Biochemical tricks of the hibernating bear – Science Daily

Winter is in full swing, and many of us have fantasized about curling up in a warm cave and slumbering until the warmth of spring arrives, just like a bear. Bears have the ability to sleep away the harsh winter months when food is scarce. They can spend five to seven months in hibernation. During this time, bears do not eat, drink, excrete or exercise. Despite the length of inactivity, bears do not experience bone loss, muscle loss, heart complications or blood clots like humans do during extended bouts of inactivity.

In a recent paper published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, Karen Gjesing Welinder at Aalborg University in Denmark and colleagues set out to understand how wild Scandinavian brown bears protect their health and save energy during hibernation.

"The bear's tricks for hibernation adaptations can inspire and teach us to prevent effects of the restricted mobility of astronauts and of long-term hospitalized patients," says Welinder. "Immobile people lose muscle and bone mass, get blood clots, atherosclerosis and cardiac diseases. Immobile bears do not. Our deeper understanding of the tremendous physiological placidity encoded in animal genomes might be exploited in healthier lifestyles and medical treatments."

To understand how bears maintain their health during hibernation, Welinder and colleagues decided to look for differences in the levels of blood constituents between hibernating and nonhibernating brown bears. The molecules circulating in the bloodstream play important roles in cellular defenses, nutrient transport and cell signaling. The researchers used a multitude of screening tools in this study to analyze the molecular components in the blood, including mass spectrometry-based quantitative proteomic, metabolomic and hematological analyses of blood cells.

The investigators discovered that the bears' secret to maintaining their health during hibernation lies in saving energy on protein synthesis. During hibernation, complex pathways with many proteins are turned down or eliminated and are replaced with a small number of proteins with broader specificity and wide ranges of functions. This switch from complexity to simplicity allows bears to decrease the energy necessary to maintain important molecular processes for survival during hibernation.

Welinder and colleagues found that while the large majority of protein levels decreased during hibernation, the overall protein concentration increased due to dehydration and an increased level of serum albumin. The change allowed the bear to spend less energy synthesizing proteins to maintain functional protein concentration levels. Additionally, protein degradation was repressed by a 6 C decrease in body temperature and an increase in expression of alpha-2-macroglobulin, a broadly acting protease inhibitor. This further saved energy on costly protein synthesis by decreasing protein turnover.

Welinder and colleagues found that even though protein expression decreased overall, there were a few select proteins that were drastically elevated during hibernation. Bile salt-activated lipase, which can hydrolyze both triglycerides and cholesterol esters, was elevated 32-fold during hibernation and allowed the bears efficiently to harvest energy from stored fat. Only the three central coagulation factors, fibrinogen, thrombin and factor Xa, were increased during hibernation; together, these factors facilitate wound healing, only permitting local formation of blood clots when needed. Furthermore, the immune response was simplified to a few antimicrobial proteins, such as lysozyme, which acts as the innate line of defense against infection.

The sex hormone-binding globulin increased a dramatic 45-fold during hibernation, suggesting that this molecule must play a central role in the maintenance of hibernation. Welinder says the mechanism of action of sex hormone-binding globulin during hibernation still remains elusive.

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Materials provided by American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB). Original written by Amber Lucas. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

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Biochemical tricks of the hibernating bear - Science Daily

Excellent weapon in war on aging – Palm Beach Post

Question: What is the latest skin tightening technology?

Answer: Ultherapy is a treatment based on ultrasound technology. It works by using ultrasound-guided technology to actually view the underlying tissue that is being treated.

We are able to reach below the dermal layer, sending ultrasound energy penetrating deeper to the fibro-muscular tissue, promoting collagen production. If you have weakened collagen in the deeper connective tissue, it can cause the skin to become prone to gravitational forces and begins to stretch, sag and shift downward a process we call aging.

This is where Ultherapy plays a role. It is FDA approved for the forehead, face and neck.

The Ultherapy treatment begins with marking the area on the face to be treated. This is the same target area that is addressed in cosmetic surgery for skin tightening.

Once the skin is marked for treatment, a mild sedative is given. A full face treatment can take anywhere from 45 to 60 minutes. You may return to normal activities and can experience flushing or redness that should resolve within a few hours.

The regenerative process is initiated at the first treatment, however, results may take up to six months since you are relying on the bodys own healing process to repair and rebuild your skins foundation.

For more information, visitwww.MDBeautyLabs.com, or call (561) 655-6325 to schedule a complimentary consultation.

Daniela Dadurian, M.D., specializes in anti-aging medicine and is an expert in non-surgical body-contouring techniques. She received her medical degree from the University of Miami School of Medicine and has traveled the world researching the safest and latest technologies on the market.

______________________________________

MD Beauty Labs Medical Spa and Wellness Center

320 S. Quadrille Blvd. West Palm Beach

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Excellent weapon in war on aging - Palm Beach Post

Excellent weapon in war on aging – Palm Beach Post

Question: What is the latest skin tightening technology?

Answer: Ultherapy is a treatment based on ultrasound technology. It works by using ultrasound-guided technology to actually view the underlying tissue that is being treated.

We are able to reach below the dermal layer, sending ultrasound energy penetrating deeper to the fibro-muscular tissue, promoting collagen production. If you have weakened collagen in the deeper connective tissue, it can cause the skin to become prone to gravitational forces and begins to stretch, sag and shift downward a process we call aging.

This is where Ultherapy plays a role. It is FDA approved for the forehead, face and neck.

The Ultherapy treatment begins with marking the area on the face to be treated. This is the same target area that is addressed in cosmetic surgery for skin tightening.

Once the skin is marked for treatment, a mild sedative is given. A full face treatment can take anywhere from 45 to 60 minutes. You may return to normal activities and can experience flushing or redness that should resolve within a few hours.

The regenerative process is initiated at the first treatment, however, results may take up to six months since you are relying on the bodys own healing process to repair and rebuild your skins foundation.

For more information, visitwww.MDBeautyLabs.com, or call (561) 655-6325 to schedule a complimentary consultation.

Daniela Dadurian, M.D., specializes in anti-aging medicine and is an expert in non-surgical body-contouring techniques. She received her medical degree from the University of Miami School of Medicine and has traveled the world researching the safest and latest technologies on the market.

______________________________________

MD Beauty Labs Medical Spa and Wellness Center

320 S. Quadrille Blvd. West Palm Beach

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Excellent weapon in war on aging - Palm Beach Post

How fat could lead to more effective anti-aging treatments – PhillyVoice.com

Human fat could be the answer to more effective anti-aging treatments, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania say.

The researchers at Penn's Perelman School of Medicine said Friday they discovered adult stem cells from fat are more stable than other stem cells, such as those taken from skin, that are currently used in a variety of anti-aging treatments.

The cells from fat, called adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs), have the ability to make more protein that originally thought, therefore allowing them to replicate and maintain their stability.

Our study shows these cells are very robust, even when they are collected from older patients, said lead author Ivona Percec, MD.

The discovery "can potentially open the door" for new treatments and therapies to address aging-related diseases.

The researchers noted that ASCs are not currently approved for direct use by the Food and Drug Administration. They said more research is needed before potential implementation of their finding.

The finding was published in the February edition of the "Stem Cells" medical journal.

