We present a new fully automated instrument for the measurement of acid gases and soluble anionic constituents of atmospheric particulate matter. The instrument operates in two independent parallel channels. In one channel, a wet denuder collects soluble acid gases; these are analyzed by anion chromatography (IC). In a second channel, a cyclone removes large particles and the aerosol stream is then processed by another wet denuder to remove potentially interfering gases. The particles are then collected by one of two glass fiber filters which are alternately sampled, washed, and dried. The washings are preconcentrated and analyzed by IC. Detection limits of low to subnanogram per cubic meter concentrations of most gaseous and particulate constituents can be readily attained. The instrument has been extensively field-tested; some field data are presented. Results of attempts to decipher the total anionic constitution of urban ambient aerosol by IC-MS analysis are also presented.
Engineered antibodies are a large and growing class of protein therapeutics comprising both marketed products and many molecules in clinical trials in various disease indications. We investigated naturally conserved networks of amino acids that support antibody V(H) and V(L) function, with the goal of generating information to assist in the engineering of robust antibody or antibody-like therapeutics. We generated a large and diverse sequence alignment of V-class Ig-folds, of which V(H) and V(L) domains are family members. To identify conserved amino acid networks, covariations between residues at all possible position pairs were quantified as correlation coefficients (phi-values). We provide rosters of the key conserved amino acid pairs in antibody V(H) and V(L) domains, for reference and use by the antibody research community. The majority of the most strongly conserved amino acid pairs in V(H) and V(L) are at or adjacent to the V(H)-V(L) interface suggesting that the ability to heterodimerize is a constraining feature of antibody evolution. For the V(H) domain, but not the V(L) domain, residue pairs at the variable-constant domain interface (V(H)-C(H)1 interface) are also strongly conserved. The same network of conserved V(H) positions involved in interactions with both the V(L) and C(H)1 domains is found in camelid V(HH) domains, which have evolved to lack interactions with V(L) and C(H)1 domains in their mature structures; however, the amino acids at these positions are different, reflecting their different function. Overall, the data describe naturally occurring amino acid networks in antibody Fv regions that can be referenced when designing antibodies or antibody-like fragments with the goal of improving their biophysical properties.
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