30,993 research outputs found
The CLC-5 2Cl-/H+ exchange transporter in endosomal function and Dent's disease
CLC-5 plays a critical role in the process of endocytosis in the proximal tubule of the kidney and mutations that alter protein function are the cause of Dent's I disease. In this X-linked disorder impaired reabsorption results in the wasting of calcium and low molecular weight protein to the urine, kidney stones, and progressive renal failure. Several different ion-transporting and protein clustering roles have been proposed as the physiological function of CLC-5 in endosomal membranes. At the time of its discovery, nearly 20 years ago, it was understandably assumed to be a chloride channel similar to known members of the CLC family, such as CLC-1, suggesting that chloride transport by CLC-5 was critical for endosomal function. Since then CLC-5 was found instead to be a 2Cl-/H+ exchange transporter with voltage-dependent activity. Recent studies have determined that it is this coupled exchange of protons for chloride, and not just chloride transport, which is critical for endosomal and kidney function. This review discusses the recent ideas that describe how CLC-5 might function in endosomal membranes, the aspects that we still do not understand, and where controversies remain
Gambling Treatment Diversion Court: First in Nevada
The first Gambling Treatment Diversion Court was established in Las Vegas, Nevada in fall of 2018 following more than 25 years of effort by passionately concerned non-profit Executives, therapists, lawyers and judges. This panel represents one leader from each of those areas, including Judge Cheryl Moss, the first judge to open the Gambling Treatment Diversion Court (GTDC), Dayvid Figler, the first attorney to successfully represent a gambling client and refer her to the GTDC, Carol O\u27Hare, Executive Director of the non-profit Nevada Council on Problem Gambler with 25+ years leadership and advocacy for problem gamblers, Sydney Smith, M.A., Clinical Director of RISE treatment center in Las Vegas and nationally- and state-certified gambling counselor, and Denise F. Quirk, M.A., Clinical Director of the Reno Problem Gambling Center and nationally- and Nevada-certified problem gambling counselor and instructor at the University of Nevada, Reno. The panel will share the development of gambling diversion treatment, legal challenges and victories, the process of the GTDC, case studies of individuals with Gambling Disorder who have endured and succeeded in the legal process, and discussion relevant to the impact of the gambling diversion process at all levels of evaluation, advocacy, treatment and support for gamblers and communities
Acoustic transmission through compound subwavelength slit arrays
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.The angular dependence of the transmission of sound in air through four types of 2D slit-arrays
formed of aluminium slats is explored, both experimentally and numerically. For a simple, subwavelength
periodic slit-array, it is well known that Fabry-Perot-like wave-guide resonances, supported
by the slit-cavities, hybridising with bound acoustic surface waves, result in āEnhanced Acoustic
Transmissionā at frequencies determined by the length, width and separation of each slit-cavity. We
demonstrate that altering the spacing or width of some of the slits to form a compound array (i.e.
an array having a basis comprised of more than one slit) results in sharp dips in the transmission
spectra, that may have a strong angular dependence. These features correspond to āphase resonancesā,
which have been studied extensively in the electromagnetic case. This geometry allows for
additional near-field configurations compared to the simple array, whereby the field in adjacent cavities
can be out-of-phase. Several types of compound slit-array are investigated; one such structure
is optimised to minimise the effect of boundary-layer loss mechanisms present in each slit cavity,
thereby achieving a deep, sharp transmission minimum in a broad maximumThe authors would like to thank the UK Ministry of Defenceās
Defence Science and Technology Laboratorty (DSTL)
for their financial support and permission to publis
From protest to agenda building: Description bias in media coverage of protest events in Washington, D.C
Social movements often seek to draw attention to issues they deem important by organizing public demonstrations with the aim of attracting mass media coverage. But only a small proportion of all public demonstrations receives any media attention. This article asks whether even the minimal coverage that demonstrations receive reveal any influence of social movements in shaping how issues are framed by the mass media. Analyzing newspaper and television news stories on Washington, D.C. protests held during 1982 and 1991, we ask whether news reports on protests are framed in ways consistent with the aims of protesters. Do demonstrators receive media coverage that highlights the issues about which they are concerned, or does coverage focus on the protest event itself, to the exclusion of the social issues that movements target? Our results support much of the surmising among media scholars, that even when movements succeed at obtaining the attention of mass media outlets, media reports portray protests in ways that may undermine social movement agendas. Despite this obstacle to communicating protest messages through demonstrations, movements engage in other forms of communication that can affect public interpretations of mass media frames
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