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Im Jahre 1891 entdeckte man bei Grabungsarbeiten in der Flur "Ob der Kaul" (heute Steinfelder Straße) in Nettersheim/Marcomagus (Kr. Euskirchen) in einem frühmittelalterlichen Gräberfeld eine fragmentarische Weihinschrift aus rötlichem Sandstein (Höhe 65,5 cm – Breite 40 cm – Tiefe 15 cm). Der in zwei Hälften gebrochene Stein diente in Zweitverwendung als Deckplatte für ein fränkisches Grab und wurde offenbar für diesen Zweck passend geschlagen,1 so dass die gesamte linke Hälfte der Inschrift und einige Buchstaben der rechten Seite verloren gingen. Obwohl die Inschrift teilweise stark verwittert ist, können die erhaltenen Buchstaben noch relativ sicher gelesen werden. Die Buchstabenhöhe beträgt in der ersten Zeile 4,5 cm, in den folgenden Zeilen 4 cm. Der Zeilenabstand misst 2 cm...
Contents:
Yuki Chiba, Santiago Escobar, Naoki Nishida, and David Sabel, and Manfred Schmidt-Schauß : Preface:
The Collection of all Abstracts of the Talks at WPTE 2015 xi
Brigitte Pientka : Mechanizing Meta-Theory in Beluga
Giulio Guerrieri : Head reduction and normalization in a call-by-value lambda-calculus
Adrián Palacios and Germán Vidal : Towards Modelling Actor-Based Concurrency in Term Rewriting
David Sabel and Manfred Schmidt-Schauß : Observing Success in the Pi-Calculus
Sjaak Smetsers, Ken Madlener, and Marko van Eekelen : Formalizing Bialgebraic Semantics in PVS 6.0
The calculus LRP is a polymorphically typed call-by-need lambda calculus extended by data constructors, case-expressions, seq-expressions and type abstraction and type application. This report is devoted to the extension LRPw of LRP by scoped sharing decorations. The extension cannot be properly encoded into LRP if improvements are defined w.r.t. the number of lbeta, case, and seq-reductions, which makes it necessary to reconsider the claims and proofs of properties. We show correctness of improvement properties of reduction and transformation rules and also of computation rules for decorations in the extended calculus LRPw. We conjecture that conservativity of the embedding of LRP in LRPw holds.
This report documents the extension LRPw of LRP by sharing decorations. We show correctness of improvement properties of reduction and transformation rules and also of computation rules for decorations in the extended calculus LRPw. We conjecture that conservativity of the embedding of LRP in LRPw holds.
An improvement is a correct program transformation that optimizes the program, where the criterion is that the number of computation steps until a value is obtained is decreased. This paper investigates improvements in both { an untyped and a polymorphically typed { call-by-need lambda-calculus with letrec, case, constructors and seq. Besides showing that several local optimizations are improvements, the main result of the paper is a proof that common subexpression elimination is correct and an improvement, which proves a conjecture and thus closes a gap in Moran and Sands' improvement theory. We also prove that several different length measures used for improvement in Moran and Sands' call-by-need calculus and our calculus are equivalent.
An improvement is a correct program transformation that optimizes the program, where the criterion is that the number of computation steps until a value is obtained is decreased. This paper investigates improvements in both { an untyped and a polymorphically typed { call-by-need lambda-calculus with letrec, case, constructors and seq. Besides showing that several local optimizations are improvements, the main result of the paper is a proof that common subexpression elimination is correct and an improvement, which proves a conjecture and thus closes a gap in Moran and Sands' improvement theory. We also prove that several different length measures used for improvement in Moran and Sands' call-by-need calculus and our calculus are equivalent.
Hepatitis B caused by infection with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) still ranks among the most challenging infectious diseases of our time. Despite the availability of an effective prophylactic vaccine, 240 million people worldwide are estimated to be chronically infected with HBV and are at risk of developing life-threatening liver diseases, including cirrhosis and liver cancer. The underlying pathogenic mechanisms of HBV-associated liver diseases are only incompletely understood. It is widely accepted that liver pathology results from long-term immune-mediated liver injury and inflammation as a consequence of inefficient viral elimination. This injury can be naturally compensated by liver regeneration. However, chronic liver damage and permanent inflammation debilitates the regenerative capacity of the liver and fosters fibrosis as well as accumulation of chromosomal aberrations, which both contribute to cirrhosis and liver cancer. Liver regeneration requires the presence of the redox-sensitive transcription factor Nrf2 and intact insulin receptor signaling. A lack of Nrf2 causes increased intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that inactivate insulin receptor signaling and induce insulin resistance. Interestingly, HBV was observed to activate Nrf2 and the expression of Nrf2-regulated genes. This argues against an inhibitory effect of HBV on insulin receptor signaling by increased ROS levels. However, chronic HBV infection is associated with dysregulation of hepatocyte proliferation and retardation of liver regeneration. Hence, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the influence of HBV on the process of liver regeneration with respect to the insulin receptor signaling pathway. After short-term carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced liver damage, HBV transgenic mice present prolonged liver damage and impaired liver regeneration as reflected by reduced hepatocyte proliferation and increased apoptosis. Impaired hepatocyte proliferation in HBV transgenic mice correlates with diminished activation of the insulin receptor. It was further observed in vitro that the activation of Nrf2 by HBV induces increased levels of the insulin receptor mRNA and protein in HBV-expressing cells. Strikingly, stably HBV-expressing cells as well as primary mouse hepatocytes from HBV transgenic mice bind less insulin due to reduced amounts of insulin receptor on the cell surface. This is caused by intracellular retention of the insulin receptor in HBV-expressing cells as a consequence of increased amounts of the cellular trafficking factor α-taxilin. The reduced amounts of insulin receptor on the cell surface impair insulin sensitivity in HBV-expressing cells and inactivate downstream signaling cascades that initiate insulin-dependent gene expression and glucose uptake. As a consequence of impaired hepatocyte proliferation and liver regeneration, HBV transgenic mice exhibit increased development of fibrosis after long-term CCl4-induced liver damage. Taken together, in this thesis, a novel pathomechanism could be uncovered that includes inactivation of insulin receptor signaling by HBV via intracellular retention of the insulin receptor leading to impaired liver regeneration after liver damage and promotion of liver fibrosis. These findings significantly contribute to an enhanced understanding of HBV-associated liver pathogenesis.
Aus Wissen wird Gesundheit : das Magazin des Universitätsklinikums Frankfurt. Ausgabe 04/2015
(2015)
Aus Wissen wird Gesundheit : das Magazin des Universitätsklinikums Frankfurt. Ausgabe 03/2015
(2015)
Aus Wissen wird Gesundheit : das Magazin des Universitätsklinikums Frankfurt. Ausgabe 02/2015
(2015)
Aus Wissen wird Gesundheit : das Magazin des Universitätsklinikums Frankfurt. Ausgabe 01/2015
(2015)
Prehistoric dental treatments were extremely rare, and the few documented cases are known from the Neolithic, when the adoption of early farming culture caused an increase of carious lesions. Here we report the earliest evidence of dental caries intervention on a Late Upper Palaeolithic modern human specimen (Villabruna) from a burial in Northern Italy. Using Scanning Electron Microscopy we show the presence of striations deriving from the manipulation of a large occlusal carious cavity of the lower right third molar. The striations have a "V"-shaped transverse section and several parallel micro-scratches at their base, as typically displayed by cutmarks on teeth. Based on in vitro experimental replication and a complete functional reconstruction of the Villabruna dental arches, we confirm that the identified striations and the associated extensive enamel chipping on the mesial wall of the cavity were produced ante-mortem by pointed flint tools during scratching and levering activities. The Villabruna specimen is therefore the oldest known evidence of dental caries intervention, suggesting at least some knowledge of disease treatment well before the Neolithic. This study suggests that primitive forms of carious treatment in human evolution entail an adaptation of the well-known toothpicking for levering and scratching rather than drilling practices.
