A systematic analysis of average molecular weights and gelation conditions for branched immune complexes: The interaction between a multivalent antigen with distinct epitopes and many different types of bivalent antibodies

Biopolymers ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lie-Ding Shiau
Author(s):  
Louis Kaplow

Throughout the world, the rule against price fixing is competition law's most important and least controversial prohibition. Yet there is far less consensus than meets the eye on what constitutes price fixing, and prevalent understandings conflict with the teachings of oligopoly theory that supposedly underlie modern competition policy. This book offers a fresh, in-depth exploration of competition law's horizontal agreement requirement, presents a systematic analysis of how best to address the problem of coordinated oligopolistic price elevation, and compares the resulting direct approach to the orthodox prohibition. The book elaborates the relevant benefits and costs of potential solutions, investigates how coordinated price elevation is best detected in light of the error costs associated with different types of proof, and examines appropriate sanctions. Existing literature devotes remarkably little attention to these key subjects and instead concerns itself with limiting penalties to certain sorts of interfirm communications. Challenging conventional wisdom, the book shows how this circumscribed view is less well grounded in the statutes, principles, and precedents of competition law than is a more direct, functional proscription. More important, by comparison to the communications-based prohibition, the book explains how the direct approach targets situations that involve both greater social harm and less risk of chilling desirable behavior—and is also easier to apply.


2020 ◽  
pp. 97-110
Author(s):  
E. N. Mikhailova ◽  
V. A. Telegina

The article is devoted to the study of evaluative tools used in modern French media in order to form the media image of a representative of the political elite. The techniques used in the creation of a memorial media portrait of Jacques Chirac (1932—2019), President of France from 1995 to 2007 are considered. The research material was the most prestigious French print media of various political orientations, published in late September — early October 2019 in connection with the death of the ex-President of the French Republic. The relevance of the research topic is dictated by the close attention of modern linguistics to axiological phenomena, differently presented in different types of discursive practices. The novelty of the study is due to the appeal to the analysis of the complex of evaluation tools used in the French print media when characterizing the former leader of the state during the nation’s farewell period. The estimated potential of the title of the article and its influence on the formation of the estimated vector of the entire text of the publication are shown. A systematic analysis of the assessment expression means, reflected in the memorial media portrait of the politician, is given. The factors that influenced the peculiarities of their use in this type of media portrait are revealed.


Author(s):  
Elena Lytvynenko ◽  
◽  
Taisiya Kozlova ◽  

The changeable and unpredictable development of the enterprises’ external environment is one of the appearance causes of various types of business activities' risks, including logistics. The purpose of this article is to develop recommendations on improving the risk management of enterprises’ logistics activities in the context of instability. Achieving this goal requires consideration of the main stages of this process regarding the logistics activities' risks, providing advices on improving the process of risk management of logistics orientation. The article explores the process of analyzing the logistics activities' risks of the enterprise. Proceeding from the theoretical provisions of management and summarizing the practical experience of research in the field of systematic analysis of the enterprises' logistics activities risks, there are traced the organization's peculiarities of such analysis, and the main directions of its further improvement are proposed. All actions in the article, which are related to the analysis of the risk of enterprise logistics activity, are proposed to carry out in a certain sequence in the article. This sequence is given in the form of a structural scheme of systematic analysis of the risks of the enterprise logistics activities. Based on the objectivity of the existence of logistics activities' risks and the need to ensure the rational management of them, the algorithm of the risk management in the enterprise logistics system covers the stages of risks' identification, their qualitative and quantitative assessment, diagnostics, assessment of risk acceptability and application of neutralization measures to unacceptable logistical risks. It is concluded that the logistics activities risks combine different types of risks of all components and elements both in the process of changing material, financial and information flows, as well as in the process of managing the risks arising in the logistics system


1962 ◽  
Vol 115 (5) ◽  
pp. 891-902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert C. Mellors ◽  
Witold J. Brzosko

