newly identified genes in the postsynaptic differentiation, since there are no tools available for the fast and reliable perturbation of gene function in vivo. In the first part of this work, we investigated the potential of RNAi in perturbing the formation and stability of postsynaptic structures in adult muscle in vivo (chapter 2 and 3). First, we used the experimental paradigm where neural agrin expressed in nonjunctional regions of rat soleus muscle induces formation of ectopic AChR aggregates. Knockout experiments have shown that this agrin activity requires the receptor tyrosine kinase MuSK and the AChR-associated scaffolding molecule rapsyn, but not the cytoskeletal proteins sarcoglycan α (SGCA) and utrophin. In our experiments, we show that co-injection of dsRNAs derived from MuSK or rapsyn perturbed agrin-induced formation of ectopic AChR aggregates, while dsRNAs derived from SGCA or utrophin had no significant effect. In a further step, we used RNAi to study the role of MuSK at adult NMJs. Here, the electroporation of plasmids encoding short hairpin-based 21-bp small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) or long hairpin dsRNAs, which allow global and sustained perturbation of MuSK expression, leads to the disassembly of NMJs in adult mice. These results are consistent with the finding that auto-antibodies to MuSK, which also lower the amount of MuSK protein, cause severe forms of myasthenia gravis. In summary, these results demonstrate for the first time the effectiveness of long dsRNA as well as siRNA in silencing endogenous genes in adult mammalian muscle in vivo and they provide strong evidence that continuous expression MuSK is required to maintain the NMJ. The second part of this work aimed to establishing RNAi in adult muscle to study the role of newly identified genes in the development of the NMJ and in the growth of muscle fibers (chapter 4 and appendix). First, we used RNAi to perturb neural agrininduced formation of ectopic AChR aggregates on mouse soleus muscle. We show that electroporation of plasmids encoding short hairpin- derived siRNA for MuSK leads to the perturbation of ectopic AChR aggregation, regardless whether agrin expression vector or recombinant protein was applied to innervated or denervated muscles. These results clearly show the reliability of RNAi in adult muscle in vivo and therefore set the stage for experiments aimed to study the function of genes, whose expression is altered during the formation postsynaptic structures. A protocol was established to identify functional siRNA target sites in several genes. Plasmids were designed that encoded short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) derived from different putative effectors of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling pathway. For some candidate effectors, electroporation of the corresponding plasmids into mouse soleus muscle leads to altered muscle fiber size. These preliminary results are consistent with several reported findings, which indicate that the mTOR signaling pathway is a central controller of muscle fiber atrophy and hypertrophy. The efficiently induced RNAi in those experiments demonstrates that our protocol is useful for identifying siRNA targets. In summary, these results demonstrate that we have successfully established RNAi as a fast and reliable gene knockdown method in muscle fibers of mammals. This method will be important for future investigation of gene functions in adult mammalian muscle in vivo

    Het operationeel maken van een hoge-druk dichtheidsmeter

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    Het doel van het onderzoek is het operationeel maken van een hoge-druk dichtheidsmeter, welke in de toekomst een hulpinstrument zal zijn voor veel verschillende onderzoeksdoeleinden binnen de sectie thermodynamica van de TU-Delft...Applied SciencesScheikundige TechnologieAnorganische en Fysische Chemi

    Author Correction: New perspectives on Neanderthal dispersal and turnover from Stajnia Cave (Poland)

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    The Author contributions section now reads:“W.N., A.N. and S.T. designed research; A.P., M.H., W.N., S.B., M.U., A.M., H.F., M.D.B., P.S., K.S., M.Ż., A.W., A.N. and S.T. performed research; A.P., M.H., W.N., S.B., M.U., A.M., H.F., M.D.B., P.S., K.S., M.Ż., A.W., A.N. and S.T. analysed data; A.P., M.H., S.T., W.N. and S.B. wrote the paper with the collaboration of all the co-authors.

