UG/PG admission begins at AMU, Aligarh: Check out the details – India Today

The Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), Aligarh has released an admission notification inviting applications from interested, eligible candidates to apply for admission to its various programmes offered under various specialisations for the academic session 2017.

BA programme: The candidates interested in applying for this programme should have passed senior secondary school or equivalent examination with at least 50 per cent marks in aggregate with English and three subjects from -- accountancy, Arabic, banking, biology, biotechnology, business organisation, business studies, chemistry, commerce, computer science, economics, education, English, fine arts, geography, Hindi, history, home science, islamic studies, mathematics, Persian, philosophy, physical health education, physics, political science/civics, psychology, Sanskrit, sociology, statistics, Urdu and modern Indian languages (Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Marathi, Punjabi and Kashmiri).

MTech programme: The candidates interested in applying for this programme should have pursued BTech or its equivalent examination, in the relevant branch of study, with not less than 60 per cent marks in aggregate or its equivalent CPI/CGPA/NAG.

MSc programme: The candidates interested in applying for this programme should have pursued BSc with biochemistry/biosciences/life sciences/medical biochemistry/clinical biochemistry as main, with two of the following subsidiary subjects: zoology/botany/ chemistry/biotechnology or BSc with biochemistry/biosciences/clinical biochemistry/ medical biochemistry, as one of the subjects of equal value along with any two of the optional subjects i.e. zoology, botany/chemistry/biotechnology.

(Read: Indian Statistical Institute Admissions 2017: Apply latest by March 10)

The candidates will be selected on the basis of departmental test conducted by the university.

The candidates are required to apply at the official website.

The last date of submissions of online application form for MSc (agriculture)/LLM programme is April 10.

The last date of submissions of online application form for MBBS/BDS programme is June 15.

The last date of submissions of online application form for MA/MTech/Mcom programmes is April 17.

The last date of submissions of online application form for LLM/BRTT/MSc programme is April 18.

The last date of submissions of online application form for MA/BFA programmes is April 12.

The last date of submissions of online application form for BA (Hons)/MPEd programmes is April 19.

Read: NISER, Bhubaneswar admissions 2017: Apply for PhD courses

For information on more courses and admissions,click here.

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UG/PG admission begins at AMU, Aligarh: Check out the details - India Today

Grey’s Anatomy season 13, episode 15: Watch online – FanSided

GREY'S ANATOMY - "Civil War" - Richard, Jackson, April and Catherine tackle a grueling trauma case intensified by hospital politics. Amelia finally faces her feelings about Owen, and Meredith gets caught between Nathan and Alex over a patient, on "Grey's Anatomy," THURSDAY, MARCH 9 (8:00-9:01 p.m. EST), on the ABC Television Network. (ABC/Richard Cartwright) ELLEN POMPEO

Supernatural season 12, episode 15: Watch online by Cheryl Wassenaar

Celtics shock Stephen Curry and Warriors at home: 3 takeaways by Ananth Pandian

Obviously, shows need to go on breaks. Actors deserve breaks, production crews deserve breaks, etc. But I would be lying if I said I wasnt a little salty every time a show went on a hiatus even a little one. Especially knowing thatwere in the final stretch of the season, with only a handful of episodes left, and that theres still plenty to touch on.

For example, and I hate to bring it up again,but I cant believe they did the Amelia / Owen fanbase dirty like this. I mean, they ended season 12 with Amelia and Owens controversial marriage. (None of the other Shepherd family members showed up because everyones mean to Amelia, Ill never be over it.) Of course, they got married, and almost immediately after, Owen starts the conversation about babies in season 13. At one point, she mightve been pregnant, but that went away. Ultimately, thisresulted in their estrangement.

Now if youre any sort of Amelia fan, you know shes a carryover from Greys Anatomy spin-off, Private Practice, where she endured a storyline about losing her child. So I like that they didnt make her have a baby, but I dont like how it was handled. I really want Amelia back, so based on the synopsis, it looks like shes finally working herself into the fold once again.

So heres the synopsis for this weeks episode, Civil War:

A grueling trauma case is complicated by hospital politics. Meanwhile, Amelia confronts her feelings regarding Owen; and Meredith finds herself stuck in the middle as Nathan and Alex butt heads over a patient.

Also, to be fair, Owen needs someone much more stable. It wasnt Cristina, may not be Amelia Teddy? Any Teddy Altman fans in the house? Okay, we currently have six episodes on the board, taking us to episode 21. Greys Anatomy seasons generally go to 24, so we might have a solid nine more episodes to go.

Now, here are the details for the Greys Anatomy live stream:

Date:Thursday,March 9 Time:8p.m. ET Episode:Civil War Channel:ABC Live stream: Watch ABC

Greys Anatomy airs new episodes every Thursday at 8 p.m. ET on ABC. Stay tuned for our recap after the episode airs right here on FanSided.

See more here:
Grey's Anatomy season 13, episode 15: Watch online - FanSided

President Trump, Please Make American Medicine Great Again and … – PR Web (press release)

Nonprofit Trusted Source of Non-Commercial Health Information

Chicago, IL (PRWEB) March 09, 2017

The time has come for a major overhaul of the American healthcare system. "While Obamacare had some noble intentions, Obamacare and politicians have driven medicine into a constant state of disarray. Its time for medical leaders such as the A4M to voice their opinion," asserts Dr. Ronald Klatz.

Dr. Ronald Klatz, M.D., D.O., physician-founder of the American Academy for Antiaging Medicine and patentholder of over 30 medical innovations stated, Physicians must resume control of patient care. Today the insurance company rep has more influence than a doctor. Thats a sad statement. It is necessary to have a plan that restores authority to highly experienced, regulated and educated medical professionals. We should focus on effective, preventative healthcare to extend quality of life and increase longevity, and simply bring back common sense to medicine.

The following 10 point, low cost, high tech healthcare, wellness, and Anti-aging plan could save American Tax Payers over One Trillion Dollars over the next 7 years:

Point One: Point of Care (POC) Laboratory Testing. Defined as testing at/near the site of patient care. The goal of POCT is to allow more rapid and effective diagnosis and triage, leading to improved patient outcomes, reduced morbidity and mortality, and slashed costs.

Point Two: Biomarkers of Aging and Health Measurement. Billions of healthcare dollars are wasted on diseases that can be detected and treated early or prior to occurrence: heart disease and stroke, cancer, and Type 2 diabetes.

Point Three: Free Biannual Comprehensive Metabolic Testing. These tests may slash Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome costs by 20%. This is significant given that Metabolic Syndrome is a primary cause of cardiovascular disease (CVD).

Point Four: 24/7 Telemedicine Consultation Access. The improvements generated from the use of telemedicine are vast. Telemedicine provides access to medical professionals for residents of remote areas and people with limited mobility, unclogs emergency rooms from non-emergency patients, and creates jobs for people who are only able to work via telecommuting.

Point Five: Aging Intervention Drugs. Six major diseases are having an enormous impact on the 65+ population: chronic lung disease, ischemic heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, pneumonia, and gastrointestinal illness.

Point Six: Stem Cells and Nanotechnology Access. These biomedical technologies offer exciting potential for significant improvement and/or cures for previously incurable conditions, such as stroke, cancers, Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, ALS, paraplegia, and other crippling neuromuscular disorders.

Point Seven: Personalized Genetic Testing and Nutrigenomics. Making these resources widely accessible allows for prospective identification of major disease processes including heart disease, cancer, diabetes, Alzheimers disease, etc., such that appropriate interventions may be deployed at the earliest stage possible, providing the best chance for recovery and less invasive and more cost effective treatment options.

Point Eight: Free/Subsidized Access to Gym, Spa, Metabolic Detoxification, and Physical Rehabilitation Facilities. Without question, obesity is costing the United States billions upon billions of dollars to combat all of its resulting diseases and conditions.

