183 resultados para Lévy interaction
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Interaction analysis is not a prerogative of any discipline in social sciences. It has its own history within each disciplinary field and is related to specific research objects. From the standpoint of psychology, this article first draws upon a distinction between factorial and dialogical conceptions of interaction. It then briefly presents the basis of a dialogical approach in psychology and focuses upon four basic assumptions. Each of them is examined on a theoretical and on a methodological level with a leading question: to what extent is it possible to develop analytical tools that are fully coherent with dialogical assumptions? The conclusion stresses the difficulty of developing methodological tools that are fully consistent with dialogical assumptions and argues that there is an unavoidable tension between accounting for the complexity of an interaction and using methodological tools which necessarily "monologise" this complexity.
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Empirical studies indicate that the transition to parenthood is influenced by an individual's peer group. To study the mechanisms creating interdepen- dencies across individuals' transition to parenthood and its timing we apply an agent-based simulation model. We build a one-sex model and provide agents with three different characteristics regarding age, intended education and parity. Agents endogenously form their network based on social closeness. Network members then may influence the agents' transition to higher parity levels. Our numerical simulations indicate that accounting for social inter- actions can explain the shift of first-birth probabilities in Austria over the period 1984 to 2004. Moreover, we apply our model to forecast age-specific fertility rates up to 2016.
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Summary : Sorting nexin (SNX) family members play important roles in intracellular protein and membrane trafficking, The membrane-tubulating SNX9 protein has been shown to interact with multiple components of the endocytic machinery and to participate in clathrin-mediated endocytosis of cell surface receptors. It has not been investigated if SNX9 may also participate in other protein sorting pathways that involve vesicular transport, specifically the biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles (LROs). Closely related to SNX9 is SNXl8, whose function is largely unknown. In this work, we have characterized the expression of SNX9 and SNXl8 in LRO-containing cells and investigated their role in protein trafficking during the formation of LROs. Our results indicate that SNX9 and SNXl8 are not essential for the formation of LROs, nor for the sorting of melanosomal proteins. We investigated how the level of intracellular SNX9 protein is regulated and found that it is a substrate of the ubiquitin ligase Itch, a member of the NEDD4 family of E3 ubiquitin ligases. Itch ubiquitylates SNX9 and regulates SNX9 levels by enhancing its degradation. Using ? truncated proteins we found that the interaction with SNX9 is mediated by the proline-rich domain of Itch, a domain distinct from the conventional WW recognition domain, and the SH3 domain of SNX9. Interaction with the PRD of Itch is essential for SNX9 ubiquitylation and degradation. We further showed that Itch binding is not affected by tyrosine phosphorylation of SNX9. Using lentivector-mediated siRNA techniques, we found that Itch regulates the level of melanosomal proteins, while knock-down of SNX9 does not alter their level. Interestingly, we revealed that silencing of SNXIS affects the amount of the melanosomal protein Melan-A, but also of SNX9, and that SNXl8 can interact with SNX9. Taken together, our results highlight that the pool of substrates of NEDD4 family E3 ligases extends to proteins containing SH3 domains and provide insight into the potential functions of SNXI8. Résumé : Les membres de la famille des Sorting Nexins (SNX) jouent des rôles importants dans le trafic intracellulaire de protéines et membranes. Il a été démontré que la protéine SNX9, qui génère les tubules membranaires, interagit avec plusieurs composants de la machinerie d'endocytose et participe à l'endocytose des récepteurs de surface mediée par la clathrine. Aucune étude n'a investigué si SNX9 pourrait aussi participer à d'autres voies de trafic de protéines tel que le transport vésiculaire, et plus particulièrement la biogenèse des organites lysosomaux ("lysosome-related organelles", LR©s). SNXl8 est similaire à SNX9, mais sa fonction est largement inconnue. Dans ce travail, nous avons caractérisé l'expression de SNX9 et SNX18 dans des cellules contenants des LROs et investigué leur rôle dans le trafic de protéines pendant la formation des LROS. Nos résultats indiquent que SNX9 et SNXI8 ne sont essentiels ni pour la formation des LR©s, ni pour le trafic de protéines mélanosomales. Nous avons examiné la régulation du niveau intracellulaire de la protéine SNX9 et avons trouvé qu'elle est un substrat de l'ubiquitine ligase Itch, un membre de la famille NEDD4 des ubiquitine ligases E3. Itch ubiquitine SNX9 et régule les niveaux de SNX9 en augmentant sa dégradation. En utilisant des protéines mutées nous avons découvert que l'interaction avec SNX9 est médiée par le domaine riche en proline de Itch, qui est différent du domaine conventionnel de reconnaissance WW, et par le domaine SH3 de SNX9. L'interaction avec le domaine riche en proline de Itch est essentielle pour l'ubiquitination et la dégradation de SNX9. De plus, nous avons montré que cette liaison n'est pas affectée par la phosphorylation des résidus tyrosine de SNX9. En utilisant des vecteurs lentiviraux exprimant des siARN, nous avons trouvé que Itch régule les niveaux de protéines mélanosomales, alors que l'extinction de l'expression de SNX9 ne change pas leurs niveaux. En autre, nous avons révélé que la diminution de SNXl8 affecte le niveau de la protéine mélanosomale Melan-A et de SNX9, et aussi que SNXl8 peut interagir avec SNX9. En résumé, nos résultats démontrent que l'ensemble des substrats de la famille NEDD4 des ubiquitine ligases E3 s'élargit aux protéines contenant des domaines SH3 et ouvrent des perspectives sur les fonctions potentielles de SNXl8.
