Repairing mutations in human mitochondria

LOS ANGELES Researchers at the UCLA stem cell center and the departments of chemistry and biochemistry and pathology and laboratory medicine have identified, for the first time, a generic way to correct mutations in human mitochondrial DNA by targeting corrective RNAs, a finding with implications for treating a host of mitochondrial diseases.

Mutations in the human mitochondrial genome are implicated in neuromuscular diseases, metabolic defects and aging. There currently are no methods to successfully repair or compensate for these mutations, said study co-senior author Dr. Michael Teitell, a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and a researcher with the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA.

Between 1,000 and 4,000 children per year in the United States are born with a mitochondrial disease and up to one in 4,000 children in the U.S. will develop a mitochondrial disease by the age of 10, according to Mito Action, a nonprofit organization supporting research into mitochondrial diseases. In adults, many diseases of aging have been associated with defects of mitochondrial function, including diabetes, Parkinson's disease, heart disease, stroke, Alzheimer's disease and cancer.

"I think this is a finding that could change the field," Teitell said. "We've been looking to do this for a long time and we had a very reasoned approach, but some key steps were missing. Now we have developed this method and the next step is to show that what we can do in human cell lines with mutant mitochondria can translate into animal models and, ultimately, into humans."

The study appears today in the peer-reviewed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The current study builds on previous work published in 2010 in the peer-reviewed journal Cell, in which Teitell, Carla Koehler, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry and a Broad stem cell research center scientist, and their team uncovered a role for an essential protein that acts to shuttle RNA into the mitochondria, the energy-producing "power plant" of a cell.

Mitochondria are described as cellular power plants because they generate most of the energy supply within a cell. In addition to supplying energy, mitochondria also are involved in a broad range of other cellular processes including signaling, differentiation, death, control of the cell cycle and growth.

The import of nucleus-encoded small RNAs into mitochondria is essential for the replication, transcription and translation of the mitochondrial genome, but the mechanisms that deliver RNA into mitochondria have remained poorly understood.

The study in Cell outlined a new role for a protein called polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPASE) in regulating the import of RNA into mitochondria. Reducing the expression or output of PNPASE decreased RNA import, which impaired the processing of mitochondrial genome-encoded RNAs. Reduced RNA processing inhibited the translation of proteins required to maintain the mitochondrial electron transport chain that consumes oxygen during cell respiration to produce energy. With reduced PNPASE, unprocessed mitochondrial-encoded RNAs accumulated, protein translation was inhibited and energy production was compromised, leading to stalled cell growth.

The findings from the current study provide a form of gene therapy for mitochondria by compensating for mutations that cause a wide range of diseases, said study co-senior author Koehler.

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Repairing mutations in human mitochondria

OriGene Technologies Announces the Acquisition of Beijing Zhongshan Golden Bridge Biotechnology Co., Ltd, a Leading …

ROCKVILLE, Md., March 12, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --OriGene Technologies, Inc. announces the acquisition of Beijing Zhongshan Golden Bridge Biotechnology Co., Ltd (ZsBio). The strategic acquisition establishes OriGene's leading position in the Chinese pathology testing market.

Headquartered in Beijing, China since 1993, ZsBio provides pathology testing products to the growing Chinese oncology diagnostic market. ZsBio has an industry leading position in the Chinese pathology testing market because of its innovative product portfolio, expertise, strong client relationships, and has established itself as a thought leader in the Chinese pathology diagnostic field. The Chinese pathology testing market has been experiencing double-digit growth annually and is one of the fast-growing segments of the Chinese diagnostic industry.

"With its leadership position in the Chinese pathology testing market, ZsBio is the ideal partner for OriGene," commented Wei-Wu He, CEO of OriGene. "ZsBio is already a leader in pathology products for cancer applications and has a wide range of market-leading diagnostics products used in hospitals and laboratories in China. In turn, OriGene brings to ZsBio innovative highly specific monoclonal antibodies and assays to complement and strengthen ZsBio's portfolio of products."

About OriGene Technologies

About Beijing Zhongshan Golden Bridge Biotechnology Co., Ltd

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OriGene Technologies Announces the Acquisition of Beijing Zhongshan Golden Bridge Biotechnology Co., Ltd, a Leading ...

New Cross pathology centre frame in place

A new 9 million pathology centre at New Cross Hospital in Wolverhampton is beginning to take shape with the steel frame now in place.

The three-storey centre will house microbiology, haematology, clinical chemistry and hist-opathology units. Work began on the facility in September. It is due to be finished later this year and open in early 2013.

With the steel frame now in place, concrete floors are being installed on all three floors.

David Loughton, chief executive of Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust, said: Its great to see this project taking shape on a daily basis. This is going to be a really important facility and is another significant project in our redevelopment of the New Cross site.

The 4,160sqm facility will include a number of new laboratories and facilities.

The work is being carried out by construction and infrastructure company Morgan Sindall.

Bosses at New Cross Hospital say the facility will cut waiting times for thousands of patients.

