Monthly Archives: February 2013

Image Studio Software – DNA Gel Analysis Ribbon – Video

Posted: February 19, 2013 at 6:45 pm


Image Studio Software - DNA Gel Analysis Ribbon
This video tutorial demonstrates the DNA Gel Analysis Ribbon, which provides tools to analyze a DNA gel. These tools include quantification and molecular weight determination. Other Image Studio Analysis Ribbon Tutorials: ** Western Analysis Key - bit.ly ** MPX Western Analysis Ribbon - bit.ly ** Plate Analysis Ribbon - bit.ly ** Plate Array Analysis Ribbon - bit.ly ** Grid Analysis Ribbon - bit.ly ** Grid Array Analysis Ribbon - bit.ly ** In-Cell Western Analysis Ribbon - bit.ly ** Small Animal Imaging Analysis Ribbon - bit.ly For more information on Image Studio Software plus support documents, go to bit.ly Want to try Image Studio Software to see just how easy it is to use? Download Image Studio Lite FREE today (bit.ly With Image Studio Lite software, you can: ** Import images from numerous sources ** Adjust brightness/contrast ** Define bands using shapes tools ** Obtain relative fluorescent units for shapes ** Export images and data ** Create lab notebooks Please note: Image Studio Lite is used for basic Western blot analysis, but does not operate your LI-COR instrument.

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Image Studio Software - DNA Gel Analysis Ribbon - Video

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Little mix dna tour , we are who we are – Video

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Little mix dna tour , we are who we are
18/2/13 Perrie waved at us wooooo!!!

By: jessica gore

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Discovery Channel. Nuskin and Ageloc. DNA Revealed – Video

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Discovery Channel. Nuskin and Ageloc. DNA Revealed

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Delay in DNA testing of criminals

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Victorian Attorney-General Robert Clark. Photo: Justin McManus

POLICE will have to conduct thousands of DNA tests a year under a state government plan to dramatically increase testing of people convicted of crimes.

However, despite Attorney-General Robert Clark announcing the crackdown - another pillar of the government's tough on law and order campaign - almost two years ago, the new regime will not come into force for at least another year.

''Victoria Police would expect a substantial increase in suspect samples. This will have an impact on caseloads which will be monitored,'' a police spokeswoman said.

In April 2011, Mr Clark said the legislation would allow DNA samples to be taken from anyone convicted of an indictable offence - crimes that attract a jail sentence of two years or more.

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At present DNA samples can only be taken from serious criminals such as murderers and rapists, but this would be expanded to include those convicted of assault, threats to kill, stalking, theft and a wider range of drug offences.

The Attorney-General described the proposed laws as a ''vital element in the high-tech fight against crime''. However, a spokesman for Mr Clark said this week the laws are ''expected to be introduced into Parliament later this year''.

A Victoria Police tender document released late last year reveals that the new laws would mean a four-fold increase in the number of mouth DNA swabs police would have to carry out. It says an average of 7300 swabs were carried out every year for the past five years, of which 1500 were for people suspected of crimes. This means the number of tests will balloon to 6000 a year.

''The status of the amendment is cabinet in confidence so unfortunately Logistical Support Branch is unable to provide further information. What we do know is that if the bill is passed, there will be a 12-month period between passage and implementation,'' the tender document says.

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Delay in DNA testing of criminals

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DNA goes untested, rapists remain free

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CINCINNATI - A year-old program testing key evidence obtained from rape victims is just beginning to identify suspects whose DNA has been sitting on shelves in so-called "rape kits" for years.

An investigation conducted by Scripps station Newsnet5 found more than 2,000 rape kits have been turned over to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation for sophisticated testing that identify suspects whose DNA is already on file.

The program was launched a year ago by Attorney General Mike DeWine, but only now has begun to swing into full gear -- identifying 28 suspects using DNA obtained from rape victims.

