12 research outputs found

    Innate control of actin nucleation determines two distinct migration behaviours in dendritic cells

    Get PDF
    Dendritic cell (DC) migration in peripheral tissues serves two main functions: antigen sampling by immature DCs, and chemokine-guided migration towards lymphatic vessels (LVs) on maturation. These migratory events determine the efficiency of the adaptive immune response. Their regulation by the core cell locomotion machinery has not been determined. Here, we show that the migration of immature DCs depends on two main actin pools: a RhoA mDial-dependent actin pool located at their rear, which facilitates forward locomotion; and a Cdc42 Arp2/3-dependent actin pool present at their front, which limits migration but promotes antigen capture. Following TLR4 MyD88-induced maturation, Arp2/3-dependent actin enrichment at the cell front is markedly reduced. Consequently, mature DCs switch to a faster and more persistent mDial-dependent locomotion mode that facilitates chemotactic migration to LVs and lymph nodes. Thus, the differential use of actin-nucleating machineries optimizes the migration of immature and mature DCs according to their specific function

    Objetivo Madrid: planes de ocupación y concepción del orden público durante la Guerra Civil española

    Get PDF
    This article looks at Spanish Civil War and violence in those days from a different point of view. On the one hand, I try to explain the military coup of July 1936 as a reaction against the experience of Modernity in the spanish cities, focusing on Madrid. On the other, I try to go in depth into the functional logic of violence instead of the hegemonic historiographical proposals. It is necessary to explain the sequence 2nd Republic-Coup-War in the mid-long range to understand the significance of Francoist Public Order model. Using the occupation plan for Madrid by Franco’s Headquarters and Servicio de Recuperación de Documentos paperwork, this article attempts to get the Dictatorship’s view about public space and sociocultural transformations in the early decades of XXth Century.El presente texto pretende ofrecer una nueva visión sobre la Guerra Civil y la violencia ejercida en su marco. Por un lado, trata de explicar la sublevación de 1936 como una reacción al proceso de Modernidad experimentado principalmente en la España urbana, y concretamente en Madrid. Por otro, procura adentrarse en la lógica funcional de la violencia en detrimento de los presupuestos exterministas dominantes en la historiografía española. Es necesario ampliar la secuencia explicativa II República-sublevación-guerra para comprender el 18 de julio desde unos parámetros más dilatados, que proyectan las expresiones de la violencia durante el conflicto hacia la posguerra a través de la gestión del orden público. Mediante el Servicio de Recuperación de Documentos y del Cuartel General del Generalísimo se documenta el plan de ocupación para Madrid. Una fuente sin duda novedosa para comprender la concepción franquista de lo que debía ser el espacio público y comprobar cómo se materializaron las bases sobre las que debía construirse el rechazo a los cambios producidos en el primer tercio del siglo xx, percibidos como una amenaza a los valores tradicionales
    corecore