Single Product (single + product)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Canine COL1A2 Mutation Resulting in C-Terminal Truncation of Pro-,2(I) and Severe Osteogenesis Imperfecta

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 6 2001
Bonnie G. Campbell
Abstract RNA and type I collagen were analyzed from cultured skin fibroblasts of a Beagle puppy with fractures consistent with type III osteogenesis imperfecta (OI). In a nonisotopic RNAse cleavage assay (NIRCA), the proband's RNA had a unique cleavage pattern in the region of COL1A2 encoding the C-propeptide. DNA sequence analyses identified a mutation in which nucleotides 3991-3994 ("CTAG") were replaced with "TGTCATTGG." The first seven bases of the inserted sequence were identical to nucleotides 4002-4008 of the normal canine COL1A2 sequence. The resulting frameshift changed 30 amino acids and introduced a premature stop codon. Reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) with primers flanking the mutation site amplified two complementary DNA (cDNA) fragments for the proband and a single product for the control. Restriction enzyme digestions also were consistent with a heterozygous mutation in the proband. Type I procollagen labeled with [3H]proline was analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Increased density of pC-,2(I) suggested comigration with the similarly sized pro-,2(I) derived from the mutant allele. Furthermore, ,-chains were overhydroxylated and the ratio of ,1(I):,2(I) was 3.2:1, consistent with the presence of ,1(I) homotrimers. Analyses of COL1A2 and type I collagen were both consistent with the described heterozygous mutation affecting the pro-,2(I) C-propeptide and confirmed a diagnosis of OI. [source]


Alternative technologies for biotechnological fuel ethanol manufacturing

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY, Issue 8 2007
Alain A Vertès
Abstract The challenges of implementing biorefineries on a global scale include socioeconomic, financial, and technological constraints. In particular, the development of biorefineries is tightly linked to the continued availability of fermentation raw materials. These constraints can be relaxed by the use of diverse raw materials, while advances that confer higher flexibility would enable biotechnological plant managers to swiftly react to volatile markets. In conventional processes, Saccharomyces cerevisiae grows on a relatively limited range of substrates, and produces only a single product,ethanol. Given the observed maturity of the S. cerevisiae fermentation technology, alternatives to baker's yeast may be needed to tip the economic balance in favour of biotechnological ethanol. These alternative fermentation technologies may allow a greater diversity of substrates to be used to produce an individually tailored mix of ethanol and other chemicals. Copyright © 2007 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Life-Cycle Assessment and Temporal Distributions of Emissions: Developing a Fleet-Based Analysis

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2000
Frank Field
Summary Although the product-centered focus of life-cycle assessment has been one of its strengths, this analytical perspective embeds assumptions that may conflict with the realities of environmental problems. This article demonstrates, through a series of mathematical derivations, that all the products in use, rather than a single product, frequently should be the appropriate unit of analysis. Such a "fleet-centered" approach supplies a richer perspective on the comparative emissions burdens generated by alternative products, and it eliminates certain simplifying assumptions imposed upon the analysis by a product-centered approach. A sample numerical case, examining the comparative emissions of steel-intensive and aluminum-intensive automobiles, is presented to contrast the results of the two approaches. The fleet-centered analysis shows that the "crossover time" (i.e., the time required before the fuel economy benefits of the lighter aluminum vehicle offset the energy intensity of the processes used to manufacture the aluminum in the first place) can be dramatically longer than that predicted by a product-centered life-cycle assessment. The fleet-centered perspective explicitly introduces the notion of time as a critical element of comparative life-cycle assessments and raises important questions about the role of the analyst in selecting the appropriate time horizon for analysis. Moreover, with the introduction of time as an appropriate dimension to life-cycle assessment, the influences of effects distributed over time can be more naturally and consistently treated. [source]


Optimal control of a production-inventory system with both backorders and lost sales

NAVAL RESEARCH LOGISTICS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 3 2010
Saif Benjaafar
Abstract We consider the optimal control of a production inventory-system with a single product and two customer classes where items are produced one unit at a time. Upon arrival, customer orders can be fulfilled from existing inventory, if there is any, backordered, or rejected. The two classes are differentiated by their backorder and lost sales costs. At each decision epoch, we must determine whether or not to produce an item and if so, whether to use this item to increase inventory or to reduce backlog. At each decision epoch, we must also determine whether or not to satisfy demand from a particular class (should one arise), backorder it, or reject it. In doing so, we must balance inventory holding costs against the costs of backordering and lost sales. We formulate the problem as a Markov decision process and use it to characterize the structure of the optimal policy. We show that the optimal policy can be described by three state-dependent thresholds: a production base-stock level and two order-admission levels, one for each class. The production base-stock level determines when production takes place and how to allocate items that are produced. This base-stock level also determines when orders from the class with the lower shortage costs (Class 2) are backordered and not fulfilled from inventory. The order-admission levels determine when orders should be rejected. We show that the threshold levels are monotonic (either nonincreasing or nondecreasing) in the backorder level of Class 2. We also characterize analytically the sensitivity of these thresholds to the various cost parameters. Using numerical results, we compare the performance of the optimal policy against several heuristics and show that those that do not allow for the possibility of both backordering and rejecting orders can perform poorly.© 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Naval Research Logistics 2010 [source]


