Publications by authors named "S Aupers"

Conspiracy theories are immensely popular today, yet in the social sciences they are often dismissed as "irrational," "bad science," or "religious belief." In this study, we take a cultural sociological approach and argue that this persistent disqualification is a form of "boundary work" that obscures rather than clarifies how and why conspiracy theorists challenge the epistemic authority of science. Based on a qualitative study of the Dutch conspiracy milieu, we distinguish three critiques that are motivated by encounters with scientific experts in everyday life: the alleged dogmatism of modern science, the intimate relation of scientific knowledge production with vested interests, and the exclusion of lay knowledge by scientific experts forming a global "power elite.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Extensive invasion of the maternal decidua by extravillous trophoblast is considered of critical importance for implantation and placentation in humans, the decidua being viewed as a passively invaded tissue. In this study, we examined whether decidual cells might contribute to the highly dynamic processes at the fetal-maternal interface by active movement.

Methods: Primary endometrial stromal cells (ESCs) or the telomerase-immortalized ESC line, St-T1b, was induced to decidualize or was left undifferentiated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The human placenta is a tissue with a unique capacity for rapid, but--as opposed to malignant tumours--tightly controlled proliferation and invasion capacity. The members of the activating protein-1 (AP-1) family of transcription factors are key regulators of cellular proliferation, differentiation and invasion processes in many systems and could, thus, play an important role in regulating these processes in the human placenta as well. In the present study, we used immunohistochemistry with specific antibodies against all members of the AP-1 family (c-Jun, JunB, JunD and c-Fos, FosB, Fra-1, Fra-2) to investigate their expression pattern and tissue localization in the human placenta.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study, a specific monoclonal antibody was used to immunohistochemically investigate correlated expression of the cell cycle promoter cyclin E and the proliferation marker Ki-67 in benign extravillous trophoblast and gestational trophoblastic lesions. Our data show that cyclin E is expressed in the normal extravillous trophoblast, with strongest levels of expression in the cell columns of anchoring villi. Differences could be observed in expression of Ki-67 in both normal extravillous trophoblast and gestational trophoblastic lesions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF