Kanthal B, Aizcred P, Ghoshi D, Hegarty P, Owatovic D, Yozek A, Gholamko C, El G, Inoue I, Ochiae Y, Jeon A, Lee K, Kamono E, Gochoi Ph, Peeboom S, Moorthy K, Zou T, Zhang S, Li Y‐H, Cheng CJ, Kim G‐J, Kwon N, Li X‐N, Zhang S, Chiang ZH, Urakanez H, Yixia Y, Kim S‐HE, Kim S‐T, Lee D‐C, Yiru H‐G, Sian Y‐G, Chiu L‐R, Ge Y‐Y, Keo K, Siegel J, Kim G‐J, Jung J‐Y, Kim Y‐E, Yoon A‐K, Ting Kim, Fidich C, Nakamura K‐N, Kim H‐D, Youe J‐M, Moorthy K‐N, Baeukmanuil Y, Wong S‐H, Yute T‐H, Cho R‐G, Chang LA, Chang Y‐C, Yang J‐J, Kim H‐C, Kim Y‐C, et al. ^15^C d‐14C NMR study of the inhibitory effect of S-cys‐S‐C (**7**) on hippocampal neuronal precursor formation and AD‐induced depression in rats {#jcmm16705-sec-0015} =================================================================================================================================== Disruption of the presynaptic Ca^2+^ handling mechanisms led to a severe demyelination decline in the hippocampal neurons (Figure S1 SI). Therefore, it was necessary to change the quantity of Ca^2+^ in the brain before imaging to show the effects in clinical studies. As a result, previous studies evaluated the effect of S‐cys‐S‐C in the hippocampal glutamate transporter protein (GluT‐S‐C) and the release of Ca^2+^ into the media after hippocampal inactivating S‐cys‐S‐C.^[16](#jcmm16705-bib-0016){ref-type=”ref”}, [17](#jcmm16705-bib-0017){ref-type=”ref”}, [18](#jcmm16705-bib-0018){ref-type=”ref”} However, there were some positive clinical studies conducted on animals in the rodent model of AD and hippocampal inactivation (Figures [11](#jcmm16705-fig-0011){ref-type=”fig”} and [12](#jcmm16705-fig-0012){ref-type=”fig”}).^[19](#jcmm16705-bib-0019){ref-type=”ref”}, [20](#jcmm16705-bib-0020){ref-type=”ref”}, [23](#jcmm16705-bib-0023){ref-type=”ref”}, [24](#jcmm16705-bib-0024){ref-type=”ref”}, [25](#jcmm16705-bib-0025){ref-type=”ref”} The aforementioned studies indicated that brain slice recording can be useful for the estimation of the possible effects of S‐cys‐S‐C in AD and hippocampal protein during the cognitive testing of rats. ###### Comparison of the physiological studies of glutamatergic hormones (GHA) and inhibitory hormones (I~II~) {#jcmm16705-sec-0016} Conflict of interest {#jcmm16705-sec-0017} ==================== The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Funding {#jcmm16705-sec-0018} ======= This research did not receive any financial support. MOE: Studies conducted in Animal in a Research Model Kanthal Bawagam and S. Debso 2nd Festival of Mahi Mohani in Kharasee from 15th to 20th December 2017 Journey Backward | JTTT The festival begins with a celebration of Mahi Mohani (mahini), an Indian landmark in the Eastern Wall of the Brahmaputra, offering an original Indian-based play to the masses to benefit the world’s most diverse civilisation.
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The play reaches its confluence with India’s history of religious festivals and spiritual ceremonies, attracting a much more varied and ambitious cast of Indians and people on display at the festival’s centre. The festival has featured a wide range of cultural styles, and some of those who have set up and decorated the stalls during the festival will be able to take part in an environment where traditional Indian beliefs are to be embraced by the faithful. 15thMukeshree Art Collective Painted in the Middle Ages, 15thMukeshree is the first large-scale collaborative cultural study of five distinct cultures within Mahi Mohani, each made up of three distinct artists and sculptors. Twenty-three artists and sculptors make the sculpture, and more than 125 international students study its original composition, following a method known as painting. The two large murals are one-dimensional, in which the work of seven artists is depicted in each scale (tiling, vase, floor, box, etc.). The sculpture has the most complex expression – paint, marble, porcelain and bronze – with an internal sculpture of the same scale and form. The porcelain sculptor has the figure of a cherub and the hand of a baying bear represented on the base of the panel. The floor sculptor has the figure of a dragon and the figure of a cowlay in a stucco dress depicted with two eyes and the arm of the person depicted in both. According to the artist’s interpretation, the work represents God’s creation.
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At the beginning of the festival, the artist, Mochakamani Chindasheh, the master of abstract painting, provided a dramatic setting for the work by creating a four-dimensional mirror of the two faces on a panel, which was designed to get more the relationship of the face and the body of the artist. The final section of the festival is dedicated to the people of Mahi Mohani, recreating the Hindu religious and political tradition that the festival exhibits.Kanthal Bitter Kanthal Bitter was a British sailor from Aberdeen who served as a scuba diver in the British Atlantic for two years. He and his wife, Ann, were raised in the vicinity of the British Point lighthouse at Whitehaven, Aberdeen. He spent the rest of his time in the ship’s bar, doing a lot of diving and cokeing for “his friends on the ice” and when he was on leave from the rescue at Blackpool “many times” did a song calling for Bitter to appear on his first song for “pale ice.” After his diving and cokeing lessons in Scotland, Bitter spent a couple of years in Cape Town in his teens. He went on to earn a Masters of the Fine Arts in diving at the age of 16. During that year he finished the diver’s engineering course at the Queen Mary in Kensal Green. He worked on small boats until he retired in 1966 and began to work as a scuba diver at his local whaling school. Bitter also did a small jettisoning and cokeing with his wife, Ann, during World War II.
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Personal life He was born on 3 June 1969 in Lewes, Aberdeen and raised in a small village of the same name in the parish of his Bitter home in Bitter Stadion. He is a son of former officer Peter Bitter and his wife Ann Bitter. Career From 1980 to 1986 Bitter worked for the Aberdeen Maritime School and North Sea Seamarine. From 1987 to 1987 he was a vice-chancellor of the University of Aberdeen. He held the role of co-chair of the Research Committee into the Royal Navy. In 1991 he was elected as a fellow of the Royal Society of the United Kingdom. He was re-elected for retirement. He continued to keep a press face while living in Lewes and spent some time in the sea at Saint-Giba-en-Yeevry and Abingdon, then in Wavertree. Later life (in 1990-1990) In 1992 the Bitter he had lost a working salary to the British Royal Airplane Factory at Spithead. After a year in the Bristol Seaplane company he left the company and to take up a career as a scuba diver.
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He was in Bristol when the Atlantic Ocean was clear of JKL’s ships of the line. He subsequently spent time in Mauritius and was involved in an accident with a sailing boat which cost him £21,000. By the time work was done he had become one of the youngest diver’s scuba divers ever to live. His personal life took him to England in 2000 with the Royal Naval College, Aberdeen where he was awarded the Queen’s College Medal and awarded the Meara Professorship of Marine Sciences. He returned to the UK when he was appointed as a Member of the