Publications by authors named "Sarah Broadley"

The optoelectronic properties of two layered copper oxyselenide compounds, with nominal composition SrZnOCuSe and BaZnOCuSe, have been investigated to determine their suitability as p-type conductors. The structure, band gaps and electrical conductivity of pristine and alkali-metal-doped samples have been determined. We find that the strontium-containing compound, SrZnOCuSe, adopts the expected tetragonal structure with 4/ symmetry, and has a band gap of 2.

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  • * The private sector has a key role in promoting sustainability but often misses collaboration opportunities with researchers when shaping research priorities that address sustainability challenges.
  • * A meeting between senior scientists and business leaders aimed to identify critical questions to improve understanding of the food-energy-water nexus and emphasized the need for tools and strategies that promote sustainable management within businesses.
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This paper describes the kinetic study of a number of gas-phase reactions involving neutral Ca-containing species, many of which are important for describing the chemistry of meteor-ablated calcium in the Earth's upper atmosphere. Ca atoms were produced thermally in the upstream section of a fast flow tube, and then converted to the molecular species CaO, CaO(2), CaO(3), CaCO(3) or Ca(OH)(2) by the addition of appropriate reagents. Atomic O or H was added further downstream, and both Ca and CaO were detected at the downstream end of the flow tube by laser-induced fluorescence.

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Human misfolding diseases arise when proteins adopt non-native conformations that endow them with a tendency to aggregate and form intra- and/or extra-cellular deposits. Molecular chaperones, such as Hsp70 and TCP-1 Ring Complex (TRiC)/chaperonin containing TCP-1 (CCT), have been implicated as potent modulators of misfolding disease. These chaperones suppress toxicity of disease proteins and modify early events in the aggregation process in a cooperative and sequential manner reminiscent of their functions in de novo protein folding.

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Abstract Several neurodegenerative diseases, including Kennedy's disease (KD), are associated with misfolding and aggregation of polyglutamine (polyQ)-expansion proteins. KD is caused by a polyQ-expansion in the androgen receptor (AR), a key player in male sexual differentiation. Interestingly, KD patients often show signs of mild-to-moderate androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS) resulting from AR dysfunction.

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A series of gas-phase reactions involving molecular Ca-containing ions was studied by the pulsed laser ablation of a calcite target to produce Ca+ in a fast flow of He, followed by the addition of reagents downstream and detection of ions by quadrupole mass spectrometry. Most of the reactions that were studied are important for describing the chemistry of meteor-ablated calcium in the earth's upper atmosphere. The following rate coefficients were measured: k(CaO+ + O --> Ca+ + O2) = (4.

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Disruption of protein homeostasis in mitochondria elicits a cellular response, which upregulates mitochondrial chaperones and other factors that serve to remodel the mitochondrial-folding environment. In a recent study, Haynes and colleagues uncovered a novel signal transduction pathway underlying this process. The upstream mitochondrial component of this pathway is an orthologue of Escherichia coli ClpP, which functions in the bacterial heat-shock response.

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The reactions between Ca(+)(4(2)S(1/2)) and O(3), O(2), N(2), CO(2) and H(2)O were studied using two techniques: the pulsed laser photo-dissociation at 193 nm of an organo-calcium vapour, followed by time-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy of Ca(+) at 393.37 nm (Ca(+)(4(2)P(3/2)-4(2)S(1/2))); and the pulsed laser ablation at 532 nm of a calcite target in a fast flow tube, followed by mass spectrometric detection of Ca(+). The rate coefficient for the reaction with O(3) is essentially independent of temperature, k(189-312 K) = (3.

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The N-terminal and C-terminal domains of mitochondrially synthesized cytochrome c oxidase subunit II, Cox2, are translocated through the inner membrane to the intermembrane space (IMS). We investigated the distinct mechanisms of N-tail and C-tail export by analysis of epitope-tagged Cox2 variants encoded in Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial DNA. Both the N and C termini of a truncated protein lacking the Cox2 C-terminal domain were translocated to the IMS via a pathway dependent upon the conserved translocase Oxa1.

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Several neurodegenerative diseases, including Huntington disease (HD), are associated with aberrant folding and aggregation of polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion proteins. Here we established the zebrafish, Danio rerio, as a vertebrate HD model permitting the screening for chemical suppressors of polyQ aggregation and toxicity. Upon expression in zebrafish embryos, polyQ-expanded fragments of huntingtin (htt) accumulated in large SDS-insoluble inclusions, reproducing a key feature of HD pathology.

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Ion-molecule reactions involving metallic species play a central role in the chemistry of planetary ionospheres and in many combustion processes. The kinetics of the Ca(+) + N(2)O --> CaO(+) + N(2) reaction was studied by the pulsed multiphoton dissociation at 193 nm of organo-calcium vapor in the presence of N(2)O, followed by time-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy of Ca(+) at 393.37 nm (4(2)P(3/2) <-- 4(2)S(1/2)).

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Hsp70 molecular chaperones function in protein folding in a manner dependent on regulation by co-chaperones. Hsp40s increase the low intrinsic ATPase activity of Hsp70, and nucleotide exchange factors (NEFs) remove ADP after ATP hydrolysis, enabling a new Hsp70 interaction cycle with non-native protein substrate. Here, we show that members of the Hsp70-related Hsp110 family cooperate with Hsp70 in protein folding in the eukaryotic cytosol.

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Spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3), like other polyglutamine (polyQ) diseases, is characterized by the formation of intraneuronal inclusions, but the mechanism underlying their formation is poorly understood. Here, we tested the "toxic fragment hypothesis", which predicts that proteolytic production of polyQ-containing fragments from the full-length disease protein initiates the aggregation process associated with inclusion formation and cellular dysfunction. We demonstrate that the removal of the N-terminus of polyQ-expanded ataxin-3 (AT3) is required for aggregation in vitro and in vivo.

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The wide-band-gap semiconductor BaZnOS adopts a high-symmetry modification of the SrZnO2 structure type and contains layers of vertex-linked ZnO2S2 tetrahedra, which represent a novel coordination environment for zinc in the solid state. BaZnOS: orthorhombic, space group Cmcm; a = 3.9619(2) angstroms, b = 12.

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Human misfolding diseases result from the failure of proteins to reach their active state or from the accumulation of aberrantly folded proteins. The mechanisms by which molecular chaperones influence the development of these diseases is beginning to be understood. Mutations that compromise the activity of chaperones lead to several rare syndromes.

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The post-transcriptional role of Mss51p in mitochondrial gene expression is of great interest since MSS51 mutations suppress the respiratory defect caused by shy1 mutations. SHY1 is a Saccharomyces cerevisiae homolog of human SURF1, which when mutated causes a cytochrome oxidase assembly defect. We found that MSS51 is required for expression of the mitochondrial reporter gene ARG8(m) when it is inserted at the COX1 locus, but not when it is at COX2 or COX3.

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