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How fat could lead to more effective anti-aging treatments - PhillyVoice.com

Gene editing could bring an end to all inherited disease and cancer, expert says – The Independent

All inherited diseases and cancers could be cured in the coming decades, according to a leading British expert.

Gene editing techniques that have been developed in recent years could be put to work to effectively end cancer and inherited diseases, according to DrEdze Westra

MrWestra believes that the ability to splice DNA into cells precisely a technology which is on the horizon, but is rejected on moral grounds by many will become super importantover the next 20 years.

It could completely transform the human race, he says so thatpeople are not affected by cancer, failing vision or the diseases of old age.

The bioscientist from the University of Exeter said: There is always a risk with this kind of technology and fears about designer babies and we have started having discussions about that so we can understand the consequences and long-term risks.

I think in the coming decades gene editing will become super important, and I think we will see it being used to cure all inherited diseases, to cure cancers, to restore sight to people by transplanting genes.

I think it will definitely have massive importance.

On Tuesday, two highly influential academic bodies in the US shook up the scientific world with a report that, for the first time, acknowledged the medical potential of editing inherited genes.

The National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Medicine ruled that gene editing of the human germlineeggs, sperm and embryos should not be seen as a red line in medical research.

Many critics insist that powerful new gene editing techniques should never be used to alter inherited DNA.

They argue that such a move would be the start of a slippery slope leading to designerbabies with selected features such as blue eyes, high intelligence or sporting prowess.

But the two pillars of the American scientific establishment said that with necessary safeguards, future use of germline gene editing to treat or prevent disease and disability was a realistic possibility that deserves serious consideration.

Mr Westra is taking part in a discussion on gene editing and its potential implications for society at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting in Boston, Massachusetts.

He said gene editing technology not only held out the promise of fixing genetic faults, but could be used to turn cells into miniature factories that churned out therapeutic chemicals or antibodies.

One application was the use of gene drivesthat increase the prevalence of a certain trait in a population.

For instance, gene editing machinery placed inside the cells of large numbers of malaria transmitting mosquitoes could prevent them spreading the organism that carriesthe disease to humans.

It could be a fantastic strategy to deal with some of the worlds biggest problems,said Mr Westra.

In terms of ethics we need to work out what happens if a genetically engineered insect flies out of the window of the lab. Trials into gene drives are already happening in labs for malaria.

The most promising form of gene editing, known as CRISPR/Cas9, was first demonstrated in 2012.

It employs a defence system bacteria useto protect themselves against viruses.

A carefully targeted enzyme is used as chemical scissorsthat cut through specific sections of double stranded DNA. Then the cells own DNA repair machinery can be exploited to insert the pastedgenetic material.

Mr Westra said: Gene editing... is causing a true revolution in science and medicine, because it allows for very precise DNA surgery.

A mutation in a gene that causes disease can now be repaired using CRISPR.

PA

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Gene editing could bring an end to all inherited disease and cancer, expert says - The Independent

iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (ETF)(NASDAQ:IBB),Health … – ETF Daily News (blog)

February 17, 2017 6:33am NASDAQ:IBB NYSE:XLV

From Taki Tsaklanos: Biotechnology was once the darling of stock market investors. Not so anymore, since the summer of 2015 the sector collapsed from 400 points to 250 points in the IBB ETF.

Likewise, the health stock market sector lost its status of outperformer as the XLV ETF went from 75 points to 62 points. Note that biotech is part of the health sector (XLV).

Biotechnology is now showing the first signs of life. The IBB ETF is up 3 percent on the week.

We warned readers to watch closely the 250 level in this alert: Biotechnology and Health Sector Testing Long Time Support. Later on, we noticed that biotech refused to break down, and started to show a pattern of higher lows. Right now, the biotech stock market sector is testing a breakout level. Things will really get bullish once 300 points in the IBB ETF is cleared.

The iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index ETF (NASDAQ:IBB) fell $1.78 (-0.61%) in premarket trading Friday. Year-to-date, IBB has gained 10.40%, versus a 5.01% rise in the benchmark S&P 500 index during the same period.

IBB currently has an ETF Daily News SMART Grade of A (Strong Buy), and is ranked #2 of 36 ETFs in the Health & Biotech ETFs category.

The broader healthcare sector (XLV ETF) looks even more interesting. It recovered its losses, and is now ready to test all-time highs. Make no mistake, 75 points is a very important price level. A triple-test is significant as, mostly, three tests are sufficient for a breakout. However, a failure to breakout, after 3 tests, is bearish to say the least.

The Health Care SPDR ETF (NYSE:XLV) was unchanged in premarket trading Friday. Year-to-date, XLV has gained 6.70%, versus a 5.01% rise in the benchmark S&P 500 index during the same period.

XLV currently has an ETF Daily News SMART Grade of A (Strong Buy), and is ranked #1 of 36 ETFs in the Health & Biotech ETFs category.

This article is brought to you courtesy of Investing Haven.

Tags: biotech Health Care NASDAQ:IBB NYSE:XLV

Categories: NASDAQ:IBB NYSE:XLV

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iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (ETF)(NASDAQ:IBB),Health ... - ETF Daily News (blog)

Anatomy of ICO For Blockchain Investors and Entrepreneurs – CoinTelegraph


CoinTelegraph
Anatomy of ICO For Blockchain Investors and Entrepreneurs
CoinTelegraph
Our London Correspondent Nick Ayton explores the structure and process of a successful Initial Coin Offering (ICO), its pitfalls, traps and the essential things you need to know as both investors and entrepreneurs.

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Anatomy of ICO For Blockchain Investors and Entrepreneurs - CoinTelegraph

Anatomy of a Cheese Recall – The Atlantic

These are chaotic times for Americans. The nationwide cheese recall, I mean. (What did you think I was talking about?)

Several well-known cheese brandsincluding Sargento, Meijer, Santino, Amish Classics, Country Fresh, and Guggisberghave issued recalls of Colby, pepper jack, shredded taco, and cheddar cheeses among concerns about listeria contamination at a cheese factory in Indiana. No illnesses have yet been reported.

Listeriosis, the foodborne illness that the Listeria monocytogenes bacteria causes, is a particular danger for those with weakened immune systems. In pregnant women, listeria can cause premature labor, miscarriages, and stillbirth. Listeria is an especially resilient bacteriaunlike many other germs, it can keep growing in a cool fridge.

The danger of an infection is part of why cheese sellers have voluntarily recalled their products in this case. But, as is often the case, the recalls have trickled out over the course of the past week. The timing raises questions about how food safety is handled and discussed among manufacturers, suppliers, distributors, and regulatorsand further questions still about how long it takes for consumers to be notified of possible contamination.

For cheese eaters, the questions are straightforward: Where did the contaminated cheese come from? And how do I know if the cheese I have in my refrigerator is safe to eat?

The answers arent always easy to find.

This recall began with Deutsch Kase Haus, a cheesemaker in Indiana that sells cheese to various companies which then package the cheese under different brand names. Deutsch Kase Haus issued a voluntary recall for products made at its factory between September 1, 2016 and January 27, 2017.

But we are a business-to-business provider, so we do not label anything under our brand, Mark Hubbard, a spokesman for Deutsch Kase Haus told me, which means we have a number of customers that fall under that productand each of those customers are the ones that actually initiate their own recalls that are put up on the FDA website.

