Scientists push for GMO adoption in Ghana

Business News of Thursday, 31 July 2014

Source: Graphic Online

Two Ghanaian research scientists made a case for Ghana to adopt genetic engineering (GE) or genetically modified organisms (GMOs) instead of sticking to the conventional method of breeding.

While agreeing that conventional plant breeding had been going on for hundreds of years and had dramatically increased the productivity and quality of plants for food, feed and fibre, they maintained that it could no longer be sustained.

At the opening of a three-day symposium, organised by the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences (GAAS) on GMOs last Monday, Dr Ibrahim Dzido Kwasi Atokple, a researcher at the Savannah Agricultural Research Institute (SARI), Tamale, said Conventional breeding is the basis, but with that alone we cannot make progress.

According to Dr Atokple, practising conventional breeding could no longer be done exclusively, in view of the population explosion and developments that are taking up the arable lands. So we need to combine all biotechnological tools to increase the productivity of the few lands that are left.

He said although the USA depended on hybrids for maize till the 1990s, the trend changed for more improved yields by adopting GMOs (inserting genes to improve yields and make maize more tolerant to insects).

In any case, we started eating GM maize from 1996 till today, he said, adding that although there had been a few success stories in Ghana, the country could do better. Almost all the improved varieties grown in Ghana are from conventional breeding but we cannot continue to do this.

We need to adopt the modern plant breeding strategies and multi-disciplinary and co-ordinated process where a large number of tools and elements of conventional breeding techniques, bioinformatics, molecular genetics, molecular biology and genetic engineering are utilised and integrated to overcome the vagaries of the environment, with respect to climate change, soil degradation and increasing biotic factors, he stated.

Dr Atokple, who is credited with introducing varieties of Maruka-resistant cowpea (beans) and rice, said it even became more imperative to employ GMO breeding because it was a faster, less laborious and more efficient way to improve crop yields.

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Scientists push for GMO adoption in Ghana

The truth about anti-aging 'cosmeceuticals'

The best anti-aging product is likely sunscreen. (Thinkstock)

WASHINGTON -- They are the latest thing in anti-aging skin care, but are those pricey cosmeceuticals really worth the money?

These products contain active ingredients, but much less than prescription creams and serums regulated by the Food and Drug Administration. Glossy magazines and cosmetic aisles in high-end stores are full of ads and testimonials to their value, but like anything else including chemicals, buyers should be wary.about those claims.

"These can work to our benefit and against us," says Dr. Tina Alster, director of the Washington Institute of Dermalogic Laser Surgery.

Alster, who is also a professor of clinical dermatology at the Georgetown University School of Medicine, says science has provided lots of great skin care products throughout the last ten years, including some cosmeceuticals.

But she adds "there are other ones that may claim they are doing something that don't, or may have ingredients that could be harmful to us in the long run."

Alster says some cosmeceuticals include ingredients that are not well known, and haven't been around long enough to adequately judge their safety with extended use. Others include certain types of acids that can over dry the skin.

Among the acids most commonly found in over-the-counter creams are glycolic, lactic and retinoic acids -- which are all found in higher concentrations in prescription treatments.

The problem, according to Alster, is many people tend to overuse cosmeceuticals, adding on layer after layer of product.

"I often see people who think the more is better, so they get stated on an active ingredient and they want to feel the burn or they feel like it is not working for them," she says.

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The truth about anti-aging 'cosmeceuticals'

Would you use Pepto Bismol as a face mask?

By Olivia Fleming

Published: 16:06 EST, 31 July 2014 | Updated: 01:37 EST, 1 August 2014

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Pepto Bismol: Treats diarrhea, heartburn, nausea, an upset stomach - and acne

Pepto Bismol: Treats diarrhea, heartburn, nausea, an upset stomach - and acne.

The pink liquid in everyone's medicine cabinet is proving to be the latest beauty must-have, thanks to its two main ingredients, acne-fighting salicylic acid and aspirin, which helps to calm inflammation.

It also contains beta hydroxy acid, which unclogs pores and promotes skin turnover.

'If you put a coating on your face, let it set for a few minutes, then wash it off, your skin will have a mega-glow that shines through even after you put on your makeup,' says beauty expert Diane Irons, author of The World's Best Anti-Aging Secrets.

