2 resultados para MURINE SKIN

em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland


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The overall objective of this thesis was to gain further insight into the mechanisms underlying commensal microbial influences on intestinal ion transport. In this regard, I examined the impact of commensal host-microbe interactions on colonic secretomotor function in mouse. I first examined the influence of two different probiotic (microorganisms which, when given in adequate amounts, can confer health benefits upon the host) strains, Bifidobacterium infantis 35624 and L. salivarius UCC118 on active colonic ion transport in the mouse, using the Ussing Chamber. I found that both probiotics appear to have converging effects on ion transport at a functional level. However, L. salivarius UCC118 may preferentially inhibit neurally-evoked ion transport. Next I examined the impact of the host microbiota itself on both baseline and stimulated colonic secretomotor function as well as probiotic induced changes in ion transport. I provide further evidence that the microbiota is capable of mediating alterations in colonic ion transport, and specifically suggests that it can influence cAMP-mediated responses. Finally, it has been well documented that many probiotics elicit their effects via secreted bioactives, therefore, I studied the effects of microbially produced GABA, contained in supernatants from the commensal microbe Lactobacillus brevis DPC6108, on colonic secretomotor function. In conclusion, I believe that commensal microbes have an important and strain specific functional influence on colonic ion transport and secretomotor function and these effects can be mediated via extracellular bioactives. Moreover, I believe that functional ex-vivo studies such as those carried out in this thesis have a critical role to play in our future understanding of host-microbe interactions in the gut.

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Thirteen unique archaeological countenances from Ireland were produced through the Manchester method of facial reconstruction. Their gaze prompts a space for a broad discourse regarding the face found within human and artefactual remains of Ireland. These faces are reminders of the human element which is at the core of the discipline of archaeology. These re-constructions create a voyeuristic relationship with the past. At once sating a curiosity about the past, facial reconstructions also provide a catharsis to our presently situated selves. As powerful visual documents, archaeological facial reconstructions illustrate re-presentations of the past as well as how the present can be connected to the past. Through engagment with Emmanuel Levinas’s (1906- 1995) main philosophical themes, the presence of the face is examined in a diachronic structure. The ‘starting point’ is the Neolithic period which has been associated with the notion of visuality with a reconstruction from the early Neolithic site of Annagh, Co. Limerick. The following layer of analysis appears with attention to intersubjectivity in the early medieval period with facial reconstructions from Dooey, Co. Donegal and Owenbristy, Co. Galway. Building upon the past concepts, the late medieval period is associated with the notion of alterity and paired with faces from Ballinderry, Co. Kildare and a sample of males from Gallen Priory, Co. Offaly. The final layer of examination culminates with the application of response and respons-ibility to the post-medieval Irish landscape with facial reconstructions from the prison on Spike Island, Co. Cork. These layers of investigation are similar to the stratigraphical composition of both the archaeological landscape and the skeletal/soft tissue landscape of the face. The separation of the neglected phenomenon of the face from the overwhelming embrace of the field of craniometrics is necessary. Through this detachment a new manner in which to discuss the face and its place within the (bio)archaeological record is possible. Encountering the faces seen in mortuary contexts, material culture, and archaeological facial reconstructions, inform and shape the archaeological imagination.