110 research outputs found
Moving hearts : how mnemonic labour (trans)forms mnemonic capital
This study explores how memory forms may be understood through an economic lens tracing how the labour of remembering adds value to and (trans)forms memories. The study focuses on embodied memories and imaginaries of migration and belonging and the ways in which these are (trans)formed through mobile and social media witnessing into a collective living archive and into objectified memory forms that include art works and digital artefacts situated within global mnemonic commodity chains. Empirically, the article draws on an arts-based collaborative research project, âMoving Heartsâ carried out with the UK Migration Museum in 2016â2018 that examined embodied, artistic, and institutional memories and imaginaries of migration. Theoretically, the article builds on the growing body of research in memory studies on the economies of memory, bringing together a political economy approach to memory and work within participatory arts to provide insights into how memory forms may be understood through mnemonic labour and mnemonic capital. Specifically, it shows how the mnemonic labour of participants making, carrying and walking with clay hearts transforms memories of migration and belonging into new kinds of mnemonic capital
HE3286, an oral synthetic steroid, treats lung inflammation in mice without immune suppression
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>17α-Ethynyl-5-androsten-3ÎČ, 7ÎČ, 17ÎČ-triol (HE3286) is a synthetic derivative of an endogenous steroid androstenetriol (ÎČ-AET), a metabolite of the abundant adrenal steroid deyhdroepiandrosterone (DHEA), with broad anti-inflammatory activities. We tested the ability of this novel synthetic steroid with improved pharmacological properties to limit non-productive lung inflammation in rodents and attempted to gauge its immunological impact.</p> <p>Methods and Results</p> <p>In mice, oral treatment with HE3286 (40 mg/kg) significantly (<it>p </it>< 0.05) decreased neutrophil counts and exudate volumes (~50%) in carrageenan-induced pleurisy, and myeloperoxidase in lipopolysaccharide-induced lung injury. HE3286 (40 mg/kg) was not found to be profoundly immune suppressive in any of the classical animal models of immune function, including those used to evaluate antigen specific immune responses <it>in vivo </it>(ovalbumin immunization). When mice treated for two weeks with HE3286 were challenged with <it>K. pneumoniae</it>, nearly identical survival kinetics were observed in vehicle-treated, HE3286-treated and untreated groups.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>HE3286 represents a novel, first-in-class anti-inflammatory agent that may translate certain benefits of ÎČ-AET observed in rodents into treatments for chronic inflammatory pulmonary disease.</p
Styrene maleic-acid lipid particles (SMALPs) into detergent or amphipols: An exchange protocol for membrane protein characterisation.
Membrane proteins are traditionally extracted and purified in detergent for biochemical and structural characterisation. This process is often costly and laborious, and the stripping away of potentially stabilising lipids from the membrane protein of interest can have detrimental effects on protein integrity. Recently, styrene-maleic acid (SMA) co-polymers have offered a solution to this problem by extracting membrane proteins directly from their native membrane, while retaining their naturally associated lipids in the form of stable SMA lipid particles (SMALPs). However, the inherent nature and heterogeneity of the polymer renders their use challenging for some downstream applications - particularly mass spectrometry (MS). While advances in cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) have enhanced our understanding of membrane protein:lipid interactions in both SMALPs and detergent, the resolution obtained with this technique is often insufficient to accurately identify closely associated lipids within the transmembrane annulus. Native-MS has the power to fill this knowledge gap, but the SMA polymer itself remains largely incompatible with this technique. To increase sample homogeneity and allow characterisation of membrane protein:lipid complexes by native-MS, we have developed a novel SMA-exchange method; whereby the membrane protein of interest is first solubilised and purified in SMA, then transferred into amphipols or detergents. This allows the membrane protein and endogenously associated lipids extracted by SMA co-polymer to be identified and examined by MS, thereby complementing results obtained by cryo-EM and creating a better understanding of how the lipid bilayer directly affects membrane protein structure and function
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Determinants of anti-PD-1 response and resistance in clear cell renal cell carcinoma.
ADAPTeR is a prospective, phase II study of nivolumab (anti-PD-1) in 15 treatment-naive patients (115 multiregion tumor samples) with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) aiming to understand the mechanism underpinning therapeutic response. Genomic analyses show no correlation between tumor molecular features and response, whereas ccRCC-specific human endogenous retrovirus expression indirectly correlates with clinical response. TÂ cell receptor (TCR) analysis reveals a significantly higher number of expanded TCR clones pre-treatment in responders suggesting pre-existing immunity. Maintenance of highly similar clusters of TCRs post-treatment predict response, suggesting ongoing antigen engagement and survival of families of TÂ cells likely recognizing the same antigens. In responders, nivolumab-bound CD8+ TÂ cells are expanded and express GZMK/B. Our data suggest nivolumab drives both maintenance and replacement of previously expanded TÂ cell clones, but only maintenance correlates with response. We hypothesize that maintenance and boosting of a pre-existing response is a key element of anti-PD-1 mode of action
Introduction: Toward an Engaged Feminist Heritage Praxis
We advocate a feminist approach to archaeological heritage work in order to transform heritage practice and the production of archaeological knowledge. We use an engaged feminist standpoint and situate intersubjectivity and intersectionality as critical components of this practice. An engaged feminist approach to heritage work allows the discipline to consider womenâs, menâs, and gender non-conforming personsâ positions in the field, to reveal their contributions, to develop critical pedagogical approaches, and to rethink forms of representation. Throughout, we emphasize the intellectual labor of women of color, queer and gender non-conforming persons, and early white feminists in archaeology
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Plant profit maximisation improves predictions of European forest responses to drought
- Knowledge of how water stress impacts the carbon and water cycles is a key uncertainty in terrestrial biosphere models.
- We tested a new profit maximisation model, where photosynthetic uptake of CO2 is optimally traded against plant hydraulic function, as an alternative to the empirical functions commonly used in models to regulate gas exchange during periods of water stress. We conducted a multi-site evaluation of this model at the ecosystem scale, before and during major droughts in Europe. Additionally, we asked whether the maximum hydraulic conductance in the soil-plant
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Europeâs Other World: Romany Memory within the New Dynamics of the Globital Memory Field
Digital connective media are enabling new articulations of memory that reanimate
what has been a viscous amnesia of slavery vvithin the heartland of Europe. This
chapter aims to examine how digital connective media may offer new possibilities
in relation to the public memory of Romain Europe. What may be loosely termed
'older media' have in various ways erased significant aspects of Roma- 'gypsy' -
memory, including Europe's shameful history of rrobia, namely Roma people's
enslavement for over 500 years in what is now predominantly the national territory of Romania. In escaping bondage, Roma people fled across Europe, resulting in the present-day Roma communities to be found in all countries of Europe, with substantial minorities in Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Slavery in various forms continued until abolition, or desrrobija, which began as a social and legislative movement at the end of the eighteenth century. Inspired in part by otl1er anti-slavery campaigns in Europe and North America, the antislavery movement continued as an ongoing social and political struggle until the end of Roma slavery in the middle of the nineteenth century
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