In other words, its up to Deutsch Kase to notify its customers, like Sargento, of the possible contaminationthen its up to those brands to communicate next steps to the the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the public. ( The FDA is inspecting the plant as part of a coordinated effort with the Indiana Board of Animal Health on the investigation, Peter Cassell, a spokesman for the FDA, told me.)

In some cases, brand-name companies will expand the recall to other products of theirs, in case the contamination spreads from, say, compromised cheese, to other products processed or packaged in the same facility. Once a food recall is issued, each company that's been affected has to then look at how contamination may have spread through its own plant. So more and more products may be pulled into the recall over time. And since each company has its own protocols to follow, they end up issuing their recalls on different timelines. Thats why its important for consumers to periodically check back to the FDA website to see how recalls change in scope, Hubbard told me.

All of this becomes more complicated still as supply chains grow longer and longer, and as agriculture and food companies consolidate. The globalization of food supply chains makes widespread outbreaks more likely, and in some ways more difficult to track. Already there are nearly 50 million foodborne infections in the United States each yearand they cause about 250,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths, according to a 2012 paper published by the Institute of Medicine. Changes in the globalization of the food trade have important implications for food safety, the papers authors wrote. Mitigating the increased risks associated with a longer, globalized supply-chain will require robust capacity for public-health surveillance.

Such surveillance could involve cheap sensors, smart labels, real-time database sharing, temperature-reading packaging, and other tools to change the way people are notified of spoiled or recalled food.

The current cheese recall was initiated, Hubbard told me, out of an abundance of caution. Its still possible, officials hope, that no illnesses will occur as a result. For now, operations at Deutsch Kase are suspended entirely, while the FDA investigates, Hubbard said.

You have to be very careful, and you have to go beyond what you think could be happening, Hubbard said. Its good that word is getting out. We want people to be cautious.

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Anatomy of a Cheese Recall - The Atlantic

US Scientists Have Backed the Genetic Modification of Human Embryos – Futurism

Gene Editing

Since the debate about the moral ramifications behind CRISPRbegan, the scientific communitys stance has generally leaned towards caution versus support. Researchers recognize the potential, but gene editing and its implications on the future of the human race are so massive its not something to be taken lightly.

A new report from the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) however, shows how the scientific community is beginning to soften their stance on the subject. Co-Chair of the study committee Alta Charo points out:

Human genome editing holds tremendous promise for understanding, treating, or preventing many devastating genetic diseases, and for improving treatment of many other illnesses. However, genome editing to enhance traits or abilities beyond ordinary health raises concerns about whether the benefits can outweigh the risks, and about fairness if available only to some people.

The paper also goes on to support germ-line engineering, a process that allows people to have biological children while ensuring that they dont pass on serious genetic diseases to their offspring but only if there are no reasonable alternatives available. To that end, scientists are calling for more stringent regulations. They concede that global prohibition of the technique is not practical, especially in the interest of safety and efficacy.

Genome editing research is very much an international endeavor, and all nations should ensure that any potential clinical applications reflect societal values and be subject to appropriate oversight and regulation, said committee co-chair Richard Hynes, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator and Daniel K. Ludwig Professor for Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. These overarching principles and the responsibilities that flow from them should be reflected in each nations scientific community and regulatory processes.

The biggest concern that experts have over gene editing is anchored on the very real possibility that it will be used to create designer babies. All efforts now are centered on using CRISPR to prevent inherited disease. But whos to say that the same principles wont be used to engineer traits like strength, beauty, or intelligence?

That said, what if only some peoplehave access to this tool in the future? Could itcreate a social divide between engineered babies and naturally born ones? The risks also arent entirely known. While rare, there are instances where CRISPR edits DNA in unintended places, which could result in unforeseen consequences.

Of course, were still pretty far off from a designer baby being born. Right now, the gene editing technique is still being tested in animals, and it will take a significant amount of time and research before it will be ready for humans. But thats not to say that we shouldnt already be having a conversation about where this advancement will take us.

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US Scientists Have Backed the Genetic Modification of Human Embryos - Futurism

The New Science of Designing for Humans – Stanford Social Innovation Review (subscription)

The days of privileging creativity over science in design thinking are over. The rise of behavioral science and impact evaluation has created a new way for engineering programs and human interactionsa methodology called behavioral design.

Today the design of things that involve human interaction, such as programs, product delivery, and services, is more art than science. Here is how it typically works: We use our creativity to brainstorm a few big ideas, experts decide which one they like, and then investors bet on the winner, often with billions of dollars at stake.

This way of design thinking should be replaced by a superior method that can enable us to innovate with more success and less risk. Specifically, we can use...

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1 Amos Tversky and Eldar Shafir, Choice Under Conflict: The Dynamics of Deferred Decision, Psychological Science, vol. 3, no. 6, 1992. 2 Sheena S. Iyengar and Mark R. Lepper, When Choice Is Demotivating: Can One Desire Too Much of a Good Thing? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol. 79, no. 6, 2000. 3 For several examples, see ideas42s June 2016 report Nudging for Success: Using behavioral science to improve the postsecondary student journey, http://www.ideas42.org. 4 D.D. Baals and W.R. Corliss, Wind Tunnels of NASA, Washington D.C.: Scientific and Technical Information Branch, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1981. 5 Kevin Ashton, How to Fly a Horse: The Secret History of Creation, Invention, and Discovery, New York: Anchor, 2015. 6 Uri Gneezy and Aldo Rustichini, A Fine Is a Price, Journal of Legal Studies, vol. 29, no. 1, 2000. 7 E. Pronin, T. Gilovich, and L. Ross, Objectivity in the Eye of the Beholder: Divergent Perceptions of Bias in Self Versus Others, Psychological Review, vol. 111, no. 3, 2004. 8 This process was previously described briefly by ideas42 Managing Director Saugato Datta and cofounder Sendhil Mullainathan in their paper Behavioral Design: A New Approach to Development Policy, Review of Income and Wealth, vol. 60, no. 1, 2014. 9 For good examples of quick tests, see David A. Asch and Roy Rosin, Innovation as Discipline, Not Fad, New England Journal of Medicine, vol. 373, no. 7, 2015. 10 Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under Risk, Econometrica, vol. 47, no. 2, 1979.

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Telomeres nature's anti-ageing scheme – Varsity Online

Zi Ran looks into the exciting biology surrounding telomeres and their potential impact

The thread of never-ending life has always been a part of the canvas of myths and religion subsequently morphed seamlessly into everyday culture. Every religion and culture has their own telling of the tale. The Abrahamic religions have heaven, the Norse gods ate Iunns apples, the Greek gods ate ambrosia and drank nectar, the Taoists sought the elixir of life, and the medieval alchemists sought the philosophers stone. Though these ancient symbols may have been metaphoric, with current technology eternal youth feels to be almost within our grasp. With organisations like Google Calico, A4M (American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine), Human Longevity Inc and sponsors like Peter Thiel and Mark Zuckerberg, it seems as though humanity may finally taste that fountain of life.