The pathology department will increase the speed test results are returned, meaning pat-ients can be treated faster and leave hospital quicker. The pathology department handles more than 1.2 million requests for work. It includes blood tests, urine tests, and identifying viral and bacterial infections among patients.

It is also hoped the lab will eliminate delays and reduce handling of samples which will lead to an overall improvement in the quality of the patient experience in hospital.

The four existing buildings house the departments of microbiology, blood sciences, clinical chemistry, histopathology and cytology. But they are old and ineffective.

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New Cross pathology centre frame in place

Innovation Sparks Success – Nutracon and Engredea Post Record Numbers

BOULDER, Colo., March 12, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --Nutracon and Engredea, two focused ingredient and supply chain events in the U.S. nutrition industry, posted record attendance last week at the Anaheim Convention Center.Nutracon and Engredea, co-located with Natural Products Expo West, are events devoted to innovation and next-generation product development across the healthy food, beverage, dietary supplement, bioactive and NutriCosmetic markets. Nutracon and Engredea drew over 220 exhibitors and 7,500 buyers and influencers over five days.

"The global healthy products market is booming, and so are the ingredients and innovation that fuel it," noted Len Monheit, Executive Director of Engredea and Nutrition Business Journal."Early estimates indicate 8% nutrition industry growth and 6.5% supplement industry growth in 2011.To keep pace we've made great investments this year including a large hosted VIP program, the Innovodex mobile app, the Innovation Station and a new focus on international business development via the Market QuickStart program in India and China. These investments are what define Nutracon and Engredea today, but this is just the start we plan to build on these exciting programs for many years to come."

"I get more work done in three days here than three weeks in the office," said Gabe Herrick, Director of Sales for Bioenergy Life Science. "We continue to meet the right contacts and leads that spur innovation and I can't wait to start following up."

Innovation, a theme at the show, took center stage at Nutracon as Zychrome from InterHealth Nutraceuticals and Portobello Mushroom Powder from Dole Nutrition Institute took home the 2012 NutrAward for Best New Ingredient and Best New Finished Product, respectively.

2012 also marked the launch of New Hope Natural Media's Hall of Legends, an awards ceremony recognizing those individuals who have made considerable contributions to the success of the natural products industry.

In addition, Functional Ingredients magazine editors combed the Engredea show floor to identify and honor the most innovative exhibitors with Editors' Choice Awards. The 2012 Editors' Choice Award winners include:

2012 Best Science: Helios Corp

2012 Best Marketing: Sabinsa, Curcumin C3 Complex

2012 Best Partnership: DSM and Provexis

2012 Best Botanical: Ilhwa Co., Gin ST15

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Innovation Sparks Success - Nutracon and Engredea Post Record Numbers

John Skipper Column: Urdahl critics cite longevity as key issue

There are some strange goings-on in county politics these days.

Jay Urdahl, a Democrat supervisor who has been in office 24 years, is being opposed by another Democrat, John Jaszewski, in the June 5 primary.

Some opponents claim Urdahls long tenure is an example of why there should be term limits for office holders.

Urdahl and other longtime office holders will tell you there already are term limits; voters have the opportunity to oust elected officials every four years.

The challenge of defeating an incumbent like Urdahl in a primary is daunting because it is asking Democrats who have supported him for nearly a quarter-century to suddenly stop doing it.

It is Jaszewskis task to convince Democrats to switch horses.

Gary Blodgett, a conservative Republican former state legislator, has lent his name to fundraising efforts for Urdahl giving credence to the old adage of politics making strange bedfellows.

Urdahls opponents within the Democratic Party cry "foul at the notion of him seeking and accepting help from a Republican.

Urdahl supporters say it is a sign of bipartisan support for him.

There doesnt seem to be much buzz about Jaszewski taking on a fellow Democrat.

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John Skipper Column: Urdahl critics cite longevity as key issue

Biology professor talks about plant galls at Nature Center

Dr. Carol Mapes, professor of biology at Kutztown University, came to the Lehigh Gap Nature Center on Feb. 26 to talk about her favorite subject, plant galls.

It was the second in a series of nature talks to be held.

A hand-out included the names of 97 galls, each of which may have several subdivisions, but many galls have never been named, said Mapes. The study of galls is termed cecidology

Some galls can be damaging to farm crops such as the cedar apple gall that looks like an orange flower. It can cause rust spots on fruit and consequently cedar and apple trees should never be planted in close proximity.

Fungal galls damage cherries, peaches and plums. Damage at the roots and stems flows to the leaves and even damages other galls.

Many galls are native and are plant specific. However, most do not damage plants. They are difficult to control.

A round ball that forms near the top of a goldenrod plant is the goldenrod ball gall which provides a source of food for developing larvae. Some people collect the larvae as bait for fishing.

A larva makes a tunnel out of the ball for the fly to use in spring because the fly does not have any chewing parts. Woodpeckers will eat the larva.

Mapes said goldenrod is an invasive plant in Hungary where there are no galls to help keep it under control.

The cynipid wasp galls grow mostly on oaks and there are those that are specific to different types of oaks. The wasps come out of the gall in the springtime and enter an acorn.

