pmid: 31728814
pmc: PMC7040053
AbstractIt is commonly assumed that many, if not most, adult children have moral duties to visit their parents when they can do so at reasonable cost. However, whether such duties persist when the parents lose the ability to recognise their children, usually due to dementia, is more controversial. Over 40% of respondents in a public survey from the British Alzheimer’s Society said that it was “pointless” to keep up contact at this stage. Insofar as one cannot be morally required to do pointless things, this would suggest that children are relieved of any duties to visit their parents. In what appears to be the only scholarly treatment of this issue, Claudia Mills has defended this view, arguing that our duties to visit our parents require a type of relationship that is lost when parents no longer remember who their children are. This article challenges Mills’ argument. Not only can children be duty-bound to visit parents who have lost the ability to recognise them, I argue that many children do in fact have such duties. As I show, these duties are grounded in any special interests that their parents have in their company; the fact that visiting their parents might allow them to comply with generic duties of sociability; and/or the fact that such visits allow them to express any gratitude that they owe their parents.
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citations | 3 | |
popularity | Average | |
influence | Average | |
impulse | Average |
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Polar nuclear migration is crucial during the development of diverse eukaryotes. In plants, root hair growth requires polar nuclear migration into the outgrowing hair. However, knowledge about the dynamics and the regulatory mechanisms underlying nuclear movements in root epidermal cells remains limited. Here, we show that both auxin and Rho-of-Plant (ROP) signaling modulate polar nuclear position at the inner epidermal plasma membrane domain oriented to the cortical cells during cell elongation as well as subsequent polar nuclear movement to the outer domain into the emerging hair bulge in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Auxin signaling via the nuclear AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR7 (ARF7)/ARF19 and INDOLE ACETIC ACID7 pathway ensures correct nuclear placement toward the inner membrane domain. Moreover, precise inner nuclear placement relies on SPIKE1 Rho-GEF, SUPERCENTIPEDE1 Rho-GDI, and ACTIN7 (ACT7) function and to a lesser extent on VTI11 vacuolar SNARE activity. Strikingly, the directionality and/or velocity of outer polar nuclear migration into the hair outgrowth along actin strands also are ACT7 dependent, auxin sensitive, and regulated by ROP signaling. Thus, our findings provide a founding framework revealing auxin and ROP signaling of inner polar nuclear position with some contribution by vacuolar morphology and of actin-dependent outer polar nuclear migration in root epidermal hair cells. Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe, 992
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citations | 30 | |
popularity | Top 10% | |
influence | Average | |
impulse | Top 10% |
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ABSTRACT Development of the Drosophila visceral muscle depends on Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (Alk) receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) signaling, which specifies founder cells (FCs) in the circular visceral mesoderm (VM). Although Alk activation by its ligand Jelly Belly (Jeb) is well characterized, few target molecules have been identified. Here, we used targeted DamID (TaDa) to identify Alk targets in embryos overexpressing Jeb versus embryos with abrogated Alk activity, revealing differentially expressed genes, including the Snail/Scratch family transcription factor Kahuli (Kah). We confirmed Kah mRNA and protein expression in the VM, and identified midgut constriction defects in Kah mutants similar to those of pointed (pnt). ChIP and RNA-Seq data analysis defined a Kah target-binding site similar to that of Snail, and identified a set of common target genes putatively regulated by Kah and Pnt during midgut constriction. Taken together, we report a rich dataset of Alk-responsive loci in the embryonic VM and functionally characterize the role of Kah in the regulation of embryonic midgut morphogenesis.
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citations | 3 | |
popularity | Average | |
influence | Average | |
impulse | Average |
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doi: 10.1007/jhep08(2018)048 , 10.3204/pubdb-2017-13283 , 10.48550/arxiv.1806.01762 , 10.7892/boris.129039 , 10.3204/pubdb-2018-00366 , 10.3204/pubdb-2018-04527 , 10.48550/arxiv.1707.03347 , 10.3204/pubdb-2018-04549
handle: 1822/48943 , 1822/57534 , 11585/623380 , 11587/425102 , 11588/742838 , 11568/1164382 , 11568/951392 , 11568/892841 , 11567/933248 , 11567/933480 , 11367/65814 , 11590/337946 , 11590/329761 , 2108/191141 , 11390/1165104 , 11390/1122695 , 11572/223811 , 11572/223607 , 20.500.11820/a642c223-1340-485e-9e52-6dcafe54f2a1 , 10400.26/27390 , 10400.26/27659 , 20.500.11770/268311 , 10481/57945 , 2434/671425 , 2434/550264 , 2066/194761 , 10852/66055 , 20.500.11851/9366 , 20.500.11851/3619 , 11245.1/2b0558eb-dbda-4096-8f96-40cd436f1acd , 11245.1/e98221f7-5621-44ac-b678-897f460a1d5b , https://repository.ubn.ru.nl/handle/2066/178943 , https://repository.ubn.ru.nl/handle/2066/194761
doi: 10.1007/jhep08(2018)048 , 10.3204/pubdb-2017-13283 , 10.48550/arxiv.1806.01762 , 10.7892/boris.129039 , 10.3204/pubdb-2018-00366 , 10.3204/pubdb-2018-04527 , 10.48550/arxiv.1707.03347 , 10.3204/pubdb-2018-04549
handle: 1822/48943 , 1822/57534 , 11585/623380 , 11587/425102 , 11588/742838 , 11568/1164382 , 11568/951392 , 11568/892841 , 11567/933248 , 11567/933480 , 11367/65814 , 11590/337946 , 11590/329761 , 2108/191141 , 11390/1165104 , 11390/1122695 , 11572/223811 , 11572/223607 , 20.500.11820/a642c223-1340-485e-9e52-6dcafe54f2a1 , 10400.26/27390 , 10400.26/27659 , 20.500.11770/268311 , 10481/57945 , 2434/671425 , 2434/550264 , 2066/194761 , 10852/66055 , 20.500.11851/9366 , 20.500.11851/3619 , 11245.1/2b0558eb-dbda-4096-8f96-40cd436f1acd , 11245.1/e98221f7-5621-44ac-b678-897f460a1d5b , https://repository.ubn.ru.nl/handle/2066/178943 , https://repository.ubn.ru.nl/handle/2066/194761
Abstract A search is presented for the pair production of heavy vector-like B quarks, primarily targeting B quark decays into a W boson and a top quark. The search is based on 36.1 fb−1 of pp collisions at $$ \sqrt{s}=13 $$ s = 13 TeV recorded in 2015 and 2016 with the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. Data are analysed in the lepton-plus-jets final state, characterised by a high-transverse-momentum isolated electron or muon, large missing transverse momentum, and multiple jets, of which at least one is b-tagged. No significant deviation from the Standard Model expectation is observed. The 95% confidence level lower limit on the B mass is 1350 GeV assuming a 100% branching ratio to Wt. In the SU(2) singlet scenario, the lower mass limit is 1170 GeV. The 100% branching ratio limits are found to be also applicable to heavy vector-like X production, with charge +5/3, that decay into Wt. This search is also sensitive to a heavy vector-like B quark decaying into other final states (Zb and Hb) and thus mass limits on B production are set as a function of the decay branching ratios.
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Green | |
gold |
citations | 30 | |
popularity | Top 10% | |
influence | Average | |
impulse | Top 10% |
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