Publications by authors named "Hathaway G"

In 2009 a Consensus Conference of experts in the field of spiritual care and palliative care recommended the inclusion of Board-certified professional chaplains with at least 1,600 hours of clinical pastoral education as members of palliative care teams. This study evaluates a clinical pastoral education residency program's effectiveness in preparing persons to provide spiritual care for those with serious illness and in increasing the palliative care team members' understanding of the chaplain as part of the palliative care team. Results showed chaplain residents felt the program prepared them to provide care for those with serious illness.

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While the field of emotions research has benefited from new developments in neuroscience, many theoretical questions remain unsolved. We propose that integrating our iterative reprocessing (IR) framework with the passive frame theory (PFT) may help unify competing theoretical perspectives of emotion. Specifically, we propose that PFT and the IR framework offer a point of origin for emotional experience.

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The neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) influences prosocial behavior(s), aggression, and stress responsiveness, and these diverse effects are regulated in a species- and context-specific manner. The naked mole-rat (Heterocephalus glaber) is a unique species with which to study context-dependent effects of OT, exhibiting a strict social hierarchy with behavioral specialization within the subordinate caste: soldiers are aggressive and defend colonies against unfamiliar conspecifics while workers are prosocial and contribute to in-colony behaviors such as pup care. To determine if OT is involved in subcaste-specific behaviors, we compared behavioral responses between workers and soldiers of both sexes during a modified resident/intruder paradigm, and quantified activation of OT neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and supraoptic nucleus (SON) using the immediate-early-gene marker c-fos co-localized with OT neurons.

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Herein is described a sensitive vacuum balance for measuring the thrust produced by small (∼0.5 kg) thrusters typically employed in microsat station-keeping. The balance is based on a torsion design but incorporates jewel-pivot bearings instead of the more typical torsion spring bearings.

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Empathy for another's physical pain has been demonstrated in humans [1] and mice [2]; in both species, empathy is stronger between familiars. Stress levels in stranger dyads are higher than in cagemate dyads or isolated mice [2, 3], suggesting that stress might be responsible for the absence of empathy for the pain of strangers. We show here that blockade of glucocorticoid synthesis or receptors for adrenal stress hormones elicits the expression of emotional contagion (a form of empathy) in strangers of both species.

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Social status is a key regulator of health and reproduction in mammals, including humans. Despite this, relatively little is known about how social status influences the mammalian brain. Furthermore, the extent to which status is an independent construct, i.

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Migraine is a highly prevalent, disabling and complex episodic brain disorder whose pathogenesis is poorly understood, due in part to the lack of valid animal models. Here we report behavioral evidence of hallmark migraine features, photophobia and unilateral head pain, in transgenic knock-in mice bearing human familial hemiplegic migraine, type 1 (FHM-1) gain-of-function missense mutations (R192Q or S218L) in the Cacna1a gene encoding the CaV2.1 calcium channel α1 subunit.

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In the analytical approach called chemically targeted identification (CTID), peptides containing phosphorylated or glycosylated serine and threonine underwent beta-elimination to produce an unsaturated double bond. Nucleophilic addition of 2-aminoethanethiol to this bond occurred, yielding aminoethylcysteine. Thus, sites containing posttranslational modifications were made susceptible to lysine endopeptidase.

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Conditional mouse knock-outs provide an informative approach to drug target validation where no pharmacological blockers exist or global knock-outs are lethal. Here, we used the Cre-loxP system to delete BDNF in most nociceptive sensory neurons. Conditional null animals were healthy with no sensory neuron loss.

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Conditions for carrying out chemically targeted identification of peptides containing phosphorylated or glycosylated serine residues have been investigated. Ba(OH)2 was used at ambient temperature to catalyze the beta-elimination reaction at 25 degrees C. Nucleophilic addition of 2-aminoethanethiol was performed in both parallel and tandem experiments.

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IGF binding protein-5 (BP-5) is an important bone formation regulator. Therefore, elucidation of the identity of IGF binding protein-5 (BP-5) protease produced by osteoblasts is important for our understanding of the molecular pathways that control the action of BP-5. In this regard, BP-5 protease purified by various chromatographic steps from a conditioned medium of U2 human osteosarcoma cells migrated as a single major band, which comigrated with the protease activity in native PAGE and yielded multiple bands in SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions.