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Biology professor talks about plant galls at Nature Center

Alissa McCaffrey Selected For Biology Honorary Society at St. Lawrence University

Josephine A. Thompson, 73, a resident of State Route 104 West, Oswego Town, passed away Monday March 12, 2012, at home, surrounded by her loving family.

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Area students ages 8 through 15 will have the opportunity to audition for a part in a very special childrens musical to be presented during Harborfest 2012. The production this year is The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.

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The Preschoolers at Phoenix Head Start Program had a special visitor on March 1. Cat in the Hat (aka Jackie Christian, center assistant) came to Discovery Day Care and celebrated Dr. Seuss birthday with the children.

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What are you doing to cut my taxes? Its a question I hear at almost every stop I make, whether a community meeting, at the front door of one of the thousands of constituents I meet every year, or even while shopping for groceries for my family.

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Attendees can meet members of the Oz Roller Girls, see roller derby demonstrations, hear about the fitness benefits of participating and ask questions about the sport or the league. The 7 p.m. event, free and open to the public, will take place in the OzZone, the former Real Deals store, in Oswegos Midtown Plaza.

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Alissa McCaffrey Selected For Biology Honorary Society at St. Lawrence University

Five seed grants totaling $115,000 awarded to UTHSCT researchers

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler:

TYLER (KYTX) - Five seed grants totaling $115,000 have been awarded to researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler. The locally raised money will help UTHSCT researchers explore new cures for serious diseases, said Steven Idell, MD, Ph.D., UTHSCT's vice president for research.

Hong-Long Ji, Ph.D., associate professor of biochemistry, was awarded a $40,000 grant to study the relationship between abnormal genes and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Usha Pendurthi, Ph.D., professor of molecular biology, received $40,000 to fund her work into how certain proteins that curb blood clotting affect the growth of cancerous tumors.

Proteins are required for the structure, function, and regulation of the body's cells, tissues, and organs; each protein has unique functions. Hormones, enzymes, and antibodies are all examples of proteins.

Buka Samten, Ph.D., associate professor of microbiology and immunology, and Malini Madiraju, Ph.D., professor of biochemistry, were awarded $20,000 for preliminary research that could lead to a better vaccine against tuberculosis. That's important, because TB kills more than a million people each year, according to the World Health Organization.

Anna Kurdowska, Ph.D., professor of biochemistry, received $10,000 for her research into a new way to treat acute lung injury, also known as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). And Amir Shams, Ph.D., associate professor of microbiology and immunology, received $5,000 to examine how to keep treatments for injured lungs inside those lungs.

"These grants enable our scientists to pursue new and exciting research that could change our understanding of how serious diseases develop, as well as transform how we treat them. They help our researchers acquire the preliminary data they need to successfully compete for funding from the National Institutes of Health, the gold standard in biomedical research," Dr. Idell said, calling this year's projects "outstanding."

Funding for the seed grants comes from UTHSC's Research Council and the Texas Lung Injury Institute. Since 2002, scientists in the Center for Biomedical Research have been awarded $118.6 million in research dollars.

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Five seed grants totaling $115,000 awarded to UTHSCT researchers

More than 130 projects judged in annual Marin secondary school science fair

Students in the seventh through 12th grades entered more than 130 projects that were on display last week at the Bay Model in Sausalito during the annual Marin County Secondary Science Fair.

Students developed a hypothesis, tested that hypothesis through data collection and analysis, and then developed conclusions based on their investigations.

The program is coordinated by the Marin County Office of Education.

Grand prize winners were:

Behavioral science: Liza Mansbach, 10th grade, Redwood High School, "The Effect of BMI on Ability to Estimate Calorie Values in Foods."

Engineering science: Conner Addison, 10th grade, Redwood High School, "The Effect of Turbine Blade Design, Angle of Attack and Wind Velocity on Turbine Power and Efficiency."

Environmental science: Kobe Peery, seventh grade, Saint Mark's School, "Do Darker Colors Attract and Sustain More Heat?"

Life science: Anna Knowles and Sarah Melbostad, 12th grade, Sir Francis Drake High School, "Why do Bristlecone Pines Have Twisted Trunks?"

Math and computer science: Parker Snipes, seventh grade, Saint Mark's School, "Probability and Risk."

Physical science: Eric Bryan, 10th grade, Redwood High School, "Harnessing the Power of Anaerobic Redox: The Effect of the Temperature and Electrode Size on the Electrical Production and Growth Rate of the Electrical Production of a Microbial Fuel Cell."

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More than 130 projects judged in annual Marin secondary school science fair

Insulin, nutrition prevent blood stem cell differentiation in fruit flies

Keeping blood stem cells, or progenitor cells, from differentiating into blood cells is important as they are needed to create the blood supply for the adult fruit fly.

The study found that the blood stem cells are receiving systemic signals from insulin and nutritional factors, in this case essential amino acids, that helped them to maintain their "stemness," said study senior author Utpal Banerjee, professor and chairman of the molecular, cell and developmental biology department in Life Sciences and a researcher with the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine at UCLA.

