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1997
Pereira, A., P. Tavares, S. Lloyd, D. Danger, D. Edmondson, E. Theil, and B. Huynh. "{Rapid and parallel formation of Fe3+ multimers, including a trimer, during H-type subunit ferritin mineralization}." Biochemistry. 36 (1997): 7917-7927. Abstract
Conversion of Fe ions in solution to the solid phase in ferritin concentrates iron required for cell function. The rate of the Fe phase transition in ferritin is tissue specific and reflects the differential expression of two classes of ferritin subunits (H and L). Early stages of mineralization were probed by rapid freeze-quench Mossbauer, at strong fields (up to 8 T), and EPR spectroscopy in an H-type subunit, recombinant frog ferritin; small numbers of Fe (36 moles/mol of protein) were used to increase Fe3+ in mineral precursor forms, At 25 ms, four Fe3+-oxy species (three Fe dimers and one Fe trimer) were identified, These Fe3+-oxy species were found to form at similar rates and decay subsequently to a distinctive superparamagentic species designated the ''young core.'' The rate of oxidation of Fe2+ (1026 s(-1)) corresponded well to the formation constant for the Fe3+- tyrosinate complex (920 s(-1)) observed previously [Waldo, G. S., {&} Theil, E. C. (1993) Biochemistry 32, 13261] and, coupled with EPR data, indicates that several or possibly all of the Fe3+-oxy species involve tyrosine. The results, combined with previous Mossbauer studies of Y30F human H-type ferritin which showed decreases in several Fe3+ intermediates and stabilization of Fe2+ [Bauminger, E. R., et al. (1993) Biochem, J. 296, 709], emphasize the involvement of tyrosyl residues in the mineralization of H-type ferritins. The subsequent decay of these multiple Fe3+-oxy species to the superparamagnetic mineral suggests that Fe3+ species in different environments may be translocated as intact units from the protein shell into the ferritin cavity where the conversion to a solid mineral occurs.
Kacsuk, Péter, José C. Cunha, Gábor Dózsa, João Louren{\c c}o, Tibor Fadgyas, and Tiago Antão. "A graphical development and debugging environment for parallel programs." Parallel Comput.. 22 (1997): 1747-1770. AbstractWebsite
To provide high-level graphical support for PVM (Parallel Virtual Machine) based program development, a complex programming environment (GRADE) is being developed. GRADE currently provides tools to construct, execute, debug, monitor and visualise message-passing parallel programs. It offers high-level graphical programming abstraction mechanism to construct parallel applications by introducing a new graphical language called GRAPNEL. GRADE also provides the programmer with the same graphical user interface during the program design and debugging stages. A distributed debugging engine (DDBG) assists the user in debugging GRAPNEL programs on distributed memory computer architectures. Tape/PVM and PROVE support the performance monitoring and visualization of parallel programs developed in the GRADE environment.
Kordikowski, A., D. G. Robertson, M. Poliakoff, T. D. DiNoia, M. McHugh, and A. Aguiar-Ricardo. "Acoustic determination of the critical surfaces in the ternary systems CO2 + CH2F2 + CF3CH2F and CO + C2H4 + CH3CHCH2 and in their binary subsystems." Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 101.30 (1997): 5853-5862. AbstractWebsite
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Kacsuk, Péter, José C. Cunha, Gábor Dózsa, João M. Lourenço, Tibor Fadgyas, and Tiago Antão. "A graphical development and debugging environment for parallel programs." Parallel Comput.. 22 (1997): 1747-1770. Abstractpar-comp97.pdfWebsite

To provide high-level graphical support for PVM (Parallel Virtual Machine) based program development, a complex programming environment (GRADE) is being developed. GRADE currently provides tools to construct, execute, debug, monitor and visualise message-passing parallel programs. It offers high-level graphical programming abstraction mechanism to construct parallel applications by introducing a new graphical language called GRAPNEL. GRADE also provides the programmer with the same graphical user interface during the program design and debugging stages. A distributed debugging engine (DDBG) assists the user in debugging GRAPNEL programs on distributed memory computer architectures. Tape/PVM and PROVE support the performance monitoring and visualization of parallel programs developed in the GRADE environment.

Neagu, E. R., J. N. MaratMendes, D. K. Dasgupta, R. M. Neagu, and R. Igreja. "Analysis of the thermally stimulated discharge current around glass-rubber transition temperature in polyethylene terephthalate." Journal of Applied Physics. 82 (1997): 2488-2496. Abstract
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Neagu, E. R., J. N. MaratMendes, D. K. Dasgupta, R. M. Neagu, and R. Igreja. "Analysis of the thermally stimulated discharge current around glass-rubber transition temperature in polyethylene terephthalate." Journal of Applied Physics. 82 (1997): 2488-2496. Abstract
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Romao, MJ, I. Kolln, JM Dias, AL Carvalho, A. Romero, P. F. Varela, L. Sanz, E. Topfer-Petersen, and JJ Calvete. "Crystal structure of acidic seminal fluid protein (aSFP) at 1.9 angstrom resolution: a bovine polypeptide of the spermadhesin family." Journal of Molecular Biology. 274 (1997): 650-660. Abstract