Cardiac arrhythmias are often associated with mutations in ion channels or other proteins. To enable drug development for distinct arrhythmias, model systems are required that allow implementing patient-specific mutations. We assessed a muscular pump in Caenorhabditis elegans. The pharynx utilizes homologues of most of the ion channels, pumps and transporters defining human cardiac physiology. To yield precise rhythmicity, we optically paced the pharynx using channelrhodopsin-2. We assessed pharynx pumping by extracellular recordings (electropharyngeograms--EPGs), and by a novel video-microscopy based method we developed, which allows analyzing multiple animals simultaneously. Mutations in the L-type VGCC (voltage-gated Ca(2+)-channel) EGL-19 caused prolonged pump duration, as found for analogous mutations in the Cav1.2 channel, associated with long QT syndrome. egl-19 mutations affected ability to pump at high frequency and induced arrhythmicity. The pharyngeal neurons did not influence these effects. We tested whether drugs could ameliorate arrhythmia in the optogenetically paced pharynx. The dihydropyridine analog Nemadipine A prolonged pump duration in wild type, and reduced or prolonged pump duration of distinct egl-19 alleles, thus indicating allele-specific effects. In sum, our model may allow screening of drug candidates affecting specific VGCCs mutations, and permit to better understand the effects of distinct mutations on a macroscopic level.
The c-MYC proto-oncogene is a regulator of fundamental cellular processes such as cell cycle progression and apoptosis. The development of novel c-MYC inhibitors that can act by targeting the c-MYC DNA G-quadruplex at the level of transcription would provide potential insight into structure-based design of small molecules and lead to a promising arena for cancer therapy. Herein we report our finding that two simple bis-triazolylcarbazole derivatives can inhibit c-MYC transcription, possibly by stabilizing the c-MYC G-quadruplex. These compounds are prepared using a facile and modular approach based on Cu(I) catalysed azide and alkyne cycloaddition. A carbazole ligand with carboxamide side chains is found to be microenvironment-sensitive and highly selective for "turn-on" detection of c-MYC quadruplex over duplex DNA. This fluorescent probe is applicable to visualize the cellular nucleus in living cells. Interestingly, the ligand binds to c-MYC in an asymmetric fashion and selects the minor-populated conformer via conformational selection.
This thesis presents microstructural investigations of rock salt from the central part of the Gorleben salt dome (Northern Germany). The main emphasis was to characterize the rock salt microfabrics, to identify operating deformation mechanisms in halite and anhydrite and to decipher the macro- and microstructural distribution of hydrocarbons, which have been encountered during the underground exploration of the salt dome. The microfabrics of the Knäuel- and the Streifensalz formation indicate that strain-induced grain boundary migration has been active during deformation of halite. Crystal plastic deformation of halite is further documented by lattice bending, subgrain formation and minor subgrain rotation. Evidence for pressure solution of halite has not been found, but cannot be excluded because of the small grain size, the lack of LPO and the low differential stress (1.1 - 1.3 MPa) as deduced from subgrain-size piezometry. Solution precipitation creep was proven for intercalated anhydrite layers and clusters, which have been deformed in the brittle-ductile regime. Brittle deformation of anhydrite in terms of boudinage and fracturing was counteracted by viscous creep of halite which caused a re-sealing of fractures and a reestablishing of the characteristic sealing capacity of rock salt. Hydrocarbons are mainly located along cross cut 1 West of the Gorleben exploration mine and are heterogeneously distributed in the rock salt. They are incorporated in the rock salt foliation in the form of streaks, dispersed clouds, clusters and isolated patches. On the micro-scale, hydrocarbons are trapped along grain boundaries of halite and/or anhydrite, in micro-capillary tubes of anhydrite and in pore space of the rare rock salt with elevated porosity (< 1.26 vol.-%). Such elevated porosities correlate with elevated hydrocarbon concentrations of several hundred ppm. The overall concentrations of hydrocarbons, however, are very low (< 0.05 wt.-%). Elevated porosity is depicted to be a remnant originating from an early stage of salt uplift when fluid and hydrocarbons have migrated and spread from the Staßfurt Karbonat (z2SK) into the superjacent Gorleben Hauptsalz. During halokinesis and the strong reworking of the salt body hydrocarbons have been redistributed and dismembered resulting in the isolated present-day occurrences. The distribution of hydrocarbons shows no relation to local variations in the rock salt fabric. The microstructures of hydrocarbon-bearing and hydrocarbon-free Gorleben rock salt are not distinguishable from each other. Likewise, the presence of hydrocarbons should not have influenced the mechanical behavior or the rock salt as indicated by the microfabrics studied and by geomechanical data. The pure amounts of hydrocarbons are too low for any detectable impact on the barrier properties of this part of rock salt. Although hydrocarbons have migrated into the Gorleben Hauptsalz during an early stage of salt uplift when the sealing capacity of rock salt was diminished, the major implication of their isolated distribution patterns is that the Gorleben rock salt was able to regain its sealing capacity during subsequent deformation and re-equilibration. Former migration pathways for fluid and hydrocarbons have been healed and do not exist anymore. The application of X-ray computed tomography (CT) allows the 3D visualization and quantification of anhydrite, pore space and fluid phases located along grain-boundaries or trapped as intracrystalline inclusions. The 3D reconstruction of anhydrite clusters and pore space for the same sample reveals different spatial distribution patterns. This fact implies that anhydrite is not responsible for such elevated pore space in the rock salt studied, which has been largely closed during the polyphase deformation history of the Gorleben salt dome. High-resolution nanoCT scans (≤ 1 μm voxel size) of single intra- and intercrystalline fluid inclusions in rock salt enable a characterization of gaseous, solid and liquid phases inside single fluid inclusions and give exact information on morphology and shape. The 3D reconstruction of grain boundary fluid inclusions allows the amount, volumes, surface areas or diameters of various types to be determined. Non-destructive X-ray CT imaging is presented as very useful tool to characterize the structural inventory of rock salt. This non-destructive technique offers new perspectives for microstructural studies and for a wide range of research in structural geology, in general.
Viruses rely completely on the hosts' machinery for translation of viral transcripts. However, for most viruses infecting humans, codon usage preferences (CUPrefs) do not match those of the host. Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are a showcase to tackle this paradox: they present a large genotypic diversity and a broad range of phenotypic presentations, from asymptomatic infections to productive lesions and cancer. By applying phylogenetic inference and dimensionality reduction methods, we demonstrate first that genes in HPVs are poorly adapted to the average human CUPrefs, the only exception being capsid genes in viruses causing productive lesions. Phylogenetic relationships between HPVs explained only a small proportion of CUPrefs variation. Instead, the most important explanatory factor for viral CUPrefs was infection phenotype, as orthologous genes in viruses with similar clinical presentation displayed similar CUPrefs. Moreover, viral genes with similar spatiotemporal expression patterns also showed similar CUPrefs. Our results suggest that CUPrefs in HPVs reflect either variations in the mutation bias or differential selection pressures depending on the clinical presentation and expression timing. We propose that poor viral CUPrefs may be central to a trade-off between strong viral gene expression and the potential for eliciting protective immune response.
