Water Quality Issues Force Two State Park Beaches To Close Early

By Austin Robertson

CREATED 10:16 PM

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (MoDNR) - Watkins Mill State Park and Lake of the Ozarks State Parks Grand Glaize swimming beaches are closed due to water quality issues according to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.

Results received today showed continued water quality issues at Watkins Mill State Park beach. Staff at Lake of the Ozarks State Park closed Grand Glaize Beach today when results showed that one of the two water samples taken at the beach failed to meet Missouri State Parks standards.

Both beaches are scheduled to close for the recreational season after the Labor Day holiday weekend. Therefore, no additional water samples will be collected from the beaches and they will remain closed for the season. Public Beach #1 at Lake of the Ozarks State Park remains open until Sept. 4.

The water at all designated beaches in the state park system is sampled weekly during the recreational season by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources to determine suitability for swimming.

Water quality can be determined to be unsuitable for swimming based on either the single sample taken earlier in the week, or by the geometric mean, which is a mathematical value that takes into consideration results from the current week plus the results taken during the previous weeks.

Both beaches closed this week had single samples in excess of the standard. The beach at Watkins Mill State Park also exceeds the geometric mean, which is a mathematical value that takes into consideration results from the current week plus the results taken during the previous weeks.

Higher bacteria levels are often associated with heavy rains that result in runoff from adjacent lands. However, there are a number of possibilities that can contribute to higher bacteria, and chances are no single source is the cause.

The sample test results indicate a snap shot of the water quality taken at the beaches at a specific time; however, a single sample does not provide an overall sense of the water quality in the lake where the beach is located.

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Water Quality Issues Force Two State Park Beaches To Close Early

Several Cape Cod beaches closed due to shark activity

Family discovers Great White shark feeding on seal

The Town of Chatham is closing several east facing ocean beaches from the Orleans/Chatham line south along Nauset Beach to Monomoy until further notice, due to the recent reports of shark activity by local fisherman.

Dan Tobin, the Director of Parks & Recreation, said the Town of Chatham has received numerous reports of increased white shark activity in the vicinity of Chathams eastern, ocean facing beaches.

The reports included a video posted on YouTube of a shark attacking a seal in the area of the South Tip of Monomoy.

Several fishermen reported white sharks in their nets off-shore and the Division of Marine Fisheries while attempting to tag a shark in the vicinity of South Beach, reported white sharks close to shore in the vicinity of swimmers.

The town wants people to avoid swimming within 300 feet of seals. If a shark is sighted, exit the water immediately and contact authorities.

All other public beaches will remain open to swimming, including Hardings Beach, Ridgevale Beach, Cockle Cove Beach, Forest Street Beach and Pleasant Street Beach along Nantucket Sound.

A family on a whale watching expedition captured video of a shark eating a seal off Monomoy Island.

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Several Cape Cod beaches closed due to shark activity

Chatham beaches closed for shark sightings

CHATHAM, Mass.Officials in Chatham have closed all eastern, open ocean-facing beaches because of increased reports from fishermen of sharks nearby.

The closings Wednesday affect beaches from the Orleans-Chatham town line south along Nauset Beach to Monomy. They are in effect until further notice.

Other public beaches remain open in the town.

Swimmers are warned to keep aware of their surroundings, and stay at least 300 feet from seals.

Sightings of sharks, including great whites, have increased off Cape Cod in recent years along with an increase in the population of seals, which sharks feed on.

In July, a man was bitten on his legs by a great white shark while swimming off Ballston Beach in Truro, north of Chatham.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Chatham beaches closed for shark sightings

Several Cape Cod beaches closed due to Great White Shark activity

Family discovers Great White shark feeding on seal

The Town of Chatham is closing several east facing ocean beaches from the Orleans/Chatham line south along Nauset Beach to Monomoy until further notice, due to the recent reports of shark activity by local fisherman.

Dan Tobin, the Director of Parks & Recreation, said the Town of Chatham has received numerous reports of increased white shark activity in the vicinity of Chathams eastern, ocean facing beaches.

The reports included a video posted on YouTube of a shark attacking a seal in the area of the South Tip of Monomoy.

Several fishermen reported white sharks in their nets off-shore and the Division of Marine Fisheries while attempting to tag a shark in the vicinity of South Beach, reported white sharks close to shore in the vicinity of swimmers.