Point Nine: Online Electronic Database on Aging Intervention & Free Medical Education Resources. By promoting practitioner and patient education, an improved paradigm is created in which physicians keep current on new technologies and patients questions and form a collaborative relationship with their medical caretakers. This increased education on both sides of the healthcare relationship will provide more accountability and communication.

Point Ten: World Center for Anti-Aging Medicine. A center of excellence to extend quality of life into the later years of the average lifespan is necessary for reducing costs and improving living. One centralized research facility dedicated to this specific mission is necessary to focus adequate attention on this vital scientific arena.

While prior administrations have failed to properly consider the value of shifting from a disease based healthcare model to an advanced preventative based, cost-saving platform, the new administration has an opportunity to change course. Elected leadership should implement this comprehensive plan immediately to reduce skyrocketing costs and improve the quality of all our lives. The new Health and Human Services (HHS) administration must help Americans get true, proven preventative care and encourage healthier lifestyles. This is the time for real solutions.

As Dr. Klatz states, "We already have the technology to live a quality, healthy, productive, youthful 100 years- plus. Now lets do it!

The American Academy of Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine, the A4M, is headquartered in Chicago, IL. Established in 1991, the A4M now represents over 26,000 physician members in 120 countries. The A4M provides continuing education to physicians, as well as specialized training programs, and a board certification. More information at http://www.WorldHealth.net.

Vince Liguori is a dedicated journalist and financial professional specializing in healthcare issues.

Vince can be reached at eloanpro1(at)gmail.com

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President Trump, Please Make American Medicine Great Again and ... - PR Web (press release)

Scientists Just Mastered an Error-Free Way to Store Data on DNA – Inc.com

Ask any business what it takes to really get ahead and data analysis comes pretty close to topping the list. The stink in the commode, though, is that companies have so much data that just storing it--let alone putting it to use--is problematic. But if scientists have their way, in the not-so-distant future, you very well could use deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) as a storage medium. As Robert Service of Science reports, researchers say they've created a new method to encode digital data onto DNA that's more efficient and accurate than any other process used until now.

Service notes several reasons why scientists are eying DNA as a viable data storage choice:

Because of these benefits, researchers have been working with DNA for data storage since 2012. But none have been able to store more than half of what researchers believe actually is possible (1.8 bits of data per nucleotide of DNA).

Yaniv Erlich, computer scientist at Columbia University, partnered with Dina Zielinski , associate scientist at the New York Genome Center. To get data onto DNA and retrieve it in a more efficient, less error-prone way, they completed the following steps:

The results, announced earlier this week, were outstanding, encoding 1.6 bits of data per nucleotide (85 percent what scientists think is the maximum) and exceeding previous attempts by other scientists by 60 percent. There were no errors, and through polymerase chain reaction, a modern technique people already use to copy DNA, Erlich and Zielinski were able to replicate the files without issue.

The price tag for Erlich and Zielinski's process was $9,000. And that's just for six measly files. Imagine the cost for all the files we've ever created, or the cost of the files people will create just today alone. In short, we're not nearly to the point where the technique would be financially prudent for companies or individuals. And writing and reading to DNA is still painfully slow, according to Erlich. So even if you could afford to use it right now, it's an archiving tool at best until technology streamlines the coding and decoding process. But those advances will happen. And when companies already are using artificial intelligence, robots and bionics, the line between natural and large-scale artificial learning might be closer than we think.

More here:
Scientists Just Mastered an Error-Free Way to Store Data on DNA - Inc.com

Posted in DNA

President Trump, Please Make American Medicine Great Again and Implement this 10 Point Plan – PR Web (press release)

Nonprofit Trusted Source of Non-Commercial Health Information

Chicago, IL (PRWEB) March 09, 2017

The time has come for a major overhaul of the American healthcare system. "While Obamacare had some noble intentions, Obamacare and politicians have driven medicine into a constant state of disarray. Its time for medical leaders such as the A4M to voice their opinion," asserts Dr. Ronald Klatz.

Dr. Ronald Klatz, M.D., D.O., physician-founder of the American Academy for Antiaging Medicine and patentholder of over 30 medical innovations stated, Physicians must resume control of patient care. Today the insurance company rep has more influence than a doctor. Thats a sad statement. It is necessary to have a plan that restores authority to highly experienced, regulated and educated medical professionals. We should focus on effective, preventative healthcare to extend quality of life and increase longevity, and simply bring back common sense to medicine.

The following 10 point, low cost, high tech healthcare, wellness, and Anti-aging plan could save American Tax Payers over One Trillion Dollars over the next 7 years:

Point One: Point of Care (POC) Laboratory Testing. Defined as testing at/near the site of patient care. The goal of POCT is to allow more rapid and effective diagnosis and triage, leading to improved patient outcomes, reduced morbidity and mortality, and slashed costs.

Point Two: Biomarkers of Aging and Health Measurement. Billions of healthcare dollars are wasted on diseases that can be detected and treated early or prior to occurrence: heart disease and stroke, cancer, and Type 2 diabetes.

Point Three: Free Biannual Comprehensive Metabolic Testing. These tests may slash Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome costs by 20%. This is significant given that Metabolic Syndrome is a primary cause of cardiovascular disease (CVD).

Point Four: 24/7 Telemedicine Consultation Access. The improvements generated from the use of telemedicine are vast. Telemedicine provides access to medical professionals for residents of remote areas and people with limited mobility, unclogs emergency rooms from non-emergency patients, and creates jobs for people who are only able to work via telecommuting.

Point Five: Aging Intervention Drugs. Six major diseases are having an enormous impact on the 65+ population: chronic lung disease, ischemic heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, pneumonia, and gastrointestinal illness.

Point Six: Stem Cells and Nanotechnology Access. These biomedical technologies offer exciting potential for significant improvement and/or cures for previously incurable conditions, such as stroke, cancers, Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, ALS, paraplegia, and other crippling neuromuscular disorders.

Point Seven: Personalized Genetic Testing and Nutrigenomics. Making these resources widely accessible allows for prospective identification of major disease processes including heart disease, cancer, diabetes, Alzheimers disease, etc., such that appropriate interventions may be deployed at the earliest stage possible, providing the best chance for recovery and less invasive and more cost effective treatment options.

Point Eight: Free/Subsidized Access to Gym, Spa, Metabolic Detoxification, and Physical Rehabilitation Facilities. Without question, obesity is costing the United States billions upon billions of dollars to combat all of its resulting diseases and conditions.

Point Nine: Online Electronic Database on Aging Intervention & Free Medical Education Resources. By promoting practitioner and patient education, an improved paradigm is created in which physicians keep current on new technologies and patients questions and form a collaborative relationship with their medical caretakers. This increased education on both sides of the healthcare relationship will provide more accountability and communication.

Point Ten: World Center for Anti-Aging Medicine. A center of excellence to extend quality of life into the later years of the average lifespan is necessary for reducing costs and improving living. One centralized research facility dedicated to this specific mission is necessary to focus adequate attention on this vital scientific arena.

While prior administrations have failed to properly consider the value of shifting from a disease based healthcare model to an advanced preventative based, cost-saving platform, the new administration has an opportunity to change course. Elected leadership should implement this comprehensive plan immediately to reduce skyrocketing costs and improve the quality of all our lives. The new Health and Human Services (HHS) administration must help Americans get true, proven preventative care and encourage healthier lifestyles. This is the time for real solutions.

As Dr. Klatz states, "We already have the technology to live a quality, healthy, productive, youthful 100 years- plus. Now lets do it!

The American Academy of Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine, the A4M, is headquartered in Chicago, IL. Established in 1991, the A4M now represents over 26,000 physician members in 120 countries. The A4M provides continuing education to physicians, as well as specialized training programs, and a board certification. More information at http://www.WorldHealth.net.

