519 research outputs found

    Compte-rendu de Jeunes socialistes, jeunes UMP. Lieux et processus de socialisation politique

    Get PDF
    L’ouvrage de Lucie Bargel, issu directement d’une thèse parfaitement maîtrisée, relève d’abord de l’étude de la socialisation politique secondaire puisqu’elle observe l’apprentissage en train de se faire dans ces groupes d’affinités que constituent les groupements politiques. Il participe également de l’analyse des partis politiques en se focalisant sur deux organisations de jeunesse, les Jeunes populaires (JP) et les Jeunes socialistes (MJS), donc sur des jeunes partisans d’organisations centrales peu étudiées (...)

    Génétique du développement des membres : contribution à son déterminisme moléculaire à partir de modèles d'étude en pathologie humaine

    Get PDF
    Limb development requires complex patterning along dorso-ventral, antero-posterior and proximo-distal axes. The molecular mechanisms underlying these stages are not fully delineated yet. Identification of the transcription factors involved is challenging because of their spatio-temporally restricted expression during limb bud development. Analysis of carefully selected series of patients affected with limb malformations is a clue to identify new mechanisms involved in this patterning. For this purpose, we studied several families presnsenting with Nail-Patella Syndrome corresponding to a disorder of dorso-ventral polarization; a large family affected with syndromic preaxial polydactyly and a series of Nager Syndrome cases as models of antero-posterior polarization; eventually, a cohort of patients affected with split hand/foot malformations corresponding to a defect in the signalisation center of proximo-distal growth and differenciation. This work has led us to emphasize the crucial role of gene expression regulation during limb bud patterning and more generally during embryological development.Le développement du membre passe par des étapes complexes de polarisation, dans les axes dorso-ventral et antéro-postérieur, qui ont lieu en parallèle de la croissance proximo-distale du bourgeon. Le déterminisme génétique de ces étapes est encore imparfaitement connu. Il implique des facteurs de transcription dont l’expression est temporo-spatiale spécifique, compliquant leur identification. L’étude de cohortes homogènes de patients porteurs d’anomalies développementales des membres est l’un des moyens d’identifier de nouveaux mécanismes impliqués dans leur modélisation. A cet effet, nous avons étudié des patients atteints de Syndrome Nail-Patella correspondant à un défaut de polarisation dorso-ventrale ; une grande famille de polydactylie préaxiale syndromique et une série de patients atteints de Syndrome de Nager comme modèles d’étude de la polarisation antéro-postérieure ; et enfin une cohorte de patients présentant des pieds et mains fendus correspondant à un défaut de la signalisation proximo-distale. Ces travaux nous ont permis de souligner le rôle crucial de la régulation d’expression génique dans la modélisation du bourgeon de membre et plus généralement dans le développement embryonnaire

    Exercise dependence among customers from a Parisian sport shop

    Get PDF
    Abstract Aim of the study: We assessed exercise dependence (ED), alcohol and nicotine use disorders, eating disorders, hypochondria and compulsive buying and in a population of customers of a Parisian sport shop. Methods: Five hundred consecutive customers of a sport shop were invited to participate. Diagnostic of exercise dependence was made with the Exercise Addiction Inventory and a specific questionnaire checking all diagnostic criteria. The DSM-IV-TR criteria for bulimia, alcohol and nicotine use disorders were checked and all subjects answered the CAGE and Fagerström questionnaires. Hypochondria was assessed with the DSM-IV-TR criteria and the Whiteley Index of Health Anxiety. For all parameters, customers with (ED+) and without (ED-) exercise dependence were compared. Results: The prevalence of exercise dependence was 29.6%. Subjects from the ED+ group were younger than in the ED-group (27.1 vs 29.8 years) and there were more women. They were more dependent on alcohol, had higher scores at the CAGE questionnaire. ED+ subjects more often presented hypochondria (23 vs 15%), bulimia and binge eating and they more often made gifts to themselves and to others. Conclusions: Exercise dependence appears as a frequent and almost always unrecognized form of behavioral dependence in non clinical population frequenting sport shops. It is frequently associated to chemical dependence and eating disorders

    A new subunit vaccine based on nucleoprotein nanoparticles confers partial clinical and virological protection in calves against bovine respiratory syncytial virus

    Get PDF
    Human and bovine respiratory syncytial viruses (HRSV and BRSV) are two closely related, worldwide prevalent viruses that are the leading cause of severe airway disease in children and calves, respectively. Efficacy of commercial bovine vaccines needs improvement and no human vaccine is licensed yet. We reported that nasal vaccination with the HRSV nucleoprotein produced as recombinant ringshaped nanoparticles (NSRS) protects mice against a viral challenge with HRSV. The aim of this work was to evaluate this new vaccine that uses a conserved viral antigen, in calves, natural hosts for BRSV. Calves, free of colostral or natural anti-BRSV antibodies, were vaccinated with NSRS either intramuscularly, or both intramuscularly and intranasally using MontanideTM ISA71 and IMS4132 as adjuvants and challenged with BRSV. All vaccinated calves developed anti-N antibodies in blood and nasal secretions and N-specific cellular immunity in local lymph nodes. Clinical monitoring post-challenge demonstrated moderate respiratory pathology with local lung tissue consolidations for the non vaccinated calves that were significantly reduced in the vaccinated calves. Vaccinated calves had lower viral loads than the nonvaccinated control calves. Thus NSRS vaccination in calves provided cross-protective immunity against BRSV infection without adverse inflammatory reaction

