Search results for "race."

showing 10 items of 4442 documents

N-Methyl-β-carboline alkaloids: structure-dependent photosensitizing properties and localization in subcellular domains

2020

N-Methyl-β-carboline (βC) alkaloids, including normelinonine F (1b) and melinonine F (2b), have been found in a vast range of living species playing different biological, biomedical and/or pharmacological roles. Despite this, molecular bases of the mechanisms through which these alkaloids would exert their effect still remain unknown. Fundamental aspects including the photosensitizing properties and intracellular internalization of a selected group of N-methyl-βC alkaloids were investigated herein. Data reveal that methylation of the βC main ring enhances its photosensitizing properties either by increasing its binding affinity with DNA as a biomolecular target and/or by increasing its oxid…

media_common.quotation_subjectOrganic ChemistryN-Methyl-β-carbolineFísicaQuímicaMethylationMitochondrionalkaloidsSubcellular localizationBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistrymelinonine FBiophysicsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryInner mitochondrial membranePurine metabolismInternalizationnormelinonine FDNAIntracellularmedia_commonOrganic & Biomolecular Chemistry
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Art as Inquiry: The Autopsy of an [Art] Experience

2003

In this article, I explore transgressive experience by embracing my personal encounters with art and life. In accordance with a phenomenological approach, I emphasize immediate experience, description, and analysis of the world as a source of knowledge and understanding. From the perspective both of art education and research, I attempt to show the enslaving effect of conventions. Furthermore, I trace and lay bare the origins of my transgressive experience from a methodological viewpoint by describing and interpreting the moments and threads that link them with time, place, and situations, thus making transparent my actions as a researcher. I travel upstream, first discussing writing, then…

media_common.quotation_subjectPerspective (graphical)Visual arts educationEpistemologyTrace (semiology)AnthropologyIntrospectionSociologyTransgressiveMeditationComposition (language)Social Sciences (miscellaneous)Qualitative researchmedia_commonQualitative Inquiry
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Structural Discrimination in Physical Education. The “Encounter” Between the (White) Norwegian Teaching Content in Physical Education Lessons and Fem…

2021

Background: Throughout society, including in the field of sports and physical education (PE), there are extensive debates on racism and structural racism. Researchers have found that students of color experience racial stereotyping and discrimination in PE. Studies also show that PE teaching practices reflect a masculine culture, emphasizing traditional (Western) competitive male sports and physical fitness practices, while marginalizing female students of color. Simultaneously these students also negotiate, resist, and operate as visible agents within these practices. While previous research has tended toward focusing on the experiences (of discrimination) from the perspective of students …

media_common.quotation_subjectPhysical fitnessEthnic groupRacismPhysical educationFeminist theoryPedagogycritical whitenessclassraceOriginal Researchmedia_commonembodimentbusiness.industryPerspective (graphical)General MedicineVDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Idrettsmedisinske fag: 850physical educationSports and Active LivingGV557-1198.995ethnicityNorm (social)businessPsychologyPrivilege (social inequality)SportsFrontiers in Sports and Active Living
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Dioecious species and arbuscular mycorrhizal symbioses: the case of Antennaria dioica.

2013

Sex-specific interactions with herbivores and pollinators have been observed in female and male plants of dioecious species. However, only a limited number of studies have revised sex-specific patterns in mycorrhizal symbiosis. To test whether female and male plants of Antennaria dioica differ in their relationship with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, we examined the temporal and spatial variation in AM fungi in female, male and non-reproductive A. dioica plants in three natural populations in Finland during flowering and after seed production. Our results are consistent with previous studies both under greenhouse and field conditions with the same species showing differences in AM colon…

media_common.quotation_subjectShort CommunicationAntennaria dioicaPlant ScienceFlowersAsteraceaePlant RootsSymbiosisPollinatorMycorrhizaeBotanyColonizationSymbiosisFinlandmedia_commonHerbivorebiologyEcologyReproductionfungiFungifood and beveragesAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationSeedsta1181ReproductionArbuscular mycorrhizalPlant signalingbehavior
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In vitro antitumor effects of the cold-water extracts of Mediterranean species of genus Pleurotus (higher Basidiomycetes) on human colon cancer cells

