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17
result(s) for
"Casey, Maurice J"
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‘Save Me from My Friends’: The Transnational Intimacies of an Irish-Latvian Couple within and beyond the Irish Revolution, 1916–1921
2023
What can a focus on intimacies and affinities between radical immigrants in Ireland and their Irish counterparts tell us about the transnational scope of the global Irish revolution? This article answers this question through the lives of Rose MacKenna, an Irish playwright and socialist, and her husband Sidney Arnold, a Latvian literary translator. The activist career of this obscure Irish-Latvian couple took them from revolutionary Dublin in the wake of the Easter Rising to Petrograd in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution. This article argues that MacKenna and Arnold, by virtue of their obscurity and marginality, rather than in spite of it, can suggest the sources and methodologies required to uncover the transnational world of Ireland's radical intelligentsia.
Journal Article
Irish Women and Radical Internationalism : from Suffrage to Antifascism, 1916-1939
2020
This thesis is a transnational political history of Irish women who proceeded from the suffrage campaign into the networks of interwar radical internationalism, grounded in the personal relationships and spatial contexts which shaped their careers. The project provides a detailed analysis of Irish women’s engagement with internationalist movements such as international communism and antifascism. Adopting an inclusive definition of Irishness, activists born in Ireland are included in the study alongside those with Irish ancestry who identified with Irish political causes later in their careers. Figures prominent in the analysis include Charlotte Despard (1844-1939), Katherine Gillett Gatty (1870-1952), May O’Callaghan (1881-1973) and Hanna Sheehy Skeffington (1877-1946). The thesis offers a history of the Irish left that expands its focus beyond the island of Ireland, encompassing activism in locations such as East London during the First World War, Moscow in the late 1920s and continental European antifascist networks. In doing so, it offers insights into a broad spectrum of Irish radicals and their international counterparts. The thesis demonstrates how a focus in the historiography of the Irish radical left on prominent socialist republican figures and organisations has marginalised women and obscured revealing case studies. Challenging a tendency in British and Irish women’s history to consider women’s internationalism as synonymous with liberal internationalism, my approach explores how radical communist-inspired internationalism influenced many activist women during this period. Responding to recent methodological insights in histories of international communism, particularly a turn towards transnational and biographical approaches, my project demonstrates how looking beyond formal Communist Party members can highlight hitherto obscure activists involved in Irish leftist groups and in the Comintern. Exploring a diverse set of Irish radical women alongside their comrades, this thesis ultimately argues that their profoundly transnational post-suffrage careers were sustained by connections to the initiatives and comradeships fostered by radical internationalism.
Dissertation
Gay and Lesbian Activism in the Republic of Ireland, 1973-93
2024
Casey reviews Gay and Lesbian Activism in the Republic of Ireland, 1973-93 by Patrick McDonagh.
Book Review
Impact of the common MTHFR 677C→T polymorphism on blood pressure in adulthood and role of riboflavin in modifying the genetic risk of hypertension: evidence from the JINGO project
by
McNulty, Helene
,
Hughes, Catherine F.
,
McCarroll, Kevin
in
Adults
,
Aged
,
Antihypertensive Agents - therapeutic use
2020
Background
Genome-wide and clinical studies have linked the 677C→T polymorphism in the gene encoding methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) with hypertension, whilst limited evidence shows that intervention with riboflavin (i.e. the MTHFR co-factor) can lower blood pressure (BP) in hypertensive patients with the variant
MTHFR
677TT genotype. We investigated the impact of this common polymorphism on BP throughout adulthood and hypothesised that riboflavin status would modulate the genetic risk of hypertension.
Methods
Observational data on 6076 adults of 18–102 years were drawn from the Joint Irish Nutrigenomics Organisation project, comprising the Trinity-Ulster Department of Agriculture (TUDA; volunteer sample) and the National Adult Nutrition Survey (NANS; population-based sample) cohorts. Participants were recruited from the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland (UK) in 2008–2012 using standardised methods.
Results
The variant
MTHFR
677TT genotype was identified in 12% of adults. From 18 to 70 years, this genotype was associated with an increased risk of hypertension (i.e. systolic BP ≥ 140 and/or a diastolic BP ≥ 90 mmHg): odds ratio (OR) 1.42, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.07 to 1.90;
P
= 0.016, after adjustment for antihypertensive drug use and other significant factors, namely, age, male sex, BMI, alcohol and total cholesterol. Low or deficient biomarker status of riboflavin (observed in 30.2% and 30.0% of participants, respectively) exacerbated the genetic risk of hypertension, with a 3-fold increased risk for the TT genotype in combination with deficient riboflavin status (OR 3.00, 95% CI, 1.34–6.68;
P
= 0.007) relative to the CC genotype combined with normal riboflavin status. Up to 65 years, we observed poorer BP control rates on antihypertensive treatment in participants with the TT genotype (30%) compared to those without this variant, CT (37%) and CC (45%) genotypes (
P
< 0.027).
