890 resultados para Ford, Gerald R., 1913-2006


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La tesis estudia el Convento de Los Dominicos en Madrid (1955-1958) que representa una de las obras más importantes del arquitecto Miguel Fisac (1913-2006). Supone el punto de partida de una etapa profesional donde comienza a cualificar los espacios y a abandonar la idea de la arquitectura como volumen. El proyecto se ubica en un lugar sin apenas referencias (sólo el aire, la luz y el agua) donde Fisac incorpora objetos entendidos a distintas escalas, que acentúan la correcta organización del programa propuesto. Objetos-edificios, objetos-techos de luz y objetos táctiles pertenecen a espacios singulares del conjunto conventual que se enlazan mediante un sistema de patios como estrategia de articulación. En este edificio se encuentran las claves y conceptos que Fisac aplica posteriormente en las obras de esta etapa que acaba de comenzar. Partiendo de la hipótesis de que lo cercano cualifica el espacio, se hace hincapié en los objetos que ponen en valor los lugares más significativos y en las relaciones espaciales que se plantean entre ellos. El objetivo es analizar los recursos espaciales utilizados por Fisac en este proyecto así como la relación con el lugar, la articulación de los espacios y la preocupación por el detalle. La tesis se estructura en tres capítulos: con-texto, pre-texto y texto. El primer capítulo describe el convento, comenzando con una introducción sobre la influencia de los viajes experimentales realizados por Fisac antes del desarrollo del proyecto. Es un estudio desde el punto de vista del autor y con documentación original. El segundo capítulo analiza la obra para identificar aquellos elementos que constituyen la naturaleza del proyecto y su organización espacial enfatizando el sistema de patios como elemento estructurante y una selección de los espacios singulares de la iglesia, el refectorio y las aulas que permiten tratar temás relacionados con la planta convergente en la iglesia, la doble escala en el refectorio y la iluminación en el caso de las aulas. Estos temás se explican con la elaboración de nuevos planos que apoyan el análisis. El tercer capítulo titulado el acento de los objetos, selecciona algunos de estos elementos a distintas escalas: torre, escalera, lucernario y fuente. Con el objetivo de profundizar en cada uno de ellos se utiliza la comparativa con otras referencias que plantean temás similares para entender los conceptos planteados por Fisac y su alcance. A través de la torre y la escalera del claustro, se tratan temás relacionados con la geometría y la trama estructural. Los techos de luz plantean conceptos de iluminación, acústica y continuidad interior y los pequeños objetos de piedra, madera y metal sirven para realizar un acercamiento a la materia y a la técnica a través del detalle, que Fisac aplica en casi todas sus obras. Con la superposición de estas visiones- la del historiador, la del arquitecto y la del crítico- se calibra el grado de elaboración de la obra y se sacan las conclusiones que representan los aspectos más importantes que acomete Fisac en este proyecto. ABSTRACT This thesis studies the Convent for the Dominican Order in Madrid (1955- 1958) which represents one of the most important buildings designed by the Spanish architect Miguel Fisac(1913-2006). This work will become the first step of a professional phase where he begins to qualify the spaces and abandons the idea of Architecture as a Volume. The building is located in a site without almost any reference (only the air, the light and the water). Here, Fisac incorporates different kinds of objects understood at different scales, which emphasizes the correct organisation of the program. Object-buildings, object- ceiling light and tactile-objects belong to singular room of the Conventual complex. These items connect to each other by a system of courtyards used as a strategy for the articulation of the spaces. In this building it is possible to find the keys and concepts that Fisac will apply in following his buildings of this same period that he just has started. Based on the hypothesis that the near things qualify the space, special emphasis is put on the objects that show the great value of the most significant places and the spatial relation that is created between them. The final objective is to analyse the spatial resources used by Fisac in this project, as well as the relation created with the site, the articulation of the spaces and the emphasis on the building details. The thesis is structured around three chapters: con-text, pre-text and text. The first one describes the Seminary, starting with an introduction about the influence of the research trips did by Fisac before the project was development. It is a study from the authors point of view using original documents. The next chapter analyses his work in order to identify those elements that constitute the nature of the project and its spatial organisation with special focus on the system of courtyards as element that structure everything, and a selection of the singular spaces in the church, the refectory and the classrooms that allows to treat issues related to the church´s convergent plan, the double scale of the refectory and the lighting of the classrooms. These issues are explained by new elaborated plans that support the analyse. The third chapter titled “the emphasis on the objects” selects some of these elements in different scales: tower, stairs, skylight, and fountain. In order study in depth these elements, they are compared to other references that pose similar issues in order to understand Fisac’s concepts and scope. Through the tower and the cloister stair, he addresses certain issues in relation to the geometry and structural grid. The skylights raise lighting, acoustic and indoor continuity concepts, and the small stone, wood and metal objects are used in order to carry out an approach to the material and technique through the detail that Fisac applies in almost all his work. With the overlapping of these visions - the historian, the architect and critic - the degree of elaboration is calibrated and conclusions are met to represent the most important aspects of Fisac’s project.

