Fungi of the forest – Concord Monitor

A walk in the woods during fall is likely to reveal an array of forest fungi. Ranging from delicate, tan mini-umbrellas to fleshy, white softballs to foot-long, orange-yellow shelves growing out of rotten logs, they come in a variety of colors, shapes, and sizes. Fungi are critical to the health of the forest, decomposing woody debris and helping trees obtain required nutrients.

Fungi are neither plant nor animal, and biologists place them in their own kingdom. The mushroom we see is only a small part of the fungus. Mushrooms are the fruit of a fungus, temporary structures intended to disperse spores. Most of a fungus body, or mycelium, is hidden underground or inside the dead tree or fallen log upon which it is growing. The mycelium is made up of a network of threadlike filaments, called hyphae, which grow through soil or wood, secreting acids and enzymes that break down the substrate, making it easier for the fungus to absorb nutrients. If you roll over a few rotten logs, you can often see a spider-like web of white or yellow mycelia beneath.

Many fungi play a vital role as decomposers in the forest. As they feed on leaf litter and dead trees, they convert this debris to humus, releasing and recycling nutrients back into the soil so new trees can grow. Only fungi and some bacteria are capable of breaking down lignin, the component of wood and other plants which imparts rigidity. The turkey tail fungus, with its concentric bands of brown, rust, and gray, is an example of a wood-decaying fungus.

Other fungi are parasitic, growing on living trees, and may eventually kill their host. In an interesting relationship, the golden-colored honey mushroom both parasitizes living trees and then decomposes them, while the aborted entoloma fungus in turn parasitizes honey mushrooms.

Some species of fungi, such as truffles and the giant puffball, greatly benefit trees and other plants by growing on their roots as symbiotic partners. This interwoven network of mycorrhizal fungi can soak up water and nutrients over a large area, helping a tree obtain many essential minerals. In exchange, the tree provides the fungi with energy-rich sugars it manufactures through photosynthesis.

Reproduction in fungi is varied and complex. Many fungi can reproduce asexually, for example when fragments of hyphae break off and grow new colonies, as well as sexually. During sexual reproduction, the mycelium of a fungus merges with a compatible mating type of the same species underground (fungi do not have distinct genders). New hyphae are generated, and when temperatures and soil moisture are right, they develop fruiting bodies or mushrooms that erupt aboveground.

Young mushrooms are known as buttons or eggs. In many species, as the egg grows, the cap breaks through the eggs veil, the stalk lengthens, and the cap opens like an umbrella. The expanding cap breaks the secondary veil protecting the gills. Remnants of this veil form a ring or annulus visible around the stem in some mushrooms. Thousands to billions of spores ripen in rows of gills on the underside of the mushrooms cap, and when ready, are disseminated by wind, water, or by hitching a ride on an animal. Only a small percentage will land in a spot suitable for germination and grow into another mycelium.

Not all mushrooms have gills, however; for example, the boletes and the wood-decaying bracket and conk fungi bear their spores in elongated tubes, while the spores of hedgehog mushrooms develop on spines.

Fungal fruit is an important food for wildlife. Chipmunks, mice, squirrels, skunks, deer, and grouse all eat mushrooms. Red squirrels will even dry and store mushrooms in the nooks and crannies of tree trunks and branches for later use.

Human foragers, however, are wise to exercise caution if they plan to consume mushrooms.

There are quite a few mushrooms that could kill you, said Dave Muska, a naturalist and educator at the North Branch Nature Center in Vermont. Muska and the students in his mycology class identified 60 species of fungi in the woods one weekend this fall, including many in the Amanita family, which includes the most poisonous mushrooms. He recommends taking a class or accompanying an experienced forager before eating any fungus.

Or you can stay away from dining on wild fungi and simply enjoy their beauty, uniqueness, and the key role they play in a healthy forest.

Susan Shea is a naturalist, writer, and conservationist who lives in Brookfield, Vermont. Illustration by Adelaide Murphy Tyrol. The Outside Story is assigned and edited by Northern Woodlands magazine and sponsored by the Wellborn Ecology Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation: http://www.nhcf.org.

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Fungi of the forest - Concord Monitor

The mole genome reveals regulatory rearrangements associated with adaptive intersexuality – Science Magazine

Intersexuality in female moles

Female moles are intersexual and develop masculinizing ovotestes, a distinctive trait among mammals. Real et al. investigated the origin of this trait by sequencing the Iberian mole genome and applying comparative strategies that integrate transcriptomic, epigenetic, and chromatin interaction data. They identified mole-specific genomic rearrangements that alter the three-dimensional regulatory landscape of the androgen-converting gene CYP17A1 and the pro-testicular factor gene FGF9, both of which show distinct expression patterns in mole gonads. The use of transgenic mice confirms the capability of these factors to increase circulating testosterone levels and to induce gonadal masculinization. This study highlights how integrative approaches can reveal the phenotypic impact of genomic variation.

Science, this issue p. 208

Linking genomic variation to phenotypical traits remains a major challenge in evolutionary genetics. In this study, we use phylogenomic strategies to investigate a distinctive trait among mammals: the development of masculinizing ovotestes in female moles. By combining a chromosome-scale genome assembly of the Iberian mole, Talpa occidentalis, with transcriptomic, epigenetic, and chromatin interaction datasets, we identify rearrangements altering the regulatory landscape of genes with distinct gonadal expression patterns. These include a tandem triplication involving CYP17A1, a gene controlling androgen synthesis, and an intrachromosomal inversion involving the pro-testicular growth factor gene FGF9, which is heterochronically expressed in mole ovotestes. Transgenic mice with a knock-in mole CYP17A1 enhancer or overexpressing FGF9 showed phenotypes recapitulating mole sexual features. Our results highlight how integrative genomic approaches can reveal the phenotypic impact of noncoding sequence changes.

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The mole genome reveals regulatory rearrangements associated with adaptive intersexuality - Science Magazine

Edelweiss launches India’s first passive index fund for healthcare sector with MSCI – ETHealthworld.com

Mumbai: Edelweiss Asset Management on Monday announced a partnership with MSCI to launch the country's first passive thematic index fund which will bet on 45 healthcare companies from India and abroad. The company feels that healthcare as a category has under-performed over the last two years during which it has seen issues like difficulties in getting US FDA licenses, and will do better in the future due to which the offering has been launched through a tie-up with MSCI.

Radhika Gupta, the chief executive of Edelweiss AMC, told reporters that the fund will invest 70 per cent of its corpus in 25 top local companies and the remaining 30 per cent in global ones listed in the US.

It is a passive fund and the investment decisions will not be done by humans at all, she said, adding that this is first in a series of collaborations between Edelweiss and MSCI.

Apart from growing demand, export opportunities and a conducive policy environment are also a growth driver for the sector, she added.

The new fund offering for the 'Edelweiss MSCI India Domestic & World Healthcare 45 Index Fund' will open on Tuesday and close on October 20.

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Edelweiss launches India's first passive index fund for healthcare sector with MSCI - ETHealthworld.com

Women who go private to give birth more likely to have Caesarean – The Irish Times

Women who go private to have their baby are almost three times more likely than public patients to have an elective Caesarean section, according to a study of 75,000 women attending a Dublin maternity hospital.

The increased elective Caesarean rate among private patients is linked in the study of patients at the Coombe Women and Infants Hospital to a desire for continuity of care from an obstetrician from women who are risk-averse.

Women who opt for private care are more likely to have experienced pregnancy loss, infertility treatment and multiple pregnancies, and are on average more than five years older than public patients, the authors found.

This suggests that women are choosing private care, in part, because they are more risk-averse for clinical and sociodemographic reasons. They prefer a model of care where there is continuity of care by a senior obstetrician and where they believe they can optimise a good clinical outcome for their baby and themselves.

Prof Michael Turner, of the UCD Centre for Human Reproduction at the Coombe hospital, pointed out that many of the women would have received IVF, and having invested personally and financially in this technology would be more likely to go privately to an obstetrician for the birth so they got continuity of care and risk minimisation.

The study involved 73,000 women who had a single pregnancy at the Coombe and 2,000 who had multiple births. It found 75 per cent had public care, 11 per cent semi-private and 14 per cent private.

Overall, 71 per cent of births in the study involved vaginal delivery, 14.5 per cent were elective Caesareans and 14.5 per cent were emergency Caesareans.

Elective Caesareans are typically carried out where a doctor thinks a vaginal delivery might be too difficult, where the baby is in the breech position or where complications have arisen.

Private patients were on average 5.3 years older and were more likely to be Irish-born, married and in professional or managerial employment.

Women with multiple pregnancies were almost twice as likely to go private than those expecting one child (24.6 per cent versus 14.9 per cent).

The elective Caesarean rate in private patients was 29.4 per cent, compared to 11.1 per cent in public patients, but the emergency Caesarean rate was slightly lower 13.3 per cent versus 14.2 per cent.

The study, published in BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth journal, also looked at women who returned to the hospital for a second pregnancy, and found 90 per cent chose the same package second time around. Women who switched to private for their second pregnancy were more likely to have had an emergency Caesarean or admission to the neonatal unit the first time.

Rising rates of Caesarean section, in Ireland and internationally, have been a source of concern for many years. The study points out that the operation has become much safer for mothers, even while risk factors have increased due to women having children later, rising obesity levels and increased rates of diabetes.

Its a question of balancing the risks and benefits for each individual case. Theres a lot of mythology about the optimum Caesarean rate, when no one knows what it is, said Prof Turner.

There is a big difference in the Caesarean rate between private and public patients, but when you correct for clinical risk it shrinks considerably.

The issue is more complex than it is sometimes portrayed, and people should not apply simplistic, ideological arguments in relation to it.

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Women who go private to give birth more likely to have Caesarean - The Irish Times

SC to hear plea opposing artificial reproduction of animals – ETHealthworld.com

(Representative image)New Delhi, The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to examine a plea seeking directions to declare the use of artificial reproduction technique (ART) on animals as cruel and illegal.

A bench, headed by Chief Justice S.A. Bobde and comprising Justices A.S. Bopanna and V. Ramasubramanian, initially expressed its reservation on entertaining the case, saying that the court is not a science expert, but then agreed to grant a hearing.

Also granting the request of the petitioner to appear in person, the bench issued notice to the Centre, the Animal Welfare Board of India, the National Biodiversity Authority, and others, seeking their response on the plea, which claimed that the ART is unconstitutional, as cruelty is being meted out to animals.

The plea contended that ART performed on livestock/animals are violative of some provisions of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animal Act, 1960, the Biological Diversity Act, 2002, and the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.

The petitioner argued that artificially reproducing as a principle/policy is by itself cruel and through these artificial processes, pain is inflicted on animals. Citing the Constitution, the plea said it has clearly recognised the welfare of animals.

--IANS

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SC to hear plea opposing artificial reproduction of animals - ETHealthworld.com

Let-7 derived from endometrial extracellular vesicles is an important inducer of embryonic diapause in mice – Science Advances

Embryonic diapause is a maternally controlled phenomenon. The molecule controlling the onset of the phenomenon is unknown. We demonstrated that overexpression of microRNA let-7a or incubation with let-7genriched extracellular vesicles from endometrial epithelial cells prolonged the in vitro survival of mouse blastocysts, which developed into live pups after having been transferred to foster mothers. Similar to in vivo dormant blastocysts, let-7induced dormant blastocysts exhibited low level of proliferation, apoptosis, and nutrient metabolism. Let-7 suppressed c-myc/mTORC1 and mTORC2 signaling to induce embryonic diapause. It also inhibited ODC1 expression reducing biosynthesis of polyamines, which are known to reactivate dormant embryos. Furthermore, the overexpression of let-7 blocked trophoblast differentiation and implantation potential of human embryo surrogates, and prolonged survival of human blastocysts in vitro, supporting the idea that embryonic diapause was an evolutionary conserved phenomenon. In conclusion, let-7 is the main factor inducing embryonic diapause.