The town wants people to avoid swimming within 300 feet of seals. If a shark is sighted, exit the water immediately and contact authorities.

All other public beaches will remain open to swimming, including Hardings Beach, Ridgevale Beach, Cockle Cove Beach, Forest Street Beach and Pleasant Street Beach along Nantucket Sound.

A family on a whale watching expedition captured video of a shark eating a seal off Monomoy Island.

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Several Cape Cod beaches closed due to Great White Shark activity

San Diego beaches remain closed after Tijuana sewage spill

San Diego County beaches near the U.S.-Mexico border remained closed Wednesday as Mexican officials scrambled to halt a sewage spill in Tijuana that has dumped more than 1 million gallons of raw sewage into the ocean since Monday.

Strong southern currents are expected to sweep contaminated waters away from San Diego-area beaches, but health officials closed coastal areas as a precautionary measure, said Steve Smullen, area operations manager for the International Water and Boundary Commission.

Signs warning of sewer contamination are posted from the border to the north end of Imperial Beach.

The sewage is spilling from a pipeline break in Tijuana, about a mile south of the border. Mexican officials have closed beaches in the area.

Its unclear what caused the spill. Environmentalists have blamed aging infrastructure in the past.

Beach closures are common after the Tijuana River swells with runoff from Mexico after heavy rains. The last sewage spill took place in January, 2010, Smullen said.

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LL Cool J burglary suspect pleads not guilty

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-- Richard Marosi in San Diego

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San Diego beaches remain closed after Tijuana sewage spill

Jaw-Dropping Space Pics: UK Contest to Pick Astronomy Photographer of the Year

Judging is underway to choose the most beautiful photos of the night sky from among thousands of entries in the 2012 Astronomy Photographer of the Year contest.

The competition is being held by England's Royal Observatory Greenwich, which will award cash prizes in various categories, including photos of objects in our solar system, in the wider cosmos, and scenic pics of a dazzling sky over landscapes on Earth.

Photos submitted for the awards range from surreal green streaks through the sky caused by the northern lights over Canada, to an eerily red-looking moon captured during a lunar eclipse, and glowing stars, gas and dust in the star cluster IC 1396.

"Shortlisted entries include a breath-taking view of stars over snow-covered Japanese mountains; the full Moon setting behind a historic abbey on Mount Pirchiriano in Italy; a meteor streaking through the sky above a rock formation in Utah, USA; and a group of friends stargazing at a caravan site in the Gower Peninsular, South Wales," Royal Observatory Greenwich officials wrote in a statement."The diversity of locations is not just limited to Earth. Photographers have also captured sights from across our solar system, galaxy and beyond; from detailed mosaics of our moon's surface, to shimmering dust columns in distant nebulae, and out beyond the Milky Way to the swirling Andromeda Galaxy." [Photos: Royal Observatorys 2012 Space Photographer of the Year Finalists]

Now in its fourth year, the contest has gathered judges from diverse backgrounds, including journalists, scientists, historians and artists, to choose the winners. The final selections will be announced Sept. 19, and the awards ceremony will be tweeted live on Twitter using the hashtag #astrophoto12.

The overall winner of the title Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2012 will be awarded 1,500 ($2,374), with 500 ($792) given to the winners of subcategories: Earth and Space, Our Solar System, Deep Space: and Young Astronomy Photographer of the Year. Special prizes will also be given in these categories: People and Space, Best Newcomer, and Robotic Scope Image of the Year.

The Royal Observatory Greenwich is the spot where the Prime Meridian line is drawn, separating the eastern and western hemispheres of Earth. The observatory, which was founded in 1675, is also where Greenwich Mean Time is kept.

Though the submission period for this year's contest has already closed, if you've taken a great photo of space and would like to share it with SPACE.com for a possible gallery or article, please contact managing editor Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com.

Follow SPACE.com on Twitter@Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook&Google+.

