105 research outputs found

    Striving for excellence at the NORD/NOBA Center for Dance

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    This internship report contains a comprehensive analysis of the NORD/NOBA Center For Dance, a community partnership between the New Orleans Recreation Department and the New Orleans Ballet Association (NOBA). Included are organizational histories and management analyses of the Center For Dance and NOBA, a description of the intern\u27s duties as the Summer Programs Coordinator, management challenges caused by a lack of human resources and planning time, and recommendations for building a stronger manpower base and developing summer planning

    Effect of Country of Origin and Involvement on Consumers' Attitudes Toward Apparel and Purchase Intentions

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    Clothing, Textiles and Merchandisin

    Elementary students' perceptions of high-stakes testing in terms of motivation, test anxiety, and academic achievement

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    High stakes tests have been suggested to motivate all students in a homogeneously positive way through the belief that attaching consequences to test scores will encourage students to apply greater effort to achieve at passing levels. This study addresses this belief by obtaining elementary students’ perceptions of high stakes tests. This was accomplished by examining students’ drawings of themselves taking the North Carolina end of grade test (EOG). It then focused on how these students’ motivational levels, test anxiety levels and academic achievement levels influenced the students’ perceptions of the North Carolina EOG

    Collaborative and competitive strategies in the variability and resiliency of large-scale societies in Mesoamerica

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    Examinations of the variation and duration of past large-scale societies have long involved a conceptual struggle between efforts at generalization and the unraveling of specific trajectories. Although historical particulars are critical to understanding individual cases, there exist both scientific and policy rationales for drawing broader implications regarding the growing corpus of cross-cultural data germane to understanding variability in the constitution of human societies, past and present. Archaeologists have recently paid increased attention to successes and failures in communal-resource management over the long term, as articulated by the transdisciplinary theory on cooperation and collective action. In this article, we consider frameworks that have been traditionally employed in studies of the rise, diversity, and fall of large-scale preindustrial aggregations. We suggest that a comparative theoretical perspective that foregrounds collective-action problems, unaligned individual and group interests, and the social mechanisms that promote or hamper cooperation advances our understanding of variability in these early cooperative arrangements. We apply such a perspective to an examination of cities from pre-Columbian Mesoamerica to demonstrate tendencies for more collective systems to be larger and longer lasting than less collective ones, likely reflecting greater resiliency in the face of the ecological and cultural perturbations specific to the region and era

    Fucoxanthin Attenuates Rifampin-Induced Cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4) and Multiple Drug Resistance 1 (MDR1) Gene Expression Through Pregnane X Receptor (PXR)-Mediated Pathways in Human Hepatoma HepG2 and Colon Adenocarcinoma LS174T Cells

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    Pregnane X receptor (PXR) has been reported to regulate the expression of drug-metabolizing enzymes, such as the cytochrome P450 3A (CYP3A) family and transporters, such as multiple drug resistance 1 (MDR1). Fucoxanthin, the major carotenoid in brown sea algae, is a putative chemopreventive agent. In this study, we determined whether fucoxanthin could overcome drug resistance through attenuation of rifampin-induced CYP3A4 and MDR1 gene expression by PXR-mediated pathways in HepG2 hepatoma cells. We found that fucoxanthin (1–10 μM) significantly attenuated rifampin (20 μM)-induced CYP3A4, MDR1 mRNA and CYP3A4 protein expression at 24 h of incubation. Mechanistically, fucoxanthin strongly attenuated the PXR-mediated CYP3A4 promoter activity in HepG2 cells. In addition, fucoxanthin attenuated constitutive androstane receptor (CAR)- and rPXR-mediated CYP3A4 promoter activity in this cell line. Using the mammalian two-hybrid assay, we found that fucoxanthin significantly decreased the interaction between PXR and SRC-1, a PXR co-activator. Thus, fucoxanthin can decrease rifampin-induced CYP3A4 and MDR1 expression through attenuation of PXR-mediated CYP3A4 promoter activation and interaction between PXR and co-activator. These findings could lead to potentially important new therapeutic and dietary approaches to reduce the frequency of adverse drug reactions

    Gene Expression Analysis in Rats Treated with Experimental Acetyl-Coenzyme A Carboxylase Inhibitors Suggests Interactions with the Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor ␣ Pathway

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    ABSTRACT Acetyl CoA carboxylase (ACC) 2, which catalyzes the carboxylation of acetyl-CoA to form malonyl-CoA, has been identified as a potential target for type 2 diabetes and obesity. Small-molecule inhibitors of ACC2 would be expected to reduce de novo lipid synthesis and increase lipid oxidation. Treatment of ob/ob mice with compound A-908292 (S) ({(S)-3-[2-(4-isopropoxy-phenoxy)-thiazol-5-yl]-1-methylprop-2-ynyl}-carbamic acid methyl ester), a small-molecule inhibitor with an IC 50 of 23 nM against ACC2, resulted in a reduction of serum glucose and triglyceride levels. However, compound A-875400 (R) ({(R)-3-[2-(4-isopropoxy-phenoxy)-thiazol-5-yl]-1-methyl-prop-2-ynyl}-carbamic acid methyl ester), an inactive enantiomer of A-908292 (S) with approximately 50-fold less activity against ACC2, also caused a similar reduction in glucose and triglycerides, suggesting that the glucose-lowering effects in ob/ob mice may be mediated by other metabolic pathways independent of ACC2 inhibition. To characterize the pharmacological activity of these experimental compounds at a transcriptional level, rats were orally dosed for 3 days with either A-908292 (S) or A-875400 (R), and gene expression analysis was performed. Gene expression analysis of livers showed that treatment with A-908292 (S) or A-875400 (R) resulted in gene expression profiles highly similar to known peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-␣ activators. The results suggest that, in vivo, both A-908292 (S) and A-875400 (R) stimulated the PPAR-␣-dependent signaling pathway. These results were further supported by both an in vitro genomic evaluation using rat hepatocytes and immunohistochemical evaluation using 70-kDa peroxisomal membrane protein. Overall, the gene expression analysis suggests a plausible mechanism for the similar pharmacological findings with active and inactive enantiomers of an ACC2 inhibitor

    The scale, governance, and sustainability of central places in pre-Hispanic Mesoamerica

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    Examinations of the variation and relative successes or failures of past large-scale societies have long involved attempts to reconcile efforts at generalization and the identification of specific factors with explanatory value for regional trajectories. Although historical particulars are critical to understanding individual cases, there are both scholarly and policy rationales for drawing broader implications regarding the growing corpus of cross-cultural data germane to understanding variability in the constitution of human societies, past and present. Archaeologists have recently highlighted how successes and failures in communal-resource management can be studied over the long term through the material record to both engage and enhance transdisciplinary research on cooperation and collective action. In this article we consider frameworks that have been traditionally employed in studies of the rise, diversity, and fall of preindustrial urban aggregations. We suggest that a comparative theoretical perspective that foregrounds collective-action problems, unaligned individual and group interests, and the social mechanisms that promote or hamper cooperation advances our understanding of variability in these early cooperative arrangements. We apply such a perspective to an examination of pre-Hispanic Mesoamerican urban centers to demonstrate tendencies for more collective systems to be larger and longer lasting than less collective ones, likely reflecting greater sustainability in the face of the ecological and cultural perturbations specific to the region and era.Accepted manuscrip

    Advances in the Household Archaeology of Highland Mesoamerica

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