162,682 research outputs found
Kenneth W. Wunderlich
Photograph of Kenneth W. Wunderlich. Wunderlich was a Founding Faculty member at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Founding Faculty are defined as: Tenure-track or tenured faculty, faculty members hired between 1972 and 1978, and faculty that retired at UTSA, passed away while employed at UTSA, or are still employed at UTSA
Alvin W. Wunderlich '39 and his wife Marjorie Jennings Wunderlich '39
Image transferred electronically from Communications Office in 2010.College trustee, Alvin W. Wunderlich received the College's Distinguished Service Medal at Commencement in 1994
W. Ament: Die Entwickelung von Sprechen und Denken beim Kinde. Leipzig, E. Wunderlich, 1899. VIII u. 213 S
W. AMENT: DIE ENTWICKELUNG VON SPRECHEN UND DENKEN BEIM KINDE. LEIPZIG, E. WUNDERLICH, 1899. VIII U. 213 S
Zeitschrift für Psychologie und Physiologie der Sinnesorgane (-)
Zeitschrift für Psychologie und Physiologie der Sinnesorgane (27) (a0001)
W. Ament: Die Entwickelung von Sprechen und Denken beim Kinde. Leipzig, E. Wunderlich, 1899. VIII u. 213 S (27) (p0285
Wunderlich Corn and Field
Photograph of Mr. Wunderlich showing Ed Anderson, Soil Conservation Service technician, some of the corn produced on his land. People shown in photo go as followed from left to right: 1. Mr. (Fred E) Wunderlich, 2. Ed Anderson, Soil Conservation Service technician. The back of the photograph proclaims, "Mr. Wunderlich, left, shows Ed Anderson, Soil Conservation Service technician, some of his 80 bushel per acre corn produced last year on 35 acres of bottomland. The field was in alfalfa for about 5 years that averaged 5 tons per acre per year. Cotton on 9 acres following the alfalfa in 1944 made two 500 pound bales per acre. The cotton was followed by 80 bushel per acre corn and this year the field is back in alfalfa.
W. L. Gibson, R. J. Hildreth, G. Wunderlich, Methods for land economics research.
Nicolas-Obadia Georges. W. L. Gibson, R. J. Hildreth, G. Wunderlich, Methods for land economics research.. In: Études rurales, n°34, 1969. pp. 143-144
Turnover of matrix proteins in mammalian mitochondria
In cultured hepatocytes the turnover of several mitochondrial matrix proteins (e.g. acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase) appears to be initiated by CoA-mediated, sequential transformation into CoA-modified forms. This modification favours the notion that intramitochondrial degradation by a matrix-resident ATP-dependent protease may be preceded by a specific modification by CoA. In a mitochondrial matrix fraction the MgATP-dependent decrease in anti-CoA immunoreactivity coincided with both a decrease in the anti-protein immunoreactivity of acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase and/or of 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase, and with the appearance of proteolytic fragments. A closer analysis of the degradation pattern revealed, however, a breakdown of the unmodified acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase and of its CoA-modified form, A I, whereas the form that is more highly modified by CoA, A2, proved to be inaccessible towards an ATP-dependent protease, In mammalian mitochondrial matrix, proteins can be degraded selectively by a matrix-resident ATP-dependent protease. The process of CoA modification results finally in the protection of matrix proteins from degradation. In cultured hepatocytes, leupeptin, an inhibitor of lysosomal proteases, did not affect the steady-state level of the mitochondrial matrix protein acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase, However, leupeptin mediated a specific accumulation of mitochondrial matrix proteins in the cytosolic fractions of hepatocytes cultured over a 24 h period. The levels of acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase, 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase and glutamate dehydrogenase proteins increased 1.9-, 2.0-and 2.2-fold respectively. Their status as mature, oligomeric, but enzymically inactive enzymes strongly suggests that they originate from a leakage of autophagosomes, a constituent of the nonselective autophagic/lysosomal pathway for degradation of whole mitochondria
Turnover of matrix proteins in mammalian mitochondria
In cultured hepatocytes the turnover of several mitochondrial matrix proteins (e.g. acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase) appears to be initiated by CoA-mediated, sequential transformation into CoA-modified forms. This modification favours the notion that intramitochondrial degradation by a matrix-resident ATP-dependent protease may be preceded by a specific modification by CoA. In a mitochondrial matrix fraction the MgATP-dependent decrease in anti-CoA immunoreactivity coincided with both a decrease in the anti-protein immunoreactivity of acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase and/or of 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase, and with the appearance of proteolytic fragments. A closer analysis of the degradation pattern revealed, however, a breakdown of the unmodified acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase and of its CoA-modified form, A I, whereas the form that is more highly modified by CoA, A2, proved to be inaccessible towards an ATP-dependent protease, In mammalian mitochondrial matrix, proteins can be degraded selectively by a matrix-resident ATP-dependent protease. The process of CoA modification results finally in the protection of matrix proteins from degradation. In cultured hepatocytes, leupeptin, an inhibitor of lysosomal proteases, did not affect the steady-state level of the mitochondrial matrix protein acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase, However, leupeptin mediated a specific accumulation of mitochondrial matrix proteins in the cytosolic fractions of hepatocytes cultured over a 24 h period. The levels of acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase, 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase and glutamate dehydrogenase proteins increased 1.9-, 2.0-and 2.2-fold respectively. Their status as mature, oligomeric, but enzymically inactive enzymes strongly suggests that they originate from a leakage of autophagosomes, a constituent of the nonselective autophagic/lysosomal pathway for degradation of whole mitochondria
Nasoonaria sinensis Wunderlich & Song 1995
Nasoonaria sinensis Wunderlich & Song, 1995 Material examined. 4 females (MHNG), VIETNAM, Vinh Phuc Province, Tam Dao National Park, 3 km N of Tam Dao city (21°28′51″N, 105°37′55″E), 1,050 m a.s.l., evergreen forest with bamboo, coll. P. Schwendinger [VN-12/02a], 12 May 2012; 1 female (MHNG), MYANMAR, Northern Shan State, ca 25 km W of Lashio, near Loi Taung Village, 860 m a.s.l., evergreen gallery forest along stream, coll. P. Schwendinger [MT-14/24], 10 June 2014. Remarks. This species was originally described based on both sexes from the extreme south of the Yunnan Province, China (Wunderlich & Song, 1995). Distribution. Yunnan Province, China (Wunderlich & Song, 1995), Laos and Thailand (Tanasevitch, 2014a, b, 2017), Sumatra, Indonesia (Tanasevitch, 2017), Vietnam, and Myanmar (first record).Published as part of Tanasevitch, A. V., 2021, New taxa and faunistic data on linyphiid spiders (Araneae: Linyphiidae) from Southeast Asia, pp. 212-218 in Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 69 on page 217, DOI: 10.26107/RBZ-2021-0017, http://zenodo.org/record/535208
Prof. Th. W. Adorno and the author Hans Erich Nossack.
Prof. Th. W. Adorno and the author Hans Erich Nossack at a reception of Insel Verlag, Buchmesse Frankfurt 1966LB
[Ronda. Casa arabe]
varios sellos en el verso, escrito a lapiz, en la esquina inferior derecha una marca color rojo "W"230x175 mm, copia a la albumina virada a sepia1.1.1. Su numero de registro topografico de compra de documentacion: R-4462
1.1.2. Titulo a lapiz en el verso
1.4.4. En los sellos se lee "se prohibe la reproduccion sin permiso" y en el otro "fot. Wunderlich nº"Vista del interior de una casa arabe de Ronda. MalagaUnidad Documenta
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