Since January 2012, forensic scientists have tested 479 of 2,124 "rape kits" that were collected in the hours after an attack, but that sat for years on shelves in police departments across the state -- often because testing was too expensive.

"Nothing ever works as fast as I want it to work," DeWine said.

The DNA testing program required hiring additional forensic scientists and establishing procedures for testing, while at the same time trying to avoid creating additional backlogs of current cases.

"What I did not want to do," DeWine said," is take these back rape kits, dump them into our system without any new people -- and create an even bigger backlog for a rape that was committed five days ago when we are actively seeking to find out who that person was."

The investigation found huge numbers of rape kits collected from police department all over Ohio, including nearly 340 cases in Cincinnati.

Amanda Slone was a teenager when she was raped by a suspect four years ago who still has not been identified. Once honored by Ohio's legislature for her volunteer work with disabled children, Slone agreed to come forward to encourage testing on behalf of other rape victims.

A citation from Ohio's Senate honored her for "making the world a better place" -- yet her world was shattered by an unknown rapist.

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DNA goes untested, rapists remain free

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Biology Human Genome Project – Video

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Biology Human Genome Project
A short infomercial against the Human Genome Project. By: Jaspreet Kalsi and Adam Murphy.

By: TheAdam1murphy

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Biology Human Genome Project - Video

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My Genome Has Been Sequenced, And I’m Headed To Abu Dhabi! – Video

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My Genome Has Been Sequenced, And I #39;m Headed To Abu Dhabi!
See, I AM a secret Arab! Just kidding. No I #39;m not. Let me know if you live in the UAE, though! I #39; staying in Abu Dhabi, but will likely visit Dubai over the weekend. So yeah, You Finns have found me, and I #39;ve found YOU, you wily Finns. Now eventually I #39;ll have to find the rest of my relatives. Well, not all of them. It doesn #39;t really matter to my life, but it #39;s fun and educational to figure out how your ancestors lived and explore the world genetically. Ancestry finder results: 100% European which breaks down to: 99.1% Northern European, .5% nonspecific European, .4% Southern European The Northern European breaks down to: 35.1% "Nonspecific" Northern European (probably would end up breaking down mostly into the others listed below, especially the British part) 25.4% Scandinavian 18.3% Finnish 14.2% French and German 6.1% British or Irish BlogTV: http://www.blogtv.com Twitter: twitter.com FaceBook: http://www.facebook.com PlayStation Network: Zaunstar PlanetSide 2: Waterson server, New Conglomerate faction, Zaunstar Outro royalty-free music license info: creativecommons.org Song URL for Dvorak Polka: incompetech.com Artist: Kevin MacLeod

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The Philippine Genome Project — Who is the Filipino?

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YAHOO: By Tarra Quismundo in Manila/Philippine Daily Inquirer | Asia News Network

It is a question that has been asked for generations: "Who is the Filipino?"

A Filipino-American scientist and global genomics expert believes the answer is in every one of us, literally. Michael Purugganan, a world authority on the molecular study of the origin, evolution and characteristics of organisms, is calling on the government, private sector and Filipino scientists to embark on the Philippines' own genome project-an undertaking that would determine where the Filipino comes from.

"One of the things that I've always advocated is a systematic analysis of the genome of Filipinos... It's still really basic research but I think it has practical values. It allows us to see, for example, what genetic diseases we might have, which might help doctors," Purugganan told the Inquirer on Jan. 30.

"Just as important is that it allows us to see who we are, to tell the story of who we are. That's a very powerful idea, that we as Filipinos can go to our DNA and see who we are and what makes us different," said the dean of science at New York University (NYU) while on a visit to Manila.

Purugganan, who works closely on rice genome studies with the Laguna-based International Rice Research Institute, proposed to look into the DNA of a representative group of 10 Filipinos from different provinces and tribal groups, and sequence their genome, the entirety of an organism's genetic makeup.

