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Different Regions (different + regions)
Selected AbstractsCOMPARISON OF THE VIRGIN OLIVE OILS PRODUCED IN DIFFERENT REGIONS OF TURKEYJOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 3 2009MUSTAFA Ö ABSTRACT Virgin olive oils from different regions of Turkey were collected and analyzed. The total phenolics and antioxidant capacity of the samples ranged from 30.26 to 208.61 mg gallic acid/kg and 0.60 to 5.61 Trolox equivalents/kg, respectively. Free acidity (0.44,7.31% oleic acid), peroxide value (6.83,39.60 meq O2/kg), total volatiles (0.11,0.37%), viscosity (65.50,85.40 cP), K232 value (1.30,2.54), K270 value (0.08,0.30), refractive index (1.470) and descriptive sensory properties of the samples were also measured. The multidimensional scaling (MDS) analysis indicated that positive and negative attributes classification of the olive oil sensory defining terms were mostly the case, and total phenolics content by itself may be a useful classification index. Also, MDS maps showed that the samples from Southeastern and Aegean regions are closer, while others are separate from each other. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS Data for the physicochemical and sensory descriptive properties of virgin olive oils from Turkey are provided for the scientific community, olive oil consumers and traders. Also, utilization of sensory data by multidimensional scaling technique for geographical origin groupings provides a unique insight for researchers for similar objectives. In addition, some findings (i.e., the eligibility of phenolics content by itself for olive oil classification) of this article produce new results for fast and practical application purposes yet confirmed by other researchers. [source] Temporal and spatial variability of cation and silica export in an alpine watershed, Emerald Lake, CaliforniaHYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 10 2004T. Meixner Abstract A reaction set of possible mineral weathering reactions is proposed to explain observed cation and silica export for the Emerald Lake watershed, a small Sierra Nevada, California catchment. The reaction set was calculated through a stoichiometric mole-balance method, using a multiyear record of stream flow and snowpack chemical analyses and site-specific mineral compositions. Reaction-set calculations were intended to explore how the processes controlling stream cation and silica export depend on differing bedrock mineralogy across the catchment as snowmelt and runoff patterns change over the year. Different regions within the watershed can be differentiated by lake inflow subdrainages, each exhibiting different stream-flow chemistry and calculated weathering stoichiometry, indicating that different silica and cation generation processes are dominant in wet steep portions of the catchment. Short-term differences in stream concentrations were assumed to reflect ion exchange equilibria and rapid biological processes, whereas long-term persistent stream concentration differences in different areas of the catchment were assumed to reflect spatial variability in mineral weathering stoichiometry. Mineralogical analyses of rock samples from the watershed provided site-specific chemical compositions of major mineral species for reaction calculations. Reaction sets were evaluated by linear regression of calculated versus observed differences between snowmelt and stream-flow chemistry and by a combined measure. Initially, single weathering reactions were balanced and evaluated to determine the reactions that best explained observed stream chemical export. Next, reactions were combined, using mineral compositions from different rock types to estimate the dependence of ion fluxes on lithology. The seasonal variability of major solute calculated fluxes is low, approximately one order of magnitude, relative to the observed three orders of magnitude variability in basin discharge. Reaction sets using basin-averaged lithology and Aplite lithologies gave superior explanations of stream chemical composition. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Reducing stigma and discrimination against older people with mental disorders: a technical consensus statement,INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, Issue 8 2003Nori Graham Abstract This technical consensus statement is jointly produced by the Old Age Psychiatry section of the World Psychiatric Association and the World Health Organization, with the collaboration of several NGOs and the participation of experts from different Regions. It is intended to be a tool for (i) promoting debate at all levels on the stigmatisation of older people with mental disorders; (ii) outlining the nature, causes and consequences of this stigmatisation; and (iii) promoting and suggesting policies, programmes and actions to combat this stigmatisation. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The heel and toe of the cell's foot: A multifaceted approach for understanding the structure and dynamics of focal adhesionsCYTOSKELETON, Issue 11 2009Haguy Wolfenson Abstract Focal adhesions (FAs) are large clusters of transmembrane receptors of the integrin family and a multitude of associated cytoplasmic "plaque" proteins, which connect the extracellular matrix-bound receptors with the actin cytoskeleton. The formation of nearly stationary FAs defines a boundary between the dense and highly dynamic actin network in lamellipodium and the sparser and more diverse cytoskeletal organization in the lamella proper, creating a template for the organization of the entire actin network. The major "mechanical" and "sensory" functions of FAs; namely, the nucleation and regulation of the contractile, myosin-II-containing stress fibers and the mechanosensing of external surfaces depend, to a major extent, on the dynamics of molecular components within FAs. A central element in FA regulation concerns the positive feedback loop, based on the most intriguing feature of FAs; that is, their dependence on mechanical tension developing by the growing stress fibers. FAs grow in response to such tension, and rapidly disassemble upon its relaxation. In this article, we address the mechanistic relationships between the process of FA development, maturation and dissociation and the dynamic molecular events, which take place in different regions of the FA, primarily in the distal end of this structure (the "toe") and the proximal "heel," and discuss the central role of local mechanical forces in orchestrating the complex interplay between FAs and the actin system. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 66: 1017,1029, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Effects of right and left vagal stimulation on left ventricular acetylcholine levels in the catACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 1 2001T. Akiyama To test the effectiveness of, and the interactions between, right and left vagal stimulation on left ventricular acetylcholine (ACh) levels, we applied the dialysis technique to the heart of anaesthetized cats. Dialysis probes were implanted in the left ventricular myocardium and perfused with Krebs,Henseleit buffer containing eserine. Dialysate ACh content was measured as an index of ACh release from post-ganglionic vagal nerve terminals in the left ventricular myocardium. We electrically stimulated the right and left cervical vagal nerves separately or together and investigated the dialysate ACh response. In two different regions of the left ventricle, substantial dialysate ACh responses were observed by the stimulation (20 Hz) of both right and left cervical vagal nerves. At stimulation frequencies of both 10 and 20 Hz, the dialysate ACh response to the bilateral vagal stimulation was almost algebraically the calculated sum of the individual dialysate ACh responses to unilateral vagal stimulation. In conclusion, ACh levels in the left ventricle are affected by both right and left vagal nerves and show little evidence of interactions between right and left vagal nerves at the level of the cardiac ganglia. [source] Expression of a novel zebrafish zinc finger gene, gli2b, is affected in Hedgehog and Notch signaling related mutants during embryonic developmentDEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Issue 2 2005Zhiyuan Ke Abstract Gli zinc-finger proteins are known as downstream mediators of the evolutionary conserved Hedgehog pathway. In zebrafish, gli2 functions differently from Gli2 in mammals. This difference could be due to the gli2 duplication in teleosts evolution and partial redundancy between two duplicated genes. Here, we report a novel zebrafish gli2 -like cDNA. Its structure, genetic location, and distinct expression pattern in the central nervous system suggested that this gene might represent a second gli2 of teleosts, and we named it gli2b. gli2b was expressed in the neural keel, excluding the forebrain,midbrain boundary, while gli2 expression complemented this pattern. After 24 hours postfertilization, several specific domains of gli2b expression were observed in the lateral and medial hindbrain and hypothalamus. In mutants affecting the Hedgehog and Notch signaling pathways, gli2b expression was either disrupted or extended in different regions. Developmental Dynamics 232:479,486, 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Auditory verb perception recruits motor systems in the developing brain: an fMRI investigationDEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, Issue 6 2009Karin Harman James This study investigated neural activation patterns during verb processing in children, using fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging). Preschool children (aged 4,6) passively listened to lists of verbs and adjectives while neural activation was measured. Findings indicated that verbs were processed differently than adjectives, as the verbs recruited motor systems in the frontal cortex during auditory perception, but the adjectives did not. Further evidence suggested that different types of verbs activated different regions in the motor cortex. The results demonstrate that the motor system is recruited during verb perception in the developing brain, reflecting the embodied nature of language learning and processing. [source] A critical review of ontogenetic development in Terebellidae (Polychaeta)ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 4 2010André R. S. Garraffoni Abstract Garraffoni, A.R.S. and Lana, P.C. 2009. A critical review of ontogenetic development in Terebellidae (Polychaeta). ,Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 91: 390,401. This study reviews the ontogenetic variability of the head, the first segments and the uncini in Terebellidae, based on primary literature and development series of four terebellid species. We test hypotheses on character homologies and indicate informative characters for future phylogenetic analyses. The prostomium, identified as the region above the prototroch band of the larva, in addition to being the region of origin of the buccal tentacles, contains a series of nerves originating from the cerebrum. The peristomium, which contains the mouth, is innervated by the stomogastric nerve and consists of upper and lower lips and an internal pharynx. The loss of the first notochaetae and neurochaetae in the course of development is a recurrent pattern in terebellids. The claviform chaetae disappear with age and growth, and can be used to define the larval stage. Chaetogenesis shows that the long shaft-shaped manubrium and posterior process develop from different regions. The uncini terminology ,double rows' was reinterpreted and renamed ,inverted rows', which better reflects the inversion