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Let-7 derived from endometrial extracellular vesicles is an important inducer of embryonic diapause in mice - Science Advances

Glyphosate in chicken poop used as fertilizer is hurting food production, researchers say – U.S. Right to Know

Scientists brought more bad news to light regarding the widely used herbicide glyphosate, better known as Roundup, in a new research paper published this month.

Researchers from the University of Turku in Finland revealed in a paper published in the journal Science of The Total Environment that manure from poultry used as fertilizer can decrease crop yields when the manure contains residues of glyphosate-based herbicides, such as Roundup. Fertilizers are meant to increase crop production, so the evidence that glyphosate residues can have the opposite effect is significant.

Poultry litter, as the manure is called, is often used as a fertilizer, including in organic agriculture, because it is considered rich in essential nutrients. Use of the poultry litter as fertilizer has been growing both in farming and in horticulture and home gardens.

While use is growing, the possible risks associated with the accumulation of agrochemicals in poultry manure are still largely ignored, the Finland researchers warned.

Organic farmers have been growing increasingly worried about traces of glyphosate in manure fertilizer that is allowed in organic production, but many in the industry are reluctant to publicize the issue.

Farmers spray glyphosate directly onto a number of crops grown around the world, including soybeans, corn, cotton, canola and other crops genetically engineered to withstand glyphosate treatments. They also often directly spray such crops as wheat and oats, which are not genetically engineered shortly before harvest to dry the crops out.

Given the amount of glyphosate-based herbicides used to treat crops that are used in animal feed, as well as the amount of manure used as fertilizer, we should definitely be aware that this kind of a risk exists, said one of the authors of study, Anne Muola.

Nobody seems very eager to talk too loudly about it. Muola noted.

The heavy use of glyphosate herbicides directly onto food crops has been promoted by Monsanto now a unit of Bayer AG since the 1990s, and glyphosate use is so ubiquitous that residues are commonly found in food, water and even air samples.

Because there are glyphosate residues in human and animal food, detectable glyphosate levels are commonly found in human urine and animal manure.

These glyphosate residues in fertilizer are a problem for growers for many reasons, according to the Finland researchers.

We found that poultry manure can accumulate high residues of (glyphosate-based herbicides), decrease plant growth and reproduction, and thus inhibit the growth-promoting effects of manure when applied as fertilizer, the paper states. These results demonstrate that the residues pass through the digestive process of birds, and more importantly, they persist in the manure fertilizer over long periods.

The researchers said the glyphosate residues can persist in ecological systems, affecting several non-target organisms over many years.

The consequences, they said, include decreased efficiency of manure as fertilizer; long-lasting glyphosate-based herbicide contamination of agricultural cycles; uncontrolled glyphosate contamination of non-target areas; increased threat to vulnerable non-target organisms, and an increased risk of emerging resistances to glyphosate.

The researchers said more studies should be done to reveal the extent of glyphosate contamination in organic fertilizers and how that impacts sustainability.

The Finland research adds to evidence of the dangers of glyphosate residues in fertilizer, according to agricultural experts.

The impacts of glyphosate residue that have accumulated in poultry excrements is a largely overlooked area of research, said Rodale Institute soil scientist, Dr. Yichao Rui. But what research does exist has shown that those residues can have a negative effect on crops, if poultry manure was used as a fertilizer. Glyphosate residues in fertilizers have been shown to have negative effects on plants, soil microbiomes, and microbes associated with plants and animals including humans through the food chain. When this contamination is unintentionally spread through fertilizer, it places a severe strain on biodiversity and ecosystem functions and services.

Worldwide 9.4 million tons of glyphosatehave been sprayed on fields enough to spray nearly half a pound of Roundup on every cultivated acre of land in the world.

In 2015, theWorld Health Organizations International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)classified glyphosateas probably carcinogenic to humans after reviewing years of published and peer-reviewed scientific studies. The team of international scientists found there was a particular association between glyphosate and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

Tens of thousands of people in the United States suffering from non-Hodgkin lymphoma have sued Monsanto, and in three trials held to date, juries have found that the companys glyphosate herbicides were to blame for causing the cancers.

Additionally, an assortment of animal studies released this summer indicate that glyphosate exposures impact reproductive organs and could threaten fertility, adding fresh evidence that the weed killing agent might be anendocrine disruptor. Endocrine disrupting chemicals may mimic or interfere with the bodys hormones and are linked with developmental and reproductive problems as well as brain and immune system dysfunction.

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Glyphosate in chicken poop used as fertilizer is hurting food production, researchers say - U.S. Right to Know

Photorealistic Painting With Light: Nanopillars Precisely Control the Color and Intensity of Transmitted Light – SciTechDaily

Illustration depicts a faithful reproduction of Johannes Vermeers Girl With a Pearl Earring using millions of nanopillars that control both the color and intensity of incident light. Credit: T. Xu/Nanjing University

The approach has potential applications in improving optical communications and making currency harder to counterfeit.

By shining white light on a glass slide stippled with millions of tiny titanium dioxide pillars, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and their collaborators have reproduced with astonishing fidelity the luminous hues and subtle shadings of Girl With a Pearl Earring, Dutch artist Johannes Vermeers masterpiece. The approach has potential applications in improving optical communications and making currency harder to counterfeit.

For example, by adding or dropping a particular color, or wavelength, of light traveling in an optical fiber, scientists can control the amount of information carried by the fiber. By altering the intensity, researchers can maintain t the brightness of the light signal as it travels long distances in the fiber. The approach might also be used to paint paper money with small but intricate color details that a counterfeiter would have great difficulty forging.

Other scientists have previously used tiny pillars, or nanopillars, of varying sizes to trap and emit specific colors when illuminated with white light. The width of the nanopillars, which are about 600 nanometers in height, or less than one-hundredth the diameter of a human hair, determines the specific color of light that a pillar traps and emits. For a demanding test of such a technique, researchers examined how well the nanopillars reproduced the colors of a familiar painting, such as the Vermeer.

Left: Schematic for generating a full-color nanopainting image. Insets show a constituent titanium dioxide nanopillar and a scanning electron microscope image of the fabricated nanopillars. False color shading indicates the primary colors generated by the nanopillars. Scale bar: 500 nm. Right: Experimental color image of Girl With a Pearl Earring generated under white-light illumination. Scale bar: 50 m. Credit: T. Xu/Nanjing University

Although several teams of researchers had successfully arranged millions of nanopillars whose sizes were tailored to transmit red, green or blue light to create a specific palette of output colors, the scientists had no way to control the intensity of those colors. The intensity, or brightness, of colors determines an images light and shadow its chiaroscuro and enhances the ability to convey impressions of perspective and depth, a signature feature of Vermeers work.

Now, by fabricating nanopillars that not only trap and emit specific colors of light but also change its polarization by varying degrees, the NIST researchers and their collaborators from Nanjing University in China have for the first time demonstrated a way to control both color and intensity. The researchers, who include Amit Agrawal and Wenqi Zhu of NIST and the University of Maryland in College Park, and Henri Lezec of NIST, describe their findings in the September 20 issue of the journal Optica.

In their new work, the NIST team fabricated on a glass slide nanopillars of titanium dioxide that had an elliptical cross section rather than a circular one. Circular objects have a single uniform diameter, but elliptical objects have a long axis and a short axis.

The researchers designed the nanopillars so that at different locations their long axis was more aligned or less aligned with the polarization of the incoming white light. (Polarized light is light whose electric field vibrates in a particular direction as it journeys across space.) If the nanopillars long axis was exactly aligned with the direction of polarization of the incoming light, the polarization of the transmitted light was unaffected. But if the long axis was rotated by some angle for instance 20 degrees relative to the direction of polarization of the incoming light, the nanopillar rotated the polarization of the incident light by twice that angle in this case, 40 degrees.

At each location on the glass slide, the orientation of a nanopillar rotated the polarization of the red, green or blue light it transmitted by a specific amount.

By itself, the rotation imparted by each nanopillar would not in any way alter the intensity of the transmitted light. But in tandem with a special polarizing filter placed on the back of the glass slide, the team achieved that goal.

The filter was oriented so that it prevented any light that had retained its original polarization from passing through. (Sunglasses work in much the same way: The lenses act as vertically polarized filters, reducing the intensity of horizontally polarized glare.) That would be the case for any place on the glass slide where a nanopillar had left unaltered the polarization of the incident light. Such a region would project as a dark spot on a distant screen.

In places where a nanopillar had rotated the polarization of the incident white light, the filter permitted a certain amount of the red, green or blue light to pass. The amount depended on the rotation angle; the greater the angle, the greater the intensity of the transmitted light. In this way, the team, for the first time, controlled both color and brightness.

Once the NIST researchers had demonstrated the basic design, they created a digital copy of a miniature version of the Vermeer painting, about 1 millimeter long. They then used the digital information to guide the fabrication of a matrix of millions of nanopillars. The researchers represented the color and intensity of each picture element, or pixel, of the Vermeer by a group of five nanopillars one red, two green and two blue oriented at specific angles to the incoming light. Examining the millimeter-size image that the team had created by shining white light through the nanopillars, the researchers found that they reproduced Girl With the Pearl Earring with extreme clarity, even capturing the texture of oil paint on canvas.

The quality of the reproduction, capturing the subtle color gradations and shadow details, is simply remarkable, said NIST researcher and study co-author Agrawal. This work quite elegantly bridges the fields of art and nanotechnology.

To construct the nanopillars, Agrawal and his colleagues first deposited a layer of an ultrathin polymer on glass, just a few hundred nanometers thick. Using an electron beam like a miniature drill, they then excavated an array of millions of tiny holes of varying dimensions and orientations in the polymer.

Then, using a technique known as atomic layer deposition, they backfilled these holes with titanium dioxide. Finally, the team etched away all of the polymer surrounding the holes, leaving behind millions of tiny pillars of titanium dioxide. The dimension and orientation of each nanopillar represented, respectively, the hue and brightness of the final millimeter-size image.

The nanopillar technique can easily be adapted to transmit specific colors of light, with particular intensities, to communicate information through an optical fiber, or to imprint a valuable item with a miniature, multihued identification mark that would be hard to replicate.

Reference: Photorealistic full-color nanopainting enabled by a low-loss metasurface by Pengcheng Huo, Maowen Song, Wenqi Zhu, Cheng Zhang, Lu Chen, Henri J. Lezec, Yanqing Lu, Amit Agrawal and Ting Xu, 4 September 2020, Optica.DOI: 10.1364/OPTICA.403092

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Photorealistic Painting With Light: Nanopillars Precisely Control the Color and Intensity of Transmitted Light - SciTechDaily

Global in vitro fertilization (IVF) market size was USD 16.89 billion in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 36.39 billion by 2026, exhibiting a CAGR…

Trusted Business Insights answers what are the scenarios for growth and recovery and whether there will be any lasting structural impact from the unfolding crisis for the In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) market.

Trusted Business Insights presents an updated and Latest Study on In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) Market 2019-2029. The report contains market predictions related to market size, revenue, production, CAGR, Consumption, gross margin, price, and other substantial factors. While emphasizing the key driving and restraining forces for this market, the report also offers a complete study of the future trends and developments of the market.The report further elaborates on the micro and macroeconomic aspects including the socio-political landscape that is anticipated to shape the demand of the In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) market during the forecast period (2019-2029).It also examines the role of the leading market players involved in the industry including their corporate overview, financial summary, and SWOT analysis.

Get Sample Copy of this Report @ In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) Market Size, Share & Industry Analysis, By Type (Conventional IVF, and IVF with ICSI), By Procedure (Fresh Non-donor, Frozen Non-donor, Fresh Donor, and Frozen Donor), By End User (Hospitals, and Fertility Clinics) and Regional Forecast, 2019-2026 (Includes COVID-19 Business Impact)

The global in vitro fertilization (IVF) market size was USD 16.89 billion in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 36.39 billion by 2026, exhibiting a CAGR of 10.1% during the forecast period.