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Jaw-Dropping Space Pics: UK Contest to Pick Astronomy Photographer of the Year

Global Aerospace Fasteners Industry

NEW YORK, Aug. 29, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

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This report analyzes the worldwide markets for Aerospace Fasteners in US$ Million. The report provides separate comprehensive analytics for the US, Canada, Japan, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and Rest of World. Annual estimates and forecasts are provided for the period 2010 through 2018. Also, a six-year historic analysis is provided for these markets. The report profiles 100 companies including many key and niche players such as 3V Fasteners Company Inc., Alcoa Fastening Systems, Allfast, Inc., B&B Specialties, Inc., B/E Aerospace, Emhart Teknologies LLC, LISI Aerospace S.A.S, National Aerospace Fasteners Corporation, Nylok Corporation, Precision Castparts Corp., Cherry Aerospace, TFI Aerospace Corporation, TPS Aviation Inc., TriMas Corporation, Monogram Aerospace Fasteners, and Wesco Aircraft Holdings, Inc. Market data and analytics are derived from primary and secondary research. Company profiles are primarily based upon search engine sources in the public domain.

To order this report:Aerospace_and_Defense Industry: Global Aerospace Fasteners Industry

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Global Aerospace Fasteners Industry

ACCC delays Sonic decision Save

Aug. 29, 2012, 10:53 a.m.

The competition regulator has again delayed its decision on whether to allow Sonic Healthcare to take over Healthscope's east coast pathology businesses, raising expectations the $100 million deal might be rejected.

The long-awaited decision was expected to be announced tomorrow, but the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission says it is still seeking information from relevant parties and a decision will be made "in due course."

Sonic Healthcare, the international medical centre, pathology and radiology company, announced in May its intention to buy private equity-owned Healthscope's pathology businesses in Western Australia, Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.

The ACCC, in a statement of issues released earlier this month, said it was its "preliminary view" that the proposed acquisition might raise competition concerns in the Qld, NSW/ACT and WA community pathology services market.

Sonic chief executive Colin Goldshmidt told BusinessDay this month that the deal was "one of those things that we're optimistic it will happen, but if it doesn't happen, then Sonic is big enough that it's not really going to make a whole lot of difference".

Its shares reached a two-year high recently of $13.43, after reaching guidance with a 7.3 per cent increase in full-year profit to $316 million and offering cautious guidance for the 2013 fiscal year.

mheffernan@fairfaxmedia.com.au

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ACCC delays Sonic decision Save

ACCC delays Sonic decision

The competition regulator has again delayed its decision on whether to allow Sonic Healthcare to take over Healthscope's east coast pathology businesses, raising expectations the $100 million deal might be rejected.

The long-awaited decision was expected to be announced tomorrow, but the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission says it is still seeking information from relevant parties and a decision will be made "in due course."

Sonic Healthcare, the international medical centre, pathology and radiology company, announced in May its intention to buy private equity-owned Healthscope's pathology businesses in Western Australia, Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.

The ACCC, in a statement of issues released earlier this month, said it was its "preliminary view" that the proposed acquisition might raise competition concerns in the Qld, NSW/ACT and WA community pathology services market.

Advertisement

Sonic chief executive Colin Goldshmidt told BusinessDay this month that the deal was "one of those things that we're optimistic it will happen, but if it doesn't happen, then Sonic is big enough that it's not really going to make a whole lot of difference".

Its shares reached a two-year high recently of $13.43, after reaching guidance with a 7.3 per cent increase in full-year profit to $316 million and offering cautious guidance for the 2013 fiscal year.

mheffernan@fairfaxmedia.com.au

Original post:
ACCC delays Sonic decision

ACCC delay feeds doubts on pathology takeover

Sonic Healthcare's CEO Colin Goldschmidt.

THE competition regulator has again delayed its decision on whether to allow Sonic Healthcare to take over Healthscope's east coast pathology businesses, raising expectations the $100 million deal might be rejected.

The long-awaited decision was expected to be announced today, but the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission said yesterday it was still seeking information from relevant parties and a decision would be made ''in due course''.

Sonic Healthcare, the international medical centre, pathology and radiology company, announced in May its intention to buy private equity-owned Healthscope's pathology businesses in Western Australia, Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.

The ACCC, in a statement of issues released this month, said it was its ''preliminary view'' that the proposed acquisition might raise competition concerns in the Queensland, NSW/ACT and WA community pathology services market.

Advertisement

Sonic chief executive Colin Goldschmidt said this month that the deal was ''one of those things that we're optimistic it will happen, but if it doesn't happen, then Sonic is big enough that it's not really going to make a whole lot of difference''.