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Would you use Pepto Bismol as a face mask?

Hearing on "Nanotechnology: Understanding How Small Solutions Drive Big Innovation" – Video


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Hearing on "Nanotechnology: Understanding How Small Solutions Drive Big Innovation" - Video

Let’s Play: Darkstone (PS1) (Legendary) Quest 5: Fountains of Immortality (1/2) (Again) – Video


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Grabbing Max Perutz’ attention: Kurt Wthrich, 2002 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry – Video


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Grabbing Max Perutz' attention: Kurt Wthrich, 2002 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry - Video

Anatomy Of The Supinator Muscle – Everything You Need To Know – Dr. Nabil Ebraheim – Video


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In the Quest to Treat Intracerebral Hemorrhage, Nanomaterials Show Promise

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Newswise Intracerebral hemorrhage is a type of stroke that affects two million people worldwide each year. Despite its seriousness, no effective treatment has yet been developed. But if a recent study in the journal Nanomedicine is right, good news for doctors and patients might one day arrive in a very small package: namely, a peptide nanofiber scaffold. In the last few decades, molecular engineering of various self-assembling peptide nanofiber scaffolds (SAPNS) has emerged as an active area of research. The peptide can form stable structures that self-assemble into a gel-like substance.

Now a University of Hong Kong team led by Professor Raymond Tak Fai Cheung, PhD and his student Lynn Yan-Hua Sang, PhD, who performed the majority of the experimental work, suggests a new therapeutic strategy for intracerebral hemorrhage: injecting SAPNS directly into a hemorrhagic lesion. Using rats, the team found that SAPNS attenuated brain injury, reduced brain cavity volume and enhanced recovery of brain function. This is the first time a nanomaterial has been used to replace the hematoma in the deep brain in a rat model of intracerebral hemorrhage. The hemostatic effects of SAPNS and other self-assembling peptides were discovered by co-author Rutledge G. Ellis-Behnke, PhD, who advised Drs. Cheung and Sang.

One man with a keen interest in this result is Terrence W. Norchi, President and CEO of Arch Therapeutics, a Wellesley, MA-based medical device company that is exploring a potential alternative approach to traditional stasis and barrier applications, including stopping bleeding during surgery, after trauma and other applications. Arch Therapeutics is also the worldwide exclusive licensee of intellectual property owned by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the University of Hong Kong (UHK), in which the composition of SAPNS is a cited agent for stopping bleeding. Dr. Ellis-Behnke, who performed his groundbreaking hemostasis research at MIT and UHK, is a co-founder of Arch Therapeutics.

Archs AC5 Surgical Hemostatic Device, currently in preclinical development, is also a peptide nanofiber scaffoldone that is being designed to achieve hemostasis in laparoscopic and open surgical procedures. It represents a new approach to the rapid cessation of bleeding and control of fluid leakage during surgery and trauma care. The time to hemostasis with this approach is measured typically in 15 to 30 seconds rather than several minutes as with existing solutions. It is also being designed to conform to irregular wound geometry, to allow for normal healing and to help maintain a clear field of vision in the wound area during the surgical procedure.

Because it is transparent and neither sticky nor glue-like, evidence supports that AC5 can be used in the laparoscopic or minimally invasive surgical setting. It consists of a synthetic peptide comprising naturally occurring amino acids that are not sourced from animals. When squirted or sprayed onto a wound, the clear, transparent liquid promptly intercalates into the nooks and crannies of the connective tissue where it self-assembles itself into a lattice-like gela physical structure that provides a barrier to leaking substances. It is being designed to quickly stop bleeding with rapid onset of hemostasis, and might also allow surgeons to safely operate through the resulting protective barrier. During the healing process, data supports that the underlying peptide is broken down into its constituent amino acids, then absorbed and either used in the amino acid pool of the body to build protein and muscle, or excreted in the urine.

Advances such as these point toward a future in which self-assembling peptides are a key tool for addressing some of the challenges faced by surgeons today.

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In the Quest to Treat Intracerebral Hemorrhage, Nanomaterials Show Promise