scholarly journals An Assessment of Alternative Low Level Calculation Methods for the Initial Selection of Conformers of Diastereomeric Esters

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrus Metsala ◽  
Sven Tamp ◽  
Kady Danilas ◽  
Ülo Lille ◽  
Ly Villo ◽  
...  

Critical assessment of performance of alternative molecular modeling methods depending on a specific object and goal of the investigation is a question of continuous interest. This prompted us to demonstrate the origin of the guidelines we have used for a rational choice and use of a proper low level calculation method (LLM) for an initial geometry optimization of generated conformers, with the aim of selecting a set for further optimization. What was performed herein was a comparison of LLMs: MM3, MM+, UFF, Dreiding, AM1, PM3, and PM6 on the optimization of conformers’ geometry of α-methoxyphenylacetic acid (MPA) 2-butyl esters as a set of typical diastereomeric esters of a chiral derivatizing agent. This set of esters calculated represents only compounds of this certain type in the current work. The LLM conformer energies were correlated with benchmark energies found by using higher level reference method B3LYP/6-311++G** on the geometries gained previously by optimization with LLMs. In an alternative treatment, the energy range to be covered and corresponding number of LLM optimized conformers obligatory for submitting to further optimization using a high level optimization cascade were considered on the basis of determination of the cut-off conformer (COFC).

Author(s):  
Margarita Khomyakova

The author analyzes definitions of the concepts of determinants of crime given by various scientists and offers her definition. In this study, determinants of crime are understood as a set of its causes, the circumstances that contribute committing them, as well as the dynamics of crime. It is noted that the Russian legislator in Article 244 of the Criminal Code defines the object of this criminal assault as public morality. Despite the use of evaluative concepts both in the disposition of this norm and in determining the specific object of a given crime, the position of criminologists is unequivocal: crimes of this kind are immoral and are in irreconcilable conflict with generally accepted moral and legal norms. In the paper, some views are considered with regard to making value judgments which could hardly apply to legal norms. According to the author, the reasons for abuse of the bodies of the dead include economic problems of the subject of a crime, a low level of culture and legal awareness; this list is not exhaustive. The main circumstances that contribute committing abuse of the bodies of the dead and their burial places are the following: low income and unemployment, low level of criminological prevention, poor maintenance and protection of medical institutions and cemeteries due to underperformance of state and municipal bodies. The list of circumstances is also open-ended. Due to some factors, including a high level of latency, it is not possible to reflect the dynamics of such crimes objectively. At the same time, identification of the determinants of abuse of the bodies of the dead will reduce the number of such crimes.


1969 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 438-441
Author(s):  
Glenn M George ◽  
A C Daftsios ◽  
Joseph L Morrison

Abstract The coccidiostat aklomide is extracted from feed with methanol and assayed colorimetrically by reduction of the nitro group to anamine with titanium trichloride and subsequent color development with t he Bratton-Marshall reaction. Thirteen laboratories studied the method collaboratively on two levels of medicated feed. Overall average recovery was 106.5% of the oretical for the low level and 104.5% of the oretical for the high level. The method is recommended for adoption as official first action


1974 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian Striefel ◽  
Paul M. Smeets

A technique for evaluating preference for television (TV) programs provided six low-level and six high-level retardates with a simultaneous choice of four keys, each programing a different consequence. The total time S depressed each of the four keys resulting in three different TV programs or no program (no audio or video) was recorded. Each consequence was continuously available and the consequence programmed by each key was switched every 2 min. All Ss spent most of the session responding for TV and preferred TV over no consequence. Five low-level and one high-level S showed a preference for a single program. The preference of one low-level and two high-level Ss varied from day to day and that of three high-level Ss changed one or more times during 10 sessions. One program can be repeated many times with low-level retardates before satiation occurs; whereas satiation occurs quickly with high-level retardates. TV preference might well be considered as a technique for selection of reinforcers. The technique has much to offer to those concerned with developing educational programs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-200
Author(s):  
Ari Purno Wahyu ◽  
Umi Hayati

Choosing a major is not an easy matter. There are many factors that must be taken into account and carefully thought out so that in choosing a major, it will cause big losses. There are many ways to determine the selection of majors, one of which is by using fuzzy logic. Determination of majors is determined from the results of the selection test in the academic field with the subjects of Mathematics, English and Computer Knowledge. With the aim of recommending the selection of the right major according to academic abilities and improving quality. By using the fuzzy inference model Mamdani max-min method. The system simulation was tried using the MATLAB Fuzzy Toolbox software. The system design is carried out in several stages, namely: (1) formation of fuzzy sets, (2) formation of rules, (3) determination of the composition of rules, and (4) confirmation (defuzzification). Defuzzification is carried out using the Composite Moment method, with the types of membership functions used are mf-triangular, mf-trapezoid and mf-gaussian. From the results of the tests carried out, it shows that the mf-triangular and mf-trapezoid membership function types produce almost the same level of accuracy. While the membership function type mf-gaussian produces a high level of accuracy for mathematics by 87.50%, English 100% and computer knowledge 81.58%.  


Author(s):  
Stephen K. Reed

Categories reduce the complexity of the environment, are the means by which objects are identified, reduce the need for constant learning, allow for the selection of an appropriate action, and support the organization of objects and events. The most typical members of categories share attributes with the other members of the category. Prototypes are the central members. Hierarchies are composed of subordinate (desk lamp), basic (lamp), and superordinate (furniture) categories. Social categories such as “ baby boomers” classify people but may be associated with misleading stereotypes. Action categories include event boundaries that mark the transition between actions. They are organized into low-level (elbow angle) and high-level (pouring milk) actions.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4021-4021
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Dickson ◽  
Nick Kennedy ◽  
Leanne M. Cork ◽  
Letizia Foroni ◽  
Corinne A. Hedgley ◽  
...  

Abstract CML patients should be screened for Abl kinase domain (KD) mutations before changing tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy to ensure that the second-line TKI will be effective against mutations that arose on the first drug. Sanger sequencing (SS) can confidently detect mutations present in >20% of BCR-ABL molecules but will fail to detect minor resistant sub-clones. If missed, these minor sub-clones may be further selected by the second-line TKI and cause treatment failure. The T315I mutation can be particularly problematic as it is resistant to most TKIs except ponatinib. It seems reasonable to detect all mutations if possible, and avoid second line drugs that are known to be ineffective in their presence. We have developed a next generation sequencing strategy (Illumina MiSeq, 2 x 300 bp) that enables confident detection of all Abl KD mutations present at a level of at least 1% in the BCR-ABL cDNA, this level being 3-5x above the background calling-error rate. Two 500 bp PCR products are sufficient to cover the entire kinase domain (aa M237 to E505). With 300 bp paired-end sequencing of the products, a 65 bp region containing the 315 codon (codons 306-326) is sequenced on both strands. By excluding base changes that are not corroborated on both strands, mutations in this region can be detected with a 10-fold higher accuracy (in 0.1% of BCR-ABL molecules). Samples with low disease burden (1% BCR-ABL/ABL positivity) can also be amplified sufficiently with 50 cycles of PCR, minimising artefactual DNA polymerase-induced mutations. Indexing allows the simultaneous analysis of 80 PCR's in a single MiSeq run (Abl KD of 40 patients). Important aspects of the method are: 50% PhiX DNA is added to the library to increase complexity, and the flow cell is seeded at low density (300,000 clusters per mm2) to reduce sequencing errors.Overlapping paired reads are combined to produce a single FASTQ sequence (modified FLASH source code). Any bases in the overlapping region that do not agree with their counterpart on the other strand are labelled "N" and given a quality score (Q score) of 20.Combined sequences are quality parsed (FASTX Tool Kit) to exclude sequences that do not have a Q score of at least 20 at all basesParsed high quality sequences are compared to the reference sequence. We have sequenced the BCR-ABL KD of patients who were sub-optimal responders (BCR-ABL/ABL ratio of >1% at >= 11 months on therapy) in the NCRI SPIRIT 2 trial of first-line imatinib vs dasatinib. Of 60 sub-optimally responding imatinib patients, 6 (10%) had high level mutations (in >20% of BCR-ABL molecules): T315I, L387F, G250E, N331D, M244V x 2. The patients with L387F and G250E were switched to dasatinib and proceeded to respond well. The patient with T315I was also initially switched to dasatinib but failed to respond (BCR-ABL/ABL 29% after 1 year). This patient eventually received ponatinib with good response (BCR-ABL/ABL <1%). One patient with M244V was switched to nilotinib. Initially this caused relative selection of a pre-existing M387F mutated clone, this mutation increasing from <1% to 55% of BCR-ABL molecules sequenced. However the patient eventually responded well to the drug, indicating that M387F causes only partial resistance to nilotinib. 11/60 (18.3%) imatinib-treated patients had low level mutations present in <20% of BCR-ABL molecules and multiple low-level mutations were seen in 2 patients. One patient had a BCR-ABL/ABL ratio of 40% and 4 non-compound mutations (Y253H - 18%, M244V- 6.5%, K285E - 5.6%, Y312C - 2.6%). All were undetectable by SS. This patient was discontinued from the study and received nilotinib. Nilotinib, which is known to be ineffective against Y253H, caused selection of the Y253H clone to 90% of BCR-ABL molecules and an increase in the BCR-ABL/ABL ratio to 61%. This patient was subsequently switched to ponatinib and responded well (BCR-ABL/ABL ratio < 1%) before undergoing allogeneic transplantation. Of 28 dasatinib-treated patients, 14 had low level mutations including one patient with a T315I of 3.4%. No high-level or compound mutations have so far been discovered in this group at this time point (>11 months). Our study demonstrates the value of using 2 x 300 bp paired-end sequencing to detect high and low level mutations, even in patients with low-level disease burden, to guide the choice of an appropriate second-line TKI. Disclosures Dickson: Ariad: Research Funding. Kennedy:Ariad: Research Funding. Cork:Roche: Research Funding; Ariad: Research Funding; BMS: Research Funding; Novartis: Research Funding. Hedgley:Roche: Research Funding; BMS: Research Funding; Ariad: Research Funding; Novartis: Research Funding. Copland:Ariad: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Pfizer: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Novartis: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; BMS: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding. Holyoake:BMS: Honoraria, Research Funding; Novartis: Honoraria, Research Funding. O'Brien:BMS: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Pzifer: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Ariad: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding. Ramashoye:Ariad: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding.