    Letter from Usami Terada to Mr. A.W. Thomas, February 7, 1945

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    A letter from Usami Terada, an incarceree at the Rohwer incarceration camp, to a Mr. A.W. Thomas in Lawndale, California. In the letter, Usami discusses about returning to California and asks Mr. Thomas how Lawndale has changed during the past three years. He also asks for photographs of Mr. Thomas' family, Terada's home, and their neighbor, Masumoto's home. Transcript was provided by the donor and is available: csudh_nis_9024.The James H. Osborne Nisei Collection contains mainly correspondence between Emiko and Usami Terada, incarcerees in the Rohwer incarceration camp, McGehee Arkansas, and the Thomas family in Lawndale, California, and photographs of the Teradas and the Thomases. The letters describe the trip from the Santa Anita Temporary Assembly Center to the Rohwer incarceration camp, their lives and conditions in the camp, and their concerns about their properties in Lawndale, California. Also included are photographs taken in the camp, some issues of "The Rohwer outpost," and fliers published during wartime

    Letter from Amy Narawaki to Mr. and Mrs. A.W. Thomas, December 15, 1971

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    A holiday letter of greetings on Christmas from Amy Nakawaki [=Emiko Amy Terada] in Stanton, California to Mr. and Mrs. A.W. Thomas in Lawndale, California, which contains basic correspondence.The James H. Osborne Nisei Collection contains mainly correspondence between Emiko and Usami Terada, incarcerees in the Rohwer incarceration camp, McGehee Arkansas, and the Thomas family in Lawndale, California, and photographs of the Teradas and the Thomases. The letters describe the trip from the Santa Anita Temporary Assembly Center to the Rohwer incarceration camp, their lives and conditions in the camp, and their concerns about their properties in Lawndale, California. Also included are photographs taken in the camp, some issues of "The Rohwer outpost," and fliers published during wartime

    Letter from Amy Emiko Nakawaki to Mr. and Mrs. A.W. Thomas, December 11, 1957

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    A holiday letter with greetings on Christmas and New Year from Amy Nakawaki [=Emiko AmyTerada] in Anaheim, California to Mr. and Mrs. A.W. Thomas in Lawndale, California. The letter includes general correspondence, including updates on her, Sam [=Usami], and Tsuyoshi.The James H. Osborne Nisei Collection contains mainly correspondence between Emiko and Usami Terada, incarcerees in the Rohwer incarceration camp, McGehee Arkansas, and the Thomas family in Lawndale, California, and photographs of the Teradas and the Thomases. The letters describe the trip from the Santa Anita Temporary Assembly Center to the Rohwer incarceration camp, their lives and conditions in the camp, and their concerns about their properties in Lawndale, California. Also included are photographs taken in the camp, some issues of "The Rohwer outpost," and fliers published during wartime

    Spectral properties of Andreev reflection from quantum turbulence in 3He-B: What do they tell about turbulent fluctuations?

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    One of the experimental techniques developed to measure quantum turbulence at low temperatures in 3He-B utilizes the Andreev reflection of thermal quasiparticle excitations from quantized vortices and vortex structures. We present the results of theoretical, numerical, and experimental study of Andreev scattering from quantum turbulence in 3He-B. We analyze the spectral properties of the Andreev reflection and compare these with the spectral properties of superfluid turbulence, and discuss the physical mechanisms responsible for the scaling of spectral densities. Finally, we discuss the relation between our findings and related observables in ordinary turbulence

    Author Correction:A 41,500 year-old decorated ivory pendant from Stajnia Cave (Poland)

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    Correction to: Scientific Reports https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-01221-6, published online 25 November 2021The original version of this Article contained errors in the author list where Marjolein D. Bosch was omitted from the author list, and Mikołaj Urbanowski was incorrectly listed as an author of the original Article, and has subsequently been removed.The Author contributions section now reads:“S.T. W.N. and A.N. conceived the project; S.T., W.N., A.P., M.B., S.C., M.D., H.F., A.M., M.D. B., D.P., M.P.R., C.M.R., V.S-M., G.M.S., P.S., M.S., K.S., A.V., F.W., H.W., A.W., M.Z., S.B., A.N., J-J. H., performed research; S.T., A.P., W.N., M.B., M.D.B., S.C., M.D., H.F., A.M., D.P., M.P.R., C.M.R., V.S-M., G.M.S., P.S., M.S., K.S., A.V., F.W., H.W., A.W., M.Z., S.B., A.N., J-J. H. analysed all archaeological data; S.T. and A.P. wrote the paper with the collaboration of all the co-authors.”The original Article and its accompanying Supplementary Information file have been corrected
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