B.C. NDP select Gwen O’Mahony to lead Chilliwack by-election charge

Gwen O’Mahony, who has failed twice before to win an election
in the Chilliwack area, is trying again.

The health-care advocate with training in biochemistry and
microbiology won the NDP’s nomination in the Chilliwack-Hope
riding against Dennis Adamson and Kathleen Stephany on
Saturday.

“She’s an excellent candidate and she gave a superb speech,”
said BC NDP Leader Adrian Dix after the vote, decided by just
35 out of 84 riding members. “She raised our (the NDP’s) vote
in the last election.”

Dix, who gave a speech to the 200 party faithful who gathered
for the nomination vote and raised $10,000 for her campaign,
noted the NDP hasn’t won before in the riding but said
O’Mahony’s running to win.

With criminology Prof. John Martin running for the B.C.
Conservatives and the Green Party sitting this one out, the
by-election will be a three-way race with votes splitting on
the right rather than the left.

The seat is empty after Liberal Barry Penner resigned in
November after representing the riding for four terms.

The Liberals have yet to name a candidate.

O’Mahony first ran for office in the 2009 B.C. election, losing
to Penner in the Chilliwack-Hope riding.

And she ran unsuccessfully for the federal NDP in
Chilliwack/Fraser Canyon in last year’s federal election,
placing a distant second to Conservative Mark Strahl.

She lives in Chilliwack, where she is raising two nieces, and
has in past served as president of the Abbotsford Rotaract, a
college and career extension of the Rotary Club, and been
involved in community environmental issues.

Voters will also be asked to go to the polls this year in the
Port-Moody Coquitlam riding because Liberal MLA Iain Black also
resigned last year.

The government has yet to set a date for either by-election.

slazaruk@theprovince.com

twitter.com/susanlazaruk

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B.C. NDP select Gwen O’Mahony to lead Chilliwack by-election charge

Biosolar Breakthrough Promises Cheap, Easy Green Electricity

Newswise — KNOXVILLE— Barry D. Bruce, professor of biochemistry, cellular and molecular biology, at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is turning the term "power plant" on its head. The biochemist and a team of researchers have developed a system that taps into photosynthetic processes to produce efficient and inexpensive energy.

Bruce collaborated with researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Ecole Polytechnique Federale in Switzerland to develop a process that improves the efficiency of generating electric power using molecular structures extracted from plants. The biosolar breakthrough has the potential to make "green" electricity dramatically cheaper and easier.

"This system is a preferred method of sustainable energy because it is clean and it is potentially very efficient," said Bruce, who was named one of "Ten Revolutionaries that May Change the World" by Forbes magazine in 2007 for his early work, which first demonstated biosolar electricity generation. "As opposed to conventional photovoltaic solar power systems, we are using renewable biological materials rather than toxic chemicals to generate energy. Likewise, our system will require less time, land, water and input of fossil fuels to produce energy than most biofuels."

Their findings are in the current issue of Nature: Scientific Reports.

To produce the energy, the scientists harnessed the power of a key component of photosynthesis known as photosystem-I (PSI) from blue-green algae. This complex was then bioengineered to specifically interact with a semi-conductor so that, when illuminated, the process of photosynthesis produced electricity. Because of the engineered properties, the system self-assembles and is much easier to re-create than his earlier work. In fact, the approach is simple enough that it can be replicated in most labs—allowing others around the world to work toward further optimization.

"Because the system is so cheap and simple, my hope is that this system will develop with additional improvements to lead to a green, sustainable energy source," said Bruce, noting that today's fossil fuels were once, millions of years ago, energy-rich plant matter whose growth also was supported by the sun via the process of photosynthesis.

This green solar cell is a marriage of non-biological and biological materials. It consists of small tubes made of zinc oxide—this is the non-biological material. These tiny tubes are bioengineered to attract PSI particles and quickly become coated with them—that's the biological part. Done correctly, the two materials intimately intermingle on the metal oxide interface, which when illuminated by sunlight, excites PSI to produce an electron which "jumps" into the zinc oxide semiconductor, producing an electric current.

The mechanism is orders of magnitude more efficient than Bruce's earlier work for producing bio-electricity thanks to the interfacing of PS-I with the large surface provided by the nanostructured conductive zinc oxide; however it still needs to improve manifold to become useful. Still, the researchers are optimistic and expect rapid progress.

Bruce's ability to extract the photosynthetic complexes from algae was key to the new biosolar process. His lab at UT isolated and bioengineered usable quantities of the PSI for the research.

Andreas Mershin, the lead author of the paper and a research scientist at MIT, conceptualized and created the nanoscale wires and platform. He credits his design to observing the way needles on pine trees are placed to maximize exposure to sunlight.

Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin in the lab of Michael Graetzel, a professor at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale in Lausanne, Switzerland, did the complex testing needed to determine that the new mechanism actually performed as expected. Graetzel is a pioneer in energy and electron transfer reactions and their application in solar energy conversion.

Michael Vaughn, once an undergraduate in Bruce's lab and now a National Science Foundation (NSF) predoctoral fellow at Arizona State University, also collaborated on the paper.

