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Institution

Agilent Technologies

CompanySanta Clara, California, United States
About: Agilent Technologies is a company organization based out in Santa Clara, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Signal & Mass spectrometry. The organization has 7398 authors who have published 11518 publications receiving 262410 citations. The organization is also known as: Agilent Technologies, Inc..


Papers
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Patent
TL;DR: In this article, a defibrillator having infrared communication capability is provided, which is implemented using infrared light or RF communications and standardized communications protocols such as the IrDA protocol to allow for ready communication between defibrators such as during handoffs of patient along the Chain of Survival.
Abstract: A defibrillator having infrared communication capability is provided. The wireless communications capability is implemented using infrared light or RF communications and standardized communications protocols such as the IrDA protocol to allow for ready communication between defibrillators such as during handoffs of patient along the Chain of Survival. The wireless communications network also allows for communications between a defibrillator and a host computer such as a palmtop for incident report generation after each handoff. Another embodiment of the present invention provides for a defibrillator having an infrared mode switch to allow for restricted access to advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) features of the defibrillator. A further embodiment of the present invention provides for a defibrillator having a remote training mode that is implemented via wireless communications. Another embodiment of the present invention provides for a defibrillator test system that is implemented via wireless communications. A further embodiment of the present invention provides for a live ECG telemetry data link using the wireless communications system.

237 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Control exposures of microarrays to ozone confirmed this factor as the root cause, and data is presented that shows susceptibility of a class of cyanine dyes to ozone levels as low as 5-10 ppb for periods as short as 10-30 s.
Abstract: A data anomaly was observed that affected the uniformity and reproducibility of fluorescent signal across DNA microarrays. Results from experimental sets designed to identify potential causes (from microarray production to array scanning) indicated that the anomaly was linked to a batch process; further work allowed us to localize the effect to the posthybridization array stringency washes. Ozone levels were monitored and highly correlated with the batch effect. Controlled exposures of microarrays to ozone confirmed this factor as the root cause, and we present data that show susceptibility of a class of cyanine dyes (e.g., Cy5, Alexa 647) to ozone levels as low as 5−10 ppb for periods as short as 10−30 s. Other cyanine dyes (e.g., Cy3, Alexa 555) were not significantly affected until higher ozone levels (>100 ppb). To address this environmental effect, laboratory ozone levels should be kept below 2 ppb (e.g., with filters in HVAC) to achieve high quality microarray data.

232 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper illustrates the effectiveness of OFFGEL electrophoresis with the Agilent 3100 OffGEL Fractionator for the fractionation of peptides by measuring the isoelectric points for peptides identified in each fraction.

231 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the ROP5 locus represents an unusual evolutionary strategy for sampling of sequence space in which the gene encoding an important enzyme has been catalytically inactivated, expanded in number, and subject to strong positive selection, which likely contributes to Toxoplasma’s successful adaptation to a wide host range and has resulted in dramatic differences in virulence.
Abstract: Toxoplasma gondii, an obligate intracellular parasite of the phylum Apicomplexa, has the unusual ability to infect virtually any warm-blooded animal. It is an extraordinarily successful parasite, infecting an estimated 30% of humans worldwide. The outcome of Toxoplasma infection is highly dependent on allelic differences in the large number of effectors that the parasite secretes into the host cell. Here, we show that the largest determinant of the virulence difference between two of the most common strains of Toxoplasma is the ROP5 locus. This is an unusual segment of the Toxoplasma genome consisting of a family of 4–10 tandem, highly divergent genes encoding pseudokinases that are injected directly into host cells. Given their hypothesized catalytic inactivity, it is striking that deletion of the ROP5 cluster in a highly virulent strain caused a complete loss of virulence, showing that ROP5 proteins are, in fact, indispensable for Toxoplasma to cause disease in mice. We find that copy number at this locus varies among the three major Toxoplasma lineages and that extensive polymorphism is clustered into hotspots within the ROP5 pseudokinase domain. We propose that the ROP5 locus represents an unusual evolutionary strategy for sampling of sequence space in which the gene encoding an important enzyme has been (i) catalytically inactivated, (ii) expanded in number, and (iii) subject to strong positive selection. Such a strategy likely contributes to Toxoplasma’s successful adaptation to a wide host range and has resulted in dramatic differences in virulence.

230 citations

Patent
14 Oct 1999
TL;DR: In this article, a method and system for providing purchasable value for gifts and other uses in the form of a credit instrument is provided, where a purchaser of a gift credit instrument authorizes a credit institution with which the purchaser holds a credit account to create a limited-value, non-renewable secondary account linked exclusively to the purchaser's credit account.
Abstract: A method and system for providing purchasable value for gifts and other uses in the form of a credit instrument is provided. A purchaser of a gift credit instrument authorizes a credit institution with which the purchaser holds a credit account to create a limited-value, non-renewable secondary account linked exclusively to the purchaser's credit account. A credit instrument is issued to an authorized user which credit instrument uniquely identifies the secondary account. The gift credit instrument may be used in the same manner as the purchaser's credit instrument; however, it expires after a certain period of time or after the initial value of the secondary account is spent. A system for carrying out the method is also provided.

230 citations


Authors

Showing all 7402 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Hongjie Dai197570182579
Zhuang Liu14953587662
Jie Liu131153168891
Thomas Quertermous10340552437
John E. Bowers102176749290
Roy G. Gordon8944931058
Masaru Tomita7667740415
Stuart Lindsay7434722224
Ron Shamir7431923670
W. Richard McCombie7114464155
Tomoyoshi Soga7139221209
Michael R. Krames6532118448
Shabaz Mohammed6418817254
Geert Leus6260919492
Giuseppe Gigli6154115159
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20228
2021142
2020157
2019168
2018164