In order to improve the reliability of the design and calculation of single piles under the combined vertical and lateral loads, the solutions were presented based on the subgrade reaction method, in which the ultimate soil resistance was considered and the coefficient of subgrade reaction was assumed to be a constant. The corresponding computational program was developed using FORTRAN language. A comparison between the obtained solutions and the model test results was made to show the validity of the obtained solutions. The calculation results indicate that both the maximum lateral displacement and bending moment increase with the increase of the vertical and lateral loads and the pile length above ground, while decrease as the pile stiffness, the coefficient of subgrade reaction and the yielding displacement of soil increase. It is also shown that the pile head condition controls the pile responses and the vertical load may cause the instability problem to the pile. In general, the proposed method can be employed to calculate the pile responses independent of the magnitude of the pile deflection.
Strains of Propionibacterium acnes, isolated from different kinds of orthopaedic and biomaterial‐associated infections and from skin flora were shown to express binding of soluble as well as immobilized fibronectin. Among these 7 strains isolated from orthopaedic infections, 2 from breast prostheses, and 9 skin isolates, 2, 2, and 5 strains respectively bound immobilized fibronectin. The fibronectin binding was sensitive to protease and heat treatment, and was inhibited by a cell surface extract from one of the binding strains. In SDS‐PAGE and autoradiography of cell surface extracts, a band corresponding to a MW of about 80 kD reacted with fibronectin and the 150 kD fragment of fibronectin. Binding to fibronectin and the 150 kD fragment of fibronectin could be inhibited with heparin. We thus present a first Fn binding protein of P. acnes, a surface exposed protein of 80 kD. None of the strains bound soluble collagen, and only one strain expressed weak binding of vitronectin and bone sialoprotein II.
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