Vince Liguori is a dedicated journalist and financial professional specializing in healthcare issues.

Vince can be reached at eloanpro1(at)gmail.com

More:
President Trump, Please Make American Medicine Great Again and Implement this 10 Point Plan - PR Web (press release)

Jenna Dewan Tatum's Very Specific Reason For Working With Jennifer Lopez – Yahoo Food

Jenna Dewan Tatum and her husband Channing Tatum are the definition of #CoupleGoals.

Look no further than then their steamy performance of Pony on Lip Sync Battle. At home with their daughter Everly, 3, the two also hit like to get hot and heavy and sweaty.

We dont dance-offs, but theres a lot of dancing that happens in our house. Theres a lot of activity withdancing happening 24/7. I have danced since I was 5. Your body is trained in a certain way. It just remembers certain motions and works out a lot easier, Dewan Tatum tells Yahoo Style.

Its fitting that shes the face of Danskin, and in the spring, will serve as the host on Jennifer Lopezs competition series World of Dance. Dewan Tatum, 36, started out as a backup dancer for Janet Jackson, worked with Pink and Christina Aguilera, and met her husband on the set of the groovy 2006 hit Step Up.

Jenna Dewan Tatum in Marchesa, with hubby Channing Tatum (Photo: Getty Images)

Dance gear, she says, is a major player in her wardrobe. I wear the high-waisted black leggings, with long sweaters. Theyre comfortable and chic. I wear a lot of the long-sleeved leotards. They pair well with nighttime clothes, says Dewan Tatum, who favors sheer and fitted Zuhair Murad and Marchesa on red carpets.

For her, a bodysuit is a game changer. Especially with jeans. It smooths everything out and creates a much nicer line. You can wear it with a sheer shirt over it. I really like a nice body-conscious outfit. A good tank top. Nice leggings. A good bodysuit. Thats really nice for me. I feel good when I know it fits well.

Speaking of feeling, and looking, good, Dewan Tatum swears that being active is the best anti-aging medicine. It helps that her daughter goes nonstop. Shes a very active little girl. And then, theres 25 years of dancing. Theres a lot of muscle memory. I work out when I can. I like to feel good. I know what looks good on my body.

Shes also aware of what doesnt work. I cant wear lots of baggier clothes, or shift dresses. I know that. I work with what god gave me, she says.

Working with Lopez, meanwhile, was its own lesson in loving yourself. Dewan Tatum likens the actress and singer to Benjamin Button, the character played by Brad Pitt who aged in reverse. I really and truly I did the whole show to learn her secrets to looking that good. I didnt find out, thats the biggest bummer. I sat there in awe of her, says Dewan Tatum.

Of course, growing up in toe shoes has made Dewan Tatum tougher in the footwear department. Where other celebrities complain about wearing stilettos, Dewan Tatum embraces heels.

My feet are used to being uncomfortable, always. I used to have a bucket of ice for my feet as a dancer. I never choose comfortable shoes, she says, adding that when it comes to her red-carpet gowns, Im always going for a bit more glamour. I want to keep it between chic and edgy. Its dependent on what I feel good in. I like to go for it.

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Jenna Dewan Tatum's Very Specific Reason For Working With Jennifer Lopez - Yahoo Food

Did Gene Therapy Cure Sickle Cell Disease? – American Council on Science and Health

A number of recent headlines imply a case study just published in the New England Journal of Medicine proves that gene therapy has cured sickle cell diseasea genetic disorder that incurs tremendous pain, suffering and diminished life expectancy. Here, we will unpack the significance of the researchers findings.

First, lets address why this news could be so groundbreaking to those afflicted and their loved ones.

Sickle Cell Disease is an inherited condition that causes a mutated hemoglobinthe protein within red blood cells (RBCs) that carries oxygen for delivery to vital tissues. Oxygen feeds our organs so they can stay healthy and perform their respective jobs. This Hemoglobin S (aka Sickle Hemoglobin) polymerizes on deoxygenation and rids the RBCs of their malleability. As a result, these malformed sickled cells are stiff and clump together thereby occluding vessels which in turn prompts organ damage.

Roughly 90,000 Americans have Sickle Cell Disease. (1) The natural course of the illness involves a complex cascade of events intermingled with crises often triggered by infections. Anemia is commonplace (and often profound) given these faulty cells get readily destroyed, over consumed and dont last as long as healthy RBCs. Vasoocclusive Crises result from infarction and ischemiain infants the hands and feet swell, in particular. Basically, adequate blood flow is halted wherever the obstruction takes place. Aggressive pain management and rehydration is essential.

Prophylactic antibiotics are a mainstay in an effort to stave off infection which can routinely catapult patients into a life-threatening crisis. By early childhood, they develop a functional asplenia or ineffective spleen. So, they become especially susceptible to overwhelming infection by encapsulatedbacteriahence, why vaccination for pneumococcus and the like is so important. Sepsis can result. Parvovirus can cause an aplastic crisis.

Strokes. Pulmonary infarcts with subsequent hypoxia. Acute Chest Syndrome. Gallstones. Blood transfusions are frequent. Though the blood supply is well-tested for safety, recurrent transfusion can lead to issues like iron overload, for instance. This too must be treated. The list goes on of the challenges, battles and treatment complexities these patients endure. Because fetal hemoglobin has a higher oxygen carrying capacity, a disease-modifying drug like Hydroxyurea that increases its presence is used.

Allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation represents the only cure, but less than 18% of those with severe disease have sibling donors who are a match. (2) This is also not without great risk, though those need to be weighed against how advanced the disease. Due to such limited progress in management of this condition, this team of researchers sought to examine whether therapeutic ex vivo gene transfer into autologous hematopoietic stem cells referred to as gene therapy, may provide a long-term and potentially curative treatment for sickle cell disease. (3)

What does this mean? They took samples from the bone marrow of a patient with severe disease. The cells here provide the origins of our blood components which includes our red blood cells. This is where the problem begins in generating the sickling. A cancer drug, busulfan, was used to condition the body expected adverse effects from this occurred which resolved with standard care (e.g. anemia, low platelets, neutropenia and so on). Using a lentiviral vector, they transferred an anti-sickling gene into the patients stem cells (retrieved from the bone marrow) which get put back into the patient in the hope they will multiply and replace the cells made with the defective gene.

In a study funded in part by Bluebird Bio whose product is LentiGlobin BB305 (the antisickling gene therapy subject of this publication), the team concludes their patient had complete clinical remission with correction of hemolysis and biologic hallmarks of the disease. Furthermore, after fifteen months the antisickling protein remained high at approximately 50% and the patient had no crises or hospitalizations. Before, the patient required regular transfusions. After, all medications were stopped, no pain ones were needed, and the patient returned to full activities at school. (4)

Ongoing research is underway in a U.S. multi center, phase 1/2 clinical study. The intention is to use this gene therapy to treat those with severe sickle cell disease and another condition called beta-thalessemia. So far, in the few patients who have participated, their results seemingly support this work. Clearly, longer term follow-up and larger populations are crucial to understanding the significance of this report. Additionally, stem cell transplantation is no minor feat.

That said, for a disease that disables at such a young age, this option could be quite an extraordinary one if the success persists. ACSHs Senior Fellow in Molecular Biology, Dr. Julianna LeMieux, puts the promise of gene therapy into even greater context for this and other disease entities:"This is an incredibly promising result, even with the obvious caveat that it is only one person. Sickle Cell is a disease that is ripe for genetic advances for a few reasons. First,the gene that is affected is known andcan be replaced by the healthy variant. Also, the cells that are needed to be alteredare easily accessible inthe bone marrow. In many diseases, this is not the case. But, this one success story is incredibly encouraging for the sickle cell community and for moving the field of curing diseases using genetic editing forward."