After intravenous injection in mice, rabbit immune complexes, solubilized in antigen excess and containing fluorescent antigens (BSA* or OA*) or fluorescent antibody, or both, were promptly localized in reticuloendothelial cells, and polymorphonuclear leukocytes, of the sinusoids of liver and the red pulp of spleen; in glomeruli and elsewhere in kidney; in capillary endothelium of heart and lung; and in hepatic cells. Thereafter manifold processes occurred. Within 48 hours the immune complexes were scarcely detectable in liver and splenic red pulp but now were localized in the germinal centers of white pulp where heretofore they had been seen only in trace amounts. This new localization presumably was associated with the antibody-forming activity of the germinal centers, for the immune phase of antigen clearance from the blood had already begun. Although the immune complexes were localized in various regions of the nephrons and their appertaining blood vessels, the initial sites of predilection were the glomerular capillary walls and intercapillary spaces. After 48 hours the immune complexes were still detectable, although in diminished amounts, in the glomeruli but had by now essentially disappeared from other renal sites. The localization of immune complexes in the kidney was associated with proteinuria and with structural changes which closely simulated in some instances those of human membranous glomerulonephritis, of focal and diffuse types, and consisted mainly of eosinophilic swellings of the glomerular capillary walls, intercapillary spaces, and basement membranes. There was a close correspondence between the distributions of the eosinophilic swellings and the fluorescent immune complexes. The renal localization and persistence of fluorescent antigens (BSA* or OA*), after separate injections in mice, differed from that of fluorescent immune complexes in several respects. For example BSA* showed predilection for the glomerular basement membranes and was localized sparsely in the capillary walls and intercapillary spaces; OA* was localized only in minute amounts; and neither was detectable in more than trace amounts at 48 hours after injection. These fluorescent proteins (of low molecular weights, 40,000, 70,000) did not cause glomerulonephritis within the time interval studied, whereas fluorescent immune complexes, containing on the average two molecules of antigen to one of antibody (with minimum molecular weights of 240,000 to 300,000) produced glomerulonephritis in some instances, in confirmation of the observations of others. Since the localization of the immune complexes occurred immediately and without known immunologic relation to the kidney itself, the selective physical retention of proteins by structures comprising the glomerular ultrafilters appeared to be of pathogenic significance in this form of membranous glomerulonephritis in mice, as perhaps also in nephrotic glomerulonephritis in man. If after injection of fluorescent immune complex, homologous antiserum was also administered intravenously so as to produce acute anaphylactic death, coarse and occlusive depositions of immune precipitates occurred in pulmonary, myocardial, and renal capillaries, and in hepatic sinusoids.


1947 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 990-997 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. V. Sarbach ◽  
B. S. Garvey

Abstract Solubility studies on unvulcanized rubbers are very useful both to indicate types of materials most likely to be good solvents and softeners and to indicate the effect of various solvents and oils on vulcanized rubbers. Furthermore, such studies are so simple and relatively economical of time and effort that they make possible the accumulation of a broad background of data which would be impractical to obtain by other means. By investigating the effect of a wide variety of solvents on a single rubber it is possible to tell which groups have good solvent action and which do not. This information makes it possible to predict, with considerable accuracy, the solvent power of any material of known composition. The solvent power of a given material, together with chemical stability, boiling point, melting point, and viscosity, indicates quite well its utility as a softener. In many cases the nature of the solution also indicates whether or not the material is an effective tackifier. The usefulness of such solubility data in cement manufacture is obvious. It is generally true that materials which are good solvents for an unvulcanized rubber are strong swelling agents for the same rubber when vulcanized. Here also such properties as melting point and viscosity have an important bearing on the time required to reach equilibrium and on the permanence of the swelling action. In agreement with the above views, solubility studies were carried out during the early evaluation of a number of synthetic rubbers. Solvents were selected so as to show the effect of various functional groups, different types of hydrocarbon radicals, chain length and branching in aliphatic radicals, and molecular weights. Allowances were made for differences in viscosity and molecular weight. These studies were then used both for the selection of cement solvents and softeners and for predicting the utility of the rubbers for various types of solvent resistance. These studies proved so useful that they have recently been brought up to date for publication.


1984 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-157
Author(s):  
M.H. Eccles ◽  
A.M. Glauert

The interaction between human peripheral blood monocytes and immobilized immune complexes has been monitored by morphological and biochemical criteria using an established model system previously used with human eosinophils. The model consists of an agar layer containing immune complexes. Monocytes flatten extensively on these layers and make very close contact with the agar surface; cells incubated on control layers, without antibody, are more loosely attached. After 15 min incubation on immobilized immune complexes there is a ‘pulse’ of lysosomal enzyme release from the monocytes and electron micrographs indicate that extracellular secretion occurs. Simultaneously, two proteins with apparent molecular weights of 50 000 and 25 000 appear at the cell surface as a specific consequence of the interaction with immune complexes. These newly accessible proteins were detected by lactoperoxidase-catalysed iodination, and the major of the two (labelled M3) has similarities to a protein with an apparent molecular weight of 55 000 of human eosinophils (labelled protein 3), which has been shown to be closely associated with the eosonophil Fc receptor. It will be of interest to establish whether a similar association occurs in monocytes.


