1,682 research outputs found
[Review of] Ruthanne Lum McCunn, Chinese American Portraits: Personal Histories, 1828·1988
With her latest book, Chinese American Portraits, Ruthanne Lum McCunn adds to her growing list of publications about the painful struggle and heroic survival of the Chinese in America. In an engaging novelistic style, accompanied by equally eloquent photographs, she tells detailed stories of seventeen diverse men and women, ranging from Yung Wing, educator and patriot, and the first Chinese to graduate from an American university (Yale, class of 1854), to Ho Yuet Fung, writer and filmmaker, who emigrated from Hong Kong in the 1970s. Interspersed within these primary narratives are photographs and lengthy captions telling the stories of other Chinese in America. How the author chose which stories to highlight and which to condense is a mystery, for each story is compelling. On the one hand, the photographs and brief stories interspersed within the pages of longer stories tend to be something of a distraction; on the other hand, in this compromise fashion, many stories beyond the major seventeen get told. The reader cannot help but be impressed by the richness of the author\u27s store as suggested by the large quantity and variety of these small vignettes
The Decision of Work and Study and Employment Outcomes
The paper studies factors that contribute to student's work study decision while attending postsecondary institutions using SLID and YITS data. It further tests that how the work decision can affect their future employment outcomes.postsecondary eduction;labour supply decisions;return to schooling
Deriving consensus rankings via multicriteria decision making methodology
Purpose - This paper seeks to take a cautionary stance to the impact of the
marketing mix on customer satisfaction, via a case study deriving consensus
rankings for benchmarking on selected retail stores in Malaysia.
Design/methodology/approach - The ELECTRE I model is used in deriving
consensus rankings via multicriteria decision making method for benchmarking
base on the marketing mix model 4P's. Descriptive analysis is used to analyze
best practice among the four marketing tactics.
Findings - Outranking methods in consequence constitute a strong base on
which to found the entire structure of the behavioral theory of benchmarking
applied to development of marketing strategy.
Research limitations/implications - This study looks only at a limited part
of the puzzle of how consumer satisfaction translates into behavioral outcomes.
Practical implications - The study provides managers with guidance on how to
generate a rough outline of potential marketing activities that can be used to
take advantage of capabilities and convert weaknesses and threats.
Originality/value - The paper interestingly portrays the effective usage of
multicriteria decision-making and ranking method to help marketing managers
predict their marketing trends
Cis‐acting allele specific expression (ASE) differences induced by alcohol and impacted by sex as well as parental genotype of origin
Background
Alcohol use disorders (AUDs) are influenced by complex interactions between the genetics of the individual and their environment. We have previously identified hundreds of polygenic genetic variants between the selectively bred high and low alcohol drinking (HAD and LAD) rat lines. Here we report allele specific expression (ASE) differences, between the HAD2 and LAD2 rat lines.
Methods
The HAD2 and LAD2 rats which have been sequenced were reciprocally crossed to generate 10 litters of F1 progeny. For 5 of these litters, the sire was HAD2; and, for the other 5 litters, the sire was a LAD2. From these 10 litters, two males and two females were picked from each F1 litter (N = 40 total). The F1‐pups were divided, with balancing for sex and direction of cross, into an alcohol (15%) vs a water control group. Alcohol‐drinking started in the middle of adolescence (~PND 35) and lasted 9 weeks. At the end of these treatments, rats were euthanized, the nucleus accumbens was dissected, and RNA was processed for RNA‐sequencing and ASE analyses.
Results
Analyses revealed that adolescent ethanol drinking, individual ethanol drinking levels, parentage, and sex‐of‐animal affected ASEs of about 300 genes. The identified genes included those associated with ethanol metabolism (e.g., Aldh2); neuromodulatory function [e.g., Cckbr, Slc6a7, and Slc1a1]; ion channel activity (e.g., Kcnc3); as well as other synaptic and epigenetic function.