2013 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 508-515
Author(s):  
Wendy F Lauer ◽  
Jean-Philippe Tourniaire

Abstract A comparative evaluation study of the Bio-Rad® iQ-Check™Listeria species Kit (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) was conducted at Q Laboratories, Inc., Cincinnati, OH. iQ-Check is a rapid method based on real-time PCR amplification and detection of all species of Listeria, including L. grayi, in food and environmental samples. The iQ-Check method was compared to the Health Canada MFHPB-30 reference method for the analysis of five ready-to-eat meats—deli turkey, hot dogs, liver paté, raw fermented sausage, and deli ham—and one stainless steel surface. Each food matrix was analyzed at two contamination levels: a low level at 0.2–2 CFU/25 g and a high level at 2–5 CFU/25 g. The environmental surfaces were analyzed at a low level of 0.2–2 CFU/5 cm2 sampling area and a high level of 2–5 CFU/5 cm2 sampling area. There were 20 replicates per contamination level and five control replicates at 0 CFU/25 g or 0 CFU/5 cm2 sampling area (uninoculated). All samples that were detected by iQ-Check were subsequently confirmed by reference method protocol. There was no significant difference in the number of positive samples detected by the iQ-Check Listeria spp. Kit in comparison to the Health Canada MFHPB-30 method for all matrixes tested.


2009 ◽  
Vol 58 (5) ◽  
pp. 625-629 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Torres ◽  
Rosa Villanueva ◽  
Germán Bou

One hundred and one randomly selected (2003–2005) clinical isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were used to assess the quantitative (MIC) and qualitative (susceptibility category) agreement between the microdilution broth reference method (RM) and disc diffusion (DD), Etest and the VITEK 2 automated susceptibility test system for determination of the susceptibility of P. aeruginosa to piperacillin (PIP), PIP–tazobactam (TZP), ceftazidime (CAZ), aztreonam (ATM) cefepime (FEP) and imipenem (IMP). The results obtained by the RM were compared with those obtained by the other methods. The RM and DD were performed according to CLSI criteria. Etest and VITEK 2 were according to the manufacturer's instructions. The Advanced Expert System (AES), which interprets MICs generated by VITEK 2, was modified with new rules of interpretation. Overall, VITEK 2 showed the lowest MIC90 values for the six antibiotics. The RM categorical testing (susceptibility and resistance) rates with P. aeruginosa were 11.8 and 88.1 for PIP, 22.7 and 77.2 for TZP, 14.8 and 78.2 for CAZ, 12.8 and 54.4 for ATM, 16.8 and 75.3 for FEP, and 7.9 and 90.1 for IMP, respectively. Very major errors (false susceptible) were only detected for ATM and FEP with DD and for IMP with three methods. Major errors (false resistant) were generally acceptable for all antibiotics except TZP. VITEK 2 yielded a high level of minor errors (trends toward false susceptibility), mainly with CAZ and FEP. A good agreement was obtained for all antibiotics/methods assayed, thus highlighting the importance of the AES for categorization of β-lactam susceptibility in P. aeruginosa.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn E Schertz ◽  
Omid Kardan ◽  
Marc Berman

It has recently been shown that the perception of visual features of the environment can influence thought content. Both low-level (e.g., fractalness) and high-level (e.g., presence of water) visual features of the environment can influence thought content, in real-world and experimental settings where these features can make people more reflective and contemplative in their thoughts. It remains to be seen, however, if these visual features retain their influence on thoughts in the absence of overt semantic content, which could indicate a more fundamental mechanism for this effect. In this study, we removed this limitation, by creating scrambled edge versions of images, which maintain edge content from the original images but remove scene identification. Non-straight edge density is one visual feature which has been shown to influence many judgements about objects and landscapes, and has also been associated with thoughts of spirituality. We extend previous findings by showing that non-straight edges retain their influence on the selection of a “Spiritual &amp; Life Journey” topic after scene identification removal. These results strengthen the implication of a causal role for the perception of low-level visual features on the influence of higher-order cognitive function, by demonstrating that in the absence of overt semantic content, low-level features, such as edges, influence cognitive processes.


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