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Daily Archives: January 6, 2014
The Soap Company – "New Dark Age" (Feat: Lorraine Jones) – Video
Posted: January 6, 2014 at 8:50 pm
The Soap Company - "New Dark Age" (Feat: Lorraine Jones)
From The Album "I Keep Dreaming About You" Available NOW on Space Station Disco records. http://www.the-soap.co/2013/11/the-soap-company-i-keep-dreaming-abou...
By: The Soap Company
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The Soap Company - "New Dark Age" (Feat: Lorraine Jones) - Video
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Kerbal Space Program – Apex Aeronautics [.23] – Episode 3 SPACE STATION KSP – Video
Posted: at 8:50 pm
Kerbal Space Program - Apex Aeronautics [.23] - Episode 3 SPACE STATION KSP
This is the beginning of a new campaign I #39;ve started in Kerbal Space Program. I #39;m masquerading as Apex Aeronautics (a fictitious engineering company) led by ...
By: Shawn Miller
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Kerbal Space Program - Apex Aeronautics [.23] - Episode 3 SPACE STATION KSP - Video
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Orbital’s Cygnus Delivering New Science To The International Space Station
Posted: at 8:50 pm
January 6, 2014
Image Caption: The SPHERES-Slosh hardware used aboard the space station will help researchers study the movement of fluids in microgravity. The may assist with designing new, more efficient fuel tanks. Credit: Florida Institute of Technology/Dr. Daniel Kirk
NASA
Delivering ants to space, sloshy fluids for robotic satellites, a study on antibiotic drug resistance and other small satellites to the International Space Station can be a tough job, and now Orbital Sciences Corporation of Dulles, Va., can help carry the load. In its first commercial resupply journey after completion of NASAs Commercial Orbital Transportation Services program, the Orbital-1 mission will deliver some very interesting new scientific investigations to the space station.
Orbitals Antares rocket is planned to launch Jan. 8 from Wallops Flight Facility in eastern Virginia. Antares is scheduled to deliver the Cygnus spacecraft full of new research investigations, supplies and other space station hardware to the space station on Jan. 12.
One of the new research investigations traveling to the orbiting laboratory is the Commercial Generic Bioprocessing Apparatus Science Insert 06: Ants in Space (CSI-06). Students in grades K-12 will observe videos of these ant-ronauts recorded by cameras on the space station. The students will also conduct their own ant interaction investigations in their classrooms as part of a related curriculum. Educational investigations such as Ants in Space are designed to motivate budding scientists in primary and secondary school to pursue their interest in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields.
The Ants in Space study examines the behavior of ants by comparing groups living on Earth to those in space. The idea is that ant interactions are dependent upon the number of ants in an area. Measuring these interactions may be important in determining behavior of ants in groups. This insight may add to existing knowledge of swarm intelligence, or how the complex behavior of a group is influenced by the actions of individuals. Developing a better understanding of swarm intelligence may lead to more refined mathematical procedures for solving complex problems, like routing trucks, scheduling airlines or telecommunications efficiency.
A second investigation launching with the Orbital-1 mission is the SPHERES-Slosh study. SPHERES-Slosh will use the existing space station facility of free-flying satellites known as Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, Reorient, Experimental Satellites (SPHERES). The goal is to look at how liquids slosh around inside containers in microgravity, showing how applied external forces impact the contents of those containers. The experiments simulate how rocket fuels move around inside their tanks in response to motor thrusts used to push a rocket through space. The study of the physics of liquid motion in microgravity is important because Earths most powerful rockets use liquid fuels to take satellites and other spacecraft into orbit. Having a deeper understanding of rocket propellants may lower the cost of industry and taxpayer-funded satellite launches by improving fuel efficiency.
A third investigation aboard the Cygnus spacecraft is a study of drug-resistant bacteria. Drug-resistant bacteria are of increasing concern to public health. As bacteria grow more resistant to antibiotics, there are less effective pharmaceutical treatment options for people with bacterial infections. Researchers for the Antibiotic Effectiveness in Space (AES-1) investigation aboard the space station look to determine gene expression patterns and changes using E. coli. This research builds upon previous space station investigations into drug-resistant bacteria, such as the National Laboratory Pathfinder Vaccine Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (NLP-Vaccine-MRSA) study of what is commonly referred to as staph infection.
The findings from AES-1 may help improve antibiotic development on Earth. Improving the efficacy of antibiotics and reducing their resistance to bacteria is a priority for health care professionals.
