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A constitutive description of the anisotropic response of the fascia lata
In this paper we propose a constitutive model to analyze in-plane extension of goat fascia lata. We first perform a histological analysis of the fascia that shows a well-organized bi-layered arrangement of undulated collagen fascicles oriented along two well defined directions. To develop a model consistent with the tissue structure we identify the absolute and relative thickness of each layer and the orientation of the preferred directions. New data are presented showing the mechanical response in uniaxial and planar biaxial extension. The paper proposes a constitutive relation to describe the mechanical response. We provide a summary of the main ingredients of the nonlinear theory of elasticity and introduce a suitable strain-energy function to describe the anisotropic response of the fascia. We validate the model by showing good fit of the numerical results and the experimental data. Comments are included about differences and analogies between goat fascia lata and the human iliotibial band.Organismic and Evolutionary Biolog
Bone marrow-derived and resident liver macrophages display unique transcriptomic signatures but similar biological functions
Abstract: Background and aims: Kupffer cells (KCs), the resident tissue macrophages of the liver, play a crucial role in the clearance of pathogens and other particulate materials that reach the systemic circulation. Recent studies have identified KCs as a yolk sac-derived resident macrophage population that is replenished independently of monocytes in the steady state. Although it is now established that following local tissue injury, bone-marrow derived monocytes may infiltrate the tissue and differentiate into macrophages, the extent to which newly differentiated macrophages functionally resemble the KCs they have replaced has not been extensively studied. Methods and results: Here we show using intravital microscopy, morphometric analysis and gene expression profiling that bone marrow derived “KCs” accumulating as a result of genotoxic injury resemble, but are not identical to their yolk-sac (YS) counterparts. An ion homeostasis gene signature, including genes associated with scavenger receptor function and extracellular matrix deposition, allows discrimination between these two KC populations. Reflecting the differential expression of scavenger receptors, YS-derived KCs were more effective at accumulating Ac-LDL, whereas surprisingly they were poorer than BM-derived KCs when assessed for uptake of a range of bacterial pathogens. The two KC populations were almost indistinguishable in regard to i) response to LPS challenge, ii) phagocytosis of effete RBCs and iii) their ability to contain infection and direct granuloma formation against Leishmania donovani, a KC-tropic intracellular parasite. Conclusions: BM-derived KCs differentiate locally to resemble YS-derived KC in most but not all respects, with implications for models of infectious diseases, liver injury and bone marrow transplantation. In addition, the gene signature we describe adds to the tools available for distinguishing KC subpopulations based on their ontology
Cohort Profile: Pregnancy And Childhood Epigenetics (PACE) Consortium.
Development Psychopathology in context: famil
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