The team proved their concept. To know if "cure" is in this gene therapy's future, much more data needs to be acquired and study be implemented. Promising with cautious optimism might be the most apt description.

Source(s):

(1) (2) (3) (4) Jean-Antoine Ribeil, M.D., Ph.D. et al. Gene Therapy in a Patient with Sickle Cell Disease. N Engl J Med. 376;848-855. March 2, 2017.

Note(s):

To learn more about "Orphan Diseases" or rare ones that afflict less than 200,000 (but in total impact 25 million Americans) and drug discovery challenges, review: Did Pompe Disease Geta New Champion in President Trump? and Pompe Disease, Newborn Screening and Inborn Errors of Metabolism.

See the article here:
Did Gene Therapy Cure Sickle Cell Disease? - American Council on Science and Health

Study parses influence of genes and environment in metabolic disease – Medical Xpress

March 8, 2017 White fat stores energy, while brown fat dissipates energy by producing heat, mediated by uncoupling protein 1, or UCP1. Credit: Ray Soccio, MD, PhD, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania

By comparing two strains of miceone that becomes obese and diabetic on a high-fat diet and another resistant to a high-fat regimenresearchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania identified genome-wide changes caused by a high-fat diet.

The a team, led by Raymond Soccio, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of Medicine, and Mitchell Lazar, MD, PhD, director the Institute for Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism, published their findings online in the Journal of Clinical Investigation (JCI), in addition to an Author's Take video.

"We focused on the epigenome, the part of the genome that doesn't code for proteins but governs gene expression," Lazar said.

Their research suggests that people who may be genetically susceptible to obesity and type 2 diabetes due to low levels of a protein that helps cells burn fat, may benefit from treatments that ultimately increase the fat-burning molecule.

The team looked at the interplay of genes and environment in two types of white fat tissue, subcutaneous fat (under the skin) versus visceral fat around abdominal organs. The latter correlates strongly with metabolic disease. This visceral fat shows major gene expression changes in diet-induced obesity. The JCI study confirmed this relationshipand importantlyextended these findings to show that the epigenome in visceral fat also changes on a high fat diet.

Diet-induced epigenomic changes in fat cells occur at histones - proteins that package and order DNA in the nucleus, which influences gene expression - across the genome. There were also changes in the binding to DNA of an essential fat cell protein, a transcription factor called PPARgamma.

The team next treated obese mice with the drug rosiglitazone, which targets PPARgamma in fat to treat diabetes in people. "While the drug-treated obese mice were more insulin sensitive, we were surprised to see that the drug had little effect on gene expression in visceral fat," Soccio said. "This led us to look at subcutaneous fat and we discovered that this depot is much more responsive to the drug."

"These results are clinically relevant and indicate that the 'bad' metabolic effects of obesity occur in visceral fat, while the 'good' effects of rosiglitazone and other drugs like it occur in subcutaneous fat," Lazar said.

In particular, the drug-induced changes they found in subcutaneous fat reflected the phenomenon of browning, in which white fat takes on characteristics of brown fat, typically in response to cold exposure or certain hormones and drugs.

White fat stores energy, while brown fat dissipates energy by producing heat, mediated by uncoupling protein 1, or UCP1. The most interesting discovery of the study, say the authors, involves UCP1.

They showed that rosiglitazone, as expected, increases Ucp1 expression in both obesity-prone and obesity-resistant strains of mice. However, in subcutaneous fat of the obesity-resistant mice, Ucp1 expression was high even in the absence of the drug. "But the real surprise came when we looked at the offspring of obesity-resistant and obesity-prone parents, which have one of each parent's version of the Ucp1 gene," Soccio said.

Strikingly, they found that the obesity-prone mouse strain's version of the Ucp1 gene has lower expression and less PPARgamma binding than the obesity-resistant version. This imbalance shows that the obesity-prone mouse strain's Ucp1 is genetically defective, since it is less active than the other strain's version, even when both are present in the same cell nucleus.

In their final experiments, the team asked what happens when browning and Ucp1 expression are activated using rosiglitazone or exposure to cold, both environmental factors. They found that in both cases, total Ucp1 expression goes up as expected, but the obesity-prone strain's defective version of Ucp1 now reaches equal levels to the obesity-resistant strain's version.

"Importantly, we were only changing the mouse's environment with a drug or temperature, not the actual DNA sequence of the Ucp1 gene," Lazar said. "We propose that this result indicates epigenomic rescue of Ucp1 expression in subcutaneous fat cells."

The team is following up the mouse studies using human fat biopsies to figure out the exact DNA sequence differences responsible for variable Ucp1 expression, both in mice and in humans.

The relevance of this study extends even beyond UCP1 and obesity. "Many gene variants are thought to exert their effects by ultimately altering gene expression levels, and this study shows that a genetic predisposition to altered gene expression can be identified and then overcome with treatment," Lazar said. "This is the dream of precision medicine, and hopefully our study is a step in this direction."

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Study parses influence of genes and environment in metabolic disease - Medical Xpress

Chemistry labs at Nottingham point way to sustainable future – Chemistry World (subscription)

The new sustainable chemistry labs of the University of Nottingham have risen phoenix-like from the ashes. The original building slated for completion in mid-2015 burnt down in September 2014. The new labs, which officially opened last week, will be carbon neutral and feature innovative technology to cut energy and water consumption that will pay back the energy invested to build them within 25 years.

The fire of 2014 completely destroyed Nottinghams GSK Carbon Neutral Laboratories for Sustainable Chemistry, which was over two-thirds complete when disaster struck. The exact cause of the fire was never determined but Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue ruled out arson and said an electrical fault was the most likely cause.

The now complete 27 million building has been built on a brownfield site that was formerly the site of bicycle makers Raleigh. The funding to construct the new labs was finalised in 2013, with the Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce) providing 10.5 million, which was matched by 12 million from UK pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline (GSK). A further 4 million was provided by the University of Nottingham and 750,000 from arts and sciences charity the Wolfson Foundation.

To cut the buildings carbon footprint it was constructed with a timber frame using 100 spruce trees and built around carbon neutral principles. After 25 years of operation the labs will have offset the carbon emissions discharged during their construction. This is possible thanks to a 1150m2 photovoltaic array and a biomass fuelled heat and power system that supplies the labs with all the power they need, as well as supplying neighbouring buildings.

The new building benefits from a number of features specifically designed to cut the labs waste, energy and water use. David Chambers-Asman, head of operations and administration at Nottinghams faculty of science, says that they have had a rethink of the way labs run day-to-day. This has meant a cultural change that has not only seen the labs designed around greater sharing of resources like fume cupboards, but also a desire by incoming research groups to, for instance, cut the use of rare earth metals and avoid chlorinated solvents whenever possible.

The labs centrepiece is the buildings intelligent ventilation system. The system responds automatically to rises and falls in demand for heating depending on the buildings occupancy. This is coupled with smart fume hoods with sashes that close automatically to minimise the loss of warm air from the building.

To save water the labs have on demand cooling units for rotary evaporators and condensing reactions. Vacuum for filtration and other purposes is provided on demand rather than running large volumes of water through aspirators to create suction. A lot of reduction of raw water usage is key for us and theres other technologies we want to try in the future like mixed solvent organic waste [] some of the research based here is actually about separating it through electrolysis of the organics and the inorganics from the water so we can run clear water and have less waste, says Chambers-Asman.