The project would ultimately answer the question that one local apparel brand posed through billboard ads last year: "What's your mix?"

"I remember somebody asking me that and I had to think about it. I said, 'I actually don't know what being a Filipino means genetically.' So, genetically we're mixtures of Taiwanese, Chinese, Indonesian, Indian, Arab, Spanish, probably some American and British. It's just different degrees," Purugganan said.

This is not to say, however, that no one is native Filipino, said Purugganan, who became the features editor of the Collegian in the early 1980s and finished a chemistry degree at the University of the Philippines (UP), before taking up advanced studies in top universities in the United States.

Most everyone, after all, is born with a mix of bloodlines from different parts of the world, given the long history of human migration, settlement and, in the case of the Philippines, colonisation.

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The Philippine Genome Project --- Who is the Filipino?

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The Bank Where Doctors Can Stash Your Genome

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A new company offers a gene vault for doctors who want to add genomics to patient care.

Genomic sequencing might be more common in medicine if doctors had a simple way to send for the test and keep track of the data.

Thats the hope of Coriell Life Sciences in Camden, New Jersey, a startup that grew out of a partnership between the Coriell Institute for Medical Research and IBM. The company wants to facilitate the process of ordering, storing, and interpreting whole-genome-sequence data for doctors. The company launched in January and is now working with different health-care providers to set up its service. The intent is that the doctor would order a test like any other diagnostic test they order today, says Scott Megill, president of Coriell Life Sciences. The company would facilitate sequencing the patients DNA (through existing sequencing companies such as Illumina or Ion Torrent), store it in its so-called gene vault, and act as the middleman between doctors and companies that offer interpretation services. Finally, we will return the genetic result in the human readable form back to the electronic medical record so the doctor can read it and interpret it for the patient, says Megill.

You need a robust software infrastructure for storing, analyzing, and presenting information, says Jon Hirsch, who founded Syapse, a California-based company developing software to analyze biological data sets for diagnosing patients. Until that gets built, you can generate all the data you want, but its not going to have any impact outside the few major centers of genomics medicine, he says.

The company will use a board of scientific advisors to guide them to the best interpretation programs available. No one company is in position to interpret the entire genome for its meaning, says Michael Christman, CEO of the Coriell Institute for Medical Research. But by having ones sequence in the gene vault, then the physician will be able to order interpretative engines, analogous to apps for the iPhone, he says. Doctors could order an app to analyze a patients genome for DNA variants linked to poor drug response at one point, and later on, order another for variants linked to heart disease.

The cloud-based workflow could help doctors in different locations take advantage of expert interpretations anywhere, says Christman. This would allow a doctor whos at a community clinic in Tulsa, Oklahoma, order an interpretation of breast cancer sequences derived at Sloan Kettering, he says.

But while the cloud offers many conveniences, it carries some potential risks. I am a bit concerned if we really start to outsource data to the cloud without any regulation, says Emiliano De Cristofaro, a cryptography scientist with Xeroxs PARC who is developing a genomic data storage and sharing platform. We must not forget that the sensitivity of genomic information is quite unprecedented, he says. The human genome is not only a unique identifier but also contains things about ethnic heritage, predisposition to certain diseases including mental disorders, and many other traits. Data leaks happen all the time, says Cristofaro, and while you can change your password after a security break, theres no way to revoke your genome.

Keeping the genomic data secure is a key component and is the reason the group began a relationship with IBM, says Megill. The data would be stored at the companys headquarters and would be available only to limited usersdoctors and companies that offer diagnostic or other medical interpretation of the genome, he says.

If a patient changes her health-care provider, the data will remain available for her next physician. Storing the data will be free, says Christman.

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Eczema Treatment – Video

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Eczema Treatment
Visit http://www.jamionpsc.com ...now to get your natural and effective treatment. Eczema Eczema Cure Eczema Remedies Eczema Treatment

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Eczema Treatment - Video

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