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Orbital’s Cygnus Delivering New Science To The International Space Station
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A Missing Genetic Link in Human Evolution
Posted: at 8:48 pm
Mysterious episodes of genetic duplication in our great ape ancestors may have paved the way for human evolution
By Emily Singer and Quanta Magazine
SRGAP2: Whereas chimps and orangutans have only one, humans have multiple copies of the gene SRGAP2 which is believed to be involved in the development of the brain. Image: Dennis/Cell/Quanta
From Quanta Magazine (find original story here).
About 8 million to 12 million years ago, the ancestor of great apes, including humans, underwent a dramatic genetic change. Small pieces of DNA replicated and spread across their resident chromosomes like dandelions across a lawn. But as these dandelion seeds dispersed, they carried some grass and daisy seeds additional segments of DNA along for the ride. This unusual pattern, repeated in different parts of the genome, is found only in great apes bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas and humans.
I think its a missing piece of human evolution, said Evan Eichler, a geneticist at the University of Washington, in Seattle. My feeling is that these duplication blocks have been the substrate for the birth of new genes.
Over the past few years, scientists have begun to uncover the function of a handful of genes that reside in these regions; they seem to play an important role in the brain, linked to the growth of new cells, as well as brain size and development. In September, Eichlers team published a new technique for analyzing how these genes vary from person to person, which could shed more light on their function.
Much about the duplication process and its implications remains a mystery. Eichler and others dont know what spurred the initial rounds of duplications or how these regions, dubbed core duplicons, reproduced and moved around the genome.
Despite the duplication-linked genes potential importance in human evolution, most have not been extensively analyzed. The repetitive structure of the duplicated regions makes them particularly difficult to study using standard genetic approaches the most efficient methods for sequencing DNA start by chopping up the genome, reading the sequence of the small chunks and then assembling those sections like one would a puzzle. Trying to assemble repetitive sections is like trying to put together a puzzle made of pieces with almost the same pattern.
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A Missing Genetic Link in Human Evolution
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5:30 Clock, Compass, DNA, Tree of Life Fireworks World Wide – Video
Posted: at 8:48 pm
5:30 Clock, Compass, DNA, Tree of Life Fireworks World Wide
Out of this world fireworks displays in London, Russia, and Dubai, appear to have the same theme, a clock set at 5:30, Freemasons compass, Portal, DNA symbol...
By: mfromcanada1
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5:30 Clock, Compass, DNA, Tree of Life Fireworks World Wide - Video
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DNA analysis now helps solve lesser crimes, too
Posted: at 8:48 pm
By Scott Daugherty The Virginian-Pilot January 6, 2014
CHESAPEAKE
DNA. For more than two decades, it's helped police solve heinous murders and catch serial rapists.
Specially trained forensic scientists routinely examine evidence, recover biological samples and conduct tests to develop a bad guy's DNA profile - the telltale genetic information contained in our cells. The evidence has become a mainstay of Virginia courtrooms, not to mention TV cop shows.
And in recent years, the science has become so commonplace it's even started popping up in misdemeanor cases. Police and prosecutors hope DNA will bolster their efforts in an unusual drunken driving case pending in General District Court.
"Twenty years ago, DNA was reserved for homicides and maybe some sexual assaults," said Brad Jenkins, biology program manager for the state's Department of Forensic Science. "But not anymore."
Police investigating a felony may submit biological evidence to one of the state's four labs for DNA testing, Jenkins said. His staff members routinely help detectives investigate robberies, assaults and burglaries.
And, when possible, the lab also will screen evidence from a misdemeanor.
"We don't do a lot of misdemeanors, but it does happen on occasion," Jenkins said, explaining that such reviews typically happen only after a member of his staff discusses the case with a prosecutor.
Budget constraints prevent the labs from helping with all misdemeanor investigations.
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Police: DNA led to arrest in attack of girl, 15
Posted: at 8:48 pm
A Northwest Side man with a long history of arrests has been charged with the brutal rape of a teenage girl who remains in critical condition nearly a month after the attack, authorities said.
Detectives were led to Luis Alberto Pantoja, 25, through DNA collected from a condom wrapper found near the Belmont Cragin backyard where the girl was assaulted just before dawn Dec. 17, according to a law enforcement source.
Pantoja was arrested at his home on Friday without incident, police said in a statement, saying additional physical evidence was recovered then.
Pantoja, of the 5500 block of West Wrightwood Avenue, is charged with attempted first-degree murder, aggravated criminal sexual assault, aggravated battery and unlawful use of a weapon by a felon. He was ordered held without bail during a hearing today.
Authorities asked for a sign language interpreter during the hearing. Pantoja is hearing-impaired, according to a police report.
Pantoja was found with a .32-caliber revolver but it was unclear if he had it during the attack, authorities said.
The attack happened in 2400 block of North Long Avenue about 5:25 a.m., police said. The girl was found by a neighbor about two hours later, half-clothed and bleeding from the head.
