142 research outputs found
Wasting Breath in Hamlet
This is the final version. Available on open access from Palgrave via the DOI in this recordThis chapter draws on instances of disordered breathing in
Hamlet in order to examine the cultural signifcance of sighs in the early
modern period, as well as in the context of current work in the feld
of medical humanities. Tracing the medical history of sighing in ancient
and early modern treatises of the passions, the chapter argues that sighs,
in the text and the performance of the tragedy, exceed their conventional
interpretation as symptoms of pain and disrupt meaning on the page and
on stage. In the light of New Materialist theory, the air circulating in
Hamlet is shown to dismantle narratives of representation, posing new
questions for the future of medical humanities
Novel Anti-bacterial Activities of β-defensin 1 in Human Platelets: Suppression of Pathogen Growth and Signaling of Neutrophil Extracellular Trap Formation
Human β-defensins (hBD) are antimicrobial peptides that curb microbial activity. Although hBD's are primarily expressed by epithelial cells, we show that human platelets express hBD-1 that has both predicted and novel antibacterial activities. We observed that activated platelets surround Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), forcing the pathogens into clusters that have a reduced growth rate compared to S. aureus alone. Given the microbicidal activity of β-defensins, we determined whether hBD family members were present in platelets and found mRNA and protein for hBD-1. We also established that hBD-1 protein resided in extragranular cytoplasmic compartments of platelets. Consistent with this localization pattern, agonists that elicit granular secretion by platelets did not readily induce hBD-1 release. Nevertheless, platelets released hBD-1 when they were stimulated by α-toxin, a S. aureus product that permeabilizes target cells. Platelet-derived hBD-1 significantly impaired the growth of clinical strains of S. aureus. hBD-1 also induced robust neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation by target polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs), which is a novel antimicrobial function of β-defensins that was not previously identified. Taken together, these data demonstrate that hBD-1 is a previously-unrecognized component of platelets that displays classic antimicrobial activity and, in addition, signals PMNs to extrude DNA lattices that capture and kill bacteria
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