The labs have been up and running for six months now and provisional data indicates their energy use is much lower than similar sized chemistry labs. Power consumption is currently around 167kWh/m2/year just 45% of that of a chemistry building that matches up to the Hefce Higher Education Energy Performance Improvement (Heepi) projects benchmarks for a modern chemistry lab. Chemistry labs typically consume a lot of energy to heat them and the new building is performing well here too. Its heating requirements are about 74kWh/m2/year, which is 25% of the Heepi benchmark for labs of this size. Despite these achievements theres still room for improvement as the labs are using more power than predicted. The team keeping an eye on power usage says that consumption is expected to drop further as people get used to the buildings energy efficiency features.

Andrew Witty, GSKs chief executive, speaking at the labs opening, said that the pharmaceutical industry needs to think much more sustainably when it comes to making drugs. He noted that Singapore, where GSK has a number of sites, produces a significant portion of the worlds drugs, and as a result ships vast quantities of solvents to Germany for destruction. This is one of the areas that he said needs to be targeted to cut the pharmaceutical industrys carbon footprint and that these new labs can be at the forefront of helping to tackle this problem. GSK has itself set a target of becoming carbon neutral by 2050. To reach carbon neutrality we need to completely reinvent the chemistry of every drug production process, Witty pointed out.

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Chemistry labs at Nottingham point way to sustainable future - Chemistry World (subscription)

Opinion: Harry Boxer’s six biotechnology stocks to watch – MarketWatch

While the broader stock market fell Monday, many biotech shares continued to outperform.

The big mover was TG Therapeutics Inc. TGTX, -8.72% which soared 90% after releasing positive results from its Phase 3 clinical trial of its treatment for high-risk leukemia patients. The stock closed up $4.85 to $10.20 on 33.7 million shares, which is 34 times its daily average. The stock blew through several layers of resistance, but pulled back at the close below resistance from the April high at around $10.50. A breakthrough there should get the stock to $13 and then $15. Support is at the days low of $9.10 and then $8. Short interest of 22 times its average volume could accelerate the advance.

Concert Pharmaceuticals Inc. CNCE, +5.67% rocketed 62% Monday on news that Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. VRTX, +1.06% will be acquiring the companys cystic fibrosis drug, CTP-656. The stock closed at $15.64, up $5.99, at around the mid-range of the days action, which bodes well for a follow-through. Volume of 10.5 million shares was more than 85 times its average. Watch for a retest the days intraday high at $18.48, a breakthrough that could get the stock moving to test its highs from November 2015 at just under $25.

Kite Pharma Inc. KITE, +1.57% which we highlighted in our biotech article on Friday, followed through on Monday, up $1.37 to $73.90. FBR Capital mentioned the company in a research note in which it said that potential tax reform and FDA policy changes under President Trump could fuel acquisitions of clinical-stage biotech companies. RBC Capital Markets boosted its price target from $85 to $95. KITE surged last week after the company released a favorable earnings report and positive clinical data on its lead product candidate for treating patients with rare forms of blood cancer. Pulling back slightly on Thursday and Friday, the stock is now in a high-level mini-wedge formation, a break of which could lead to the next target at $90.

Amicus Therapeutics Inc. FOLD, +3.21% was relatively flat on Monday, down just 10 cents to $7.69, but is looking strong. As we noted in our article Friday, the stock rocketed 17% on Wednesday after the company CEOs daughter, Megan Crowley, who has Pompe disease, was highlighted during President Trumps address to Congress Tuesday night. The stock has broken out of a mini-consolidation pattern and across lateral resistance from its December high. At its intraday highs last week, the stock nearly reached the level it was at before its big gap down in December. If it can fill that gap, watch for a move next to $9.50.

Among other biotechs to watch, Supernus Pharmaceuticals Inc. SUPN, +5.40% reached a new all-time at $30.37 on Monday, before closing at $29.75, still up $1 in a down market. The drugmaker has been rallying in the past week since topping analysts forecasts in its fourth-quarter report last Wednesday. Watch for $32-$33 in the short term.

Foundation Medicine Inc. FMI, +2.05% gained $3, or 10.6%, to $31.30 on no news Monday. Stock in the diagnostic cancer analyses company has been up six days in a row since closing at $23.10 on Feb. 24. The rally has broken the stock out of a falling wedge pattern. Our initial target of $29 was exceeded Monday, and next target is near $35.

See Harrys video-chart analysis on these stocks.

The writer has no holdings in any securities mentioned.

Harry Boxer is founder of TheTechTrader.com, a live trading room featuring his stock picks, technical market analysis, and live chart presentations.

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Opinion: Harry Boxer's six biotechnology stocks to watch - MarketWatch

Area high schools to offer dual credit biotechnology courses through Ivy Tech – Greene County Daily World

Several area high schools will start offering students the opportunity to take dual credit courses through Ivy Tech and earn free college credit this spring.

Last fall, Ivy Tech Community College Bloomington was awarded a Perkins Competitive Grant from the Indiana Department of Education, worth $85,000, to increase rural career and technical education pathways in biotechnology, according to Cook Medical Content Specialist, Moriah Sowders.

The course will be available to students attending Brown County, Owen Valley, Eastern Greene and Bloomfield high schools.

Currently, the courses are taught by an Ivy Tech instructor, though the grant will also provide training for high school science teachers to begin teaching the course in the 2017-18 school year.

In an article previously published by the Greene County Daily World, Bloomfield Jr./Sr. High School announced it would begin piloting two courses, BIOT (biotechnology) 102, the survey of good manufacturing practices, in the fall semester beginning on Jan. 17, and BIOT 100, the survey of biotechnology in the spring semester.

Eastern Greene Principal Doug Lewis said a course began there in mid January and has been going well.

It helps prepare them for going into that field, they can get a leg up going into other classes or straight into the workforce, said Lewis.

Currently, Lewis said the course is taught by an instructor from Ivy Tech once a week, and the students also login online daily for course work. The course will be offered by an Eastern Greene teacher next semester, according to Lewis.

Cook Pharmica also provided an additional $15,000 to Ivy Tech Bloomington to help launch and sustain the program in the future by providing funding for textbooks which can then be reused by participating high schools.

We have a mission at Ivy Tech Bloomington to help fill the local industry skills gap, and one way we do that is through partnerships like this with Cook Pharmica, said Jennie Vaughan, chancellor at Ivy Tech Bloomington. With the help of this grant, high school students can take dual credit classes in biotechnology, developing a clear pathway toward employment in the life sciences, an industry thats thriving in our region.

Tedd Green, president of Cook Pharmica said, We appreciate the work Ivy Tech does to help students in the local community develop the skills they need to enter the workforce upon graduating high school. This program is a true community partnership that supports the education of our local youth and the workforce development needs of the growing life sciences industry in South Central Indiana. We are pleased to be a partner in this program.

According to Sowders, Cook Pharmica has grown to 715 employees and introduced its new My Cook Pathway education assistance program in 2016, which provides employees the opportunity to continue their education at no cost to them from day one when with the company.

To find out more information about Cook Pharmica visit http://www.cookpharmica.com or to find out more information about Ivy Tech Community College visit http://www.ivytech.edu

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Area high schools to offer dual credit biotechnology courses through Ivy Tech - Greene County Daily World

Grey’s Anatomy Live Stream: Watch Season 13, Episode 15 Online Free – Streaming Observer News

Show/Episode: Greys Anatomy Season 13, Episode 15 Civil War

Date/Time: Tuesday, March 9 at 8 p.m. ET

Channel: ABC

Watch the Greys Anatomy Live Stream with: DIRECTV NOW (free 7-day trial), Sling TV (free 7-day trial)

Next Day, On Demand: Sling TV (free 7-day trial)

International Stream: Streaming options outside of the US

Civil War offers up a first-class case of hospital politics. April, Catherine, Jackson, and Richard all spend time on a difficult trauma case that is only made harder by in-hospital politics. Amelia comes to terms with how she feels about Owen. Meanwhile, Meredith ends up caught between Nathan and Alex because of a patient. If you cant wait to watch Greys Anatomy Season 13, Episode 15 online, you can learn how in the rest of this guide.