Author(s):  
Jeff McMahan

This chapter offers a systematic analysis of the notion of proportionality in both moral philosophy and law, particularly the law of armed conflict. Proportionality is a constraint on different forms of justification for harming people. There are thus different forms of proportionality corresponding to different types of justification. The proportionality constraint should not be conflated with a different constraint—the necessity constraint—which in turn must be carefully distinguished from necessity as a form of justification. The chapter explains how the proportionality constraint and the necessity constraint are distinguished by the different comparisons they require. It further explains the relations between the requirement of proportionality in jus ad bellum and the requirement of proportionality in jus in bello and argues that the criterion of proportionality in the law of jus in bello is actually incoherent. The final section elucidates the various matters of moral theory that are relevant to understanding how the requirement of proportionality applies in practice to the action of combatants who fight in just wars.


2020 ◽  
Vol 305 ◽  
pp. 00059
Author(s):  
Csaba Lorinţ ◽  
Eugen Traistă ◽  
Adrian Florea

There are several situations in which it is necessary to clarify the types of coal that enter into the composition of mixtures: technical expertise and/or establishing the nature of some coal wastes, often from old stockpiles, in order to eliminate them. The proposed method is based on the identification and description of those mineralogical-petrographic and physico-chemical properties whose pursuit can lead to a diagnosis in differentiation of coal types. Systematic analysis involves in the first stage the identification of the different types of coal present in the sample by mineralogical analysis. From the sample subjected to mineralogical analysis, granules are extracted from the different types of coal present in the sample and the characteristics defining them are determined: moisture and hygroscopic moisture content, volatile matter content, fixed carbon content, agglutination characteristics, etc. Further, the characteristics of the mixtures are determined on another part of the sample and their structure is determined by algebraic methods.


2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 547-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANNA L. HOWE ◽  
ANDREW E. JONES ◽  
CHERYL TILSE

ABSTRACTThe diversity of terms and meanings relating to housing with services for older people confounds systematic analysis, especially in international comparative research. This paper presents an analysis of over 90 terms identified in literature from the United Kingdom, the United States of America, Canada, Australia and New Zealand reporting types of housing with services under the umbrella of ‘service integrated housing’ (SIH), defined as all forms of accommodation built specifically for older people in which the housing provider takes responsibility for delivery of one or more types of support and care services. A small number of generic terms covering housing for people in later life, home and community care, and institutional care are reviewed first to define the scope of SIH. Review of the remainder identifies different terms applied to similar types of SIH, similar terms applied to different types, and different terms that distinguish different types. Terms are grouped into those covering SIH focused on lifestyle and recreation, those offering only support services, and those offering care as well as support. Considerable commonality is found in underlying forms of SIH, and common themes emerge in discussion of drivers of growth and diversification, formal policies and programmes, and symbolic meanings. In establishing more commonality than difference, clarification of terminology advances policy debate, programme development, research and knowledge transfer within and between countries.


e-Polymers ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alvaro H. Arnez-Prado ◽  
Luis J. González-Ortiz ◽  
Francisco J. Aranda-García ◽  
Carlos F. Jasso-Gastinel

AbstractSemicontinuous seeded emulsion copolymerizations, using 5 different types of feeding profiles of comonomers (styrene/butyl acrylate, S/BA) were carried out, to vary in a gradual manner the composition of the copolymer chains formed throughout the reactions (gradient composition copolymer, GCC). For comparison, equivalent core-shell type polymeric materials were synthesized in two stages (TS). In all reactions, the S/BA global mass ratio was: 70/30. To estimate the weight composition distribution (WCD) of the copolymer chains, the cumulative styrene content in the polymer mass was followed throughout the reaction (1H-NMR). Average molecular weights were determined using SEC. The differences in mechanical performance were established, carrying out a mechanodynamic (DMA), and mechanostatic characterization (stress-strain at several temperatures and, Izod testing). The area under the loss modulus curve (LA) was correlated with Izod impact strength, showing the damping superiority of the GCCs over the T-S material. At all tested temperatures (between 25 and 70 °C), the GCC materials exhibited yielding and plastic deformation, while the T-S material presented brittle fracture in that temperature interval. The WCDs were used to elucidate the differences in mechanical behaviour among GCC materials. The feeding profile variation in combination with the WCD analysis represents a novel methodology to produce tailor made copolymers.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document