Institution
University of Rouen
Education•Rouen, France•
About: University of Rouen is a education organization based out in Rouen, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Receptor. The organization has 7299 authors who have published 13209 publications receiving 313477 citations.
Topics: Population, Receptor, Laser, Atom probe, Membrane
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The aim of the tutorial review is to show that any crystallization from solution is guided by stable or metastable equilibria and thus can be rationalized by using phase diagrams.
Abstract: The aim of the tutorial review is to show that any crystallization from solution is guided by stable or metastable equilibria and thus can be rationalized by using phase diagrams. Crystallization conducted by cooling, by evaporation and by anti-solvent addition is mainly considered. The driving force of crystallization is quantified and the occurrence of transient metastable states is logically explained by looking at the pathways of crystallization and the progressive segregation which might occur in a heterogeneous system.
109 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the dielectric permittivity increased 10-fold at 10−2 Hz for RGO compared to EG filled composites at 5 wt% loading while preserving low deformation due to reducing polarization process to screen charge movement.
109 citations
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TL;DR: This prospective study identifies an association between pre-operative mitochondrial dysfunction of the atrial myocardium and AF occurrence after cardiac surgery in patients with metabolic disease, providing novel insights into the link between mitochondria and arrhythmias in patients.
108 citations
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University of Guelph1, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada2, Natural Resources Canada3, Atatürk University4, University of Pennsylvania5, Sewanee: The University of the South6, National Museum of Natural History7, Imperial College London8, Natural History Museum9, University of California, Santa Barbara10, University of Rouen11, Finnish Environment Institute12, Landcare Research13, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign14, National Autonomous University of Mexico15
TL;DR: The integration of DNA barcoding with traditional morphology‐based taxonomy, host records, and other data has substantially improved the accuracy of microgastrine wasp identifications and will significantly accelerate further studies on this group of parasitoids.
Abstract: Microgastrine wasps are among the most species-rich and numerous parasitoids of caterpillars (Lepidoptera). They are often host-specific and thus are extensively used in biological control efforts and figure prominently in trophic webs. However, their extraordinary diversity coupled with the occurrence of many cryptic species produces a significant taxonomic impediment. We present and release the results of 8 years (2004–2011) of DNA barcoding microgastrine wasps. Currently they are the best represented group of parasitoid Hymenoptera in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD), a massive barcode storage and analysis data management site for the International Barcoding of Life (iBOL) program. There are records from more than 20 000 specimens from 75 countries, including 50 genera (90% of the known total) and more than 1700 species (as indicated by Barcode Index Numbers and 2% MOTU). We briefly discuss the importance of this DNA data set and its collateral information for future research in: (1) discovery of cryptic species and description of new taxa; (2) estimating species numbers in biodiversity inventories; (3) clarification of generic boundaries; (4) biological control programmes; (5) molecular studies of host-parasitoid biology and ecology; (6) evaluation of shifts in species distribution and phenology; and (7) fostering collaboration at national, regional and world levels. The integration of DNA barcoding with traditional morphology-based taxonomy, host records, and other data has substantially improved the accuracy of microgastrine wasp identifications and will significantly accelerate further studies on this group of parasitoids.
108 citations
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TL;DR: E. coli isolates that rapidly lost their culturability were more frequently isolated in water recently contaminated by fecal bacteria of human origin, and most were multiresistant to antibiotics and harbored several virulence factors.
Abstract: Escherichia coli, a commensal bacterium from the intestinal tracts of humans and vertebrate animals, has been used as one of two bacterial indicators of fecal contamination, along with intestinal enterococci, to monitor the microbiological quality of water. However, water environments are now recognized as a secondary habitat where some strains can survive. We investigated the survival of E. coli isolates collected from bodies of water in France exhibiting distinct profiles of contamination, defined according to the following criteria: vicinity of the point sources of contamination, land use, hydrology, and physicochemical characteristics of the receiving water. We selected 88 E. coli strains among a collection of 352 strains to carry out a microcosm experiment in filtered estuarine water for 14 days at 10°C. The relationship between the survival of E. coli strains and genotypic and phenotypic characteristics was analyzed. This work showed that distinct E. coli survival types, able to survive from between 7 and 14 days to less than 2 days, coexisted in the water. E. coli isolates that rapidly lost their culturability were more frequently isolated in water recently contaminated by fecal bacteria of human origin, and most were multiresistant to antibiotics and harbored several virulence factors. In contrast, persistent strains able to survive from 4 to 14 days were more often found in water with low levels of fecal bacteria, belonged mainly to the B1 phylogroup, often harbored only one virulence factor, kspE or ompT, and were able to grow at 7°C.
108 citations
Authors
Showing all 7360 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Yves Agid | 141 | 669 | 74441 |
Alexis Brice | 135 | 870 | 83466 |
Mohamed Eddaoudi | 94 | 327 | 64217 |
Hervé Tilly | 86 | 479 | 30321 |
David Cohen | 83 | 635 | 37722 |
Jörg Neugebauer | 81 | 491 | 30909 |
Hubert Vaudry | 80 | 975 | 34350 |
Michel Baudry | 80 | 372 | 23890 |
Richard L. Stevens | 79 | 264 | 19148 |
Claudine Berr | 75 | 297 | 27919 |
Christian P. Robert | 75 | 535 | 36864 |
Thierry Frebourg | 71 | 307 | 22403 |
Georges Pelletier | 69 | 432 | 19018 |
Michel Vert | 69 | 333 | 17899 |
Jean-Charles Schwartz | 69 | 252 | 15917 |