Health Risks Hidden in Cleft Palate Gene

Seth Weinberg, assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine, looks at a three-dimensional image of his head. He is involved in genetic research into clefting.

PITTSBURGH | Cleft lips and palates in newborns can frighten parents at first, while at the same time the cause of such dramatic impacts on function and appearance has long mystified doctors and scientists.

Those factors led Mary Marazita, who holds a doctoral degree in genetics, to begin researching the genetic causes of clefts in the 1980s.

Since then her research team has widened its focus to include many physical and health impacts that blood relatives of people with clefts can experience from shared gene variants.

While the cleft lip is the most obvious consequence of those variants, Marazita and her team at the Center for Craniofacial and Dental Genetics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine have been working to understand the genetic causes of the more hidden physical and health impacts.

Such abnormalities can include alterations and weaknesses in facial structure and tissue, with a higher risk of developing problems such as poor wound healing and even ovarian, breast and prostate cancers, among others.

A 2011 study she led and published in Nature described it this way:

Studies into the cause of clefts "may well enhance our understanding of other common, complex traits and allow us to move beyond the attitude that cleft lip and palate are only a structural birth defect," the study stated. "Instead, it is a lifelong disorder for which therapies and prevention can promise a fuller and healthier lifespan."

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that clefts affect 1 in every 940 live births, about two-thirds of whom are boys, with 8,000 American children born each year with the defect.

The condition occurs in utero when the upper lip and jaw and palate tissue from both sides of the face fail to come together fully during the first trimester, said Weinberg, a research assistant professor at the center.

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Health Risks Hidden in Cleft Palate Gene

Genecoin: Bitcoin DNA Backup Could be Used to Forge Your Clone Army

Genecoin - a group of young US entrepreneurs are developing a DNA storage service that uses bitcoin technology to encrypt and store the data(Genecoin)

A group of young entrepreneurs from the US is offering to take peoples' sequenced DNA, convert it into data, and then back it up using the cryptocurrency bitcoin to keep it safe for future genetic engineering and even cloning. It's the stuff of dystopian nightmare futures with clone armies marching around demanding bitcoin for your life.

The Genecoinservice will offer users an easy-to-use DNA sampling kit which can be sent back to the startup through the mail. The firm will then perform the necessary DNA tests and then upload the genome data into a bitcoin storage network.

The creators, based in the Pacific Northwest, say that using bitcoin blockchain technology as a storage tool has great potential for the future far beyond being merely a ledger for bitcoin transactions.

"Bitcoin's core innovation is the idea of a blockchain, which is a decentralised ledger. Bitcoin isn't a currency rather it is a protocol for writing to a blockchain, and this opens the door to lots of disruptive software innovations," Genecoin's creators computer science graduates who currently want to remain anonymous told IBTimes UK.

"There are so many use cases for the blockchain, and 'currency' is only the first one. People are working on all sorts of ideas: smart property, proof of existence, assurance contracts, data storage these are all possible with bitcoin."

There are already other companies using this technique, such as Storj.io, a startup aiming to provide a super secure private cloud, but so far none focusing on genomics.

A physical representation of a Bitcoin(Reuters)

But the question is: would anyone really want to store their DNA to be used to make clones of themselves in the future, and will Bitcoin even be around for long enough to make it a reliable storage format?

"Most people think of Bitcoin as a currency but it is much more. Bitcoin stores records of transactions. Imagine if you sent Morse code messages by giving your friends money. If you're clever about it, you can encode data based on how you make those transactions," Genecoin's creators said.

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Genecoin: Bitcoin DNA Backup Could be Used to Forge Your Clone Army

Business as Unusual: Futurist Jack Uldrich to Address Grant Thornton's Up & Coming Managers

Washington D.C. (PRWEB) November 04, 2014

In our ever changing and rapidly paced world, future-proofing one's business is a key component to success. Futurist Jack Uldrich makes a living traveling the world and writing on how to do just that, and Grant Thornton is bringing him in to address their Advanced Manager Program in Washington D.C. to speak with 62 of their up and coming leaders from all around the world. Individuals from 33 countries will be represented at the event. The purpose is to help these young leaders prepare for a swiftly shifting workplace in the coming years.