"We expect that this study will promote further investigation of possible direct signal sensing mechanisms by mammalian blood stem cells," Banerjee said. "Such studies will probably yield insights into chronic inflammation and the myeloid cell accumulation seen in patients with type II diabetes and other metabolic disorders."

The study appears March 11, 2012 in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Cell Biology.

In the flies, the insulin signaling came from the brain, which is an organ similar to the human pancreas, which produces insulin. That insulin was taken up by the blood stem cells, as were amino acids found in the fly flood, said Ji Won Shim, a postdoctoral fellow in Banerjee's lab and first author of the study.

Shim studied the flies while in the larval stage of development. To see what would happen to the blood stem cells, Shim placed the larvae into a jar with no food - they usually eat yeast or cornmeal and left them for 24 hours. Afterward, she checked for the presence of blood stem cells using specific chemical markers that made them visible under a confocal microscope.

"Once the flies were starved and not receiving the insulin and nutritional signaling, all the blood stem cells were gone," Shim said. "All that were left were differentiated mature blood cells. This type of mechanism has not been identified in mammals or humans, and it will be intriguing to see if there are similar mechanisms at work there."

In the fruit fly, the only mature blood cells present are myeloid cells, Shim said. Diabetic patients have many activated myeloid cells that could be causing disease symptoms. It may be that abnormal activation of myeloid cells and abnormal metabolism play a major role in diabetes.

"Metabolic regulation and immune response are highly integrated in order to function properly dependent on each other. Type II diabetes and obesity, both metabolic diseases, are closely associated with chronic inflammation, which is induced by abnormal activation of blood cells," Shim said. "However, no systemic study on a connection between blood stem cells and metabolic alterations had been done. Our study highlights the potential linkage between myeloid-lineage blood stem cells and metabolic disruptions."

Going forward, Banerjee and his team are seeking other system signaling molecules that may be controlling blood stem cells in the fruit fly.

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Insulin, nutrition prevent blood stem cell differentiation in fruit flies

New design techniques enable extremely reliable medical devices

To counter the increasing fault-rates expected in the next technology generations, Desyre develops new design techniques for future Systems-on-Chips to improve reliability while at the same time reducing power and performance overheads associated with fault-tolerance. Ioannis Sourdis, Assistant Professor in Computer Engineering at Chalmers, is the project leader of DeSyRe (on-Demand System Reliability).

We focus on the design of future highly reliable Systems-on-Chips that consume far less power than other designs for high reliability systems, he says. This approach allows by design devices that combine high reliability with small batteries and state-of-the-art longevity. It is perfect for safety-critical applications such as in implantable medical devices, for example pacemakers or deep brain stimulators that treat Parkinsons disease.

Research in reliable systems typically focuses on fail-safe mechanisms that use various redundancy schemes, in which sensitive subsystems are entirely doubled as a fail-safe. Checking for faults in the subsystem increases the energy consumption and decreases the performance of chips, as testing all subsystems cost time and energy.

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It sounds perhaps counterintuitive to design a highly reliable System-on-Chip on the basis of components that may fail, and yet this is exactly what we propose to do. Since our subsystems consist of small, interchangeable processing cores, we can test and exclude individual cores while the function of the whole systems stays intact, says Gerard Rauwerda, CTO of Recore Systems, one of the industry partners of Desyre. "The beauty of the Desyre approach is that the system continues to do its job reliably, even if one or more cores fail, extending chip longevity."

The researchers expect this type of fault-tolerance to reduce energy consumption by at least ten to twenty percent compared to other redundancy schemes, while at the same time minimizing penalty on performance.

"People that need implantable medical devices will also benefit from this, as it pays off in a longer battery life and a postponed device replacement without any compromise to reliability," Ioannis Sourdis concludes.

Ioannis Sourdis explains the Desyres approach on Monday March 12 in a tutorial on Hardware and software design and verification for safety critical electronic systems during the Date 2012 conference in Dresden, Germany.

Provided by Chalmer's University of Technology

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New design techniques enable extremely reliable medical devices

How Human Engineering Could Be the Solution to Climate Change

Some of the proposed modifications are simple and noninvasive. For instance, many people wish to give up meat for ecological reasons, but lack the willpower to do so on their own. The paper suggests that such individuals could take a pill that would trigger mild nausea upon the ingestion of meat, which would then lead to a lasting aversion to meat-eating. Other techniques are bound to be more controversial. For instance, the paper suggests that parents could make use of genetic engineering or hormone therapy in order to birth smaller, less resource-intensive children.

The lead author of the paper, S. Matthew Liao, is a professor of philosophy and bioethics at New York University. Liao is keen to point out that the paper is not meant to advocate for any particular human modifications, or even human engineering generally; rather, it is only meant to introduce human engineering as one possible, partial solution to climate change. He also emphasized the voluntary nature of the proposed modifications. Neither Liao or his co-authors, Anders Sandberg and Rebecca Roache of Oxford, approve of any coercive human engineering; they favor modifications borne of individual choices, not technocratic mandates. What follows is my conversation with Liao about why he thinks human engineering could be the most ethical and effective solution to global climate change.

