200 research outputs found

    ā€œI rise, in my own defenceā€: Character, the courtroom and radical address in British writing, 1792-1824

    Get PDF
    This thesis examines how British radical character was represented in the Romantic period. It takes as its starting-point two sets of changes in how character was understood at this time. In literary history, critics recognise that the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were a time of transition for fictional characters: readers increasingly valued those who had an appearance of a deep interiority, over the more transparently-meaningful characters typical in the earlier eighteenth century. Similarly, in legal history, a shift was underway in how character evidence was used in criminal courts, from a focus on local reputation and social standing to more modern ideas about criminal responsibility. Scholars recognise that both changes were uneven, however, with older approaches to character persisting well into the nineteenth century. This thesis reads these two uneven transitions alongside each other, in the context of the periodā€™s many political prosecutions. Beginning with the 1792 trial of Thomas Paine for Rights of Man and finishing with the 1824 trial of John Hunt for publishing Lord Byronā€™s Vision of Judgment, I consider how radicals defended their characters, inside and outside court. Examining the trials and writings of Paine, John Thelwall, William Godwin, Peter Finnerty, William Hone and Byron (the latter something of an outlier from this activist tradition), the thesis argues that readers and juries alike were expected to ā€œreadā€ character with increasing care. An address to an imagined reader, hostile or sympathetic, was embedded in radical self-defences, whether written specifically for a courtroom or not. Moreover, a high proportion of prosecuted radicals were writers or publishers, and their defences blur the boundaries between legal and non-legal registers. The thesis proposes that the legal meanings of character are an essential context for understanding how character was represented in a range of non-legal writings of the Romantic period

    XI: The Eighteenth Century

    Get PDF
    This chapter has four sections: 1. General and Prose; 2. The Novel; 3. Poetry; 4. Drama. Section 1 is by Michelle Lyons-McFarland; section 2 is by Fiona Milne; section 3 is by Dylan Carver; section 4 is by Kristin M. Distel

    Breads Fortified with Freeze-Dried Vegetables : Quality and Nutritional Attributes. Part 1: Breads Containing Oil as an Ingredient

    Get PDF
    Acknowledgments: Funds for the study were provided by the Scottish Governmentā€™s Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division and conducted as part of the Scottish Government Strategic Research programme (Diet and Health Theme of the Food Land & People Programme). The authors are grateful to Phillip Morrice, Vivian Buchan and Donna Henderson for helping with the nutritional analysis of the breads. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Breads Fortified with Freeze-Dried Vegetables : Quality and Nutritional Attributes. Part II: Breads Not Containing Oil as an Ingredient

    Get PDF
    Acknowledgments: Funds for the study were provided by the Scottish Government's Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division and conducted as part of the Scottish Government Strategic Research programme (Diet and Health Theme of the Food Land & People Programme). The authors are grateful to Phillip Morrice, Vivian Buchan, and Donna Henderson for helping with the nutritional analysis of the breads. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Tantalus, a Novel ASX-Interacting Protein with Tissue-Specific Functions

    Get PDF
    AbstractThe Drosophila trithorax- and Polycomb-group (trxG and PcG) proteins maintain activated and repressed transcriptional states at specific target gene loci. The Additional sex combs (Asx) gene is of particular interest as it appears to function in both protein complexes and yet its effects on target genes are more restricted. A novel protein, Tantalus (TAN), was identified in a yeast two-hybrid screen for ASX-interacting proteins that might confer tissue-specific ASX functions. TAN contains consensus nuclear localization sites and binds DNA in vitro. However, its subcellular localization varies in a tissue-specific fashion. In salivary glands, TAN is predominantly nuclear and associates with 66 euchromatic sites on polytene chromosomes, more than half of which overlap with ASX. These loci do not include the homeotic genes of the ANT and BX complexes bound by other PcG and trxG proteins. Rather, tan mutant defects are restricted to sensory organs. We show that one of these defects, shared by Asx, is genetically enhanced by Asx. Taken together, the data suggest that TAN is a tissue-specific cofactor for ASX, and that its activity may be partially controlled by subcellular trafficking

    Relationship between ambient temperature at sampling and the interferon gamma test result for bovine tuberculosis in cattle

    Get PDF
    Publication history: Accepted - 17 May 2023; Published online - 19 May 2023.Bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is a disease of significant economic and zoonotic importance, therefore, optimising tests for the identification of Mycobacterium bovis infected cattle is essential. The Interferon Gamma (IFN-Ī³) Release Assay (IGRA) can diagnose M. bovis infected cattle at an early stage, is easy to perform and can be used alongside skin tests for confirmatory purposes or to increase diagnostic sensitivity. It is known that IGRA performance is sensitive to environmental conditions under which samples are taken and transported. In this study, the association between the ambient temperature on the day of bleeding and the subsequent IGRA result for bTB was quantified using field samples from Northern Ireland (NI). Results of 106,434 IGRA results (2013ā€“2018) were associated with temperature data extracted from weather stations near tested cattle herds. Model dependent variables were the levels of IFN-Ī³ triggered by avian purified protein derivative (PPDa), M. bovis PPD (PPDb), their difference (PPD(b-a)) as well as the final binary outcome (positive or negative for M. bovis infection). IFN-Ī³ levels after both PPDa and PPDb stimulation were lowest at the extremes of the temperature distribution for NI. The highest IGRA positive probability (above 6%) was found on days with moderate maximum temperatures (6ā€“16 Ā°C) or moderate minimum temperatures (4ā€“7 Ā°C). Adjustment for covariates did not lead to major changes in the model estimates. These data suggest that IGRA performance can be affected when samples are taken at high or low temperatures. Whilst it is difficult to exclude physiological factors, the data nonetheless supports the temperature control of samples from bleeding through to laboratory to help mitigate post-collection confounders

    Osteoblast-specific deficiency of ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase or phosphodiesterase-1 engenders insulin resistance in high-fat diet fed mice

    Get PDF
    Supraphysiological levels of the osteoblastā€enriched mineralization regulator ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase or phosphodiesteraseā€1 (NPP1) is associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus. We determined the impact of osteoblastā€specific Enpp1 ablation on skeletal structure and metabolic phenotype in mice. Female, but not male, 6ā€weekā€old mice lacking osteoblast NPP1 expression (osteoblastā€specific knockout [KO]) exhibited increased femoral bone volume or total volume (17.50% vs. 11.67%; pā€‰<ā€‰.01), and reduced trabecular spacing (0.187 vs. 0.157ā€‰mm; pā€‰<ā€‰.01) compared with floxed (control) mice. Furthermore, an enhanced ability of isolated osteoblasts from the osteoblastā€specific KO to calcify their matrix in vitro compared to fl/fl osteoblasts was observed (pā€‰<ā€‰.05). Male osteoblastā€specific KO and fl/fl mice showed comparable glucose and insulin tolerance despite increased levels of insulinā€“sensitizing underā€carboxylated osteocalcin (195% increase; pā€‰<ā€‰.05). However, following highā€fatā€diet challenge, osteoblastā€specific KO mice showed impaired glucose and insulin tolerance compared with fl/fl mice. These data highlight a crucial local role for osteoblast NPP1 in skeletal development and a secondary metabolic impact that predominantly maintains insulin sensitivity

    High Viral Diversity and Mixed Infections in Cerebral Spinal Fluid From Cases of Varicella Zoster Virus Encephalitis.

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Varicella zoster virus (VZV) may cause encephalitis, both with and without rash. Here we investigate whether viruses recovered from the central nervous system (CNS; encephalitis or meningitis) differ genetically from those recovered from non-CNS samples. METHODS: Enrichment-based deep sequencing of 45 VZV genomes from cerebral spinal fluid (CSF), plasma, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), and vesicles was carried out with samples collected from 34 patients with and without VZV infection of the CNS. RESULTS: Viral sequences from multiple sites in the same patient were identical at the consensus level. Virus from vesicle fluid and CSF in cases of meningitis showed low-level diversity. By contrast, plasma, BAL, and encephalitis had higher numbers of variant alleles. Two CSF-encephalitis samples had high genetic diversity, with variant frequency patterns typical of mixed infections with different clades. CONCLUSIONS: Low viral genetic diversity in vesicle fluid is compatible with previous observations that VZV skin lesions arise from single or low numbers of virions. A similar result was observed in VZV from cases of VZV meningitis, a generally self-limiting infection. CSF from cases of encephalitis had higher diversity with evidence for mixed clade infections in 2 cases. We hypothesize that reactivation from multiple neurons may contribute to the pathogenesis of VZV encephalitis.Action Medical research GN2424 This work was supported by a UK MRC New Investigator Award to D. P. D; UCL/UCLH BRC (J. B.); Action Medical Research (grant number GN2424 to C. J. H); Swedish Research Council (P. N. and T. B.). The work was also support by an NIHR Fellowship (grant number DRF-2013-06-168 to F. M.), the Meningitis Research Foundation (grant number 0904.0), an NIHR Programme Grant in Applied Research (grant number RP-PG-0108-10048 to T. S.), and the NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Emerging and Zoonotic Infections, University of Liverpool

    RNA aptamer reveals nuclear TDP-43 pathology is an early aggregation event that coincides with STMN-2 cryptic splicing and precedes clinical manifestation in ALS

    Get PDF
    Open Access via the Springer Agreement The research leading to this manuscript has been supported by (i) a Target ALS foundation grant to JMG, MHH, GGT, EZ and NS and employing MG and FMW BB-2022-C4-L2; (ii) an NIH grant to JG and MHH, employing HS and FR R01NS127186; (iii) the European Research Council (RIBOMYLOME_309545 and ASTRA_855923) to GGT; and (iv) an MND Association Lady Edith Wolfson Junior Non-Clinical Fellowship to RS Saleeb/Oct22/980-799 (RSS). The authors would also like to thank the University of Aberdeen Microscopy and Histology Core Facility in the Institute of Medical Sciences.Peer reviewe
    • ā€¦
    corecore