Academic literature on the topic 'French bean cells'

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Journal articles on the topic "French bean cells"

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Bolwell, G. Paul, Chris Gerrish, and Jean-Pierre Salaun. "Changes in enzymes involved in suberisation in elicitor-treated french bean cells." Phytochemistry 45, no. 7 (1997): 1351–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0031-9422(97)00188-x.

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Kim, Jae Whune, and Takao Minamikawa. "Expression and Characterization of Endopeptidase in Suspension-cultured Cells of French Bean." Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry 61, no. 1 (1997): 113–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1271/bbb.61.113.

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Pladys, Dominique, Liliana Dimitrijevic, and Jean Rigaud. "Localization of a Protease in Protoplast Preparations in Infected Cells of French Bean Nodules." Plant Physiology 97, no. 3 (1991): 1174–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.97.3.1174.

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Bolwell, G. P., M. P. Robbins, and R. A. Dixon. "Elicitor-induced prolyl hydroxylase from French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris). Localization, purification and properties." Biochemical Journal 229, no. 3 (1985): 693–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj2290693.

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The enzyme prolyl hydroxylase (proline: 2-oxoglutarate dioxygenase, EC 1.14.11.12), induced in suspension-cultured cells of Phaseolus vulgaris L. (French bean) by treatment with an elicitor preparation from the phytopathogenic fungus Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, has been investigated. The enzyme, which catalyses the hydroxylation of poly-L-proline with the stoichiometric decarboxylation of 2-oxoglutarate, has been shown to be localized mainly in smooth endoplasmic reticulum. After solubilization from microsomal membranes, the hydroxylase was purified by ion-exchange chromatography and affini
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ROBERTSON, Duncan, Colin SMITH, and G. Paul BOLWELL. "Inducible UDP-glucose dehydrogenase from French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) locates to vascular tissue and has alcohol dehydrogenase activity." Biochemical Journal 313, no. 1 (1996): 311–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj3130311.

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UDP-glucose dehydrogenase is responsible for channelling UDP-glucose into the pool of UDP-sugars utilized in the synthesis of wall matrix polysaccharides and glycoproteins. It has been purified to homogeneity from suspension-cultured cells of French bean by a combination of hydrophobic-interaction chromatography, gel filtration and dye-ligand chromatography. The enzyme had a subunit of Mr 40000. Km values were measured for UDP-glucose as 5.5±1.4 mM and for NAD+ as 20±3 μM. It was subject to inhibition by UDP-xylose. UDP-glucose dehydrogenase activity co-purified with alcohol dehydrogenase acti
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Robertson, D., B. A. McCormack, and G. P. Bolwell. "Cell wall polysaccharide biosynthesis and related metabolism in elicitor-stressed cells of French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)." Biochemical Journal 306, no. 3 (1995): 745–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj3060745.

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Enzyme activities involved in quantitative and qualitative flux of sugars into cell wall polysaccharides were determined following elicitor treatment of suspension cultured cells of French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.). Two subsets of activities were examined: the first were involved in synthesis and metabolism of UDP-glucose and the provision of the pool of UDP-sugars, and the second a selection of membrane-bound glycosyltransferases involved in the synthesis of pectins, hemicelluloses and glucans of the primary cell wall. Of the first group, only UDP-glucose dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.22) showed
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Bolwell, G. Paul, Dewi R. Davies, Chris Gerrish, Chung-Kyoon Auh, and Terence M. Murphy. "Comparative Biochemistry of the Oxidative Burst Produced by Rose and French Bean Cells Reveals Two Distinct Mechanisms." Plant Physiology 116, no. 4 (1998): 1379–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.116.4.1379.

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Wood, Lesley A., and Michèle C. Heath. "Light and electron microscopy of the interaction between the sunflower rust fungus (Puccinia helianthi) and leaves of the nonhost plant, French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris)." Canadian Journal of Botany 64, no. 11 (1986): 2476–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/b86-329.