Its shares reached a two-year high this week of $13.43, after reaching guidance with a 7.3 per cent increase in full-year profit to $316 million.

See the rest here:
ACCC delay feeds doubts on pathology takeover

RSP Nutrition is Nominated for 2012 New Brand of the Year by Bodybuilding.com. Vote for RSP Nutrition Now!

MIAMI BEACH, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

RSP Nutrition, the creators of Sports Performance Nutrition, was recently nominated for New Brand of the Year for 2012 by Bodybuilding.com. Bodybuilding.com is the Internets most-visited bodybuilding and fitness site and largest online retailer of nutritional supplements. Nominees were determined based on 2012 sales volume.

According to Victor Davanzo, RSP Nutritions Managing Director, We are honored to receive this nomination as it is a testament to the quality of our brand, products and team. Every day we strive to add value to the lives of our customers and help them lead healthier, more active lifestyles. Nominations such as this reinforce our efforts and continue to grow our presence on an international level.

The Bodybuilding.com Supplement Awards have set the standard for recognition of the best products and brands in the fitness and supplement industry. Last year, over one million votes from across the world helped decide what products would become instant top-sellers out of the 8,000+ products Bodybuilding.com carries. Being nominated for a Bodybuilding.com Supplement Award is quite an accomplishment! Since the public chooses the final winners, winning this award positions a company to be one of the most trustworthy out there, explains Bodybuilding.com CEO Ryan DeLuca.

Winners will be decided by customer vote via an online voting system running July 13, 2012 to August 31, 2012 on Bodybuilding.com and from a top health and nutrition industry panel. Winners will be announced live on the Olympia Main Stage as part of Joe Weiders Olympia Weekend in Las Vegas, Nevada on September 28-29, 2012. Please cast your vote for RSP Nutrition as New Brand of the Year at: http://www.bodybuilding.com/awards

Like us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/FastFuel Follow us on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/FastFuelOnline

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RSP Nutrition is Nominated for 2012 New Brand of the Year by Bodybuilding.com. Vote for RSP Nutrition Now!

Bacterial cause found for skin condition rosacea

Scientists are closer to establishing a definitive bacterial cause for the skin condition rosacea. This will allow more targeted, effective treatments to be developed for sufferers, according to a review published in the Journal of Medical Microbiology.

Rosacea is a common dermatological condition that causes reddening and inflammation of the skin mostly around the cheeks, nose and chin. In severe cases skin lesions may form and lead to disfigurement. Rosacea affects around 3% of the population usually fair-skinned females aged 30-50 and particularly those with weak immune systems. The condition is treated with a variety of antibiotics, even though there has never been a well-established bacterial cause.

A new review carried out by the National University of Ireland concludes that rosacea may be triggered by bacteria that live within tiny mites that reside in the skin.

The mite species Demodex folliculorum is worm-like in shape and usually lives harmlessly inside the pilosebaceous unit which surrounds hair follicles of the face. They are normal inhabitants of the face and increase in number with age and skin damage for example, following exposure to sunlight. The numbers of Demodex mites living in the skin of rosacea patients is higher than in normal individuals, which has previously suggested a possible role for the mites in initiating the condition.

More recently, the bacterium Bacillus oleronius was isolated from inside a Demodex mite and was found to produce molecules provoking an immune reaction in rosacea patients. Other studies have shown patients with varying types of rosacea react to the molecules produced by this bacterium exposing it as a likely trigger for the condition. What's more, this bacterium is sensitive to the antibiotics used to treat rosacea.

Dr Kevin Kavanagh who conducted the review explained, "The bacteria live in the digestive tracts of Demodex mites found on the face, in a mutually beneficial relationship. When the mites die, the bacteria are released and leak into surrounding skin tissues - triggering tissue degradation and inflammation."

"Once the numbers of mites increase, so does the number of bacteria, making rosacea more likely to occur. Targeting these bacteria may be a useful way of treating and preventing this condition," said Dr Kavanagh. "Alternatively we could look at controlling the population of Demodex mites in the face. Some pharmaceutical companies are already developing therapies to do this, which represents a novel way of preventing and reversing rosacea, which can be painful and embarrassing for many people."

More information: Dr Kavanagh's review "The potential role of Demodex folliculorum mites and bacteria in the induction of rosacea," will be published online ahead of print on Thursday 30 August in the Society for General Microbiology's Journal of Medical Microbiology. dx.doi.org/10.1099/jmm.0.048090-0

Journal reference: Journal of Medical Microbiology

Provided by Society for General Microbiology

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Bacterial cause found for skin condition rosacea

Research and Markets: Food Microbiology: An Introduction, Third Edition Includes Expert Perspectives on Parasites …

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/8kkjwc/food_microbiology) has announced the addition of John Wiley and Sons Ltd's new report "Food Microbiology: An Introduction, Third Edition" to their offering.

Authoritative coverage presented in a format designed to facilitate teaching and learning

The newly updated and expanded third edition:

- Incorporates instructors' input to further clarify complex topics in the field of food microbiology.

- Encourages students to venture beyond memorization and think critically to gain a broader conceptual understanding of food microbiology and acquire the understanding and skills necessary to ensure the safety of tomorrow's food supply.

- Presents explicit learning goals to focus students on the core principles of food microbiology.

- Introduces the genetics and molecular mechanisms important for the understanding of foodborne microbes

Key Topics Covered:

I. Basics of Food Microbiology

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Research and Markets: Food Microbiology: An Introduction, Third Edition Includes Expert Perspectives on Parasites ...

Lake Erie experts fear DNA spike is sign of Asian carp

John Flesher | Associated Press

An Asian carp, jolted by an electric current from a research boat, jumps out of the Illinois River. The fishs DNA was detected in 20 of 150 water samples taken July?30-31 from Sandusky Bay in Lake Erie.

The Columbus Dispatch Wednesday August 29, 2012 8:15 AM

The discovery of additional Asian carp DNA in Sandusky Bay has state and federal wildlife officials increasing efforts to see whether the invasive fish has entered Lake Erie.

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources reported yesterday that Asian carp DNA had been detected in 20 of 150 water samples taken July 30-31.

In earlier tests, four of 325 water samples in Sandusky Bay and two of 92 samples taken from Maumee Bay were positive. State and federal officials swept the area over three days this month but found no actual Asian carp.

We are going to go out and do more electro-fishing and netting to see what we can find, said Bethany McCorkle, an agency spokeswoman. We wont know until we actually have a live fish.Jeffrey Reutter, the director of Ohio Sea Grant and Ohio State Universitys Stone Laboratory on Lake Erie, called the latest test results disappointing.

At this point, that is definitely worrisome, he said.

Finding breeding carp would signal a huge threat to the lakes $1-billion-a-year fishing industry and its $10-billion-a-year tourism industry. The carp out-compete native fish for food. After escaping fish farms during massive floods in 1993, they now dominate several stretches of the Mississippi and Illinois rivers.

Sandy Bihn, the director of the Toledo-based Lake Erie Waterkeeper advocacy group, expressed hope that the fish havent set up housekeeping.

Originally posted here:
Lake Erie experts fear DNA spike is sign of Asian carp

Posted in DNA

DNA test confirms cantaloupe from Chamberlain Farms of Indiana a source in 21-state salmonella outbreak

Chamberlain Farm Produce Inc. in Owensville, Ind. is the source of at least some of the salmonella that has infected 178 people in 21 states.

The Salmonella bacteria collected from Chamberlain Farms matches the "DNA fingerprint" of the salmonella strain responsible for sickening 178 people, including 62 who were hospitalized, FDA spokeswoman Shelly Burgess said.

73 sickened by salmonella-tainted mangoes, say California health officials Cantaloupe-linked salmonella kills two FDA: Avoid cantaloupes grown in southwestern Indiana

She stressed that federal and state agencies were still investigating whether there might be other sources of the salmonella involved in the outbreak.

"Just because we've identified this as one source, things just don't stop here," she said. "We're still assessing the full scope of this."

Salmonella bacteria typically live in animal and human intestines and are shed through feces, according to the Mayo Clinic.

Salmonella infection, or salmonellosis, may cause diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps within eight to 72 hours of exposure. Most people recover without treatment, but it can be deadly for some. In some cases, diarrhea associated with the infection can be so dehydrating that medical attention is necessary. If salmonella spreads beyond infected people's intestines, they risk death.

Amy Reel, a spokeswoman for the Indiana State Department of Health, said samples have been collected from multiple southern Indiana farms. The FDA is handling analysis of those samples, she said.

Gary Zhao, an attorney for the southwestern Indiana farm, said Tuesday in response to a message seeking comment that the farm would release a statement later this week.

Last week, Tim Chamberlain, who runs the 100-acre (40-hectare) Chamberlain Farms, said it had stopped producing and distributing cantaloupe on Aug. 16, when the FDA alerted him that the fruit could be tainted.

The rest is here:
DNA test confirms cantaloupe from Chamberlain Farms of Indiana a source in 21-state salmonella outbreak

Posted in DNA

Biology Course at WHS Earns AP Designation

Washington High School has learned its biology course syllabus is now authorized to use the AP (Advanced Placement) designation for the 2012-13 academic year.

The AP program is a curriculum in the United States and Canada sponsored by the College Board which offers standardized courses to high school students that are generally recognized to be equivalent to undergraduate courses in college.

Participating colleges grant credit to students who obtained high enough scores on the exams to qualify.

WHS Principal Dr. Frank Wood said it also signifies the course is more rigorous than the general course offerings.

Were real pleased to learn of the AP approval, said Wood, adding that about 16 students are currently enrolled in that particular class, which includes a lab.

A letter from the AP program states that WHSs syllabus was reviewed by experienced college and university faculty, who have confirmed that it outlines how you provide a college-level learning experience for your students.

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Biology Course at WHS Earns AP Designation

Bio-Rad Launches a Digital Biology Center to Develop Products for Research and Diagnostics Markets Based on the …

HERCULES, CA--(Marketwire -08/29/12)- Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. (BIO) and (BIO.B), a multinational manufacturer and distributor of life science research and clinical diagnostic products, today announced the launch of a Digital Biology Center to focus on the development of innovative new products based on the company's recently acquired droplet partitioning technology. The first product based on this technology, Bio-Rad's QX100 Droplet Digital PCR system that was introduced last year, applies a sample partitioning technology to polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and offers a new approach to nucleic acid quantification.

PCR is widely used to amplify and quantify nucleic acids. Droplet digital PCR offers researchers a new level of precision in the quantification of target nucleic acid molecules, providing accurate determination of copy number variation as well as the detection of rare mutation events such as those seen in certain tumors. Applications of these capabilities have the potential to provide new strategies for diagnosis of inherited disorders, cancer, and infectious disease.

"We believe the digital droplet partitioning technology, which is at the heart of our recently launched QX100 Droplet Digital PCR instrument, has potential far beyond the digital PCR market," said Annette Tumolo, Director, Digital Biology Center. "Our mission is to provide innovative products that deliver powerful, accessible solutions for digital biology and expand the reach of our digital droplet PCR technology."

About the QX100 Droplet Digital SystemThe QX100 Droplet Digital PCR system (ddPCR) provides an absolute measure of target DNA molecules with unrivaled performance in precision, accuracy, and sensitivity for quantitative PCR applications. The Droplet Digital PCR system is the third generation of PCR technology and provides a new approach to target DNA quantification. The QX100 droplet generator partitions samples into 20,000 nanoliter-sized droplets. After PCR on a thermal cycler, droplets from every sample are streamed in single file on the QX100 droplet reader. The PCR-positive and PCR-negative droplets are counted to provide absolute quantification of target DNA in digital form, detecting rare DNA target copies with unmatched sensitivity and determining copy number variation with unrivaled accuracy.

About Bio-Rad Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. (BIO) and (BIO.B) has remained at the center of scientific discovery for more than 50 years, manufacturing and distributing a broad range of products for the life science research and clinical diagnostic markets. The company is renowned worldwide among hospitals, universities, major research institutions, as well as biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies for its commitment to quality and customer service. Founded in 1952, Bio-Rad is headquartered in Hercules, California, and serves more than 100,000 research and industry customers worldwide through its global network of operations. The company employs over 7,100 people globally and had revenues exceeding $2 billion in 2011. For more information, visit http://www.bio-rad.com.

