1,906 research outputs found

    Sectoral allocation by gender of Latin American workers over the liberalization period of the 1990s

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    The recent restructuring of Latin American economies has renewed interest in the effects of trade liberalization, on labor markets, and on the gender division of labor. The author does not attempt to establish casuality between economic reforms, and the types of jobs that men and women hold. Instead, she provides a detailed description of the trends in male, and female formal, and informal sector participation during the economic reform period in Argentina, Brazil, and Costa Rica. The author first compares the gender composition of the formal, informal wage, and self-employment sectors in a year before reforms (1988 for Argentina, 1989 for Brazil, and Costa Rica), and a year after reforms implementation (1997 for Argentina, 1995 for Brazil and Costa Rica). Although women continued to be more likely than men to work in the informal wage sector, there is no trend of"masculinization"or"feminization"of the informal sector, or any other. Instead, in Argentina men have overtaken women as the most prevalent workers in the informal wage sector, while in Brazil, the opposite has occurred (as men move into self-employment). In Costa Rica there have been no statistical, observable changes. The author then considers the distribution across sectors within each gender group, to identify whether men, and women are more likely to select different sectors in the post-reform period relative to the pre-reform period. Among both men, and women in all three countries (except Brazilian men), workers have become more likely to hold informal wage jobs, and less likely to hold formal sector jobs. Trends in human capital accumulation explain these changes for both men, and women, while changes in gender roles, primarily in homecare and marriage, do not seem to have an effect.Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Labor Policies,Population&Development,Public Health Promotion,Environmental Economics&Policies,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Environmental Economics&Policies,Population&Development,Banks&Banking Reform,Work&Working Conditions

    Photochemistry and Drug Synthesis,

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    HH. Donnelly, Bethan and Harrison, Tim (2018). Photochemistry and Drug Synthesis, Chemistry Review November 22-25

    Thyroid function tests and characterization of thyroxine-binding globulin in the carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type I.

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    Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein (CDG) syndrome is a newly recognized hereditary disorder that presents with psychomotor retardation, cerebellar ataxia, peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy, and, variably, skeletal abnormalities, lipodystrophy, and retinitis pigmentosa. These abnormalities appear to be produced by a defect that causes reduced carbohydrate content in glycoproteins. We studied seven patients with CDG type I belonging to five unrelated families. The concentration of serum TBG, a glycoprotein of hepatic origin, was measured by RIA and T4 saturation and was found to be below the normal range in three of the seven patients and normal in four of them. More than half of the total serum TBG had reduced sialic acid content and localized on isoelectric focusing (IEF) as two prominent bands cathodal to the three major bands of normal TBG. The latter two bands are responsible for the characteristic IEF pattern or CDG syndrome. TBG in patients with CDG had immunoreactivity indistinguishable from that of normal TBG and had normal affinity for T4, T3, and rT3. Serum total T4, T3, and rT3 were below the normal range in seven, five, and seven patients, respectively. The free T4 index was also below normal in four patients, but the free T4 concentration, measured by equilibrium dialysis at low dilution, and serum TSH were in the midnormal range. The serum total T4 and rT3 levels were disproportionately reduced relative to the serum TBG concentration and compared to the concentrations of these iodothyronines in matched subjects with inherited partial TBG deficiency. Chronic illness cannot explain these changes, because, contrary to patients with nonthyroidal illness, those with CDG had significantly higher serum total T3/T4 and lower rT3/T4 ratios. It is concluded that IEF of TBG is a rapid and simple method for the diagnosis of CDG type I and that the abnormal pattern can be detected as early as 5 days postpartum. Patients with CDG are chemically euthyroid, and it is postulated that the reduction in serum iodothyronine concentrations beyond that explained on the basis of low TBG levels may be due to the interference with binding to TBG by an unidentified substance

    The transcriptional activator Gli2 modulates T-cell receptor signalling through attenuation of AP-1 and NFκ-B activity.