Judging from your paper, you seem skeptical about current efforts to mitigate climate change, including market based solutions like carbon pricing or even more radical solutions like geoengineering. Why is that?

Liao: It's not that I don't think that some of those solutions could succeed under the right conditions; it's more that I think that they might turn out to be inadequate, or in some cases too risky. Take market solutions---so far it seems like it's pretty difficult to orchestrate workable international agreements to affect international emissions trading. The Kyoto Protocol, for instance, has not produced demonstrable reductions in global emissions, and in any event demand for petrol and for electricity seems to be pretty inelastic. And so it's questionable whether carbon taxation alone can deliver the kind of reduction that we need to really take on climate change.

With respect to geoengineering, the worry is that it's just too risky---many of the technologies involved have never been attempted on such a large scale, and so you have to worry that by implementing these techniques we could endanger ourselves or future generations. For example it's been suggested that we could alter the reflectivity of the atmosphere using sulfate aerosol so as to turn away a portion of the sun's heat, but it could be that doing so would destroy the ozone layer, which would obviously be problematic. Others have argued that we ought to fertilize the ocean with iron, because doing so might encourage a massive bloom of carbon-sucking plankton. But doing so could potentially render the ocean inhospitable to fish, which would obviously also be quite problematic.

One human engineering strategy you mention is a kind of pharmacologically induced meat intolerance. You suggest that humans could be given meat alongside a medication that triggers extreme nausea, which would then cause a long-lasting aversion to meat eating. Why is it that you expect this could have such a dramatic impact on climate change?

Liao: There is a widely cited U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization report that estimates that 18% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions and CO2 equivalents come from livestock farming, which is actually a much higher share than from transportation. More recently it's been suggested that livestock farming accounts for as much as 51% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. And then there are estimates that as much as 9% of human emissions occur as a result of deforestation for the expansion of pastures for livestock. And that doesn't even to take into account the emissions that arise from manure, or from the livestock directly. Since a large portion of these cows and other grazing animals are raised for consumption, it seems obvious that reducing the consumption of these meats could have considerable environmental benefits.

Even a minor 21% to 24% reduction in the consumption of these kinds of meats could result in the same reduction in emissions as the total localization of food production, which would mean reducing "food miles" to zero. And, I think it's important to note that it wouldn't necessarily need to be a pill. We have also toyed around with the idea of a patch that might stimulate the immune system to reject common bovine proteins, which could lead to a similar kind of lasting aversion to meat products.

Your paper also discusses the use of human engineering to make humans smaller. Why would this be a powerful technique in the fight against climate change?

Liao: Well one of the things that we noticed is that human ecological footprints are partly correlated with size. Each kilogram of body mass requires a certain amount of food and nutrients and so, other things being equal, the larger person is the more food and energy they are going to soak up over the course of a lifetime. There are also other, less obvious ways in which larger people consume more energy than smaller people---for example a car uses more fuel per mile to carry a heavier person, more fabric is needed to clothe larger people, and heavier people wear out shoes, carpets and furniture at a quicker rate than lighter people, and so on.

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How Human Engineering Could Be the Solution to Climate Change

DNA 'snared rapist 20 years later'

A serial sex attacker violently raped a complete stranger and was traced through his DNA more than 20 years later, a court has heard.

Antoni Imiela, 57, is accused of a "terrifying" assault on Sheila Jankowitz near her flat in south-east London in the early hours of Christmas Day 1987.

Prosecutor Richard Hearnden told jurors at the Old Bailey that the attack was "a horrific ordeal suffered by Mrs Jankowitz at the hands of a complete stranger".

Years after the alleged assault Imiela went on to commit a series of seven rapes for which he was convicted in 2004.

Mr Hearnden told the jury: "He was linked to each of those rapes by the presence of his DNA... The prosecution say therefore it would be an extraordinary coincidence for Mrs Jankowitz to have fabricated an allegation of rape against a totally innocent man, a man with whom she had enjoyed consensual sex and a man who we now know later went on to rape seven other females in similar circumstances."

Mrs Jankowitz - who died in 2006 - had been to the pub with her husband Erwin on Christmas Eve in 1987 but the couple had an argument and went their separate ways.

She returned home to their Forest Hill flat to see if he was there and finding he was not, decided to go out again by herself. As she walked towards the main road Imiela grabbed her, put his hand over her mouth, dragged her onto wasteground and sexually assaulted her, the court heard.

He threatened her with a brick, said he would kill her and repeatedly punched her in the face, jurors were told. After the attack Mrs Jankowitz's mother-in-law Jill Stevens said her clothes were dishevelled and had blood and grass stains on them and her face was bruised.

The attacker stopped her from looking at his face during the attack, it is claimed, but more than two decades later a cold case team matched Imiela's DNA to the alleged rape.

Imiela, originally from Appledore near Ashford in Kent, denies rape, indecent assault and buggery.