You can watch ABC online in a couple of different ways. The easiest way is by picking a live stream service. This means that youll be able to watch Greys Anatomy Civil War online when it airs on TV. There are two great, low-cost ways to watch Greys Anatomy Season 13, Episode 15 online and those are DIRECTV NOW and Sling TV. Even better, both options include free trials, so you can even watch Greys Anatomy online free! On-demand options are also available and will be discussed further in the article.

ABC is a channel offered in every DIRECTV NOW package. Package pricing starts at $35 each month and includes a minimum of 60 channels. ABC and other local channels are available in live stream in select cities or they are available on-demand nationwide. You also have FX, History, Food Network, USA, AMC, TNT, TBS, and Discovery. If you find you dont have enough channels you can choose a larger package or you can add channels like HBO for just a few dollars more each month.

DIRECTV NOW works on mobile and streaming devices and can be watched from almost anywhere with a WiFi connection. The DIRECTV NOW 7-day trial ensures that you can watch Greys Anatomy Season 13, Episode 15 online free! You can check out our DIRECTV NOW review if you want to learn more.

Like DIRECTV NOW, Sling TV also offers the ability to watch ABC online. The first thing you need to do is choose a package. The Sling TV Orange package only costs $20 a month and includes more than 25 channels. You will have access to TNT, AMC, A&E, ESPN, Disney, and many additional channels. From there, you need the Broadcast Extra package for an additional $5. This gives you access to ABC and select other channels. ABC is only available in live stream in select cities, but there is nationwide on-demand access, so youll be able to watch Greys no matter what! If youre interested in HBO that can be added to any package for $15/month.

Sling TV works on streaming and mobile devices from most locations. Perhaps the best news of all is that you can watch Greys Anatomy Season 13, Episode 15 online free with the Sling TV free 7-day trial! Our Sling TV review is available if you have any questions.

You can also watch Greys Anatomy S13, E15 online using on-demand services. Both Amazon Instant Video and Vudu are two of the most popular services. They both offer single episodes at $2 a piece and if you decide to order the season pass you can get them cheaper than that. Both services will allow you to watch online from a variety of streaming and mobile devices. You wont be able to watch the show in live stream, but each service does offer new episodes as soon as the day after they air on TV.

Still want to know how to watch Greys Anatomy Season 13, Episode 15 online? If so, any questions can be directed to our comment section. And if theres anything else youd like to know about Greys Anatomy streaming, our guide can fill you in!

Ashtyn Evans is a screenwriter and freelance writer from the Midwest. She owns nearly a thousand films on Amazon and holds streaming subscriptions to everything from HBO and Hulu to Showtime and Starz. Email her at ashtynevans@streamingobserver.com. Disclosure: Streaming Observer is supported by readers. Articles may contain referral links. For more information, see the disclosure at the bottom of the page.

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McGill third-best in the world for anatomy, sixth for mining – McGill Reporter

Browse > Home / Headline News / McGill third-best in the world for anatomy, sixth for mining

Posted on Tuesday, March 7, 2017

By McGill Reporter Staff

McGill just keeps getting better. Thats the conclusion to be drawn from the latest QS World University Rankings by Subject released on March 8, 2017.

From a stunning third-place ranking for the Universitys program in anatomy and physiology (only Oxford and Cambridge were better) to a sixth-place rank for Mining and Metals Engineering, McGill had 32 subjects ranked in the Top 50 in the world and posted 23 improvements since last year, against only 12 declines and 10 subjects where the ranking didnt change.

The seventh edition of Quacquarelli Symondss analysis of subject-specific university performance lists the worlds best universities for the study of 46 different subjects. Anatomy & Physiology is one of four new subject categories introduced in this years listing.

We are extremely pleased to rank among the worlds top three universities in the study of anatomy and physiology, said David Eidelman, Vice-Principal of Health Affairs and Dean of Medicine at McGill. This is a direct outcome of the quality of our academics and staff in these departments, who I congratulate for their stellar and hard work on behalf of our students. I am also gratified to see McGills rankings rise this year in the medicine and pharmacology categories.

Dean of Engineering Jim Nicell was equally delighted with the results in Mining and Metals. We are very proud to be ranked so highly along with our counterparts in other Canadian institutions, he said. The mining industry is an essential part of the economy of Canada, so we must always do our best to stay at the forefront in our teaching and research in support of this sector.

McGills ranking in the Medicine subject category rose from 27th in 2016 to 22nd in the latest edition. In Pharmacology, McGill moved up to the 31st spot from 37th a year ago.

McGill was ranked in five subject areas and placed in the Top 50 in four of them Medicine (28), Arts & Humanities (43), Natural Sciences (46) and Social Sciences & Management (49). McGill ranked 63rd in Engineering.

QS evaluated 4,438 universities,qualified 3,098 and ranked 1,117 institutions in total. More than 127 million citations attributions were analyzed and the British firm verified the provision of more than 18,900 programs. This years QS rankings by subject feature a record 46 subjects, four more than the previous year.

McGill University now features amongst the worlds elite institutions in 40 of the 46 subjects and all five subject areas featured in this yearsQS World University Rankings by Subject, said Ben Sowter, Head of Division for the QS Intelligence Unit.

The University is currently ranked 30th globally by QS, among the almost 1,000 universities surveyed for the annual report of world university rankings. McGill has been ranked as the top Canadian university for 11 of the 13 years that the QS/THE rankings have been published, apart from 2013 and 2014.

The full QS World University Rankings by Subject tables can be foundonline. The full methodology can be foundhere.

Category: Headline News

Tag: QS World University Rankings by Subject, Quacquarelli Symonds

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McGill third-best in the world for anatomy, sixth for mining - McGill Reporter

Anatomy of the fight with Europe – Yeni afak English

I asked a friend for a three- to four-day summary of the German media, and for some reason, the news and comments seemed very familiar. Whatever the Turkish media's attitude toward German policies is, the position in Germany is the same in the opposite direction.

Turkey in German media

It appears that President Recep Tayyip Erdoan's statements, especially his comparison of the current German government to Nazis, have provoked the German media quite a bit.

One of the major German dailies, Bild, published the headline, When will Merkel's patience run out? She is being criticized for keeping her silence amid Erdoan'd harsh comments.

Bild is in favor of all Turkish politicians being barred from speaking in Germany. The tone used in the article is interesting: Why are these Turkish haters allowed to speak in our country? The newspaper is reacting toward Economy Minister Nihat Zeybeki's speech.

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung has also reached the verge of severing ties: Germany is not a country that is very dependent on Turkey. It has shown great patience until now.

Propaganda turning to violence in Europe

I guess if we were to review the Dutch, French and Austrian media, we would come across similar articles since Turkey has become the main talk in European election campaigns just as it was one of the main issues in the U.K.'s Brexit referendum.

This is called making foreign politics a matter of domestic politics, and it is extremely dangerous because its affects can turn into violence.

Migrants, Islamophobia and Turkophobia are currently the nerve toward which the European public is most sensitive. Politicians are gaining votes by touching this nerve. After a while, all the anti-Turkey and anti-Islam comments, statements and propaganda made to collect votes come back as violence.

Ninety-one mosques were set on fire in Germany in 2016 alone. As many as 40 percent of Germans are in favor of banning Muslims from entering the country.

A total of 48 percent of the people in the Netherlands want Muslims' citizenship rights revoked.

In 2016, there were more than 1,000 Islamophobia-related attacks in the U.K. As many as 60 percent of the attacks were aimed at Muslim women.

In the same year, more than 360 attacks took place in France.