We have updated In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) Market with respect to COVID-19 Impact.Inquire before buying

In vitro fertilization (IVF) is one of the most widely used assisted reproductive technology (ART) and it works by using the combination of both medicines and surgical procedures. The IVF treatment helps with embryo development, and implantation in an infertile couple. IVF is the process of fertilization by extracting eggs, retrieving a sperm sample and then manually combining egg and sperm in a laboratory. Growing adoption of IVF technique has resulted in ever year around half a million babies born using IVF or other assisted reproductive techniques. Thus, growing popularity of IVF & ICSI treatment is anticipated to boost the adoption of in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment during the forecast period.Rising prevalence of infertility, increasing success rate of IVF procedures and increasing awareness about infertility are some of the major factors fueling the demand for IVF treatment worldwide. Moreover, the introduction of advanced and extended fertility treatment of IVF i.e. intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) is expected to drive the growth of in vitro fertilization (IVF) market during 2019-2026 period.

However, the high cost and risks associated with IVF and ICSI treatment are some factors restraining the IVF market growth during the forecast period. For instance, according to a data published by the Reproductive Science Center, a rare condition called Imprinting Disorders was associated with some IVF procedures and it was estimated that the risk of such disorders with IVF treatment was around 2 to 5 per 15,000 births using IVF technique, while the risk in general cases was 1 in 15,000 normal births. Hence, such potential risks and birth defects associated with IVF treatment can hamper the adoption of IVF or ICSI procedure worldwide.

MARKET DRIVERS

Delay in Pregnancies is Accelerating Demand for IVF TreatmentIt is observed that in females, the chances of conceiving start to reduce after the age of 32 and it drop by half by the age of 40. In many countries, a drastic increase in median age of women for first time pregnancy is observed which is leading to several complications associated with pregnancy and also increases the risk of infertility in female partners. Some of the major reasons attributed to the delay in pregnancy are late marriages, couples prioritizing their careers over family planning, and financial instability, etc. Thus, the increasing trend of delaying pregnancy is resulting in infertility that is subsequently increasing the adoption rate of IVF treatment on a global basis. For instance, it has been estimated by various studies that the average fertility rate of the world has declined by 2.5% and the major reason responsible for this is delayed pregnancies in women.

Globally Increasing Prevalence of Infertility is Boosting the Adoption of IVFThe rising prevalence of infertility in countries such as China, U.S, UK and Japan is expected to fuel the demand for in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment during the forecast period. For instance, according to a data published by the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) in 2018, around 6.7% of women in the U.S, aged between 15 to 44 years were suffering from infertility. Also, increasing prevalence of male infertility in the world is anticipated to fuel the adoption of IVF ICSI treatment. For instance, according to a data published by NCBI, it was stated that in 2015, nearly 15.0% of couples present in the world were affected by infertility and among them, the male partners were solely responsible for almost 20.0% -30.0% of the cases. Along with this, shift towards sedentary lifestyle, rising stress level and obesity among the general population are some of the other factors responsible for an increasing prevalence of infertility. Thus, is expected to promote the IVF treatment market growth worldwide. Additionally, governments of some countries are taking initiatives to provide better reimbursement policies for IVF procedures. Hence, these initiatives are anticipated to attract high in vitro fertilization market revenue during the forecast period.SEGMENTATION

By Type Outlook

VF with ICSI Segment is Expected to Dominate the IVF MarketOn the basis of types, the in IVF market segments include conventional IVF, and IVF with ICSI. The IVF with ICSI segment dominated the market in 2018 owing to the increasing number of IVF-ICSI procedures worldwide. For instance, according to the Family Fertility Center, it was estimated that in 2018, IVF-ICSI procedures accounted for approximately 75.0% of all IVF procedures performed in the U.S. It is also observed that the intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) is a preferred choice of treatment for male infertility. Thus, the introduction of such advanced technologies like ICSI coupled with the increasing prevalence of male infertility cases are projected to boost the growth of this segment during the forecast period.

Similarly, the conventional IVF segment is expected to grow at a significant pace during the 2019-2026 period. This growth is attributed to the rising shift of infertile couples towards standard IVF treatment as it involves a comparatively lower risk than the ICSI procedure. Also, it is proved by various studies that the success rate of conventional IVF and IVF along with ICSI are same in couples where the female partner is suffering from infertility. Hence, such data is anticipated to increase the growth rate of this segment by the end of 2026.

By Procedure Outlook

Fresh Non-donor Segment to Hold a Dominant Share in 2018Based on procedure, the global market is segmented into fresh non-donor, frozen non-donor, fresh donor and frozen donor. The fresh non-donor segment is anticipated to register a high CAGR during the forecast period primarily due to the rising prevalence of infertility combined with high success rate of IVF procedures using fresh eggs or embryos. For instance, as per a study published in the Oxford journal, 2017, out of all fertility cycles performed in U.K, an estimated 19.0% would result in live birth if the egg used for the process had never been frozen.

However, the frozen-non donor segment holds the second position in the procedure segment owing to its low cost than the IVF cycles using fresh eggs or embryos. Similarly, the fresh donor and frozen donor segments are expected to register a comparatively moderate CAGR during the forecast period owing to the stringent government regulations in many countries regarding egg & sperm donation.

By End User Outlook

Fertility Clinics Dominate the End User Segment in 2018In terms of end user, the global IVF market is segmented into fertility clinics and hospitals. The fertility clinics segment is expected to dominate the market during the forecast period. This dominance is attributed to the increasing number of IVF procedures in fertility clinics, coupled with presence of specialized staff that provide accurate care to the patients. Furthermore, the in vitro fertilization market share from fertility clinics segment is anticipated to grow at a faster pace owing to increasing number of registered fertility clinics in developed and emerging countries such as China, Japan and Brazil.

The hospitals segment accounted for a comparatively lower share of the global market in 2018. The slow growth of this segment is attributed to fewer number of patient visits in hospitals for treatment of infertility, lack of expertise for IVF in hospital settings, and inadequate reimbursement policies in these settings.

REGIONAL ANALYSIS

Europe generated a revenue of USD 7.57 billion in 2018 and dominated the vitro fertilization market share in 2018. The dominance is attributed to increasing prevalence of infertility, coupled with the rising success rate of IVF treatment in the region. European countries such as Spain and Denmark are considered to be the most active nations for IVF treatment and are responsible to drive the market growth of this region during 2019-2026 period. For instance, according to a data published by European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) states that the pregnancy rate per treatment in Europe in 2016 was around 30.5% which witnessed a growth of 1.3% than the previous year owing to high success rate of IVF & ICSI procedures. Thus, the increasing birth rate from IVF and ICSI procedures in Europe is anticipated to boost the adoption of IVF in this region during the forecast period.Europe In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) Market Size, 2018

However, North America is projected to register a steady growth during the forecast period owing to comparatively high cost of IVF and ICSI treatment in this region. For instance, according to FertilityIQ database 2017, a patient spends around US$ 22,000.0 for a single IVF cycle in the U.S. Hence, the increasing IVF cost coupled with growing demand in U.S is resulting in patients travelling to other countries for the treatment. Thus, such trend is leading to a steady growth of this region during forecast period.

Asia Pacific is anticipated to project a higher CAGR by the end of 2026 due to the increasing awareness regarding infertility, coupled with the rise in medical tourism in this region. Additionally, an increase in number of registered fertility clinics is observed in the region which is further expected to result in higher adoption of IVF treatment during the forecast period. For instance, according to the Fertility Society of Australia, in 2018 there were around 120 registered clinics present in Australia, among which almost 98.0% were providing IVF services. Moreover, Latin America and Middle East & Africa are expected to hold considerable IVF market shares owing to their developing health care infrastructure which is subsequently increasing medical tourism in these regions for infertility treatment.

INDUSTRY KEY PLAYERS

Monash IVF, Pelargos IVF and Boston IVF, are Among Major Players Providing IVF TreatmentMonash IVF, Boston IVF and Pelargos IVF are some of the leading service providers of in vitro fertilization market. These companies offer IVF & ICSI treatment with comprehensive care provided by their highly qualified physicians and nursing staff which are primarily responsible for their popularity in the global market. On the other hand, companies like Bloom IVF Centre and Bangkok IVF center are focused in offering IVF treatment at a comparatively lower price that is subsequently up surging medical tourism in their clinics. Other treatment providers engaged in in vitro fertilization (IVF) market are Ovation Fertility, CMRE, Shady Grove Fertility and Group Ambroise Par Clinic.

LIST OF KEY COMPANIES COVERED:

REPORT COVERAGE

The report presents a comprehensive assessment of the global in vitro fertilization (IVF) market by offering valuable insights, facts, industry-related information, and historical data. Several methodologies and approaches are adopted to make meaningful assumptions and views. Furthermore, the report offers a detailed analysis and information as per market segments, helping our readers to get a comprehensive overview of the global IVF market.

Report Scope & Segmentation

Segmentation

By Type

By Procedure

By End User

By Geography

INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT:

July 2019: Shady Grove Fertility announced the opening of its new full service in vitro fertilization (IVF) center in Tampa, Florida

May 2019: Scientist of Monash IVF developed a new embryo screening test in order to reduce risk of miscarriage during IVF treatment

May 2019: NMC Health plc, acquired a majority of stake in Boston IVF with an aim to create the most diversified and experienced fertility network in the world.

Looking for more? Check out our repository for all available reports on In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) in related sectors.

Quick Read Table of Contents of this Report @ In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) Market Size, Share & Industry Analysis, By Type (Conventional IVF, and IVF with ICSI), By Procedure (Fresh Non-donor, Frozen Non-donor, Fresh Donor, and Frozen Donor), By End User (Hospitals, and Fertility Clinics) and Regional Forecast, 2019-2026 (Includes COVID-19 Business Impact)

Trusted Business InsightsShelly ArnoldMedia & Marketing ExecutiveEmail Me For Any ClarificationsConnect on LinkedInClick to follow Trusted Business Insights LinkedIn for Market Data and Updates.US: +1 646 568 9797UK: +44 330 808 0580

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Global in vitro fertilization (IVF) market size was USD 16.89 billion in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 36.39 billion by 2026, exhibiting a CAGR...

NEET exam 2020: 2 weeks to go; detail preparation plan to crack the examsessential tips and strategies – The Financial Express

After an uncertain delay of more than two months, the National Eligibility Entrance Test (NEET) is finally going to be conducted on September 13 and students wishing to take in the countrys top medical colleges are left with only two weeks to prepare for the exam. Like any other competitive exam, the bulk of the focus of students should remain on the revision and practice part in the last few days up to the exam day as most students must have gone through the syllabus of the exam multiple times by now. Here are a few tips Devadas Krishnan who is associated with a Bengaluru based ed-tech platform have for students preparing for the exam, according to an Indian Express report.

1. Students must not look for new books and resources at this juncture and must re-visit the ones they have already read. Multiple readings of NCERT books will not only help students have a better understanding of the topics but also help them hit the questions with more accuracy. Rather than pursuing the most interesting subject, candidates should ideally focus on all the three subjects-Physics, Biology and Chemistry equally as below-average performance in any of the subjects could destroy their admission chances. Topics carrying more weightage should be amply focused by the students

2. Strategy for Biology: Being the gateway for students who want to become doctors, the NEET exam has substantially more focus on Biology in comparison to Physics and Chemistry. Better marks in Biology will also help students secure an all India better rank as its marks are preferred in the case of a tiebreaker between the two students. Biological classification, plant kingdom, animal kingdom, cell, human health, human reproduction are some of the key topics for this exam and students must emphasise on these topics to fare better in the exam.

3. Strategy for Chemistry: Chemical bonding, Molecular structure, S and P block elements, chemical kinetics, equilibrium are some of the important topics which are heavily asked in the entrance exam. Thorough preparation for these topics can give an edge to the students.

4. Strategy for Physics: Consisting of both the concept-based and numerical based questions, the Physics section could make or break the chances of many students. Rather than focusing exclusively on numericals or theory, students had better devote their time equally on both. Most crucials topics from the Physics section are Modern Physics, Magnetism, semiconductors, current electricity and Newton laws system among others.