To find immortality, one must understand mortality. Cells seemingly repair and divide without end, but they exhibit signs of ageing as well. The crux of the issue lies in the inherent structure of our genetic material, DNA. Human DNA is linear, so there must be two ends to the double helix. Every time DNA is replicated, information on the ends of the strands are lost. With increasing divisions, more and more information is lost to the point where the cell is no longer able to function cells senescence. Cells with this kind of DNA structure must have an extra layer of molecular protection which ensure many healthy divisions before their eventual death. These protective elements are called telomeres. Telomere research has been a hot topic within the anti-ageing community, as its length is directly correlated to longevity. These DNA aglets are extra pieces of DNA which cap on to the ends of the double helix strand and tightly wraps itself together to protect the genetic material both from chemical and mechanical damage. However, this method is not fool-proof. Telomeres also run out, and with time all cells eventually die.

The miracle of the fountain of life, if it exists at all, can only be found in the moment of conception. In embryos, the DNA is refreshed, and old used telomeres are extended. Embryonic cells are a rare type of cells which express telomerase, the only protein capable of extending the length of telomeres. These little molecular machines use RNA as a template to extend the depleted telomeres, elongating the lifespan of the cell. Telomerases are also expressed in some stem cells, which supply the body with red blood cells and repair large damages. As attractive as telomerases sound as a solution to age, their over-expression can also become a problem. Many tumours and cancer types use telomerase as a tool to extend their lifespan indefinitely, outliving their healthy counterparts and taking over the body. To fine-tune the activity of this protein such that humans achieve eternal life while escaping the potential over-proliferation of cells is something that has yet to be achieved.

The most important breakthrough of 2016?

Telomeres, all in all, may only be one piece of the longevity biochemical puzzle. Many other biological processes are affected by age, although the precise mechanisms remain shrouded in mystery. Mitochondria become less efficient, transport to and from the nucleus becomes much less regulated, proteins are misshapen more often, and the DNA racks up too many mutations to efficiently repair them. It looks as though humanity still has so much to learn in terms of mortality that the seemingly tiny gap to eternal life may actually be a journey of a thousand miles.

Once we understand the essentials of life, will eternity still be attractive? The underlying basis of all living things is maintenance of a dynamic equilibrium, meaning that balance is maintained through constant life and death. The confusion of age for life has been recorded since the time of the ancient Greeks. When Eos mistakenly asked on Tithonus behalf for immortality and not eternal youth, what she really obtained from Zeus was eternal torture. The ancient Homeric hymns only remember Tithonus as a withered old man with no strength to even sit up, certainly an anecdote to keep us grounded in our search

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Dermatologist-Approved Anti-Aging Tips to Try for Better Skin – Allure Magazine

Even the most well-informed and highly skeptical skin-care users (i.e. dermatologists) are buying into these buzzy treatments. Here, we've rounded up the best dermatologist-approved anti-aging tips and tricks to try for your best-looking skin yet.

Sometimes buzz, hype, and a Instagram blitz happens for a reasonbecause said treatments are efficacious, effective, and safe. These are three the pros stand by.

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Double-cleansing. Washing your face twicewith an oil-based cleanser followed by a water-based oneis a trend. But for Whitney Bowe, a dermatologist in New York City, its just part of her anti-aging regimen. Double-cleansing can preserve collagen, she says. Sure, that sounds like a tall order, but Bowe uses a DIY oil cleanser to dissolve makeup easily without the rubbing that can age your skin. She even takes off her mascara with the oil so she doesnt have to tug on her lashestheyve gotten thinner with age, so they fall out more easily. Her recipe: two tablespoons of olive oil stirred into eight ounces of aloe vera water. She follows that with Cetaphil Gentle Skin Cleanser to finish the job.

Vampire facials. OK, doctors actually call them platelet-rich plasma injections, but youre probably more familiar with the Kardashian-popularized term. (In case you missed that episode: The treatment involves injecting extracts from a patients own blood back into her skin using tiny needles.) It seems bonkers/creepy, but injecting plasma-rich platelets, which are full of stem cells, could help build new collagen, says Marie Jhin, a dermatologist in San Francisco. And replacing collagen in your skin as you age is a continuous battle. She does the treatments on herself twice a year; Bowe does the same.

CoolSculpting. This device destroys fat cells with extreme coldin about an hour. The technique is called cryolipolysis, and it works best on small areas of fat, says Karyn Grossman, a dermatologist in Los Angeles. I was happy with my overall weight, but fat had accumulated around my upper back and one hip. Two cycles of CoolSculpting completely changed the way my dress fit for my sons bar mitzvah, she says.

If you remember only one thing from this story, remember this: Sunscreen is nonnegotiable. It helps prevent skin cancer, and people who wear it have 24 percent fewer signs of aging than those who dont, according to a study published in Annals of Internal Medicine . Dermatologists apply it every day, more than once, rain or shine. And they have a few things to say on the matter.

For sheer coverage: Too many sunscreens look obvious on skin of color. They dont blend in, or they make my skin look gray or purple, says Jeanine Downie, a dermatologistand an African-American womanin Montclair, New Jersey. Her solution: SkinMedica Total Defense + Repair Broad Spectrum SPF 34 Sunscreen . I wear it on my face, my neck, my ears, and the back of my hands every day, she says. Its very sheer, and I reapply it. For medium skin tones, Mona Gohara, a dermatologist in Danbury, Connecticut, who is Egyptian, says La Roche-Posay Anthelios SPF 30 soaks in very quickly and doesnt leave a chalky cast.

For lasting protection: Bowe and Gohara carry around the Colorescience Loose Mineral Foundation SPF 20 Powder Brush for touch-ups over makeup. It contains iron oxides, and a recent study showed that sunscreens with iron oxides prevent melasma better than formulas without them, says Gohara. Its really (really) important to know, however, that powders are supplements to, not replacements for, traditional sunscreen lotions and creams. Ellen Marmur, a dermatologist in New York City and a premelanoma survivor, applies a tinted formula with SPF, like Chanel Vitalumire Moisture-Rich Radiance Sunscreen Fluid Makeup Broad Spectrum SPF 15 , each morningand then reapplies it over her makeup before going outside throughout the day. I do a lot of skin-cancer surgeries on the tops of the eyebrows, between the eyes, and around the nostrils, so Im careful to cover those spots, she says.

For the whole package: Every single dermatologist we talked to layers sunscreen over an antioxidant serum or cream. Thats key for neutralizing the free radicals from sunlight, pollution, and even heat that can slip through sunscreen, damage collagen, and set off pigment production in skin, says Bowe, who likes Olay Total Effects 7 in One Anti-Aging Moisturizer with vitamin E and green tea extract for her sensitive skin. I wear it at night, tooif you sleep in moisturizer, you wake up with more hydrated and plump skin. And that means fine lines are less noticeable the next day.

PHOTOGRAPHED BY CLAIRE BRAND

Snoop around a docs bathroom (nosy) and youll find three unlikely standbys.

Hydroquinone. This skin lightener is banned in Europe, and studies have shown it is carcinogenic in rats when ingested. But most American dermatologists are confident about its safety when its used topicallyso confident that they rely on it to fade their own dark spots. It can brighten even the most intractable pigmentation and works faster than anything else (in as little as two months). Jhin applies a prescription Obagi Nu-Derm product twice a day; Alicia Barba, a dermatologist in Miami, uses Melamix Skin Lightener & Blending Crme Hydroquinone USP 4% at night for two to four weeks three times a year to treat her melasma.