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DNA 'snared rapist 20 years later'

Posted in DNA

DNA jab a safer test for babies

A new safe DNA test named T21 will be available worldwide within 12 months. Picture: Stuart Milligan Source: Herald Sun

A SIMPLE jab to screen for Down syndrome in unborn babies could provide relief to scores of pregnant Australians who are fearful of invasive, risky tests.

The prenatal blood test has been unveiled in Sydney with scientists claiming a diagnosis rate of 99.1 per cent.

Women's DNA is analysed to detect chromosomal abnormalities including Down syndrome from 10 weeks.

The screening test has the potential to reduce the need for invasive diagnostic testing for 99 per cent of people who are having them, said one of the lead scientists, Prof Rossa Chiu, from the The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Pregnant women are often fearful of amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling, which carry up to a 1 per cent risk of miscarriage.

The safeT21 test, presented at the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia conference, will be available worldwide within 12 months.

The Australian introduction is dependent on government regulators but it is being used in high-risk cases in the US, Hong Kong and China alongside existing screening methods.

The test comes after scientists discovered babies released DNA into their mother's blood plasma during pregnancy.

Prof Chiu recommends women who test positive for chromosomal abnormalities still have the invasive tests due to the 0.1 per cent false positive rate.

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Posted in DNA

BioMAP® Profiling Provides Insights into Toxicity of Nanomaterials, Failed Drugs and Environmental Chemicals

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Assessments of the biological activity of various nanomaterials and chemicals in the context of primary human cell biology were presented today at the annual meeting of the Society of Toxicology by scientists from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and BioSeek, LLC. The presented findings further demonstrate the value of BioMAP human primary cell assay systems for both identifying critical bioactivities and potentially adverse effects of drugs, new materials and other compounds in a high-throughput format.

Through our work with EPA, BioMAP is yielding a rich harvest of biological information on a wide variety of environmental and other chemicals and their potential effects on human health, said Ellen Berg, Ph.D., General Manager of BioSeek. In addition to helping meet the goals of the ToxCast Program, which are aimed at developing high-throughput screening methods capable of predicting chemical toxicities, this information is continuing to enrich our BioMAP database. We view that resource as an increasingly valuable tool that can be mined to better understand the activities and potential safety of our pharmaceutical partners compounds in the context of human biology, prior to undertaking costly human clinical trials.

In an oral presentation by EPA, various nanomaterials with varying cores and their ion and micro counterparts were tested for cytotoxicity in various cell types, for transcription factor activation in HepG2cells, and for protein bioactive profiling in eight BioMAP human primary cell systems at concentrations equivalent to human exposures of 24 hours to 45 years. Analysis showed that nanomaterial cores are critical to bioactivities and their effects are often similar to those of related ions. Comparing test results on nanomaterials to reference profiles of other compounds in the BioMAP database suggested further molecular targets and pathways affected by the tested nanomaterials that werent directly measured by the assays performed.

A poster presented by EPA and BioSeek collaborators discussed the biological profiling of the ToxCast Phase II Chemical Library in BioSeeks primary human cell co-culture systems. The Phase II library contains 1060 unique compounds including failed pharmaceuticals donated by industry partners, reference compounds known to be endocrine disrupters, carcinogens or reproductive/developmental toxicants, and other widely used chemicals, food and cosmetic additives, and proposed alternatives to current industrially used chemicals The chemicals were tested in a panel of BioMAP co-culture systems and classified based on their ability to cause overt cytotoxicity in various cells types and on their bioactivity profiles when compared to reference compounds.

About BioMAP

BioSeeks proprietary BioMAP technology platform bridges the gap between in vitro and in vivo testing to connect primary human cell-based assay data to clinically relevant results. Compounds tested in BioMAP Assay Systems generate biological activity profiles that are compared to those of thousands of well-characterized agents in our proprietary BioMAP database, using a variety of predictive computational analyses. BioMAP Assay Systems are physiologically relevant and concurrently provide multifactorial readouts relevant to compound efficacy and safety. Thus, a compounds detected activities effectively preview in vivo results and forecast potential clinical outcomes. The BioMAP technology platform is consistently reproducible within and between assays, is high throughput, and supports drug discovery programs from library screening to lead optimization and candidate selection. For more information on BioMAP, please visit our website at http://www.bioseekinc.com.

About the US EPA ToxCastTMProgram

The U.S. EPA ToxCastTM Program is developing approaches to predict chemical toxicity using data from high-throughput and high content in vitro assays. The goal of ToxCastTM is to develop and verify "toxicity signatures," which are algorithms using in vitro and in silico data to predict in vivo toxicities. Phase I of ToxCastTM has produced data from >300 chemicals, ~500 in vitro assays and ~100 in vivo endpoints, providing a powerful dataset for evaluating the applicability of various analytic approaches for predicting the potential for an adverse response. The initial results from Phase I of the ToxCastTM program were presented on May 14-15, 2009 at the First ToxCastTM Data Analysis Summit held in Research Triangle Park, NC. Phase II of the ToxCastTM program will expand on and verify the ability of this approach to predict potential human toxicity. In Phase III, ToxCastTM will expand the list to thousands of environmental chemicals, delivering an affordable, science-based system for decision-makers to prioritize chemicals for more detailed toxicological evaluations.

