69 research outputs found

    Scholarship on Gender and Sport in Sex Roles and Beyond

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    In this paper we critically review how research on girls or women and sport has developed over the last 35 years. We use a post-positivist lens to explore the content of the papers published in Sex Roles in the area of women, gender and sport and examine the shifts in how gender and sport have been conceptualized in these accounts. In order to initiate a broader dialogue about the scholarly analysis of gender and sport, we subsequently explore ideas inspired by feminist theorizing that have dominated/guided related research in other outlets over this time period but have received relatively little attention in papers published in Sex Roles. We conclude by briefly making suggestions for further research in this area

    Oncolytic Measles Virotherapy and Opposition to Measles Vaccination

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    Recent measles epidemics in US and European cities where vaccination coverage has declined are providing a harsh reminder for the need to maintain protective levels of immunity across the entire population. Vaccine uptake rates have been declining in large part because of public misinformation regarding a possible association between measles vaccination and autism for which there is no scientific basis. The purpose of this article is to address a new misinformed antivaccination argument-that measles immunity is undesirable because measles virus is protective against cancer. Having worked for many years to develop engineered measles viruses as anticancer therapies, we have concluded (1) that measles is not protective against cancer and (2) that its potential utility as a cancer therapy will be enhanced, not diminished, by prior vaccination

    Track D Social Science, Human Rights and Political Science

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138414/1/jia218442.pd

    The Economics of Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism: A Survey (Part II)

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    A lentiviral vector expressing a fusogenic glycoprotein for cancer gene therapy

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    The gibbon ape leukaemia virus envelope fusogenic membrane glycoprotein (GALV FMG) is a highly potent cytotoxic gene with great potential for use in cancer gene therapy. Here, we show that production of a VSV-G pseudotyped lentiviral vector expressing GALV FMG reconciles the requirements of viral production with the cytotoxic effects of GALV in human cells and has high titres on both dividing and quiescent tumour cells. Direct intratumoral injection of these stocks eradicated progressively growing human tumour xenografts. The potent bystander effect of the FMG transgene is a major contributor to the success of this approach but immunological activation may also be a factor. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration in vivo of the potential both of FMG and lentiviral vectors for cancer gene therapy and highlights the importance of exploring different vector systems to complement the biological properties of the therapeutic transgene
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