410 research outputs found
Not all features are created equal: Processing asymmetries between location and object features
Previous research has shown spontaneous location processing when location is not a task relevant feature
and when a target is presented together with distractors. The present study investigates whether such
processing can occur in the absence of distractor inhibition, and whether there is a processing asymmetry
between location and an object feature. The results show that not all features are created equal. Whereas
attending to an object’s color or texture led to the involuntary processing of that object’s location, attending
to an object’s location did not necessarily result in the encoding of its color or texture when these
nonspatial properties were not task relevant. These results add to the body of evidence demonstrating
the special role of location in attentional selection. They also provide a clearer picture of the interactions
among location, object features, and participants’ behavioral goals
Les lésions médullaires traumatiques : épidémiologie et perspectives
AbstractObjectiveSpecify the epidemiological data on the acute spinal cord injuries and define a group of patients that could benefit from cellular transplantation therapy designed with the aim of repair and regeneration of damaged spinal cord tissues.Material and methodsFive years monocentric (Gui-de-Chauliac Hospital, Montpellier, France) retrospective analysis of patients suffering from spinal cord injury (SCI). Spinal cord injured-patients, defined as sensory-motor complete, underwent a clinical evaluation following American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) and functional type 2 Spinal Cord Independence Measure (SCIM2) scorings as well as radiological evaluation through spinal cord magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).ResultsOne hundred and fifty-seven medical records were reviewed and we selected and re-examined 20 patients with complete thoracic spinal cord lesion. Clinical and radiological evaluations of these patients demonstrated, in 75 % of the cases, an absence of clinical progression after a mean of 49months. Radiological abnormalities were constantly present in the initial (at the admission to hospital) and control (re-evaluation) MRI and no reliable predictive criteria of prognosis had been found.Discussion/ConclusionWe compare our results to the literature and discuss advantages and limits of cellular transplantation strategies for these patients.RésuméObjectifsConnaître les données épidémiologiques de notre région sanitaire sur les traumatismes médullaires. Au sein de cette population, sélectionner les patients susceptibles de bénéficier de thérapie cellulaire dans la moelle épinière lésée dans l’objectif de régénérer le tissu nerveux. Évaluer à distance ces patients.Patients et méthodeAnalyse rétrospective de tous les patients pris en charge pour un traumatisme vertébro-médullaire. Réévaluation clinique et radiologique des patients présentant une atteinte médullaire thoracique sensitivomotrice complète. Réévaluation réalisée par le score de l’American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA), le score fonctionnel Type 2 Spinal Cord Independence Measure (SCIM2) et contrôle radiologique par une IRM médullaire.RésultatsCent cinquante-sept dossiers de patients ont été analysés et 28 patients présentaient une lésion médullaire complète. Une évaluation clinique et radiologique réalisée chez 20 patients sur 28 (71 %) a montré l’absence d’évolution clinique dans 75 % des cas dans un délai moyen de 49 mois. Les anomalies radiologiques étaient présentes dans 100 % des cas sur l’IRM initiale et de contrôle sans qu’aucun critère fiable prédictif de bon pronostic n’est retrouvé.Discussion/conclusionNous présentons ces résultats comparativement à ceux de la littérature et nous discutons chez ces malades les stratégies de transplantation cellulaire, leurs limites actuelles et les progrès nécessaires pour obtenir des résultats
Anatomical study of serotonergic innervation and 5-HT1A receptor in the human spinal cord
Serotonergic innervation of the spinal cord in mammals has multiple roles in the control of motor, sensory and visceral functions. In rats, functional consequences of spinal cord injury at thoracic level can be improved by a substitutive transplantation of serotonin (5-HT) neurons or regeneration under the trophic influence of grafted stem cells. Translation to either pharmacological and/or cellular therapies in humans requires the mapping of the spinal cord 5-HT innervation and its receptors to determine their involvement in specific functions. Here, we have performed a preliminary mapping of serotonergic processes and serotonin-lA (5-HT1A) receptors in thoracic and lumbar segments of the human spinal cord. As in rodents and non-human primates, 5-HT profiles in human spinal cord are present in the ventral horn, surrounding motoneurons, and also contact their presumptive dendrites at lumbar level. 5-HT1A receptors are present in the same area, but are more densely expressed at lumbar level. 5-HT profiles are also present in the intermediolateral region, where 5-HT1A receptors are absent. Finally, we observed numerous serotonergic profiles in the superficial part (equivalent of Rexed lamina II) of the dorsal horn, which also displayed high levels of 5-HT1A receptors. These findings pave the way for local specific therapies involving cellular and/or pharmacological tools targeting the serotonergic system