5. General tips: Multiple revisions and study up to as many hours as possible can play a crucial role in the exam. Revision will not only help candidates remember the facts and concepts better but also boost up their confidence in the exam hall. On the other hand, failure to complete multiple revisions will make students anxious and probably commit silly mistakes which could cost them very dear. Solving question papers of previous years along with the mock test papers can also help students the general areas of the subjects from which most questions are asked in the exam. Students should also not forget to take small breaks between their mounting study hours for leisure and small physical activities.

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NEET exam 2020: 2 weeks to go; detail preparation plan to crack the examsessential tips and strategies - The Financial Express

A Woman May Have Been Cured of H.I.V. Without Medical Treatment – The New York Times

A woman who was infected with H.I.V. in 1992 may be the first person cured of the virus without a risky bone-marrow transplant or even medications, researchers reported on Wednesday.

In an additional 63 people in their study who controlled the infection without drugs, H.I.V. apparently was sequestered in the body in such a way that it could not reproduce, the scientists also reported. The finding suggested that these people may have achieved a functional cure.

The research, published in the journal Nature, outlines a new mechanism by which the body may suppress H.I.V., visible only now because of advances in genetics. The study also offers hope that some small number of infected people who have taken antiretroviral therapy for many years may similarly be able to suppress the virus and stop taking the drugs, which can exact a toll on the body.

It does suggest that treatment itself can cure people, which goes against all the dogma, said Dr. Steve Deeks, an AIDS expert at the University of California, San Francisco, and an author of the new study.

The woman is Loreen Willenberg, 66, of California, already famous among researchers because her body has suppressed the virus for decades after verified infection. Only two other people Timothy Brown of Palm Springs, Calif., and Adam Castillejo of London have been declared cured of H.I.V. Both men underwent grueling bone-marrow transplants for cancer that left them with immune systems resistant to the virus.

Bone-marrow transplants are too risky to be an option for most people infected with H.I.V., but the recoveries raised hopes that a cure was possible. In May, researchers in Brazil reported that a combination of H.I.V. treatments may have led to another cure, but other experts said more tests were needed to confirm that finding.

I think that is a novel, an important discovery, Dr. Sharon Lewin, director of the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Melbourne, said of the new study. The real challenge, of course, is how you can intervene to make this relevant to the 37 million people living with H.I.V.

Even among viruses, H.I.V. is particularly wily and difficult to eradicate. It inserts itself into the human genome and tricks the cells machinery into making copies. H.I.V. naturally prefers to lurk within genes, the most active targets of the cells copiers.

In some people, the immune system over time hunts down cells in which the virus has occupied the genome. But intensive scrutiny of the participants in this study showed that viral genes may be marooned in certain blocked and locked regions of the genome, where reproduction cannot occur, said Dr. Xu Yu, the studys senior author and a researcher at the Ragon Institute in Boston.

The participants in the research were so-called elite controllers, the 1 percent of people with H.I.V. who can keep the virus in check without antiretroviral drugs.

It is possible that some people who take antiretroviral therapy for years may also arrive at the same outcome, especially if given treatments that can boost the immune system, the researchers speculated.

This unique group of individuals provided to me sort of a proof of concept that it is possible with the host immune response to achieve what is really, clinically, a cure, Dr. Deeks said.

Elite controllers have been exhaustively studied for clues to how to control H.I.V. Ms. Willenberg has been enrolled in such studies for more than 15 years. With the exception of one test years ago that indicated a small amount of virus, researchers were never able to identify H.I.V. in her tissues.

In the new study, Dr. Yu and her colleagues analyzed 1.5 billion blood cells from Ms. Willenberg and found no trace of the virus, even using sophisticated new techniques that can pinpoint the viruss location within the genome.

Millions of cells from the gut, rectum and intestine also turned up no signs of the virus.

She could be added to the list of what I think is a cure, through a very different path, Dr. Lewin said.

Other researchers were more circumspect. Its certainly encouraging, but speculative, said Dr. Una ODoherty, a virologist at the University of Pennsylvania. I need to see more before I would say, Oh, shes cured.

But Dr. ODoherty, an expert in analyzing large volumes of cells, said she was impressed by the results overall.

Another 11 people in the study, whom the researchers referred to as exceptional controllers, have the virus only in a part of the genome so dense and remote that the cells machinery cannot replicate it.

Some people who suppress the virus without drugs dont have detectable antibodies or immune cells that rapidly respond to H.I.V. But their immune systems carry a potent memory of the virus, the team found.

Powerful T cells, a constituent of the immune system, eliminated cells in which the viral genes had lodged in more accessible parts of the genome. The infected cells that remained held the virus only in remote regions of the genome where it could not be copied.

Thats really the only explanation for the findings we have, said Dr. Bruce Walker, a researcher at the Ragon Institute who has studied elite controllers for 30 years.

About 10 percent of people who take antiretroviral treatments, especially those who start doing so soon after being infected, also successfully suppress the virus even after they stop taking the drugs. Perhaps something similar is at work in those people as well, experts suggested.

H.I.V. cure studies have focused on rooting out all of the virus thats hidden in the genome. The new study offers a more attainable solution: If the virus remains in only parts of the genome where it cannot be reproduced, the patient may still achieve a functional cure.

The part thats in the gene deserts just doesnt matter, Dr. Walker said. It suggests that as were doing these studies, we need to not just be looking at quantity of the reservoir, but we really need to look at quality.

Since the researchers completed the study, they have analyzed samples from 40 elite controllers and have found a couple more that could qualify as cures, Dr. Yu said: We believe theres definitely many of them out there.

With help from Dr. Deeks, they are contacting people with H.I.V. who have taken antiretroviral drugs for 20 years or more and who may have managed to banish the virus to the deserts of their genomes.

Antiretroviral drugs can have harsh side effects, including heart disease and organ damage, especially when taken over many years. A functional cure, if it is borne out by further research, would transform patients lives, Dr. Yu said: They can stop their treatment and can be just cured, to be healthy for the rest of their life.

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A Woman May Have Been Cured of H.I.V. Without Medical Treatment - The New York Times

Your voice says a lot about you and AI is listening – ABC News

What does your voice say about you?

Your accent can nod to where you come from; the pace of your speech can reveal your emotional state; your voiceprint can be used to identify you.

Linguists, companies and governments are now parsing our voices for these details, using them as biometric tools to uncover more and more information about us.

While a lot of this information is used to make our lives easier, it has also been used to controversial and worrying effect.

And the next frontier of voice technology means we may not be able to trust what we hear even if we appear to have said it ourselves.

Much like a fingerprint, we all have a unique voiceprint.

Its distinctiveness is a product of our differently-shaped bodies, our throats, our larynxes, mouths and tongues.

These days it's common to confirm your identity with your voice to log into your bank, access your ATO file, or unlock your phone.

But the use of voiceprints has a longer history than you might think.

"By the early 20th century, vocal portraits were added to archives of criminal records in police departments across Europe and the United States," says Xiaochang Li, assistant professor of communication at Stanford University.

"These recordings were used for a number of forensic purposes, from identification to physiognomy, which is tied to eugenics."

The portraits were used not so much to identify a single person, but to try and identify characteristics of criminality across a population.

Researchers believed the voice could reveal age and class but also uncertainty, obfuscation or lies.

But use of these portraits failed to take hold, in part due to the technical constraints of reproducing the recordings.

Fast forward to 1944 and the mighty R&D company Bell Labs credited with developing radio astronomy, the transistor, the laser and the photovoltaic cell was researching the sound spectrograph.

It's a visual representation of sound that maps frequencies and their intensities.

They were attempting to map qualities of the voice pitch, rate of speech, missing harmonics to identity.

They couldn't conclusively prove which features signalled markers of identity, but the sound spectrograph would become instrumental in the use of the voiceprint for identification because it's much faster for a computer program to look at an image of sound than to listen in real time.

And now voice ID systems such as Nuance, Verint and Pindrop are replacing customer service representatives in banks, call centres and government agencies around the world.

But what if you are looking to identify qualities in the voice that don't present in a sound snapshot? Qualities that shift and change over your lifetime like your accent?

In the early 2000s, as part of the asylum seeker application process to Australia, applicants who arrived without papers were asked to take a language test.

Not a test to confirm their ability to speak English, but a linguistics test to confirm their country of origin.

Tim McNamara, a professor of applied linguistics at the University of Melbourne, says it was first introduced in Sweden in 1993.

"The Swedish government decided to use the way people spoke as part of the process the likelihood that the person is from where they claim to be from," he says.

If done properly, a Language Analysis for the Determination of Origin (LADO) test would employ a trained linguist to elicit speech samples from the applicant that would place them on one side of a border or another.

Your phone and other personal computing devices know an awful lot about you.

However, in Australia the test was often conducted by another asylum seeker who could speak the language, or a translator who spoke a similar dialect.

"I think language verification results are appalling," says Sanmati Verma, accredited immigration law specialist at Clothier Anderson Immigration Lawyers.

"In the context of displaced refugee communities folks have not been to school, they are living in ethnocised ghettos, they haven't been interacting with members of local population there is no way to determine through language where they are truly from."

Professor McNamara, with a group of international linguists, wrote a set of guidelines that say if LADO is to be used, there are ways to sharpen the tool: use qualified linguists, better understand how language moves across borders, and allow for uncertainty.

"The real problem with LADO is that it is done badly, and it's done cheaply. And the courts want black and white, but there has to be room for doubt," he says.

LADO is still being used by several governments in Europe and the UK, but Australia has exchanged the test in favour of constructing a person's narrative, a process that has also attracted criticisms.

Nonetheless, the decisions within the application process are still being made by humans. What happens when we hand over the reins to automated systems?

Public services such medical systems and government departments are turning to automation to find efficiencies and to meet increasing demand.

Dial the ATO and your voiceprint can be matched in less than 30 seconds by a computer algorithm, forgoing minutes of security questions.

Beyond the simple voiceprint, companies at the frontier of voice tech suggest they can sort for all kinds of different traits, such as our emotional states.

Earshot is about people, places, stories and ideas, in all their diversity.

The next time you dial a call centre you could be triaged by an AI voice for how stressed you sound over the phone.

One company, Clearspeed, even promises to be able to hear risk in the voice, through an automated questionnaire.

CEO Alex Martin says its algorithms are looking for the "acute threat response, in concert with what is known as cognitive effort".

"These are the things that collide and impact speech phonation, resonating impacts of speech and that's what we're detecting and measuring."

For instance, a job applicant answers a set of tailored yes/no questions over the phone, and they are flagged low to high risk. Low risk, they go onto an interview; high risk, their application is reviewed.

"Everyone should be able to say no and have absolutely no problem in their response. Their no looks normal in our model and we score it as low to average risk. But if there is neurophysiological reaction, depending on the amount of reaction it could be scored as potential risk or high risk," Mr Martin explains.

Clearspeed is concerned with clearance problems, assessing hundreds of applications quickly, automatically, and says its tool should be used in constellation with standard practises.

But as more systems are automated, the role of humans and human judgement is diminishing.

Is artificial intelligence sexist?

"Judgement is what happens when we face a decision that doesn't have a pre-coded answer," says Mark Andrejevic, professor of communication at Monash University.

"Most of the meaningful decisions we make in our lives are not syllogistic, [meaning] they cannot be reduced to a set of logical principles building on a few givens."

He cautions against automating too many decisions in our lives.

"Automation is really good for those syllogistic decisions. But we want to avoid handing over the non-syllogistic decisions because it reduces the capacities we need to live a life in common."

And then there's next frontier in voice technology, where we do away with our bodies altogether.

In the past couple of weeks, a new voice synthesis product was released.

Overdub proposes to create ultra-realistic text-to-speech of your own voice.

Using 10 minutes of recorded audio of your voice, it creates a clone of your voice, which you can make say anything you want.