This release contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-looking statements generally can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as, "believe," "expect," "may," "will," "intend," "estimate," "continue," or similar expressions or the negative of those terms or expressions. Such statements involve risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to vary materially from those expressed in or indicated by the forward-looking statements. For further information regarding the Company's risks and uncertainties, please refer to the "Risk Factors" in the Company's public reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Company's most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K. The Company cautions you not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which reflect an analysis only and speak only as of the date hereof. Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

Originally posted here:
Bio-Rad Launches a Digital Biology Center to Develop Products for Research and Diagnostics Markets Based on the ...

Could Your Genes Influence How You Vote?

By Carina Storrs HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Aug. 27 (HealthDay News) -- With the U.S. presidential campaign season heating up and Election Day drawing nearer, political science experts are saying that campaigns could one day benefit from having a deeper understanding of voters, all the way down to their DNA.

"Since about 2005, there has been a turning of the tide that genes can influence political traits," said Peter Hatemi, an associate professor of political science, microbiology and biochemistry at Pennsylvania State University.

"Most social scientists had viewed the world as a blank slate, whatever your family is, whatever you run into and your experiences, is how you develop your attitudes," he added.

Research into the genetic underpinnings of political views has grown significantly in the past eight years, Hatemi said. His comprehensive review of previous research on the role genes play in attitudes, ideologies and voting behavior, is co-authored by Rose McDermott, a professor of political science at Brown University, and appears online Aug. 27 in Trends in Genetics.

Political scientists have borrowed pages from the geneticists' book of techniques for studying medicine and psychology, but it may be how political scientists are using these approaches that will have the biggest impact on public health.

"The world revolves around politics, it doesn't revolve around schizophrenia. It's important to study because the biggest determinant of public health is going to be politics," Hatemi said.

One technique in particular involves studying identical and fraternal twins. Researchers can compare how often identical twins, who share all of their genes, and fraternal twins, who share half their genes on average, give the same answers to political questions to gauge how big of a role genes play in different categories.

Hatemi and McDermott reviewed previous twin studies and reported that about half of the variation in political traits could be explained by genetics, the other half by upbringing and environment.

Categories such as political knowledge and liberal versus conservative ideology were more likely to be influenced by genetics, whereas political party identification was strongly affected by upbringing, the researchers said.

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Could Your Genes Influence How You Vote?

Scaled-Down: New Nano Device Can Weigh Single Molecules

A tiny resonating beam, just 10 millionths of a meter in length, can measure the mass of a molecule or nanoparticle in real time

By John Matson

WEIGHTY MATTERS: The diagonal beam in this image can detect the presence of single molecules and determine their mass. Image: Caltech/Scott Kelber and Michael Roukes

Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...

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Dieters and exercise buffs might feel better about their progress if they tracked their weight loss in daltons. Even a short jog can help you shed a few septillion daltons, a unit of mass often used in biochemistry that is equivalent to the atomic mass unit. (Of course, no weight-conscious individual would want to know their full weight in this unitthe average American male weighs approximately 5 X 1028 daltons.)

Even the megadalton, or one million daltons, is a tiny unit of measurea gold particle five nanometers across weighs in at just a few megadaltons. (One nanometer is a billionth of a meter.) But researchers at the California Institute of Technology and CEALeti, a government-funded research organization in Grenoble, France, have built a scale that weighs single objects even lighter than a megadalton, including nanoparticles and human antibody molecules. The device is the first of its kind to determine the masses of individual molecules and nanoparticles in real time, the researchers reported in a study published online August 26 in Nature Nanotechnology. (Scientific American is part of Nature Publishing Group.)

The heart of the device is a nanoelectromechanical resonatora tiny beam of silicon vibrating at two tones simultaneously. "It's like vibrating a guitar string at the fundamental and a harmonic," says study co-author Michael Roukes, a Caltech physicist. "We're continuously strumming it with an electrostatic excitation." The beam runs diagonally across the photo (above); it measures 10 microns long and 300 nanometers wide. (A micron is one millionth of a meter.)

Tiny arms connecting the ends of the beam to the rest of the device convert the resonator's vibrations into an electrical signal via a phenomenon known as the piezoresistive effect. "The smallest pieces there are flexed slightly, and when they're flexed their resistance changes," Roukes says. "And so we can read out the motion as a change in resistance." A single molecule landing on the beam shifts the frequency of the two tones downward, and from the accompanying change in resistance the researchers can deduce both the mass of the particle and where it landed along the beam.

