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Coulomb dissociation of 16O into 4He and 12C (2020)
Göbel, Kathrin ; Heil, Michael ; Bott, Lukas ; Brandenburg, Leonard ; Caesar, Christoph ; Deuter, Isabell ; Grein, Alexander ; Keliç-Heil, Aleksandra ; Körper, Daniel ; Löher, Bastian ; Reifarth, René ; Savran, Deniz ; Schulte, Hendrik ; Simon, Haik ; Törnqvist, Hans Toshihide ; Almusidi, Tahani ; Álvarez-Pol, Héctor ; Atkins, Liam ; Aumann, Thomas ; Bemmerer, Daniel ; Benlliure Anaya, Jose Fernando ; Boretzky, Konstanze ; Brückner, Benjamin ; Cabanelas Eiras, Pablo ; Casarejos Ruiz, Enrique ; Cederkäll, Joakim ; Chulkov, Leonid V. ; Cortina Gil, Dolores ; Danilov, Andrey ; Erbacher, Philipp ; Escribano Rodriguez, Sonia ; Fülöp, Zsolt ; Falduto, Ashton ; Fiebiger, Stefan ; Gašparić, Igor ; Garcia Borge, Maria José ; Gernhäuser, Roman ; Glorius, Jan ; Gonzales Caamaño, David ; Hartig, Anna-Lena ; Heftrich, Tanja ; Heggen, Henning ; Heine, Marcel ; Heinz, Andreas ; Hensel, Thomas ; Holl, Matthias ; Johansson, Håkan T. ; Jonson, Björn ; Kalantar-Nayestanaki, Nasser ; Kamenyero, Armel ; Khasawneh, Kafa al- ; Kiselev, Oleg A. ; Klenze, Philipp ; Kohls, Marvin ; Kröll, Thorsten ; Kresan, Dmytro ; Kurtulgil, Cem Deniz ; Kurz, Nikolaus ; Langer, Christoph ; Lehr, Christopher ; Litvinov, Yuri A. ; Lorenz, Enis ; Murillo Morales, Silvia ; Nácher González, Enrique ; Nilsson, Thomas ; Park, Joochun ; Paschalis, Stefanos ; Perea Martinez, Angel ; Petri, Marina ; Plag, Ralf ; Ponnath, Lukas ; Popočovski, Romana ; Reich, Markus ; Rhee, Han-Bum ; Rodriguez Sanchez, Jose Luis ; Rossi, Dominic M. ; Scheit, Heiko ; Schmidt, Konrad ; Slavkovská, Zuzana ; Starostin, Viktor ; Storck, Sonja ; Sürder, Christian ; Tanaka, Junki ; Tengblad, Olof ; Thomas, Benedikt ; Typel, Stefan ; Varga, László ; Volk, Klaus ; Volknandt, Meiko ; Wagner, Vadim ; Wamers, Felix ; Weigand, Mario ; Zanetti, Lorenzo
We measured the Coulomb dissociation of 16O into 4He and 12C at the R3B setup in a first campaign within FAIR Phase 0 at GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung, Darmstadt. The goal was to improve the accuracy of the experimental data for the 12C(α,γ)16O fusion reaction and to reach lower center-ofmass energies than measured so far. The experiment required beam intensities of 109 16O ions per second at an energy of 500 MeV/nucleon. The rare case of Coulomb breakup into 12C and 4He posed another challenge: The magnetic rigidities of the particles are so close because of the same mass-to-charge-number ratio A/Z = 2 for 16O, 12C and 4He. Hence, radical changes of the R3B setup were necessary. All detectors had slits to allow the passage of the unreacted 16O ions, while 4He and 12C would hit the detectors' active areas depending on the scattering angle and their relative energies. We developed and built detectors based on organic scintillators to track and identify the reaction products with sufficient precision.