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Growth of the sunflower rust fungus (Puccinia helianthi Schw.) was compared by light microscopy in sunflower leaves, in untreated French bean leaves, in bean leaves given a preinoculation heat treatment, and on collodion membranes. Results suggested that fungal growth was slightly reduced and the formation of haustorial mother cells was inhibited in untreated bean leaves. Haustorial mother cells, when present, did not form haustoria and adjacent mesophyll cell walls usually were highly refractive. Preinoculation heat treatment reduced the incidence of refractive cell walls and increased that o
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Heath, Michèle C., and Mary Ann Stumpf. "Ultrastructural observations of penetration sites of the cowpea rust fungus in untreated and silicon-depleted French bean cells." Physiological and Molecular Plant Pathology 29, no. 1 (1986): 27–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0048-4059(86)80035-2.

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Bindschedler, Laurence V., Farida Minibayeva, Sarah L. Gardner, Chris Gerrish, Dewi R. Davies, and G. Paul Bolwell. "Early signalling events in the apoplastic oxidative burst in suspension cultured French bean cells involve cAMP and Ca2+." New Phytologist 151, no. 1 (2001): 185–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1469-8137.2001.00170.x.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "French bean cells"

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Trethowan, Jonathan Brian. "Characterisation and expression of a novel chitin-binding protein involved in plant defence." Thesis, Royal Holloway, University of London, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.267687.

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Books on the topic "French bean cells"

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El Kenz, Hanane, and Philippe Van der Linden. The physiology of blood in anaesthetic practice. Edited by Jonathan G. Hardman. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199642045.003.0011.

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Following the discovery of the ABO blood groups by Landsteiner in 1901, Albert Hustin described the first transfusion of a whole blood unit in 1914. The modern transfusion era really begins in 1916 with the discovery of sodium citrate as an anticoagulant by the same physician, allowing blood conservation in dedicated packs. Since that time, many advances have been made especially over the past two decades in the storage, the conservation, and the laboratory testing of blood components and in transfusion medicine practice. Transfusion of whole blood has been replaced by blood component therapy,
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Book chapters on the topic "French bean cells"

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Bolwell, G. Paul, Jonathan B. Trethowan, and Przemyslaw Wojtaszek. "A Major Antimicrobial Hybrid Chitin-Binding Protein from French Bean with Features Common to Arabinogalactan-Proteins and Hydroxyproline-Rich Glycoproteins." In Cell and Developmental Biology of Arabinogalactan-Proteins. Springer US, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4207-0_8.

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Saltzman, W. Mark. "Cell Delivery and Recirculation." In Tissue Engineering. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195141306.003.0016.

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Perhaps the simplest realization of tissue engineering involves the direct administration of a suspension of engineered cells—cells that have been isolated, characterized, manipulated, and amplified outside of the body. One can imagine engineering diverse and useful properties into the injected cells: functional enzymes, secretion of drugs, resistance to immune recognition, and growth control. We are most familiar with methods for manipulating the cell internal chemistry by introduction or removal of genes; for example, the first gene therapy experiments involved cells that were engineered to produce a deficient enzyme, adenine deaminase (see Chapter 2). But genes also encode systems that enable cell movement, cell mechanics, and cell adhesion. Conceivably, these systems can be modified to direct the interactions of an administered cell with its new host. For example, cell adhesion signals could be introduced to provide tissue targeting, cytoskeleton-associated proteins could be added to alter viscosity and deformability (in order to prolong circulation time), and motor proteins could be added to facilitate cell migration. Ideally, cell fate would also be engineered, so that the cell would move to the appropriate location in the body, no matter how it was administered; for example, transfused liver cells would circulate in the blood and, eventually, crawl into the liver parenchyma. Cells find their place in developing organisms by a variety of chemotactic and adhesive signals, but can these same signaling mechanisms be engaged to target cells administered to an adult organism? We have already considered the critical role of cell movement in development in Chapter 3. In this chapter, the utility of cell trafficking in tissue engineering is approached by first considering the normal role of cell recirculation and trafficking within the adult organism. Most cells can be easily introduced into the body by intravenous injection or infusion. This procedure is particularly appropriate for cells that function within the circulation; for example, red blood cells (RBCs) and lymphocytes. The first blood transfusions into humans were performed by Jean-Baptiste Denis, a French physician, in 1667. This early appearance of transfusion is startling, since the circulatory system was described by William Harvey only a few decades earlier, in 1628.
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Ardaillou, Raymond. "Regenerative Medicine: Which Cells?" In Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine. IOS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/bhr210006.

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Stem cells used in therapy include mainly hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) to treat aplasias, leukemias and hematological genetic diseases, and mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) produced in small quantities by the bone marrow, but also other tissues, to treat cardiac and cutaneous diseases thanks to their secretory properties of growth factors. A major step was taken with the use of embryonic (ESC) or induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS). The former are used, after isolation and differentiation, either in rare therapeutic purposes or for the in vitro screening of drugs. iPS are produced from adult cells after reprogramming and differentiation and utilized for the treatment of various diseases in autologous or allogeneic form, the second condition allowing only mass production. New lines of research are now in progress including the creation of organoids that are templates of many organs of the body and allow the process of cell organization and its perturbations to be analyzed. Creation of post-meiosis gametes (23 chromosomes) from iPS or ESC is intended to treat serious genetic diseases. Creation of human chimera by interspecies blastocyst complementation has also been studied in view of organ transplantation. It is only allowed for the implantation of human cells in animal blastocysts and prohibited for the reverse. Implantation in uterus of the modified embryos is prohibited by the French law.
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Dyakov, Nikolay N. "Muhammed ben Yusef: From a “Golden Cell” to the First 5-year Plan (Commemorating the 65th Anniversary of Independence of the Kingdom of Morocco)." In DIGEST OF WORLD POLITICS. ANNUAL REVIEW. VOLUME 10. St. Petersburg State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/26868318.05.

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Muhammed b. Yusuf (1909–1961) — a key person in political history of Morocco in the middle of the 20th C. With his intronization in the beginning of the French colonial rule Muhammed b. Yusuf started in his biography a long and winding road from a puppet sultanate as an instrument of the French Protectorate, to the leadership in the liberation movement, becoming a symbol of nationalism and a father-founder of the independent Moroccan statehood restored in 1956.
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Li, Jie Jack. "Cancer Drugs: From Nitrogen Mustards to Gleevec." In Laughing Gas, Viagra, and Lipitor. Oxford University Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195300994.003.0006.

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Whereas infectious diseases are the scourge of developing countries, cancer is the most significant affliction in developed countries. At the beginning of 2005, the American Cancer Society announced that, for the first time, cancer had surpassed heart disease as the number one killer of Americans. Cancer, which is the uncontrollable multiplication of cells, has been in existence as long as animals have; evidence of cancers has been found in dinosaur bones. Cancers have also been found on mummies dating back 2,500 years. An operation to remove cancer was documented in the Ebers papyrus found in Egypt. In ancient times cancer was a relatively rare disease, because infectious diseases often made the life span so short that cancer had little chance to proliferate. Hippocrates (460–370 B.C.) coined the word cancer, which means “crab” in Greek. There are over 110 types of cancer, which can be divided into four categories depending on the tissue involved: carcinoma, lymphoma, leukemia, and sarcoma. Carcinomas are the most common, with 85–90% of all cancers falling into this category. Carcinomas are tumors that originate in epithelial tissue such as skin, breast, lung, prostate, stomach, colon, ovary, and so forth. Lymphomas are cancers of the lymphatic system. Leukemia is the cancer of the blood, bone marrow, and liver. Sarcomas, the rarest of all four types, are tumors arising from cells in connective tissue, bone, or muscle. It seems inconceivable that we had almost no clue about the origin of cancers up until the mid-1970s, despite the existence of cancer that predates human life. The debate raged on as to what caused cancer, with one camp believing that carcinogens (cancer-causing agents such as chemicals, X-ray, and ultraviolet light) were to blame, whereas the other thought that viruses were the culprits. The carcinogen theory took root first. As early as 1775, British doctor Percival Pott made the astute epidemiological observation that young English boys employed as chimney sweeps were more prone to develop scrotal skin cancers than their French counterparts. Further scrutiny revealed that the continental sweeps bathed more frequently after work, which prompted Pott to speculate that long exposure to coal tar caused skin cancer. In 1915, 140 years later, Katsusaburo Yamagiwa and Koichi Ichikawa confirmed Pott’s theory in an animal model.
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Dyulgerova-Nikolova, Desislava, and Tanya Milachich. "Rare Sperm Freezing." In Infertility and Assisted Reproduction [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.98388.

