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Important Alterations (important + alteration)
Selected AbstractsResources, techniques, and strategies south of the Sahara: revising the factor endowments perspective on African economic development, 1500,20001ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, Issue 3 2008GARETH AUSTIN This article seeks to revise and re-apply the factor endowments perspective on African history. The propositions that sub-Saharan Africa was characterized historically by land abundance and labour scarcity, and that the natural environment posed severe constraints on the exploitation of the land surplus, are broadly upheld. Important alterations are suggested, however, centred on the seasonality of labour supply, Ruf's concept of ,forest rent', and, for precolonial economies, the role of fixed capital. This revised endowments framework is then applied in order to explore the long-term dynamics of economic development in Africa, focusing on how the economic strategies of producers and political authorities created specific paths of change which shifted the production possibility frontiers of the economies concerned, and ultimately altered the very factor ratios to which the strategies had been responses. [source] Cell-autonomous role of EphB2 and EphB3 receptors in the thymic epithelial cell organizationEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 10 2009Javier García-Ceca Abstract The role of EphB2 and EphB3 in the organization of thymic epithelial cells has been studied in EphB-deficient fetal thymus lobes grafted under the kidney capsule of WT mice. The deficient lobes, as compared with WT ones, showed altered distribution of medullary areas, shortening of medullary epithelial cell processes and presence of K5,K8, areas. EphB2 and EphB3 expressed on thymic epithelial cells play an autonomous role in their organization. The relevance of Eph/ephrinB forward and reverse signals for this process was evaluated in grafted fetal thymus lobes from mice expressing a truncated EphB2 receptor capable of activating reverse, but not forward, signaling. These deficient lobes showed important alterations of the thymic epithelial organization as compared with the grafted WT lobes, but a less severe phenotype than the grafted EphB2-deficient thymus lobes, which confirms the relevance of EphB2 forward signal for the thymic epithelial organization but, also, a role of the reverse signaling in determining the final epithelial phenotype. [source] Proton pump inhibitor omeprazole use is associated with low bone mineral density in maintenance haemodialysis patientsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE, Issue 2 2009A. Kirkpantur Summary Objective:, Limited studies have shown that proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy may decrease bone density or insoluble calcium reabsorption through induction of hypochlorhydria. However, PPI therapy may also reduce bone resorption via inhibition of osteoclastic vacuolar proton pumps. The aim of this study was to determine whether the opposing effects of PPI therapy may cause clinically important alterations in bone mineral densitometry (BMD) parameters in maintenance haemodialysis patients. Methods:, Sixty-eight maintenance haemodialysis patients were enrolled in this study. Patients were classified into two groups involving users of PPI therapy (omeprazole 20 mg/day, group 1, n = 36 patients) and non-users of acid suppression drugs (group 2, n = 32 patients). Patients had radius, hip and spine BMD assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Results:, The mean duration of PPI therapy with omeprazole was 27 ± 5 months. The users of PPI therapy had lower values of bone mineral density and T -scores at the anatomical regions than non-users of acid suppression drugs. Serum calcium and phosphate levels, calcium-phosphate product and serum intact parathormone levels and the ratio of users of vitamin D therapy were similar among groups. A mutivariable adjusted odds ratio for lower bone density associated with more than 18 months of omeprazole, when all the potential confounders were considered, was 1.31 in the proximal radius, 0.982 in the femur neck, 0.939 in the trochanter and 1.192 in the lumbal spine. Conclusion:, The present data suggest that PPI therapy should be cautiously prescribed in maintenance haemodialysis patients, especially with lower BMD values. [source] Association of aberrant p53 and p21WAF1 immunoreactivity with the outcome of oral verrucous leukoplakia in TaiwanJOURNAL OF ORAL PATHOLOGY & MEDICINE, Issue 2 2000Kuo-Wei Chang Abstract: The expression of p53 and p21WAF1 in 53 oral verrucous leukoplakias (OVLs), mostly non-dysplastic lesions, was investigated to ascertain the role of such events in malignant conversion. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed aberrant p53 and p21WAF1 immunoreactivity in 51% (27 cases) and 75% (40 cases), respectively. After an average follow-up period of three and a half years, histopathological examination revealed that 22 (42%) cases had developed oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), 14 (26%) cases had undergone recurrence, and 17 (32%) cases were free of disease. The oncogenic potential of this subset of premalignant lesions warrants attention. A significant difference in the frequency of OSCC progression/recurrence was noted in lesions bearing aberrant immunoreactivity of either p53 (93% vs 42%; P=0.00008) or p21WAF1 (80% vs 32%; P=0.002) in comparison with lesions without immunoreactivity. This study suggested that the aberrant immunoreactivity of p53 and p21WAF1 may represent important alterations of OVL and could affect the outcome of this lesion. [source] Differences in molecular alterations of hepatocellular carcinoma between patients with a sustained virological response and those with hepatitis C virus infectionLIVER INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2009Takehiro Hayashi Abstract Background/Aims: The mechanism of hepatocarcinogenesis remains unclear in patients in whom hepatitis C virus (HCV) disappears after interferon (IFN) therapy. We compared molecular alterations in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) between patients with a sustained virological response (SVR) to IFN and patients with HCV. Methods: The study group comprised 44 patients with HCV and 13 patients with SVR. One patient in the SVR group had two tumour nodules, both of which were examined. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations in displacement-loop lesions were directly sequenced. Mutation of the TP53 gene was examined by direct sequencing. The methylation status of p16, p15, p14, RB and PTEN genes was evaluated by a methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction. Results: The average number of mtDNA mutations was 4.2 in 44 HCCs with HCV and 2.0 in 14 HCCs with SVR (P=0.0021). mtDNA mutation was less frequently detected in HCCs from patients with SVR than in patients with HCV. TP53 mutations were detected in 12 (27%) of 44 HCCs with HCV and 2 (14%) of 14 SVR-HCCs. Hypermethylation of the p16, p15, p14, RB and PTEN promoters was, respectively, detected in 34, 13, 8, 12 and 11 of 44 HCCs from patients with HCV and 14, 0, 0, 2 and 2 of 14 HCCs from patients with SVR (P=0.049, 0.021, 0.085, 0.322 and 0.402). Hypermethylation of p16 was one of the most important alterations in SVR-HCC. Conclusions: Molecular alterations in hepatocarcinogenesis of patients with SVR-HCC were different from those of patients with continuous HCV infection. [source] Introgressive hybridization of human and rodent schistosome parasites in western KenyaMOLECULAR ECOLOGY, Issue 23 2008MICHELLE L. STEINAUER Abstract Hybridization and introgression can have important consequences for the evolution, ecology and epidemiology of pathogenic organisms. We examined the dynamics of hybridization between a trematode parasite of humans, Schistosoma mansoni, and its sister species, S. rodhaini, a rodent parasite, in a natural hybrid zone in western Kenya. Using microsatellite markers, rDNA and mtDNA, we showed that hybrids between the two species occur in nature, are fertile and produce viable offspring through backcrosses with S. mansoni. Averaged across collection sites, individuals of hybrid ancestry comprised 7.2% of all schistosomes collected, which is a large proportion given that one of the parental species, S. rodhaini, comprised only 9.1% of the specimens. No F1 individuals were collected and all hybrids represented backcrosses with S. mansoni that were of the first or successive generations. The direction of introgression appears highly asymmetric, causing unidirectional gene flow from the rodent parasite, S. rodhaini, to the human parasite, S. mansoni. Hybrid occurrence was seasonal and most hybrids were collected during the month of September over a 2-year period, a time when S. rodhaini was also abundant. We also examined the sex ratios and phenotypic differences between the hybrids and parental species, including the number of infective stages produced in the snail host and the time of day the infective stages emerge. No statistical differences were found in any of these characteristics, and most of the hybrids showed an emergence pattern similar to that of S. mansoni. One individual, however, showed a bimodal emergence pattern that was characteristic of both parental species. In conclusion, these species maintain their identity despite hybridization, although introgression may cause important alterations of the biology and epidemiology of schistosomiasis in this region. [source] |