11 research outputs found

    Dwelling in the Forest: Nature, Society and Power in Tribal Central India

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    This dissertation explores the lives of indigenous communities in India and their relationships to the environments and landscapes of their subsistence through an ethnography of the Baiga, a forest-dwelling, cultivator community who negotiate their everyday access to forests and land amidst shifting historical, legal and policy regimes of rights and access. Taking as its point of departure a particular conjuncture in Indian ecological history, the enactment of the Scheduled Tribes and other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act (2007), when forests and forest dwellers in their mutual entwinement come to be visible to the state and law, this dissertation asks: what does it means to dwell in a forest today, when dwelling is taken both as the daily work of making worlds more habitable, and the legal - governmental object of regulation and recognition? Each chapter explores a distinct threshold of being or becoming human in relation to an external world signalled as ‘nature,’ by tracking a particular aspect, trajectory, or predicament of Baiga subsistence and livelihood. The first chapter follows women into the forest as they gather forest produce, suggesting that people become perceiving organisms in the course of doing daily subsistence tasks and that perception itself is distributed rather than anchored in a perceiving subject. The second chapter considers the emergence of notions of self and other around questions of possession and property, exploring practices of land-making under conditions of land scarcity and the fluidity of state land categories, through a village land dispute. The third chapter shows how the Baiga were historically made into subjects of nature by examining debates around the colonial program for restricting shifting cultivation that cast the Baiga as wild, upland, unruly ‘forest-dwellers,’ in opposition to Gond as sedentary cultivators. The fourth and final chapter reengages the question of how Baigas are made into subjects of nature from a contemporary perspective, by examining how villagers make claims on the state, and the manner in which such acts of claiming bring their ‘bodily natures’ into the political domain. Thus, this dissertation tracks how contemporary Baiga selfhood and subjectivity are expressed in relation to their everyday environments of subsistence in the context of contemporary and historical vectors of state intervention in the lives and habitations of indigenous communities in India. Based on 22 months of fieldwork in a predominantly ‘tribal,’ ‘indigenous’ or ‘adivasi’ district of central India, the dissertation draws on close participant observation with farmers and forest dwellers, NGO activists and forest officials of the Baigachak region; interviews and conversations with Delhi-based environmentalists, activists, bureaucrats and journalists shaping national forest legislation; and select historical documents on the formation of the Baigachak as well as contemporary news coverage— local and national— of the Baiga and other forest-dwelling communities

    The functional characterization of long noncoding RNA SPRY4-IT1 in human melanoma cells

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    Expression of the long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) SPRY4-IT1 is low in normal human melanocytes but high in melanoma cells. siRNA knockdown of SPRY4-IT1 blocks melanoma cell invasion and proliferation, and increases apoptosis. To investigate its function further, we affinity purified SPRY4-IT1 from melanoma cells and used mass spectrometry to identify the protein lipin 2, an enzyme that converts phosphatidate to diacylglycerol (DAG), as a major binding partner. SPRY4-IT1 knockdown increases the accumulation of lipin2 protein and upregulate the expression of diacylglycerol O-acyltransferase 2 (DGAT2) an enzyme involved in the conversion of DAG to triacylglycerol (TAG). When SPRY4-IT1 knockdown and control melanoma cells were subjected to shotgun lipidomics, an MS-based assay that permits the quantification of changes in the cellular lipid profile, we found that SPRY4-IT1 knockdown induced significant changes in a number of lipid species, including increased acyl carnitine, fatty acyl chains, and triacylglycerol (TAG). Together, these results suggest the possibility that SPRY4-IT1 knockdown may induce apoptosis via lipin 2-mediated alterations in lipid metabolism leading to cellular lipotoxicity

    Effect of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and angiotensin receptor blocker initiation on organ support-free days in patients hospitalized with COVID-19

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    IMPORTANCE Overactivation of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) may contribute to poor clinical outcomes in patients with COVID-19. Objective To determine whether angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) initiation improves outcomes in patients hospitalized for COVID-19. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS In an ongoing, adaptive platform randomized clinical trial, 721 critically ill and 58 non–critically ill hospitalized adults were randomized to receive an RAS inhibitor or control between March 16, 2021, and February 25, 2022, at 69 sites in 7 countries (final follow-up on June 1, 2022). INTERVENTIONS Patients were randomized to receive open-label initiation of an ACE inhibitor (n = 257), ARB (n = 248), ARB in combination with DMX-200 (a chemokine receptor-2 inhibitor; n = 10), or no RAS inhibitor (control; n = 264) for up to 10 days. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome was organ support–free days, a composite of hospital survival and days alive without cardiovascular or respiratory organ support through 21 days. The primary analysis was a bayesian cumulative logistic model. Odds ratios (ORs) greater than 1 represent improved outcomes. RESULTS On February 25, 2022, enrollment was discontinued due to safety concerns. Among 679 critically ill patients with available primary outcome data, the median age was 56 years and 239 participants (35.2%) were women. Median (IQR) organ support–free days among critically ill patients was 10 (–1 to 16) in the ACE inhibitor group (n = 231), 8 (–1 to 17) in the ARB group (n = 217), and 12 (0 to 17) in the control group (n = 231) (median adjusted odds ratios of 0.77 [95% bayesian credible interval, 0.58-1.06] for improvement for ACE inhibitor and 0.76 [95% credible interval, 0.56-1.05] for ARB compared with control). The posterior probabilities that ACE inhibitors and ARBs worsened organ support–free days compared with control were 94.9% and 95.4%, respectively. Hospital survival occurred in 166 of 231 critically ill participants (71.9%) in the ACE inhibitor group, 152 of 217 (70.0%) in the ARB group, and 182 of 231 (78.8%) in the control group (posterior probabilities that ACE inhibitor and ARB worsened hospital survival compared with control were 95.3% and 98.1%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this trial, among critically ill adults with COVID-19, initiation of an ACE inhibitor or ARB did not improve, and likely worsened, clinical outcomes. TRIAL REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT0273570

    Indigenous children are still dying in boarding Schools

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    Mapping the human genetic architecture of COVID-19

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    The genetic make-up of an individual contributes to the susceptibility and response to viral infection. Although environmental, clinical and social factors have a role in the chance of exposure to SARS-CoV-2 and the severity of COVID-191,2, host genetics may also be important. Identifying host-specific genetic factors may reveal biological mechanisms of therapeutic relevance and clarify causal relationships of modifiable environmental risk factors for SARS-CoV-2 infection and outcomes. We formed a global network of researchers to investigate the role of human genetics in SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 severity. Here we describe the results of three genome-wide association meta-analyses that consist of up to 49,562 patients with COVID-19 from 46 studies across 19 countries. We report 13 genome-wide significant loci that are associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection or severe manifestations of COVID-19. Several of these loci correspond to previously documented associations to lung or autoimmune and inflammatory diseases3–7. They also represent potentially actionable mechanisms in response to infection. Mendelian randomization analyses support a causal role for smoking and body-mass index for severe COVID-19 although not for type II diabetes. The identification of novel host genetic factors associated with COVID-19 was made possible by the community of human genetics researchers coming together to prioritize the sharing of data, results, resources and analytical frameworks. This working model of international collaboration underscores what is possible for future genetic discoveries in emerging pandemics, or indeed for any complex human disease

    Effect of Antiplatelet Therapy on Survival and Organ Support–Free Days in Critically Ill Patients With COVID-19

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    A second update on mapping the human genetic architecture of COVID-19

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