189 resultados para Internal architecture
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Transcription and translation require a high concentration of potassium across the entire tree of life. The conservation of a high intracellular potassium was an absolute requirement for the evolution of life on Earth. This was achieved by the interplay of P- and V-ATPases that can set up electrochemical gradients across the cell membrane, an energetically costly process requiring the synthesis of ATP by F-ATPases. In animals, the control of an extracellular compartment was achieved by the emergence of multicellular organisms able to produce tight epithelial barriers creating a stable extracellular milieu. Finally, the adaptation to a terrestrian environment was achieved by the evolution of distinct regulatory pathways allowing salt and water conservation. In this review we emphasize the critical and dual role of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase in the control of the ionic composition of the extracellular fluid and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) in salt and water conservation in vertebrates. The action of aldosterone on transepithelial sodium transport by activation of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) at the apical membrane and that of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase at the basolateral membrane may have evolved in lungfish before the emergence of tetrapods. Finally, we discuss the implication of RAAS in the origin of the present pandemia of hypertension and its associated cardiovascular diseases.
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In this paper, we show how business model modelling can be connected to IT infrastructure, drawing parallels from enterprise architecture models such as ArchiMate. We then show how the proposed visualization based on enterprise architecture, with a strong focus on business model strategy, can help IT alignment, at both the business model and the IT infrastructure level.
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La station valaisanne de Crans-Montana est richement représentée par la photographie, la peinture, les affiches et l'architecture. Cette thèse de doctorat s'emploie à réunir un large corpus de photographies et de représentations : peintures, affiches, cartes postales et reproductions de bâtiments emblématiques (voir le corpus illustré et documentaire annexé). Les questions liées à l'identité du territoire et son image sont les fils conducteurs de ce travail qui a débuté en 2008. Un premier ensemble visuel a été réuni par le Dr Théodore Stephani (1868-1951), un acteur fondamental pour l'histoire de la naissance de la station. Médecin, mais également photographe, il réalise une collection de plus de 1300 clichés, réunie en six albums, sur une période de trente-sept ans (1899-1936). Les photographies du médecin, originaire de Genève, fondateur de ce lieu désormais touristique sont le point de départ de cette recherche et son fil rouge. Celle-ci tentera d'articuler des représentations sur l'évolution du paysage et l'urbanisation de la station autour d'acteurs illustres, tels que les peintres Ferdinand Hodler (1853-1918) et Albert Muret (1874-1955), l'écrivain Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz (1878-1947) et les nombreux hôteliers ou médecins qui ont marqué l'histoire de la naissance du Haut-Plateau. Les représentations débutent en 1896 car c'est à ce moment-là que le Dr Stephani s'établit à Montana. Les architectes les plus connus de la première période sont François-Casimir Besson (1869-1944), Markus Burgener (1878-1953), suivi de la deuxième génération autour de Jean-Marie Ellenberger (1913-1988), André Perraudin (1915-2014) et André Gaillard (1921-2010). Parallèlement ou avant eux, les peintres déjà cités, Ferdinand Hodler et Albert Muret, - suivis de René Auberjonois (1872-1957), Henri-Edouard Bercher (1877-1970), Charles-Clos Olsommer (1883-1966), Oskar Kokoschka (1886-1980), Albert Chavaz (1907¬1990), Paul Monnier (1907-1982) et Hans Emi (1909-2015) - qui appartiennent tous à l'histoire culturelle de la région. Quant aux écrivains qui ont résidé dans la région, nous citons Elizabeth von Arnim (1866-1941), sa cousine Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923) alors que l'oeuvre de Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz est largement développée par une interprétation de son oeuvre Le Règne de l'esprit malin (1917) et un clin d'oeil pour Igor Stravinsky (1882¬1971). Nous présenterons aussi les films de trois cinéastes qui se sont inspirés des oeuvres écrites par Ramuz lors de son passage à Lens, à savoir Dimitri Kirsanoff (1899-1957), Claude Goretta (1929) et Francis Reusser (1942). Le concept du « village » est abordé depuis l'exposition nationale suisse (1896) jusqu'au projet des investisseurs russes, à Aminona. Ce « village » est le deuxième mégaprojet de Suisse, après celui d'Andermatt. Si le projet se réalise, l'image de la station s'en trouvera profondément transformée. En 1998, la publication de Au bord de la falaise. L'histoire entre certitudes et inquiétudes amène une grande visibilité aux propositions de Roger Chartier, qui lie l'étude des textes aux objets matériels et les usages qu'ils engendrent dans la société. Il définit l'histoire culturelle comme "une histoire culturelle du social" alors que pour Pascal Ory, une histoire culturelle est "comme une forme d'histoire sociale", ce qui revient presque au même, mais nous choisirons celle d'Ory pour une histoire sociale du paysage et de l'architecture. Ce travail adopte ainsi plusieurs points de vue : l'histoire sociale, basée sur les interviews de nombreux protagonistes de l'histoire locale, et l'histoire de l'art qui permet une sélection d'objets emblématiques ; l'histoire culturelle offre ainsi une méthode transversale pour lire et relier ces différents regards ou points de vue entre les paysages, les arts visuels, l'architecture, la littérature et le cinéma.