Compression socks. Theyre not exactly sexy, but Gohara gets four or five pairs at the drugstore at the beginning of pants season and wears them daily to prevent the varicose veins caused by standing all day.

More dermatologist-approved anti-aging tips:

Even dermatologists skin acts upthe difference is they know how to get it back in shape, pronto. For mild eczema flare-ups, Jessica Wu, a dermatologist in Los Angeles, heads to the health aisle for an Australian bee-pollen extract called propolis. Its anti-inflammatory and antibacterial and has been shown to help skin heal itself, she says. If thats not enough, then Ill use prescription cortisone.

Then there are the smart choices dermatologists make that have nothing to do with creams or lotions or unattractive hosiery.

They don't rub their eyes. The skin there will darken if youre a chronic rubber, says Nada Elbuluk, a dermatologist in New York City, who recommends putting a cool compress on the eyes whenever you feel the urge to rub. Grossman goes as far as sleeping in bendy glasses, called Swissflex glasses. Uncomfortable? Maybe. But they keep her sleeping on her back, which prevents her skin from creasing against her pillow (and eventually wrinkling).

They go to bed. Ive become neurotic about prioritizing sleep over an extra hour of iPad, says Gohara. When you dont sleep, your cortisol levels shoot up, which causes inflammation in the body. That can make skin conditions like acne and rosacea worse and, over time, lead to wrinkles.

They get physical. What I do with my body affects my skin almost as much as what I put on it, says Gohara. To that end, she does 20 to 30 minutes of high-intensity interval training every morning to enhance her circulation, reduce stress, and decrease the inflammation that causes aging.

Now, find out when it's time to call a
dermatologist:

Vote for your favorite makeup, skin, hair, and body products by February 20, 2017, and you'll be entered for chances to win one of four awesome beauty prizes!

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Dermatologist-Approved Anti-Aging Tips to Try for Better Skin - Allure Magazine

Harvard and MIT Scientists Win Gene-Editing Patent Fight – New York Times


BioWorld Online
Harvard and MIT Scientists Win Gene-Editing Patent Fight
New York Times
The Broad Institute in Cambridge, Mass., will retain potentially lucrative rights to a powerful gene-editing technique that could lead to major advances in medicine and agriculture, the federal Patent and Trademark Office ruled on Wednesday. The ...
There's a fine red line between cures, enhancements using gene editing techBioWorld Online
What the CRISPR Patent Decision Means for Gene EditingThe Atlantic
A Patent Decision on Crispr Gene Editing Favors MITWIRED
Phys.Org -NPR -Yahoo News
all 116 news articles »

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Harvard and MIT Scientists Win Gene-Editing Patent Fight - New York Times

Cancer could be wiped off the face of the earth with new gene editing techniques – Metro

We could be about to see a golden age of health (Picture: Getty)

Gene editing techniques developed in the last five years could usher in a golden age of health with an effective end to the scourge of cancer and inherited disease being banished forever, a leading British expert predicts.

Dr Edze Westra believes the ability to splice selected DNA into cells with great precision is destined to become super important in the next two decades.

He foresees it transforming the human race by creating generations of people for whom cancer, failing vision, and the diseases of old age or bad genes are distant memories.

The bioscientist from the University of Exeter said: There is always a risk with this kind of technology and fears about designer babies and we have started having discussions about that so we can understand the consequences and long-term risks.

I think in the coming decades gene editing will become super important, and I think we will see it being used to cure all inherited diseases, to cure cancers, to restore sight to people by transplanting genes. I think it will definitely have massive importance.

On Tuesday, two highly influential academic bodies in the US shook up the scientific world with a report that, for the first time, acknowledged the medical potential of editing inherited genes.

The National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Medicine ruled that gene editing of the human germline eggs, sperm and embryos should not be seen as a red line in medical research.

Many critics insist that powerful new gene editing techniques should never be used to alter inherited DNA.

They argue that such a move would be the start of a slippery slope leading to designer babies with selected features such as blue eyes, high intelligence or sporting prowess.

But the two pillars of the American scientific establishment said that with necessary safeguards, future use of germline gene editing to treat or prevent disease and disability was a realistic possibility that deserves serious consideration.

Dr Westra is taking part in a discussion on gene editing and its potential implications for society at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting in Boston, Massachusetts.

He said gene editing technology not only held out the promise of fixing genetic faults, but could be used to turn cells into miniature factories that churned out therapeutic chemicals or antibodies.

One application was the use of gene drives that increase the prevalence of a certain trait in a population.

For instance, gene editing machinery placed inside the cells of large numbers of malaria transmitting mosquitoes could prevent them spreading the organism that causes the disease to humans.

It could be a fantastic strategy to deal with some of the worlds biggest problems, said Dr Westra.

In terms of ethics we need to work out what happens if a genetically engineered insect flies out of the window of the lab. Trials into gene drives are already happening in labs for malaria.

The most promising form of gene editing, known as CRISPR/Cas9, was first demonstrated in 2012.

It employs a defence system bacteria use to protect themselves against viruses.

A carefully targeted enzyme is used as chemical scissors that cut through specific sections of double stranded DNA. Then the cells own DNA repair machinery can be exploited to insert the pasted genetic material.

Dr Westra said: Gene editing .. is causing a true revolution in science and medicine, because it allows for very precise DNA surgery.

A mutation in a gene that causes disease can now be repaired using CRISPR.

Read the original here:
Cancer could be wiped off the face of the earth with new gene editing techniques - Metro

Human genome editing report strikes the right balance between risks and benefits – Medical Xpress

February 16, 2017 by Merlin Crossley, The Conversation Gene therapy is growing in its capabilities, but there should be limits to its use. Credit: Shutterstock

If you recognise the words "CRISPR-mediated gene editing", then you'll know that our ability to alter DNA has recently become much more efficient, faster and cheaper.

This has inevitably led to serious discussions about gene therapy, which is the direct modification of someone's DNA to rectify a genetic disorder, such as sickle cell anaemia or haemophilia. And you may also have heard of deliberate genetic enhancement, to realise a healthy person's dreams of improving their genome.

Both of these issues have now been tackled in a comprehensive report on gene editing released today by the US National Academy of Science and National Academy of Medicine.

The message is fairly simple: relax, we've seen this all before, little if any harm has eventuated, and society is well placed to move forward together on this.

A definite maybe

Of all human technologies, recombinant DNA has arguably been one of the safest. There have been multiple benefits in both medicine and agriculture. And the legitimate concerns that arose when viruses were first mixed with bacterial genes, when cloning was first introduced, and when stem cells were developed, have not come to pass.

I cannot list all the benefits here, but if you have received the Hepatitis B vaccine or Australian Ian Fraser's Gardasil vaccine, which protects against cervical cancer viruses, you have been protected from disease thanks to recombinant DNA technology.

However, you probably haven't received somatic gene therapy, which is gene alteration directed at fixing one cell type, such as defective blood or liver cells. This is because this therapy only touches a tiny number of people, probably fewer than 1,000 worldwide, and again the benefits have outweighed the risks.

But there is one new message in the report that will grab the headlines.