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Gamete cryobanking has been widely incorporated in present assisted reproductive technology (ART). Preserving male gametes for future fertility is considered to be an easy and accessible way to insure one’s reproduction. Despite the fact that the method could not secure success, sperm freezing could be the only chance to father biological offspring. In cases when severe male factor (SMF) infertility is diagnosed (retrograde ejaculation, virtual azoospermia, obstructive azoospermia, cryptozoospermia) and providing fresh semen samples for assisted reproduction may alter chances to achieve pregnancy, rare sperm cryopreservation could contribute for conceiving. Isolation, selection and cryopreservation of single sperm cells from semen samples is a challenging procedure. Different approaches and devices could be used in order to extract utmost spermatozoa. Aiming to highest cryosurvival rates sperm freezing protocols should be carefully considered. For some men, rare sperm cryopreservation might be the only alternative for parenting biological offspring. Thus, the latter technique should be widely discussed, developed and practiced in assisted reproduction.
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Wilson, Dawn K., and Sarah F. Griffin. "Health Promotion and Primary Prevention of Cancer." In Comprehensive Handbook of Childhood Cancer and Sickle Cell Disease. Oxford University Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195169850.003.0030.

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There are a number of important preventable risk factors that have been associated with the prevalence and incidence of various types of cancers. These risk factors include sedentary lifestyle, poor diet, obesity, sun exposure, and tobacco use (Friedenreich & Orenstein, 2002; Healthy People 2010, 1998; Pappo, 2003; Slattery, Schumacher, West, Robison, & French, 1990). These risk factors are modifiable, and early prevention in childhood may reduce the likelihood of developing cancers such as melanoma and lung, colon, breast, prostate, and endometrial cancers (IARC Working Group, 2002). For example, according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer, between one fourth and one third of cancer cases may be attributed to the combined effects of obesity and physical inactivity (IARC Working Group, 2002), thus promoting both weight control and physical activity in youths may be beneficial for preventing cancer. Therefore, the identification of multiple risk factors that may be linked to cancer prevention that could be incorporated into prevention programs may be an effective approach for cancer prevention in youth. A social ecological model is presented in this chapter as a framework for understanding multilevel strategies for promoting healthy lifestyles to prevent cancer in youths (Bronfenbrenner, 1979, 1992; Wilson & Evans, 2003). According to the ecological model, health behavior is affected by intrapersonal, social, cultural, and physical environmental variables. A social ecological framework (McLeroy, Bibeau, Steckler, & Glanz, 1988) conceptualizes health behavior (e.g., physical activity) as affected by multiple levels of influence. Based on this social ecological model, five levels of influence are specified: (a) individual influences (e.g., biological and psychosocial); (b) interpersonal influences (e.g., family, peers); (c) institutional factors (e.g., school, work sites); (d) community factors (e.g., relationship among organizations, institutions, and social networks); and (e) public policy (e.g., laws and policies at the local, state, national, and international levels). In this model, health behaviors such as physical activity, nutrition, sun exposure, and tobacco use are conceptualized as a function of the interaction of individual, family, and peer influences and school, community, mass media, and public policy influences.
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Finger, Stanley. "The Long-Awaited Volumes." In Franz Joseph Gall. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190464622.003.0013.

