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Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde mar. 1997 / hasta dic. 2023 Science Journals

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0036-8075

ISSN electrónico

1095-9203

Editor responsable

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Consumption: Challenge to Sustainable Development …

Norman Myers

<jats:p>Consumption cannot persist in its present patterns and forms. This is apparent with respect to, for example, the many consumer products dependent on artificially cheap fossil-fuel energy, which is the single largest source of global warming. There are many ways to shift consumption toward less resource-intensive and polluting types, hence to constrain it rather than restrain it. Moreover, this will often lead to increased quality of life. The way ahead can be illuminated by a clearer scientific understanding of what drives consumption.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 53-55

… or Distraction?

Jeffrey R. Vincent; Theodore Panayotou

<jats:p>Environmental degradation and resource depletion are not inevitably linked to consumption. The root causes of these problems are instead market and policy failures that lead consumers and producers to ignore the full social costs of their decisions. Policy-makers should focus not on capping consumption, but rather on addressing market and policy failures through economic and political liberalization and environmental policy reform.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 55-57

Frontiers in Medicine: Regeneration

Pamela J. Hines

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 59-59

Liver Regeneration

George K. Michalopoulos; Marie C. DeFrances

<jats:p>Liver regeneration after the loss of hepatic tissue is a fundamental parameter of liver response to injury. Recognized as a phenomenon from mythological times, it is now defined as an orchestrated response induced by specific external stimuli and involving sequential changes in gene expression, growth factor production, and morphologic structure. Many growth factors and cytokines, most notably hepatocyte growth factor, epidermal growth factor, transforming growth factor-α, interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-α, insulin, and norepinephrine, appear to play important roles in this process. This review attempts to integrate the findings of the last three decades and looks toward clues as to the nature of the causes that trigger this fascinating organ and cellular response.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 60-66

Stem Cells in the Central Nervous System

Ronald McKay

<jats:p>In the vertebrate central nervous system, multipotential cells have been identified in vitro and in vivo. Defined mitogens cause the proliferation of multipotential cells in vitro, the magnitude of which is sufficient to account for the number of cells in the brain. Factors that control the differentiation of fetal stem cells to neurons and glia have been defined in vitro, and multipotential cells with similar signaling logic can be cultured from the adult central nervous system. Transplanting cells to new sites emphasizes that neuroepithelial cells have the potential to integrate into many brain regions. These results focus attention on how information in external stimuli is translated into the number and types of differentiated cells in the brain. The development of therapies for the reconstruction of the diseased or injured brain will be guided by our understanding of the origin and stability of cell type in the central nervous system.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 66-71

Marrow Stromal Cells as Stem Cells for Nonhematopoietic Tissues

Darwin J. Prockop

<jats:p>Marrow stromal cells can be isolated from other cells in marrow by their tendency to adhere to tissue culture plastic. The cells have many of the characteristics of stem cells for tissues that can roughly be defined as mesenchymal, because they can be differentiated in culture into osteoblasts, chondrocytes, adipocytes, and even myoblasts. Therefore, marrow stromal cells present an intriguing model for examining the differentiation of stem cells. Also, they have several characteristics that make them potentially useful for cell and gene therapy.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 71-74

Wound Healing--Aiming for Perfect Skin Regeneration

Paul Martin

<jats:p>The healing of an adult skin wound is a complex process requiring the collaborative efforts of many different tissues and cell lineages. The behavior of each of the contributing cell types during the phases of proliferation, migration, matrix synthesis, and contraction, as well as the growth factor and matrix signals present at a wound site, are now roughly understood. Details of how these signals control wound cell activities are beginning to emerge, and studies of healing in embryos have begun to show how the normal adult repair process might be readjusted to make it less like patching up and more like regeneration.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 75-81

Amphibian Limb Regeneration: Rebuilding a Complex Structure

Jeremy P. Brockes

<jats:p>The ability to regenerate complex structures is widespread in metazoan phylogeny, but among vertebrates the urodele amphibians are exceptional. Adult urodeles can regenerate their limbs by local formation of a mesenchymal growth zone or blastema. The generation of blastemal cells depends not only on the local extracellular environment after amputation or wounding but also on the ability to reenter the cell cycle from the differentiated state. The blastema replaces structures appropriate to its proximodistal position. Axial identity is probably encoded as a graded property that controls cellular growth and movement through local cell interactions. The molecular basis is not understood, but proximodistal identity in newt blastemal cells may be respecified by signaling through a retinoic acid receptor isoform. The possibility of inducing a blastema on a mammalian limb cannot be discounted, although the molecular constraints are becoming clearer as we understand more about the mechanisms of urodele regeneration.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 81-87

Energy Conditions in the Epoch of Galaxy Formation

Matt Visser

<jats:p>The energy conditions of Einsteinian gravity (classical general relativity) do not require one to fix a specific equation of state. In a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe where the equation of state for the cosmological fluid is uncertain, the energy conditions provide simple, model-independent, and robust bounds on the behavior of the density and look-back time as a function of red shift. Current observations suggest that the “strong energy condition” was violated sometime between the epoch of galaxy formation and the present. This implies that no possible combination of “normal” matter is capable of fitting the observational data.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 88-90

An Occurrence of Metastable Cristobalite in High-Pressure Garnet Granulite

Robert S. Darling; I-Ming Chou; Robert J. Bodnar

<jats:p>High-pressure (0.8 gigapascals) granulite facies garnet from Gore Mountain, New York, hosts multiple solid inclusions containing the low-pressure silica polymorph cristobalite along with albite and minor ilmenite. Identification of cristobalite is based on Raman spectra, electron microprobe analysis, and microthermometric measurements on the α/β phase transformation. The cristobalite plus albite inclusions may have originated as small, trapped samples of hydrous sodium-aluminum-siliceous melt. Diffusive loss of water from these inclusions under isothermal, isochoric conditions may have resulted in a large enough internal pressure decrease to promote the metastable crystallization of cristobalite.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 91-93