That is the view on human germline gene therapy, which entails modifications that would be passed on to children and then to their children. This kind of gene therapy has been considered highly controversial. But this time, instead of a simple no thanks there's a definite maybe, provided the therapy is targeted at a severe disease as a last resort.

There will be alarm in some circles at the very mention of germline gene therapy, although perhaps not from the very few people who might be contemplating such treatment for the sake of their future children.

The authors of the report, who are among the mostly highly respected experts in the world, are well aware that many people will not be comfortable with the thought of germline gene therapy. They stress the need for extensive consultation, the meeting of strict criteria, and close regulation.

But in weighing up safety and efficacy, social and individual benefit, they clearly don't want to see a reflex ban put in place that may limit options if this technology can be used to make the life of some individuals better.

On one hand, they are right. This technology is not a threat to the fabric of society. Nor, I'd say, is this a genie that could not be put back in the bottle; gene editing could be reversed.

Nor, like the Sorcerer's Apprentice's broomsticks, will it multiply and spread when we try to restrain it. This is not like letting slip a virus, cane toads, oozing radioactive waste or carbon emissions into the atmosphere.

Seeking germline gene therapy in order to have a disease-free child would be a choice made at a personal level and those not wishing to participate should never feel compelled to do so.

Except, of course, the children who would not have a say in it. But also for them the risks might well outweigh the benefits. And, one way or another, parents already make life-determining choices for their children and sometimes for their children's children.

Even those seeking germline therapy for the sake of their children would mostly have alternatives, such as preimplantation diagnosis, which itself also has ethical considerations. There are no easy answers here.

So I can understand the report's conclusion, although I also believe there are risks, which I'll mention below.

Hard to abuse

There are other aspects of the report worth mentioning. It confirms that we already do properly regulate laboratory-based gene modifications, and we have learned so much from previous somatic gene therapy efforts that we are well placed to push on safely with both research and somatic treatments. I agree with this.

It also says that actual genetic enhancements should be avoided. There is evidence that society is uncomfortable with the idea of individuals, who are not suffering from disease, improving either themselves through somatic therapy or their bloodlines through germline genetic enhancement.

Some people might want more copies of the p53 tumour suppressing gene or to lose their CCR5 gene, which helps HIV invade cells, in order to give their children possible protection from cancer or HIV respectively, but I'd have to say it isn't worth the risk.

I would add that, ethical reservations aside, the sheer complexity of our genomes, and the rather involved and lengthy process of human reproduction, means that I have no concerns that even the craziest world leader could ever generate an army of super-mutants. Such an ambition would be defeated by not knowing which genes to alter, not to mention the requirement to assemble tens of thousands of surrogate mothers, then wait 20 years for the army to mature.

Yes, it is possible that someone somewhere will attempt germline gene enhancement as a stunt. That would be wrong and dangerous, and a risk for the child. But it would not threaten society any more deeply than many other obscene and regrettable individual crimes that sadly occur every day.

Germline gene therapy is illegal in many countries, and although there is a risk that unfortunate "medical tourism" may occur at some stage, I don't expect this to be a greater problem than the already widespread snake-oil selling that is a feature of many economies.

No emergency

So am I comfortable with this report and confident that it covers the ethical issues? I think it is superbly written. It is accurate, up to date, balanced, thoughtful, and covers experiments, somatic therapy, germline therapy, genetic enhancement, societal responses, and the need for public consultation and careful regulation. There is no emergency here.

My main concern is that raising the prospect of germline gene therapy will trigger discussions that will divert us from more pressing issues.

I do worry that introducing this apex concept as a possibility may increase the number of people who fixate on what gene therapy could deliver and thus may be lured into medical tourism, both desperate patients and also foolish investors, and all the while charlatans will profit from peddling promise.

I worry that raising hopes too high too quickly will ultimately cause a backlash against more moderate science.

I also worry that even conventional funding bodies will succumb to understandable pressures to fund translational research prematurely and this will actually waste large amounts of valuable public money.

And I worry about a hysterical reaction that could divide society along political lines with people lining up for or against germline gene therapy based on their political positions or personal beliefs rather than a sober examination of the facts, risks and contexts.

Finally, I worry that the focus on human modification will distract us from other issues, such as the use of CRISPR-mediated gene drives that could be used to eradicate rapidly reproducing organisms such as mosquitoes, and could thus be used for both great good or great harm.

But I don't feel the burden of worry too much because I know that, as a scientist, I can and should share the weight of my concerns with society.

Explore further: With stringent oversight, heritable human genome editing could be allowed: report

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Clinical trials for genome editing of the human germline - adding, removing, or replacing DNA base pairs in gametes or early embryos - could be permitted in the future, but only for serious conditions under stringent oversight, ...

Recent evidence demonstrating the feasibility of using novel CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technology to make targeted changes in the DNA of human embryos is forcing researchers, clinicians, and ethicists to revisit the highly ...

The National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Medicine issued a 258-page report Tuesday (Feb. 14) focused on human genome editing. It lays out principles and recommendations for the U.S. government and governments ...

At the conclusion of the recent International Summit on Human Gene Editing in Washington, DC, its organizing committee released a much-anticipated statement recommending how human genetic engineering should be regulated. ...

Don't expect designer babies any time soonbut a major new ethics report leaves open the possibility of one day altering human heredity to fight genetic diseases, with stringent oversight, using new tools that precisely ...

Personalized medicine, which involves tailoring health care to each person's unique genetic makeup, has the potential to transform how we diagnose, prevent and treat disease. After all, no two people are alike. Mapping a ...

Work on gene therapy is showing significant progress for restoring muscle strength and prolonging lives in dogs with a previously incurable, inherited neuromuscular disease. UW Medicine Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative ...

A genomic study of baldness identified more than 200 genetic regions involved in this common but potentially embarrassing condition. These genetic variants could be used to predict a man's chance of severe hair loss. The ...

Purdue University and Indiana University School of Medicine scientists were able to force an epigenetic reaction that turns on and off a gene known to determine the fate of the neural stem cells, a finding that could lead ...

Just before Rare Disease Day 2017, a study from the Monell Center and collaborating institutions provides new insight into the causes of trimethylaminura (TMAU), a genetically-transmitted metabolic disorder that leads to ...

Monash University and Danish researchers have discovered a gene in worms that could help break the cycle of overeating and under-exercising that can lead to obesity.

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Human genome editing report strikes the right balance between risks and benefits - Medical Xpress

The 10 Best Popular Science Books of 2016: Maths, Physics, Chemistry – Forbes


Forbes
The 10 Best Popular Science Books of 2016: Maths, Physics, Chemistry
Forbes
This group of books that I think were the best to be published in 2016 focuses on chemistry, physics and mathematics. So if the other book lists that I published a few weeks ago (evolution/ecology/behavior, environment/conservation and birds/birding ...

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The 10 Best Popular Science Books of 2016: Maths, Physics, Chemistry - Forbes

Chemistry 101: Claremore boys will talk about school records ‘when the dust is settled’ – Claremore Daily Progress

The Claremore boys basketball program is too busy winning games and conferences to worry about posting one of the best seasons in school history.

Last Friday, the Zebras wrapped up the Metro Lakes Conference title with their 55-45 win at Tahlequah. Tuesday, they recorded their 20th win in 22 games with a 48-42 victory at No. 7 Collinsville.