There were 100 hate crime and violent attacks that targeted Muslims in the Netherlands, 30 in Sweden, 90 in Austria and 20 in Belgium.

The total number of Islamophobic and anti-migrant attacks in Europe in 2016 exceeded 2,000 (Source: @trdiplomasi).

Increase in number of people joining Daesh in Europe

As you can see, the more politicians increase their anti-Turkey and Islamophobic discourse, the more it reflects through society as violence. The more violence increases, the more radical approaches increase. And it is terrorist organizations that take best advantage of this.

According to a 2014 study by former FBI agent Ali Soufan, Daesh received recruits from 86 countries. The number of militants joining the terrorist organization from Western Europe doubled in the course of a year. As many as 5,000 militants have joined Daesh from Europe.

The higher these numbers reach, the more it becomes apparent that Daesh militants are from Europe and the more the hate and violence toward Muslims increases. This further instigates radicalization on the opposite side. In other words, Europe is struggling in a vicious cycle, with both sides feeding one another.

This propaganda, and thus the incidents of violence, are certainly expected to increase in the elections to be held within the next two years in Germany, France, the Netherlands, Austria and Hungary.

So, what are Muslim countries, and especially Turkey, doing to counter this?

UN: 'Islamophobia is the source of global terrorism'

In a speech he made in February 2017, newly elected U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres made a very sound observation: The cause of increased global terrorism is Islamophobia. However, the matter was never seriously brought up on the agenda in the U.N. Security Council or the General Assembly.

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) did not include the problem on its agenda or try to influence public opinion either. Despite almost all of those attacked being Muslim, no solidarity, cooperation or joint action was formed.

Even though Turkish politicians voices the topic of Islamophobia and Turkophobia in their rhetoric, this rhetoric has not turned into concrete steps to remedy the situation.

The subject in Europe is also increasingly evolving toward Turkey. Reciprocal harsh statements due to the constitutional referendum in Turkey and elections in Europe are raising tensions.

Following Foreign Minister Mevlt avuolu's statement: I will come there, nobody can stop me, Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) Chairman Devlet Baheli raised the bar, saying: If Turkey reaches a boil, Berlin will burn.

Naturally, all of these statements have an opposite echo in Europe. Hence, an international problem turns into a subject of the domestic agenda, becoming even more difficult to solve.

The problem in Europe needs to be included on the global agenda

Yet, while the problem is one that concerns the entire world and, as stated by the U.N. secretary general, it instigates global terrorism, it is being turned into a fight between Europe and Turkey. This is wrong.

Turkey is obliged to influence public opinion on a more global scale, at the U.N. level, with all the Muslim countries that have been harmed by its side.

The U.N.'s uselessness is probably the first subject to come to one's mind. However, the matter should not be left here, and the fact that this situation is harming economic relations should be included second on the agenda.

The trade volume between Turkey and Germany is at 36.8 billion euros and in favor of Germany. Turkey ranks fifth among the countries with the greatest number of trade activities.

There is no need to state with how big of a difference the EU's trade ties with Muslim countries is in favor of the EU.

Europe has no conscience, it has interests.

Hence, Turkey must produce more global strategies and explain in a more powerful way that the problem in Europe is a problem that concerns the world in general, as the problem cannot solved through rhetoric.

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Anatomy of the fight with Europe - Yeni afak English

Breaking Bread: GMO labeling due on packaged foods by summer … – Columbus Dispatch

Last year, Congress passed a law requiringthat foods containing genetically modified ingredients reveal that on their labels.

By the summer of 2018, the marketing division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture is charged with definingwhat that label will say.

Will it actually list the ingredients (as in: This product contains genetically modified corn and soy), or will it be a QR codeconnecting the consumer to the information on a website?

The debate over the labels wording could prove as contentious as the fight over genetically modified organisms themselves.

GMOs are plants whose DNA has been changed. The development is beyond the typical cross-breeding of plants because the changes are made in the laboratory at the cellular level.

Opponents of GMOs fought hard for the labeling. They consider GMOsless safe than non-GMO foods, have ethical concerns about tampering with nature,have issues with the corporations behind GMO seed (namely Monsanto), and fear environmental damage from widespread GMO crops.

GMOs were developed 20 years ago to help farmers by changing the structure of plants to make them more resistant to disease so that farms could produce higher yields while applying fewer pesticides.GMOs are produced mostly for commodity crops: corn, soy, canola and sugar beet.

Recently, I had the chance to sit in while a group of Ohio food manufacturers learned about the new labeling law from Steve Armstrong of EAS Consulting.

Armstrong is a lawyer who specializes in food labeling and food-regulation compliance;until recently, he served as the chief food-law counsel for Campbell's Soup Co. Armstrong traveled to Columbus to speak at the Ohio Food Industry Summit, sponsored by the Center for Innovative Food Technology in Toledo.

Armstrongs time at Campbells is significant because, under his counsel, the company adopted a corporate strategy not tooppose GMO labeling but to embrace the transparency.

He encouraged the Ohio food makers at the summit to do the same.

Some already are.

Orrville-based J.M. SmuckerCo. already has introduced its labeling: On the back of a jar of apricot preserves, for example, you might be surprised to read: Partially produced with genetic engineering.

Farmers, food manufacturers and the companies that produce genetically modified seed fought hard to avoid the labeling. Their fight made consumers trust GMOs even less, Armstrong emphasized, as consumers wondered what the industries were trying to cover up.

Armstrong pointed to recent research showing that 87 percent of global consumers think that GMOs are less safe andless healthy than non-GMO foods. This despite statements to the contrary from theUSDA, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, World Health Organization, American Medical Association and National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.

Armstrongs point is this: Consumers want to know everything about their food where it comes from, whats in it, who produced it. Such knowledge is theconsumer's right, Armstrong emphasized.

Soon, however, consumers might see their concerns about GMOs tested in a new way. The Arctic Apple, a fruit sold sliced that is genetically modified to not turn brown, is about to hit grocery stores nationwide. It represents the first GMO convenience product rather than a commodity ingredient such as corn syrup and producers want to see how Americans will react to it.

Scientific advancements in food production have helped to feed a hungry world, and thats a good thing. Iknow that the canola oil I often use probably comes from aGMO plant, and I don't think I'm suffering negative effects from it.

But I have concerns about corporate domination over the seed forAmerican commodity crops. And an apple that doesnt brown,although it might be perfectly safe, strikes me asdownright unnatural. Convenient, yes, but unnatural nonetheless.

Eventually, there might be enough research to convince everyone that GMOs are safe, or to prove that they're not.

Until then,providing as much information to consumers as possible is the right thing to do.

Lisa Abraham is the Dispatch food editor.

labraham@dispatch.com

@DispatchKItchen

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Breaking Bread: GMO labeling due on packaged foods by summer ... - Columbus Dispatch

Genetic Engineering to Alter mRNA to Pave a New Way for Cancer … – Mobile Magazine

Stanford University is a private research university in Stanford, California, adjacent to Palo Alto and between San Jose and San Francisco. Stanford had expanded their research and has now ventured into scientific research about vaccines. They have genetically engineered mice to glow like fireflies. Yes, you heard it right glowing mice. Researchers at Stanford have developed a way to extract firefly proteins and introduce it to the mice specimen. This is envisioned to aid in the treatment and cure of patients with cancer.

