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1.
A festschrift for Dr. John Martyn Bailey, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology was organized by the Biochemistry department of the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences on December 4-5, 2006 to honor his 48 years of contributions. He made important contributions in the areas of essential fatty acids, prostaglandins, thromboxanes and lipoxygenase metabolites.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Protein bodies induced in tomato leaf cells by wounding were shown to contain proteinase Inhibitor I by using ferritin-labelled antibodies, fluorescein-labelled antibodies, and cytochrome C-labelled antibody fragments. Both pre-embedding and postembedding techniques were used. Nonspecific binding was least when p-formaldehyde was used as the initial fixative followed by treatment with cytochrome c-labelled antibody fragments.Abbreviations Fab antibody fragments - BSA bovine serum albumin - GMA glycol methacrylate - THB Tris-HCl buffer Taken in part from a doctoral (Ph.D.) dissertation submitted to Washington State University by Vivian V. Yang. This work was supported largely by NSF Grant GB-29614X (LKS) and in part by the United States Department of Agricultural Cooperative States Research Service Grant 316-15-30 (CAR), the National Science Foundation Grant GB-37972 (CAR), and the College of Agriculture Research Center, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99163, Scientific Paper No. 4525, Project 1791.Program in Genetics and Department of Botany. To whom reprint requests should be sent.Department of Agricultural Chemistry and Program in Biochemistry and Biophysics.  相似文献   

3.
The College of Medicine, King Khalid University of Abha, Saudi Arabia currently accepts 100 students a year, up from 50 to 70 students four years ago. The first-year students take four science courses (Biology,Chemistry, Physics, and Statistics) in addition to some general university requirement courses. Biochemistry is offered in the second year, Anatomy in the second and third year and Pharmacology in the fourth year. This study was carried out to determine the correlation between the performance of medical students in Biochemistry and their performance in Anatomy and Pharmacology. Data were obtained from two groups of students (Group 22 and 23) of the years 1995 and 1996 who had already taken Biochemistry, Anatomy and Pharmacology. Performance was equal in Pharmacology but in biochemistry performance of group 23 was clearly lower than group 22. Scores of students in Biochemistry course strongly correlated with the basic Pharmacology course (r=0.714, P<0.0001). Scores in Anatomy also correlated with those in Biochemistry (r=0.616, P<0.001) but much less with scores in Pharmacology (r=0.345, P<0.01).  相似文献   

4.
Summary Three new continuous cell lines were established from two species of marine fishes economically important in Asia. Perch (Lateolabrax japonicus) heart (PH), perch liver (PL), and grouper (Epinephelus amblycephalus) kidney (GK) lines were established in Eagle’s minimum essential medium with 10% fetal bovine serum and have been subcultured over 120 times. The optimum growth temperature was 25°C for the PK and GK lines and 30° C for the PH line. The modal chromosome numbers for each cell line are: PH (49), PK (50), and GK (65). None of the lines was susceptible to the rhabdovirus infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) or channel catfish herpesvirus (CCV); however, all three cell lines were susceptible to a variety of fish birnaviruses, including infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV), the EVE eel virus, and newly isolated birnaviruses from a variety of fish and shellfish in Taiwan. This research was funded by National Science Foundation grant INT-810447, the University of Main/University of New Hampshire Sea Grant College Program, and the Maine Agriculture Experiment Station publication no. 1165.  相似文献   

5.
ContributorsThis report results from the discussion of an Expert Group convened in Edinburgh on 29–30 October 1992 for a workshop on that subject sponsored and organized by the Commission of the European Communities, Directorate General XII (CEC-DG XII). The experts taking part in the workshop were: R. Lathe and J.J. Mullins, Coordinators (AFRC Centre for Genome Research, University of Edinburgh); G.N. Fracchia, Secretary (Medical Research-Pharmaceuticals, CEC-DG XII, Brussels); and the participants; C. Babinet (Dept d'Immunologie, Institut Pasteur, Paris); P. Eliard (EFPIA, Brussels); C. Benoist (LGME du CNRS/INSERM, Strasbourg); G. Bianchi (Ospedale San Raffaele, Universita di Milano, Milan); E. Boncinelli (DIBIT, Ospedale San Raffaele, Milan); G. Brem (Universitat München); G. Cossu (Institute of Histology, School of Medicine, University of Rome); N. Dillon (MRC National Institute for Medical Research, London); V. Episkopou (Dept of Biochemistry & Molecular Genetics, St Mary's Hospital Medical School, London); M. Evans (Wellcome/CRC Institute, Cambridge); R. Forster (Italfarmaco Research Centre, Cinisello Balsamo, Milan); D. Ganten (Max-Delbrück-Zentrum für Molekulare Medizin, Berlin); A. Gossler (Max-Delbrück-Laboratorium in der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Köln); J. Gray (Dept Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, London); R. Hammer (Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Texas, Dallas, USA); A. Hobden (Genetics Unit, Glaxo Group Research Ltd, Middlesex); G. Kollias (Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Hellenic Pasteur Institute, Athens); D. Lamy (Transgène SA, Strasbourg); D. Lincoln (MRC Reproductive Biology Unit, Edinburgh); J. Mallet (CNRS/LNCM, Gif-sur-Yvette); D. Melton (ICMB, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh); J.M. Moalic (U127 INSERM, Hôpital Laraboisire, Paris); S. Mockrin (Dept Health & Human Services, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MA, USA); J. Ottesen (Biopharmaceuticals Division, Dept of Gene Technology and Virology, Novo Industrie, Denmark); D. Porteous (MRC Human Genetics Unit, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh); P. Rae (Pharmaceutical Division, Miles, West Haven, USA); F. Theuring (Schering AG, Pharmaceutical Research, Berlin); G. Tremp (Rhone-Poulenc Rorer SA, Centre de Recherche de Vitry-Alfortville, Vitry-sur-Seine); H. Van der Putten (Dept Biotechnology, Ciba-Geigy AG, Basel); R. Wolf (ICRF Molecular Pharmacology Group, Biochemistry Dept, Edinburgh). Further supporting documentation and commentary were received from P. Dement (Amsterdam), U. Habenicht (Berlin), P. Grüss (Gottingen), M. Lyon (Oxford), C.C.J. Miller (London), W.-D. Schleuning (Berlin) and R. Williamson (London) and their contributions are gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Absorption and imagery locate immune responses in the body   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Imagery instructions specifying mucosal immunity should alter mucosal immunoglobulin A (m-IgA) levels in high absorbers, whose intent concentration evokes intense physiological responses. After screening for health status, 121 high or low absorbers were randomly assigned to either Relaxation Alone (R), Relaxation with Mucosal Immune Imagery (RI), or Vigilance Task control (VT). Before and after one 60-min intervention, subjects reported theory-relevant psychological variables and provided 5ml whole saliva, which was immediately frozen and assayed lateren masse with enzyme-linked immunoabsorbence (ELISA). MANOVA analysis of psychological variables replicated past research. ANOVA on residualized m-IgA found Time × Absorption interaction and Condition main effects. High more than low absorbers responded to relaxation with mucosal immune imagery by producing higher m-IgA. High absorbers appear able to locate where their immune systems will respond. Individual differences like absorption level need to be emphasized in diagnosis and treatment responsiveness.National Institutes of HealthM. Banks (Jasnoski) Gregerson, Department of Psychology, The George Washington University, changed to The Family Therapy Institute; Ingram M. Roberts, The George Washington University Medical Center, changed to Department of Medicine, Bridgeport Hospital; and Michael M. Amiri, The George Washington University Medical Center, changed to the Department of Neuroscience, NINDS Branch, National Institutes of Health. This research supported by an intra-mural BioMedical Research Grant from The George Washington University, was presented at the 1992 Annual Meeting of the Eastern Psychological Association, Boston, Massachusetts. Special thanks are extended to the following students who assisted instrumentally at various stages: undergraduates Lina Alathari, S. Theodor King, Beth Lieberman, Parisa Lotfi, Anita McClenon, and Karen Siscoe, and graduate student Mariken Hasert.  相似文献   

