The epidermis is the protective outer layer of clonally related cells covering all plant organs.
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Hair cells are the sensory receptors in the inner ear that detect sound and head motion to begin the processes of hearing and balance control. The defining feature of hair cells is the hair bundle, the transduction organelle protruding from their apical surface composed of ordered arrays of stereocilia. Mechanical deflection of the hair bundle, normally induced by physiological stimuli, increases the open probability of mechanically gated cation channels located at the tip of stereocilia. The resulting depolarizing inward current generates a receptor potential. The information encoded in this electrical response is transmitted to the auditory or vestibular afferent nerve fibres via the Ca2+-induced release of neurotransmitter from the hair cell's basal pole. In this way sensory information is relayed to the brain enabling us to perceive sound and maintain balance. In mammals, hair cell loss causes irreversible balance and hearing impairment because these sensory cells show very little or no regenerative ability.
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Liposomes are synthetic vesicles consisting of one or more phospholipid bilayers, able to accommodate water- and lipid-soluble molecules. They are used as a delivery system for drugs, genes and vaccines in therapeutics. Liposomes may be formulated with a range of characteristics including different size, charge and drug retention, which can be tailored for a given drug and target site. There is a range of clinical products approved for use which exploit liposomes to passively target drugs or vaccines to the appropriate site of action thereby improving specificity and reducing toxicity. Liposomes can also be actively targeted to specific cells or subcellular regions using targeting ligands attached to their surface, or by modification of the bilayer to give triggered release under appropriate conditions.
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The relationship between biology and politics is manifold, ranging from politics within biology and implications of politics for biological research to intrinsic political dimensions of biological insights. Politics within biology plays out in the everyday practice of academic and applied science and has recently reached a new dimension in the context of priority and patent disputes, whereas political interventions in form of regulatory and funding policies have become major factors in shaping biological research. Here we focus on how the results of biology, and specifically modern evolutionary biology and its conceptual extensions, have shaped discussions in economics, medicine and public health and anthropology. We argue that these recent developments in the life sciences have enormous conceptual and practical implications for human society and politics as they contribute to a substantial reevaluation of some deeply entrenched conceptions about human nature and the foundations of society.
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The discovery in the early 1970s that cervical cancer was caused by infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) stimulated a highly successful vaccine development programme based on the use of recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) technology to produce virus proteins in a form that can stimulate powerful and long lasting antibody responses. The vaccines have been designed as combinations to target the HPV virus types that are responsible for most human disease. Clinical trials have shown that it is possible to prevent both genital warts and the early stages of cervical cancer through vaccination and this has led to licensure and use of HPV vaccines in many countries throughout the world. Progression from initial virus infection to development of invasive cancer is often very slow, however, and so it will be many years before the impact of the vaccine on the overall disease burden is fully understood.
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Before the seventeenth century, interest in birds centred largely on folklore and their symbolic significance. Ray and Willughby's encyclopaedia, the Ornithology of Francis Willughby (1676 and 1678) marked a turning point in the study of birds by rejecting folklore and focussing especially on biology. Following Ray's Wisdom of God (1691), which addressed ultimate causes, the study of birds developed along two separate strands: (i) systematics, nomenclature and faunistics (inspired by Ornithology) and (ii) natural history (inspired by Wisdom). The first of these endeavours dominated ornithology for the next 250 years, and were the main focus of the ornithological Unions founded in the 1800s. The two strands were reunited in the 1920s (central Europe) and 1940s (the UK and the USA). After World War II not only the expansion of higher education resulted in a huge increase in both the number of professional ornithologists, but also our knowledge of avian natural history and evolution.
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Sjögren's syndrome is a lymphoproliferative disease with autoimmune features characterized by mononuclear cell infiltration of exocrine glands, notably the lacrimal and salivary glands (autoimmune exocrinopathy). These lymphoid infiltrations lead to dryness of the eyes (keratoconjunctivitis sicca), dryness of the mouth (xerostomia) and frequently, dryness of the nose, throat, vagina and skin. Sjögren's syndrome is associated with the production of autoantibodies because B-cell activation is a consistent immunoregulatory abnormality. The spectrum of the disease extends from an organ-specific autoimmune disorder to a systemic process (musculoskeletal, pulmonary, gastric, haematologic, dermatologic, renal and nervous system involvement). Sjögren's syndrome may occur alone (primary) or in association with almost any of the autoimmune rheumatic diseases (secondary), the most frequent being rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Sjögren's syndrome also is associated with an increased risk of B-cell lymphoma development. Current treatments are mainly symptomatic.
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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a progressive neurodegenerative syndrome characterized by loss of motor neurons. Cognitive impairment occurs in a significant proportion of those affected. Numerous theories of pathogenesis have been advanced. The most cogent hypothesis is that genetic susceptibilities to neurodegeneration interact with environmental exposures, leading to neuronal injury, glial activation and neuronal death. Modern tools of molecular and cell biology and constructive international collaborations have provided insights into the factors that increase disease susceptibility. The important observation that genes associated with ribonucleic acid (RNA) processing are implicated in disease pathogenesis will undoubtedly influence the direction of research in the coming years. These factors, combined with improvements in clinical trial design, and an improved understanding of the limitations of translating positive findings from animal models to human subjects, are likely to lead to new and successful therapeutic options for patients in the near future.
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Climate, more than any other factor, controls the broad-scale distributions of plant species and vegetation. Rapid climate change over the next century is likely to lead to major changes in the distribution of plants and thus in biomes and habitats. This will affect many other nonplant species as their ecology is intimately linked not only to climate but also to the habitat availability. How plants have already responded to climate change, concentrating on their phenology, the timing of events in their annual cycle such as leaf out or flowering and shifts in species ranges are summarized. How plants have responded in the past to changing climates particularly since the end of the last ice age is also discussed. Simulation modelling is a tool that is being used to forecast vegetation change and some of the techniques and forecasts for the future from modelling experiments are also described.
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Stable isotope geochemistry has proved to be an extremely useful tool in elucidating many ecological problems, with stable isotope ecology comprising the theme of a series of international conferences (http://www.isoecol.org). Stable isotopes can be used as biological tracers in the following ways: (i) to identify sources, for instance in determining the identity of basal carbon in a food web; (ii) to distinguish sources, for example to determine whether a breeding animal is using local resources or its own reserves; (iii) to quantify relative inputs in a system, for example determining the proportions of different prey items to a consumer's diet. When utilized carefully, stable isotope geochemistry provides some advantages over conventional methods, and provides an additional device for the ecologist. The following article provides a short reference for ecologists considering the inclusion of stable isotope analysis as part of their methodology.
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Plant–water relations concern how plants control the hydration of their cells, including the collection of water from the soil, its transport within the plant and its loss by evaporation from the leaves. The water status of plants is usually expressed as ‘water potential’, which has units of pressure, is always negative, and in simple form is the algebraic sum of the hydrostatic pressure and the osmotic pressure of water. Flow of water through plant and soil over macroscopic distances is driven by gradients in hydrostatic pressure. Over microscopic distances (e.g. across semipermeable membranes) it is driven by gradients in water potential. Evaporation of water from leaves is primarily controlled by stomata, and if not made good by the flow of water from soil through the plant to the leaves, results in the plants wilting. Resistances to this flow are still not well understood.
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