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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

Study of hepatic cytochrome P450 system in Richardson ground squirrels

Ling, Binbing 14 December 2005
Richardson ground squirrels (gophers) are pests on the prairies that cause considerable agricultural and ecological damage. Traditional control methods such as the rodenticides strychnine, zinc phosphide, and anticoagulants, have proven ineffective in reducing gopher densities. In additional, current gopher control methods have the significant potential to cause primary and secondary toxicity to non-target animals. Thus, alternative methods for toxicological control of gophers are needed to mitigate these concerns. Present studies focused on the cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme system responsible for xenobiotic detoxification in gophers. In vitro hepatic microsomal systems and HPLC analysis were used to elucidate general metabolic characteristics of major gopher xenobiotic metabolizing pathways. We found that the content and activity of individual components of the CYP450 system including CYP450, cytochrome b5, and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase in liver microsomal preparations were higher in gophers exposed to toxins used to control their population than in naïve (unexposed) gophers. When in vitro CYP450 mediated activities for five substrates [coumarin and aniline aromatic hydroxylation, 7-methoxycouamrin O-demethylation, and N-methylaniline, and N,N-dimethylaniline N-demethylation] were measured, naïve gophers were identified to have higher specific activity but similar whole body activity compared to the exposed gophers. Furthermore, there was a clearly identifiable sub-population of poor metabolizers showing considerably lower CYP450 activity within the gopher samples studied. Clotrimazole was found to be a potent inhibitor of several substrates of CYP450 enzyme-mediated reactions, which included aniline aromatic hydroxylation, N-methylaniline and N,N-dimethylaniline N-demethylation, and 7-methoxycoumarin O-demethylation. The cytotoxicity of above compounds was tested using freshly isolated gopher hepatocytes. The results showed that each compound caused considerable cytotoxicity to gopher hepatocytes. Addition of clotrimazole to the freshly isolated hepatocyte suspension increased the cytotoxicity of all tested compounds. <p>In conclusion, gophers may develop resistance to current chemical control methods through the enhancement of CYP450 system content, which can compensate the loss of enzyme activity. Furthermore, clotrimazole is a potent cytochrome P450 inhibitor, which increases the cytotoxicity caused by given compounds in gopher livers. The concept of using CYP450 enzyme inhibitor in combination with another chemical whose elimination depends on CYP450 metabolism to improve current gopher control method has practical importance.
182

Ground Penetrating Radar Imaging of Ancient Clastic Deposits: A Tool for Three-dimensional Outcrop Studies

Akinpelu, Oluwatosin 14 January 2011 (has links)
The growing need for better definition of flow units and depositional heterogeneities in petroleum reservoirs and aquifers has stimulated a renewed interest in outcrop studies as reservoir analogues in the last two decades. Despite this surge in interest, outcrop studies remain largely two-dimensional; a major limitation to direct application of outcrop knowledge to the three dimensional heterogeneous world of subsurface reservoirs. Behind-outcrop Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) imaging provides high-resolution geophysical data, which when combined with two dimensional architectural outcrop observation, becomes a powerful interpretation tool. Due to the high resolution, non-destructive and non-invasive nature of the GPR signal, as well as its reflection-amplitude sensitivity to shaly lithologies, three-dimensional outcrop studies combining two dimensional architectural element data and behind-outcrop GPR imaging hold significant promise with the potential to revolutionize outcrop studies the way seismic imaging changed basin analysis. Earlier attempts at GPR imaging on ancient clastic deposits were fraught with difficulties resulting from inappropriate field techniques and subsequent poorly-informed data processing steps. This project documents advances in GPR field methodology, recommends appropriate data collection and processing procedures and validates the value of integrating outcrop-based architectural-element mapping with GPR imaging to obtain three dimensional architectural data from outcrops. Case studies from a variety of clastic deposits: Whirlpool Formation (Niagara Escarpment), Navajo Sandstone (Moab, Utah), Dunvegan Formation (Pink Mountain, British Columbia), Chinle Formation (Southern Utah) and St. Mary River Formation (Alberta) demonstrate the usefulness of this approach for better interpretation of outcrop scale ancient depositional processes and ultimately as a tool for refining existing facies models, as well as a predictive tool for subsurface reservoir modelling. While this approach is quite promising for detailed three-dimensional outcrop studies, it is not an all-purpose panacea; thick overburden, poor antenna-ground coupling in rough terrains typical of outcrops, low penetration and rapid signal attenuation in mudstone and diagenetic clay- rich deposits often limit the prospects of this novel technique.
183