8.
Charles Stacy French, one of the great men of photosynthesis research, died on 13 October 1995. He received his PhD at Harvard University where he associated with William Arnold, Caryl Haskins, later president of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, and Pei-Sung Tang. He did early work on the photosynthesis of photosynthetic bacteria with Robert Emerson and later with Otto Warburg. French worked for three years with James Franck in Chicago. His associates there included Hans Gaffron, Robert Livingston, Warren Butler and Roderick Clayton. After spending three years at the University of Minnesota he became the director of the Department of Plant Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington and remained there until he retired in 1973. French's research career at the Carnegie Institution was marked by the development of novel and ingenious pieces of equipment such as the French pressure cell used to prepare chloroplast particles to measure partial reactions of photosynthesis. He developed the first recording fluorescence spectrophotometer and demonstrated efficient energy transfer between certain photosynthetically-active pigments, a spectrophotometer that measured the first derivative of absorbance, as well as a novel analog computer to show that complex absorption curves in living plants are produced by a number of distinct forms of chlorophyll occurring in vivo. French used the Blinks rate-measuring oxygen electrode to measure action spectra of oxygen evolution by photosynthesis automatically. He and Jack Myers did some of the pioneering work on the Emerson effect showing the necessary cooperation of two photosystems in photosynthesis. French used the Carnegie Institution's fellowship program to bring large numbers of scientists from around the world to his laboratory. When Stacy French died in 1995, the field of photosynthesis lost one of its great and early pioneers.This is CIW/DPB publication No. 1314.  相似文献   

9.
Jonathon Howard.     
Jonathon 'Joe' Howard (Fig. 1) is Group Leader and Director at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics; he and his research group moved to Dresden, Germany, in July 2001. Howard received his PhD in neurobiology in 1983 from the Australian National University in Canberra. He did postdoctoral research there and also at the University of Bristol, UK, and at the University of California, San Francisco. In 1989, he joined the faculty at the University of Washington. His book "Mechanics of Motor Proteins and the Cytoskeleton" was published earlier this year. [interview by Mari N. Jensen]  相似文献   

10.
Journal of Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology - Unfortunately, the title of the article was incorrectly published in the original publication. The correct title is updated.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry - In the original publication of the article, the location and rs number of TNNI3K mouse SNP (3784 C&gt;T) (rs49812611) has been mentioned inadvertently in...  相似文献   

12.
E. B. Skvyrska was born in the town of Chigirin. In 1928 she graduated from the Agricultural-Pedagogical Division of the Kyiv Institute of People's Education (Taras Shevchenko Kyiv National University, now) in speciality pedagogue-biologist. In 1937 she finished the post-graduate course at the Institute of Biochemistry of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, in 1940 she defended the thesis for the Candidate's degree in biology and the title of the senior researcher was conferred on her in 1941. Beginning from 1936, E. B. Skvyrska had been working at the Institute of Biochemistry. She was working at the Department of Structure and Biochemistry of Nervous System (till 1963), and then at the Department of Structure and Biochemistry of Nuclear Acids (till 1973). In 1958 she defended the thesis for the Doctor's degree. From 1938 to 1941 E. B. Skvyrska worked as the assistant, and from 1945 to 1950 as the docent of the Department of Biochemistry at the Taras Shevchenko Kyiv (State) National University. Up to 1941 her scientific work was dedicated to the investigation of peculiarities of carbohydrate metabolism of the central and peripheral nervous system depending on the animal age. Since 1951 E. B. Skvyrska was investigating the metabolism of high-molecular phosphorus-including compounds (nucleic acids, phosphoproteins and phospholipids) in the central nervous system during the excitation and inhibition, in ontogenesis, in functionally and morphologically different parts of the nervous system, in different structure elements of the nerve cell. The results of investigations allowed finding the biochemical peculiarities connected with the difference of structure and function of morphologically different divisions of the nervous system. Peculiarities and functioning of t-RNA and aminoacyl-t-RNA synthetases of rats in norm and during starvation were studied at the Department of Nucleic Acids. More than 50 scientific works have been published.  相似文献   

13.
In 2020, the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB) Women in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Committee introduced the ASBMB Leadership Awards to recognize individuals with a strong commitment to advancing the careers of women in biochemistry and molecular biology along with demonstrated excellence in research, discovery, and/or service. This innovative award recognizes efforts to mentor and support trainees and colleagues at all levels. Such a leadership award provides the opportunity to focus briefly on the important role of mentoring within the STEM disciplines. The goal of this commentary, which brings together perspectives from a senior scientist and recent recipient of the ASBMB Mid-Career Leadership Award as well as two junior faculty, is to highlight approaches for purposeful support of colleagues, with an emphasis on going beyond formal mentoring committees. The commentary primarily focuses on mentoring within the academic arena of extramural funding and publication, highlighting the reality that multiple mentors with diverse expertise and perspectives are critical to support success within STEM careers.  相似文献   