BACKGROUND: Human SAMHD1 is a triphosphohydrolase that restricts the replication of retroviruses, retroelements and DNA viruses in noncycling cells. While modes of action have been extensively described for human SAMHD1, only little is known about the regulation of SAMHD1 in the mouse. Here, we characterize the antiviral activity of murine SAMHD1 with the help of knockout mice to shed light on the regulation and the mechanism of the SAMHD1 restriction and to validate the SAMHD1 knockout mouse model for the use in future infectivity studies.
RESULTS: We found that endogenous mouse SAMHD1 restricts not only HIV-1 but also MLV reporter virus infection at the level of reverse transcription in primary myeloid cells. Similar to the human protein, the antiviral activity of murine SAMHD1 is regulated through phosphorylation at threonine 603 and is limited to nondividing cells. Comparing the susceptibility to infection with intracellular dNTP levels and SAMHD1 phosphorylation in different cell types shows that both functions are important determinants of the antiviral activity of murine SAMHD1. In contrast, we found the proposed RNase activity of SAMHD1 to be less important and could not detect any effect of mouse or human SAMHD1 on the level of incoming viral RNA.
CONCLUSION: Our findings show that SAMHD1 in the mouse blocks retroviral infection at the level of reverse transcription and is regulated through cell cycle-dependent phosphorylation. We show that the antiviral restriction mediated by murine SAMHD1 is mechanistically similar to what is known for the human protein, making the SAMHD1 knockout mouse model a valuable tool to characterize the influence of SAMHD1 on the replication of different viruses in vivo.
Self-narratives of patients have received increasing interest in schizophrenia since they offer unique material to study patients’ subjective experience related to their illness, in particular the alteration of self that accompanies schizophrenia. In this study, we investigated the life narratives and the ability to integrate and bind memories of personal events into a coherent narrative in 27 patients with schizophrenia and 26 controls. Four aspects of life narratives were analyzed: coherence with cultural concept of biography, temporal coherence, causal-motivational coherence and thematic coherence. Results showed that in patients cultural biographical knowledge is preserved, whereas temporal coherence is partially impaired. Furthermore, causal-motivational and thematic coherence are significantly impaired: patients have difficulties explaining how events have modeled their identity, and integrating different events along thematic lines. Impairment of global causal-motivational and thematic coherence was significantly correlated with patients’ executive dysfunction, suggesting that cognitive impairment observed in patients could affect their ability to construct a coherent narrative of their life by binding important events to their self. This study provides new understanding of the cognitive deficits underlying self-disorders in patients with schizophrenia. Our findings suggest the potential usefulness of developing new therapeutic interventions to improve autobiographical reasoning skills.
Gallbladder cancer (GBC) is a highly malignant tumor characterized by a poor response to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. We evaluated the in vitro and in vivo antitumor efficacy of mTOR inhibitors, rapamycin and WYE-354. In vitro assays showed WYE-354 significantly reduced cell viability, migration and invasion and phospho-P70S6K expression in GBC cells. Mice harboring subcutaneous gallbladder tumors, treated with WYE-354 or rapamycin, exhibited a significant reduction in tumor mass. A short-term treatment with a higher dose of WYE-354 decreased the tumor size by 68.6% and 52.4%, in mice harboring G-415 or TGBC-2TKB tumors, respectively, compared to the control group. By contrast, treatment with a prolonged-low-dose regime of rapamycin almost abrogated tumor growth, exhibiting 92.7% and 97.1% reduction in tumor size, respectively, compared to control mice. These results were accompanied by a greater decrease in the phosphorylation status of P70S6K and a lower cell proliferation Ki67 index, compared to WYE-354 treated mice, suggesting a more effective mTOR pathway inhibition. These findings provide a proof of concept for the use of rapamycin or WYE-354 as potentially good candidates to be studied in clinical trials in GBC patients.
Mechanism of Na+-dependent citrate transport from the structure of an asymmetrical CitS dimer
(2015)
The common human pathogen Salmonella enterica takes up citrate as a nutrient via the sodium symporter SeCitS. Uniquely, our 2.5 Å x-ray structure of the SeCitS dimer shows three different conformations of the active protomer. One protomer is in the outside-facing state. Two are in different inside-facing states. All three states resolve the substrates in their respective binding environments. Together with comprehensive functional studies on reconstituted proteoliposomes, the structures explain the transport mechanism in detail. Our results indicate a six-step process, with a rigid-body 31° rotation of a helix bundle that translocates the bound substrates by 16 Å across the membrane. Similar transport mechanisms may apply to a wide variety of related and unrelated secondary transporters, including important drug targets.
BACKGROUND: Toxoplasmosis endangers the unborn child if its infectious agent--toxoplasma gondii--is transmitted transplacentally during pregnancy. Although this condition occurs in all parts of the world and represents a major public health burden, no detailed knowledge on the global research architecture of congenital toxoplasmosis is available thus far. Hence, it was the aim of this study to assess the related global research activity over the past 110 years.
METHODS: We employed the NewQIS platform, which combines established scientometric and socioeconomic analysis tools with novel visualizing techniques such as density equalizing mapping projections.
RESULTS: In the Web of Science, 13,044 congenital toxoplasmosis-related items published between 1900 and 2012 were identified. These were issued by 26,483 authors originating from 125 countries. The US was the dominating nation (38.7 % of total scientific output), followed by France (10.9 %) and Great Britain (9.2 %). The US also led the ranking in regards to semi-qualitative parameters (total citations, country-specific h-indices and citation rates). When research activity was related to economic figures, the ratio of total toxoplasmosis publications to the total GDP listed Switzerland first with an average of 589.35 toxoplasmosis-related publications per GDP in 1000 Bio US-$, followed by France (545.16), the UK (486.13) and Brazil (431.84) and the US (311.11). The relation of toxoplasmosis-specific publications to the economic power indicator GDP per capita in 1000 US-$ revealed that the US was ranked first with 97.65 toxoplasmosis-related publications/GDP per capita in 1000 US-$, followed by Brazil (85.95). Subject area analysis indicated a relative shortage of studies that addressed pharmacological or public health aspects of congenital toxoplasmosis.
CONCLUSIONS: This study is the first in-depth approach to sketch a global picture of the congenital toxoplasmosis research architecture. In contrast to other fields of biomedical research, not only high-income countries play a major role regarding congenital toxoplasmosis research but also countries such as Brazil that have a high incidence of congenital toxoplasmosis.
Nachdem Padua dem Proto-Signore Ezzelino III. da Romano entrissen worden war und derselbe wenige Jahre später den Schlachtentod gefunden hatte, verfasste der Paduaner Rolandino eine Chronik, in der er die Ereignisse in der Trevisaner Mark vom späten 12. Jahrhundert bis ins Jahr 1260 schildert. Der vorliegende Aufsatz veranschaulicht, bei weiter Auslegung des Kommunikationsbegriffs, vier Kommunikationsebenen in der und über die Chronik. Anhand ausgewählter Beispiele werden einige Kommunikationskontexte im spätmittelalterlichen Ostoberitalien sowie Darstellungsabsicht, Vorgehensweise und Gegenwartsinteresse des Chronisten und auch die frühe Rezeption des Werkes seitens der paduanischen Bürgerschaft aufgezeigt.
