Publications by authors named "S Steimer"

Road traffic is an important source of urban air pollutants. Due to increasingly strict controls of exhaust emissions from road traffic, their contribution to the total emissions has strongly decreased over time in high-income countries. In contrast, non-exhaust emissions from road vehicles are not yet legislated and now make up the major proportion of road traffic emissions in many countries.

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Female cancer patients who have undergone chemotherapy have an elevated risk of developing ovarian dysfunction and failure. Experimental approaches to treat iatrogenic infertility are evolving rapidly; however, challenges and risks remain that hinder clinical translation. Biomaterials have improved in vitro follicle maturation and in vivo transplantation in mice, but there has only been marginal success for early-stage human follicles.

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Article Synopsis
  • Exposure to particulate matter (PM), particularly ultrafine particles (UFPs) from different transport modes, has been linked to various negative health effects, but the specific toxicity levels and health impacts from each mode remain unclear.
  • The review focuses on toxicological and epidemiological studies comparing UFPs from vehicle exhaust (like diesel and biodiesel), shipping, aviation, and subway systems, demonstrating that inhalation of these particles can affect not just lung health but also cardiovascular and brain functions.
  • Limited studies exist on the toxicity of UFPs from different sources, but findings suggest a need for more research to better understand the health implications of source-specific nanoparticles and their relative potencies across various transport modes.
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Plants combine both chemical and structural means to appear colorful. We now have an extensive understanding of the metabolic pathways used by flowering plants to synthesize pigments, but the mechanisms remain obscure whereby cells produce microscopic structures sufficiently regular to interfere with light and create an optical effect. Here, we combine transgenic approaches in a novel model system, Hibiscus trionum, with chemical analyses of the cuticle, both in transgenic lines and in different species of Hibiscus, to investigate the formation of a semi-ordered diffraction grating on the petal surface.

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