Publications by authors named "E A Bramhall"

Objective: As more women enter the military, it is important to understand how different risks and lifestyle factors influence physical fitness and injury among women in both active duty (AD) and National Guard/Reserve (NG/R). Women in military service are less fit and more likely to suffer musculoskeletal injuries during physical training than men. They also use more medical care during deployment than men.

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This article highlights the importance of effective communication skills for nurses. It focuses on core communication skills, their definitions and the positive outcomes that result when applied to practice. Effective communication is central to the provision of compassionate, high-quality nursing care.

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An immune response to a biotherapeutic can be induced when the therapeutic is processed and presented by antigen presenting cell to T helper cells. This study evaluates the performance of an in vitro assay that can elicit antigen specific effector T cell responses. Two biotherapeutics with known clinical immunogenicity [FPX1 and FPX2] were assessed for their ability to induce antigen-specific IFN-γ secreting T cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC).

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Article Synopsis
  • The GroEL/GroES complex, despite being an ATPase, has a unique structure, and to study its nucleotide binding sites, researchers used a photolabeling technique involving 2-azido-ATP.
  • Three specific residues (Pro137, Cys138, and Thr468) on GroEL were identified as being labeled, indicating that the ATP analog binds to a different conformer of GroEL when GroES is present.
  • The interaction suggests that the labeled residues are near the GroEL/GroEL subunit interface, and although GroES was labeled for detection, a stable derivative for sequencing was not obtained, unlike its homolog from yeast, which did yield a stable derivative.
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Nucleotide-depleted EcF1 binds a maximum of two GTP, ATP, or ADP at noncatalytic sites, whereas all three sites can only be filled by a combination of nucleoside di- and triphosphates. MgPPi prevents binding of GTP and significantly slows ATP binding, suggesting that non-catalytic sites also bind PPi. No binding of GDP at non-catalytic sites could be detected.

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