Modern experiments in heavy ion collisions operate with huge data rates that can not be fully stored on the currently available storage devices. Therefore the data flow should be reduced by selecting those collisions that potentially carry the information of the physics interest. The future CBM experiment will have no simple criteria for selecting such collisions and requires the full online reconstruction of the collision topology including reconstruction of short-lived particles.
In this work the KF Particle Finder package for online reconstruction and selection of short-lived particles is proposed and developed. It reconstructs more than 70 decays, covering signals from all the physics cases of the CBM experiment: strange particles, strange resonances, hypernuclei, low mass vector mesons, charmonium, and open-charm particles.
The package is based on the Kalman filter method providing a full set of the particle parameters together with their errors including position, momentum, mass, energy, lifetime, etc. It shows a high quality of the reconstructed particles, high efficiencies, and high signal to background ratios.
The KF Particle Finder is extremely fast for achieving the reconstruction speed of 1.5 ms per minimum-bias AuAu collision at 25 AGeV beam energy on single CPU core. It is fully vectorized and parallelized and shows a strong linear scalability on the many-core architectures of up to 80 cores. It also scales within the First Level Event Selection package on the many-core clusters up to 3200 cores.
The developed KF Particle Finder package is a universal platform for short- lived particle reconstruction, physics analysis and online selection.
Die Relevanz von MSC aus Fettgewebe (ASC) in der regenerativen Medizin überrascht in Anbetracht ihrer breit gefächerten Eigenschaften nicht. Neben antiinflammatorischen Eigenschaften und Hypoxieresistenz können sie in eine Vielzahl von Geweben differenzieren und in geschädigtes Gewebe migrieren, wo sie an Reperaturvorgängen beteiligt sind. Dabei stehen unterschiedliche Quellen zur Isolierung von MSC (und ASC) zur Verfügung. Um ASC therapeutisch einsetzen zu können, ist es essentiell ihre Quellen und ihr Potenzial zu erforschen. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass perirenales Fettgewebe eine geeignete Quelle für ASC (prASC) darstellt. Der Nachweis der Oberflächenantigene CD73, CD90 und CD105 mittels Durchflusszytometrie sowie die Fähigkeit der prASC an Zellkulturplastik zu adhärieren, erlauben die Schlussfolgerung, dass es sich bei den nach einem bereits etablierten Verfahren isolierten Zellen um MSC handelt. Außerdem konnte durch eine zweiwöchige Kultivierung der prASC in supplementierten Medien die Differenzierung in Adipozyten, Chondrozyten sowie Osteozyten induziert werden. Der Nachweis erfolgte durch cytochemische Färbemethoden. In dieser Arbeit wurde die Differenzierung von prASC in Epithelzellen untersucht. Dafür wurden die Zellen in unterschiedlichen ATRA-haltigen Kulturmedien und konditioniertem Medium aus Tubulusepithelzellen kultiviert. Der Einfluss der Medien wurde mittels Western Blot, qPCR und Immunfluoreszenzfärbung nachgewiesen. Die Kultivierung mit ATRA führte zu einer signifikanten Erhöhung der Expression von CK18 und ZO-1. Dabei handelt es sich um Marker, die charakteristisch für Epithelzellen sind. Es konnte folglich gezeigt werden, dass humane prASC in vitro eindeutig in epithelialer Richtung differenzieren können. Unter dem Einfluss von ATRA-supplementierten Medien exprimierten die kultivierten Zellen Genprodukte, die Epithelzellen zuzuordnen sind.
Welche Bedeutung diese Erkenntnis hat ist noch unklar. Möglicherweise sind prASC, als Stammzellen aus Nischen mit anatomischer Nähe zu den Nieren, potente Kandidaten, um untergegangenes Nierengewebe, wie beispielsweise Tubulusepithelzellen, zu ersetzen.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde das Auftreten einer Fatigue und Depression mit verschiedenen Messinstrumenten in den beiden Vergleichsgruppen Patienten mit einem Prostatakarzinom unter GnRH-Analoga-Therapie im Vergleich zu Patienten mit einem benignen Prostatasyndrom (BPS) untersucht.
Dabei wurde neben der Erhebung des sozioökonomischen Status eine Befragung mittels Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI), EORTC-QLQ-C30 und dem Beck Depressions-Inventar (BDI) durchgeführt. Die Hypothese war, dass kein Unterschied im Vorhandensein der beiden Merkmale Fatigue und Depression zwischen den beiden Gruppen besteht.
Insgesamt konnten 102 Prostatakarzinom- und 100 BPS-Patienten in die zuvor von der Ethikkommission der Landesärztekammer Hessen genehmigte Studie eingeschlossen werden. Die Datenerhebung erfolgte an ambulanten Patienten in den urologischen Praxisstandorten Prof. Dr. Bickeböller (Frankfurt) und PD Dr. Engl (Oberursel).
In der Auswertung stellte sich ein signifikanter Unterschied hinsichtlich des Durchschnittsalters der Probanden (74,2 Jahre bei den Prostatakarzinompatienten, 70,1 Jahre bei den BPS-Patienten) dar. Bei der Schulbildung und dem Familienstand bestand kein signifikanter Unterschied.
Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Fatigue gemessen mittels BFI-Score keinen signifikanten Unterschied zwischen den beiden Gruppen erreichte. Der mittlere BFI-Score bei den Prostatakarzinompatienten lag bei 2,86 und bei den BPS-Patienten bei 2,79 Punkten. Von einer behandlungsbedüftigen, klinisch relevanten Fatigue spricht man nach allgemeinem Konsens bei einem Punktewert > 3. Diese lag bei 36,7% der Prostatakarzinompatienten und bei 33,7% der BPS-Patienten vor (p = 0,321).
Im EORTC-QLQ C30 Fragebogen ergaben sich signifikante Unterschiede für die Funktionscores Rollenfunktion (p = 0,038) und physische Funktion (p = 0,020) sowie für den Symptomscore Fatigue (FA-Score) (p = 0,047) zugunsten der BPS-Patienten, die jeweils bessere Werte erzielten. Dabei lag der durchschnittliche Punktewert der Rollenfunktion bei den Prostatakarzinompatienten mit 70,1 Punkten niedriger als bei den BPS-Patienten mit 77,5 Punkten. Der durchschnittliche Score für die physische Funktion lag bei den Prostatakarzinompatienten bei 71,0 Punkten (BPS-Patienten 78,4 Punkte) und der FA-Score bei 38,3 Punkten (BPS-Patienten 31,4 Punkte), wobei berücksichtigt werden muss, dass beim FA-Score niedrigere Punktewerte ein geringeres Ausmaß an Fatigue repräsentieren.