2014

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the cold-water extracts of Pleurotus eryngii var. ferulae (CWE-Pef) and Pleurotus nebrodensis (CWE-Pn), 2 of the most prized wild and cultivated edible mushrooms, can affect the tumor phenotype of human colon cancer HCT116 cells. Our results showed that treatment with CWE- Pef and CWE-Pn resulted in a significant inhibition of the viability of HCT116 cells and promoted apoptosis, as also demonstrated by the increase of Bax-to-Bcl-2 messenger RNA ratio. Moreover, we observed that both extracts were able to inhibit cell migration and to affect homotypic and heterotypic cell-cell adhesion. It also was found that treatment with CWE-Pef and CWE-Pn ne…

medicinal mushrooms Pleurotus eryngii var. ferulae Pleurotus nebrodensis human colon cancer antitumor activityCell SurvivalApoptosisPleurotusApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologySettore BIO/13 - Biologia ApplicataCell Line TumorVegetablesDrug DiscoveryExtracellularHumansPleurotus eryngiiCell Proliferationbcl-2-Associated X ProteinPharmacologyPleurotus nebrodensisPleurotusbiologyPlant ExtractsKinasebiology.organism_classificationAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicIn vitroProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2BiochemistryApoptosisColonic NeoplasmsPhosphorylation
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Data from: Specimens at the center: an informatics workflow and toolkit for specimen-level analysis of public DNA database data

2017

Major public DNA databases — NCBI GenBank, the DNA DataBank of Japan (DDBJ), and the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) — are invaluable biodiversity libraries. Systematists and other biodiversity scientists commonly mine these databases for sequence data to use in phylogenetic studies, but such studies generally use only the taxonomic identity of the sequenced tissue, not the specimen identity. Thus studies that use DNA supermatrices to construct phylogenetic trees with species at the tips typically do not take advantage of the fact that for many individuals in the public DNA databases, several DNA regions have been sampled; and for many species, two or more individuals have been…

medicine and health caretaxon disparity indexCarexphylogenetic workflowMedicinespecimen-level dataCyperaceaeSupermatrixLife sciences
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Mechanisms of Cell-Volume Regulation in the Central Nervous System

2017

Function and viability of every cell is dependent on the proper control of its shape and volume. In the brain, which is protected by a rigid outer shell, cell-volume regulation is of particular importance, since large volume changes affect cerebral perfusion and, hence, function. Neuronal activation leads to constant changes of the ionic and metabolic composition of the brain’s extracellular space. These changes are buffered by astrocytes on the expense of constant changes in cell volume. Under pathological conditions, the ability of astrocytes to maintain the homeostasis of the brain is overwhelmed and permanent cell swelling, cytotoxic edema, occurs. The current chapter describes the prin…

medicine.anatomical_structureCytotoxic edemaCellCell volumeCentral nervous systemmedicineExtracellularsense organsCerebral perfusion pressureBiologyNeuroscienceHomeostasisFunction (biology)
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Isolation of nuclei and downstream processing of cell-type-specific nuclei from micro-dissected mouse brain regions – techniques and caveats

2020

AbstractThe mammalian brain consists of several structurally and functionally distinct regions equipped with an equally complex cell-type system. Due to its relevance in uncovering disease mechanisms, the study of cell-type-specific molecular signatures of different brain regions has increased. The rapid evolution of newer and cheaper sequencing techniques has also boosted the interest in cell-type-specific epigenetic studies. In fact, the nucleus holds most of the cell’s epigenetic information and is quite resistant to tissue dissociation processes as compared to cells. As such, nuclei are continually preferred over cells for epigenetic studies. However, the isolation of nuclei from cells …

medicine.anatomical_structureDownstream processingChemistryDisease mechanismsCell type specificmedicineBiophysicsCentrifugationDensity gradient ultracentrifugationEpigeneticsNuclear membraneNucleus
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Hsp60 in Skeletal Muscle: From Molecular Anatomy to Pathophysiology

2019

The chaperoning system of an organism is composed of the entire set of chaperones, co-chaperones, and chaperone co-factors and their interactors and receptors. Its functions pertain typically to protein homeostasis but also to many other activities inside and outside cells. In the skeletal muscle, with its multi-molecular structures rich in proteins and their continuous rearrangements, the chaperoning system plays a crucial role. However, little is known about the details of the workings of the chaperoning system in skeletal muscle development and during exercise and disease. Molecular chaperones are surely involved in muscle formation and maintenance under physiologic conditions and under …

medicine.anatomical_structurebiologyChaperone (protein)Myosinbiology.proteinExtracellularmedicineRespiratory chainSkeletal muscleHSP60MitochondrionReceptorCell biology
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Superfood for axons: Glial exosomes boost axonal energetics by delivery of SIRT2

2021

Axon integrity depends on support by glia facilitating axonal maintenance and energy homeostasis, but the molecular mechanisms are not well understood. In this issue of Neuron, Chamberlain et al. (2021) provide evidence that oligodendrocyte-to-axon transfer of SIRT2 via extracellular vesicles (exosomes) enables deacetylation of mitochondrial proteins, enhancing axonal energy production.

medicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemChemistryGeneral NeurosciencemedicineNeuronAxonSIRT2Extracellular vesiclesMitochondrial proteinEnergy homeostasisMicrovesiclesCell biologyNeuron
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