At a Sunday afternoon news conference, Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy congratulated Area North detectives and officers from the Great Lakes Regional Fugitive Task Force on the arrest.
He said the investigation found the girl was attacked an hour earlier than detectives originally thought. The was on her way to catch a bus so she could meet her father, who was to give her a ride to school, McCarthy said.
He said the girl would usually leave a little later in the morning, which is why police thought the attack occurred not long after 6 a.m.
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Police: DNA led to arrest in attack of girl, 15
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Police: DNA led to arrest in attack of 15-year-old girl
Posted: at 8:48 pm
A Northwest Side man with a long history of arrests has been charged with the brutal rape of a teenage girl who remains in critical condition nearly a month after the attack, authorities said.
Detectives were led to Luis Alberto Pantoja, 25, through DNA collected from a condom wrapper found near the Belmont Cragin backyard where the girl was assaulted just before dawn Dec. 17, according to a law enforcement source.
Pantoja was arrested at his home on Friday without incident, police said in a statement, saying additional physical evidence was recovered then.
Pantoja, of the 5500 block of West Wrightwood Avenue, is charged with attempted first-degree murder, aggravated criminal sexual assault, aggravated battery and unlawful use of a weapon by a felon. He was ordered held without bail during a hearing today.
Authorities asked for a sign language interpreter during the hearing. Pantoja is hearing-impaired, according to a police report.
Pantoja was found with a .32-caliber revolver but it was unclear if he had it during the attack, authorities said.
The attack happened in 2400 block of North Long Avenue about 5:25 a.m., police said. The girl was found by a neighbor about two hours later, half-clothed and bleeding from the head.
At a Sunday afternoon news conference, Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy congratulated Area North detectives and officers from the Great Lakes Regional Fugitive Task Force on the arrest.
He said the investigation found the girl was attacked an hour earlier than detectives originally thought. The was on her way to catch a bus so she could meet her father, who was to give her a ride to school, McCarthy said.
He said the girl would usually leave a little later in the morning, which is why police thought the attack occurred not long after 6 a.m.
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Police: DNA led to arrest in attack of 15-year-old girl
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Study: ‘Jumping genes’ linked to schizophrenia
Posted: at 8:48 pm
Roaming bits of DNA that can relocate and proliferate throughout the genome, called "jumping genes," may contribute to schizophrenia, a new study suggests. These rogue genetic elements pepper the brain tissue of deceased people with the disorder and multiply in response to stressful events, such as infection during pregnancy, which increase the risk of the disease. The study could help explain how genes and environment work together to produce the complex disorder and may even point to ways of lowering the risk of the disease, researchers say.
Schizophrenia causes hallucinations, delusions and a host of other cognitive problems, and afflicts roughly 1 percent of all people. It runs in families -- a person whose twin sibling has the disorder, for example, has a roughly 50-50 chance of developing it. Scientists have struggled to define which genes are most important to developing the disease, however; each individual gene associated with the disorder confers only modest risk. Environmental factors such as viral infections before birth also have been shown to increase risk of developing schizophrenia, but how and whether these exposures work together with genes to skew brain development and produce the disease is still unclear, says Tadafumi Kato, a neuroscientist at the RIKEN Brain Science Institute in Wako City, Japan, and co-author of the new study.
Over the past several years, a new mechanism for genetic mutation has attracted considerable interest from researchers studying neurological disorders, Kato says. Informally called jumping genes, these bits of DNA can replicate and insert themselves into other regions of the genome, where they either lie silent, doing nothing; start churning out their own genetic products; or alter the activity of their neighboring genes. If that sounds potentially dangerous, it is: Such genes are often the culprits behind tumor-causing mutations and have been implicated in several neurological diseases. However, jumping genes also make up nearly half the current human genome, suggesting that humans owe much of our identity to their audacious leaps.
Recent research by neuroscientist Fred Gage and colleagues at the University of California, San Diego, has shown that one of the most common types of jumping gene in people, called L1, is particularly abundant in human stem cells in the brain that ultimately differentiate into neurons and plays an important role in regulating neuronal development and proliferation. Although Gage and colleagues have found that increased L1 is associated with mental disorders such as Rett syndrome, a form of autism, and a neurological motor disease called Louis-Bar syndrome, "no one had looked very carefully" to see if the gene might also contribute to schizophrenia, he says.
To investigate that question, principal investigator Kazuya Iwamoto, a neuroscientist; Kato; and their team at RIKEN extracted brain tissue of deceased people who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia as well as several other mental disorders, extracted DNA from their neurons, and compared it with that of healthy people. Compared with controls, there was a 1.1-fold increase in L1 in the tissue of people with schizophrenia, as well as slightly less elevated levels in people with other mental disorders such as major depression, the team reported last week in Neuron.
