The shelter belt effect: beetles in the litter-layer of Tamarix nebkha in the north rim of Taklamakan

2017 ◽  
Vol 37 (19) ◽  
Author(s):  
王晶 WANG Jing ◽  
吕昭智 LÜ Zhaozhi ◽  
尹传华 YIN Chuanhua ◽  
李锦辉 LI Jinhui ◽  
吴文岳 WU Wenyue
2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (8) ◽  
pp. 4827-4835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongning He ◽  
Steffen Mueller ◽  
Paul R. Chipman ◽  
Carol M. Bator ◽  
Xiaozhong Peng ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Structures of all three poliovirus (PV) serotypes (PV1, PV2, and PV3) complexed with their cellular receptor, PV receptor (PVR or CD155), were determined by cryoelectron microscopy. Both glycosylated and fully deglycosylated CD155 exhibited similar binding sites and orientations in the viral canyon for all three PV serotypes, showing that all three serotypes use a common mechanism for cell entry. Difference maps between the glycosylated and deglycosylated CD155 complexes determined the sites of the carbohydrate moieties that, in turn, helped to verify the position of the receptor relative to the viral surface. The proximity of the CD155 carbohydrate site at Asn105 to the viral surface in the receptor-virus complex suggests that it might interfere with receptor docking, an observation consistent with the properties of mutant CD155. The footprints of CD155 on PV surfaces indicate that the south rim of the canyon dominates the virus-receptor interactions and may correspond to the initial CD155 binding state of the receptor-mediated viral uncoating. In contrast, the interaction of CD155 with the north rim of the canyon, especially the region immediately outside the viral hydrophobic pocket that normally binds a cellular “pocket factor,” may be critical for the release of the pocket factor, decreasing the virus stability and hence initiating uncoating. The large area of the CD155 footprint on the PV surface, in comparison with other picornavirus-receptor interactions, could be a potential limitation on the viability of PV escape mutants from antibody neutralization. Many of these are likely to have lost their ability to bind CD155, resulting in there being only three PV serotypes.


1991 ◽  
Vol 383 ◽  
pp. 233
Author(s):  
Richard G. Teske
Keyword(s):  

Fire ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentijn Hoff ◽  
Eric Rowell ◽  
Casey Teske ◽  
LLoyd Queen ◽  
Tim Wallace

While operational fire severity products inform fire management decisions in Grand Canyon National Park (GRCA), managers have expressed the need for better quantification of the consequences of severity, specifically forest structure. In this study we computed metrics related to the forest structure from airborne laser scanning (ALS) data and investigated the influence that fires that burned in the decade previous had on forest structure on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon in Arizona. We found that fire severity best explains the occurrence of structure classes that include canopy cover, vertical fuel distribution, and surface roughness. In general we found that high fire severity resulted in structure types that exhibit lower canopy cover and higher surface roughness. Areas that burned more frequently with lower fire severity in general had a more closed canopy and a lower surface roughness, with less brush and less conifer regeneration. In a random forests modeling exercise to examine the relationship between severity and structure we found mean canopy height to be a powerful explanatory variable, but still proved less informative than the three-component structure classification. We show that fire severity not only impacts forest structure but also brings heterogeneity to vegetation types along the elevation gradient on the Kaibab plateau. This work provides managers with a unique dataset, usable in conjunction with vegetation, fuels and fire history data, to support management decisions at GRCA.


1967 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 363 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ervin M. Schmutz ◽  
Charles C. Michaels ◽  
B. Ira Judd
Keyword(s):  

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