Conclusion
These data indicate that ethanol drinking differentially amplified paternal vs maternal allelic contribution to the transcriptome. We hypothesize that this was due, at least in part, to ethanol‐induced changes in cis‐regulation of polymorphisms previously identified between the HAD2 and LAD2 rat lines. This report highlights the complexity of gene‐by‐environment interactions mediating a genetic predisposition for, and/or the active development of, alcohol use disorders
Effects of Soy Peptide on Dendritic Cells
poster abstractInnate immunity is mediated by effector cells, including NK cells, dendritic cells (DCs), macrophages, and polymorphonuclear phagocytes, which can respond immediately after activation through receptors encoded by germ-line genes. Innate immune responses represent the first line of defense in immunosurveillance. Interventions that enhance the functions of innate immunity will be an important armamentarium to human health. We recently exploited a natural dietary soy peptide called lunasin to improve the immune functions. The hypothesis was that lunasin peptide has stimulatory effects on immune cells. To test this hypothesis, human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of healthy donors were stimulated with or without lunasin. We found that lunasin is capable of stimulating DCs to up-regulate chemokines (CCL2, CCL3, and CCL4), cytokines (TNFα and IFNα), and co-stimulatory molecules (CD80, CD86). In addition, lunasin-treated DCs can provide NK with required signals for activation. Taken together, our results support the immunomodulatory activity of soy peptide on DCs, which leads to enhancement of innate immunity
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Sterilization of granulomas is common in both active and latent tuberculosis despite extensive within-host variability in bacterial killing
Over 30% of the world’s population is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), yet only ~5–10% will develop clinical disease1. Despite considerable effort, we understand little about what distinguishes individuals who progress to active tuberculosis (TB) from those who remain latent for decades. The variable course of disease is recapitulated in cynomolgus macaques infected with Mtb2. Active disease in macaques is defined by clinical, microbiologic and immunologic signs and occurs in ~45% of animals, while the remaining are clinically asymptomatic2,3. Here, we use barcoded Mtb isolates and quantitative measures of culturable and cumulative bacterial burden to show that most lesions are likely founded by a single bacterium and reach similar maximum burdens. Despite common origins, the fate of individual lesions varies substantially within the same host. Strikingly, in active disease, the host sterilizes some lesions even while others progress. Our data suggest that lesional heterogeneity arises, in part, through differential killing of bacteria after the onset of adaptive immunity. Thus, individual lesions follow diverse and overlapping trajectories, suggesting critical responses occur at a lesional level to ultimately determine the clinical outcome of infection. Defining the local factors that dictate outcome will be important in developing effective interventions to prevent active TB
Structural and functional analysis of the pro-domain of human cathelicidin, LL-37
Cathelicidins form a family of small host defense peptides distinct from another class of cationic antimicrobial peptides, the defensins. They are expressed as large precursor molecules with a highly conserved pro-domain known as the cathelin-like domain (CLD). CLDs have high degrees of sequence homology to cathelin, a protein isolated from pig leukocytes and belonging to the cystatin family of cysteine protease inhibitors. In this report, we describe for the first time the X-ray crystal structure of the human CLD (hCLD) of the sole human cathelicidin, LL-37. The structure of hCLD, determined at 1.93 Å resolution, shows the cystatin-like fold and is highly similar to the structure of the CLD of the pig cathelicidin, protegrin-3. We assayed the in vitro antibacterial activities of hCLD, LL-37 and the precursor form, pro-cathelicidin (also known as hCAP18), and we found that the unprocessed protein inhibited the growth of Gramnegative bacteria with efficiencies comparable to the mature peptide, LL-37. In addition, the antibacterial activity of LL-37 was not inhibited by hCLD intermolecularly, since exogenously added hCLD had no effect on the bactericidal activity of the mature peptide. hCLD itself lacked antimicrobial function and did not inhibit the cysteine protease, cathepsin L. Our results contrast with previous reports of hCLD activity. A comparative structural analysis between hCLD and the cysteine protease inhibitor stefin A showed why hCLD is unable to function as an inhibitor of cysteine proteases. In this respect, the cystatin scaffold represents an ancestral structural platform from which proteins evolved divergently, with some losing inhibitory functions
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