About BioSeek

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BioMAP® Profiling Provides Insights into Toxicity of Nanomaterials, Failed Drugs and Environmental Chemicals

Molecular biology program grants stipends for summer research

While many University students are still waiting for their summer plans to solidify, most rising seniors in the Department of Molecular Biology already know exactly where they will be for June, July and August: on campus.

Each summer, the molecular biology department offers a nine-week program for students with a lab-based thesis, giving them a chance to conduct a good portion of their research before the start of senior year.

The program is not mandatory but is open to all rising seniors who are completing a lab-based thesis. However, the participation rate is very high because the majority of students in the department do lab-based theses, which require a lot of time in the lab.

Elena Chiarchiaro, manager of student services for the molecular biology department, said that it is very rare for students who have a lab-based thesis to choose not to participate. They feel that its almost necessary, Chiarchiaro said.

Experimental research develops a certain momentum, Mark Rose, the director of undergraduate studies and a representative for the department, said. Once you set up, you can collect data routinely over time and that takes less effort, but sometimes it takes a lot of time to get started. So the opportunity to be here over the summer can help develop the momentum that sustains students over the fall semester.

Even though the molecular biology department and the Program in Quantitative and Computational Biology organize the summer research program, it is open to a number of other students as well. Students majoring in departments such as chemistry, physics, and psychology who are conducting thesis research in biology labs can participate, as can freshmen and sophomores considering majoring in molecular biology and students from outside the University.

However, non-University students and potential majors must apply for spots. Students from other schools are housed in the dormitories and are reimbursed for travel expenses, but University students must provide their own housing and transportation. All participants receive a $4,000 stipend.

The program is supported by grants from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and several other organizations, such as the Genentech Foundation and the New Jersey Commission on Cancer Research.

We have the funds to pay our students a large enough stipend to get by. Its like they have a job, Chiarchiaro said.

By encouraging students from other schools to apply, Rose said, the department hopes to bring in underrepresented minorities as well as students from small colleges who might not otherwise have access to research facilities like those of the University.

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Molecular biology program grants stipends for summer research

[Music] Nikki Bacolod to collaborate with a Malaysian singer; new songs will be distributed in Asian countries …

Nikki Bacolod to collaborate with a Malaysian singer; new songs will be distributed in Asian countries

Ikinagalak ng Viva contract artist na si Nikki Bacolod ang pagkapili sa kanya ng Malaysian recording executive na si Julfekar Ahmad Shah upang makabilang sa piling mga singers na nais bigyan ng break sa nasabing record executive sa Malaysia.

Si Nikki ay runner-up ng Search for a Star in A Million talent search noong 2005 at nakagawa na siya ng album under Viva Records kung saan pumirma siya ng kontrata matapos siyang magwagi. Bagamat mas kilala siya bilang singer, pinasok din ni Nikki ang acting, na isa rin sa kanyang passion kaya tila nalimutan niya ang pagkanta. Pero masaya siya sa oportunidad na dumating sa ngayon na makapag-recording sa Malaysia.

Kasama ni Nikki na nabigyan ng break na mag-record para sa Dream Millennium Art Label sina Bryan Termulo, newbie teen singers Hai Zel and Grendel Ramos, and the Pinoy rock band Frio. Nakatakda silang magrecording ng mga awitin sa Bahasa Malaysia at Pinoy na idi-distribute sa iba't-ibang bansa sa Asia. Ipinakilala sila sa isang pre-listening presscon noong Martes sa Patio Carlito Restaurant sa may Quezon City.

"Masaya naman po ako kung paano ako inalagaan ng Viva. Natutuwa po ako kais binigyan din nila ako ng break sa acting," sabi pa ni Nikki. "Hindi naman po nakaramdam na pinabayaan ako ng Viva dahil sunud-sunod din naman ang projects ko sa kanila."

Nakasama si Nikki sa mga drama shows tulad ng Diyosa, Rosalka, Imortal, at Pangarap na Bituin. Nakalabas din siya sa Maalaala Mo Kaya.

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[Music] Nikki Bacolod to collaborate with a Malaysian singer; new songs will be distributed in Asian countries ...

Meet Your Merchant: The Gelbers' cutting edge practice gives a facelift to Incline

INCLINE VILLAGE, Nev. Aging is a natural, necessary part of life. Over time, your body begins to illustrate the bends, twists and turns your life has taken. Wrinkles and sun spots reflect damage from days spent under the intense glow of harmful ultraviolet rays. Joint and muscle pains may indicate too little or even too much exercise over a lifespan. Skin sags in places you wish it wouldn't, fat cells accumulate in unflattering proportions, and hormone imbalances only expedite the aging process.

But what if you could rehabilitate a torn meniscus without surgery and a long recovery process? What if you could lose weight quickly without going under the knife? What if you could look 10 years younger without the painful aid of a face lift?

Dr. Rebecca Gelber is proving that you can.

