Daily Archives: January 13, 2014

Assassin`s Creed 4 – Multiplayer – Artifact Assault – DNA vs. TLT Clanwar-Match #1 – Video

Posted: January 13, 2014 at 3:47 pm


Assassin`s Creed 4 - Multiplayer - Artifact Assault - DNA vs. TLT Clanwar-Match #1
Servus leute, Hier mal wieder ein paar runden AA. Unter Clanwar gesucht und fndig geworden. Gespielt wurde gegen TLT. Ab und an sind ein paar Nebengerusche...

By: Netsurfer1983

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Assassin`s Creed 4 - Multiplayer - Artifact Assault - DNA vs. TLT Clanwar-Match #1 - Video

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Changing Your DNA Through Your Thoughts – Video

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Changing Your DNA Through Your Thoughts
http://www.aactev8.com.

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DNA evidence yields arrest in 2012 Rowland Heights rape case

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January 13, 2014, 7:02 a.m.

Authorities say they were able to use DNA evidence to track down a man who they say brutally beat and raped a 29-year-old woman in her apartment in 2012.

The woman, who has not been identified, woke up at 6 a.m. Oct. 27 in her Rowland Heightsapartment as Pablo Reyes Bautista, 26, attacked her, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.

The break in the case came when DNA recently entered by the suspect resulted in a match from a national database.

Bautista was arrested "after an extensive manhunt" in Atwater Village, the department said. He previously lived in Rowland Heights, where the alleged attack occurred in the 1500 block of Jellick Avenue.

Bautista was charged with rape by force, aggravated mayhem and burglary, authorities said.

He is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday.

Authorities are hoping that any other possible victims of Bautista will step forward and call the special victims bureau at (877) 710-5273.

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DNA evidence yields arrest in 2012 Rowland Heights rape case

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DNA testing confirms grey wolf shot in Wayne County

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UPDATE Ex-inmate, 2 others to be honored for saving life of 2-year-old Ex-inmate, 2 others to be honored for saving life of 2-year-old

Updated: Monday, January 13 2014 2:16 PM EST2014-01-13 19:16:48 GMT

A 2-year-old Pinal County girl is recovering after falling through a damaged septic tank lid and nearly drowning. Pinal County Sheriff's spokesman Tim Gaffney said the girl was walking with her mother

Henry Ricketts dove in head first to try to save a 2-year-old girl who fell into a septic tank in Maricopa. Others came to her rescue, too.

Updated: Monday, January 13 2014 9:44 AM EST2014-01-13 14:44:27 GMT

The question on many residents minds in Golconda is, when will the water come back on? Since Monday, Jan. 6 the town has been without enough water pressure in their water system to keep the town running.

The question on many residents minds in Golconda is, when will the water come back on? Since Monday, Jan. 6 the town has been without enough water pressure in their water system to keep the town running.

Updated: Monday, January 13 2014 2:24 AM EST2014-01-13 07:24:56 GMT

The plane, which was supposed to land at Branson Airport, landed at a nearby airport with a significantly shorter runway.

The plane, which was supposed to land at Branson Airport, landed at a nearby airport with a significantly shorter runway.

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DNA testing confirms grey wolf shot in Wayne County

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‘Lost’ remains of queen found

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The remains of a woman kept in an Indian church likely belong to an ancient queen executed about 400 years ago, a new DNA analysis suggests.

The DNA analysis suggests the remains are those of Queen Ketevan, an ancient Georgian queen who was executed for refusing to become a member of a powerful Persian ruler's harem. The findings are detailed in the January issue of the journal Mitochondrion.

Tumultuous lifeKetevan was the Queen of Kakheti, a kingdom in Georgia, in the 1600s. After her husband the king was killed, the Persian Ruler, Shah Abbas I, besieged the kingdom.

"Shah Abbas I led an army to conquer the Georgian kingdom and took Queen Ketevan as prisoner," said study co-author Niraj Rai, a researcher at the Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad, India.