We report the three-dimensional crystal structure of acidic seminal fluid protein (aSFP), a 12.9 kDa poly-peptide of the spermadhesin family isolated from bovine seminal plasma, solved by the multiple isomorphous replacement method and refined with data to 1.9 Angstrom resolution with a final R-factor of 17.3%. aSFP is built by a single CUB domain architecture, a 100 to 110 amino-acid-residue extracellular module found in 16 functionally diverse proteins. The structure of aSFP reveals that the CUB domain displays a beta-sandwich topology organised into two 5-stranded beta-sheets, each of which contain two parallel and four antiparallel strands. The structure of aSFP is almost identical to that of porcine spermadhesins PSP-I and PSP-II, which in turn show limited structural similarity with jellyroll topologies of certain virus capsid proteins. Essentially, topologically conserved residues in these proteins are those internal amino acids forming the hydrophobic core of the CUB and the jellyroll domains, suggesting their importance in maintaining the integrity of these protein folds, On the other hand, the structure of aSFP shows structural features that are unique to this protein and which may provide a structural ground for understanding the distinct biological properties of different members of the spermadhesin protein family. (C) 1997 Academic Press Limited.

Romero, A., MJ Romao, P. F. Varela, I. Kolln, JM Dias, AL Carvalho, L. Sanz, E. TopferPetersen, and JJ Calvete. "The crystal structures of two spermadhesins reveal the CUB domain fold." Nature Structural Biology. 4 (1997): 783-788. Abstract

Spermadhesins, 12,000-14,000 M-r mammalian proteins, include lectins involved in sperm-egg binding and display a single CUB domain architecture. We report the crystal structures of porcine seminal plasma PSP-I/PSP-II, a heterodimer of two glycosylated spermadhesins. and bovine aSFP at 2.4 Angstrom and 1.9 Angstrom resolution respectively.

Dias, JM, AL Carvalho, I. Kolln, JJ Calvete, E. TopferPetersen, P. F. Varela, A. Romero, C. Urbanke, and MJ Romao. "Crystallization and preliminary x-ray diffraction studies of aSFP, a bovine seminal plasma protein with a single CUB domain architecture." Protein Science. 6 (1997): 725-727. Abstract

{Bovine acidic seminal fluid protein (aSFP) is a 12.9 kDa polypeptide of the spermadhesin family built by a single CUB domain architecture. The CUB domain is an extracellular module present in 16 functionally diverse proteins. To determine the three-dimensional structure of aSFP, the protein was crystallized at 21 degrees C by vapor diffusion in hanging drops, using ammonium sulfate, pH 4.7, and polyethyleneglycol 4000 as precipitants, containing 10% dioxane to avoid the formation of clustered crystals. Elongated prismatic crystals with maximal size of 0.6 x 0.3 x 0.2 mm(3) diffract to beyond 1.9 Angstrom resolution and belong to space group P2(1)2(1)2, with cell parameters a = 52.4 Angstrom

Dias, C. J., and Ieee. "Determination of a distribution of relaxation frequencies using a combination of time and frequency dielectric spectroscopies." Ieee 1997 Annual Report - Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena, Vols I and Ii (1997): 475-478. Abstract
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Tavares, P., AS Pereira, S. G. Lloyd, D. Danger, DE Edmondson, E. C. Theil, and BH HUYNH. "Mossbauer spectroscopic and kinetic characterization of ferric clusters formed in h-chain ferritin mineralization." Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society. 213 (1997): 503-INOR. AbstractWebsite
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Dias, C. J., P. Inacio, J. N. MaratMendes, and D. K. Dasgupta. "Polarization and hysteresis in low resistivity ferroelectric composites." Ferroelectrics. 198 (1997): 121-130. AbstractWebsite
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Dias, C. J., P. Inacio, J. N. MaratMendes, and D. K. Dasgupta. "Polarization and hysteresis in low resistivity ferroelectric composites." Ferroelectrics. 198 (1997): 121-130. Abstract
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Igreja, R., C. J. Dias, and J. N. MaratMendes. "Processing and characterization of sol-gel derived modified PbTiO3 for ferroelectric composite applications." Journal of Sol-Gel Science and Technology. 8 (1997): 721-723. Abstract
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Igreja, R., C. J. Dias, and J. N. MaratMendes. "Processing and characterization of sol-gel derived modified PbTiO3 for ferroelectric composite applications." Journal of Sol-Gel Science and Technology. 8 (1997): 721-723. Abstract
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Igreja, R., C. J. Dias, and J. N. MaratMendes. "Processing and characterization of sol-gel derived modified PbTiO3 for ferroelectric composite applications." Journal of Sol-Gel Science and Technology. 8 (1997): 721-723. AbstractWebsite
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Pereira, AS, P. Tavares, S. G. Lloyd, D. Danger, DE Edmondson, E. C. Theil, and BH HUYNH. "Rapid and parallel formation of Fe3+ multimers, including a trimer, during H-type subunit ferritin mineralization." Biochemistry. 36 (1997): 7917-7927. AbstractWebsite