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Chromatin state variation at gene regulatory elements is abundant across individuals, yet we understand little about the genetic basis of this variability. Here, we profiled several histone modifications, the transcription factor (TF) PU.1, RNA polymerase II, and gene expression in lymphoblastoid cell lines from 47 whole-genome sequenced individuals. We observed that distinct cis-regulatory elements exhibit coordinated chromatin variation across individuals in the form of variable chromatin modules (VCMs) at sub-Mb scale. VCMs were associated with thousands of genes and preferentially cluster within chromosomal contact domains. We mapped strong proximal and weak, yet more ubiquitous, distal-acting chromatin quantitative trait loci (cQTL) that frequently explain this variation. cQTLs were associated with molecular activity at clusters of cis-regulatory elements and mapped preferentially within TF-bound regions. We propose that local, sequence-independent chromatin variation emerges as a result of genetic perturbations in cooperative interactions between cis-regulatory elements that are located within the same genomic domain.
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This paper analyses how banking regulation was introduced in Switzerland - one of the world's most prominent financial centres - which remained in place until the beginning of the twenty-first century. It shows that the law adopted on 8 November 1934 is a perfect example of capture of the regulator by the regulated. Essentially a political response in the context of the economic crisis of the 1930s, it largely reflected the interests of banking circles by limiting the intervention of the State as much as possible. The introduction of the new legislation was facilitated by the temporary weakness of Swiss banking circles, as they depended on the State to delay or prevent the collapse of many major credit institutions. They did not manage to derail the law as they had two decades earlier when they scuppered the federal bill on banks drawn up between 1914 and 1916. But this time they were better organized and more united, and intervened all the more effectively in the legislative process itself. The 1934 law is thus distinctive in that it made no structural changes to the architecture of the financial centre but merely codified its practices through flexible legislation meant to reassure the public. The law was aimed less at controlling banking activity than at keeping - thanks to skilfully calibrated political concessions - the State from having to intervene more directly in the internal management of banks or in the fixing of interest rates and the export of capital.
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BACKGROUND: The structure and organisation of ecological interactions within an ecosystem is modified by the evolution and coevolution of the individual species it contains. Understanding how historical conditions have shaped this architecture is vital for understanding system responses to change at scales from the microbial upwards. However, in the absence of a group selection process, the collective behaviours and ecosystem functions exhibited by the whole community cannot be organised or adapted in a Darwinian sense. A long-standing open question thus persists: Are there alternative organising principles that enable us to understand and predict how the coevolution of the component species creates and maintains complex collective behaviours exhibited by the ecosystem as a whole? RESULTS: Here we answer this question by incorporating principles from connectionist learning, a previously unrelated discipline already using well-developed theories on how emergent behaviours arise in simple networks. Specifically, we show conditions where natural selection on ecological interactions is functionally equivalent to a simple type of connectionist learning, 'unsupervised learning', well-known in neural-network models of cognitive systems to produce many non-trivial collective behaviours. Accordingly, we find that a community can self-organise in a well-defined and non-trivial sense without selection at the community level; its organisation can be conditioned by past experience in the same sense as connectionist learning models habituate to stimuli. This conditioning drives the community to form a distributed ecological memory of multiple past states, causing the community to: a) converge to these states from any random initial composition; b) accurately restore historical compositions from small fragments; c) recover a state composition following disturbance; and d) to correctly classify ambiguous initial compositions according to their similarity to learned compositions. We examine how the formation of alternative stable states alters the community's response to changing environmental forcing, and we identify conditions under which the ecosystem exhibits hysteresis with potential for catastrophic regime shifts. CONCLUSIONS: This work highlights the potential of connectionist theory to expand our understanding of evo-eco dynamics and collective ecological behaviours. Within this framework we find that, despite not being a Darwinian unit, ecological communities can behave like connectionist learning systems, creating internal conditions that habituate to past environmental conditions and actively recalling those conditions. REVIEWERS: This article was reviewed by Prof. Ricard V Solé, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona and Prof. Rob Knight, University of Colorado, Boulder.