- Niraj Rai, a researcher at the Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad, India

Queen Ketevan languished in Shiraz, Iran, for about a decade. But in 1624, Shah Abbas asked the queen to convert to Islam from Christianity and join his harem. She refused, and he had her tortured, then executed on Sept. 22, 1624. Ketevan the Martyr was canonized as a saint by the Georgian Orthodox Church shortly after. [Saintly? The 10 Most Controversial Miracles]

Missing relicsBefore her death, Queen Ketevan had befriended two Augustinian friars who became devoted to her. Legend had it that, in 1627, the two friars secretly dug up her remains and smuggled them out of the country. An ancient Portuguese document suggested her bones were held in a black sarcophagus kept in the window of the St. Augustinian Convent in Goa, India.

But the centuries had not been kind to the church: Part of the convent had collapsed and many valuables had been sold off in the intervening centuries. Early attempts to find her remains failed.

But starting in 2004, Rai and colleagues excavated an area they believed contained the remains and found a broken arm bone and two other bone fragments, as well as pieces of black boxes.

Rare lineageTo find out if the bones belonged to the martyred queen, the researchers extracted mitochondrial DNA, or DNA found only in the cytoplasm of an egg that is passed on through the maternal line.

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'Lost' remains of queen found

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Subaru Legacy STI Genome exhaust – Video

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Subaru Legacy STI Genome exhaust

By: mattypot1

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Startup Genome Highlights: Córdoba, Argentina – Video

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Startup Genome Highlights: Crdoba, Argentina

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Startup Genome Highlights: Córdoba, Argentina - Video

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Subaru Liberty 3RB with STI Genome’s – Video

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Subaru Liberty 3RB with STI Genome #39;s
05 Subaru Liberty 3RB 6MT Wagon with stock exhaust and STI Genome mufflers.

By: Jay Ritchie

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Subaru Liberty 3RB with STI Genome's - Video

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Non-coding DNA implicated in type 2 diabetes

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Jan. 12, 2014 Variations in non-coding sections of the genome might be important contributors to type 2 diabetes risk, according to a new study.

DNA sequences that don't encode proteins were once dismissed as "junk DNA," but scientists are increasingly discovering that some regions are important for controlling which genes are switched on.

The new study, published in Nature Genetics, is one of the first to show how such regions, called regulatory elements, can influence people's risk of disease.

Type 2 diabetes affects over 300 million people worldwide. Genetic factors have long been known to have an important role in determining a person's risk of type 2 diabetes, alongside other factors such as body weight, diet and age.

Many studies have identified regions of the genome where variations are linked to diabetes risk, but the function of many of these regions is unknown, making it difficult for scientists to glean insights into how and why the disease develops. Only around two per cent of the genome is made up of genes: the sequences that contain code for making proteins. Most of the remainder is shrouded in mystery.

"Non-coding DNA, or junk DNA as it is sometimes known, is the dark matter of the genome. We're only just beginning to unravel what it does," said leading author Professor Jorge Ferrer, a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator from the Department of Medicine at Imperial College London.

In the new study scientists mapped the regulatory elements that orchestrate gene activity in the cells of the pancreas that produce insulin, a hormone that regulates blood sugar.

In type 2 diabetes, the tissues become less responsive to insulin, resulting in blood sugar levels being too high. Most people can compensate when this happens by producing more insulin, but in people with type 2 diabetes, the pancreas cannot cope with this increased demand.

"The cells that produce insulin appear to be programmed to behave differently in people with type 2 diabetes," said co-author Mark McCarthy, a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator at the University of Oxford. "This study provides some important clues to the mechanisms which are disturbed in the earliest stages of the development of type 2 diabetes, and may point the way to novel ways of treating and preventing the disease."

The team identified genome sequences that drive gene activity in insulin-producing cells specifically. They found that these sequences are located in clusters, and that genetic variants known to be linked to diabetes risk are also found in these clusters.

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Non-coding DNA implicated in type 2 diabetes

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Eczema: Bleach bath therapy – Video

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Eczema: Bleach bath therapy
If your child #39;s dermatologist recommends bleach baths, follow these important steps for giving a bleach bath.

By: AcademyofDermatology

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