14.
Wang  Liping  Li  Shijun  Yu  Xiao  Han  Yang  Wu  Yinshuang  Wang  Shidan  Chen  Xixi  Zhang  Jianing  Wang  Shujing 《Journal of physiology and biochemistry》2019,75(4):619-619
Journal of Physiology and Biochemistry - Subsequently to the publication of this article, the authors have noticed that the published version of Fig. 4H contained incorrect data showing the...  相似文献   

15.
Book notices     
INSECT HORMONES. By V. J. A. Novak
PHASE AND CASTE DETERMINATION IN INSECTS. ENDOCRINE ASPECTS. Papers presented at a Symposium of the Section Physiology and Biochemistry of the XV International Congress of Entomology, Washington, D.C., 1976 (Chairman: Dorothy Feir). Edited by Martin Lüscher
A BIOLOGY OF LOCUSTS. By R. F. Chapman  相似文献   

16.
Pomo Indian Basket Weavers. Their Baskets and the Art Market Grace Hudson Museum and Sun House, Ukiah, California, May through September 1998; National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., October 1998 through January 1999; National Museum of the American Indian, George Gustav Heye Center, New York, May 9through August 15, 1999 (review venue); University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia, PA, October 1999 through September 2000.
Pomo Indian Basket Weavers. Their Baskets and the Art Market. Special issue of Expedition, The Magazine of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology 40(1), 1998.  相似文献   

17.
Xu  Jiao  Tang  Shu  Yin  Bin  Sun  Jiarui  Song  Erbao  Bao  Endong 《Molecular and cellular biochemistry》2019,461(1-2):213-214
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry - In the original publication of the article, one of the images was selected by mistake in Fig.&nbsp;3 (HS?+?ASA, 5&nbsp;h). The correct...  相似文献   

18.
Academic collaboration is critical to knowledge production, especially as teams dominate scientific endeavors. Typical predictors of collaboration include individual characteristics such as academic rank or institution, and network characteristics such as a central position in a publication network. The role of disciplinary affiliation in the initiation of an academic collaboration between two investigators deserves more attention. Here, we examine the influence of disciplinary patterns on collaboration formation with control of known predictors using an inferential network model. The study group included all researchers in the Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences (ICTS) at Washington University in St. Louis. Longitudinal data were collected on co-authorships in grants and publications before and after ICTS establishment. Exponential-family random graph models were used to build the network models. The results show that disciplinary affiliation independently predicted collaboration in grant and publication networks, particularly in the later years. Overall collaboration increased in the post-ICTS networks, with cross-discipline ties occurring more often than within-discipline ties in grants, but not publications. This research may inform better evaluation models of university-based collaboration, and offer a roadmap to improve cross-disciplinary collaboration with discipline-informed network interventions.  相似文献   

19.
《Biochemical education》1992,20(3):166-169
The Workshop Team from IUBMB consisted of Professor W Rombauts (Leuven, Belgium), Professor F Vella (Saskatoon, Canada), and Dr E J Wood (Leeds, UK), with local arrangements being in the hands of Dr S A Hulea (Secretary of the Romanian Biochemical Society). The Workshop was held at the Institute of Biochemistry, Romanian Academy of Sciences (Head: Professor Dr Cecilia Motas) and there were participants from Bucharest, Constantin, Cluj-Napoca, Galati, Tasi and Sibiu. Support was kindly provided by the Romanian Biochemical Society, World Vision International, The Commission of Biochemistry, Romanian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Biochemistry, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Carol Davilla”, University of Bucharest, and IUBMB  相似文献   

20.
Oskar Markovič 《Biologia》2006,61(3):333-338
This personal and professional autobiography covers the 57-year period from 1948 to 2005 and includes the studies at the Faculty of Chemical Technology of the Slovak Technical University and the Faculty of Pharmacy of Comenius University, both in Bratislava, as well as the activities at the Regional Pharmaceutical Research Institute and the Institute of Chemistry of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava, the Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry in Prague, Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm and at other research and scientific working places in Slovakia and abroad. It highlights the research on natural substances and enzymes, especially the pectin methyl esterase.  相似文献   

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