COMPRENDO : focus and approach (2006)
Schulte-Oehlmann, Ulrike ; Albanis, Triantafyllos ; Allera, Axel ; Bachmann, Jean ; Berntsson, Pia ; Beresford, Nicola ; Carnevali, Daniela Candia ; Ciceri, Francesca ; Dagnac, Thierry ; Falandysz, Jerzy ; Galassi, Silvana ; Hala, David ; Janer, Gemma ; Jeannot, Roger ; Jobling, Susan ; King, Isabella ; Klingmüller, Dietrich ; Kloas, Werner ; Kusk, Kresten Ole ; Levada, Ramon ; Lo, Susan ; Lutz, Ilka ; Oehlmann, Jörg ; Oredsson, Stina ; Porte, Cinta ; Rand-Weaver, Marian ; Sakkas, Vasilis ; Sugni, Michela ; Tyler, Charles ; Aerle, Ronny van ; Ballegoy, Christoph van ; Wollenberger, Leah
Tens of thousands of man-made chemicals are in regular use and discharged into the environment. Many of them are known to interfere with the hormonal systems in humans and wildlife. Given the complexity of endocrine systems, there are many ways in which endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) can affect the body’s signaling system, and this makes unraveling the mechanisms of action of these chemicals difficult. A major concern is that some of these EDCs appear to be biologically active at extremely low concentrations. There is growing evidence to indicate that the guiding principle of traditional toxicology that “the dose makes the poison” may not always be the case because some EDCs do not induce the classical dose–response relationships. The European Union project COMPRENDO (Comparative Research on Endocrine Disrupters—Phylogenetic Approach and Common Principles focussing on Androgenic/Antiandrogenic Compounds) therefore aims to develop an understanding of potential health problems posed by androgenic and antiandrogenic compounds (AACs) to wildlife and humans by focusing on the commonalities and differences in responses to AACs across the animal kingdom (from invertebrates to vertebrates).
Large-Scale Recombinant Production of the SARS-CoV-2 Proteome for High-Throughput and Structural Biology Applications (2021)
Altınçekiç, Nadide ; Korn, Sophie Marianne ; Qureshi, Nusrat Shahin ; Dujardin, Marie ; Ninot-Pedrosa, Martí ; Abele, Rupert ; Abi Saad, Marie Jose ; Alfano, Caterina ; Almeida, Fabio C. L. ; Alshamleh, Islam ; Amorim, Gisele Cardoso de ; Anderson, Thomas K. ; Anobom, Cristiane D. ; Anorma, Chelsea ; Bains, Jasleen Kaur ; Bax, Adriaan ; Blackledge, Martin ; Blechar, Julius ; Böckmann, Anja ; Brigandat, Louis ; Bula, Anna ; Bütikofer, Matthias ; Camacho-Zarco, Aldo R. ; Carlomagno, Teresa ; Caruso, Icaro Putinhon ; Ceylan, Betül ; Chaikuad, Apirat ; Chu, Feixia ; Cole, Laura ; Crosby, Marquise G. ; De Jesus, Vanessa ; Dhamotharan, Karthikeyan ; Felli, Isabella C. ; Ferner, Jan ; Fleischmann, Yanick ; Fogeron, Marie-Laure ; Fourkiotis, Nikolaos K. ; Fuks, Christin ; Fürtig, Boris ; Gallo, Angelo ; Gande, Santosh L. ; Gerez, Juan Atilio ; Ghosh, Dhiman ; Gomes-Neto, Francisco ; Gorbatyuk, Oksana ; Guseva, Serafima ; Hacker, Carolin ; Häfner, Sabine ; Hao, Bing ; Hargittay, Bruno ; Henzler-Wildman, Katherine ; Hoch, Jeffrey C. ; Hohmann, Katharina F. ; Hutchison, Marie T. ; Jaudzems, Kristaps ; Jović, Katarina ; Kaderli, Janina ; Kalnins, Gints ; Kanepe, Iveta ; Kirchdoerfer, Robert N. ; Kirkpatrick, John ; Knapp, Stefan ; Krishnathas, Robin ; Kutz, Felicitas ; Zur Lage, Susanne ; Lambertz, Roderick ; Lang, Andras ; Laurents, Douglas ; Lecoq, Lauriane ; Linhard, Verena ; Löhr, Frank ; Malki, Anas ; Bessa, Luiza Mamigonian ; Martin, Rachel W. ; Matzel, Tobias ; Maurin, Damien ; McNutt, Seth W. ; Mebus-Antunes, Nathane Cunha ; Meier, Beat H. ; Meiser, Nathalie ; Mompeán, Miguel ; Monaca, Elisa ; Montserret, Roland ; Perez, Laura Mariño ; Moser, Celine ; Muhle-Goll, Claudia ; Neves-Martins, Thais Cristtina ; Ni, Xiamonin ; Norton-Baker, Brenna ; Pierattelli, Roberta ; Pontoriero, Letizia ; Pustovalova, Yulia ; Ohlenschläger, Oliver ; Orts, Julien ; Poian, Andrea T. da ; Pyper, Dennis J. ; Richter, Christian ; Riek, Roland ; Rienstra, Chad M. ; Robertson, Angus ; Pinheiro, Anderson S. ; Sabbatella, Raffaele ; Salvi, Nicola ; Saxena, Krishna ; Schulte, Linda ; Schiavina, Marco ; Schwalbe, Harald ; Silber, Mara ; Almeida, Marcius da Silva ; Sprague-Piercy, Marc A. ; Spyroulias, Georgios A. ; Sreeramulu, Sridhar ; Tants, Jan-Niklas ; Tars, Kaspars ; Torres, Felix ; Töws, Sabrina ; Trevino, Miguel A. ; Trucks, Sven ; Tsika, Aikaterini C. ; Varga, Krisztina ; Wang, Ying ; Weber, Marco E. ; Weigand, Julia E. ; Wiedemann, Christoph ; Wirmer-Bartoschek, Julia ; Wirtz Martin, Maria Alexandra ; Zehnder, Johannes ; Hengesbach, Martin ; Schlundt, Andreas
The highly infectious disease COVID-19 caused by the Betacoronavirus SARS-CoV-2 poses a severe threat to humanity and demands the redirection of scientific efforts and criteria to organized research projects. The international COVID19-NMR consortium seeks to provide such new approaches by gathering scientific expertise worldwide. In particular, making available viral proteins and RNAs will pave the way to understanding the SARS-CoV-2 molecular components in detail. The research in COVID19-NMR and the resources provided through the consortium are fully disclosed to accelerate access and exploitation. NMR investigations of the viral molecular components are designated to provide the essential basis for further work, including macromolecular interaction studies and high-throughput drug screening. Here, we present the extensive catalog of a holistic SARS-CoV-2 protein preparation approach based on the consortium’s collective efforts. We provide protocols for the large-scale production of more than 80% of all SARS-CoV-2 proteins or essential parts of them. Several of the proteins were produced in more than one laboratory, demonstrating the high interoperability between NMR groups worldwide. For the majority of proteins, we can produce isotope-labeled samples of HSQC-grade. Together with several NMR chemical shift assignments made publicly available on covid19-nmr.com, we here provide highly valuable resources for the production of SARS-CoV-2 proteins in isotope-labeled form.
Experiments with a fast chopper system for intense ion beams (2011)
Dinter, Hannes ; Droba, Martin ; Lotz, Marcel ; Meusel, Oliver ; Müller, Ilja ; Noll, Daniel ; Ratzinger, Ulrich ; Schulte, Kathrin ; Wagner, Christopher ; Wiesner, Christoph
Chopper systems are used to pulse charged particle beams. In most cases, electric deflection systems are used to generate beam pulses of defined lengths and appropriate repetition rates. At high beam intensities, the field distribution of the chopper system needs to be adapted precisely to the beam dynamics in order to avoid aberrations. An additional challenge is a robust design which guarantees reliable operation. For the Frankfurt Neutron Source FRANZ, an E×B chopper system is being developed which combines static magnetic deflection with a pulsed electric field in a Wien filter configuration. It will generate proton pulses with a flat top of 50 ns at a repetition rate of 250 kHz for 120 keV, 200 mA beams. For the electric deflection, pre-experiments with static and pulsed fields were performed using a helium ion beam. In pulsed mode operation, ion beams of different energies were deflected with voltages of up to ±6 kV and the resulting response was measured using a beam current transformer. A comparison between experiments and theoretical calculations as well as numerical simulations are presented.