Der BDI offenbarte signifikante Unterschiede (Angabe in Mittelwerten) bei den Attributen „Selbstkritik“ (Prostatakarzinompatienten 0,23 Punkte, BPS-Patienten 0,44 Punkte, p = 0,015), „Energieverlust“ (Prostatakarzinompatienten 1,01 Punkte, BPS-Patienten 0,71 Punkte, p = 0,020) und „Verlust an sexuellem Interesse“ (Prostatakarzinompatienten 1,65 Punkte, BPS-Patienten 0,69 Punkte, p = 0,000). Von einer milden depressiven Symptomatik spricht man vereinbarungsgemäß ab einem BDI-Gesamt-Mittelwert von ≥ 14 Punkten. Der Mittelwert unserer beiden Vergleichsgruppen lag bei 10,29 (Prostatakarzinompatienten) und 8,6 (Patienten mit BPS) und war mit p = 0,608 nicht signifikant unterschiedlich. Eine Korrelation zwischen Fatigue und Depression konnte nicht erfolgen, da die Anzahl der Patienten mit einer moderaten/schweren Depression aufgrund der kleinen Fallzahl zu gering war.
Insgesamt konnte bei keinem der untersuchten Messinstrumente eine signifikante Korrelation zum Alter oder zum Familienstand festgestellt werden. Es zeigte sich ein signifikanter Unterschied (p = 0,029) im Vergleich der Schulbildung zum Ausmaß der Fatigue im FA-Score bei Prostatakarzinompatienten zuungunsten einer niedrigeren Schulbildung. Bei den BPS-Patienten konnte dieser Sachverhalt nicht gezeigt werden.
Zusammenfassend kann festgestellt werden, dass kein signifikanter Unterschied der beiden Gruppen in Hinblick auf das Ausmaß der Fatigue gemessen mit dem BFI-Score und das Auftreten einer Depression gemessen mit dem BDI besteht. Der signifikante Unterschied der Fatigue gemessen mittels FA-Score des EORTC-QLQ-C30 Fragebogens kann mit einem von Knobel et al. beschriebenen floor/ceiling effect erklärt werden, der bei Karzinompatienten das Ausmaß der Fatigue aufgrund von physischen Einschränkungen überschätzt und bei gesunden Patienten unterschätzt.
Dass Patienten mit einer benignen Grunderkrankung wie dem Prostatasyndrom im gleichen Ausmaß an Fatigue leiden wie Prostatakarzinompatienten wurde in unserer Arbeit erstmalig gezeigt und bedarf der weiteren Forschung, da die bislang bekannten pathophysiologischen Faktoren der Fatigue kein ausreichendes Erklärungsmodell bieten. Eine gestörte Nachtruhe durch die vermehrt im Rahmen des BPS auftretende Nykturie kann als eine der Ursachen angenommen werden, diesbezüglich sollten zukünftig weitere Untersuchungen stattfinden.
In der familienbiographischen Studie „Bürgerliche Lebenswelten im Spiegel eines familiären Briefwechsels“ wird eine bürgerliche, nicht-prominente Familie aus Hamburg über drei Generationen hinweg in der Zeit von 1840 bis 1930 untersucht. Als Quellen wurden knapp 3000 Privatbriefe sowie mehrere Familienchroniken ausgewertet.
Thematisch gehört die Arbeit zum Kontext der deutschsprachigen Bürgertumsforschung und hat eine Schnittmenge mit mehreren thematischen Unterbereichen: Sie legt einen starken Fokus auf geschlechtergeschichtliche Themen und Problemstellungen und weist interdisziplinär Schnittmengen mit der Soziologie auf. Gerade bei der Beschreibung von biographisch hochemotionalen Momenten nähert sie sich bewusst der bislang wenig beachteten ,Gefühlskultur’ bürgerlicher Menschen und ihrer je nach Persönlichkeit sehr individuellen Ausprägung an.
Breast cancer is fast becoming the leading cause of oncologic morbidity and mortality among women worldwide. Demographic changes in Asia, Southeast Asia, and South America will further accelerate this trend. Different specialties are involved in the treatment of breast cancer patients: gynecology, surgery, pathology, hematology/oncology, radiology, radiation oncology, and nuclear medicine. Optimal results are seen in countries providing standardized breast cancer care in certified breast centers. The present article provides an overview of current state-of-the-art treatment strategies and explains the contributions of different specialties to optimal and individualized care for breast cancer patients. Breast cancer will be one of the most important health issues facing physicians involved with women’s health and a basic understanding of current treatment objectives will be essential medical knowledge for everyone taking care of female patients.
Der Pilz Podospora anserina ist seit mehr als fünf Jahrzehnten ein wichtiger Modellorganismus für die Alternsforschung. Insbesondere die Mitochondrien, essentielle eukaryotische Zellorganellen – wegen ihrer Funktion im Energiestoffwechsel häufig auch als „zelluläre Kraftwerke“ bezeichnet, sind Schlüsselfaktoren für den Alterungsprozess dieses Organismus.
Im Rahmen einer vorangegangenen Diplomarbeit wurde daher der Einfluss der mitochondrialen CLPXP-Protease, einem bisher noch wenig erforschten Bestandteil der Proteinqualitätskontrolle in Mitochondrien, auf die Alterung von P. anserina untersucht. Mitochondriale CLPXP-Proteasen sind, wie auch ihre bakteriellen Pendants, aus zwei verschiedenen Untereinheiten aufgebaut: der Protease-Komponente CLPP und der Chaperon-Komponente CLPX. Die Deletion des Gens PaClpP, kodierend für CLPP in P. anserina, führte zu einer überraschenden Verlängerung der gesunden Lebensspanne der Mutante. Darüber hinaus war es möglich, den pilzlichen PaClpP-Deletionsstamm durch Einbringen von CLPP des Menschen zu komplementieren. Dies beweist, dass die Proteasen CLPP des Menschen und von P. anserina funktionell homolog sind. Dadurch eröffnete sich die Perspektive, diesen einfachen Modellorganismus für die Gewinnung potenziell auf den Menschen übertragbarer Erkenntnisse einzusetzen. Bedeutenderweise ist die menschliche CLPXP-Protease wahrscheinlich involviert in die Entstehung verschiedener Krankheiten, darunter das Perrault-Syndrom sowie einige Krebsarten. Die zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen sind jedoch noch weitestgehend unverstanden.
Ziel des in dieser Dissertation beschriebenen Forschungsprojektes war daher die Gewinnung genauerer Einsichten in die molekulare Funktion und die daraus folgende biologische Rolle der mitochondrialen CLPXP-Protease von P. anserina. Der wohl wichtigste Punkt für das detaillierte Verständnis einer Protease ist die Kenntnis ihres Substratspektrums, d. h. der von ihr abgebauten Proteine. Tatsächlich wurde aber bis heute noch in keinem eukaryotischen Organismus eine umfassende Analyse der Substrate einer mitochondrialen CLPXP-Protease vorgenommen. Um diese Wissenslücke zu füllen, wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit eine ursprünglich in Bakterien entwickelte Verfahrensweise, der sogenannte CLPP „Substrat-trapping Assay“, in P. anserina implementiert. Dafür mussten zunächst die notwendigen handwerklichen Voraussetzungen für den Assay geschaffen werden, insbesondere die effiziente Affinitätsaufreinigung von Proteinen aus isolierten Mitochondrien – einer bisher in P. anserina noch nicht angewandten Technik. Unter Verwendung verschiedener neu hergestellter Varianten der menschlichen Protease-Komponente CLPP, darunter einer proteolytisch inaktiven Variante zum „Einfangen“ von Substraten, konnte der CLPP „Substrat-trapping Assay“ in P. anserina erfolgreich durchgeführt werden. Insgesamt wurden, in Kooperation mit der Arbeitsgruppe von Julian D. Langer (Max-Planck-Institut für Biophysik; Durchführung von massenspektrometrischen Analysen) nahezu 70 spezifische Proteine erstmalig als potenzielle Substrate oder Interaktionspartner einer mitochondrialen CLPXP-Protease identifiziert. Bei einem Großteil dieser Proteine handelt es sich um Enzyme und Komponenten verschiedener Stoffwechselwege – vor allem um solche, die eine zentrale Rolle im mitochondrialen Energiestoffwechsel spielen. Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Arbeit legen somit folgende Arbeitsthese als Schlussfazit und gleichzeitig Ausganspunkt für zukünftige Untersuchungen nahe:
Die hauptsächliche molekulare Funktion der mitochondrialen CLPXP-Protease in P. anserina ist die Degradation von Stoffwechselenzymen und ihre biologische Rolle demnach die Kontrolle und Aufrechterhaltung des mitochondrialen und zellulären Energiestoffwechsels.