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Gall was already starting to write a book about organology while in Vienna. It had been approved by the censor and he had a subscription to back it. But he did not complete it there or during his lecture-demonstration tour prior to entering France. He did, however, continue to collect more case studies and feedback along the way and in Paris, where he was helped with his French. Gall knew this book was important for his legitimacy as a serious scientist and for his legacy, and he spent a small fortune on the four volumes and magnificent accompanying atlas. Titled Anatomie et Physiologie du Système Nerveux en Général, et du Cerveau en Particulier, it came out between 1810 and 1819, with Spurzheim (who left him in the interim) as his co-author on the first two volumes and the atlas. To his dismay, Gall discovered that the set was too expensive for most of his readers to afford. This revelation led him to publish a less expensive “small edition” without the detailed neuroanatomy and the costly atlas, his Sur les Fonctions du Cerveau et sur Celles de Chacune de ses Parties, which left his organologie virtually unchanged and was completed in 1825. The latter was translated into English a decade later, seven years after his death, and it allowed a broader audience to follow his logic and see his evidence for multiple, independent organs of mind associated with discrete cortical territories.
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Gaines, Susan M., Geoffrey Eglinton, and Jürgen Rullkötter. "From the Moon to Mars: The Search for Extraterrestrial Life." In Echoes of Life. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195176193.003.0009.

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“But did anyone really expect to find anything?” I ask Geoff, as he shows me the canister that had contained his sample of moon dust from the 1969 Apollo 11 mission. “Well, no,” he replied, “we didn’t think there’d ever been life on the moon. But we didn’t know. We thought there might be organic compounds.” And why not? People had been finding organic compounds in meteorites for more than a century, and no one was quite sure where they’d come from or how they’d formed. In 1834, the Swedish chemist Jöns Jakob Berzelius noted the high carbon content of a meteorite that had fallen in southern France a couple of decades earlier. Meteor showers in Europe were described as early as 1492, and their extraterrestrial provenance had been documented in 1803, when the distinguished French physicist Jean-Baptiste Biot featured among the scores of citizens who witnessed the stones falling from the sky above the village of l’Alsace. But the source of the carbon compounds Berzelius and others found in meteorites would remain controversial far into the next century. Another carbonaceous meteorite fell in Hungary in 1857, and the eminent chemist Frederick Wöhler—Berzelius’s student, and the first to show that one could create carbon compounds like those made by organisms from inorganic substances in the lab—found organic compounds that he was convinced were of extraterrestrial biological origin. A decade later, Marcellin Berthelot found what he called “petroleum-like hydrocarbons” in a meteorite that had fallen near Orgueil, France, in 1864. He postulated that the hydrocarbons had formed abiotically from reaction of metal carbides with water, but in the next few years there was a spate of meteorite treatises in which the fossils of an astounding assortment of exotic extraterrestrial creatures were described in minute detail. Louis Pasteur had just presented his famous experiment showing that a protected, sterile medium remained devoid of life ad infinitum and debunked the popular theory that life could burst spontaneously into being from nonliving matter, but now the debate shifted to the possibility that life on Earth had originated with live cells or spores delivered by meteorites from space.
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Levy, Sharon. "Strangled Waters: First Wave." In The Marsh Builders. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190246402.003.0009.

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On a balmy day in June 1955, George Anderson took his sailboat out on Lake Washington, the long stretch of fresh water that separates Seattle from its eastern suburbs. Anderson had recently finished his doctoral research on phytoplankton, and knew the lake well. The water that day looked odd; he noticed a strange brown tinge. So he collected a sample in an empty beer bottle and brought it back to the University of Washington lab where he worked with his mentor, W.T. Edmondson, the ranking authority on the lake. Under the microscope, Anderson and Edmondson found a life form they’d never seen before. It grew in long, narrow chains, striated with lines that separated one cell from the next. They thought this might be a species infamous among limnologists, the cyanobacterium Oscillatoria rubescens. (Cyanobacteria, popularly known as blue-green algae, are in fact distinct from and far more ancient than algae. They appeared more than 3 billion years ago, when the planet was inhabited only by microbes, and were the first organisms to evolve photosynthesis. Their proliferation and release of great volumes of oxygen profoundly changed the chemical makeup of Earth’s atmosphere, making the evolution of complex life possible.) The researchers needed to be sure, so they sent a sample off to an expert, who confirmed their suspicions. O. rubescens signaled deteriorating conditions in Lake Washington. To Edmondson, it also meant an unprecedented opportunity to track the impacts of nutrient overload. O. rubescens had been the harbinger of drastic change in a number of western European lakes. The best-known case was that of Lake Zurich in Switzerland. Fed by Alpine glaciers, Lake Zurich was, until the late 1800s, an expanse of blue known for its abundant populations of whitefish and lake trout, which thrive in deep water. The lake is made up of two basins separated by a narrow passage. In the late nineteenth century towns at the edge of the lower basin, the Untersee, abandoned privies for flush toilets, and began to release their raw sewage into the lake.
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Conference papers on the topic "French bean cells"