The device's sensitivity to single molecules allowed the researchers to perform mass spectroscopyidentifying the various particles in a mixture by their masseson collections of gold nanoparticles five and 10 nanometers in diameter, as well as on the antibody molecule immunoglobulin M, which weighs just under one megadalton. (The natural molecules proved much more consistent in their construction than did the man-made nanoparticles, whose masses fluctuated by a factor of five or so from particle to particle.)

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Scaled-Down: New Nano Device Can Weigh Single Molecules

Project MICREAgents: self-assembling smart microscopic reagents to pioneer pourable electronics

29.08.2012 - (idw) Ruhr-Universitt Bochum

First place in an EU competitive call on Unconventional Computing was awarded to a collaborative proposal coordinated by Prof. John McCaskill from the RUB Faculty of Chemistry and Biochemistry. The project MICREAgents plans to build autonomous self-assembling electronic microreagents that are almost as small as cells. They will exchange chemical and electronic information to jointly direct complex chemical reactions and analyses in the solutions they are poured into. The EU supports the project within the FP7 programme with 3.4 million Euros for three years. Turning chemistry inside-out Self-assembling smart microscopic reagents to pioneer pourable electronics 3.4 million Euros from EU programme for international research project

First place in an EU competitive call on Unconventional Computing was awarded to a collaborative proposal coordinated by Prof. John McCaskill from the RUB Faculty of Chemistry and Biochemistry. The project MICREAgents plans to build autonomous self-assembling electronic microreagents that are almost as small as cells. They will exchange chemical and electronic information to jointly direct complex chemical reactions and analyses in the solutions they are poured into. This is a form of embedded computation to compute is to construct in which for example the output is a particular catalyst or coating needed in the (input) local chemical environment. The EU supports the project within the FP7 programme with 3.4 million Euros for three years. Four research groups at RUB will join forces with top teams across Europe, from Israel and New Zealand.

Self-assembling electronic agents

In order to create this programmable microscale electronic chemistry, MICREAgents (Microscopic Chemically Reactive Electronic Agents) will contain electronic circuits on 3D microchips, called lablets. The lablets have a diameter of less than 100 m and self-assemble in pairs or like dominos to enclose transient reaction compartments. They can selectively concentrate, process, and release chemicals into the surrounding solution, under local electronic control, in a similar way to which the genetic information in cells controls local chemical processes. The reversible pairwise association allows the lablets to transfer information from one to another.

Translating electronic signals into chemical processes

The lablet devices will integrate transistors, supercapacitors, energy transducers, sensors and actuators, and will translate electronic signals into constructive chemical processing as well as record the results of this processing. Instead of making chemical reactors to contain chemicals, the smart MICREAgents will be poured into chemical mixtures, to organize the chemistry from within. Ultimately, such microreactors, like cells in the bloodstream, will open up the possibility of controlling complex chemistry from the inside out.

The self-assembling smart micro reactors can be programmed for molecular amplification and other chemical processing pathways that start from complex mixtures, concentrate and purify chemicals, perform reactions in programmed cascades, sense reaction completion, and transport and release products to defined locations. MICREAgents represent a novel form of computation intertwined with construction. By embracing self-assembly and evolution, they are a step towards a robust and evolvable realization of John von Neumanns universal construction machine vision. Although these nanoscale structures will soon be sufficiently complex to allow self-replication of their chemical and electronic information, they will not present a proliferative threat to the environment, because they depend for their function on the electronic circuit layer that is fabricated as part of their substrate.

RUB collaborators

For the project, Prof. Dr. John S. McCaskill (Microsystems Chemistry and Biological Information Technology) collaborates with Prof. Dr. Gnter von Kiedrowski (Bioorganic Chemistry), Prof. Dr. Jrgen Oehm (Analog Integrated Circuits) and Dr. Pierre Mayr (Integrated Digital Circuits). McCaskills and von Kiedrowskis labs at RUB have already joined forces in previous European Projects forging a path towards artificial cells. The ECCell project, for example, that finished in February this year, has laid the foundation for an electronic chemical cell. There, the electronics and microfluidics were exterior to the chemistry: in MICREAgents this is being turned inside out.

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Project MICREAgents: self-assembling smart microscopic reagents to pioneer pourable electronics