Scientists pinpoint a gene regulator that makes human brains bigger

Thursday February 19, 2015 03:37 PM

The Associated Press

(c) 2015, The Washington Post.

By inserting bits of human DNA into mice, scientists were able to make their brains develop more rapidly and ultimately grow bigger in the womb. The study, published Thursday in Current Biology, suggests that the evolution of this gene may be one of the things that sets us apart from our close relatives in the primate world.

Human brains are unique, even when compared with our close genetic relatives, such as chimpanzees. Our brains are about three times heavier than those of our cousins, and are more complex and interconnected as well. It's generally accepted that these neurological differences are what allowed us to evolve the higher brain function that other primates lack. But just what genetic changes allowed humans to surpass chimps in the brain arena is one that's still being answered.

There are a lot of physical differences to examine more closely, but size is such a dramatic one that the authors of the new study chose to start there.

Using databases created by other labs, the Duke University scientists cross-checked areas of human DNA that had developed differences from chimp DNA with areas of DNA they expected to be important for gene regulation. Regulator genes help determine how other genes will express themselves, and the researchers suspected that some of these regulators might be making brain development more active in human embryos than in chimps.

They ended up focusing on a region called HARE5 (short for human-accelerated regulatory enhancer), which testing indicated had something to do with brain development. They suspected that the enhancer, which is found close to a molecular pathway important in brain development, might have changed in a way that influenced brain size in humans.

"We discovered that the human DNA sequence, which only had 16 changes in it compared to the chimp sequence, was being expressed differently in mice," said study author Debra Silver, an assistant professor of molecular genetics and microbiology in the Duke University Medical School.

In fact, HARE5 was regulating how many neural stem cells the precursors of brain cells a mouse embryo could produce.

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Scientists pinpoint a gene regulator that makes human brains bigger

Ames company aids in Ebola vaccine candidate

An Ebola vaccine candidate that has been undergoing human trials in the lab now will be used in trial on people in a real world environment with assistance from the Ames-based biopharmaceutical company NewLink Genetics Corporation.

On Thursday, the company announced that with its collaboration with pharmaceutical company Merck, a vaccine for the virus, which has reached epidemic status in parts of Africa and popped up in other parts of the world, will soon begin clinical trials in Liberia.

The control group will be comprised of 27,000 patients and there are plans to do trials in other countries.

We are cautiously optimistic that the trials will lead to data that says the vaccine works, said Charles Link, CEO of NewLink Genetics.

There is no timeline for results, and Link said the trials will take several months.

The company will also receive $20 million in connection with the achievement. The company received $30 million when it first reached a license agreement with Merk in 2014.

Merck obtained an exclusive license to research, develop, manufacture and distribute the Ebola vaccine candidate as well as any follow-on products

Other partners in this collaboration project include the government of Canada, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Department of Defense and the World Health Organization.

NewLink, which is located in the Iowa State University Research Park, began work with an Ebola vaccine in 2010 when it acquired the vaccine candidate from Public Health Agency of Canada, which developed it.

At that point, it was for animal experiments and not for humans, Link said. The laboratory work and research to get to the current point was accelerated because of the outbreak in West Africa.

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Ames company aids in Ebola vaccine candidate

Radio 3Fourteen – Matthew Buckley – How Monsanto is Destroying the Brains and Health of Everyone – Video


Radio 3Fourteen - Matthew Buckley - How Monsanto is Destroying the Brains and Health of Everyone
http://www.radio3fourteen.com http://www.redicecreations.com/radio3fourteen https://twitter.com/radio3fourteen https://plus.google.com/113418328935577511830 ...

By: Red Ice Radio

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Radio 3Fourteen - Matthew Buckley - How Monsanto is Destroying the Brains and Health of Everyone - Video

Health Care: Cape's prodigious daughter returns

Hyannis February 13, 2015 Cheryl Bartlett, a drug abuse expert and former commissioner of the state DPH Photo by Alan Belanich

If youre sick, Cheryl Bartlett is the nurse you want at your bedside.

Why? Shes got the top echelon of Bay State health care officials on speed dial.

In truth, Bartlett is no ordinary nurse. Shes the former commissioner of the Department of Public Health, having recently stepped down from the role toward the end of Gov. Deval Patricks administration in December.

Bartlett has also spent years in the weeds of public health care and administration, with a specialty in outreach, reorganization and rallying the troops.

And best of all, shes the Capes very own and has returned home full time after years of spending her weeks on Beacon Hill. Bartlett is from the peninsula -- with homes in Hyannis and in Yarmouth Port -- and now her new job is here, too.

Bartlett began working at Cape Cod Healthcare in December as the organizations executive director of the Cape Cod Regional Substance Abuse Prevention Initiative and Public Health. The initiative -- a conglomerate of health and human services groups began about a year ago.

Commissioner of the DPH since May 2013 and with years of practical nursing and administrative experience on the Cape and Islands, Bartlett sat down with the Patriot last week, exploring challenges and opportunities as she comes to the aid of the region during perhaps its time of greatest need: a wave of heroin overdoses and death.

Some of her thoughts and views are express verbatim here:

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Health Care: Cape's prodigious daughter returns

WTF is GMO?

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com @BednarChuck

As a general rule, humans like to know exactly what it is that theyre eating. In the past, this was an easy task you could pick up a tomato, a can of corn and a pack of ground beef and be fairly confident that you knew where they came from. In recent years, however, scientists have become increasingly involved in food production, causing some confusion amongst consumers.

[Related story: GMO potato approved by USDA]

If youre one of the people who sometimes feel overwhelmed when you start hearing terms such as genetic modification and selective breeding, dont worry we here at RedOrbit feel your pain, so weve created this handy little guide to help clear up some of the confusion.

Genetic modification (GMO)

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) have been at the center of much of the discussion over scientifically-manipulated food. While a 2010 EU-funded study found that eating GMO foods is no more risky that eating conventionally-grown products, there are laws requiring these goods to carry special labels in over 60 countries, and some remain concerned about their safety.

According to the nonprofit George Mateljan Foundation, a GMO is defined as any organism that has had its core genetic material altered using genetic engineering techniques. In other words, the crops or creatures have had their DNA or RNA fundamentally changed in a laboratory in order to add or enhance specific traits, allowing them to grow larger, stay fresh longer, and so on.

A good example of this is the Arctic apple, a genetically-modified apple produced by a Canadian company, Okanagan Specialty Fruits, that received USDA approval earlier this week. The Arctic apple underwent a process called RNA interference (RNAi), which blocked a normally-occurring enzyme and kept the apple from turning brown after it had been sliced. [Related story: GMO apple approved for sale in US]

Selective breeding

Like genetic modification, selective breeding is performed in order to promote specific traits in a plant or animal. However, the selective breeding process does not involve making any changes to the core biological makeup of a plants genetic makeup at least not directly. Rather, organisms which strongly exhibit specific characteristics are bred together to emphasize those traits.

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WTF is GMO?

Fight of the Week: Jorina Baars Goes to War With Cris Cyborg at Lion Fight – Video


Fight of the Week: Jorina Baars Goes to War With Cris Cyborg at Lion Fight
Before you watch Jorina Baars in the main event of Lion Fight 20, watch her EPIC fight with Invicta Champ Cris Cyborg at Lion Fight 14 in the AXS TV Fights "Fight of the Week". Watch Lion...

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Fight of the Week: Jorina Baars Goes to War With Cris Cyborg at Lion Fight - Video