781 research outputs found
Cadherin-26 (CDH26) regulates airway epithelial cell cytoskeletal structure and polarity.
Polarization of the airway epithelial cells (AECs) in the airway lumen is critical to the proper function of the mucociliary escalator and maintenance of lung health, but the cellular requirements for polarization of AECs are poorly understood. Using human AECs and cell lines, we demonstrate that cadherin-26 (CDH26) is abundantly expressed in differentiated AECs, localizes to the cell apices near ciliary membranes, and has functional cadherin domains with homotypic binding. We find a unique and non-redundant role for CDH26, previously uncharacterized in AECs, in regulation of cell-cell contact and cell integrity through maintaining cytoskeletal structures. Overexpression of CDH26 in cells with a fibroblastoid phenotype increases contact inhibition and promotes monolayer formation and cortical actin structures. CDH26 expression is also important for localization of planar cell polarity proteins. Knockdown of CDH26 in AECs results in loss of cortical actin and disruption of CRB3 and other proteins associated with apical polarity. Together, our findings uncover previously unrecognized functions for CDH26 in the maintenance of actin cytoskeleton and apicobasal polarity of AECs
Emergence of hybrid CSR models as a conflict‐driven communicative process in a Nordic welfare state
This paper offers an understanding of how hybrid models of corporate social responsibility (CSR) – models combining society-centric mandatory (implicit) and business-centric voluntary (explicit) approaches to CSR – are communicatively constructed through institutional struggles over the roles and responsibilities of business in society, in the context of a Nordic welfare state. We develop a model of hybridization as a dialectical process of communicative activity, framing and counter-framing, in which conflict and contestation over normative understandings about CSR drive the process. The model explains the emergence of hybrid models of CSR in terms of gradually evolving issue development and frame changes that are driven by discursive struggles over moral obligations of business in society, appropriate configuration of legitimacy relationships, and appropriate institutional arrangements for CSR governance. In contrast to prevailing accounts, which tend to theorize hybridization as resulting from isomorphic, mimetic, and normative pressures, our account explicitly attends to the politics of hybridization
Observation of insulating nanoislands in ferromagnetic GaMnAs
Resonant Raman data on ferromagnetic GaMnAs reveal the existence of a new kind of defect: insulating nanoislands consisting of substitutional Mn-Ga acceptors surrounded by interstitial Mn-I donors. As indicated by the observation of a sharp 1S(3/2)-> 2S(3/2) Raman transition at similar to 703 cm(-1), the acceptor-bound holes inside the islands are isolated from the metallic surroundings. Instead, Mn-bound excitons do couple to the ferromagnetic environment, as shown by the presence of associated Raman magnon side bands. This leads to an estimate of 5-10 nm for the nanoisland radius. The islands disappear after annealing due to the removal of the Mn-I ions
Two-Roton Bound State in the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
The true nature of the lowest-energy, long-wavelength neutral excitation of
the fractional quantum Hall effect has been a long outstanding problem. In this
Letter, we establish that it is a two-roton bound state.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; Physical Review Letters, in pres
Quantum Monte Carlo calculation of Compton profiles of solid lithium
Recent high resolution Compton scattering experiments in lithium have shown
significant discrepancies with conventional band theoretical results. We
present a pseudopotential quantum Monte Carlo study of electron-electron and
electron-ion correlation effects on the momentum distribution of lithium. We
compute the correlation correction to the valence Compton profiles obtained
within Kohn-Sham density functional theory in the local density approximation
and determine that electronic correlation does not account for the discrepancy
with the experimental results. Our calculations lead do different conclusions
than recent GW studies and indicate that other effects (thermal disorder,
core-valence separation etc.) must be invoked to explain the discrepancy with
experiments.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
Calculations of the A_1 phonon frequency in photoexcited Tellurium
Calculations of the A_1 phonon frequency in photoexcited tellurium are
presented. The phonon frequency as a function of photoexcited carrier density
and phonon amplitude is determined. Recent pump probe experiments are
interpreted in the light of these calculatons. It is proposed that, in
conjunction with measurements of the phonon period in ultra-fast pump-probe
reflectivity experiments, the calculated frequency shifts can be used to infer
the evolution of the density of photoexcited carriers on a sub-picosecond
time-scale.Comment: 15 pages Latex, 3 postscript figure
Electrons in High-Tc Compounds: Ab-Initio Correlation Results
Electronic correlations in the ground state of an idealized infinite-layer
high-Tc compound are computed using the ab-initio method of local ansatz.
Comparisons are made with the local-density approximation (LDA) results, and
the correlation functions are analyzed in detail. These correlation functions
are used to determine the effective atomic-interaction parameters for model
Hamiltonians. On the resulting model, doping dependencies of the relevant
correlations are investigated. Aside from the expected strong atomic
correlations, particular spin correlations arise. The dominating contribution
is a strong nearest neighbor correlation that is Stoner-enhanced due to the
closeness of the ground state to the magnetic phase. This feature depends
moderately on doping, and is absent in a single-band Hubbard model. Our
calculated spin correlation function is in good qualitative agreement with that
determined from the neutron scattering experiments for a metal.Comment: 21pp, 5fig, Phys. Rev. B (Oct. 98
An examination of the relationship of governance structure and performance: Evidence from banking companies in Bangladesh
Corporate governance has become increasingly important in developed and developing countries just after a series of corporate scandals and failures in a number of countries. Corporate governance structure is often viewed as a means of corporate success despite prior studies reveal mixed, somewhere conflicting and ambiguous, and somewhere no relationship between governance structure and performance. This study empirically investigates the relationship between corporate governance mechanisms and financial performance of listed banking companies in Bangladesh by using two multiple regression models. The study reveals that a good number of companies do not comply with the regulatory requirements indicating remarkable shortfall in corporate governance practice. The companies are run by the professional managers having no duality and no ownership interest for which they are compensated by high remuneration to curb agency conflict. Apart from some inconsistent relationship between some corporate variables, the corporate governance mechanisms do not appear to have significant relationship with financial performances. The findings reveal an insignificant negative impact or somewhere no impact of independent directors and non-independent non-executive directors on the level of performance that strongly support the concept that the managers are essentially worthy of trust and earn returns for the owners as claimed by stewardship theory. The study provides support for the view that while much emphasis on corporate governance mechanisms is necessary to safeguard the interest of stakeholders; corporate governance on its own, as a set of codes or standards for corporate conformance, cannot make a company successful. Companies need to balance corporate governance mechanisms with performance by adopting strategic decision and risk management with the efficient utilization of the organization’s resources
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