219 research outputs found
Book Reviews : Current Health Policy Issues and Alternatives (An Applied Social Science Perspective), Carole E. Hill, Editor, Athens, The University of Georgia Press, 1986, 212 pages
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68137/2/10.1177_109019818801500208.pd
Melanoma cells break down LPA to establish local gradients that drive chemotactic dispersal.
The high mortality of melanoma is caused by rapid spread of cancer cells, which occurs unusually early in tumour evolution. Unlike most solid tumours, thickness rather than cytological markers or differentiation is the best guide to metastatic potential. Multiple stimuli that drive melanoma cell migration have been described, but it is not clear which are responsible for invasion, nor if chemotactic gradients exist in real tumours. In a chamber-based assay for melanoma dispersal, we find that cells migrate efficiently away from one another, even in initially homogeneous medium. This dispersal is driven by positive chemotaxis rather than chemorepulsion or contact inhibition. The principal chemoattractant, unexpectedly active across all tumour stages, is the lipid agonist lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) acting through the LPA receptor LPAR1. LPA induces chemotaxis of remarkable accuracy, and is both necessary and sufficient for chemotaxis and invasion in 2-D and 3-D assays. Growth factors, often described as tumour attractants, cause negligible chemotaxis themselves, but potentiate chemotaxis to LPA. Cells rapidly break down LPA present at substantial levels in culture medium and normal skin to generate outward-facing gradients. We measure LPA gradients across the margins of melanomas in vivo, confirming the physiological importance of our results. We conclude that LPA chemotaxis provides a strong drive for melanoma cells to invade outwards. Cells create their own gradients by acting as a sink, breaking down locally present LPA, and thus forming a gradient that is low in the tumour and high in the surrounding areas. The key step is not acquisition of sensitivity to the chemoattractant, but rather the tumour growing to break down enough LPA to form a gradient. Thus the stimulus that drives cell dispersal is not the presence of LPA itself, but the self-generated, outward-directed gradient
On the Strength of First Order Phase Transitions
Electroweak baryogenesis may solve one of the most fundamental questions we
can ask about the universe, that of the origin of matter. It has become clear
in the past few years that it also poses a multi-faceted challenge. In order to
compute the tiny primordial baryonic excess, we probably must invoke physics
beyond the standard model (an exciting prospect for most people), we must push
perturbation theory to its ``limits'' (or beyond), and we must deal with
nonequilibrium aspects of the phase transition. In this talk, I focus mainly on
the latter issue, that of nonequilibrium aspects of first order transitions. In
particular, I discuss the elusive question of ``weakness''. What does it mean
to have a weak first order transition, and how can we distinguish between weak
and strong? I argue that weak and strong transitions have very different
dynamics; while strong transitions proceed by the usual bubble nucleation
mechanism, weak transitions are characterized by a mixing of phases as the
system reaches the critical temperature from above. I show that it is possible
to clearly distinguish between the two, and discuss consequences for studies of
first order transitions in general. (Invited talk given at the ``Electroweak
Physics and the Early Universe'' workshop, Sintra, March 23-25, 1994.)Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures not included (can be obtained from
hep-ph/9403310, or by request) RevTeX, DART-HEP-94/0
Australia's insurance crisis and the inequitable treatment of self-employed midwives
Based upon a review of articles published in Australia's major newspapers over the period January 2001 to December 2005, a case study approach has been used to investigate why, when compared with other small business operators, including medical specialists, Australian governments have appeared reluctant to protect the economic viability of the businesses of self-employed midwives. Theories of agenda setting and structuralism have been used to explore that inequity. What has emerged is a picture of the complex of factors that may have operated, and may be continuing to operate, to shape the policy agenda and thus prevent solutions to the insurance problems of self-employed midwives being found
QCD and strongly coupled gauge theories : challenges and perspectives
We highlight the progress, current status, and open challenges of QCD-driven physics, in theory and in experiment. We discuss how the strong interaction is intimately connected to a broad sweep of physical problems, in settings ranging from astrophysics and cosmology to strongly coupled, complex systems in particle and condensed-matter physics, as well as to searches for physics beyond the Standard Model. We also discuss how success in describing the strong interaction impacts other fields, and, in turn, how such subjects can impact studies of the strong interaction. In the course of the work we offer a perspective on the many research streams which flow into and out of QCD, as well as a vision for future developments.Peer reviewe
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