According to the co-author of the study, Professor Christopher Contag, this study demonstrated for the first time that we can deliver messenger RNA (mRNA) to cells in a dish, or to cells in organs of living animals. The mRNA is the intermediate between the genome and functional proteins. Prior to this work there has not been an effective way to transfer synthetic mRNA into cells in a way that the cell can turn it into protein. This opens up an entirely new way to have cells express proteins that can treat a myriad of diseases. The research was featured and published in the recent paper journal entitled, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

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In the study, protein expression using mRNA has the ability to transform multiple areas for research, including the prevention, detection and treatment of disease. Functional delivery of mRNA to tissues in the body is key to implementing fundamentally new and potentially transformative strategies for vaccination, protein replacement therapy, and genome editing, collectively affecting approaches for the prevention, detection, and treatment of disease. This is, in particular, quite a challenge for the team because the mRNA is negatively charged; the cell membrane is positive so the transmission of the two is incompatible. To override this imbalance, the scientists came up with a way to create a vehicle for the mRNA. To test that, the specimen mice came into the picture.

Professor Paul Wender from Stanfords department of Chemistry and is one of the authors of the research said that, What we did was to use mRNA that codes for an optical readout, meaning one that we could see. In this case that meant light coming out of a cell. Its the fastest way of discovering whether you have succeeded in getting something into a cell, by getting it to shoot photons back at you. The study was a success that no adverse effects on the test subject were observed. The experiment worked for a few hours, and eventually subsided in 24 to 48 hours after. This experiment also showed a possibility of extending that desired effect by manipulating the DNA involved.

The research is still young as it will need more nurturing and sleepless nights to fully develop it into maturity. Being able to manipulate mRNA transmission and its genetic engineering means more possibilities for learning and being able to create new things. Science is a very complex subject but also very rewarding. The little things you focus on will grow out to affect the biggest if done right. We just hope stability of findings would occur soon so that it can be used for the benefit of the general public.

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Behavioral Science – Newswise (press release)

WASHINGTON (March 6, 2016) -- Two reports published March 5 (EST) by the World Health Organization reveal that more than 1 in 4 deaths of children under 5 years are attributable to unhealthy environments. That amounts to 1.7 million child deaths a year.

The reports (Inheriting a Sustainable World: Atlas on Childrens Health and the Environment and Dont pollute my future! The impact of the environment on childrens health) are alarming to Georgetown Universitys Laura Anderko, PhD, RN, director of the Mid-Atlantic Center for Childrens Health and the Environment, a regionalCDC Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit, which covers the District of Columbia, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia.

Anderko says many might think these reports reflect problems in developing countries, but that the United States is grappling with its own environmental challenges.

The new reports from the WHO underscore the important contribution of pollution to our children's health both abroad and here in the United States, says Anderko, the Robert and Kathleen Scanlon Chair in Values Based Health Care at Georgetowns School of Nursing & Health Studies. The US is experiencing an increase in the number of children suffering from asthma each year, which is exacerbated by extreme heat days that results in increased air pollution. Today, over 6 million US children suffer from asthma.

Anderko adds, It is essential to support efforts to reduce air pollution and reduce asthma in our children. In the U.S., we are fortunate to have the Office of Children's Health Protection at the EPA working to improve the health of our children through research, education, and regulation.

To interview Anderko about the impact of the environment on childrens health, please contact Karen Teber at km463@georgetown.edu.

About Georgetown University Medical Center Georgetown University Medical Center (GUMC) is an internationally recognized academic medical center with a three-part mission of research, teaching and patient care (through MedStar Health). GUMCs mission is carried out with a strong emphasis on public service and a dedication to the Catholic, Jesuit principle ofcura personalis-- or "care of the whole person." The Medical Center includes the School of Medicine and the School of Nursing & Health Studies, both nationally ranked; Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, designated as a comprehensive cancer center by the National Cancer Institute; and the Biomedical Graduate Research Organization, which accounts for the majority of externally funded research at GUMC including a Clinical and Translational Science Award from the National Institutes of Health. Connect with GUMC on Facebook (Facebook.com/GUMCUpdate), Twitter (@gumedcenter) and Instagram (@gumedcenter).

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Behavioral Science - Newswise (press release)

Spring's Anti-Aging Foods – AARP News

Beets

Sworn beet haters take notice. This ruby gem boasts so many healthy benefits, it absolutely has to find a way into your shopping cart, whether or not you like its earthy flavor. A fiber-rich food, beets contain an animo acid called betaine that can help lower your blood pressure, reduce your risk of inflammation, and help prevent and reduce the accumulation of fat in the liver. Win-win-win. When it comes to aging, beets contain powerful antioxidants that help keep skin supple and youthful and carotenoids that can ward off the macular degeneration that occurs as you grow older.

Asparagus

Asparagus not only boosts heart health, thanks to its vitamin K (which prevents blood clots), but this succulent vegetable also contains a special antioxidant called glutathione thats believed to help slow down the aging process. Whats more, the veggies other key vitamins, B9 and B12, may help ward off cognitive decline. Indeed, a study from Tufts University found that older adults with higher levels of folate and B12 which is harder to absorb as you age performed better on cognitive tests than those with lower levels. If that werent enough, asparagus is also rich in lycopene, which has been found to protect the prostate and help lower the risk of prostate cancer.

Carrots

Carrots are rich in beta-carotene, which actually gets its name from the classic vegetable. The body converts this beta-carotene into vitamin A, which in carrots is called retinol, an ingredient found in many antiaging creams. Along with being good for your skin and hair, vitamin A helps support your immune system, preserves good vision and may help fight cancer.

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Spring's Anti-Aging Foods - AARP News

Empire Medical Training Expands Course Offering – PR Web – PR Web (press release)

These courses are great because they are easy to learn, have financial benefits, and your patients will love the results.

Fort Lauderdale, FL (PRWEB) March 08, 2017

With their dedication to reaching students nationwide, Empire Medical Training has announced new courses they will be offering this year. Empire Medical Training invites medical practices to expand their business by signing up for one of the new courses or registering for a VIP class. By taking Continuing Medical Education courses like aesthetics and pain management, and adding them to a practices repertoire, Doctors and Dentists become more valuable to their patients.

For the first time, Empire Medical Training will host their One Day Complete Dermal Filler and Botox class in Chicago, Illinois. This course will be on April 1, 2017 in the Westin Hotel. By combining the Dermal Fillers Workshop and the Botox Workshop into one day, members and students will become proficient in all injection techniques discussed in this one course.

Empire Medical Training will be in Las Vegas, Nevada from March 11th through March 13th for their VIP training courses. These VIP courses are unique because these classes offer one-on-one training with the instructor and the student. For this weekend, the courses will include Botulinum Toxin Training, Advanced Botox and Dermal Fillers (Level II), and Complete, Hands-on Dermal Filler. Any Physician, Dentist, or Nurse looking to receive Botox and Dermal Filler Aesthetic Training would be a good fit for these courses. As Dr. Stephen Cosentino, President and Founder of Empire Medical Training, says, These courses are great because they are easy to learn, have financial benefits, and your patients will love the results.

To cover the demand for their courses, Dr. Stephen Cosentino will also expand Empire Medical Training by offering three VIP classes in New York City, New York from March 31st through April 2nd. This weekend will include Platelet Rich Plasma for Aesthetics, Botulinum Toxin Training, and Complete, Hands-on Dermal Filler courses.

Empire Medical Training has been training Physicians and Health Care Practitioners since 1998, longer than any other procedural training institution. With over 45,000 graduates in specialties such as Aesthetics, Anti Aging/Weight Management Medicine, and Pain Management, Empire Medical Training is renowned throughout the United States and abroad as the premier academy for providing academic excellence. Dr. Stephen Cosentino pioneered ways to add new procedures and services as well as business strategies to a practice and improve patient care. With Dr. Cosentinos commitment and dedication to the specialty and the field of medicine, Empire Medical Training is steadfast to developing new training programs and topics to broaden the scope of the primary care practitioner. All Empire courses are created through mainstream medicine using the most current technologies and standards of care.

For more information on the cities and courses offered at Empire Medical Training please visit their website or call 866-366-1576.

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Empire Medical Training Expands Course Offering - PR Web - PR Web (press release)