Insgesamt ist die auf Grundlage des CLPP „Substrat-trapping Assay“ in P. anserina anzunehmende Rolle der mitochondrialen CLPXP-Protease als regulatorische Komponente des mitochondrialen Energiestoffwechsels erstaunlich gut mit Beobachtungen in anderen eukaryotischen Organismen, gerade bezüglich der Relevanz der CLPXP-Protease des Menschen für diverse Krankheiten, zu vereinbaren. Somit erscheint es überaus sinnvoll und vielversprechend, dass in dieser Doktorarbeit erstellte und bisher beispiellose Kompendium potenzieller in vivo Substrate und Interaktionspartner dieser Protease auch als Referenz für zukünftige Untersuchungen außerhalb von P. anserina anzuwenden.
The success stories of design-oriented companies like Apple, Audi or Nike have put design on the agenda in many marketing departments. Consumers cannot elude the effect of aesthetics and therefore design is a major factor for business success. Typically consumers choose the product with the best design, all other aspects being equal. Only when the interplay of product characteristics, brand and design is carefully coordinated can successful products be created. This requires an integrated approach to design, one which is applied right at the beginning of the value chain. Product development, marketing and design need to work in close cooperation, communicate well and frequently, and collect feedback from the market. Superior aesthetics are always important but should be a top priority in cases where efficiency-oriented Asian competitors are able to offer functionally similar products at much lower prices.
The caddisfly subfamily Drusinae BANKS comprises roughly 100 species inhabiting mountain ranges in Europe, Asia Minor and the Caucasus. A 3-gene phylogeny of the subfamily previously identified three major clades that were corroborated by larval morphology and feeding ecologies: scraping grazers, omnivorous shredders and filtering carnivores. Larvae of filtering carnivores exhibit unique head capsule complexities, unknown from other caddisfly larvae. Here we assess the species-level relationships within filtering carnivores, hypothesizing that head capsule complexity is derived from simple shapes observed in the other feeding groups. We summarize the current systematics and taxonomy of the group, clarify the systematic position of Cryptothrix nebulicola, and present a larval key to filtering carnivorous Drusinae. We infer relationships of all known filtering carnivorous Drusinae and 34 additional Drusinae species using Bayesian species tree analysis and concatenated Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of 3805bp of sequence data from six gene regions (mtCOI5-P, mtCOI3-P, 16S mrDNA, CADH, WG, 28S nrDNA), morphological cladistics from 308 characters, and a total evidence analysis. All analyses support monophyly of the three feeding ecology groups but fail to fully resolve internal relationships. Within filtering carnivores, variation in head setation and frontoclypeus structure may be associated with progressive niche adaptation, with less complex species recovered at a basal position. We propose that diversification of complex setation and frontoclypeus shape represents a recent evolutionary development, hypothetically enforcing speciation and niche specificity within filtering carnivorous Drusinae.
An increasing body of evidences from preclinical as well as epidemiological and clinical studies suggest a potential beneficial role of dietary intake of omega-3 fatty acids for cognitive functioning. In this narrative review, we will summarize and discuss recent findings from epidemiological, interventional and experimental studies linking dietary consumption of omega-3 fatty acids to cognitive function in healthy adults. Furthermore, affective disorders and schizophrenia (SZ) are characterized by cognitive dysfunction encompassing several domains. Cognitive dysfunction is closely related to impaired functioning and quality of life across these conditions. Therefore, the current review focues on the potential influence of omega-3 fatty acids on cognition in SZ and affective disorders. In sum, current data predominantly from mechanistic models and animal studies suggest that adjunctive omega-3 fatty acid supplementation could lead to improved cognitive functioning in SZ and affective disorders. However, besides its translational promise, evidence for clinical benefits in humans has been mixed. Notwithstanding evidences indicate that adjunctive omega-3 fatty acids may have benefit for affective symptoms in both unipolar and bipolar depression, to date no randomized controlled trial had evaluated omega-3 as cognitive enhancer for mood disorders, while a single published controlled trial suggested no therapeutic benefit for cognitive improvement in SZ. Considering the pleiotropic mechanisms of action of omega-3 fatty acids, the design of well-designed controlled trials of omega-3 supplementation as a novel, domain-specific, target for cognitive impairment in SZ and affective disorders is warranted.
The current Review article provides a narrative review about the neurobiological underpinnings and treatment of treatment resistant late-life depression (TRLLD). The manuscript focuses on therapeutic targets of late-life depression, which include pharmacological, psychological, biophysical and exercise treatment approaches. Therefore, we summarize available evidences on that kind of therapies for patients suffering from late-life depression. The search for evidences of therapeutic options of late-life depression were done using searching websites as “pubmed”, and using the searching terms “depression”, “late-life depression”, “treatment”, “biophysical therapy”, “exercise therapy”, “pharmacological therapy” and “psychological therapy”. To the end, we summarize and discuss current data, providing some directions for further research.
Treatment recommendations for elderly depressive patients favour a multimodal approach, containing psychological, pharmacological and secondary biophysical therapeutic options. Particularly, a combination of psychotherapy and antidepressant medication reflects the best therapeutic option. However, mostly accepted and used is the pharmacological treatment although evidence suggests that the drug therapy is not as effective as it is in younger depressive patients. Further studies employing larger samples and longer follow-up periods are necessary and may focus on comparability of study designs and involve novel approaches to establish the validity and reliability of multimodal treatment programs.
Understanding how to achieve efficient transduction of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), while preserving their long-term ability to self-reproduce, is key for applying lentiviral-based gene engineering methods. SAMHD1 is an HIV-1 restriction factor in myeloid and resting CD4+ T cells that interferes with reverse transcription by decreasing the nucleotide pools or by its RNase activity. Here we show that SAMHD1 is expressed at high levels in HSPCs cultured in a medium enriched with cytokines. Thus, we hypothesized that degrading SAMHD1 in HSPCs would result in more efficient lentiviral transduction rates. We used viral like particles (VLPs) containing Vpx, shRNA against SAMHD1, or provided an excess of dNTPs or dNs to study this question. Regardless of the method applied, we saw no increase in the lentiviral transduction rate. The result was different when we used viruses (HR-GFP-Vpx+) which carry Vpx and encode GFP. These viruses allow assessment of the effects of Vpx specifically in the transduced cells. Using HR-GFP-Vpx+ viruses, we observed a modest but significant increase in the transduction efficiency. These data suggest that SAMHD1 has some limited efficacy in blocking reverse transcription but the major barrier for efficient lentiviral transduction occurs before reverse transcription.