All you have to do is type the desired sentence to the web app, and out it comes your voice, as if you'd said it using your throat, larynx, mouth and tongue.

The implications of text-to-speech synthesis are manifold, exciting and terrifying.

Photo editors made us doubt images, video editors resulted in deep fakes soon we will not be able to trust what we hear. Even if we appear to have said it ourselves.

I created a voice clone to test whether "she" would pass as the narrator of my Earshot documentary.

And the process revealed the elegance and the clumsiness of the tech. To train the AI, I had to repeat prescribed sentences and inflect them with joy or anger or sadness, as if the AI needed emotional training too.

When my voice had been cloned and I heard the first utterances of "her", I was amazed at the reproduction but listening more closely the odd vowels and strange phrasings came into focus, and the uncanniness I first heard started to come undone.

But, in terms of this technology, we are only at the beginning.

Our voices are shifting from representations of us to technological tools. Tools that we can learn how to use to redefine ourselves, for us and for who is listening.

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New weed killer studies raise concern for reproductive health – US Right to Know – U.S. Right to Know

As Bayer AG seeks to discount concerns that Monsantos glyphosate-based herbicides cause cancer, several new studies are raising questions about the chemicals potential impact on reproductive health.

An assortment of animal studies released this summer indicate that glyphosate exposures impact reproductive organs and could threaten fertility, adding fresh evidence that the weed killing agent might be an endocrine disruptor. Endocrine disrupting chemicals may mimic or interfere with the bodys hormones and are linked with developmental and reproductive problems as well as brain and immune system dysfunction.

In a paper published last month in Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology, four researchers from Argentina said that studies contradict assurances by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that glyphosate is safe.

The new research comes as Bayer is attempting to settle more than 100,000 claims brought in the United States by people who allege exposure to Monsantos Roundup and other glyphosate-based herbicide products caused them to develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The plaintiffs in the nationwide litigation also claim Monsanto has long sought to hide the risks of its herbicides.

Bayer inherited the Roundup litigation when it bought Monsanto in 2018, shortly before the first of three trial victories for plaintiffs.

The studies also come as consumer groups work to better understand how to reduce their exposure to glyphosate through diet. A study published Aug. 11 found that after switching to an organic diet for just a few days, people could cut the levels of glyphosate found in their urine by more than 70 percent. Notably, the researchers found that the children in the study had much higher levels of glyphosate in their urine than did the adults. Both adults and children saw large drops in the presence of the pesticide following the diet change.

Glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, is the most widely used weed killer in the world. Monsanto introduced glyphosate-tolerant crops in the 1990s to encourage farmers to spray glyphosate directly over whole fields of crops, killing weeds but not the genetically altered crops. The widespread use of glyphosate, by farmers as well as homeowners, utilities and public entities, has drawn growing concern over the years because of its pervasiveness and fears about what it could be doing to human and environmental health. The chemical is now found commonly in food and water and in human urine.

According to the Argentinian scientists, some of the reported effects of glyphosate seen in the new animal studies are due to exposure to high doses; but there is new evidence showing that even low dose exposure could also alter the development of the female reproductive tract, with consequences on fertility. When animals are exposed to glyphosate before puberty, alterations are seen in the development and differentiation of ovarian follicles and the uterus, the scientists said. Additionally, exposure to herbicides made with glyphosate during gestation could alter the development of the offspring. It all adds up to show that glyphosate and glyphosate-based herbicides are endocrine disruptors, the researchers concluded.

Agricultural scientist Don Huber, professor emeritus from Purdue University,said the new research expands on knowledge about the potential scope of damage associated with glyphosate and glyphosate-based herbicides and provides a better grasp of understanding the seriousness of the exposure that is ubiquitous in our culture now.

Huber has warned for years that Monsantos Roundup might be contributing to fertility problems in livestock.

One noteworthy study published online in July in the journal Food and Chemical Toxicology, determined that glyphosate or glyphosate-based herbicides disrupted critical hormonal and uterine molecular targets in exposed pregnant rats.

A different study recently published in the journal Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology by researchers from Iowa State University looked at glyphosate exposure in mice. The researchers concluded that chronic low-level exposure to glyphosate alters the ovarian proteome (a set of expressed proteins in a given type of cell or organism) and may ultimately impact ovarian function. In a related paper from the same two Iowa State researchers and one additional author, published in Reproductive Toxicology, the researchers said they did not find endocrine disrupting effects in the mice exposed to glyphosate, however.

Researchers from the University of Georgia reported in the journal Veterinary and Animal Science that consumption by livestock of grain laced with glyphosate residues appeared to carry potential harm for the animals, according to a review of studies on the topic. Based on the literature review, glyphosate-based herbicides appear to act as reproductive toxicants, having a wide range of effects on both the male and female reproductive systems, the researchers said.

Alarming results were also seen in sheep. A study published in the journal Environmental Pollution looked at the impacts of glyphosate exposure on the development of the uterus in female lambs. They found changes that they said might affect the female reproductive health of sheep and show glyphosate-based herbicides acting as an endocrine disruptor.

Also published in Environmental Pollution, scientists from Finland and Spain said in a new paper that they had performed the first long-term experiment of the effects of sub-toxic glyphosate exposure on poultry. They experimentally exposed female and male quails to glyphosate-based herbicides from the ages of 10 days to 52 weeks.

The researchers concluded that the glyphosate herbicides could modulate key physiological pathways, antioxidant status, testosterone, and the microbiome but they did not detect effects on reproduction. They said the effects of glyphosate may not always be visible with traditional, especially short-term, toxicology testing, and such testing may not fully capture the risks

Glyphosate and Neonicotinoids

One of the newest studies looking at glyphosate impacts on health was published this month in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. Researchers concluded that glyphosate as well as the insecticides thiacloprid and imidacloprid, were potential endocrine disruptors.

The insecticides are part of the neonicotinoid class of chemicals and are among the most heavily used insecticides in the world.

The researchers said that they monitored the effect of glyphosate and the two neonicotinoids on two critical targets of the endocrine system: Aromatase, the enzyme responsible for estrogen biosynthesis, and estrogen receptor alpha, the main protein promoting estrogen signaling.

Their results were mixed. The researchers said with respect to glyphosate, the weed killer inhibited aromatase activity but the inhibition was partial and weak. Importantly the researchers said glyphosate did not induce estrogenic activity. The results were consistent with the screening program conducted by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which concluded that there is no convincing evidence of a potential interaction with the estrogen pathway for glyphosate, they said.

The researchers did see estrogenic activity with imidacloprid and thiacloprid, but at concentrations higher than the pesticide levels measured in human biological samples. The researchers concluded that low doses of these pesticides should not be considered harmless, however, because these pesticides, together with other endocrine disrupting chemicals, might cause an overall estrogenic effect.

The varying findings come as many countries and localities around the world evaluate whether or not to limit or ban continued use of glyphosate herbicides.

A California appeals court ruled last monththat there was abundant evidence that glyphosate, together with the other ingredients in Roundup products, caused cancer.

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New weed killer studies raise concern for reproductive health - US Right to Know - U.S. Right to Know

Two anti-inflammatory drugs found that may inhibit Covid-19 virus reproduction – Hindustan Times

Two anti-inflammatory drugs, one prescribed for humans and another for animals, may inhibit a key enzyme in the replication or reproduction of the novel coronavirus that causes Covid-19, according to a study.

The study, published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences, used computer techniques to analyse 6,466 drugs authorised by various drug agencies for both human and veterinary use.

The researchers from Universitat Rovira in Spain assessed whether these drugs could be used to inhibit the main protease of the virus (M-pro) enzyme, which plays an essential role in the replication of the virus.

They found that a human and a veterinary anti-inflammatory drug -- Carprofen and Celecoxib -- inhibit a key enzyme in the replication and transcription of the virus responsible for COVID-19.

Finding drugs that can inhibit the infection caused by SARS-CoV-2 is an essential step to finding the vaccine that can definitively bring the spread of the virus to an end, according to the researchers.

M-pro enzyme is responsible for cutting two polypeptides -- generated by the virus itself -- and generating a number of proteins that are essential for the reproduction of the virus, the researchers said.

Some of the trials coordinated by the World Health Organization against the COVID-19 pandemic also aim to inhibit M-pro using two antiretrovirals such as Lopinavir and Ritonavir, drugs initially designed to treat HIV, they said.

In the new study, the researchers predicted that seven of the 6,466 drugs analysed may inhibit M-pro.

The results have been shared with the international initiative of scientists, COVID Moonshot, which has selected two of these seven compounds -- Carprofen and Celecoxib -- in order to test their ability to inhibit M-pro in vitro, they said.

The findings show that at a concentration of 50 micromolar (M) of Celecoxib or Carprofen, the inhibition of the in vitro activity of M-pro enzyme is 11.90 and 4.0 per cent, respectively.

Both molecules could be used as a starting point for further lead optimisation to obtain even more potent derivatives, the researchers said.

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Two anti-inflammatory drugs found that may inhibit Covid-19 virus reproduction - Hindustan Times

Indira IVF to resume in-vitro fertilisation services – Express Healthcare

All safety protocols directed by authorities will be followed to ensure safety of patients, doctors, working staff

In March, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) ordered to pause the IVF treatment procedures in the UK. After the massive Coronavirus hit,IVFclinics were asked to postpone its services amidst the lockdown. There has been too much fear about the patients contracting the virus and they are taking all the measures to curb it. Recently, European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology, The American Society for Reproductive Medicine and Indian health department have asked clinics to start essential services in a phased manner with all necessary safety measures.

Working as per the guidelines provided by the authorities, Indira IVF has taken a decision to restart its in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) services. All 89 clinics are open for patients who are seeking treatment with all the precautionary measures as per the guidelines provided by the Government of India.

With the current number of cases increasing aggressively, hospitals and clinics are advised to remain vigilant in the safety protocols and take all the required safety measures. Relentless adherence to safety protocols is a must.

Keeping into consideration the current COVID-19 condition, Indira IVF is following all safety protocols directed by the authorities to ensure the safety of patients, doctors and the working staff.

To ensure a safe and clean environment, the company has come up with precautions including:

Mandatory checking of temperature for all who enter the premises

Self-declaration form by the patients to identify the high-risk patients

Proper precautionary measure should be taken by the patients, doctors, and staff like gloves, masks, and others

Regular disinfection of the hospital facility

Strict sanitisation protocols

Social distancing and entry only by prior appointment

Speaking about the same, Nitiz Murdia, Marketing Director, Indira IVFsaid In this difficult time, we are keeping our focus to minimise visits a patient makes to the clinic for IVF treatment by offering tele-consultation with the treating fertility specialist. We are also taking special precaution at all our 88 clinics across pan India to strictly follow health and hygiene guidelines issued by the government for the safety of our staff and our patients. To live with COVID-19 virus is now the new way to live life hence its our collective responsibility to take all the necessary precautions to safeguard our-self as well as our family members from this virus.

Fertility clinics have shut down its services since March after the lockdown was announced. But today, fertility hospitals are trying to resume their operations.The reopening is happening in phases with new safety measures being put in place.

Speaking about the present scenario,Dr Kshitiz Murdia, Chief Operating Officer, Indira IVFsaid The impact of Coronavirus has greatly affected infertile couples who have planned to undergo treatment in summers; due to lockdown conditions in the city, couples had to postpone their treatment. The good news is that now they will be able to re-start their treatment at Indira IVF clinics. To tackle the previous load of the IVF patients, we are giving priority to patients whose embryos were frozen with us but due to lockdown they couldnt undergo embryo transfer procedure followed by other patients.

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Indira IVF to resume in-vitro fertilisation services - Express Healthcare

Our Brain Is Better at Remembering Where to Find Brownies Than Cherry Tomatoes – Scientific American

The human brain is hardwired to map our surroundings. This trait is called spatial memoryour ability to remember certain locations and where objects are in relation to one another. New findings published today in Scientific Reports suggest that one major feature of our spatial recall is efficiently locating high-calorie, energy-rich food. The studys authors believe human spatial memory ensured that our hunter-gatherer ancestors could prioritize the location of reliable nutrition, giving them an evolutionary leg up.