of chaetal positions during ontogenetic development. [source] Osteoderm morphology in recent and fossil euphractine xenarthransACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 4 2009C. M. Krmpotic Abstract The presence of osteoderms within the integument, forming a carapace, is one of the most distinctive features of armadillos with the external morphology of these elements forming the basis of most systematic schemes. This is especially true for fossil taxa, where these elements are most frequent in the palaeontological record. A detailed study of osteoderms from the cephalic shield and different regions of the dorsal armour of Chaetophractus villosus (Euphractinae, Xenarthra) was made and compared to those of the extant genus Dasypus (Dasypodinae, Xenarthra), and the extinct genus ,Eutatus. Three distinct histological zones were recognized: outer and inner zones are thin, formed by regular compact bone, the middle zone is thicker, with large cavities that contain mainly adipose tissue, hair follicles, and sweat and sebaceous glands. The internal structure of ,Eutatus (also a member of Euphractinae) osteoderms is close to that of C. villosus, consistent with the notion that these taxa are phylogenetically closely related. In contrast, Dasypus shows marked differences. Dasypus shows hair follicles associated with both gland types (sweat and sebaceous) and connected to foramina on the external surface. Although not observed in adult C. villosus, it has been documented during embryonic development, only to atrophy later in ontogeny. Furthermore, the presence of red bone marrow is rare in C. villosus, but widespread in Dasypus novemcinctus osteoderms. These results suggest an early split of both subfamilies and support the hypothesis that the Euphractinae are more derived than the Dasypodinae. [source] Elementary processes of soil,water interaction and thresholds in soil surface dynamics: a reviewEARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 9 2004Richard S. B. Greene Abstract Elementary processes of soil,water interaction and the thresholds to these processes are important to understand as they control a range of phenomena that occur at the soil surface. In particular processes involved with wetting by rainfall that lead to particle breakdown are critical. This breakdown causes soil detachment and crust formation, which are both key elements in erosion. This paper reviews the range of approaches that have been taken in describing the processes associated with the wetting of a soil surface by rainfall. It assembles the studies that emphasize soil physics, soil chemistry, and erosion mechanics in a framework to enable a balanced consideration of important processes and management strategies to control erosion for a particular situation. In particular it discusses the factors associated with the two basic processes of soil structural breakdown, i.e. slaking and dispersion, and how these processes are critical in particle detachment, transport and surface crust formation. Besides the balance between the exchangeable cation composition and electrolyte concentration (measured as the sodium adsorption ratio (SAR) and total cation concentration (TCC) respectively) of the soil, the importance of energy input and soil organic matter content in controlling clay dispersion is emphasized. Based on the balance between these factors, the soil can be in one of three different regions, i.e. a dispersed region, a ,occulated region and one where the resilience of the soil is variable. The implications of each of these regions to soil erosion management are brie,y outlined, as are the critical roles that soil cover levels and organic matter have in controlling erosion. Finally, the relationship between various laboratory measures of aggregate stability, and corresponding ,eld erosion characteristics, is discussed. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Uniform hazard versus uniform risk bases for performance-based earthquake engineering of light-frame wood constructionEARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING AND STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS, Issue 11 2010Yue Li Abstract This paper investigates the implications of designing for uniform hazard versus uniform risk for light-frame wood residential construction subjected to earthquakes in the United States. Using simple structural models of one-story residences with typical lateral force-resisting systems (shear walls) found in buildings in western, eastern and central regions of the United States as illustrations, the seismic demands are determined using nonlinear dynamic time-history analyses, whereas the collapse capacities are determined using incremental dynamic analyses. The probabilities of collapse, conditioned on the occurrence of the maximum considered earthquakes and design earthquakes stipulated in ASCE Standard 7-05, and the collapse margins of these typical residential structures are compared for typical construction practices in different regions in the United States. The calculated collapse inter-story drifts are compared with the limits stipulated in FEMA 356/ASCE Standard 41-06 and observed in the recent experimental testing. The results of this study provide insights into residential building risk assessment and the relation between building seismic performance implied by the current earthquake-resistant design and construction practices and performance levels in performance-based engineering of light-frame wood construction being considered by the SEI/ASCE committee on reliability-based design of wood structures. Further code developments are necessary to achieve the goal of uniform risk in earthquake-resistant residential construction. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Adaptive advantages of myrmecochory: the predator-avoidance hypothesis tested over a wide geographic rangeECOGRAPHY, Issue 5 2005Antonio J. Manzaneda The predator-avoidance hypothesis states that once released from the parent plant, myrmecochorous seeds are rapidly taken by ants to their nests, where they are protected from predators. Previous studies conducted to test this hypothesis have frequently neglected two major aspects necessary for its verification: 1) the influence of processes acting after the seed release and 2) the spatial evenness of such processes. Thus, large-scale variations in the mechanisms acting beyond seed release, and possibly influencing seed escape from predators, remain poorly documented. Here, we present the results of a post-dispersal seed-removal experiment on the myrmecochorous herb Helleborus foetidus, aimed at verifing the predator-avoidance hypothesis by considering two key post-release aspects of seed fate: seed destination (dispersed or nondispersed) and seed burial (buried or not buried). Experiments were performed in four different regions in the Iberian Peninsula. After three days of exposure of seeds to the main predator (fieldmice Apodemus sylvaticus), ca 30% of the seeds were removed. Seed destination affected the proportion of seeds escaping predation, but the sign, magnitude and statistical significance of the effect varied among the geographical regions. In the southern region (Cazorla), seeds dispersed in ant nests or intermediate destinations suffered scarcely any predation, but seeds under reproductive-age plants experienced losses ca 50%. Conversely, in the northern region (Caurel), seeds in nests suffered significantly greater losses than seeds under plants or intermediate destinations, suggesting that nests were especially unsafe destinations. Seed burial had a strong impact on seed escape from predators, and its effect was highly consistent among geographical regions. In view of the consistency of its effect at different spatial scales, seed burial was a more general mechanism for predation avoidance than seed relocation to ant nests, which was habitat- and/or ant-species-dependent. Our results thus only partially support the predator-avoidance hypothesis for the evolution of myrmecochory. [source] Cottage industry, migration, and marriage in nineteenth-century EnglandECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, Issue 4 2008NIGEL GOOSE There has been considerable debate concerning the impact of the industrial employment of women upon their demographic behaviour in nineteenth-century England. This article assesses the impact of employment in the cottage industry of straw plait and hat making in the county of Hertfordshire, comparing and contrasting districts where the industry was prominent with those where it was not. It is discovered that in 1851 the availability of straw industry employment encouraged earlier marriage, most notably in those parishes where the industry was particularly heavily concentrated, although overall levels of nuptiality and proportions ultimately marrying were similar in straw and non-straw areas alike. By 1871, however, the skewed sex ratio that such employment produced among young adults served to offset this positive effect. As the industry waned in the later nineteenth century, the experience of different regions of the county converged, while throughout the period the data suggest that urban/rural contrasts and the suburbanization of London produced more stark contrasts in female marriage patterns than did the availability of cottage industry employment. [source] RECONSTRUCTING DEWEYAN DEMOCRATIC EDUCATION FOR A GLOBALIZING WORLDEDUCATIONAL THEORY, Issue 4 2009Jessica Ching-Sze Wang As democratic citizenship education gains importance worldwide, one wonders whether common civic education practices in the United States, such as mock elections, are adequate models for other countries, or whether they fall short of realizing the goal of promoting democracy in different regions and cultures. Despite various controversies, one fundamental question remains: How should we teach democracy? Should we teach it as a system of government or as a way of life? Jessica Ching-Sze Wang finds inspiration in Dewey's life and works. She draws on Dewey's experience during the First World War and his insights into the connection between democracy and education to reconstruct a culturally and morally robust form of democratic education, as opposed to the politically dominated one currently being practiced. Wang concludes that Deweyan democratic education thus reconstructed can help us better realize democracy as a way of life for our globalizing world. [source] Molecular phylogeny and phylogeography of flightless beetles Parechthistatus gibber and Hayashiechthistatus inexpectus (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) inferred from mitochondrial COI gene sequencesENTOMOLOGICAL SCIENCE, Issue 2 2008Hiroshi NAKAMINE Abstract To elucidate the speciation patterns of two endemic flightless cerambycid beetles, Parechthistatus gibber and Hayashiechthistatus inexpectus, molecular phylogenetic analysis was carried out. A 1144 bp region of the cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene was sequenced for individuals from 51 local populations of these species. There were nine haplotype lineages of P. gibber, and H. inexpectus was included within a P. gibber lineage. These lineages were highly divergent and occurred in different regions. Based on previously published molecular change rates for the COI gene (1.5,2.3% per million years), the time of divergence of P. gibber COI haplotypes was inferred to be 3.0,4.6 million years ago, in the Pliocene. [source] Global statistical analysis of MISR aerosol data: a massive data product from NASA's Terra satelliteENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 7 2007Tao Shi Abstract In climate models, aerosol forcing is the major source of uncertainty in climate