Conclusions
The
MTHFR
677TT genotype is associated with higher BP independently of homocysteine and predisposes adults to an increased risk of hypertension and poorer BP control with antihypertensive treatment, whilst better riboflavin status is associated with a reduced genetic risk. Riboflavin intervention may thus offer a personalised approach to prevent the onset of hypertension in adults with the TT genotype; however, this requires confirmation in a randomised trial in non-hypertensive adults.
Journal Article
Long non-coding RNA ZFAS1 is a major regulator of epithelial-mesenchymal transition through miR-200/ZEB1/E-cadherin, vimentin signaling in colon adenocarcinoma
by
Patel, Ajay
,
Galandiuk, Susan
,
Kalbfleisch, Theodore
in
Adenocarcinoma
,
Carcinogenesis
,
Colon cancer
2021
Colon adenocarcinoma is a common cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Epithelial-mesenchymal transition is a major regulator of cancer metastasis, and increased understanding of this process is essential to improve patient outcomes. Long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) are important regulators of carcinogenesis. To identify lncRNAs associated with colon carcinogenesis, we performed an exploratory differential gene expression analysis comparing paired colon adenocarcinoma and normal colon epithelium using an RNA-sequencing data set. This analysis identified lncRNA ZFAS1 as significantly increased in colon cancer compared to normal colon epithelium. This finding was validated in an institutional cohort using laser capture microdissection. ZFAS1 was also found to be principally located in the cellular cytoplasm. ZFAS1 knockdown was associated with decreased cellular proliferation, migration, and invasion in two colon cancer cell lines (HT29 and SW480). MicroRNA-200b and microRNA-200c (miR-200b and miR-200c) are experimentally validated targets of ZFAS1, and this interaction was confirmed using reciprocal gene knockdown. ZFAS1 knockdown regulated ZEB1 gene expression and downstream targets E-cadherin and vimentin. Knockdown of miR-200b or miR-200c reversed the effect of ZFAS1 knockdown in the ZEB1/E-cadherin, vimentin signaling cascade, and the effects of cellular migration and invasion, but not cellular proliferation. ZFAS1 knockdown was also associated with decreased tumor growth in an in vivo mouse model. These results demonstrate the critical importance of ZFAS1 as a regulator of the miR-200/ZEB1/E-cadherin, vimentin signaling cascade.
Journal Article
Crohn’s disease–related single nucleotide polymorphisms are associated with ileal pouch afferent limb stenosis
by
Hallion, Jacob
,
Gardner, Sarah
,
Pan, Jianmin
in
Colitis, Ulcerative - genetics
,
Colitis, Ulcerative - surgery
,
Colonic Pouches
2021
Background
Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) is a common surgical treatment for ulcerative colitis. Afferent limb stenosis is an infrequent complication following IPAA, suggesting underlying Crohn’s disease (CD). We hypothesized that CD-related single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are associated with afferent limb stenosis.
Methods
Afferent limb stenosis and CD control group patients were recruited from a prospective institutional inflammatory bowel disease database and associated biobank. Patient demographics, Montreal classification, and medication use were recorded. Ten SNPs associated with stricturing Crohn’s disease were examined in genomic DNA and compared among afferent limb stenosis, stricturing CD, and non-stricturing CD controls.
Results
Twenty-seven afferent limb stenosis and 162 CD control group patients (108 stricturing, 54 non-stricturing) were identified. Patients were gender and race matched. Afferent limb stenosis and stricturing CD controls were younger at diagnosis (Montreal A1/A2 vs. A3) compared to non-stricturing CD controls (both
p
< 0.05). The majority of afferent limb stenosis patients were non-smokers compared to CD controls (74% vs. 36%,
p
< 0.01) and did not use biologic therapies (4% vs. 37%,
p
< 0.001). The FUT2 G allele was more frequent in afferent limb stenosis and stricturing CD controls compared to non-stricturing CD controls (both
p
< 0.05). The NOD2 T allele was more frequent in stricturing CD controls compared to afferent limb stenosis and non-stricturing CD controls (both
p
< 0.05).
Conclusion
Afferent limb stenosis patients are phenotypically similar to stricturing CD controls, but differ with lower smoking rates and lower NOD2 allele frequency. Such differences could contribute to the presentation delay with a stricturing phenotype. Selective SNP assessment may help categorize patients likely to develop afferent limb stenosis.
Journal Article