Friday night, the Zebras get a playoff warm-up game at Skiatook before hosting them the following Friday in the first round of the Claremore 5A Regional.

Nope...not enough time to pat themselves on the back. They got business to take are of.

Honestly, we really havent got caught up in the records or anything like that, said head coach Tommy Nolan. I think what we try to preach to the kids is we take it a day at a time, a practice at a time, a possession at a time and a game at a time. I told our coaches that when the dust is settled and when the season is over, well start digging down into the record books. We know (this season) is up there. Its been a special season. These kids deserve the recognition. Its definitely got to be one of the best winning percentages Claremore has had.

Talk of records may have not crossed the coaching staffs minds, but they are getting talked about. The Zebras are ranked No. 3 in the state. They will host a regional, which means they are one of the favorites to be one of eight teams at the state tournament.

Conference title check.

Winning a playoff game is next.

We accomplished a goal, Nolan said. We knew it was important. But weve got to maintain that momentum going into the playoffs. We want to make sure the kids enjoy it along the process, but as a coaching staff, weve got to stay focused and keep these guys as focused as we can.

At times this season, fans can tell this is a special team with lofty expectations. The senior-heavy team is full of athletes who have played together for years. Through those years, they have developed a chemistry almost a melding of the minds where they know where each other is going to be on the floor.

Sometimes, its just downright eerie.

The chemistry is there, Nolan said. And the guys who havent played with them as long, you can tell the chemistry has been built throughout the year in practice. These guys love to play. When they get done with practice, they stay around and play. You can tell they have built a chemistry together. They are able to read off one another and get to the right spots. They feed off each other.

And its not just Chemistry 101. There are other reasons why this team is 20-2.

Chemistry is very important, Nolan said. This team has been very unselfish. They relish in the success of the other guys. Its helped with the chemistry on the floor.

Last years early exit in the first round of the playoffs was a tough pill to swallow. Now, the Zebras are a year older and a year wiser. And that first-round game will be on their home floor against Skiatook at 8 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 24.

The other regional game will be Edison vs. Bishop McGuinness at 6:30 p.m. The winners will play at 7 p.m. Saturday.

If the Zebras hold court and are regional champs, they are just one win away from a trip to state.

Our first goal was to win the MetroLakes. Now it is to win a playoff game, Nolan said. There are a lot of good teams on that board behind you. And weve got a tough region. Weve got a couple of good teams coming in and a really good team from the west side of the state. When you get into the playoffs, anything can happen. We want to worry about winning that first game and then focus on trying to win the regonal and whatever happens from there on happens.

The Zebras wont be looking to rest players for the regular season finale at Skiatook. They may try some different rotations, do a little more substituting, try some new things. But Nolan wants his team to be that snowball rolling down the mountain gaining momentum and growing as it goes.

We will have a week, Nolan said. Theyve got plenty of time of rest after (Fridays) game. We just need to make sure we go out and execute and keep working together.

Nolan says this is a passionate group. They celebrate their wins as a team, celebrate their individual successes with no jealousy. They jump around and sing in the locker room after a game. It has been one of those seasons.

Its a joy to be around, Nolan said.

But when it all eventually comes to an end, either in the regional or area tournaments, or standing on the podium while holding the gold ball, it will be sad for everyone knowing it is over.

Thats the tough part of coaching, Nolan said. You build relationships. Its not just the scoring and the defense and what they do on the floor, in the halls and in the classroom. You build strong bonds and relationships with these guys. You hope when all is said and done, in three years or four years, that theyll come back around and be a part of the program because they are a big piece of the success we had.

Thats what we enjoy is seeing them become young men, and hopefully, some of the things weve instilled in them they can carry on later as they become husbands and fathers themselves.

PLAYOFFS

5A Girls Regional

At Shawnee

Thursday, Feb. 23

6:30 p.m. - Claremore vs. Tulsa Memorial

8 p.m. - Shawnee vs. Durant

Saturday, Feb. 25

1:30 p.m. - Regional championship

5A Boys Regional

At Claremore

Friday, Feb. 24

6:30 p.m. - Edison vs. Bishop McGuinness

8 p.m. - Claremore vs. Skiatook

Saturday, Feb. 25

7 p.m. - Regional championship

4A Districts (Area II)

Friday, Feb. 17

Oologah at Victory Christian (girls 6:30 p.m., boys 8 p.m.)

Claremore Sequoyah at Rogers (girls 6:30 p.m., boys 8 p.m.)

Saturday, Feb. 18

Inola at Miami (girls 6:30 p.m., boys 8 p.m.)

4A Districts (Area IV)

Friday, Feb. 17

Muldrow at Catoosa (girls 6:30 p.m., boys 8 p.m.)

3A Districts (Area II)

Saturday, Feb. 18

Dove Science at Verdigris (girls 6:30 p.m., boys 8 p.m.)

Kellyville at Chelsea (girls 6:30 p.m., boys 8 p.m.)

2A Districts (Area II)

Friday, Feb. 17 at Liberty

Foyil vs. Libert (girls 6:30 p.m., boys 8 p.m.)

Saturday, Feb. 18

Winners play Christian Heritage (girls, 6:30 p.m, boys 8 p.m.)

The rest is here:
Chemistry 101: Claremore boys will talk about school records 'when the dust is settled' - Claremore Daily Progress

SSCI Expands Biochemistry Services to Meet Growing Industry … – Benzinga

Intended to meet rapidly growing needs of the biopharmaceutical sector

WEST LAFAYETTE, Indiana (PRWEB) February 16, 2017

SSCI, a division of Albany Molecular Research Inc. has further extended its industry leading Biochemistry Services specifically targeting the rapidly growing needs of the biopharmaceutical sector. This service offers state-of-the-art cGMP techniques and methods for the biochemical and biosimilar characterization, product-related impurity characterization, aggregation state characterization, structure elucidation, protein formulation development, comparability, analytical method development and validation, and protein and peptide crystallization. Included in the diverse array of services available, an ultra-high resolution Q-TOF mass spectrometry is the cornerstone a state of the art instrument that significantly enhances SSCI's capabilities in analysis and data interpretation for large molecules, including biologic drugs such as antibodies and antibody-drug conjugates, metabolites and polymers to meet the expectations outlined in the ICH Q6B Specifications: Test Procedures and Acceptance Criteria for Biotechnological/ Biological Products.

"Innovative proteins and biopharmaceuticals comprise the fastest growing class of new chemical entities in the industry," commented Patrick Tishmack, PhD, Director Analytical Development , who leads the Biochemistry Services at SSCI. "Many of these therapeutic proteins typically exist in the solid state as lyophilized powders during their manufacture or in a final formulation. Few proteins are produced as crystals or formulated as mixtures of crystalline and amorphous protein. Therefore, SSCI is uniquely positioned to provide an understanding of the properties of biologics in the solid-state or as liquid formulations, which is of critical importance both in the development of the product and for regulatory approval."