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A chemical strategy has been developed for identifying phosphorylated and glycosylated sites in peptides. Phosphoserine, phosphothreonine, O-glycosylserine, and O-glycosylthreonine residues in the peptides were converted to the protease-sensitive S-2-aminoethylcysteine derivatives by beta-elimination followed by Michael addition of 2-aminoethanethiol.The resultant lysine analogs were cleaved with Achromobacter lysine endopeptidase.

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Addition of low levels of solid tris-(2-carboxyethyl)-phosphine hydrochloride to Applied Biosystems' R4A (2 mM) and R5 (0.17 mM) resulted in a coupled, phosphinedithiothreitol reducing system. Coupling the two reductants eliminated or greatly decreased interference from the oxidation product of dithiothreitol and allowed quantitation of phenylthiohydantoin (PTH)-Asp below the 400-fmol level.

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Gradient elution, capillary liquid chromatography mass spectrometry was performed with linear, static gradients constructed by laminar flowing ten, 1.5 microL volume steps of decreasing organic concentration into tubing of small internal diameter. Sample loading, gradient formation, and sample elution were accomplished entirely by means of a commercially available micro-autosampler and single-syringe drive pump.

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A method is described for constructing spin columns for reverse-phase centrifugal desalting of proteolytic digests. The technique employs small, self-packed, reusable cartridges and required less than 30 minutes to process six samples, making the procedure useful as a parallel technique. Up to 15 microL of sample could be loaded and eluted with 2 to 7 microL of a solvent compatible with electrospray ionization.

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Two xylanases, xynA of Bacillus pumilus and xyn II of Trichoderma reesei, were purified and then modified by the attachment of pentaammineruthenium, thereby resulting in the generation of a xylanase with veratryl alcohol oxidase activity. Hydrolytic activity of T. reesei xyn II on soluble xylans was unchanged by modification with pentaammineruthenium; however, modification of B.

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A commercially available, matrix-assisted, laser desorption/ionization (MALDI), time-of-flight mass spectrometer has been used for the successful characterization of picomole quantities of modified deoxyoligonucleotides. The procedure was found to be applicable to the analysis of a variety of modified synthetic structures that included oligos with an intact dimethoxytrityl-blocking group, with omega-aminohexyl- and omega-hexyl-modified bases and with alterations to the normal phosphate backbone: 2'-5' and phosphorothioate linkages. Use of an alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid/ammonium formate based matrix gave sharp peaks, sensitivity to 1 pmol, accuracy to 0.

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This descriptive comparative study addresses long distance related stress and coping behaviors of 53 parents of children with cancer. The purpose of the study was to determine the differences in the stress and coping behaviors of parents living 100 miles from the tertiary treatment center compared with those who live less than 100 miles from the center. The theoretical framework used was Lazarus' theory on stress and coping.

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Venom of the funnel web spider Agelenopsis aperta inhibits the binding of 125I-omega-conotoxin GVIA (omega-CgTx) to calcium channels in chick brain synaptosomal membranes. Fractionation of the venom by liquid chromatography shows that this inhibitory activity is associated primarily with a diverse class of peptide toxins called omega-agatoxins (omega-Aga). Using binding inhibition as an assay, we purified and identified the novel, 76-amino acid toxin, omega-Aga-IIIA.

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A survey of 124 protein and/or nucleic acid chemistry facilities has provided a basis for estimating the resources needed to establish a facility, the financial support needed to keep it operating, and the technical capabilities it might reasonably be expected to achieve. Based on these data, an average core facility occupied 870 ft2, was staffed by three full-time personnel, and was equipped with 4-5 major instrument systems. Because user fees generated an average of about $101,000/year in income compared with an average operating budget of about $197,000/year, even a facility that charged user fees would, on average, still require an annual subsidy of about $96,000.

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Totally implanted port catheter systems have a lower incidence of infection and are more easily used in home care that external catheters in adult cancer patients. Experience with this method in children has been limited. During the past 2 years, we have implanted 71 ports in 66 children with cancer.

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