Founded in Chicago in 1924, Grant Thornton is one of the worlds leading organizations of independent audit, tax and advisory firms and they works with a broad range of publicly and privately held companies, government agencies, financial institutions, and civic and religious organizations. By fostering responsible entrepreneurship, Grant Thornton helps their clients grow and fuel a thriving economy. Similarly, Uldrich does the same thing by inspiring clients like Grant Thornton, Verizon Wireless, The American Medical Association, ABB, Emerson and McGladrey to embrace change and prepare wisely for the ever shifting sands within their specific workplace.

Uldrich's work is based on the transformational principles of unlearning or freeing yourself from obsolete knowledge and assumptions as a strategy to survive and thrive in an era of unparalleled change. He argues that creativity and action are more powerful and versatile than knowledge. "Leaders must become aware of the extraordinary changes taking place across todays global landscape. In fact, the Internet of Things (also known as the Industrial Internet) has alone been estimated to be a $15 trillion business opportunity in the coming decade," says Uldrich.

He will round out his speaking engagements this week speaking at the Farm Credit Services Leaders Conference in Omaha, NE., and the Clearesult Annual Energy Summit in Austin, TX.

Parties interested in learning more about Jack, his books, his daily blog or his speaking availability are encouraged to visit his website. Media wishing to know more about either the event or interviewing Uldrich as a futurist or trend expert can contact Amy Tomczyk at (651) 343.0660.

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Business as Unusual: Futurist Jack Uldrich to Address Grant Thornton's Up & Coming Managers

NTSB: Virgin Galactic Spacecraft Tail System Deployed Prematurely Before Crash

Lorenda Ward, investigator-in-charge of the SpaceShipTwo accident. (Credit: NTSB)

A press briefing by the National Transportation Safety Board regarding its investigation into the crash of the Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo revealed new information and more questions about its surrounding circumstances.

On Sunday night, NTSB Acting Chairman Hart explained that SpaceShipTwos tail section has the ability to feather, which enables the spacecraft to make a safer descent. He then revealed that shortly prior to the spacecraft breaking up in flight, the feathering system deployed prematurely.

According to the spacecrafts flight procedures, said Hart, there are two steps required for the feathering system to deploy. First, the system must be unlocked by one lever, then a second needs to be moved to deploy the system. The system isnt supposed to be unlocked until the spacecraft reaches a speed of Mach 1.4, however it appears that the co-pilot moved the lever to unlock at a speed of just over Mach 1.0. The second lever was never activated but it appears the feathering system deployed anyway.

During the briefing, Hart emphasized on several occasions that this is a statement of fact, not of cause, and that determining exactly what happened still requires a lot of analysis.

To that end, Hart noted that the NTSB has recovered nearly every important part of debris from the spaceship crash. In particular, both the fuel tanks and engine were recovered intact, with no indication of breach.

This is of interest because since the accident, a lot of attention and speculation has focused on whether an engine failure caused the crash, as this was the first flight of SpaceShipTwo with its new fuel mix. Hart indicated that the engine data gathered so far appeared to be normal.

Of course, as Hart stated, investigators are a long way from finding the cause. The NTSB still has a number of people to interview and a lot of data to go through. It will be months, possibly even a year, before the agency issues the final results of its investigation.

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NTSB: Virgin Galactic Spacecraft Tail System Deployed Prematurely Before Crash

Pete Santilli Episode #831 – Arrest Warning Notice Served On Officials By Operation American Freedom – Video


Pete Santilli Episode #831 - Arrest Warning Notice Served On Officials By Operation American Freedom
Operation American Freedom OPEN FB Group http://ow.ly/DJUl2 Americans from across this nation have gathered to form Operation American Freedom. We have come together due to the continual ...

