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Institution

Swedish Defence Research Agency

GovernmentStockholm, Sweden
About: Swedish Defence Research Agency is a government organization based out in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Radar & Synthetic aperture radar. The organization has 1413 authors who have published 2731 publications receiving 56083 citations. The organization is also known as: Totalförsvarets forskningsinstitut.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2002-Carbon
TL;DR: In this article, an unbiased evaluation of predictive models for the affinity coefficient of the Dubinin-Radushkevich equation was performed, based on three parameters only, the molecular weight and VdW volume of a compound and the calculated energy of interaction between the compound and a graphite model surface.

31 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Thewarfarin selectivity of the MIP suggests its potential for use as a recognition element in a MIP-based warfarin sensor and even as a model to aid in understanding and steering blood-plasma protein-regulated transport processes or even for the development of warfarIn sensors.
Abstract: Here, we report the design, synthesis, and characterization of molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) derived mimics of the human serum albumin (HSA) Sudlow I site-the binding site for the anticoagulant warfarin MIP design was based upon a combination of experimental ((1)H NMR) and computational (molecular dynamics) methods Two MIPs and corresponding nonimprinted reference polymers were synthesized and characterized (scanning electron microscopy; nitrogen sorption; and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy) MIP-ligand recognition was examined using radioligand binding studies, where the largest number of selective sites was found in a warfarin-imprinted methacrylic acid-ethylene dimethacrylate copolymer (MAA-MIP) The warfarin selectivity of this MIP was confirmed using radioligand displacement and zonal chromatographic studies A direct comparison of MIP-warfarin binding characteristics with those of the HSA Sudlow I binding site was made, and similarities in site population (per gram polymer or protein) and affinities were observed The warfarin selectivity of the MIP suggests its potential for use as a recognition element in a MIP-based warfarin sensor and even as a model to aid in understanding and steering blood-plasma protein-regulated transport processes or even for the development of warfarin sensors

31 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evaluating whether a low-dose of DEX in combination with the antioxidant N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) and if different treatments administered 1h after Cl2-exposure could improve protection against acute lung injury in Cl1-exposed mice provided a foundation for future studies aimed at identifying new concepts for treatment of chemical-induced lung injury.

31 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that TyeA is involved in regulation of Yop expression and required for polarized delivery of Yup effectors in general and is not as suggested in Y. enterocolitica directly required for translocation of a subset of Yoper effectors.
Abstract: Type III secretion-dependent translocation of Yop (Yersinia outer proteins) effector proteins into host cells is an essential virulence mechanism common to the pathogenic Yersinia species. One unique feature of this mechanism is the polarized secretion of Yops, i.e. Yops are only secreted at the site of contact with the host cell and not to the surrounding medium. In vitro, secretion occurs in Ca2+-depleted media, a condition believed to somehow mimic cell contact. Three proteins, YopN, LcrG and TyeA have been suggested to control secretion and mutating any of these genes results in constitutive secretion. In addition, in Y. enterocolitica TyeA has been implied to be specifically required for delivery of a subset of Yop effectors into infected cells. In this work we have investigated the role of TyeA in secretion and translocation of Yop effectors by Y. pseudotuberculosis. An in frame deletion mutant of tyeA was found to be temperature-sensitive for growth and this phenotype correlated to a lowered expression of the negative regulatory element LcrQ. In medium containing Ca2+, Yop expression was somewhat elevated compared to the wild-type strain and low levels of Yop secretion was also seen. Somewhat surprisingly, expression and secretion of Yops was lower than for the wild-type strain when the tyeA mutant was grown in Ca2+-depleted medium. Translocation of YopE, YopH, YopJ and YopM into infected HeLa cells was significantly lower in comparison with the isogenic wild-type strain and Yop proteins could also be recovered in the tissue culture medium. This indicated that the tyeA mutant had lost the ability to translocate Yop proteins by a polarized mechanism. In order to exclude that the defect in translocation seen in the tyeA mutant was a result of lowered expression/secretion of Yops, a double lcrQ/tyeA mutant was constructed. This strain was de-repressed for Yop expression and secretion but was still impaired for translocation of both YopE and YopM. In addition, the low level of YopE translocation in the tyeA mutant was independent of the YopE chaperone YerA/SycE. TyeA was found to localize to the cytoplasm of the bacterium and we were unable to find any evidence that TyeA was secreted or surface located. From our studies in Y. pseudotuberculosis we conclude that TyeA is involved in regulation of Yop expression and required for polarized delivery of Yop effectors in general and is not as suggested in Y. enterocolitica directly required for translocation of a subset of Yop effectors.

31 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors' results show well-known tensions such as intrinsic versus instrumental values but also new ones concerning forests’ social values, including prioritization of rural development, new valued-added forest products and diversified forest management.
Abstract: Conflicting perspectives on forests has for a long time challenged forest policy development in Sweden. Disagreements about forest futures create intractable deadlocks when stakeholders talk past each other. The purpose of this study is to move beyond this situation through the application of participatory backcasting. By comparing visions of the future forest among stakeholder groups, we highlight contemporary trajectories and identify changes that were conceived as desirable. We worked with four groups: the Biomass and Bioenergy group, the Conservation group, the Sami Livelihood group and the Recreation and Rural Development group; in total representatives from 40 organizations participated in workshops articulating the groups’ visions. Our results show well-known tensions such as intrinsic versus instrumental values but also new ones concerning forests’ social values. Identified synergies include prioritization of rural development, new valued-added forest products and diversified forest management. The results may feed directly into forest policy processes facilitating the process and break current deadlocks.

31 citations


Authors

Showing all 1417 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Anders Larsson80130733995
Anders Johansson7553821709
Anders Eriksson6867919487
Dan S. Henningson6636919038
Bengt Johansson6663519206
Anders Sjöstedt6319611422
Björn Johansson6263716030
Mats Gustafsson6152018574
D. G. Joakim Larsson5815113687
Anders Larsson5419855761
Mats Tysklind5325017534
Jerker Fick511438787
Erik Johansson501149437
Göran Finnveden4919312663
Ian A. Nicholls451947522
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20232
20228
202163
202074
2019102
201894