3 resultados para CRASH ANALYSES
em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland
Resumo:
The human body is colonized by an enormous population of bacteria (microbiota) that provides the host with coding capacity and metabolic activities. Among the human gut microbiota are health-promoting indigenous species (probiotic bacteria) that are commonly consumed as live dietary supplements. Recent genomics-based studies (probiogenomics) are starting to provide insights into how probiotic bacteria sense and adapt to the gastrointestinal tract environment. In this Review, we discuss the application of probiogenomics in the elucidation of the molecular basis of probiosis using the well-recognized model probiotic bacteria genera Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus as examples.
Resumo:
Bacteriophages belonging to the Siphoviridae family represent viruses with a noncontractile tail that function as extremely efficient bacterium-infecting nanomachines. The Siphoviridae phages TP901-1 and Tuc2009 infect Lactococcus lactis, and both belong to the so-called P335 species. As P335 phages are typically capable of a lytic and lysogenic life cycle, a number of molecular tools are available to analyse their virions. This doctoral thesis describes mutational and molecular analyses of TP901-1 and Tuc2009, with emphasis on the role of their tail-associated structural proteins. Several novel and intriguing findings discovered during the course of this study on the nature of Siphoviridae phages furthers a basic molecular understanding of their virions, and the role of their virion proteins, during the initial stages of infection. While Siphoviridae virions represent complex quaternary structures of multiple proteins and subunits thereof, mutagenic analysis represents an efficient mechanism to discretely characterize the function of individual proteins, and constituent amino acids, in the assembly of the phage structure and their biological function. However, as always, more research is required to delve deeper into the mechanisms by which phages commence infection. This is important to advance our understanding of this intricate process and to facilitate application of such findings to manipulate phage infections. On the one hand, we may want to prevent phages from infecting starter cultures used in the dairy industry, while on the other hand it may be desirable to optimize viral infection for the application of phages as bacterial parasites and therapeutic agents.
Resumo:
This thesis argues that through the prism of America’s Cold War, scientism has emerged as the metanarrative of the postnuclear age. The advent of the bomb brought about a new primacy for mechanical and hyperrational thinking in the corridors of power not just in terms of managing the bomb itself but diffusing this ideology throughout the culture in social sciences, economics and other such institutional systems. The human need to mitigate or ameliorate against the chaos of the universe lies at the heart of not just religious faith but in the desire for perfect control. Thus there has been a transference of power from religious faith to the apparent material power of science and technology and the terra firma these supposedly objective means supply. The Cold War, however was a highly ideologically charged opposition between the two superpowers, and the scientific methodology that sprang forth to manage the Cold War and the bomb, in the United States, was not an objective scientific system divorced from the paranoia and dogma but a system that assumed a radically fundamentalist idea of capitalism. This is apparent in the widespread diffusion of game theory throughout Western postindustrial institutions. The inquiry of the thesis thus examines the texts that engage and criticise American Cold War methodology, beginning with the nuclear moment, so to speak, and Dr Strangelove’s incisive satire of moral abdication to machine processes. Moving on chronologically, the thesis examines the diffusion of particular kinds of masculinity and sexuality in postnuclear culture in Crash and End Zone and finishing up its analysis with the ethnographic portrayal of a modern American city in The Wire. More than anything else, the thesis wishes to reveal to what extent this technocratic consciousness puts pressure on language and on binding narratives.