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Eukaryotic gene expression depends on a complex interplay between the transcriptional apparatus and chromatin structure. We report here a yeast model system for investigating the functional interaction between the human estrogen receptor (hER) and CTF1, a member of the CTF/NFI transcription factor family. We show that a CTF1-fusion protein and the hER transactivate a synthetic promoter in yeast in a synergistic manner. This interaction requires the proline-rich transactivation domain of CTF1. When the natural estrogen-dependent vitellogenin B1 promoter is tested in yeast, CTF1 and CTF1-fusion proteins are unable to activate transcription, and no synergy is observed between hER, which activates the B1 promoter, and these factors. Chromatin structure analysis on this promoter reveals positioned nucleosomes at -430 to -270 (+/-20 bp) and at -270 to - 100 (+/-20 bp) relative to the start site of transcription. The positions of the nucleosomes remain unchanged upon hormone-dependent transcriptional activation of the promoter, and the more proximal nucleosome appears to mask the CTF/NFI site located at - 101 to -114. We conclude that a functional interaction of hER with the estrogen response element located upstream of a basal promoter occurs in yeast despite the nucleosomal organization of this promoter, whereas the interaction of CTF1 with its target site is apparently precluded by a nucleosome.
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NK cells can kill MHC-different or MHC-deficient but not syngeneic MHC-expressing target cells. This MHC class I-specific tolerance is acquired during NK cell development. MHC recognition by murine NK cells largely depends on clonally distributed Ly49 family receptors, which inhibit NK cell function upon ligand engagement. We investigated whether these receptors play a role for the development of NK cells and provide evidence that the expression of a Ly49 receptor transgene on developing NK cells endowed these cells with a significant developmental advantage over NK cells lacking such a receptor, but only if the relevant MHC ligand was present in the environment. The data suggest that the transgenic Ly49 receptor accelerates and/or rescues the development of NK cells which would otherwise fail to acquire sufficient numbers of self-MHC-specific receptors. Interestingly, the positive effect on NK cell development is most prominent when the MHC ligand is simultaneously present on both hemopoietic and nonhemopoietic cells. These findings correlate with functional data showing that MHC class I ligand on all cells is required to generate functionally mature NK cells capable of reacting to cells lacking the respective MHC ligand. We conclude that the engagement of inhibitory MHC receptors during NK cell development provides signals that are important for further NK cell differentiation and/or maturation.
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The splenium of the corpus callosum connects the posterior cortices with fibers varying in size from thin late-myelinating axons in the anterior part, predominantly connecting parietal and temporal areas, to thick early-myelinating fibers in the posterior part, linking primary and secondary visual areas. In the adult human brain, the function of the splenium in a given area is defined by the specialization of the area and implemented via excitation and/or suppression of the contralateral homotopic and heterotopic areas at the same or different level of visual hierarchy. These mechanisms are facilitated by interhemispheric synchronization of oscillatory activity, also supported by the splenium. In postnatal ontogenesis, structural MRI reveals a protracted formation of the splenium during the first two decades of human life. In doing so, the slow myelination of the splenium correlates with the formation of interhemispheric excitatory influences in the extrastriate areas and the EEG synchronization, while the gradual increase of inhibitory effects in the striate cortex is linked to the local inhibitory circuitry. Reshaping interactions between interhemispherically distributed networks under various perceptual contexts allows sparsification of responses to superfluous information from the visual environment, leading to a reduction of metabolic and structural redundancy in a child's brain.