Next, the scientists tested whether environmental factors associated with schizophrenia could trigger a comparable increase in L1. They injected pregnant mice with a chemical that simulates viral infection and found that their offspring did show higher levels of the gene in their brain tissue. An additional study in infant macaque monkeys, which mimicked exposure to a hormone also associated with increased schizophrenia risk, produced similar results. Finally, the group examined human neural stem cells extracted from people with schizophrenia and found that these, too, showed higher levels of L1.
The fact that it is possible to increase the number of copies of L1 in the mouse and macaque brains using established environmental triggers for schizophrenia shows that such genetic mutations in the brain may be preventable if such exposures can be avoided, Kato says. He says he hopes that the "new view" that environmental factors can trigger or deter genetic changes involved in the disease will help remove some of the disorder's stigma.
Combined with previous studies on other disorders, the new study suggests that L1 genes are more active in the brain of patients with neuropsychiatric diseases, Gage says. He cautions, however, that no one yet knows whether they are actually causing the disease. "Now that we have multiple confirmations of this occurring in humans with different diseases, the next step is to determine if possible what role, if any, they play."
One tantalizing possibility is that as these restless bits of DNA drift throughout the genomes of human brain cells, they help create the vibrant cognitive diversity that helps humans as a species respond to changing environmental conditions, and produces extraordinary "outliers," including innovators and geniuses such as Picasso, says UC San Diego neuroscientist Alysson Muotri. The price of such rich diversity may be that mutations contributing to mental disorders such as schizophrenia sometimes emerge. Figuring out what these jumping genes truly do in the human brain is the "next frontier" for understanding complex mental disorders, he says. "This is only the tip of the iceberg."
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Study: 'Jumping genes' linked to schizophrenia
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Discovery spotlights key role of mystery RNA modification in cells
Posted: at 8:47 pm
4 hours ago University of Chicago graduate student Xiao Wang and her colleagues based the results of their Nature paper on RNA modification on analysis of HeLa cells, a line of human cells widely used in laboratory research. Credit: Rob Kozloff/University of Chicago
Researchers had known for several decades that a certain chemical modification exists on messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA), which is essential to the flow of genetic information. But only recently did experiments at the University of Chicago show that one major function of this modification governs the longevity and decay of RNA, a process critical to the development of healthy cells.
The chemical modification on mRNA in question is called N6-methyladenosine (m6A). A recent study by UChicago scientists reveals how the m6A modification on mRNA could affect the half life of mRNA that in turn regulates cellular protein quantities That discovery could provide fundamental insights into healthy functioning and disorders such as obesity, diabetes, and infertility.
The m6A modification "affects a huge number of messenger RNA in human cells, and yet we did not know its exact function," said Chuan He, professor in chemistry at UChicago and a recently selected investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He, Xiao Wang and 11 co-authors from UChicago, University of California, San Diego, and Peking University reported their findings on m6A in the Jan. 2 issue of Nature.
RNA in human cells becomes constantly depleted as it produces proteins, an instability that is essential to biology. "Whenever a cells starts to differentiate, transform into a different type of cell, it needs to express a different set of proteins using a different set of messenger RNA," He said. "It can't be the original set."
The disposal of old RNA allows for the addition of new RNA and the production of different proteins. The Nature study documents that this process is regulated by the insertion or removal of a methyl, a chemical group commonly found in organic compounds.
"Biology is about protein expression regulation: which proteins, how many and at what point," He explained. "If you have the right pattern you get healthy cells. If you get the wrong pattern, you get disease."
It is well known that genetic factors can control protein expression, but the methylation and demethylation of RNA can be epigeneticoperating independent of the sequence of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). "This is a very important yet under-explored field," said Wang, the study's lead author and a graduate student in chemistry at UChicago. "It's also a field that is expanding very quickly."
Researchers had long known the presence of the m6A methylation on messenger RNA, but why this occurred remained unknown. He and his associates took a major step in 2011 when they discovered the reverse of the methylation process, demethylation. This discovery involved a so-called "eraser protein" that removed the methyl from RNA, a defect of which leads to obesity. "We basically said, 'Look, if you have certain defect of this function, you get obesity, so there's something going on fundamentally interesting. This methylation appears to play important roles in biological regulation."
He and his associates have now shown that the methylation affects the decay of messenger RNA. "People who are interested in messenger RNA decay or all kinds of cytoplasmic RNA biology now have a new pathway to consider," Wang said.
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Discovery spotlights key role of mystery RNA modification in cells
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