forcing, over the industrial period. To reduce this uncertainty, instruments on satellites have been put in place to collect global data. However, missing and noisy observations impose considerable difficulties for scientists researching the global distribution of aerosols, aerosol transportation, and comparisons between satellite observations and global-climate-model outputs. In this paper, we fit a Spatial Mixed Effects (SME) statistical model to predict the missing values, denoise the observed values, and quantify the spatial-prediction uncertainties. The computations associated with the SME model are linear scalable to the number of data points, which makes it feasible to process massive global satellite data. We apply the methodology, which is called Fixed Rank Kriging (FRK), to the level-3 Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) dataset collected by NASA's Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) instrument flying on the Terra satellite. Overall, our results were superior to those from non-statistical methods and, importantly, FRK has an uncertainty measure associated with it that can be used for comparisons over different regions or at different time points. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] High-frequency Oscillations after Status Epilepticus: Epileptogenesis and Seizure GenesisEPILEPSIA, Issue 9 2004Anatol Bragin Summary:,Purpose: To investigate the temporal relation between high-frequency oscillations (HFOs) in the dentate gyrus and recurrent spontaneous seizures after intrahippocampal kainite-induced status epilepticus. Methods: Recording microelectrodes were implanted bilaterally in different regions of hippocampus and entorhinal cortex. A guide cannula for microinjection of kainic acid (KA) was implanted above the right posterior CA3 area of hippocampus. After recording baseline electrical activity, KA (0.4 ,g/0.2 ,l) was injected. Beginning on the next day, electrographic activity was recorded with video monitoring for seizures every day for 8 h/day for ,30 days. Results: Of the 26 rats studied, 19 revealed the appearance of sharp-wave activity and HFOs in the frequency range of 80 to 500 Hz in the dentate gyrus ipsilateral to the KA injection. In the remaining seven rats, no appreciable activity was noted in this frequency range. In some rats with recurrent seizures, HFOs were in the ripple frequency range (100,200 Hz); in others, HFOs were in the fast ripple frequency range (200,500 Hz), or a mixture of both oscillation frequencies was found. The time of detection of the first HFOs after status epilepticus varied between 1 and 30 days, with a mean of 6.3 ± 2.0 (SEM). Of the 19 rats in which HFO activity appeared, all later developed recurrent spontaneous seizures, whereas none of the rats without HFOs developed seizures. The sooner HFO activity was detected after status epilepticus, the sooner the first spontaneous seizure occurred. A significant inverse relation was found between the time to the first HFO detection and the subsequent rate of spontaneous seizures. Conclusions: A strong correlation was found between a decreased time to detection of HFOs and an increased rate of spontaneous seizures, as well as with a decrease in the duration of the latent period between KA injection and the detection of spontaneous seizures. Two types of HFOs were found after KA injection, one in the frequency range of 100 to 200 Hz, and the other, in the frequency range of 200 to 500 Hz, and both should be considered pathological, suggesting that both are epileptogenic. [source] Identification of the principal viruses infecting tomato crops in TunisiaEPPO BULLETIN, Issue 2 2000A. Ben Moussa Serological tests have been used to detect viruses associated with tomato in 257 samples collected in different regions in Tunisia, Cap-Bon, Sahel and South during successive seasons. The viruses detected were cucumber mosaic cucumovirus (CMV) and tomato aspermy cucumovirus (TAV), potato Y potyvirus (PVY), tobacco etch potyvirus (TEV) and pepper veinal mottle potyvirus (PVMV), tomato mosaic tobamovirus (ToMV) and tobacco mosaic tobamovirus (TMV), tobacco rattle tobravirus (TRV), alfalfa mosaic alfamovirus (AMV), tomato spotted wilt tospovirus (TSWV), tomato ringspot nepovirus (TomRSV) and potato X potexvirus (PVX). Some were detected in all three regions surveyed, at variable frequencies: TMV, CMV, TEV, PVY, ToMV, AMV, TAV, TSWV and TRV. Others were only detected in two regions (PVMV in Cap-Bon and Sahel and PVX in Sahel and in the south) or one region (TomRSV in Cap-Bon). Movement of individual viruses from one region to another may be due to movement of specific vectors, as in the case of the thrips-transmitted TSWV moving from the south to the north. Some of these viruses were found for the first time in Tunisia. [source] Muscle thickness and neuron density in the caecum of horses with chronic recurrent caecal impactionEQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue S32 2000G. F. SCHUSSER Summary In this study, the hypothesis that caecal smooth muscle layers would be thinner and the linear neuron density of myenteric plexus greater was tested in normal horses compared to those with chronic recurrent caecal impaction. Four normal horses and 18 horses with chronic recurrent caecal impaction were subjected to euthanasia and 7 tissue samples were collected from each horse at different regions of the caecum (apex, dorsal body, cranial base, dorsal base, caudal base, caudal body, ventral body). Twelve horses with chronic recurrent caecal impaction were treated surgically. Only one tissue sample of the cranial part of the caecal base close to the caecocolic orifice was taken during surgery. The thickness of the circular muscle layer of all caecal regions measured in killed horses with chronic recurrent caecal impaction was significantly increased compared to the