Single-warehouse multi-retailer inventory systems with full truckload shipments

NAVAL RESEARCH LOGISTICS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 5 2009
Yue Jin
Abstract We consider a multi-stage inventory system composed of a single warehouse that receives a single product from a single supplier and replenishes the inventory of n retailers through direct shipments. Fixed costs are incurred for each truck dispatched and all trucks have the same capacity limit. Costs are stationary, or more generally monotone as in Lippman (Management Sci 16, 1969, 118,138). Demands for the n retailers over a planning horizon of T periods are given. The objective is to find the shipment quantities over the planning horizon to satisfy all demands at minimum system-wide inventory and transportation costs without backlogging. Using the structural properties of optimal solutions, we develop (1) an O(T2) algorithm for the single-stage dynamic lot sizing problem; (2) an O(T3) algorithm for the case of a single-warehouse single-retailer system; and (3) a nested shortest-path algorithm for the single-warehouse multi-retailer problem that runs in polynomial time for a given number of retailers. To overcome the computational burden when the number of retailers is large, we propose aggregated and disaggregated Lagrangian decomposition methods that make use of the structural properties and the efficient single-stage algorithm. Computational experiments show the effectiveness of these algorithms and the gains associated with coordinated versus decentralized systems. Finally, we show that the decentralized solution is asymptotically optimal. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Naval Research Logistics 2009 [source]


Identification and characterization of microsatellites in eggplant

PLANT BREEDING, Issue 3 2003
T. Nunome
Abstract The potential of microsatellite markers for use in genetic studies in eggplant, Solanum melongena, has been evaluated. A genomic library of eggplant was screened for GA and GT repeat motifs to isolate microsatellite clones. The frequency of each repeat motif in the eggplant genome was found to be every 3200 kb for GA repeats and every 820 kb for GT repeats. Sixty-one per cent of GT repeats were found to directly flank AT repeats. A total of 37 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primer pairs were designed, 23 of which amplified a single product or several products. The level of microsatellite polymorphism was evaluated by using S. melongena lines and related Solanum species. Two to six alleles per primer pair were displayed in the S. melongena lines and two to 13 alleles were displayed in the Solanum relatives. Seven microsatellites showed polymorphism between parental lines of the mapping population and segregated in a codominant Mendelian manner. These microsatellite loci were distributed throughout the linkage map. [source]


Evaluating conflicts of interest in research presented in CME venues

THE JOURNAL OF CONTINUING EDUCATION IN THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS, Issue 4 2008
Nancy L. Davis PhD
Abstract Introduction: There is much in the literature regarding the potential for commercial bias in clinical research and in continuing medical education (CME), but no studies were found regarding the potential for bias in reporting original research in CME venues. This pilot study investigated the presence of perceived bias in oral and print content of research findings presented in certified CME activities. Methods: Research presentations at two national primary care CME activities, where authors had self-reported potential conflicts of interest, were peer reviewed and monitored for perceived commercial bias. Blinded and unblinded peer reviewers' and monitors' analyses of bias were compared to assess whether knowledge of potential conflicts of interest affected perceptions of bias. Results: Knowledge of potential conflicts of interest appeared to increase awareness of potential commercial bias with regard to use of a single product in care and assurance that there was reasonable evidence to support the practice recommendation. A perception of the presenter's strong opinion regarding care did not appear to be influenced by knowledge of a potential conflict of interest. Discussion: While limited, by study design, this research detected subjectivity and variability in perceiving commercial bias within research findings presented in CME venues. Further study of these questions is required to guide the resolution of conflicts of interest in research and CME. [source]


ChemInform Abstract: Cobalt Catalysis at the Crossroads: Cobalt-Catalyzed Alder,Ene Reaction versus [2 + 2] Cycloaddition.

CHEMINFORM, Issue 32 2010
Gerhard Hilt
Abstract Depending on the Cobalt ligand used (dppp or dppe), cyclobutene derivatives [cf.(III)] or Alder-ene products [cf.(VIII)] arise with changing ratios, sometimes as a single product [cf.(V)]. [source]


On the Mechanism and Stereochemistry of Chiral Lithium-Carbenoid-Promoted Cyclopropanation Reactions

CHEMISTRY - A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, Issue 23 2007
Zhuofeng Ke
Abstract An investigation into the mechanism and stereochemistry of chiral lithium-carbenoid-promoted cyclopropanation reactions by using density functional theory (DFT) methods is reported. Previous work suggested that this type of cyclopropanation reaction may proceed by competition between a methylene-transfer mechanism and a carbometalation mechanism. In this paper, it is demonstrated that the intramolecular cyclopropanation reactions promoted by chiral carbenoids 1 and 2 proceed by the methylene-transfer mechanism. The carbometalation mechanism was found to have a much higher reaction barrier and does not appear to compete with the methylene-transfer mechanism. The Lewis base group does not enhance the carbometalation pathway enough to compete with the methylene-transfer pathway. The present computational results are consistent with experimental observations for these cyclopropanation reactions. The factors governing the stereochemistry of the intramolecular cyclopropanation reaction by the methylene-transfer mechanism were examined to help elucidate the origin of the stereoselectivity observed in experiments. Both the directing group and the configuration at the C1 centre were found to play a key role in the stereochemistry. Carbenoid 1 has a chiral C1 centre of R configuration. The Lewis base group directs the cyclization of carbenoid 1 to form a single product. In contrast, the Lewis base group cannot direct the cyclization of carbenoid 2 to furnish a stereoselective product due to the S configuration of the chiral C1 centre in carbenoid 2. This relationship of the stereochemistry to the chiral character of the carbenoid has implications for the design of new efficient carbenoid reagents for stereoselective cyclopropanation. [source]