"This is a real scientific breakthrough that could become a significant part of our renewable energy strategy in the future," said Lee Riedinger, interim vice chancellor for research. "This success shows that the major energy challenges facing us require clever interdisciplinary solutions, which is what we are trying to achieve in our energy science and engineering PhD program at the Bredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education of which Dr. Bruce is one of the leading faculty."

The Bredesen Center is a joint UT/Oak Ridge National Laboratory academic unit. Bruce is also a co-principal investigator and scientific thrust leader in TN: SCORE, the Tennessee Solar Conversion and Storage Using Outreach, Research and Education. The $20 million project is funded by the NSF and focuses on promoting research and education on solar energy problems across Tennessee. Additionally, he co-founded and is associate director of UT's Sustainable Energy Education.

Bruce's work is funded by the Emerging Frontiers Program at the National Science Foundation.

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Biosolar Breakthrough Promises Cheap, Easy Green Electricity

#03 Biochemistry Amino Acids Lecture for BB 450/550 Fall 2011 – Video

01-10-2011 17:35 Alecture by Kevin Ahern to BB 450/550 at Oregon State University. A lecture by Kevin Ahern of Oregon State University to his BB 450/550 class. See the full course at oregonstate.edu This course can be taken for credit (wherever you live) via OSU's ecampus.

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#03 Biochemistry Amino Acids Lecture for BB 450/550 Fall 2011 - Video

Bite-Sized Biochemistry #41 – DNA Replication, Repair, Recombination I – Video

03-08-2011 13:42 Lecture by Kevin Ahern of Oregon State University discussing Biochemistry Basics in BB 451. See the full course at oregonstate.edu This course can be taken for credit (wherever you live) via OSU's ecampus. For details, see ecampus.oregonstate.edu Download Metabolic Melodies at http://www.davincipress.com Related courses include BB 350 - oregonstate.edu BB 450 - oregonstate.edu BB 100 - oregonstate.edu 1.Salvage of purine nucleotides is important metabolically - perhaps more so than salvage of pyrimidines

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Bite-Sized Biochemistry #41 - DNA Replication, Repair, Recombination I - Video

Bite-Sized Biochemistry #45 – Transcription I (RNA Synthesis) – Video

(02/21/11) Lecture by Kevin Ahern of Oregon State University discussing Biochemistry Basics in BB 451. See the full course at oregonstate.edu This course can be taken for credit (wherever you live) via OSU's ecampus. For details, see ecampus.oregonstate.edu Download Metabolic Melodies at http://www.davincipress.com Related courses include BB 350 - oregonstate.edu BB 450 - oregonstate.edu BB 100 - oregonstate.edu Transcription Highlights 1

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Bite-Sized Biochemistry #45 - Transcription I (RNA Synthesis) - Video

Bite-Sized Biochemistry #5: Protein Structure III – Video

Lecture by Kevin Ahern of Oregon State University discussing Protein Structure II in BB 450. This course can be taken for credit (wherever you live) via OSU's ecampus. For details, see ecampus.oregonstate.edu See the full course at oregonstate.edu Download Metabolic Melodies at http://www.davincipress.com Related courses include BB 350 - oregonstate.edu BB 451 - oregonstate.edu BB 100 - oregonstate.edu Highlights Protein Structure 3 1

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Bite-Sized Biochemistry #5: Protein Structure III - Video

#05 Biochemistry Protein Tertiary/Quaternary Structure Lecture for BB 450/550 Fall 2011 – Video

A lecture by Kevin Ahern to his BB 450/550 class at Oregon State University. Topics covered include protein structure (tertiary and quaternary), prions, protein folding, misfolding, chaperoning, chaperones, RNase, denaturation, stabilizing forces, primary/secondary structure.

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#05 Biochemistry Protein Tertiary/Quaternary Structure Lecture for BB 450/550 Fall 2011 - Video

#04 Biochemistry Protein Primary/Secondary Structure Lecture for BB 450/550 Fall 2011 – Video

A lecture by Kevin Ahern at Oregon State University to his BB 450/550 class. Topics covered include primary and secondary structure of proteins, alpha helices, beta strands beta sheets, collagen, proline, steric hindrance, Ramachandran plots, alpha carbon, turns, cis, trans, and hydrogen bonds.

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#04 Biochemistry Protein Primary/Secondary Structure Lecture for BB 450/550 Fall 2011 - Video

Bite-Sized Biochemistry #11: Enzymes II – Video

Lecture by Kevin Ahern of Oregon State University discussing Biochemistry Basics in BB 450. See the full course at oregonstate.edu This course can be taken for credit (wherever you live) via OSU's ecampus. For details, see ecampus.oregonstate.edu Download Metabolic Melodies at http://www.davincipress.com Related courses include BB 350 - oregonstate.edu BB 451 - oregonstate.edu BB 100 - oregonstate.edu Highlights of Enzymes III Lecture 1.

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Bite-Sized Biochemistry #11: Enzymes II - Video