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The activity of the M26 meiotic recombination hot spot of Schizosaccharomyces pombe depends on the presence of the heptamer 5′-ATGACGT-3′. Transplacement of DNA fragments containing the ade6-M26 gene to other chromosomal loci has previously demonstrated that the heptamer functions in some, but not all, transplacements, suggesting that hot spot activity depends on chromosomal context. In this study, hot spot activity was tested in the absence of gross DNA changes by using site-directed mutagenesis to create the heptamer sequence at novel locations in the genome. When created by mutagenesis of 1–4 bp in the ade6 and ura4 genes, the heptamer was active as a recombination hot spot, in an orientation-independent manner, at all locations tested. Thus, the heptamer sequence can create an active hot spot in other chromosomal contexts, provided that the gross chromosomal structure is not altered; this result is consistent with the hypothesis that a specific higher-order chromatin structure is required for M26 hot spot activity.

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The Candida albicans genes, CST20 and HST7, were cloned by their ability to suppress the mating defects of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants in the ste20 and ste7 genes, which code for elements of the mating mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway. These Candida genes are both structural and functional homologs of the cognate Saccharomyces genes. The pattern of suppression in Saccharomyces is related to their presumptive position in the MAP kinase cascade. Null alleles of these genes were constructed in Candida. The Candida homozygous null mutants are defective in hyphal formation on some media, but are still induced to form hyphae by serum, showing that serum induction of hyphae is independent of the MAP kinase cascade. The Candida heterozygotes CST20/cst20 and HST7/hst7 are also defective in hyphal formation. This lack of dominance of the wild-type allele suggests that gene dosage is important in Candida.

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The three yeast A kinase catalytic subunit isoforms are redundant for viability. We demonstrate that they have dramatically different roles in pseudohyphal development: Tpk2 is essential, whereas Tpk3 inhibits. Tpk1 has no discernible effect. Two-hybrid analysis identified the transcription factor Sfl1 as a protein that interacts specifically with Tpk2, but not Tpk1 or Tpk3. Deletion of SFL1 enhances pseudohyphal and invasive growth. Flo11, a cell surface flocculin required for pseudohyphal development, is transcriptionally regulated by Tpk2 and Sfl1. Genetic evidence indicates that Tpk2 acts upstream of Sfl1 in the regulation of Flo11.

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The two highly conserved RAS genes of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are redundant for viability. Here we show that haploid invasive growth development depends on RAS2 but not RAS1. Ras1p is not sufficiently expressed to induce invasive growth. Ras2p activates invasive growth using either of two downstream signaling pathways, the filamentation MAPK (Cdc42p/Ste20p/MAPK) cascade or the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (Cyr1p/cAMP/PKA) pathway. This signal branch point can be uncoupled in cells expressing Ras2p mutant proteins that carry amino acid substitutions in the adenylyl cyclase interaction domain and therefore activate invasive growth solely dependent on the MAPK cascade. Both Ras2p-controlled signaling pathways stimulate expression of the filamentation response element-driven reporter gene depending on the transcription factors Ste12p and Tec1p, indicating a crosstalk between the MAPK and the cAMP signaling pathways in haploid cells during invasive growth.