About SSCI SSCI, a division of Albany Molecular Research Inc., provides industry leading contract solid-state and analytical testing services and exists to help companies in the pharmaceutical, food, agrochemical, and other chemical industries develop better products and get them to market more quickly. Over the past quarter century, SSCI has provided comprehensive cGMP research and analytical services in the characterization and chemistry of solid materials, with particular expertise in small and large molecules being investigated for pharmaceutical use. As the AMRI's Center of Excellence for Solid State Chemistry, its offerings include early candidate support services (in vitro analysis, stability, solubility, dissolution, excipient compatibility), solid form screening and polymorph, salt and cocrystal screening, form selection, particle engineering (process development, particle size method development), property improvement, crystallization of difficult materials, process control, biochemical analysis, full analytical chemistry support including method development and validation, intellectual property consulting and litigation support, and related research activities.

For more information about SSCI's biochemistry services, please contact 1-800-375-2179 or visit http://www.ssci-inc.com.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/02/prweb14066531.htm

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SSCI Expands Biochemistry Services to Meet Growing Industry ... - Benzinga

Anatomy of a sell out: why Isis targets scholars for working with the government – The Guardian

Islamic State (Isis) has ordered its followers to kill three Sydney imams: the Grand Mufti of Australia, Dr Ibrahim Abu Mohammed (pictured); Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman; and Sheikh Ahmed Abdo. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

Ive been called many things in my time working for the Muslim community in Sydney, but there is a recurring name that has stuck: sell out. Although often associated with musical acts that move from indie niche to mainstream success, abandoning their fans and values in the meantime, it has come to mean something slightly different to Muslims.

To Muslims, selling out refers to making a compromise on your beliefs and is often associated with engagement with power structures. On the surface, this logic is based on the idea that engagement with these structures, especially in the west, can never be genuine and can never be on Muslim terms.

It is upon this logic that Islamic State (Isis) has ordered its followers to kill three Sydney imams: the Grand Mufti of Australia, Dr Ibrahim Abu Mohammed; Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman; and Sheikh Ahmed Abdo. All three are known for their work in engaging different communities and working with government, policing agencies or with other faith groups.

By trying to excommunicate these sheikhs and essentially branding them as sell outs, Isis is seeking to justify its call to violence against them. The use of such inflammatory rhetoric, as a form of propaganda, is neither new nor exclusive to Isis, and has been used time and again by groups from across the political spectrum. However, it is vital to note that what lies beneath the rhetoric from all sides is an important point on engagement.

Its important to state (although it has been said in a variety of ways, ad infinitum), that the violence of Isis is abhorrent and unacceptable. The best way to thumb our collective nose at their desire to be part of a discussion about faith and engagement would be to have that conversation without their input or presence.

The term sell out is used as a counter to a power imbalance, as a means of expressing distrust in the avenues for engagement between Muslim communities and state power structures. And it is here where the conversation must begin when discussing the reasons for branding such individuals in this way.

Engagement in and of itself must be underscored by a power balance between the participating parties. Without this balance, what will result is a skewed conversation, one that is almost theatre in the way it follows a pre-determined script. What is not to be spoken about is ignored, what is focused upon is the symbolism and platitudes that are used to maintain the status quo.

By taking part in these so-called conversations without the ability to frame the discussion or the ability to have it on our terms, Muslims become complicit in our own silence. Moreover, we are also complicit in the injustices eked out under that silence, having been unable to break the cycle of violence and enforced obliviousness.

The wounds and trauma of the Syrian civil war, the Iraq war, the invasion of Afghanistan, the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, the Israeli occupation of Palestine, the Lebanese civil war, and the current violence in Yemen all of these conflicts are partly the result of the interference of western powers, both recent and long-standing. Colonisation continues to deeply affect communities, with the trauma lasting generations as the entire region seeks to reconcile its history with its present, and its people with the interests of foreign powers.

These scars, fresh or deep, are at the forefront of any conversation on power and politics, no matter the level or relevance. Conversations at all levels must be framed by these injustices, by a global, historical, political context that would seek to be guided by a need to recognise and right those injustices.

So, when the Muslim community is in conversation with government agencies or police, on any particular issue, whether it be criminality, socio-economic challenges, obstacles to education and so on, the coordinates of that conversation need to be reset.

Unfortunately, when discussing something apparently irrelevant to international politics or history, respectability politics plays a huge role, with nobody wanting to appear rude or inconsiderate. However, it is essential we shelve such considerations in the face of a growing need to reshape the way we think about engagement with government and police.

And its here where the notion of the sell out remerges, because without its global or historical context these conversations will continue to exclude and alienate any group or party seeking to have their scars recognised and healed.

Without it, genuine progress will be hampered by the notion of the sell out, both in conversations with institutions of power, and with a community continuously sidelined and dismissed.

At the end of the day, its not that I dont want people to call me a sell out, its that I want to see the roots of that notion no longer dismissed as just a rhetorical tool used by fringe groups. There are genuine problems with the way we, as a community and as a nation, see engagement, and until we fix that, the issues we face will never be addressed.

Read more:
Anatomy of a sell out: why Isis targets scholars for working with the government - The Guardian

The recent findings on Turmeric’s anti-aging effects – eMaxHealth

Curcumin safety

A review of the literature on the effects of Curcumin in the body, published by the journal of alternative medicine, found that a high dose of Curcumin is not toxic for humans. In one of the studies 25 subjects used up to 8000 mg of curcumin per day for 3 months, and five other subjects used 1125-2500 mg of curcumin, which was also found to be safe.

The ageing stressor factors and the three ways Turmeric is anti-geing

There are three main aspects of ageing: oxidative stress, inflammation and sun damage.

Experts at the Deparment of Neuroscience and Neurology in Finland, explain that during aging, adaptive immunity significantly declines, while innate immunity seems to be activated which induces a characteristic pro-inflammatory profile.

The first way in which Turmeric works is by inhibiting the number of different molecules that play a role in inflammation. In 2010 an article published at Current Design, has measured the molecular targets of curcumin in the body. The researchers found that that curcumin directly affects a few major targets, such the NF-B signaling pathways, which can in turn suppresses the pro-inflammatory state involved in the etiology of ageing and age-related diseases. Therefore, Curcumins anti- ageing results are compelling.

The second way Turmeric is anti-ageing is by fighting oxidative stress, because in the same study, Curcumins molecules were observed to take another important anti-ageing effect in the body, as its molecules are able to trigger the Nrf2/ARE signaling pathway, which plays a key role in activating antioxidative enzymes, phase 2 enzymes and so - called vitagenes, which have a pivotal role in oxidative stress-induced diseases. It is well known by scientists that anti- oxidants are important in order to fight free radicals, which are cells that have been damaged overtime.

Finally, Curcumin has been proven to be photoprotective (prevents sun damage), by blocking UV rays, which are known to provoke oxidative stress, a mediator of apoptosis (cell death). In an experiment conducted by Department of Bioscience Technology and Center for Nanotechnology, it was proven that Curcumin is able to inhibit UV irradiation-induced cell death. Scientists exposed A431 cells (a model human cell line used for research) to various doses of curcumin. Some were exposed to UV light irradiation, other samples were exposed to UV light irradiation after pre-incubation with Curcumin, and cell viability was determined. Approximately 50% of cells died after 200 J/m2 UV irradiation, and this cell death was reduced by Curcumin in a dose-dependent manner.

Considering all the above facts, it can be concluded that the Curcumin has a lot of potential as a more natural approach to heal and prevent certain diseases that are age related and is a powerful natural anti- ageing spice.

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The recent findings on Turmeric's anti-aging effects - eMaxHealth