Institution
University of East Anglia
Education•Norwich, Norfolk, United Kingdom•
About: University of East Anglia is a education organization based out in Norwich, Norfolk, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Climate change. The organization has 13250 authors who have published 37504 publications receiving 1669060 citations. The organization is also known as: UEA.
Topics: Population, Climate change, Randomized controlled trial, Health care, Psychological intervention
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The molecular characterisation of Giardia and Cryptosporidium has given rise to a more epidemiological meaningful and robust taxonomy and there is a need for molecular epidemiological studies to be undertaken in well-defined foci of transmission in order to fully determine the frequency and importance of zoonotic transmission.
399 citations
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TL;DR: A spectro-potentiometric characterization of a trans-OM icosa-heme complex, MtrCAB, is presented and its capacity to move electrons across a lipid bilayer after incorporation into proteoliposomes is demonstrated.
Abstract: A number of species of Gram-negative bacteria can use insoluble minerals of Fe(III) and Mn(IV) as extracellular respiratory electron acceptors. In some species of Shewanella, deca-heme electron transfer proteins lie at the extracellular face of the outer membrane (OM), where they can interact with insoluble substrates. To reduce extracellular substrates, these redox proteins must be charged by the inner membrane/periplasmic electron transfer system. Here, we present a spectro-potentiometric characterization of a trans-OM icosa-heme complex, MtrCAB, and demonstrate its capacity to move electrons across a lipid bilayer after incorporation into proteoliposomes. We also show that a stable MtrAB subcomplex can assemble in the absence of MtrC; an MtrBC subcomplex is not assembled in the absence of MtrA; and MtrA is only associated to the membrane in cells when MtrB is present. We propose a model for the modular organization of the MtrCAB complex in which MtrC is an extracellular element that mediates electron transfer to extracellular substrates and MtrB is a trans-OM spanning β-barrel protein that serves as a sheath, within which MtrA and MtrC exchange electrons. We have identified the MtrAB module in a range of bacterial phyla, suggesting that it is widely used in electron exchange with the extracellular environment.
399 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that emigration and remittances have offsetting effects on resilience within an evolving social and political context, and diversification and increasing income levels are beneficial for resilience.
Abstract: We argue that all aspects of demographic change, including migration, impact on the social resilience of individuals and communities, as well as on the sustainability of the underlying resource base. Social resilience is the ability to cope with and adapt to environmental and social change mediated through appropriate institutions. We investigate one aspect of the relationship between demographic change, social resilience, and sustainable development in contemporary coastal Vietnam: the effects of migration and remittances on resource-dependent communities in population source areas. We find, using longitudinal data on livelihood sources, that emigration and remittances have offsetting effects on resilience within an evolving social and political context. Emigration is occurring concurrently with, not driving, the expansion of unsustainable coastal aquaculture. Increasing economic inequality also undermines social resilience. At the same time diversification and increasing income levels are beneficial for resilience.
398 citations
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University of Toronto1, Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute2, University of Calgary3, King's College London4, University of Cambridge5, Sunnybrook Research Institute6, Rabin Medical Center7, University of California, Santa Barbara8, University of Southern California9, University of Ottawa10, University of Western Ontario11, McMaster University12, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust13, Nemours Foundation14, University Health Network15, University of East Anglia16, Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto17, Hospital de Sant Pau18, Ottawa Hospital19, Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital20, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre21, Glasgow Royal Infirmary22, Université du Québec23, Queen's University24, Royal Victoria Infirmary25, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust26, Edinburgh Royal Infirmary27, University of Southampton28, University College Hospital29, University of Manchester30, South Tees Hospitals NHS Trust31, Russells Hall Hospital32, Kingston General Hospital33, Royal University Hospital34, JDRF35
TL;DR: In this paper, the effectiveness of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) on maternal glucose control and obstetric and neonatal health outcomes was examined in women with Type 1 diabetes and planning pregnancy.
398 citations
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TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors proposed and empirically tested a model delineating the relationship among environmental orientation, green supply chain management (GSCM) activities (green purchase, customer cooperation and investment recovery) and corporate performance.
398 citations
Authors
Showing all 13512 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
George Davey Smith | 224 | 2540 | 248373 |
Nicholas J. Wareham | 212 | 1657 | 204896 |
Cyrus Cooper | 204 | 1869 | 206782 |
Kay-Tee Khaw | 174 | 1389 | 138782 |
Phillip A. Sharp | 172 | 614 | 117126 |
Rory Collins | 162 | 489 | 193407 |
William J. Sutherland | 148 | 966 | 94423 |
Shah Ebrahim | 146 | 733 | 96807 |
Kenneth M. Yamada | 139 | 446 | 72136 |
Martin McKee | 138 | 1732 | 125972 |
David Price | 138 | 1687 | 93535 |
Sheila Bingham | 136 | 519 | 67332 |
Philip Jones | 135 | 644 | 90838 |
Peter M. Rothwell | 134 | 779 | 67382 |
Ivan Reid | 131 | 1318 | 85123 |