Illegals abortions and utero-digestives lesions: retrospective study of 12 cases in the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics at the Treichville teaching hospital (Abidjan, Cote D’ivoire)
Background: Traumatic intestinal digestive damage after abortion by endo-uterine manoeuvres are not uncommon. The purpose of this study is to describe the diagnostic, therapeutic and prognostic aspects of these lesions.Methods: This is a retrospective study of 3 years on patients with a uterine lesion associated with a digestive traumatic injury during illegal abortions endo-uterine manoeuvres.Results: 12 patients with a median age of 23, 9 are included. The clinical manifestations are not specific: impairment of the general condition 33.3%; hyperthermia 83.3% (or 10 cases); digestive disorders such as diarrhoea 25%, vomiting 33.3%; abdominal pain 100%; occlusive syndrome 16.7%; acute abdominal syndrome 75%. The seat of traumatic injuries is variable. The lesions were for hail alone in 4 cases (33.3%), colon alone for 2 cases (16.7%), rectum 1 case and epiploon 2 cases. In these 3 cases, the lesions were associated, sitting on both the hail and the colon at a time. All these lesions were associated with uterine perforation of variable siege. The therapeutic management consisted of a small bowel resection with ileostomy in 5 cases or 41.7%; colon resection with colostomy 3 cases or 25%; suture lesions after beveling beiges 5 cases either 41, 7 in 2 cases, we performed haemostasis on the bleeding epiploon. Treatment of the uterine lesion was conservative 75% of the time. The evolution on the 10 patients was favorable, 83.3%. Two patients died early in the operative course after septic shock.Conclusions: The digestive lesions are a factor aggravating the prognosis of post-abortion uterine manoeuvres. Their management must be rapid and requires close collaboration between the digestive surgeon and the Gynecologist
Influence of particle composition and thermal cycling on bijel formation
Colloidal particles with appropriate wetting properties can become very
strongly trapped at an interface between two immiscible fluids. We have
harnessed this phenomenon to create a new class of soft materials with
intriguing and potentially useful characteristics. The material is known as a
bijel: bicontinuous interfacially-jammed emulsion gel. It is a
colloid-stabilized emulsion with fluid-bicontinuous domains. The potential to
create these gels was first predicted using computer simulations.
Experimentally we use mixtures of water and 2,6-lutidine at the composition for
which the system undergoes a critical demixing transition on warming. Colloidal
silica, with appropriate surface chemistry, is dispersed while the system is in
the single-fluid phase; the composite sample is then slowly warmed well beyond
the critical temperature. The liquids phase separate via spinodal decomposition
and the particles become swept up on the newly created interfaces. As the
domains coarsen the interfacial area decreases and the particles eventually
become jammed together. The resulting structures have a significant yield
stress and are stable for many months. Here we begin to explore the complex
wetting properties of fluorescently-tagged silica surfaces in water-lutidine
mixtures, showing how they can be tuned to allow bijel creation. Additionally
we demonstrate how the particle properties change with time while they are
immersed in the solvents.Comment: Proceedings of the 7th Liquid Matter Conference, held in Lund
(Sweden) in June 200
“Savages Who Speak French”: Folklore, Primitivism and Morals in Robert Hertz
Hertz's analysis of the Alpine cult of Saint Besse apparently marks a break from his studies of death, sin and the left to folkloric studies. This analysis helps one to understand the personality of Robert Hertz. His sociological curiosity about folklore reveals his ambiguous position in social sciences at the beginning of the twentieth century. His text appears to be a variation from the Durkheimian norm, but another reading could suggest that Hertz continued and went beyond Durkheimian thought to something between sociology of the modern world and engaged socialism. Through this study, Hertz linked his political ideals, his work in ethnology and his desire for social involvement. The cult of Saint Besse perpetuated as much religious tradition as local identity. The Alpine people were presented in the text as wilful perpetuators of an ideal social order, whose loss for his contemporary city dwellers Hertz feared. The alpine Other, marked by a material and moral backwardness, represented for activist and socialist Hertz one of the paths of balanced social organization that stabilized the identity of a group across time if it fit rather well into the folkloric stereotypes of the beginning of the twentieth century. Finally, by linking events in Herz's life (e.g., the accidental Alpine death of his father), this article suggests that the legend of Saint Besse embodied several recurring motifs in Hertz' career: the accidental deaths of saint and father by falls, the military role of the saint and of Hertz himself
Substrate Entrainment, Depositional Relief, and Sediment Capture: Impact of a Submarine Landslide on Flow Process and Sediment Supply
From Frontiers via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: collection 2021, received 2021-08-12, accepted 2021-10-27, epub 2021-11-16Publication status: PublishedSubmarine landslides can generate complicated patterns of seafloor relief that influence subsequent flow behaviour and sediment dispersal patterns. In subsurface studies, the term mass transport deposits (MTDs) is commonly used and covers a range of processes and resultant deposits. While the large-scale morphology of submarine landslide deposits can be resolved in seismic reflection data, the nature of their upper surface and its impact on both facies distributions and stratal architecture of overlying deposits is rarely resolvable. However, field-based studies often allow a more detailed characterisation of the deposit. The early post-rift Middle Jurassic deep-water succession of the Los Molles Formation is exceptionally well-exposed along a dip-orientated WSW-ENE outcrop belt in the Chacay Melehue depocentre, Neuquén Basin, Argentina. We correlate 27 sedimentary logs constrained by marker beds to document the sedimentology and architecture of a >47 m thick and at least 9.6 km long debrite, which contains two different types of megaclasts. The debrite overlies ramps and steps, indicating erosion and substrate entrainment. Two distinct sandstone-dominated units overlie the debrite. The lower sandstone unit is characterised by: 1) abrupt thickness changes, wedging and progressive rotation of laminae in sandstone beds associated with growth strata; and 2) detached sandstone load balls within the underlying debrite. The combination of these features suggests syn-sedimentary foundering processes due to density instabilities at the top of the fluid-saturated mud-rich debrite. The debrite relief controlled the spatial distribution of foundered sandstones. The upper sandstone unit is characterised by thin-bedded deposits, locally overlain by medium-to thick-bedded lobe axis/off-axis deposits. The thin-beds show local thinning and onlapping onto the debrite, where it develops its highest relief. Facies distributions and stacking patterns record the progradation of submarine lobes and their complex interaction with long-lived debrite-related topography. The emplacement of a kilometre-scale debrite in an otherwise mud-rich basinal setting and accumulation of overlying sand-rich deposits suggests a genetic link between the mass-wasting event and transient coarse clastic sediment supply to an otherwise sand-starved part of the basin. Therefore, submarine landslides demonstrably impact the routing and behaviour of subsequent sediment gravity flows, which must be considered when predicting facies distributions and palaeoenvironments above MTDs in subsurface datasets
Diabetes-induced mechanical hyperalgesia involves spinal mitogen-activated protein kinase activation in neurons and microglia via N-methyl-D-aspartate-dependent mechanisms
ABSTRACT Molecular mechanisms underlying diabetes-induced painful neuropathy are poorly understood. We have demonstrated, in rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes, that mechanical hyperalgesia, a common symptom of diabetic neuropathy, was correlated with an early increase in extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK), p38, and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) phosphorylation in the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion at 3 weeks after induction of diabetes. This change was specific to hyperalgesia because nonhyperalgesic rats failed to have such an increase. Immunoblot analysis showed no variation of protein levels, suggesting a post-translational regulation of the corresponding kinases. In diabetic hyperalgesic rats, immunocytochemistry revealed that all phosphorylated mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) colocalized with both the neuronal (NeuN) and microglial (OX42) cell-specific markers but not with the astrocyte marker [glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)] in the superficial dorsal horn-laminae of the spinal cord. In these same rats, a 7-day administration [5 g/rat/day, intrathecal (i.t.)] of 1,4-diamino-2,3-dicyano-1,4-bis(2-aminophenylthio)butadiene (U0126), 4-(4-fluorophenyl)-2-(4-methylsulfinylphenyl)-5-(4-pyridyl)1H-imidazole (SB203580), and anthra(1,9-cd)pyrazol-6(2H)-one (SP600125), which inhibited MAPK kinase, p38, and JNK, respectively, suppressed mechanical hyperalgesia, and decreased phosphorylation of the kinases. To characterize the cellular events upstream of MAPKs, we have examined the role of the NMDA receptor known to be implicated in pain hypersensitivity. The prolonged blockade of this receptor during 7 days by (5R,10S)-(ϩ)-5-methyl-10, 11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]-cyclohepten-5-10-imine hydrogen maleate (MK801; 5 g/rat/day, i.t.), a noncompetitive NMDA receptor antagonist, reversed hyperalgesia developed by diabetic rats and blocked phosphorylation of all MAPKs. These results demonstrate for the first time that NMDA receptor-dependent phosphorylation of MAPKs in spinal cord neurons and microglia contribute to the establishment and longterm maintenance of painful diabetic hyperalgesia and that these kinases represent potential targets for pain therapy. Sensitive peripheral neuropathies represent a common and debilitating complication of diabetes (types 1 and 2) and affect an increasing proportion of diabetic patients as the disease progresses. Even though antidepressant and antiepileptic agents have been shown to be partially effective, clinical studies have reported the difficulty of managing pain caused by these neuropathies The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade is a family of serine/threonine kinases that are activated by dual phosphorylation on threonine and tyrosine residues. The Article, publication date, and citation information can be found a
Time-Lapse Imaging of the Dynamics of CNS Glial-Axonal Interactions In Vitro and Ex Vivo
Myelination is an exquisite and dynamic example of heterologous cell-cell interaction, which consists of the concentric wrapping of multiple layers of oligodendrocyte membrane around neuronal axons. Understanding the mechanism by which oligodendrocytes ensheath axons may bring us closer to designing strategies to promote remyelination in demyelinating diseases. The main aim of this study was to follow glial-axonal interactions over time both in vitro and ex vivo to visualize the various stages of myelination.We took two approaches to follow myelination over time: i) time-lapse imaging of mixed CNS myelinating cultures generated from mouse spinal cord to which exogenous GFP-labelled murine cells were added, and ii) ex vivo imaging of the spinal cord of shiverer (Mbp mutant) mice, transplanted with GFP-labelled murine neurospheres. We demonstrate that oligodendrocyte-axonal interactions are dynamic events with continuous retraction and extension of oligodendroglial processes. Using cytoplasmic and membrane-GFP labelled cells to examine different components of the myelin-like sheath, we provide evidence from time-lapse fluorescence microscopy and confocal microscopy that the oligodendrocytes' cytoplasm-filled processes initially spiral around the axon in a corkscrew-like manner. This is followed subsequently by focal expansion of the corkscrew process to form short cuffs, which then extend longitudinally along the axons. We predict from this model that these spiral cuffs must extend over each other first before extending to form internodes of myelin.These experiments show the feasibility of visualizing the dynamics of glial-axonal interaction during myelination over time. Moreover, these approaches complement each other with the in vitro approach allowing visualization of an entire internodal length of myelin and the ex vivo approach validating the in vitro data
The human DNA glycosylases NEIL1 and NEIL3 excise psoralen-induced DNA-DNA cross-links in a four-stranded DNA structure
Interstrand cross-links (ICLs) are highly cytotoxic DNA lesions that block DNA replication and transcription by preventing strand separation. Previously, we demonstrated that the bacterial and
human DNA glycosylases Nei and NEIL1 excise unhooked psoralen-derived ICLs in three-stranded DNA via hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond between the crosslinked base and deoxyribose sugar. Furthermore, NEIL3 from Xenopus laevis has been shown to cleave psoralen- and abasic site-induced ICLs in Xenopus
egg extracts. Here we report that human NEIL3 cleaves psoralen-induced DNA-DNA cross-links in three-stranded and four-stranded DNA substrates to generate unhooked DNA fragments containing
either an abasic site or a psoralen-thymine monoadduct. Furthermore, while Nei and NEIL1 also cleave a psoralen-induced four-stranded DNA substrate to generate two unhooked DNA duplexes with a nick, NEIL3 targets both DNA strands in the ICL without generating single-strand breaks. The DNA substrate specificities of these Nei-like enzymes imply the occurrence of long uninterrupted three- and four-stranded crosslinked DNA-DNA structures that may originate in vivo from DNA replication fork
bypass of an ICL. In conclusion, the Nei-like DNA glycosylases unhook psoralen-derived ICLs in various DNA structures via a genuine repair mechanism in which complex DNA lesions can be removed without generation of highly toxic double-strand breaks
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