As founder of Tahoe Medical Spa in Incline Village, Gelber's mission is to bring minimally invasive anti-aging therapies to the aesthetic medical field through innovative treatments and technologies. At her boutique-like practice, which she co-owns with her husband Matthew, Gelber offers an abundance of non-invasive services like dermal fillers, vein sclerotherapy and weight loss plans.

It sounds vain; however, Gelber is anything but.

In fact, until opening the medical spa nearly two years ago, Gelber had dedicated her life's work to emergency response medicine. After graduating from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1993, Gelber completed her residency at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center where she met the love of her life, Matthew.

When I started looking for a job with a university, Michael said to me, I'll follow you any place in world as long as it's in California and not within 3 hours of Los Angeles,' Gelber said, turning to her husband with a grin stretched across her angelic face.

Without hesitation, Gelber followed her heart's desire to Northern California where she worked as an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the University of California Davis Medical Center for eight years before relocating to Tahoe in 2000.

With a passion still burning for emergency medicine, Gelber went to work in the ER unit at Renown Medical Center and also taught classes at UNR, but the chaos and hardships of emergency response began to take their toll on Gelber's graceful spirit.

I really did enjoy emergency medicine, but after a long period of time, you start to want to develop relationships with your patients that are ongoing you really want to help people be well, and what you're seeing in emergency medicine is the end result of people who haven't been able to take care of themselves, Gelber said.

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Meet Your Merchant: The Gelbers' cutting edge practice gives a facelift to Incline

Concorde Career Colleges Goes Digital with Online Human Anatomy Learning Tools Now in Use at 15 Schools

Every Concorde anatomy & physiology student can now access to Anatomy & Physiology Online, an interactive, 3D, digital learning tool developed by Primal Pictures. Anatomy & Physiology Online offers virtual, 3D access to every part of the human body, with 3D, adjustable images, interactive models, and narrated animations.

London, UK and Mission, Kansas (PRWEB) March 12, 2012

We are excited to be among the first career colleges to offer this innovative learning tool that can transform and enhance our students understanding of human anatomy, says Pat Debold, Vice President of Academic Affairs at Concorde. A deep and foundational understanding of the human body is critical to all of our students, and 3D, virtual learning will better prepare them to work as health professionals.

Todays students are often more comfortable with online learning, and many independently seek interactive learning tools for complex, visual topics such as human anatomy, said Laurie Wiseman, Founder and Publishing Director for Primal Pictures. Concorde is a step ahead in meeting student learning needs, and we are happy to partner with them on this innovative shift in teaching and learning.

Primal Pictures developed its 3D models using real medical scan data to create a highly detailed model. Anatomy & Physiology Online offers 3D anatomy that can be peeled away, rotated and labelled, along with narrated animations of physiology, learning objectives, self-testing, summary text, and pronunciation guides. It includes hundreds of lab activities to be performed by the student as they learn, ranging from labelling exercises to online quizzing and coloring pages.

Textbooks are wordy and cumbersome for learning A&P, says Mark Holcomb, Curriculum Development Specialist at Concorde. Primal offers us an innovative way to engage students. Anatomy &Physiology Online will enliven the classroom, and give students a unique understanding of anatomy. Best of all, we will transform the way we provide lab activities on our campuses. Going digital in A&P is the way ahead, we believe.

Students using the resource agree.

If we didnt have Primal, we would be learning from books: flat, 2D, boring, says Amy Cangelosi, a Dental Hygiene Student at Concorde. This makes a huge difference to how I can learn and study anatomy.

ABOUT PRIMAL PICTURES

Primal Pictures offers the most complete, detailed and medically-accurate 3D model of human anatomy for students, educators and health care practitioners. Primal Pictures 3D anatomy software is widely adopted in education and it is used for patient, practitioner and student education in over 20 countries. In 2012, over half a million students will learn anatomy using Primal software. A&P Online recently won the British Medical Associations annual prize for the best digital resource.

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Concorde Career Colleges Goes Digital with Online Human Anatomy Learning Tools Now in Use at 15 Schools

COLUMN: Rethink your diet during National Nutrition Month

By: Julie Whittington | Statesville Record & Landmark Published: March 11, 2012 Updated: March 11, 2012 - 6:03 AM

March is National Nutrition Month! This years theme, Get Your Plate in Shape, focuses on encouraging Americans to have proper portion control when it comes to eating.

Every March, The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (formerly known as The American Dietetic Association) creates a National Nutrition Month (NNM) campaign to educate the public on nutritional health and promote the dietetics profession. The first campaign was in 1973.

Key messages for the 2012 campaign focus on choosing food mindfully and considering everything you select to put on your plate. The seven key messages, as found on the Academys NNM website (www.eatright.org/nnm) are as follows:

Make half your plate fruits and vegetables;

Make at least half your grains whole;

Switch to fat-free or low-fat milk;

Vary your protein choices;

Cut back on sodium and empty calories from solid fats and added sugars;

Enjoy your food, but eat less; and

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COLUMN: Rethink your diet during National Nutrition Month