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Daily Archives: September 1, 2014
Rani Mukherjee At Lalbaugcha Raja 2014 | DNA Eco Friendly Ganesha Awards – Video
Posted: September 1, 2014 at 4:43 pm
Rani Mukherjee At Lalbaugcha Raja 2014 | DNA Eco Friendly Ganesha Awards
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Rani Mukherjee At Lalbaugcha Raja 2014 | DNA Eco Friendly Ganesha Awards - Video
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Garry’s Mod – Trouble In Terrorist Town (TTT) – DNA – Video
Posted: at 4:43 pm
Garry #39;s Mod - Trouble In Terrorist Town (TTT) - DNA
TTT aka Trouble In Terrorist Town! Other Players: Pause: http://www.youtube.com/pauseunpause Coe: http://www.youtube.com/coestar Chad: http://www.youtube.com/omgchad Pyro: http://www.youtube.com/...
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Garry's Mod - Trouble In Terrorist Town (TTT) - DNA - Video
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brittnygirl: Little Mix – DNA COVER – Video
Posted: at 4:43 pm
brittnygirl: Little Mix - DNA COVER
It #39;s YOUR turn to shine! Get The Voice and make your own hit music video. Download The Voice for iOS: http://bit.ly/TVOSiOS or ANDROID: http://bit.ly/voiceappcp2 and get singing! Subscribe...
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brittnygirl: Little Mix - DNA COVER - Video
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Ancestry DNA Unboxing – Video
Posted: at 4:43 pm
Ancestry DNA Unboxing
I just received my AncestryDNA kit in the mail. This video shows what your DNA kit will look like. I will post a follow-up of the results when I receive them.
By: Mark Goudy
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Ancestry DNA Unboxing - Video
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the queen of harts by louis k 4 the dr of dna – Video
Posted: at 4:43 pm
the queen of harts by louis k 4 the dr of dna
the mad haters world of mad people.
By: louis karantoni
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the queen of harts by louis k 4 the dr of dna - Video
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DNA Tours 2013 Make You Believe in France Paris – Video
Posted: at 4:43 pm
DNA Tours 2013 Make You Believe in France Paris
cet vido date de 2013 mais elle a pas tait dvoil sur Youtube dsole pour le retard.
By: Sims Simsette
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DNA Tours 2013 Make You Believe in France Paris - Video
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DNA may have had humble beginnings as nutrient carrier
Posted: at 4:43 pm
5 hours ago by Adam Hadhazy An artists impression of a DNA molecule. Credit: FBI
New research intriguingly suggests that DNA, the genetic information carrier for humans and other complex life, might have had a rather humbler origin. In some microbes, a study shows, DNA pulls double duty as a storage site for phosphate. This all-important biomolecule contains phosphorus, a sometimes hard-to-get nutrient.
Maintaining an in-house source of phosphate is a newfound tactic for enabling microorganisms to eke out a living in harsh environments, according to a new study published in the open-access, peer reviewed scientific journal PLOS ONE. The finding bodes well for life finding a way, as it were, in extreme conditions on worlds less hospitable than Earth.
The results also support a second insight: DNA might have come onto the biological scene merely as a means of keeping phosphate handy. Only later on in evolutionary history did the mighty molecule perhaps take on the more advanced role of genetic carrier.
"DNA might have initially evolved for the purpose of storing phosphate, and the various genetic benefits evolved later," said Joerg Soppa, senior author of the paper and a molecular biologist at Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany.
Unraveling life's origins
Scientists continue to investigate the development of self-replicating, intricate sets of chemistryin other words, lifefrom the chemical compounds thought available on early Earth. Out of this mixture of prebiotic chemicals, two nucleic acidsRNA and DNAemerged as champions.
Today, these two types of biomolecules serve as the genetic information carriers for all Earthly biota. RNA on its own suffices for the business of life for simpler creatures, such as some viruses. Complex life, like humans, however, relies on DNA as its genetic carrier.