equivalent caecal region of normal horses. On the other hand, the longitudinal muscle layer was significantly thicker only in the cranial and caudal caecal base and in the dorsal region of the caecal body. The linear neuron densities of all caecal base areas and 2 caecal body regions, the caudal body region and of the apex, of killed horses with chronic recurrent caecal impaction were significantly lower compared with those in clinically normal horses. The circular muscle layer of all caecal regions was thickened (hypertrophied) probably as a consequence of chronic uncoordinated hypercontractility due to neuron deficit in the myenteric plexus of the caecal base. [source] National Qualification Frameworks: from policy borrowing to policy learningEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, Issue 2 2010BORHENE CHAKROUN This article takes up the issue of the internationalisation of Vocational Education and Training (VET) reforms, expressed in the way policy instruments such as National Qualifications Frameworks (NQF) are introduced in the European Training Foundation's (ETF) partner countries. There is an international debate and different perspectives regarding NQFs. These perspectives have largely talked past each other. The article brings together these perspectives and highlights the issues at stake in this field. Through the analysis of ETF interventions in different regions, the article makes a case for new approaches of intervention, namely policy learning, that aim at enabling national stakeholders and that are conducive for home-grown VET policies. The discussion is broad in scope, not only because the article reviews developments in qualifications frameworks across-regions, but also because it highlights the complex interaction of the global and local development when introducing NQFs and the impact of such reforms on VET systems. [source] Two-way active avoidance training-specific increases in phosphorylated cAMP response element-binding protein in the dorsal hippocampus, amygdala, and hypothalamusEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 12 2005Subhash Saha Abstract Previous studies have demonstrated that the activation of pontine-wave (P-wave) generating cells in the brainstem during post-training rapid eye movement (REM) sleep is critical for the consolidation of memory for two-way active avoidance (TWAA) learning in the rat. Here, using immunocytochemistry, we investigated the spatio-temporal distribution of CREB phosphorylation within different parts of the dorsal hippocampus, amygdala, and hypothalamus following a session of TWAA training in the rat. We show that the TWAA training trials increased phosphorylation of CREB (p-CREB) in the dorsal hippocampus, amygdala, amygdalo-hippocampal junction (AHi), and hypothalamus. However, the time intervals leading to training-induced p-CREB activity were different for different regions of the brain. In the dorsal hippocampus, p-CREB activity was maximal at 90 min and this activity disappeared by 180 min. In the AHi, activity of the p-CREB peaked by 180 min and disappeared by 360 min. In the amygdala, the p-CREB activity peaked at 180 min and still remained higher than the control at the 360 min interval. In the hypothalamus, at 90 min p-CREB activity was present only in the ventromedial hypothalamus; however, by 180 min this p-CREB activity was also present in the dorsal hypothalamus, perifornical area, and lateral hypothalamus. By 360 min, p-CREB activity disappeared from the hypothalamus. This TWAA training trials-induced spatiotemporal characteristic of CREB phosphorylation, for the first time, suggests that REM sleep P-wave generator activation-dependent memory processing involves different parts of the dorsal hippocampus, amygdala, and hypothalamus. [source] Silencing dopamine D3 -receptors in the nucleus accumbens shell in vivo induces changes in cocaine-induced hyperlocomotionEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 12 2005Amine Bahi Abstract The dopamine D3 receptor (D3R) is an important pharmacotherapeutic target for its potential role in psychiatric disorders and drug dependence. To further explore its function in rats, a regulatable lentivirus, Lenti-D3, holding the rat D3R cDNA, has been constructed as well as three nonregulatable lentiviruses, Lenti-D3-siRNA1, Lenti-D3-siRNA2 and Lenti-D3-siRNA3, expressing small hairpin RNAs, aimed at silencing D3R expression and specifically targeted against different regions of the D3R mRNA. In vitro, Lenti-D3 expressed D3R and could efficiently be blocked with Lenti-D3-Sils. These viruses were stereotaxically injected into the shell part of the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) and effects of passive cocaine delivery on locomotor activity were assessed. Manipulations of D3R levels induced changes in the locomotor stimulant effects of cocaine as compared to control treatment. Suppression of dopamine (DA) D3R in the NAcc by means of local knockdown (with Lenti-D3-Sils) increased locomotor stimulant effects, whereas its overexpression with Lenti-D3 drastically reduced them. The latter effects could be reversed when animals were fed doxycycline, which prevented lentiviral-mediated DA D3R overexpression in the NAcc. Gene expression assessed by quantitative RT-PCR confirmed very efficient gene knockdown in vivo in animals treated with Lenti-D3-Sils (> 93% silencing of D3R gene). Thus D3R expression significantly contributes to behavioural changes associated with chronic cocaine delivery. [source] The morphological development of neurons derived from EGF- and FGF-2-driven human CNS precursors depends on their site of integration in the neonatal rat brainEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 7 2000Anne E. Rosser Abstract Neural precursor cells derived from the developing human brain were expanded in vitro under the influence