In the study, researchers at Wageningen University & Research in the Netherlands observed 512 participants follow a fixed path through a room where either eight food samples or eight food-scented cotton pads were placed in different locations. When they arrived at a sample, the participants would taste the food or smell the cotton and rate how much they liked it. Four of the food samples were high-calorie, including brownies and potato chips, and the other four, including cherry tomatoes and apples, were low in caloriesdiet foods, you might call them.

After the taste test, the participants were asked to identify the location of each sample on a map of the room. They were nearly 30 percent more accurate at mapping the high-calorie samples versus the low-calorie ones, regardless of how much they liked those foods or odors. They were also 243 percent more accurate when presented with actual foods, as opposed to the food scents.

Our main takeaway message is that human minds seem to be designed for efficiently locating high-calorie foods in our environment, says Rachelle de Vries, a Ph.D. candidate in human nutrition and health at Wageningen University and lead author of the new paper. De Vries feels her teams findings support the idea that locating valuable caloric resources was an important and regularly occurring problem for early humans weathering the climate shifts of the Pleistocene epoch. Those with a better memory for where and when high-calorie food resources would be available were likely to have a survivalor fitnessadvantage, she explains.

This looks like a nice piece of work, says James Nairne, a cognitive psychology professor at Purdue University, who was not involved in the new research. Memory evolved so that we can remember things that aid our survival or reproductionhence, its not surprising that we remember fitness-relevant information particularly well, [including] high caloric content.

We tend to think of primates such as ourselves as having lost the acute sense of smell seen in many other mammals in favor of sharp eyesight. And to a large degree, we humans have developed that way. But the new findings support the notion that our sniffer is not altogether terrible: These results suggest that human minds continue to house a cognitive system optimized for energyefficient foraging within erratic food habitats of the past, and highlight the often underestimated capabilities of the human olfactory sense, the authors wrote.

One drawback of our spatial skills, as they relate to sustenance, is our modern taste for junk food. With a life span of not much more than 30as was the case for humans until relatively recentlychronic diseases such as diabetes were not a concern for our ancestors. If you came across a rich grove of fruit trees, you consumed all the sugar you could to help ensure your survival. Now our taste for sweets and fats contributes to a global obesity epidemic and has us reaching for candy over kale. In a way, our minds (and bodies) may be mismatched to our current obesogenic food-rich circumstances, de Vries says. We have reason to suspect that the high-calorie spatial memory bias could stimulate people to choose high-calorie foods by making high-calorie options easier or more convenient to find and obtain.

Were more likely to remember sweet things, which was a real plus for most of our evolutionary history, Nairne adds. But this is problematic in todays world.... Were still walking around with Stone Age brains.

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Our Brain Is Better at Remembering Where to Find Brownies Than Cherry Tomatoes - Scientific American

The spatial distribution characteristics of typical pathogens and nitrogen and phosphorus in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir and their relationships…

Spatial distribution characteristics of typical pathogens in sedimentsAnalysis of microbial community structure in surface sediments

It can be seen from Fig.2 that the microbial community structures of the various surface sediments of Shahe Reservoir contained a large number of potential pathogens that had certain similarities and differences. Clostridium sensu stricto, a potential pathogen which is widely distributed in soil, sludge, human and animal intestines, etc., had the greatest average abundance in each sediment sample (18.975.80%); it peaked in the central area (4#) at 30.03%, and its abundance in the point-source pollution area (18#) was lowest at 10.15%. The high abundance of Clostridium sensu stricto means that the sediments in the Shahe Reservoir are in an anaerobic environment. Acinetobacter is a pathogen widely distributed in soil and water. Its average abundance in each sediment sample was 7.904.51%. The Beisha River channel (15#) had the highest abundance (18.39%). The abundance of the point-source pollution area (18#) was the lowest at 2.26%.

(a) Heat map of the top 10 genera in each sample based on the reads (log2 transformed). (b) Horizontal distribution of E. coli and Enterococcus in Shahe Reservoir sediments. (The Fig.3a has been prepared using Heml 1.0 software).

Romboutsia, a common intestinal pathogen, had a high average abundance in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir (6.552.00%), but its distribution was completely opposite to the distribution of Acinetobacter. Romboutsia had its highest abundance (9.40%) in the point-source pollution area (18#) and its lowest abundance (2.87%) in the river channel (15#).

The average abundance of Povalibacter and Trichococcus species reached 5.342.24% and 3.942.22%, respectively, but they also showed low abundance at the point-source pollution area (18#), whereas abundance at sampling points in other areas was high. The highest abundance for Povalibacter and Trichococcus was 8.16% (downstream of the reservoir, 6#) and 7.71% (upstream of the reservoir, 7#), respectively, and the lowest was 0.93% (point-source pollution area, 18#) and 1.25% (channel, 15# sampling point).

The average abundances of Sporacetigenium, Subdivision3_genera_incertae_sedis, Clostridium XI, Litorilinea, Smithella, and Thermomarinilinea were all above 2.00%: their maximum values were 5.99% (15#), 3.50% (3#), 13.06% (18#), 5.25% (14#), 7.56% (18#), and 4.22% (12#), respectively, while the minimum values were1.43% (4#), 1.46% (14#), 0.59%(4#), 1.54% (3#), 0.97% (15#), and 0.83% (18#). Thus, different microorganisms showed certain individual differences, but generally they had relatively low population abundance in the reservoir core area and point-source pollution area, and displayed high population abundance in different regions of Shahe Reservoir.

The results of this study (Fig.2) showed significant differences in the distribution of E. coli and Enterococcus in different regions. The horizontal distribution range of E. coli content was between 1.50106 and 1.56108 copiesg1, with an average value of 2.691074.71107 copiesg1. The highest value was at the 12# sampling point in the lower reaches of Shahe Reservoir (1.56108 copiesg1), which was one to two orders of magnitude greater than at other regions. The average content of E. coli in the downstream area (6#, 12#) reached 7.971077.68107 copiesg1, followed by the point-source pollution areas (18#, 6.76107 copiesg1), which were higher than the central area (3#, 4#, 5.151062.26106 copiesg1) and upstream (1#, 7#, 1.111072.84106 copiesg1), while the average content in the river channel (14#, 15#, 16#) was relatively low (3.261061.75106 copiesg1).

The horizontal distribution range of ENT content was between 3.56108 and 3.74109 copiesg1, with an average value of 1.821091.23109 copiesg1. The highest value appeared in the upper reaches of Shahe Reservoir at the 7# sampling point (3.74109 copiesg1) and was about an order of magnitude higher than at the sampling points in other regions. The average content of ENT in the central area (2.601091.15109 copiesg1) was relatively high, followed by the point-source pollution area (2.46109 copiesg1), downstream (2.171099.19108 copiesg1), upstream (2.171091.47109 copiesg1), and finally in the Shahe Reservoir (6.131081.96108 copiesg1), where the content was relatively low.

The above results show that the content of ENT in the surface sediments of Shahe Reservoir was about two orders of magnitude higher than that of E. coli. Further, the content of E. coli in the 12# sampling point downstream of the reservoir and the content of ENT in the surface sediments of the upstream area of the reservoir are higher than in other areas.

Based on the results of OTU classification to the genus level, a heat map (Fig.3a) was constructed to study the vertical distribution characteristics of the microbial community structure in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir. A large number of potential pathogenic bacteria were found, which displayed certain commonalities (between different depths of the same sediment column) as well as differences (between different sediment columns).

(a) Heat map of the top 10 genera in each sample based on the reads (log2 transformed). (b) Vertical distribution of E. coli and Enterococcus in Shahe Reservoir sediments. (The Fig.3a has been prepared using Heml 1.0 software).

Sulfuricurvum, a genus of potential pathogens that is widely distributed and commonly found in soil and sludge, had the highest average abundance (18.77%16.71%) in the sediment column samples. Among these, in the 3# sediment column from the reservoir center it was most abundant (44.52%) at the depth of 34cm, but at its lowest (0.56%) at 2cm from the surface.

Arcobacter is a genus of pathogenic bacteria commonly found in humans, animals, and the environment. A. cryaerophilus can cause inflammation of the human intestines. The symptoms of A. butzleri infection include abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea caused by fever. The average abundance of Arcobacter found in each sediment column sample was relatively high (8.35%18.09%). However, contrary to the vertical distribution of Sulfuricurvum in the 3# sediment column from Shahe Reservoir center, Arcobacter had its highest abundance (59.13%) at 2cm. The abundance was lowest (0.07%) at 1422cm of the 3# sediment column.

Thiobacillus had a relatively high abundance in the vertical distribution of sediments in Shahe Reservoir (6.59%4.66%). The average abundance of Clostridium sensu stricto, Lactobacillus, and Conexibacter in the vertical distribution of the sedimentary column were above 3.00%, with the highest abundance values of Clostridium sensu stricto and Lactobacillus appearing in the Nansha River channel 16# sediment column at 1218cm (respectively, 13.75%, 10.70%), and the highest value of Conexibacter abundance at 412cm (10.41) of the 3# sediment column from the reservoir center. The minimum values of the three species were in the surface 2cm of the 3# sediment column (0.56%, 0.26%, 0.06%).

The vertical distributions of E. coli and ENT in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir are shown in Fig.3b. The content of E. coli in the 3# sediment column from the reservoir center, the 14# sediment column from Beisha River, and the 16# sediment column from Nansha River ranged, respectively, between 1.76104 and 2.95104 copiesg1, 1.04103 and 2.97102 copiesg1, and 3.34104 and 6.56102 copiesg1. The mean values of each were 2.251044.19105 copiesg1, 1.551021.19102 copiesg1 and 2.481022.89102 copiesg1. Thus, it was found that the content of E. coli in the 16# column from the Nansha River channel was about 1.6 times that of the 14# column from Beisha River channel, and two orders of magnitude higher than that of the 3# column from the reservoir center. It is worth noting that the E. coli in all three sediment columns showed a gradual increasing trend with the increase of depth. The content of the three columns at 2cm from the surface was relatively low (1.76104, 1.53103 and 3.34104 copiesg1), but became higher at about 1525cm (2.10104, 2.97102 and 6.56102 copiesg1).

There was little difference between the vertical distributions of ENT and E. coli. The content of ENT in the 3#column, 14#column, and 16#column ranged, respectively, between 2.44103 and 2.13102 copiesg1, 1.48102 and 1.14101 copiesg1, and 1.32102 and 5.12102 copiesg1. The average values were, respectively, 1.381026.73103 copiesg1, 6.151024.00102 copiesg1, and 2.991021.53102 copiesg1. Unlike E. coli, the content of ENT in the Beisha River 14# sediment column was relatively high, about 2.06 times that of the Nansha River 16# column and 4.45 times that of the reservoir center 3# column. The vertical distribution was the same as for E. coli. The content of ENT in the 3# column from the reservoir center, the 14# Beisha River column, and the 16# Nansha River column were all lower at 2cm from the surface of the sediment (respectively, 2.44103 copiesg1, 1.48102 copiesg1 and 1.32102 copiesg1), and higher at about 1525cm (2.13102 copiesg 1, 1.14101 copiesg1 and 4.44102 copiesg1).