Vitamin D levels vary during antiviral treatment but are unable to predict treatment outcome in HCV genotype 1 infected patients (2014)
Grammatikos, Georgios ; Lange, Christian ; Susser, Simone ; Schwendy, Susanne ; Dikopoulos, Nektarios ; Buggisch, Peter ; Encke, Jens ; Teuber, Gerlinde ; Goeser, Tobias ; Thimme, Robert ; Klinker, Hartwig ; Boecher, Wulf O. ; Schulte-Frohlinde, Ewert ; Penna Martinez, Marissa ; Badenhoop, Klaus ; Zeuzem, Stefan ; Berg, Thomas ; Sarrazin, Christoph
Background: Different parameters have been determined for prediction of treatment outcome in hepatitis c virus genotype 1 infected patients undergoing pegylated interferon, ribavirin combination therapy. Results on the importance of vitamin D levels are conflicting. In the present study, a comprehensive analysis of vitamin D levels before and during therapy together with single nucleotide polymorphisms involved in vitamin D metabolism in the context of other known treatment predictors has been performed. Methods: In a well characterized prospective cohort of 398 genotype 1 infected patients treated with pegylated interferon-α and ribavirin for 24–72 weeks (INDIV-2 study) 25-OH-vitamin D levels and different single nucleotide polymorphisms were analyzed together with known biochemical parameters for a correlation with virologic treatment outcome. Results: Fluctuations of more than 5 (10) ng/ml in 25-OH-vitamin D-levels have been observed in 66 (39) % of patients during the course of antiviral therapy and neither pretreatment nor under treatment 25-OH-vitamin D-levels were associated with treatment outcome. The DHCR7-TT-polymorphism within the 7-dehydrocholesterol-reductase showed a significant association (P = 0.031) to sustained viral response in univariate analysis. Among numerous further parameters analyzed we found that age (OR = 1.028, CI = 1.002–1.056, P = 0.035), cholesterol (OR = 0.983, CI = 0.975–0.991, P<0.001), ferritin (OR = 1.002, CI = 1.000–1.004, P = 0.033), gGT (OR = 1.467, CI = 1.073–2.006, P = 0.016) and IL28B-genotype (OR = 2.442, CI = 1.271–4.695, P = 0.007) constituted the strongest predictors of treatment response. Conclusions: While 25-OH-vitamin D-levels levels show considerable variations during the long-lasting course of antiviral therapy they do not show any significant association to treatment outcome in genotype 1 infected patients.
Aufklärung im Kommentar : zu zwei hebräischen Maimonides-Kommentaren von Moses Mendelssohn und Salomon Maimon (2017)
Schulte, Christoph
Nicht nur die Philologie, sondern auch die Philosophie setzt sich jedoch in der Moderne mit dem Kommentar und seiner religiösen Dimension auseinander. Der Beitrag von Christoph Schulte zeigt dies an zwei Maimonides-Kommentaren aus der Haskala, der jüdischen Aufklärung im 18. Jahrhundert: Sowohl der Kommentar Moses Mendelssohns (1761/65) als auch derjenige Salomon Maimons (1791) greifen auf die kanonische Autorität des mittelalterlichen Autors zurück, um die moderne Philosophie der Aufklärung unter ihren jüdischen Zeitgenossen zu propagieren. Nicht zufällig verwenden sie dafür das Genre des Kommentars, die dominante literarische Gattung im rabbinischen Judentum, und damit eine eminent religiöse Form. Dabei will Mendelssohns Kommentar zu Maimonides' Kommentar zu Aristoteles' Logik und Metaphysik die jüdische Religion selbst als kompatibel mit der Aufklärung erweisen. Salomon Maimon hingegen liefert in seinem Kommentar zu Maimonides' philosophischem Hauptwerk "Führer der Unschlüssigen" eine hebräische Einleitung in die Terminologie Immanuel Kants (mit Übersetzung der zentralen Begriffe) wie auch die erste moderne Wissenschafts- und Philosophiegeschichte in hebräischer Sprache überhaupt. Beiden Aufklärern ist also gemeinsam, dass sie sich zwar der nichtjüdischen Welt der Aufklärung öffnen, dabei aber nicht die rabbinische Tradition des religiösen Judentums preisgeben.
Exkursion: Ennepe-Ruhr-Kreis, Witten-Herbede, artenreiche Feuchtwiesen im Muttental (2022)
Vahle, Hans-Christoph ; Schulte, Annette ; Buch, Corinne
Endlich, die erste Exkursion nach zehn Monaten Zwangspause! Bei schönstem Wetter ging es in eine der besten Feuchtwiesen der Region. Feuchtwiesen sind insgesamt sehr selten geworden. Meist wurden sie entwässert, in Maisäcker umgewandelt, aufgeforstet oder aber sie fielen brach und verbuschten. Die Wiese im Muttental wird seit Jahrzehnten traditionell zur Heugewinnung genutzt, wenig gedüngt und konnte daher ihren Artenreichtum erhalten.
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