Conversion of Fe ions in solution to the solid phase in ferritin concentrates iron required for cell function. The rate of the Fe phase transition in ferritin is tissue specific and reflects the differential expression of two classes of ferritin subunits (H and L). Early stages of mineralization were probed by rapid freeze-quench Mossbauer, at strong fields (up to 8 T), and EPR spectroscopy in an H-type subunit, recombinant frog ferritin; small numbers of Fe (36 moles/mol of protein) were used to increase Fe3+ in mineral precursor forms, At 25 ms, four Fe3+-oxy species (three Fe dimers and one Fe trimer) were identified, These Fe3+-oxy species were found to form at similar rates and decay subsequently to a distinctive superparamagentic species designated the ''young core.'' The rate of oxidation of Fe2+ (1026 s(-1)) corresponded well to the formation constant for the Fe3+- tyrosinate complex (920 s(-1)) observed previously [Waldo, G. S., & Theil, E. C. (1993) Biochemistry 32, 13261] and, coupled with EPR data, indicates that several or possibly all of the Fe3+-oxy species involve tyrosine. The results, combined with previous Mossbauer studies of Y30F human H-type ferritin which showed decreases in several Fe3+ intermediates and stabilization of Fe2+ [Bauminger, E. R., et al. (1993) Biochem, J. 296, 709], emphasize the involvement of tyrosyl residues in the mineralization of H-type ferritins. The subsequent decay of these multiple Fe3+-oxy species to the superparamagnetic mineral suggests that Fe3+ species in different environments may be translocated as intact units from the protein shell into the ferritin cavity where the conversion to a solid mineral occurs.

1996
Devreese, B., P. Tavares, J. Lampreia, N. VanDamme, J. LeGall, JJG Moura, J. VanBeeumen, and I. Moura. "Primary structure of desulfoferrodoxin from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, a new class of non-heme iron proteins." FEBS LETTERS. 385 (1996): 138-142. Abstract
The primary structure of desulfoferrodoxin from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, a redox protein with two mononuclear iron sites, was determined by automatic Edman degradation and mass spectrometry of the composing peptides, It contains 125 amino acid residues of which five are cysteines, The first four, Cys-9, Cys-12, Cys-28 and Cys-29, are responsible for the binding of Center I which has a distorted tetrahedral sulfur coordination similar to that found in desulforedoxin from D. gigas, The remaining Cys-115 is proposed to be involved in the coordination of Center II, which is probably octahedrally coordinated with predominantly nitrogen/oxygen containing ligands as previously suggested by Mossbauer and Raman spectroscopy.
Moniz, António, and Marco Dinis Study of Instruments and Tools to Anticipate the Effects of Industrial Change - Portuguese report. University Library of Munich, Germany, 1996. Abstract

This study was produced for the “Study of Instruments and Tools to anticipate the effects of industrial change on employment, trades and vocational qualifications” and for DG V (Employment) of the European Commission in the late 1994. It started when the previous Portuguese government was still ruling, the main policies were defined, and the available instruments were not used in a minimum extend. The new Government, issued from the 1995 elections, proposed “employment” as a major objective with horizontal responsibility. That’s also why there is now a Ministry for Qualifications and Employment, and another one for Solidarity and Social Affairs, not one for Employment and Social Affairs as the previous Government had. But more than that, this objective is considered to need a coordinated and consistent action that involves external affairs, industrial and regional policies, and the policies on education, training and employment, among others. The promotion of the “quality of employment” is being recently done at the working conditions, remuneration, social protection, occupational promotion levels, and the equality of opportunities towards employment and vocational training levels, and finally, the levels of qualification of human resources for a better labour market, education policy and training policy developments. In Portugal, the influence of the industrial change is produced in a top-down way; with (in some cases) an ex post analysis process to formulated training needs. This means that the industrial change impact is produced (normally, unexpectedly), and afterwards the responsible at the company level tries to know which training needs should be formulated in order those effects could be the smoother possible. The training needs at the company level is not based on anticipatory studies, neither is done any long term forecast on qualification, or even employment level.

Wenger, M. P., P. Blanas, C. J. Dias, RJ SHUFORD, and D. K. Das-Gupta. "FERROELECTRIC CERAMIC/POLYMER COMPOSITES AND THEIR APPLICATIONS." Ferroelectrics. 187 (1996): 75-86. Abstract
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Dias, C. J., and D. K. Dasgupta. "Inorganic ceramic/polymer ferroelectric composite electrets." Ieee Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation. 3 (1996): 706-734. AbstractWebsite
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Dias, C. J., and D. K. Dasgupta. "Inorganic ceramic/polymer ferroelectric composite electrets." Ieee Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation. 3 (1996): 706-734. Abstract
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