of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) and epidermal growth hormone (EGF), and were then transplanted into different regions of the neonatal rat brain. Four weeks later neurons were seen to have developed from human embryonic precursors, using a human-specific antibody to tau (htau). There were morphological differences between implanted neurons developing in the hippocampus, striatum and neocortex, which were confirmed by cell volume measurements, although no specific neurochemical phenotypes were identified. Htau-positive fibres were seen to project extensively along fibre pathways appropriate for the site of neuronal integration. This study demonstrates that, following cell division in vitro, neurons differentiating from human precursor cell populations retain the ability to respond appropriately to regional determinants present in the neonatal rat brain. This is important for the application of such cells in CNS repair strategies, in particular neural transplantation. [source] Age-associated changes in viscoelastic properties of the bovine temporomandibular joint discEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORAL SCIENCES, Issue 1 2006Eiji Tanaka To test the hypothesis that compressive properties of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disc change with age, we investigated its viscoelastic properties and stress-relaxation behavior under compression. Compressive stress-relaxation tests were performed in different regions of bovine discs of various ages. For each disc, specimens were derived from three different regions (anterior, central, and posterior). For four strain levels (5, 10, 15, and 20%), a stress-relaxation test was conducted over a 5-min period. Values of the instantaneous modulus, E0, appeared to be larger in the anterior than in the posterior region of the disc, irrespective of age. The E0 value increased with age, especially in the central region. Values of the relaxed modulus, ER, also increased significantly with age. There were no regional differences in values of the relaxed modulus. Under stress-relaxation, the relaxation time became longer with age, especially in the posterior region. The results suggest that the compressive properties, instantaneous and relaxed moduli, increase with age, while the relaxation time becomes longer. This implies that the TMJ disc becomes harder with age. Furthermore, the compressive properties of the TMJ disc are region-specific. As a result of the harder disc, it is likely that the TMJ becomes more vulnerable to secondary damage, such as fracture and tissue degradation. [source] Influence of food consistency on the rabbit masseter muscle fibresEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORAL SCIENCES, Issue 1 2003Geerling Langenbach The plasticity of the masseter muscle was studied by comparing two groups of rabbits that were fed soft- and hard-diet for 87 d. Incisors of the soft-diet group were cut back to minimize the bite forces. Muscle fibres were immunohistochemically defined as fast- or slow-contracting fibres and their cross-sectional area was measured. The muscles of animals fed with the hard-diet were composed of fibres with larger cross-sectional areas than the soft-diet group. The relative difference was larger in slow-contracting fibres than in fast-contracting fibres. The results were similar for the different regions of the muscle. No changes in fibre composition were found. In conclusion, the difference in food consistency, as induced in this study, caused changes in the muscle fibre cross-sectional area that can be recognized from the altered necessary occlusal forces, which result from the modified forces developed by the masseter muscle. [source] ADAPTIVE REPTILE COLOR VARIATION AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE MCIR GENEEVOLUTION, Issue 8 2004Erica Bree Rosenblum Abstract The wealth of information on the genetics of pigmentation and the clear fitness consequences of many pigmentation phenotypes provide an opportunity to study the molecular basis of an ecologically important trait. The melanocortin-1 receptor (Mc1r) is responsible for intraspecific color variation in mammals and birds. Here, we study the molecular evolution of Mc1r and investigate its role in adaptive intraspecific color differences in reptiles. We sequenced the complete Mc1r locus in seven phylogenetically diverse squamate species with melanic or blanched forms associated with different colored substrates or thermal environments. We found that patterns of amino acid substitution across different regions of the receptor are similar to the patterns seen in mammals, suggesting comparable levels of constraint and probably a conserved function for Mc1r in mammals and reptiles. We also found high levels of silent-site heterozygosity in all species, consistent with a high mutation rate or large long-term effective population size. Mc1r polymorphisms were strongly associated with color differences in Holbrookia maculata and Aspidoscelis inornata. In A. inornata, several observations suggest that Mc1r mutations may contribute to differences in color: (1) a strong association is observed between one Mc1r amino acid substitution and dorsal color; (2) no significant population structure was detected among individuals from these populations at the mitochondrial ND4 gene; (3) the distribution of allele frequencies at Mc1r deviates from neutral expectations; and (4) patterns of linkage disequilibrium at Mc1r are consistent with recent selection. This study provides comparative data on a nuclear gene in reptiles and highlights the utility of a candidate-gene approach for understanding the evolution of genes involved in vertebrate adaptation. [source] Lipophilic and hydrophilic moisturizers show different actions on human skin as revealed by cryo scanning electron microscopyEXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY, Issue 