Astrobiologists want to understand the origin of DNA and its genetic cousin, RNA, because figuring out how life got started here on Earth is key for gauging if it might ever develop on alien planets.
Many researchers think RNA must have preceded DNA as the genetic molecule of choice. RNA is more versatile, acting as both genetic code and a catalyst for chemical reactions. Explicating the rise of DNA as a genetic material directly from RNA, however, is tricky. Compared to RNA, DNA needs significantly more supporting players for it to work well in a biological setting.
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DNA may have had humble beginnings as nutrient carrier
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John Glass – Digitizing Life Using Synthetic Genomics – Video
Posted: at 4:43 pm
John Glass - Digitizing Life Using Synthetic Genomics
Watch on LabRoots at http://labroots.com/user/webinars/details/id/321 In 2010, our team of synthetic biologists announced the creation of a bacterial cell that had a chemically synthesized...
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Scientists sequence complete genome of E. coli strain responsible for food poisoning
Posted: at 4:43 pm
9 hours ago by Catherine Hockmuth UC San Diego bioengineers have completed the genome sequencing of a particularly harmful strain of E. coli that has been tied to outbreaks of food poisoning. The circular map shows the completed sequence with lighter color regions representing gaps in a 2001 sequencing of the strain that have now been completed with current technology. Credit: The Systems Biology Research Group at UC San Diego.
(Phys.org) Researchers at the University of California, San Diego have produced the first complete genome sequencing of a strain of E. coli that is a common cause of outbreaks of food poisoning in the United States. Although the E. coli strain EDL933 was first isolated in the 1980s, it gained national attention in 1993 when it was linked to an outbreak of food poisoning from Jack-in-the-Box restaurants in the western United States.
Their paper published online Aug. 14 in the journal Genome Announcements reports the full, complete sequence with no gaps. Their analysis includes so-called jumping genes that can move around the same genome, sometimes causing damage to individual genes or enabling antibiotic resistance.
"With a complete genome sequence, we can now pinpoint the precise location of all such elements, which might help to track and treat future outbreaks," said Ramy Aziz, the senior author on the paper. Aziz led the research as a visiting scientist working in Bernhard Palsson's Systems Biology Research Group at UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering. Aziz is also a professor at Cairo University in Egypt.
The genome sequence for this historical strain was first published in 2001, but there were many gaps in the genome that could not be closed with the sequencing technology available to scientists in 2001. Given the importance of this strain as a major cause of food poisoning, Palsson's Systems Biology Research Group recently sequenced its genome using a combination of sequencing data from instruments made by Pacific Biosciences and Illumina.
"New sequencing and assembly methods are enabling a full expose of pesky pathogens; there is no place to hide genetic characteristics anymore. The full genetic delineation of multiple pathogenic strains is likely to not only improve our understanding of their characteristics, but to find and exploit their vulnerabilities, said Palsson, the Galletti Professor of Bioengineering at UC San Diego.
Explore further: New models predict where E. coli strains will thrive
More information: Paper: genomea.asm.org/content/2/4/e00821-14.full.pdf
Bioengineers at the University of California, San Diego have used the genomic sequences of 55 E. coli strains to reconstruct the metabolic repertoire for each strain. Surprisingly, these reconstructions do an excellent job of ...
(Phys.org) Bioengineers at the Jacobs School have created a better way to sequence genomes from individual cells. The breakthrough, which relies on microwells just 12 nanoliters in volume (see image), ...
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Scientists sequence complete genome of E. coli strain responsible for food poisoning
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Central biobank for drug research
Posted: at 4:42 pm
5 hours ago The biobank comprises three cryotanks, equipped with cooled protective hoods, and a transfer station from which the sample containers are transported via a rail system. There is enough space for approximately 60,000 samples. Credit: Fraunhofer IBMT
For the development of new drugs it is crucial to work with stem cells, as these allow scientists to study the effects of new active pharmaceutical ingredients. But it has always been difficult to derive enough stem cells of the right quality and in the right timeframe. A central biobank is about to remedy the situation.
