Publications by authors named "Laue B"

This contribution presents the design and implementation of a compact and robust Echelle-inspired cross-grating spectrometer which is arranged as a double pass setup. This allows use of the employed refractive elements for collimation of the incoming light and, after diffraction at the reflective crossed diffraction grating, for imaging the diffracted light onto the detector. The crossed diffraction grating combines the two dispersive functionalities of a classical Echelle spectrometer in a single element and is therefore formed by a superposition of two blazed linear gratings which are oriented perpendicularly.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A method that significantly increases the detection efficiency of filter array-based spectral sensors is proposed. The basic concept involves a wavelength-dependent redistribution of incident light before it reaches the filter elements located in front of the detector. Due to this redistribution, each filter element of the array receives a spatially concentrated amount of a pre-selected and adjusted spectral partition of the entire incident light.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The diversification of lineages within Pseudomonas syringae has involved a number of adaptive shifts from herbaceous hosts onto various species of tree, resulting in the emergence of highly destructive diseases such as bacterial canker of kiwi and bleeding canker of horse chestnut. This diversification has involved a high level of gene gain and loss, and these processes are likely to play major roles in the adaptation of individual lineages onto their host plants. In order to better understand the evolution of P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and gene loss are key processes in bacterial evolution. However, the role of gene gain and loss in the emergence and maintenance of ecologically differentiated bacterial populations remains an open question. Here, we use whole-genome sequence data to quantify gene gain and loss for 27 lineages of the plant-associated bacterium Pseudomonas syringae.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A recently emerging bleeding canker disease, caused by Pseudomonas syringae pathovar aesculi (Pae), is threatening European horse chestnut in northwest Europe. Very little is known about the origin and biology of this new disease. We used the nucleotide sequences of seven commonly used marker genes to investigate the phylogeny of three strains isolated recently from bleeding stem cankers on European horse chestnut in Britain (E-Pae).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Context: General practices educate increasing numbers of learners at various stages. Criteria for educational provision exist, but practices supporting learners at different stages and from different institutions might face different criteria.

Methods: Criteria for practice-based teaching were developed at a workshop at a national conference.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Ear syringing is a common procedure performed for a variety of symptoms in primary care. Reports of its effectiveness vary considerably and no randomised controlled trials (RCTs) have been performed.

Aim: To estimate the effect of ear syringing on hearing thresholds and on symptoms leading to ear syringing in general practice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A total of 137 soilborne and plant-associated bacterial strains belonging to different Pseudomonas species were tested for their ability to synthesize N-acyl-homoserine lactones (NAHL). Fifty-four strains synthesized NAHL. Interestingly, NAHL production appears to be more common among plant-associated than among soilborne Pseudomonas spp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Several different species of Pseudomonas: produce N:-acylhomoserine lactones (AHLs), quorum-sensing signal molecules which are involved in the cell-density-dependent control of secondary metabolite and virulence gene expression. When Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 was cross-streaked against AHL biosensors capable of sensitively detecting either short (C(4)-C(8)) or long (C(10)-C(14)) acyl chain AHLs, no activity was detectable. However, by extracting cell-free stationary-phase culture supernatants with dichloromethane followed by reverse-phase HPLC, three distinct fractions were obtained capable of activating the AHL biosensors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A fine-scale phylogenetic comparison was made among the symbionts of different genera of hydrothermal vent tube worms. These included Riftia pachyptila and Tevnia jerichonona, which inhabit sites along the east Pacific Rise, and Ridgeia piscesae from the Juan de Fuca Ridge. An analysis of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) was employed using three symbiont-specific gene probes: eubacterial 16S rRNA, RuBPC/O Form II, and ATP sulfurylase (recently cloned from the Riftia symbiont).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The bacterium Myxococcus xanthus undergoes a primitive developmental cycle in response to nutrient deprivation. The cells aggregate to form fruiting bodies in which a portion of the cells differentiate into environmentally resistant myxospores. During the growth portion of the M.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The bacterium Myxococcus xanthus alternates between two colony types distinguished by colony morphology and pigmentation. Because the two phases are interconvertible, this phenomenon has been termed phase variation. In one phase, the colonies are bright yellow, rough, and swarming.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

ATP sulfurylase is a key enzyme in the energy-generating sulfur oxidation pathways of many chemoautotrophic bacteria. The utilization of reduced sulfur compounds to fuel CO2 fixation by the still-uncultured bacterial endosymbionts provides the basis of nutrition in invertebrates, such as the tubeworm Riftia pachyptila, found at deep-sea hydrothermal vents. The symbiont-containing trophosome tissue contains high levels of ATP sulfurylase activity, facilitating the recent purification of the enzyme.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Considering the sociological and historical relativeness of 'objective' guilt and the relativeness of guilt feelings in the light of 'objective guilt' the authors delve into the problem of whether there exists such a thing as 'objective guilt'. This is particularly relevant after considering recent American investigations by Kohlberg et al. on children's development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The myth of oedipus follows - from an anthropological-phenomenological point of view - an interpretation as a tragedy of enlightment. Oedipus solves the riddle of the sphinx concerning the finality of human life. By this he has done the step from the cyclical conception of life, essential for early humanity and childhood, towards the causal and teleological thinking of modern man.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In an anthropological-phenomenological interpretation the authors demonstrate the multitude of determinants that constitute the myth of Narciss: the connection of rejection by the nymph "Echo", the further relation of rejection, suffering and the development of reflection, the relation between reflection - thinking - and death, that forms the nucleus of the myth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF