Human conglutinin-like protein Jensenius, J C; Thiel, S; Baatrup, G ...
Bioscience reports,
10/1985, Volume:
5, Issue:
10-11
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
The presence in human plasma of a molecule homologous to bovine conglutinin is indicated by the results of biological and immunochemical analysis. The human conglutinin-like protein shows ...calcium-dependent binding to complement-treated solid phase IgG and immunological cross-reaction with chicken anti-bovine conglutinin. The binding of the human protein to complement-treated IgG was inhibited by N-acetyl-D-glucosamine but not by other sugars. Analysis by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting showed reaction of anti-conglutinin with molecules of similar mobility to the monomer and hexamer of bovine conglutinin.
Provider: - Institution: - Data provided by Europeana Collections- Between the 17th and 24th April 2010 we conducted a geophysical investigation in the area in the close vicinity of tumulus 26 by a ...Bartington Fluxgate Grad 601-1 gradiometer. We surveyed a yet uninvestigated tumulus found west of T26, as well as a more extended area than that in 2009. The excavations conducted between the 9th of August and 6th of September 2010 were carried out by an international team of archaeologists and students from Germany, Romania and Poland. We numbered a total of 112 find features and stray finds. Most finds consist of pottery, like in the previous campaigns. The main result of the 2010 campaign was the documentation of the large-sized construction of recent phase of raising the tumulus over its entire length and in its essential segments. The revealed features point to a complicated evolution of the construction and reconstruction of this building. At the same time we partially investigated the earlier building from the first phase of the tumulus. It is expected that the dendrochronological tests might result in detailed data on the period when the place of worship in T26 was used.- All metadata published by Europeana are available free of restriction under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. However, Europeana requests that you actively acknowledge and give attribution to all metadata sources including Europeana
The fifth generation (5G) of mobile networks is envisioned to support new applications having demanding requirements, such as low latency and high reliability, which is the focus of this article ...along with enhanced traditional mobile broadband and massive sensing. Different approaches have already been proposed to achieve low latency while guaranteeing high reliability. However, the challenge of efficient resource utilization remains. In this article, concepts for a flexible and low-latency-enabling mobile network architecture are presented, along with strategies for staying efficient. The work is put in perspective with respect to ongoing standardization activities. Finally, future visions for network management architectures and 5G's impact on economic aspects are discussed.