11 2007Julia Caussin Abstract:, To study the mode of action of moisturizers on human skin, hydrophilic moisturizers in water and neat lipophilic moisturizers were applied on excised skin for 24 h at 32°C. Samples of the treated skin were subsequently visualized in a cryoscanning electron microscope. The stratum corneum (SC) appeared as a region of swollen corneocytes (the swollen region) sandwiched between two layers of relatively dry corneocytes (the upper and lower non-swelling regions respectively). Lipophilic moisturizers increased the water content of the SC, whereas hydrophilic moisturizers can also reduce the water content of the SC. When focusing on the effect of the moisturizers on the three different regions, it was observed that cells in the swelling region are most sensitive to the application of the moisturizers and that the change in SC thickness is most influenced by the change in the thickness of the swelling region. Summarizing, SC cells are not equally sensitive to moisturizer application: centrally located corneocytes are more sensitive than corneocytes in the upper and the lowest regions of the SC. [source] Chronic Hypoxia Induces Prolonged Angiogenesis in Skeletal Muscles of RatEXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 3 2002D. Deveci Skeletal muscle capillarity and fibre cross-sectional area were investigated within and between diaphragm (Diaph), extensor digitorum longus (EDL), soleus (SOL) and tibialis anterior (TA) muscles of control and chronic hypoxic (12% O2 for 6 weeks) adult male Wistar rats (final body mass ,355 g). Cryostat sections were stained for alkaline phosphatase activity to depict all capillaries, and for succinic dehydrogenase to demonstrate regional differences in oxidative capacity within the muscles. Hypoxia-induced angiogenesis occurred in all muscles (P < 0.01), with capillary-to-fibre ratio (C:F) being higher in the more active and oxidative muscles, Diaph (27%) and SOL (26%), than phasically active and glycolytic muscles, TA (21%) and EDL (15%). Diaph, SOL and EDL maintained fibre size, and hence showed an increased capillary density (CD) and reduced intramuscular diffusion distance (DD), whereas TA showed fibre hypertrophy and maintained CD and DD compared to control muscles. The extent of angiogenesis among different regions of muscle varied so as to suggest that muscle fibre size has an additional influence on capillary growth during chronic systemic hypoxia, which is progressive over an extended period of systemic hypoxia. [source] Conformational properties of bacterial DnaK and yeast mitochondrial Hsp70FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 12 2005-helical subdomain, Role of the divergent C-terminal Among the eukaryotic members of the Hsp70 family, mitochondrial Hsp70 shows the highest degree of sequence identity with bacterial DnaK. Although they share a functional mechanism and homologous co-chaperones, they are highly specific and cannot be exchanged between Escherichia coli and yeast mitochondria. To provide a structural basis for this finding, we characterized both proteins, as well as two DnaK/mtHsp70 chimeras constructed by domain swapping, using biochemical and biophysical methods. Here, we show that DnaK and mtHsp70 display different conformational and biochemical properties. Replacing different regions of the DnaK peptide-binding domain with those of mtHsp70 results in chimeric proteins that: (a) are not able to support growth of an E. coli DnaK deletion strain at stress temperatures (e.g. 42 °C); (b) show increased accessibility and decreased thermal stability of the peptide-binding pocket; and (c) have reduced activation by bacterial, but not mitochondrial co-chaperones, as compared with DnaK. Importantly, swapping the C-terminal ,-helical subdomain promotes a conformational change in the chimeras to an mtHsp70-like conformation. Thus, interaction with bacterial co-chaperones correlates well with the conformation that natural and chimeric Hsp70s adopt in solution. Our results support the hypothesis that a specific protein structure might regulate the interaction of Hsp70s with particular components of the cellular machinery, such as Tim44, so that they perform specific functions. [source] HCV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase replicates in vitro the 3, terminal region of the minus-strand viral RNA more efficiently than the 3, terminal region of the plus RNAFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 22 2001Sandrine Reigadas The NS5B protein, or RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of the hepatitis virus type C, catalyzes the replication of the viral genomic RNA. Little is known about the recognition domains of the viral genome by the NS5B. To better understand the initiation of RNA synthesis on HCV genomic RNA, we used in vitro transcribed RNAs as templates for in vitro RNA synthesis catalyzed by the HCV NS5B. These RNA templates contained different regions of the 3, end of either the plus or the minus RNA strands. Large differences were obtained depending on the template. A few products shorter than the template were synthesized by using the 3, UTR of the (+) strand RNA. In contrast the 341 nucleotides at the 3, end of the HCV minus-strand RNA were efficiently copied by the purified HCV NS5B in vitro. At least three elements were found to be involved in the high efficiency of the RNA synthesis directed by the HCV NS5B with templates derived from the 3, end of the minus-strand RNA: (a) the presence of a C residue as the 3, terminal nucleotide; (b) one or two G residues at positions +2 and +3; (c) other sequences and/or structures inside the following 42-nucleotide stretch. These results indicate that the 3, end of the minus-strand RNA of HCV possesses some sequences and structure elements well recognized by the purified NS5B. [source] |