The findings suggest that mitochondria in oocytes and preimplantation embryos may be heterogeneous with respect to deltapsim. We propose that high-polarized pericortical mitochondria may have a role in the acquisition of oocyte competence and the regulation of early developmental processes that may be associated with elevated metabolism or intracellular signalling through calcium-induced calcium release pathways.
Overconsumption in affluent societies is the root or contributing cause of many of the world's most pressing problems, including environmental degradation, global poverty, peak oil and consumer malaise. This suggests that any transition to a sustainable and just society will require those who are overconsuming to move to far more materially 'simple' lifestyles. The Voluntary Simplicity Movement can be understood broadly as a diverse social movement made up of people who are resisting high consumption lifestyles and who are seeking, in various ways, a lower consumption but higher quality of life alternative. Recently a multi-national online survey was launched for the purpose of gaining empirical insight into this 'post-consumerist' social movement, and this study provides the most extensive sociological examination of the movement available. After situating the Voluntary Simplicity Movement in theoretical context, this article presents a foundational analysis of these new survey results.
It has been suggested that mitochondrial DNA defects that effect metabolic capacity may be a proximal cause of failures in oocyte maturation, fertilization, or early embryonic development. Here, the distribution of mitochondria was examined by scanning laser confocal microscopy in living human pronuclear oocytes and cleavage stage embryos, followed either by measurements of the net ATP content of individual blastomeres or anti-tubulin immunofluorescence to determine the relationship between mitochondrial distribution and microtubular organization. The results indicate that specific patterns of perinuclear mitochondrial aggregation and microtubular organization are related, and that asymmetrical mitochondrial distributions at the pronuclear stage can result in some proportion of blastomeres with reduced mitochondrial inheritance and diminished ATP generating capacity. While the inability to divide appears to be a development consequence for an affected blastomere, for the embryo, reduced competence may occur during cleavage if several blastomeres inherit a mitochondrial complement inadequate to support normal cellular functions. The findings provide a possible epigenetic explanation for the variable developmental ability expressed within cohorts of morphologically normal early cleavage stage human embryos obtained by in-vitro fertilization.
The occurrence of a pleiomorphic population of cytoplasmic fragments is a common characteristic of early human embryos fertilized in vitro. Here, temporal, spatial, fine structural, and biochemical aspects of fragmentation were examined in fragmented monospermic and dispermic pronuclear to early cleavage stages human embryos classified as stage-appropriate during the first 3.5 days of culture. The morphodynamics of certain common patterns of fragmentation and the movement and composition of fragments were analysed by time-lapse video, mitochondrial fluorescent probes, and transmission electron microscopy. Plasma membrane and nuclear DNA integrity were assessed by annexin V staining, and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labelling (TUNEL) and single-cell alkaline gel electrophoresis ('comet') assays respectively. Developmental competence for affected embryos was related to outcome after embryo transfer. The results demonstrate that certain common forms of spontaneous fragmentation affecting early human embryos are not lethal, and that clusters of apparent fragments are often transient structures, which disappear by resorption or lysis. The findings suggest that the occurrence and fate of fragments characteristic of these phenotypes may be related to oncosis-like processes associated with transient and focal ATP deficiencies in blastomeres and mitochondrial deficiencies or absence in extracellular fragments.
The Voluntary Simplicity Movement can be understood broadly as a diverse social movement made up of people who are resisting high consumption lifestyles and who are seeking, in various ways, a lower consumption but higher quality of life alternative. The central argument of this paper
is that the Voluntary Simplicity Movement or something like it will almost certainly need to expand, organise, radicalise and politicise, if anything resembling a degrowth society is to emerge in law through democratic processes. In a sentence, that is the 'grass-roots' or 'bottom up' theory
of legal and political transformation that will be expounded and defended in this paper. The essential reasoning here is that legal, political and economic structures will never reflect a post-growth ethics of macro-economic sufficiency until a post-consumerist ethics of micro-economic sufficiency
is embraced and mainstreamed at the cultural level.
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