Despite multimodal regimens and diverse treatment options alleviating disease symptoms, morbidity and mortality associated with advanced ischemic heart failure remain high. Recently, technological innovation has led to the development of regenerative therapeutic interventions aimed at halting or reversing the vicious cycle of heart failure progression. Driven by the unmet patient need and fueled by encouraging experimental studies, stem cell-based clinical trials have been launched over the past decade. Collectively, these trials have enrolled several thousand patients and demonstrated the clinical feasibility and safety of cell-based interventions. However, the totality of evidence supporting their efficacy in ischemic heart failure remains limited. Experience from the early randomized stem cell clinical trials underscores the key points in trial design ranging from adequate hypothesis formulation to selection of the optimal patient population, cell type and delivery route. Importantly, to translate the unprecedented promise of regenerative biotherapies into clinical benefit, it is crucial to ensure the appropriate choice of endpoints along the regulatory path. Accordingly, we here provide considerations relevant to the choice of endpoints for regenerative clinical trials in the ischemic heart failure setting.
This dissertation examines the language of politics of leading figures of the ex-Free Aceh Movement or Gerakan Aceh Merdeka‟ (GAM) leading figures in selected Aceh media during the 2012 gubernatorial election campaign. By analyzing their symbolic acts, topic selection, campaign methods, and campaign locations as reported in five selected Aceh media, I demonstrate the process of ex-GAM political rhetoric in the post-conflict election setting. The mixed method approach used in the dissertation includes the following: grounded, content analysis, case study, and rhetorical analysis. Data were collected from three local daily broadsheet newspapers (Serambi Indonesia, Rakyat Aceh and Harian Aceh) and two online news portals (The Atjeh Post and The Globe Journal). The research found that ex-GAM political rhetoric was deeply divided into two opposing political camps: the Irwandi camp as the incumbent independent and the PA camp as the challenger from a newly-established local political party. Both camps highlighted the importance of expressive symbolic acts, such as explaining and making promises in their campaigns. Irwandi introduced more varied, specific, practical, and concrete topics in its rhetoric with diverse and less formal campaign methods that appealed to those who envision a prosperous future in Aceh. By contrast, PA employed general, unrealistic, and abstract topics in its rhetoric with less attractive and more formal campaign methods that appealed to emotional and historical romanticism. In relation to ex-GAM political rhetoric and campaign locations, both focused on the traditional regions in northeast Aceh or in the conflict-sensitive regions where most of their loyalists reside, and on big regencies/cities where the potential voters live. However, during the campaign Irwandi appeared less frequently in ethnically diverse locations, whereas PA appeared more in non-traditional regions such as the previously isolated and less-developed regions in the central highlands and southeast regions of Aceh. In this way they highlighted the rhetoric of economic and infrastructure development and that of unity in diversity taking into account the multi-ethnicity of the voters. In terms of overall media appearances, except in The Atjeh Post, where Muzakir Manaf from PA was dominant, Irwandi Yusuf was the most-reported ex-GAM during the election campaign in the selected media. Finally, the available evidence seems to suggest that Irwandi‘s language of politics was rhetorically more attractive than that of other ex-GAM leaders.
Reading is an essential ability to master everyday life in our society. The ability to read is based on specific connections between brain regions involved in the reading process – so-called cortical networks for reading. These cortical networks for reading allow us to learn the correct identification of visual words. The use of visual words is based on knowledge about the orthography (lexical) and the meaning of words (semantic). This knowledge must be acquired by beginning readers (first grader), i.e. beginning readers learn in a first step to link letters to a whole word and in a second step associate this whole word with meaning. To retrieve this knowledge during visual word recognition (VWR) a cortical network for lexical-semantic process must be activated. However, it is currently unclear whether beginning readers and reading experts activate the same neuronal network during VWR. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the question whether beginning readers (first grader, children) and reading experts (adults) use different cortical networks for the lexical-semantic processing in VWR.
To address this question we recorded electroencephalographic (EEG) activity during VWR in children and adults. Children and adults were instructed to read a visualizable word to compare this word with a following picture stimulus. The first part of this thesis is concerned with the analysis of ERPs for visual word recognition in children and adults at sensor level. For both groups we observed the typical ERP components P100 and N170 for visual word recognition. These components differed in amplitude and time course between both groups. The second part of this thesis investigated the neuronal generators (brain areas) of ERPs during VWR and possible differences between children and adults at source level. We observed a high overlap in brain areas involved during VWR in children and adults. However, the brain areas differed in activation and time course between children and adults. Finally, the third and most important part of the thesis investigated the question whether children and adults use different cortical networks for the lexical-semantic processing in VWR over time. To address this question Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) and Bayesian model comparison were used. We compared nine biologically plausible cortical network models underlying the ventral lexical-semantic path in VWR. In addition, increasing time intervals were used to consider possible changes of network structure during VWR. The network models included eight brain regions (four bilateral pairs) involved in the lexical-semantic processing in VWR: occipital cortex (OC), temporo-occipital part of inferior temporal gyrus (ITG), temporal pole (TP), and inferior frontal gyrus (IFG). In almost all time intervals we found evidence that children and adults use the same cortical networks for the lexical-semantic processing in VWR. However, we found differences between adults and children in the connection strengths of the favoured model. Interestingly, we found a stronger direct connection from OC to IFG in adults compared to children.
In conclusion, our results suggest that children and adults activate largely the same lexical-semantic networks during VWR over time. This supports the notion that children and adults use the same biological fiber connections for VWR. However in contrast to children, adults showed increased use of the shortcut pathway from OC to IFG. The increased use of the shortcut pathway from OC to IFG in adults can be interpreted as consequence of learning. Learning causes in accordance with the Hebbian learning rule (“neurons that fire together, wire together” (Hebb, 1949)) synaptic change. Consequently the frequent coactivation of the input and output stage of OC and IFG during the lexical-semantic process facilitates the stronger direct connection between both brain areas. The stronger direct connection from OC to IFG most likely allows adult reading experts to speed up the lexical-semantic process during VWR. Accordingly, we conclude that the stronger direct connections from OC to IFG in adults compared to children underlay the different reading capabilities in both groups.
The processing of pain undergoes several changes in aging that affect sensory nociceptive fibers and the endogenous neuronal inhibitory systems. So far, it is not completely clear whether age-induced modifications are associated with an increase or decrease in pain perception. In this study, we assessed the impact of age on inflammatory nociception in mice and the role of the hormonal inhibitory systems in this context. We investigated the nociceptive behavior of 12-month-old versus 6–8-week-old mice in two behavioral models of inflammatory nociception. Levels of TRP channels, and cortisol as well as cortisol targets, were measured by qPCR, ELISA, and Western blot in the differently aged mice. We observed an age-related reduction in nociceptive behavior during inflammation as well as a higher level of cortisol in the spinal cord of aged mice compared to young mice, while TRP channels were not reduced. Among potential cortisol targets, the NF-κB inhibitor protein alpha (IκBα) was increased, which might contribute to inhibition of NF-κB and a decreased expression and activity of the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS). In conclusion, our results reveal a reduced nociceptive response in aged mice, which might be at least partially mediated by an augmented inflammation-induced increase in the hormonal inhibitory system involving cortisol.