As shown in Fig.4a, the TN content of the surface sediments (020cm) from the Shahe Reservoir ranged from 610.00 to 5420.00mgkg1, with an average value of 2759.441450.54mgkg1. The content of TN in the sediments from the point-source pollution area and downstream of the reservoir was significantly greater than that in the core area of the reservoir, the river channel, and upstream of the reservoir. Shahe Reservoir is long and narrow. The reclaimed water (about 80,000 m3d1) flows into the Beisha reservoir (near the 13#sampling point), and the downstream of the reservoir is intercepted by a sluice dam. Therefore, flow velocity at the mouth and upstream of the reservoir is higher than at the middle and downstream. Although pollutants in the reservoir water body may have a tendency to gradually decrease from upstream to downstream, the particulate pollutants are more likely to be deposited in the downstream of the reservoir than at the entrance and upstream. Under normal water depth conditions, the particulate pollutants are at the mudwater interface and in deep water. While the self-purification rate of the area may not be high, the sedimentation is more obvious. Therefore, the phenomenon that pollutants in the sediments gradually accumulate from the upstream to the downstream of the reservoir is manifested in the TN content in the sediment, which increased sequentially from the upstream of the reservoir (1898.001047.54mgkg1) through the central area (2996.671405.13mgkg1) to the lower reaches (4500.00920.00mgkg1). The highest value of TN in the sediments of the reservoir area was located at the 12# sampling point (5420.00mgkg1) downstream of the reservoir. The content of TN at sampling points 4# and 5# in the center area was relatively low (840.00mgkg1, 1950.00mgkg1), due to the installation of aeration facilities in the overlying water body. Wu Bi17, Li Jinrong18, and others found that increased dissolved oxygen will promote the release of nitrogen and phosphorus nutrients from the sediments and thus reduce their content.

Source:WGS 1984).

(a) Horizontal characteristics of TN and TP in the sediments. (b) Vertical characteristics of TN and TP in the sediments. (The figure was created by using ArcGIS software 10.2;

The content of TP in the surface sediments of Shahe Reservoir ranged from 740.00 to 2440.00mgkg1, with an average value of 1444.33395.55mgkg1. As with the horizontal distribution of TN, TP also increased from the upper reaches of the reservoir (1264.00104.61mgkg1) through the central area of the reservoir (1340.00332.47mgkg1) to the lower reaches of the reservoir (1750.0010.00mgkg1). In the river course it was 1605.00522.61mgkg1. Point-source pollution areas were slightly higher (2150.00mgkg1) than the surface sediments of the reservoir area. This is because the point-source pollution area of Shahe Reservoir is mostly near the urbanrural junction, with a high pollution-to-radius ratio.

The sources of pollutants are mostly domestic sewage, surface runoff, and pipeline sediments, and the proportion of phosphorus pollutants is often high. For example, Li Siyuan19 found that 1130% NH4+-N, 1835% TN, and 1947% TP of the point-source pollution in the old city of Changzhou was from domestic sewage, while 2346% NH4+-N, 4356% TN, and 4262% TP came from pipeline sediments.

After sewage and pipeline sediments entered Shahe Reservoir, the sediments and interstitial waters of the point-source pollution area showed significantly higher levels of nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus than were found in the river course, the upper reaches of the reservoir, the core area, and the lower reaches of the reservoir. This may be because the sediments of Shahe Reservoir are an important source of nitrogen and phosphorus nutrients. The content of TP in the surface sediments of the 16# sampling point (1220.00mgkg1) and 17# sampling point (1100.00mgkg1) of the Nansha River channel were low, due to the amount of algae and aquatic plants in the overlying water of the river. A large amount of phosphorus released by sediments is used by algae and aquatic plants20. At the same time, the river flow is faster, which reduces the phosphorus content in the sediments. The difference in the spatial distribution characteristics of TP in the surface sediments of Shahe Reservoir, in addition to hydraulic factors, may be related to the chemical environmental effects of different locations in the reservoir area21 and different microbial effects22.

Figure4b shows the vertical change characteristics of TN and TP in the sediments of the Nansha River and Beisha River (near the point-source pollution area) and in the reservoir core area. The TN content of the 3# sediment column (042cm) in the central area, the 14# sediment column (030cm) near the point-source pollution area, and the 16# sediment column (026cm) of the Nansha River channel ranged, respectively, between 1210.00 and 9540.00mgkg1, 1400.00 and 6640.00mgkg1, and 1100.00 and 5480.00mgkg1. The mean values were 4230.952643.50mgkg1, 3485.331420.50mgkg1, and 2723.081456.81mgkg1. For the same sampling points, the content range of TP ranged, respectively, between 1040.00 and 2890.00mgkg1, 1110.00 and 3550.00mgkg1, and 670.00 and 1630.00mgkg1. The average values of TP were 1726.14561.22mgkg1, 2100.67617.59mgkg1, and 1161.54287.40mgkg1.

The vertical distributions of TN and TP in the sediments showed a large change in the content of the surface layer and a small difference in the lower layer. From 10cm, the content of TN and TP in the surface layer had an increasing trend. The distribution of TN and TP presented a three-stage feature of decrease-increasedecrease, with an enrichment layer at 1020cm. This may be due to the continuous increase of phosphorus load in the lake caused by human activity and industrial production in the upper reaches of Shahe Reservoir23. Zhang Wei et al.12 found that the water content of sediments below 30cm in Shahe Reservoir was relatively stable and, based on the time of construction of the dam(1960), the sediment thickness was estimated to be about 30cm, with a linear sediment deposition rate of 0.60cmyr1. This is consistent with the analysis results of this study. It can be seen from Fig.4b that the content of TN and TP below 30cm in the 3# column in the central area is in a stable state, and the 030cm is mainly the sediment produced by external pollution since the construction of the reservoir.

The Pearson correlation analysis of the abundance of E. coli and ENT in the surface sediments and the horizontal distribution of TN and TP (Fig.5) showed a significant positive correlation between E. coli and both TN (r=0.638, P<0.05) and TP (r=0.755, P<0.05); however, ENT and TN (r=0.131, P>0.05) were not significantly correlated, although there was a significant positive correlation with ENT and TP (r=0.752, P<0.05).

Pearson correlation analysis between pathogenic bacteria and TN and TP in the sediment. (The figure has been prepared using IBM SPSS 25.0 software).

The Pearson correlation analysis of the relative abundance of E. coli and ENT in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir and the vertical distribution of TN and TP is shown in Table 2. There was a significant negative correlation between the E. coli in the 3# sediment column in the center area and TN (P<0.05) and also TP (P<0.05); the E. coli in the 14# sediment column had a significant negative correlation with TP (P<0.05), but the correlation with TN was not significant (P>0.05); in the 16# sediment column, the correlations between E. coli and both TN and TP were not significant (P>0.05).

The nutrients in the water body will promote the growth and reproduction of aquatic plants and phytoplankton, and at the same time, phytoplankton will produce a large amount of organic matter through photosynthesis24. In addition, when the number of phytoplankton increases, the food intake of zooplankton also increases, and the excrement increases, which makes the organic matter in the water body increase. The growth and reproduction of aquatic plants also provides a suitable environment for the growth of microorganisms. Scholars such as Wang Mi pointed out in related investigations that TP and TN are environmental factors that affect phytoplankton in the North Canal; The study by Guo Feifei25 et al. on Hubei Jinshahe Reservoir showed that PO43-P affects the structure of microbial communities. Main environmental factors. Therefore, in addition to controlling microorganisms, the reservoir area should also strengthen the control of nutrients.

The correlation between ENT and the vertical distribution of TN and TP in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir was significantly different from that of E. coli. The main difference was that the correlations between ENT and TN and TP in the 3# column of the center area were not significant; Beisha River channel ENT in the 14# sediment column had a significant negative correlation with TP (P<0.05), but the correlation with TN was not significant (P>0.05); in the Nansha River channel 16# column, ENT had a significant negative correlation with TP (P<0.05), and with TN a very significant negative correlation (P<0.01).

It is worth noting that the Pearson correlation of the vertical distribution of E. coli, ENT, TN, and TP in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir was significantly different from correlation results of the horizontal distribution, mainly manifested in the significant negative correlations. The reason may be that changes in environmental conditions (pH more acid or alkali, higher water temperature, increased dissolved oxygen, stronger hydrodynamic conditions, etc.) release nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus26 and then, as a result, the content of TN and TP in the surface layer of the sediment becomes higher and the content in the deep layer becomes lower. The migration and fate conditions of E. coli and ENT are different from those of nitrogen and phosphorus, as they are mainly affected by factors such as strain type, bacterial solution concentration, ionic strength, ion type, median particle size, pore flow rate, etc27. As a result, the Pearson correlation between E. coli and ENT in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir and the vertical distribution of TN and TP showed a negative correlation.

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The spatial distribution characteristics of typical pathogens and nitrogen and phosphorus in the sediments of Shahe Reservoir and their relationships...

Emory Must Commit to Organic Land Management – The Emory Wheel

How far will the Emory community go to keep our campus weed-free? In the wake of growing concerns about biodiversity loss and climate change, Emory must evaluate how its herbicide use impacts the health of students, staff and the environment.

Emory must move toward becoming an organic campus, or one that does not use toxic weed killers to manage its grounds. More than this, we need a cultural shift a rethinking of why we use chemicals and a commitment to thinking about creative alternatives that are not harmful.

Emory administrators must work with the Grounds team, students and faculty to commit to transitioning to organic land management by 2025.

As a fourth-year student, I started Herbicide-Free Emory, a group dedicated to working with groundskeepers to help Emory become herbicide-free. As a chapter of the Herbicide-Free Campus movement, the group is part of a national coalition that works with groundskeepers and administrators all over the country to reduce and eventually eliminate the use of herbicides on school grounds and transition to organic land care.

Currently, Emory follows an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) plan designed by the University of Georgia. According to a March 27 email from Exterior Services Director Jimmy Powell, Emory uses glyphosate-based herbicides in addition to the herbicide triclopyr. Although the grounds team is actively working to decrease their herbicide use, there is little mentioned on Emorys websites on these steps. The lack of information available to students on Emorys pesticide use makes it difficult to research or understand how Emory compares with other campuses. There must be more transparency in Emorys use of herbicides. In continuation with groundskeepers strong efforts to decrease herbicide use, administrators must publicly take steps toward creating a campus free of glyphosate and other dangerous herbicides.

The national dialogue surrounding glyphosate is heated. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as probably carcinogenic to humans. The IARC found that people exposed to glyphosate had higher rates of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. In addition to cancer, glyphosate has been found to disrupt endocrine functioning, reproduction and development, and kidney and liver activity. Amid growing health concerns, glyphosate has been banned in countries across the globe. Although some other regulatory bodies, including the EPA, have asserted that glyphosate poses no public risk, overwhelming evidence suggests that Emory must nevertheless act to protect its community by disavowing its use.

By eliminating herbicides and transitioning to organic land care, Emory will more consistently meet its stated missions of maximizing sustainability and protecting human health. The shift will have to be gradual, but it is attainable. Herbicides may continue to be used as a last resort for treating invasive species but a big step toward organic landscape management is necessary. Many campuses have already made commitments toward herbicide-free land management, including Harvard University (Mass.), the University of Colorado Boulder, Tufts University (Mass.) and The University of Pennsylvania.

Moreover, this shift isnt necessarily more expensive than traditional methods. Many campuses have even saved money and natural resources by transitioning to organic practices. Since Harvard began managing its land without any synthetic pesticides in 2009, the resulting 30% reduction in its irrigation needs have saved it 2 million gallons of water every year. Before going organic, Harvard spent $35,000 each year to remove landscape waste from its grounds. That cost is now gone. Today, the school composts all its grass clippings, leaves and branches, which in turn saves the University an additional $10,000 in fertilizer costs.

Additionally, experimenting with organic land care on campus would facilitate new community partnerships and outreach. Emory could work with groups like the Atlanta BeltLine Partnership to convince them to implement organic strategies in their parks. Emory could partner with local schools to teach children what it means to manage landscapes organically. In doing so, Emory could expand its outreach to schools, community centers and other organizations throughout the Atlanta area.

Emory students and faculty can also utilize this project in academic research. From studying the chemistry of soil health to the aesthetics of weeds, this projects implications are multidisciplinary. Undergraduates, graduate students and faculty alike could use Emorys landscape as a laboratory as they develop solutions to environmental and sociological catastrophes.

Though a small team, Emory groundskeepers remarkably manage 700 acres to create a beautiful landscape. Managing the entire campus organically would require additional more labor and resources than the grounds team currently has, but with the help of changes in policy, proper training in organic methods, and the implementation of student weeding workdays, the transition to an herbicide-free campus can begin.