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    Different tissues contain diverse and dynamic cellular niches, providing distinct signals to tissue-resident or migratory, infiltrating immune cells. Hedgehog (Hh) proteins are secreted inter-cellular signalling molecules, which are essential during development and are important in cancer, post-natal tissue homeostasis and repair. Hh signalling, via the Hh-responsive transcription factor Gli2, also has multiple roles in T-lymphocyte development and differentiation. Here we investigate the function of Gli2 in T-cell signalling and activation. Gene transcription driven by the Gli2 transcriptional activator (Gli2A) attenuated T-cell activation and proliferation following T-cell receptor (TCR) stimulation. Expression of Gli2A in T-cells altered gene expression profiles, impaired the TCR-induced calcium flux and nuclear expression of NFAT, suppressed upregulation of molecules essential for activation, and attenuated signalling pathways upstream of AP-1 and NFκB, leading to reduced activation of these important transcription factors. Inhibition of physiological Hh-dependent transcription increased NFκB activity on TCR ligation. These data have importance for understanding molecular mechanisms of immunomodulation, particularly in tissues where Hh proteins or other Gli-activating ligands such as TGFβ are upregulated, including during inflammation, tissue damage and repair, or in tumour microenvironments

    Why liberalization alone has not improved agricultural productivity in Zambia : the role of asset ownership and working capital constraints

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    The authors use a large panel data set from Zambia to examine factors that could explain the relatively lackluster performance of the country's agricultural sector after liberalization. Zambia's liberalization significantly opened the economy but failed to alter the structure of productionor help realize efficiency gains. They reach two main conclusions. First, not owning productive assets (in Zambia, draft animals and implements) limits improvements in agricultural productivity and household welfare. Owning oxen increases income directly, allows farmers to till their fields efficiently when rain is delayed, increases the area cultivated, and improves access to credit and fertilizer markets. Second, the authors reject the hypothesis that the application of fertilizer is unprofitable because of high input prices. Rather, fertilizer use appears to have declined because of constraints on supplies, which government intervention exacerbated instead of alleviating. (Extending the use of fertilizer to the many producers not currently using it would be profitable, but increasing the amount applied by the few producers who now have access to it would not be.) Policies to foster accumulation of the assets needed for agricultural production (including draft animals and implements) and to provide complementary public goods (education, credit, and good agricultural extension services) could greatly help reduce poverty and improve productivity.Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Labor Policies,Banks&Banking Reform,Agricultural Knowledge&Information Systems,Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Banks&Banking Reform,Agricultural Knowledge&Information Systems,Agricultural Research

    Modeling Surface Brightness of the HH 901 Jets in the Carina Nebula

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    abstract: The purpose of this thesis is to accurately simulate the surface brightness in various spectral emission lines of the HH 901 jets in the Mystic Mountain Formation of the Carina Nebula. To accomplish this goal, we gathered relevant spectral emission line data for [Fe II] 12660 Å, Hα 6563 Å, and [S II] 6720 Å to compare with Hubble Space Telescope observations of the HH 901 jets presented in Reiter et al. (2016). We derived the emissivities for these lines from the spectral synthesis code Cloudy by Ferland et al. (2017). In addition, we used WENO simulations of density, temperature, and radiative cooling to model the jet. We found that the computed surface brightness values agreed with most of the observational surface brightness values. Thus, the 3D cylindrically symmetric simulations of surface brightness using the WENO code and Cloudy spectral emission models are accurate for jets like HH 901. After detailing these agreements, we discuss the next steps for the project, like adding an external ambient wind and performing the simulations in full 3D

    Canonical formalism for Lagrangians of maximal nonlocality

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    A canonical formalism for Lagrangians of maximal nonlocality is established. The method is based on the familiar Legendre transformation to a new function, which can be derived from the maximally nonlocal Lagrangian. The corresponding canonical equations are derived through the standard procedure in local theory and appear much like those local ones, though the implication of the equations is largely expanded.Physics, MultidisciplinarySCI(E)中国科学引文数据库(CSCD)0ARTICLE5715-7224

    Author response image 1.

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    Smoothened (Smo) inhibition by Patched (Ptch) is central to Hedgehog (Hh) signaling. Ptch, a proton driven antiporter, is required for Smo inhibition via an unknown mechanism. Hh ligand binding to Ptch reverses this inhibition and activated Smo initiates the Hh response. To determine whether Ptch inhibits Smo strictly in the same cell or also mediates non-cell-autonomous Smo inhibition, we generated genetically mosaic neuralized embryoid bodies (nEBs) from mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs). These experiments utilized novel mESC lines in which Ptch1, Ptch2, Smo, Shh and 7dhcr were inactivated via gene editing in multiple combinations, allowing us to measure non-cell autonomous interactions between cells with differing Ptch1/2 status. In several independent assays, the Hh response was repressed by Ptch1/2 in nearby cells. When 7dhcr was targeted, cells displayed elevated non-cell autonomous inhibition. These findings support a model in which Ptch1/2 mediate secretion of a Smo-inhibitory cholesterol precursor
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