This article is a detailed case study of a particular FMS that will be operational in 1989. It describes the daily planning and operating problems that will need to be addressed. The algorithms that will operate this system are presented. Given the daily changing production requirements, the algorithms begin with an aggregate planning feasibility check. Then planning, scheduling, inventory management, and breakdowns are addressed. The key problems in operating this system are tool management problems. Detailed tooling data and their analysis are presented in an appendix to address these problems. 相似文献
1. 1.|The mitochondrial population in hypothalamic and hypophysial brain tissue from warm (30°C) and cold (5°C) acclimated goldfish (Carassius auralus L.) was analyzed using sterological techniques.
2. 2.|It was revealed that there is a significantly larger volume density (Vv) in the cold acclimated tissue, with no significant difference in either of the surface densities (Svext and Svint) from either of the brain areas.
3. 3.|The hypothalamic brain tissue has a significantly lower specific surface (S/V) in the cold acclimated tissue but there is not a significant difference in this parameter for the hypophysial brain tissue.
4. 4.|The values for these three parameters (Vv, Svext and SVint, and S/V) indicate that mitochondria from acclimated brain tissue undergo shape changes in response to thermal stress.
5. 5.|We suggest that the shape changes may be related to the change in the phospholipid composition of the inner mitochondrial membrane with acclimation temperature.
Summary The immunogenicity of the disialoganglioside, GD3, a melanoma-tumor-associated antigen, has been evaluated in non-human primates. Sera from four chimpanzees and two monkeys were evaluated for anti-GD3 antibody activity by solid-phase radioimmunoassay using GD3 and control gangliosides as targets. Serum from one monkey, immunized with cells from a melanoma cell line, was strongly reactive with GD3, having a titer of >2500. In contrast, serum from this animal was non-reactive with several other gangliosides including the structurally similar GM3. Anti-GD3 reactivity was also demonstrable, albeit in low titer, in the sera of an additional monkey and a chimpanzee. Each of these animals had likewise been immunized using cells from melanoma cell lines. On the basis of these observations, suggestive of a primate anti-GD3 antibody response, we initiated a series of immunizations of chimpanzee using purified GD3 bound to Salmonella minnesota, R595. IgG reactive with melanoma cells in the cell-binding assay was first detected in sera collected after 4 immunizations and increased in titer against each reactive melanoma cell line during the immunizations. Reactivity of this serum with melanoma cell lines demonstrated a direct correlation with the expression of GD3 by the respective cell line. Anti-GD3 reactivity was evident in solid-phase radioimmunoassay against purified GD3 beginning with serum collected after 11 immunizations. By comparison with its binding to the control ganglioside panel, this serum demonstrated strong specificity for GD3 (titer=640) while having only marginal reactivity with GM3 (titer=40). Immune serum from this animal was also able specifically to block subsequent binding of a murine IgM anti-GD3 antibody (DMab7) to target GD3 in solid-phase radioimmunoassay. Together, these observations suggest that GD3, in the form of a purified molecule bound to a bacterial matrix or as part of the intact melanoma cell membrane, can be immunogenic in non-human primates, and is able to elicit an antibody response of appropriate specificity.Supported in part by grant CA32672 from the National Cancer Institute, Veterans Administration Program 821 and by the Yerkes Regional Primate Center, Atlanta, Georgia. The Yerkes Center is fully accredited by the American Association for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care 相似文献
More than 41 species in 23 genera of the microdrile oligochaete families Tubificidae, Naididae, Opistocystidae, and Enchytraeidae and the freshwater megadrile family Alluroididae have been identified in recent collections made in Peru, Guyana and Ecuador. Just less than 70% of our species records are new for one or more of these countries and one is a new, albeit tentative, generic record for the South American continent. About 16 species new to science remain to be described. One of these is only the second reported species of Brinkhurstia (Alluroididae) and possesses unusual, single, very elongate penial setae. All of our species records are pertinent to tests of different hypotheses about historical and phylogenetic relationships among organisms of northern and southern South America and North America. The species, including new ones, with limited distributions are of particular significance to such hypotheses. 相似文献