By: GMN Telemedia

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Pete Santilli Episode #831 - Arrest Warning Notice Served On Officials By Operation American Freedom - Video

Press Freedom: George Brandis is talking plain rubbish

A question of trust: Attorney-General George Brandis urged members of the Press Club to trust the Coalition. Photo: Andrew Meares

I am not a fan of the Attorney-General, Senator George Brandis. He's a politician with a slender grasp of matters such as fairness and accuracy, as he demonstrated last year when he branded me publicly as an enemy of press freedom.

I defended myself at the time, and don't need to do it again here. The sad truth is few politicians have much regard for fairness and accuracy. Exaggeration and distortion are much more useful on the hustings. What's more concerning is that Brandis, who constantly applauds himself for his championship of press freedom, appears not to understand it at all.

Witness his bizarre defence of section 35P of the newly minted National Security Legislation Amendment Act (No. 1). That's the section that makes it an offence, punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment, to "disclose information" about a so-called special intelligence operation.

Illustration: John Spooner

On Q&A on Monday night, Brandis announced the law was not aimed at journalists. But, asked Tony Jones, if a journalist reported what a whistleblower had disclosed, would they fall under the law

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Here, verbatim, is Brandis' convoluted reply:"If it's a whistleblower, the whistleblower protection laws still apply. If it's a journalist covering what a whistleblower has disclosed, then the journalist wouldn't fall within the reach of the section, because the relevant conduct is the conduct constituting the disclosure; so if the event is already disclosed by someone else and a journalist merely reports that which has already been disclosed, as it was by Snowden, then the provision would not apply."

Well, for a start, as the Attorney-General must know, there is no chance at all that the whistleblower protection laws would apply to anyone disclosing information about an intelligence operation (let alone a "special" intelligence operation) to the media. Not a chance.

Second, most whistleblowers do not act openly, as Edward Snowden did. They approach the media, seeking confidentiality. The first public disclosure of the information is by a journalist, either quoting a confidential source, or publishing a document supplied by that source.

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Press Freedom: George Brandis is talking plain rubbish

Fireside: The digital photo frame curated via the cloud

Generally speaking digital photo frames are as dumb as bricks. The sole purpose of these low-end electronics is showcasing the hordes of digital pictures you take on your smartphone or digital camera, without much thought to intelligent curation of your memories. A crowdfunding push is underway to change this, though, in the form of the Fireside smart frame and cloud service.

The Fireside digital picture eco-system bills itself as a smart system in the home, consisting of its specialized "in the cloud" delivery system tied to a so-called "revolutionary re-imagining" of the digital photo frame. It also integrates apps for iPhones, iPads and Android devices.

Heres how this whole thing works. You take a digital picture or video through one of your mobile phones or tablets. All of this data is herded from these devices and through the Fireside app onto the companys cloud service. Using what those behind this technology describe as "contextual computing and machine learning," the system gathers the digital memories into libraries that are organized by, among other things, life events such as birthdays and anniversaries.

Once the Amazon S3-based cloud service is done with its number-crunching, the photos are beamed over Wi-Fi to the rather elegant-looking Fireside SmartFrame (which also apparently can grab images via Bluetooth directly from users devices). This product, with its 64 GB of local eMMC storage, hosts your files locally so as to prevent possible buffering and playback issues one might encounter over a network. The memories are displayed in such a way as to take into account factors like special dates (i.e. birthdays, weddings) and weather conditions (i.e. if cold outside, it might display skiing and holiday images).

The 15-inch display frame, operating off of Android, is said to take design cues from furniture and lighting in its looks. It is crafted from materials like glass, melamine, chrome and copper. It also sports a rotating stand mechanism for either standalone placement on a mantle or hanging on the wall.

At the time of this post the Fireside was still in the early days of its Kickstarter campaign but steadily raking in the pledges. Early adopter pricing is currently set at US$339, and if all goes as planned first shipments of these devices should drop in June of 2015.

More information on the Fireside can be seen in the pitch video below.

Sources: Kickstarter, Fireside

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Fireside: The digital photo frame curated via the cloud