// +author:j ascencio +author:ascencio var _ajax_res = { hits: 4, first: 0, results: [ {userid:"gregory.guisbiers", "refid":"68","repocollections":"","attachment":"","_thumb":"","articletype":"article","sectionheading":"","title":"Order-Disorder Phase Transitions in Au-Cu Nanocubes: From Nano-Thermodynamics to Synthesis","year":"2017","author":"R. Mendoza-Cruz, L. Bazan-Diaz, J. J. Velazquez-Salazar, J. E. Samaniego-Benitez, F. M. Ascencio-Aguirre, R. Herrera-Becerra, M. Jos\u00e9-Yacaman, G. Guisbiers","journal":"Nanoscale","volume":"9","number":"","pages":"9267-9274","month":"","doi":"10.1039\/C7NR00028F","pubmed":"","pdflink":"http:\/\/pubs.rsc.org\/en\/content\/articlelanding\/2017\/nr\/c7nr00028f#!divAbstract","urllink":"","abstract":"","note":"","tags":"","weight":68} , {userid:"gregory.guisbiers", "refid":"72","repocollections":"","attachment":"","_thumb":"","articletype":"article","sectionheading":"","title":"Synthesis and properties of self-assembly of gold-copper nanoparticles into nanoribbons","year":"2018","author":"L. Bazan-Diaz, R. Mendoza-Cruz, J. Velazquez-Salazar, G. Plascencia-Villa, F. M. Ascencio-Aguirre, R. Herrera-Becerra, H. Ojeda-Galvan, G. Guisbiers, M. Jos\u00e9-Yacaman","journal":"Langmuir","volume":"34","number":"","pages":"9394-9401","month":"","doi":"10.1021\/acs.langmuir.7b04187","pubmed":"","pdflink":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1021\/acs.langmuir.7b04187","urllink":"","abstract":"","note":"","tags":"","weight":72} , {userid:"jvega_arreguin", "articletype":"article","pages":"1697-1712","author":"P L Ramos, R G Guevara-Gonz\u00e1lez, R Peral, J T Ascencio-Iba\u00f1ez, J E Polston, G R Arg\u00fcello-Astorga, J C Vega-Arregu\u00edn, R F Rivera-Bustamante","year":"2003","title":"Tomato mottle Taino virus pseudorecombines with PYMV but not with ToMoV: implications for the delimitation of cis- and trans-acting replication specificity determinants.","month":"Sep","journal":"Archives of virology","publisher":"","volume":"148","number":"9","note":"","tags":"Amino Acid Sequence,Base Sequence,Cloning, Molecular,Geminiviridae,Genome, Viral,Lycopersicon esculentum,Molecular Sequence Data,Recombination, Genetic,Virus Replication","booktitle":"","editor":"","abstract":"Over the last decade, the tomato production in Cuba has been affected by new whitefly-associated diseases. In addition to the well-documented presence of Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) along the island, the occurrence of bipartite begomoviruses has also been reported. One of them, tentatively named Tomato mottle Taino virus (ToMoTV), has now been cloned and characterized at the molecular level. Its genomic organization is similar to other bipartite geminiviruses. Phylogenetic analyses placed ToMoTV in a subcluster with other geminiviruses isolated in the Caribbean Basin: Tomato mottle virus (ToMoV), Bean dwarf mosaic virus, Abutilon mosaic virus, Sida golden mosaic virus and Potato yellow mosaic virus (PYMV). Biolistic inoculation of tobacco and tomato plants with cloned viral DNA showed that ToMoTV pseudorecombines with PYMV-GP as predicted by the identity of their iterative elements, whereas it does not show the same ability with ToMoV, even when their replication-associated proteins (Rep and REn) show the highest percentage of similarity. A comparative analysis of Rep proteins from begomoviruses that are able to produce viable reassortants suggests that some key elements for virus replication specificity are located in the first ten amino acids of this protein.","address":"","school":"","issn":"0304-8608","doi":"10.1007\/s00705-003-0136-3","isi":"","pubmed":"14505083","key":"Ramos2003","howpublished":"","urllink":"","refid":12,"weight":12} , {userid:"GSSA_Publications-2012", "refid":153,"repocollections":"","attachment":"","_thumb":"","articletype":"article","sectionheading":"","title":" Matrix population models from 20 studies of perennial plant populations. ","year":"2012","author":" Ellis, Martha M., Jennifer L. Williams, Peter Lesica, Timothy J. Bell, Paulette Bierzychudek, Marlin Bowles, Elizabeth E. Crone, Daniel F. Doak, Johan Ehrl\u00e9n, Albertine Ellis-Adam, Kathryn McEachern, Rengaian Ganesan, Penelope Latham, Sheila Luijten, Thomas N. Kaye, Tiffany M. Knight, Eric S. Menges, William F. Morris, Hans den Nijs, Gerard Oostermeijer, Pedro F. Quintana-Ascencio, J. Stephen Shelly, Amanda Stanley, Andrea Thorpe, Tamara Ticktin, Teresa Valverde, and Carl W. Weekley. ","journal":"Ecology","volume":"93","number":"4","pages":"951-951","month":"April","doi":" http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.1890\/11-1052.1","pubmed":"","pdflink":"","urllink":"","abstract":"Demographic transition matrices are among the most commonly applied population models for both basic and applied ecological research. The relatively simple framework of these models and simple, easily interpretable summary statistics they produce have prompted the wide use of these models across an exceptionally broad range of taxa. Here, we provide annual transition matrices and observed stage structures\/population sizes for 20 perennial plant species which have been the focal species for long-term demographic monitoring. These data were assembled as part of the \u201cTesting Matrix Models\u201d working group through the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS). The data represent 82 populations with >460 total population-years of observations. It is our hope that making these data available will help promote and improve our ability to monitor and understand plant population dynamics.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n","note":"The complete data sets corresponding to abstracts published in the Data Papers section of the journal are published electronically in Ecological Archives at \u3008http:\/\/esapubs.org\/archive\u3009. (The accession number for each Data Paper is given directly beneath the title.)","tags":"February 2013, ecology,conservation, Demographic matrix models, ecological forecasting, extinction risk, matrix population models, plant population dynamics, population growth rate, ecosystem ecology"} ] } ; ajaxResultsLoaded(_ajax_res);