    AFLP linkage map of the Japanese quail Coturnix japonica

    Get PDF
    The quail is a valuable farm and laboratory animal. Yet molecular information about this species remains scarce. We present here the first genetic linkage map of the Japanese quail. This comprehensive map is based solely on amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers. These markers were developed and genotyped in an F2 progeny from a cross between two lines of quail differing in stress reactivity. A total of 432 polymorphic AFLP markers were detected with 24 TaqI/EcoRI primer combinations. On average, 18 markers were produced per primer combination. Two hundred and fifty eight of the polymorphic markers were assigned to 39 autosomal linkage groups plus the ZW sex chromosome linkage groups. The linkage groups range from 2 to 28 markers and from 0.0 to 195.5 cM. The AFLP map covers a total length of 1516 cM, with an average genetic distance between two consecutive markers of 7.6 cM. This AFLP map can be enriched with other marker types, especially mapped chicken genes that will enable to link the maps of both species and make use of the powerful comparative mapping approach. This AFLP map of the Japanese quail already provides an efficient tool for quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping

    How Ebola Impacts Genetics of Western Lowland Gorilla Populations

    Get PDF
    12 pagesInternational audienceBackground: Emerging infectious diseases in wildlife are major threats for both human health and biodiversity conservation. Infectious diseases can have serious consequences for the genetic diversity of populations, which could enhance the species' extinction probability. The Ebola epizootic in western and central Africa induced more than 90% mortality in Western lowland gorilla population. Although mortality rates are very high, the impacts of Ebola on genetic diversity of Western lowland gorilla have never been assessed. Methodology/Principal Findings: We carried out long term studies of three populations of Western lowland gorilla in the Republic of the Congo (Odzala-Kokoua National Park, Lossi gorilla sanctuary both affected by Ebola and Lossi's periphery not affected). Using 17 microsatellite loci, we compared genetic diversity and structure of the populations and estimate their effective size before and after Ebola outbreaks. Despite the effective size decline in both populations, we did not detect loss in genetic diversity after the epizootic. We revealed temporal changes in allele frequencies in the smallest population. Conclusions/Significance: Immigration and short time elapsed since outbreaks could explain the conservation of genetic diversity after the demographic crash. Temporal changes in allele frequencies could not be explained by genetic drift or random sampling. Immigration from genetically differentiated populations and a non random mortality induced by Ebola, i.e., selective pressure and cost of sociality, are alternative hypotheses. Understanding the influence of Ebola on gorilla genetic dynamics is of paramount importance for human health, primate evolution and conservation biology

    A genome scan for quantitative trait loci affecting the Salmonella carrier-state in the chicken

    Get PDF
    Selection for increased resistance to Salmonella colonisation and excretion could reduce the risk of foodborne Salmonella infection. In order to identify potential loci affecting resistance, differences in resistance were identified between the N and 61 inbred lines and two QTL research performed. In an F2 cross, the animals were inoculated at one week of age with Salmonella enteritidis and cloacal swabs were carried out 4 and 5 wk post inoculation (thereafter called CSW4F2 and CSW4F2) and caecal contamination (CAECF2) was assessed 1 week later. The animals from the (N × 61) × N backcross were inoculated at six weeks of age with Salmonella typhimurium and cloacal swabs were studied from wk 1 to 4 (thereafter called CSW1BC to CSW4BC). A total of 33 F2 and 46 backcross progeny were selectively genotyped for 103 and 135 microsatellite markers respectively. The analysis used least-squares-based and non-parametric interval mapping. Two genome-wise significant QTL were observed on Chromosome 1 for CSW2BC and on Chromosome 2 for CSW4F2, and four suggestive QTL for CSW5F2 on Chromosome 2, for CSW5F2 and CSW2BC on chromosome 5 and for CAECF2 on chromosome 16. These results suggest new regions of interest and the putative role of SAL1

    Urinary Biomarkers of Prenatal Atrazine Exposure and Adverse Birth Outcomes in the PELAGIE Birth Cohort

    Get PDF
    Background: Despite evidence of atrazine toxicity in developing organisms from experimental studies, few studies—and fewer epidemiologic investigations—have examined the potential effects of prenatal exposure

    Multi-classifier prediction of knee osteoarthritis progression from incomplete imbalanced longitudinal data

    Full text link
    Conventional inclusion criteria used in osteoarthritis clinical trials are not very effective in selecting patients who would benefit from a therapy being tested. Typically majority of selected patients show no or limited disease progression during a trial period. As a consequence, the effect of the tested treatment cannot be observed, and the efforts and resources invested in running the trial are not rewarded. This could be avoided, if selection criteria were more predictive of the future disease progression. In this article, we formulated the patient selection problem as a multi-class classification task, with classes based on clinically relevant measures of progression (over a time scale typical for clinical trials). Using data from two long-term knee osteoarthritis studies OAI and CHECK, we tested multiple algorithms and learning process configurations (including multi-classifier approaches, cost-sensitive learning, and feature selection), to identify the best performing machine learning models. We examined the behaviour of the best models, with respect to prediction errors and the impact of used features, to confirm their clinical relevance. We found that the model-based selection outperforms the conventional inclusion criteria, reducing by 20-25% the number of patients who show no progression. This result might lead to more efficient clinical trials.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, 10 table
    corecore