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The discovery of exhumed continental mantle and hyper-extended crust in present-day magma-poor rifted margins is at the origin of a paradigm shift within the research field of deep-water rifted margins. It opened new questions about the strain history of rifted margins and the nature and composition of sedimentary, crustal and mantle rocks in rifted margins. Thanks to the benefit of more than one century of work in the Alps and access to world-class outcrops preserving the primary relationships between sediments and crustal and mantle rocks from the fossil Alpine Tethys margins, it is possible to link the subsidence history and syn-rift sedimentary evolution with the strain distribution observed in the crust and mantle rocks exposed in the distal rifted margins. In this paper, we will focus on the transition from early to late rifting that is associated with considerable crustal thinning and a reorganization of the rift system. Crustal thinning is at the origin of a major change in the style of deformation from high-angle to low-angle normal faulting which controls basin-architecture, sedimentary sources and processes and the nature of basement rocks exhumed along the detachment faults in the distal margin. Stratigraphic and isotopic ages indicate that this major change occurred in late Sinemurian time, involving a shift of the syn-rift sedimentation toward the distal domain associated with a major reorganization of the crustal structure with exhumation of lower and middle crust. These changes may be triggered by mantle processes, as indicated by the infiltration of MOR-type magmas in the lithospheric mantle, and the uplift of the Brianconnais domain. Thinning and exhumation of the crust and lithosphere also resulted in the creation of new paleogeographic domains, the Proto Valais and Liguria-Piemonte domains. These basins show a complex, 3D temporal and spatial evolution that might have evolved, at least in the case of the Liguria-Piemonte basin, in the formation of an embryonic oceanic crust. The re-interpretation of the rift evolution and the architecture of the distal rifted margins in the Alps have important implications for the understanding of rifted margins worldwide, but also for the paleogeographic reconstruction of the Alpine domain and its subsequent Alpine compressional overprint.
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Vision provides a primary sensory input for food perception. It raises expectations on taste and nutritional value and drives acceptance or rejection. So far, the impact of visual food cues varying in energy content on subsequent taste integration remains unexplored. Using electrical neuroimaging, we assessed whether high- and low-calorie food cues differentially influence the brain processing and perception of a subsequent neutral electric taste. When viewing high-calorie food images, participants reported the subsequent taste to be more pleasant than when low-calorie food images preceded the identical taste. Moreover, the taste-evoked neural activity was stronger in the bilateral insula and the adjacent frontal operculum (FOP) within 100 ms after taste onset when preceded by high- versus low-calorie cues. A similar pattern evolved in the anterior cingulate (ACC) and medial orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) around 180 ms, as well as, in the right insula, around 360 ms. The activation differences in the OFC correlated positively with changes in taste pleasantness, a finding that is an accord with the role of the OFC in the hedonic evaluation of taste. Later activation differences in the right insula likely indicate revaluation of interoceptive taste awareness. Our findings reveal previously unknown mechanisms of cross-modal, visual-gustatory, sensory interactions underlying food evaluation.
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BACKGROUND: NR2E3 (PNR) is an orphan nuclear receptor essential for proper photoreceptor determination and differentiation. In humans, mutations in NR2E3 have been associated with the recessively inherited enhanced short wavelength sensitive (S-) cone syndrome (ESCS) and, more recently, with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP). NR2E3 acts as a suppressor of the cone generation program in late mitotic retinal progenitor cells. In adult rod photoreceptors, NR2E3 represses cone-specific gene expression and acts in concert with the transcription factors CRX and NRL to activate rod-specific genes. NR2E3 and CRX have been shown to physically interact in vitro through their respective DNA-binding domains (DBD). The DBD also contributes to homo- and heterodimerization of nuclear receptors. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We analyzed NR2E3 homodimerization and NR2E3/CRX complex formation in an in vivo situation by Bioluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (BRET(2)). NR2E3 wild-type protein formed homodimers in transiently transfected HEK293T cells. NR2E3 homodimerization was impaired in presence of disease-causing mutations in the DBD, except for the p.R76Q and p.R104W mutant proteins. Strikingly, the adRP-linked p.G56R mutant protein interacted with CRX with a similar efficiency to that of NR2E3 wild-type and p.R311Q proteins. In contrast, all other NR2E3 DBD-mutant proteins did not interact with CRX. The p.G56R mutant protein was also more effective in abolishing the potentiation of rhodospin gene transactivation by the NR2E3 wild-type protein. In addition, the p.G56R mutant enhanced the transrepression of the M- and S-opsin promoter, while all other NR2E3 DBD-mutants did not. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest different disease mechanisms in adRP- and ESCS-patients carrying NR2E3 mutations. Titration of CRX by the p.G56R mutant protein acting as a repressor in trans may account for the severe clinical phenotype in adRP patients.
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To study the major histocompatibility complex class II I-E dependence of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) superantigens, we constructed hybrids between the I-E-dependent MMTV(GR) and the I-E-independent mtv-7 superantigens and tested them in vivo. Our results suggest that, although the C-terminal third mediates I-A interaction, additional binding sites are located elsewhere in the superantigen.