Study of hepatic cytochrome P450 system in Richardson ground squirrels

Ling, Binbing 14 December 2005 (has links)
Richardson ground squirrels (gophers) are pests on the prairies that cause considerable agricultural and ecological damage. Traditional control methods such as the rodenticides strychnine, zinc phosphide, and anticoagulants, have proven ineffective in reducing gopher densities. In additional, current gopher control methods have the significant potential to cause primary and secondary toxicity to non-target animals. Thus, alternative methods for toxicological control of gophers are needed to mitigate these concerns. Present studies focused on the cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme system responsible for xenobiotic detoxification in gophers. In vitro hepatic microsomal systems and HPLC analysis were used to elucidate general metabolic characteristics of major gopher xenobiotic metabolizing pathways. We found that the content and activity of individual components of the CYP450 system including CYP450, cytochrome b5, and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase in liver microsomal preparations were higher in gophers exposed to toxins used to control their population than in naïve (unexposed) gophers. When in vitro CYP450 mediated activities for five substrates [coumarin and aniline aromatic hydroxylation, 7-methoxycouamrin O-demethylation, and N-methylaniline, and N,N-dimethylaniline N-demethylation] were measured, naïve gophers were identified to have higher specific activity but similar whole body activity compared to the exposed gophers. Furthermore, there was a clearly identifiable sub-population of poor metabolizers showing considerably lower CYP450 activity within the gopher samples studied. Clotrimazole was found to be a potent inhibitor of several substrates of CYP450 enzyme-mediated reactions, which included aniline aromatic hydroxylation, N-methylaniline and N,N-dimethylaniline N-demethylation, and 7-methoxycoumarin O-demethylation. The cytotoxicity of above compounds was tested using freshly isolated gopher hepatocytes. The results showed that each compound caused considerable cytotoxicity to gopher hepatocytes. Addition of clotrimazole to the freshly isolated hepatocyte suspension increased the cytotoxicity of all tested compounds. <p>In conclusion, gophers may develop resistance to current chemical control methods through the enhancement of CYP450 system content, which can compensate the loss of enzyme activity. Furthermore, clotrimazole is a potent cytochrome P450 inhibitor, which increases the cytotoxicity caused by given compounds in gopher livers. The concept of using CYP450 enzyme inhibitor in combination with another chemical whose elimination depends on CYP450 metabolism to improve current gopher control method has practical importance.
184

Managing projects with strong technological rupture case of high-speed ground transportation systems /

Tilière, Guillaume de. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Civil Engineering)--École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne, 2002. / PDF document ; contains 333 pages, with illustrations and charts (some col.). "Thèse no. 2568 (2002)." Includes bibliographical references.
185

Broadband counter-wound helix antenna for land mine detection /

Shivandas, Dilipkumar. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Systems Engineering)--Naval Postgraduate School, March 2004. / Thesis advisor(s): David C. Jenn. Includes bibliographical references (p. 89-92). Also available online.
186

Analysis of the variation of horizontal stresses and strains in bedded deposits in the eastern and midwestern United States

Dolinar, Dennis R. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--West Virginia University, 2004. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains xv, 120 p. : ill. (some col.), maps. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 102-109).
187

Broadband counterwound spiral antenna for subsurface radar applications /

Lim, Teck Yong. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Engineering Science (Electrical Engineering))--Naval Postgraduate School, December 2003. / Thesis advisor(s): David Jenn, Jeffrey B. Knorr. Includes bibliographical references (p. 73-76). Also available online.
188

Hydraulic management of SDI wastewater dispersal in an Alabama Black Belt soil

He, Jiajie. Dougherty, Mark, Lange, Clifford R. January 2009 (has links)
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Auburn University, 2009. / Abstract. Includes bibliographic references (p.140-163).
189

The mite Haemolaelaps glasgowi (Acarina: Laelaptidae) found on the round-tailed ground squirrel near Tucson, Arizona

Lang, James Delmer, 1942- January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
190

Ground ice characteristics in permafrost on the Fosheim Peninsula, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T. : a study utilizing ground probing radar and geomorphological techniques

Barry, Peter January 1992 (has links)
This thesis investigates the nature and distribution of ground ice occurrences on the central Fosheim Peninsula, Ellesmere Island, and assesses the potential for thermokarst in light of possible climatic warming. / Field observations conducted in 1990 and 1991 involved geomorphological and cryostratigraphic examinations of twenty-eight ground ice sections exposed in retrogressive thaw slumps and ground probing radar surveys of two of the thaw slumps. Samples were taken of ground ice and sediments exposed in thaw slump headwalls for laboratory analysis. / Samples were analyzed for moisture content, grain size distribution, and Atterberg limits. Gravimetric ice contents were calculated and an average ice content profile was constructed for the study area. / Ground ice was found to be an important component of permafrost on the Fosheim Peninsula and was widely observed in Holocene marine sediments. The ice occurred in two stratigraphic settings at depths of one to five meters in silt and clay, and at ten meters or deeper beneath massive clay. Ice contents were generally found to increase rapidly with depth down to three meters, below which ice content was stabilized. / Ground probing radar was found to be a useful tool for permafrost research, given its ability to discriminate between ice and soil, as well as between frozen and unfrozen water.

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