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Diacakis, M., R. Hales, M. Morin, and P. Pilidis. "Combined Heat and Power Systems Based on an Externally Integrated Solid Oxide Fuel Cell – Gas Turbine Hybrid System: The Case of a Hospital Under French Legislation." In ASME 2004 2nd International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. ASMEDC, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fuelcell2004-2532.

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High temperature Fuel Cells are an attractive technology to generate electricity at high efficiencies. Advantages over traditional heat engine systems include lower irreversibilities, stack modularity and lower maintenance requirements. Solid Oxide Fuel Cells can be coupled with Gas Turbines to further increase cycle performance. In the present study the evaluation of an Externally Integrated Solid Oxide Fuel CellGas Turbine (EISOFCGT) system is presented. The cycle has been designed to meet the requirements of a hospital with a peak thermal demand of 12 MW and electrical of 4.75 MW. Various c
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Carapellucci, Roberto, Roberto Cipollone, and Davide Di Battista. "Near-Zero CO2 Emissions Power Plant Based on High Temperature Fuel Cells." In ASME 2019 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2019-10848.

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Abstract The recent awareness on the environmental issues related to global warming is leading to the search for always more efficient energy conversion systems and, mainly, with very low carbon dioxide emissions. In fact, they are strictly related to the combustion reaction of fossil fuels which is the main process of the actual power generation technology. In this regard, fuel cells are energy conversion systems which are characterized by higher efficiency and near-zero CO2 emissions. Their novel integration with conventional power plants participates to the concept of the decarbonization of
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El Faras, Wafaa. "Great benefits of Conocarpus erectus." In The 8th International Conference of Biotechnology, Environment and Engineering Sciences. SRO media, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.46617/icbe8006.

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Plants still an important source of omega oils that help to healthy for human and animals. Fresh leaves, stem, flower and fruits samples from Conocarpus erectus family Combretaceae has been analyzed using (GLC) Gas and liquid chromatography. The results indicated high levels of Omega oils which related to growth of nerve cells in brain. PH of fresh leaves determined and alkaloids with 8.2 which could help patients of diabetic type II
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Zafar, Rasheeda, and Daniel A. Walz. "PURIFICATION AND PROPERTIES OF HUMAN PLATELET MEMBRANE GLYCOPROTEIN V (GP-V)." In XIth International Congress on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Schattauer GmbH, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1643907.

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Platelet membrane glycoproteins function as specific ligand receptors or substrates for selected platelet agonists and antagonists. GP-V is the only such membrane glycoprotein known to be a thrombin substrate. We have purified GP-V to homogeneity in order to better characterize the nature and specificity of this thrombin proteolysis. GP-V was extracted from fresh human platelets and purified through a combination of gel filtration, hydroxylapatite, DEAE and mono S chromatographies. The resulting protein had a molecular mass of 80 kDa by both non-reduced and reduced SDS electrophoresis. Aminort
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Lam, C. Y., S. Q. Shi, J. Lu, and P. K. L. Chan. "Investigating the Humidity Effect on Si/PEDOT:PSS Hybrid Solar Cell and Power Conversion Efficiency Recovery by Re-Deposition of the Hole Transporting Layer." In ASME 2013 7th International Conference on Energy Sustainability collocated with the ASME 2013 Heat Transfer Summer Conference and the ASME 2013 11th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/es2013-18265.

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The degradation of silicon nanostructure / poly(3,4-ethylenedioxylthiophene : poly(styrenesulphonic acid) (SiNS/PEDOT:PSS) hybrid solar cell due to the moisture is investigated with an environmental chamber. The unencapsulated devices were tested under different relative humidity (RH) varied from (15% to 100%). Under different RH, the devices show various degradation trends. After 3hrs of storage under 100% RH, the average device power conversion efficiency (PCE) drops from 6.52% to 1.27%. While the device is stored under 15% RH, the averaged PCE just drop from 6.40% to 5.49% and the device at
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Zacharski, L., V. Memoli, and S. Rousseau. "THROMBIN-SPECIFIC SITESOF FIBRINOGEN IN SMALL CELL CARCINOMA OF THE LUNG." In XIth International Congress on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Schattauer GmbH, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1643670.

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Thrombin-generated cleavage sites of human fibrinogen have been identified within the connective tissue stroma adjacent to viable tumor cells in fresh frozen sections of small cell carcinomaof the lung (SCCL) by means of immunohistochemical techniques using mouse monoclonal antibodies (designated alpha and beta) to the N-terminal peptides of the fibrinogen alpha and beta chains(provided by G. Matsueda and E. Haber).Specific connective tissue staining with antibody alpha was diffuse while staining with antibody beta was linear and focal. These results indicate thatthrombin is generated in situ
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Doucet, M., L. Durand Terrasson, and J. Mouton. "Safety Criticality Standards Using the French CRISTAL Code Package: Application to the AREVA NP UO2 Fuel Fabrication Plant." In 14th International Conference on Nuclear Engineering. ASMEDC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icone14-89017.

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Criticality safety evaluations implement requirements to proof of sufficient sub critical margins outside of the reactor environment for example in fuel fabrication plants. Basic criticality data (i.e., criticality standards) are used in the determination of sub critical margins for all processes involving plutonium or enriched uranium. There are several criticality international standards, e.g., ARH-600, which is one the US nuclear industry relies on. The French Nuclear Safety Authority (DGSNR and its advising body IRSN) has requested AREVA NP to review the criticality standards used for the
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Guillot, E., M. Epstein, C. Wieckert, et al. "Solar Carbothermic Production of Zinc From Zinc Oxide: Solzinc." In ASME 2005 International Solar Energy Conference. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/isec2005-76015.

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In late 2004, the pilot Solzinc solar reactor was commissioned. The European Union and the Swiss Federal Office of Science and Education are funding this project to demonstrate the technical feasibility and the economical potential of producing Zn by reducing zinc oxide with the aid of concentrated solar energy and a small amount of carbon at a close to industrial scale. The zinc can be used as a means to store solar energy in a chemical way, e.g. suited to release electricity in Zinc-air fuel cells. This allows on demand use, boosting the availability of solar energy. Furthermore, as the Zinc
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Huppmann, Gerhard. "The MTU Carbonate Fuel Cell HotModule®: Utilization of Biomass and Waste Originated Fuels for Polygeneration in Fuel Cells." In ASME 2006 4th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. ASMEDC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fuelcell2006-97120.

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MTU’s HotModule is a High Temperature Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell System. It transfers the chemical energy of the fuel directly to electricity, heat and a useful depleted air with an electrical efficiency in the range of 42 to 52%. It convinces by minimal emissions of contaminants. The produced heat is given by the depleted air at a temperature level of 400 °C; this ensures a multi purpose and valuable utilization of the heat. The HotModule operated with natural gas is demonstrated meanwhile together with our partner Fuel Cell Energy Inc. in approximately 25 field trial plants and reached now a
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Bumbieler, F., S. Necib, J. Morel, D. Crusset, and G. Armand. "Mechanical and SCC Behavior of an API5L Steel Casing Within the Context of Deep Geological Repositories for Radioactive Waste." In ASME 2015 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2015-45234.

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Andra, the French national radioactive waste management agency, is in charge of studying the possibility of disposal of High Level activity Wastes (HLW) in deep geological repositories. The concept of HLW cells consists of horizontal micro-tunnels of about 0.7 m in diameter, equipped with a steel casing. In order to ensure the reliability of the casing, particularly with respect to Stress Corrosion Cracking (SCC), several in-situ experiments dedicated to the analysis of its short term mechanical and corrosion behavior have been performed at Andra’s Underground Research Laboratory (URL) as well
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