Jul 31, 2018 - radiation (wavelength λ = 0.154 nm) at 45 kV and a tube current of 200 mA with Rigaku SmartLab. Imposed strain is a maximum around the edge of the disk but it. [19] Williamson GK and Hall WH 1953 Acta Metall. [22] Estrin Y, Molotnikov A, Davies CHJ and Lapovok R 2008 J. 195 Eurykleia 19 4 1879 MBA 0,0599 16,521 85,71 C 196. 705 Erminia 1910 KV 6 10 1910 MBA 0,0432 53,96 134,22 X 706 Hirundo 1910. 784 Pickeringia 1914 UM 20 3 1914 MBA 0,0555 13 89,42 785 Zwetana 1914. CU 13 2 1935 MBA 0,1073 33,75 1354 Botha 1935 GK 3 4 1935 MBA 0,0225 48,75 1355.
BLAST search against GenBank file v. V 229.0 released on 2018-12-15 (search results include 431048 sequences from 3141 references) This page contains a list of all GenBank entries on HIV-1 protease, RT and integrase grouped by reference. The reference may include a published paper or the title provided with the GenBank submission. The purpose of this page is to show which GenBank entries are in the HIV Drug Resistance Database and which aren't.
The last column (Annotation) of the table shows whether or not there are plans to add the entry to the database. Each entry in the Annotation column is linked to a page explaining the annotation. The entries were created by performing a BLAST search of the GenBank using the consensus B protease, RT and integrase amino acid sequence (give link to the sequences). The E-value column contains the lowest e-value (best match) for all the GenBank entries associated with a specific reference. The columns, # in GB, # in HIVDB, and% in HIVDB indicate the number of entries in GenBank associated with the reference, the number of these entries that are also in the HIV Drug Resistance Database, and the% of GenBank entries from a particular reference that are in the HIV Drug Resistance Database. For a treatment summary for every isolate in our database and in the GenBank, This file indicates whether or not the person from whom the sequenced virus was obtained had received one or more nucleoside RT inhibitor, nonnucleoside RT inhibitor, or protease inhibitor. Pre-intermediate student's book. Authors Title Citation E-value # in HIVDB # in Gb% in HIVDB Annotation Predominance of CRF06_cpx and transmitted HIV resistance in Algeria: update 2013-2014 AIDS Res.
Retroviruses (2015) In press 0 119PR 109RT 119PR 111RT 99 Drug resistance in HIV patients with virological failure or slow virological response to antiretroviral therapy in Ethiopia BMC Infect. 14, 181 (2014) 0 28PR 28RT 29PR 29RT 96 HIV-1 genetic diversity and drug-resistance mutations among treatment-naive adult patients in Suriname AIDS Res. Retroviruses (2016) In press 1.42e-176 99PR 95RT 99PR 95RT 100 Effectiveness and safety of tenofovir gel, an antiretroviral microbicide, for the prevention of HIV infection in women Science 329 (5996), 1168-1174 (2010) 0 92PR 94RT 92PR 94RT 100 RECOMBINATION confounds the early evolutionary history of human immunodeficiency virus type 1: subtype g is a circulating recombinant form J.
81 (16), 8543-8551 (2007) 0 1PR 1RT 1IN 1PR 1RT 1IN 100 Molecular epidemiological analysis of paired pol/env sequences from portuguese HIV-1 patients AIDS Res. Retroviruses (2011) In press 0 154PR 154RT 0 Abott (2018) The complete genomic sequence of the HIV-1 AAV isolate Unpublished 0 3PR 3RT 3IN 0 CCR5- and CXCR4-tropic subtype C human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates have a lower level of pathogenic fitness than other dominant group M subtypes: implications for the epidemic J.
Material processing techniques that employ severe plastic deformation have evolved over the past decade, producing metals, alloys and composites having extraordinary properties. Variants of SPD methods are now capable of creating monolithic materials with submicron and nanocrystalline grain sizes. The resulting novel properties of these materials has led to a growing scientific and commercial interest in them. They offer the promise of bulk nanocrystalline materials for structural; applications, including nanocomposites of lightweight alloys with unprecedented strength. These materials may also enable the use of alternative metal shaping processes, such as high strain rate superplastic forming.