The Muskoka Initiative – or the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) Initiative has been a flagship foreign policy strategy of the Harper Conservatives since it was introduced in 2010. However, the maternal health initiative has been met with a number of key criticisms in relation to its failure to address the sexual and reproductive health needs of women in the Global South2. In this article, I examine these criticisms and expose the prevalent and problematic discourse employed in Canadian policy papers and official government speeches pertaining to the MNCH Initiative. I examine the embodiment of the MNCH and how these references to women’s bodies as “walking wombs” facilitate: the objectification and ‘othering’ of women as mothers and childbearers; a discourse of ‘saving mothers’ in a paternalistic and essentialist language; and the purposeful omission of gender equality. Feminist International Relations (IR) and post-colonial literature, as well as critical/feminist Canadian foreign policy scholarship are employed in this paper to frame these critiques.
This paper argues that it is necessary to focus on gender rather than exclusively on women in discussions on global poverty eradication. It argues firstly, that the drivers of poverty are complex and multifaceted leading to a least two different forms of deprivation – transitory and structural poverty – each requiring different forms of analysis and treatment. Transitory poverty can arise as a consequence of an event or shock that would diminish an individual’s capacity to retain or secure employment and where a State lacks an appropriate form of social protection. Structural poverty, on the other hand, arises where groups are excluded from the workforce on a more permanent basis due to a wide variety of factors of discrimination such as sex, race, ethnicity, and age. Focusing on the sex of an individual alone cannot explain why some are more likely to experience different forms of poverty than others. Policies that protect women against transitory poverty, such as care related allowances, are not sufficient to eradicate structural poverty. Secondly, structural poverty prompts an examination of gender roles and relations. Unlike the category of ‘women’, the concept of gender demands consideration of a wider range of intersecting factors that influence life chances. The structure of contemporary gender relations, where women continue to experience higher levels of violence, and carry the greatest burden of responsibility for non-market based production activities, create the social conditions where domination and dependence thrive, and where persistently high rates of poverty seem inevitable. Such circumstances are generated by human agency. Thus, thirdly, it argues that these circumstances can and should be changed through human action. Knowledge of these circumstances gives rise to moral obligations for both men and women to avoid upholding values and practices that lead to domination and dependence as a matter of basic justice.
In this paper, I examine how maternal myths are deployed in popular development literature. Using critical discourse analysis and working within a feminist postcolonial framework I analyse five texts produced by development organizations for popular consumption. I identify how maternal myths are constructed in each text and conduct a contextual analysis of four myths to identify their ideological significance within the development sector. I conclude that that in their construction of maternal myths, these texts, while intended to elicit support for gender and development interventions, reinforce exploitative gender roles and relations and limit women’s experiences of development.
As the lowest in the caste hierarchy, Dalits in Indian society have historically suffered caste-based social exclusion from economic, civil, cultural, and political rights. Women from this community suffer from not only discrimination based on their gender but also caste identity and consequent economic deprivation. Dalit women constituted about 16.60 percent of India’s female population in 2011. Dalit women’s problems encompass not only gender and economic deprivation but also discrimination associated with religion, caste, and untouchability, which in turn results in the denial of their social, economic, cultural, and political rights. They become vulnerable to sexual violence and exploitation due to their gender and caste. Dalit women also become victims of abhorrent social and religious practices such as devadasi/jogini (temple prostitution), resulting in sexual exploitation in the name of religion. The additional discrimination faced by Dalit women on account of their gender and caste is clearly reflected in the differential achievements in human development indicators for this group. In all the indicators of human development, for example, literacy and longevity, Dalit women score worse than Dalit men and non-Dalit women. Thus, the problems of Dalit women are distinct and unique in many ways, and they suffer from the ‘triple burden’ of gender bias, caste discrimination, and economic deprivation. To gain insights into the economic and social status of Dalit women, our paper will delve more closely into their lives and encapsulate the economic and social situations of Dalit women in India. The analyses of human poverty and caste and gender discrimination are based on official data sets as well as a number of primary studies in the labor market and on reproductive health.
Ibegin by providing some background to conceptions of responsibility. I note the extent of disagreement in this area, the diverse and cross-cutting distinctions that are deployed, and the relative neglect of some important problems. These facts make it difficult to attribute responsibility for climate change, but so do some features of climate change itself which I go on to illuminate. Attributions of responsibility are often contested sites because such attributions are fundamentally pragmatic, mobilized in the service of a normative outlook. We should be pluralists about responsibility and shape whatever conceptions can help to explain, guide, and motivate our responses to climate change. I sketch one such notion, ‘intervention-responsibility’, and argue that it should be ascribed to international regimes and organizations, states and other jurisdictions, individuals, and firms. Each has different capacities and thus different intervention-responsibilities responsibilities, but these differences are not always mirrored in public discussion. In particular, the moral responsibility of firms has been greatly neglected.
t is becoming less and less controversial that we ought to aggressively combat climate change. One main reason for doing so is concern for future generations, as it is they who will be the most seriously affected by it. Surprisingly, none of the more prominent deontological theories of intergenerational justice can explain why it is wrong for the present generation to do very little to stop worsening the problem. This paper discusses three such theories, namely indirect reciprocity, common ownership of the earth and human rights. It shows that while indirect reciprocity and common ownership are both too undemanding, the human rights approach misunderstands the nature of our intergenerational relationships, thereby capturing either too much or too little about what is problematic about climate change. The paper finally proposes a way to think about intergenerational justice that avoids the pitfalls of the traditional theories and can explain what is wrong with perpetuating climate change.
This article discusses obstacles to overcoming dangerous climate change. It employs an account of dangerous climate change that takes climate change and climate change policy as dangerous if it imposes avoidable costs of poverty prolongation. It then examines plausible accounts of the collective action problems that seem to explain the lack of ambition to mitigate. After criticizing the merits of two proposals to overcome these problems, it discusses the pledge and review process. It argues that pledge and review possesses the virtues of encouraging broad participation and of providing a procedural safeguard for the right of sustainable development. However, given the perceptions of the marginal short term costs of mitigation, pledge and review is unlikely, at least initially, to issue in an agreement to make deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Because there is no rival approach that seems likely to better instantiate the two virtues, pledge and review may be the best available policy for mitigation. Moreover, recent economic research suggests that the co-benefits of mitigation may be greater than previously assumed and that the costs of renewable energy may be less than previously calculated. This would radically undermine claims that the short term mitigation costs necessarily render mitigation irrational and produce collective action problems. Given the circumstances, pledge and review might be our best hope to avoid dangerous climate change.
In cases in which there is the possibility of massive human losses, the threshold likelihood of their occurrence, and the non-excessive costs of their prevention, we ought to act now. This is all the more definitely the case because it may well be that this is the time-of-last-opportunity to head off one or more potential disasters, all of which may still be preventable by sufficiently rapid reductions in carbon emissions from the combustion of fossil fuel. It is unfair that the present generation should incur as heavy a burden as it does of seizing the last opportunity for prevention of disasters like large sea-level rises, but the unfairness is not sufficient to make the burden unreasonable to bear, especially since it is not in fact as heavy as often believed.