Human stem cells allow scientists to assess how patients are likely to respond to new drugs and to examine how illnesses come about. For a few years now, it has been possible to take tissue samples from adults and use reverse programming to artificially produce stem cells, which have the potential to create any kind of cell found in the human body. Before this discovery, pharmaceutical researchers had to use adult stem cells or primary cells, which have a more limited potential. Another option is to use stem cells derived from human embryos, but quite apart from the ethical considerations these cells are available only in limited diversity. The new technique makes it possible for instance to reprogram adult skin or blood cells so that they behave in a similar way to embryonic stem cells and can become any type of cell. "These are known as induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPS cells for short," says Dr. Julia Neubauer from the Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering IBMT in St. Ingbert, Germany. Although an increasing number of local biobanks have emerged in recent years, none of them fulfills the requirements of the pharmaceutical industry and research institutions. What is needed is a supply of 'ready-to-use' stem cells, which means large numbers of consistently characterized, systematically catalogued cells of suitable quality.
At the beginning of 2014, the IBMT teamed up with 26 industry and research partners to launch a project aimed at establishing a central biobank the European Bank for induced pluripotent Stem Cells (EBiSC) to generate iPS cells from patients with specific diseases or genetic mutations (http://ebisc.org/). Six months into the project and the first cells are available for use in the development of new drugs. By its three-year mark, it is hoped the project will be in a position to offer over 1000 defined and characterized cell lines comprising a hundred million cells. Such quantities are needed because a single drug screening involves testing several million cells. The main biobank facility is being built in the English city of Cambridge and an identical "mirror site" will be set up at the IBMT's Sulzbach location in Germany.
Gently freezing cells
The IBMT was brought on board for EBiSC by virtue of the comprehensive expertise it gained through participation in the EU's "Hyperlab" and "CRYSTAL" projects. For EBiSC, IBMT scientists are responsible for freezing the cells and for automating cell cultivation and the biobank itself. For an efficient long-term storage of functional stem cells, they have to be cooled down to temperatures of below 130 degrees Celsius in a controlled way. The scientists have to prepare the cells so they can survive the cold shock of nitrogen gas. The IBMT has, for instance, developed technologies that allow cells to be frozen in an extremely gentle way. "Cells don't like being removed from the surface they are grown on, but that's what people used to do in order to freeze them. Our method allows the cells to stay adherent," explains Neubauer.
Just as with foodstuffs, stem cells depend on an unbroken cold chain to preserve their functionality and viability. The scientists store the cells in special containers or cryotanks each measuring one by two meters. To remove a particular sample, the scientists have to open the cryotank. The problem is that this exposes all the other samples to warmer ambient air, causing them to begin to thaw out. "It's just like when you go to your refrigerator at home it's not a good idea to leave the door open too long," says Neubauer. She and her colleagues at the IBMT and industry partner Askion GmbH have together developed a stem cell biobank complete with protective hoods that protect the other samples whenever the cryotank is opened. In addition to maintaining the temperature, the hoods help keep another key shelf-life criterion, humidity, at a constant level.
Flawless freezing is important, but it is just as important to automate the whole process. "That not only guarantees consistency, it's what makes it possible to provide large quantities of cells of the required quality in the first place," says Neubauer. And the scientists' cooling process already boasts a finished technology. In their automated biobank, each cell sample is labelled with barcodes to allow them to be tracked. The samples travel along a conveyor belt to the individual cyrotanks, and a computer monitors the entire freezing and storage process.
Now the scientists are working on automating cell cultivation or the multiplying of the cells. There are essentially two possible approaches. One is to use robots that translate each preparation step into a mechanical one. The other is to use stirred bioreactors that provide free-moving cells with the ideal supply of nutrients and oxygen. Both technologies feature in the IBMT's portfolio. "By the time the project is completed, we'll know which is the better method for what we're trying to do," says Neubauer.
Explore further: Animal-free reprogramming of adult cells improves safety
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Central biobank for drug research
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