Together, the Emory community can continue to lead in environmental management, public health practices and student engagement. A strong commitment to evaluating our herbicide use will bring success to the university on a national scale and bring increasing depth to its academics, research and campus life.

We must prioritize the health and safety of the groundskeepers, students, staff and faculty on our campus instead of weed-free sidewalks and lawns. I urge you to join me in advocating for a herbicide-free Emory.

Lindsey Kapel (20C) is from Weston, Connecticut.

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Emory Must Commit to Organic Land Management - The Emory Wheel

Halt in-person university teaching until test and trace fixed, union urges – The Guardian

Face-to-face teaching at universities should be halted until the government fixes test-and-trace failures and curbs the spread of Covid-19, the union representing academics and staff has said.

The warning from Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union (UCU), comes as institutions increasingly take matters into their own hands by switching to majority online-only teaching.

Others are spending million of pounds instituting their own test-and-trace systems to identify outbreaks on campus. Strict disciplinary measures for students who flout social distancing rules are also being brought in.

Across England, one in 500 people are believed to have had Covid-19 last week, with the number of daily coronavirus infections tripling in a fortnight according to the Office for National Statistics. The R (reproduction) number was put at 1.2-1.5 for England and the UK.

More than 20 million people 30% of the UK face enhanced lockdown restrictions after extra curbs were announced in Leeds, Blackpool, Stockport, Cardiff and Swansea.

Outbreaks have hit 23 universities, forcing thousands of students into self-isolation. Hundreds of coronavirus cases were confirmed on campuses, including 172 at the University of Glasgow, 127 at Manchester Metropolitan University and 120 at Edinburghs Napier University.

In response to the Manchester outbreak, 1,700 students are being placed in quarantine for a fortnight at halls of residence at Birley and All Saints Park, in a joint move by the local authority, the university and Public Health England.

In an interview with the Guardian, Grady said the sharp rise in cases at Scottish universities which reopened earlier than those in the rest of the UK showed that test and trace was inadequate to protect staff and students. She called for in-person teaching to be abandoned where possible until the system could be fixed.

Grady urged university leaders to act now to drop face-to-face classes and potentially allow students to return home. If [vice-chancellors] dont do something now, all their efforts will be undone in a few weeks because the number of infections will be so high, or there wont be enough staff to teach, she said.

There is an urgency about this that didnt exist a month ago, because we are seeing infection rates rising and there is the danger that students are just becoming incubators.

But until there is an effective UK-wide test-and-trace programme, there are going to be cases everywhere. Even if youve got a self-contained university campus with a relatively small number of students, you are still bringing people all together from all over the UK, and staff who teach at multiple institutions moving between them.

The University of Leeds has become the latest to go online-only unless teaching is deemed safe and necessary. Six of its students tested positive for Covid-19 and the city of Leeds will go into local lockdown from midnight, meaning most students will not be able to visit their families.

It emerged that 12 universities in England and Wales are trying to combat possible shutdowns by forging ahead with testing programmes and in some cases with their own on-campus tracing teams and mechanisms.

While university leaders say publicly that their bespoke systems are to supplement the 10bn NHS test and trace programme, in private they complain that they have been forced to institute on-campus testing because it will be impossible to ensure that thousands of students can be tested.

The University of Cambridge plans to test all students living in university accommodation weekly, while the University of Exeter has invested in rapid saliva testing facilities.

Imperial College in London has gone further and set up campus-wide tracing, with a Covid-19 contact tracing hub. Students who return positive tests will be reached and asked to provide details for those they have had close contact with, including intimate physical or sexual contact or skin-to-skin contact, as well as anyone with whom they have spent at least a minute within 1 metre.

Alastair Sim, director of Universities Scotland, said the governments in England and Scotland could not provide enough tests to universities because of shortages caused by schools reopening.

There was a big peak with schools going back and I think the testing capacity got, I wouldnt say overwhelmed but certainly stretched [in a way] that wasnt really anticipated. The government, and this is both governments, could not make testing available for many students, he told the BBC.

Salford University, which has reported 20 infections among students, is among those running its own test-and-trace system, known as Sprout. But it has not yet been synchronised with class lists, meaning students were having to report to staff if they were symptomatic or living with someone who was.

At Salford, student gatherings in halls were said to have been broken up by security staff. Theyve been on hold for so long and have obviously gone a bit crazy as first-years do and now theyre faced with this, said a lecturer. Staff are really worried, none of us want to go back to face-to-face learning. Were the ones with the risk factors, rather than the 18, 19 and 20-year-olds.

The University of Southampton has developed its own rapid-response saliva test, and will test all incoming students and staff when they arrive on campus.

Universities in Liverpool and Manchester have switched to online teaching, with only clinical subjects retaining in-person classes in most cases.

Manchesters universities are preparing to clamp down on illegal gatherings with strict measures including potentially expelling students who do not comply with social distancing rules and imposing curfews on residential halls.

The University of Manchester has so far taken disciplinary action against 200 students for breaching social distancing guidelines, while several have also been issued with 100 fixed penalty notices by police.

A spokesperson for the university said it saw imposing a curfew on students living in halls as a last resort, but if residents fail to adhere to social distancing rules we will be faced with no alternative.

A government spokesperson said: Testing capacity is the highest it has ever been, but we are seeing a significant demand for tests. It is vital that staff and students only get a test if they develop coronavirus symptoms.

Our universities are home to world-leading science and innovation, but for those producing their own tests, it is important that the process works with the national system so we know what is happening and where, so we can utilise it for public safety.

In Scotland, there was intense criticism and growing confusion around new restrictions announced by universities, including a bar on going out this weekend, which the countrys commissioner for children and young people said raised concerning human rights implications.

The first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, confirmed that the ban on visiting bars, cafes or restaurants this weekend applies to all students in Scotland, even those studying part-time or living outside halls of residence.

But she hinted at a U-turn on guidance from the governments clinical director, Jason Leitch, who said students were not allowed to return to their family homes, saying there would be further guidance over the weekend. Addressing students directly at her daily briefing, Sturgeon told them: I know you might feel like you are somehow being blamed its not your fault.

Continued here:
Halt in-person university teaching until test and trace fixed, union urges - The Guardian

Viruses have big impacts on ecology and evolution as well as human health – The Economist

Aug 20th 2020

IThe outsiders inside

HUMANS ARE lucky to live a hundred years. Oak trees may live a thousand; mayflies, in their adult form, a single day. But they are all alive in the same way. They are made up of cells which embody flows of energy and stores of information. Their metabolisms make use of that energy, be it from sunlight or food, to build new molecules and break down old ones, using mechanisms described in the genes they inherited and may, or may not, pass on.

It is this endlessly repeated, never quite perfect reproduction which explains why oak trees, humans, and every other plant, fungus or single-celled organism you have ever seen or felt the presence of are all alive in the same way. It is the most fundamental of all family resemblances. Go far enough up any creatures family tree and you will find an ancestor that sits in your family tree, too. Travel further and you will find what scientists call the last universal common ancestor, LUCA. It was not the first living thing. But it was the one which set the template for the life that exists today.

And then there are viruses. In viruses the link between metabolism and genes that binds together all life to which you are related, from bacteria to blue whales, is broken. Viral genes have no cells, no bodies, no metabolism of their own. The tiny particles, virions, in which those genes come packagedthe dot-studded disks of coronaviruses, the sinister, sinuous windings of Ebola, the bacteriophages with their science-fiction landing-legs that prey on microbesare entirely inanimate. An individual animal, or plant, embodies and maintains the restless metabolism that made it. A virion is just an arrangement of matter.

The virus is not the virion. The virus is a process, not a thing. It is truly alive only in the cells of others, a virtual organism running on borrowed hardware to produce more copies of its genome. Some bide their time, letting the cell they share the life of live on. Others immediately set about producing enough virions to split their hosts from stem to stern.

The virus has no plan or desire. The simplest purposes of the simplest lifeto maintain the difference between what is inside the cell and what is outside, to move towards one chemical or away from anotherare entirely beyond it. It copies itself in whatever way it does simply because it has copied itself that way before, in other cells, in other hosts.

That is why, asked whether viruses are alive, Eckard Wimmer, a chemist and biologist who works at the State University of New York, Stony Brook, offers a yes-and-no. Viruses, he says, alternate between nonliving and living phases. He should know. In 2002 he became the first person in the world to take an array of nonliving chemicals and build a virion from scratcha virion which was then able to get itself reproduced by infecting cells.

The fact that viruses have only a tenuous claim to being alive, though, hardly reduces their impact on things which are indubitably so. No other biological entities are as ubiquitous, and few as consequential. The number of copies of their genes to be found on Earth is beyond astronomical. There are hundreds of billions of stars in the Milky Way galaxy and a couple of trillion galaxies in the observable universe. The virions in the surface waters of any smallish sea handily outnumber all the stars in all the skies that science could ever speak of.

Back on Earth, viruses kill more living things than any other type of predator. They shape the balance of species in ecosystems ranging from those of the open ocean to that of the human bowel. They spur evolution, driving natural selection and allowing the swapping of genes.

They may have been responsible for some of the most important events in the history of life, from the appearance of complex multicellular organisms to the emergence of DNA as a preferred genetic material. The legacy they have left in the human genome helps produce placentas and may shape the development of the brain. For scientists seeking to understand lifes origin, they offer a route into the past separate from the one mapped by humans, oak trees and their kin. For scientists wanting to reprogram cells and mend metabolisms they offer inspirationand powerful tools.

IIA lifestyle for genes

THE IDEA of a last universal common ancestor provides a plausible and helpful, if incomplete, answer to where humans, oak trees and their ilk come from. There is no such answer for viruses. Being a virus is not something which provides you with a place in a vast, coherent family tree. It is more like a lifestylea way of being which different genes have discovered independently at different times. Some viral lineages seem to have begun quite recently. Others have roots that comfortably predate LUCA itself.

Disparate origins are matched by disparate architectures for information storage and retrieval. In eukaryotescreatures, like humans, mushrooms and kelp, with complex cellsas in their simpler relatives, the bacteria and archaea, the genes that describe proteins are written in double-stranded DNA. When a particular protein is to be made, the DNA sequence of the relevant gene acts as a template for the creation of a complementary molecule made from another nucleic acid, RNA. This messenger RNA (mRNA) is what the cellular machinery tasked with translating genetic information into proteins uses in order to do so.

Because they, too, need to have proteins made to their specifications, viruses also need to produce mRNAs. But they are not restricted to using double-stranded DNA as a template. Viruses store their genes in a number of different ways, all of which require a different mechanism to produce mRNAs. In the early 1970s David Baltimore, one of the great figures of molecular biology, used these different approaches to divide the realm of viruses into seven separate classes (see diagram).

In four of these seven classes the viruses store their genes not in DNA but in RNA. Those of Baltimore group three use double strands of RNA. In Baltimore groups four and five the RNA is single-stranded; in group four the genome can be used directly as an mRNA; in group five it is the template from which mRNA must be made. In group sixthe retroviruses, which include HIVthe viral RNA is copied into DNA, which then provides a template for mRNAs.

Because uninfected cells only ever make RNA on the basis of a DNA template, RNA-based viruses need distinctive molecular mechanisms those cells lack. Those mechanisms provide medicine with targets for antiviral attacks. Many drugs against HIV take aim at the system that makes DNA copies of RNA templates. Remdesivir (Veklury), a drug which stymies the mechanism that the simpler RNA viruses use to recreate their RNA genomes, was originally developed to treat hepatitis C (group four) and subsequently tried against the Ebola virus (group five). It is now being used against SARS-CoV-2 (group four), the covid-19 virus.

Studies of the gene for that RNA-copying mechanism, RdRp, reveal just how confusing virus genealogy can be. Some viruses in groups three, four and five seem, on the basis of their RdRp-gene sequence, more closely related to members of one of the other groups than they are to all the other members of their own group. This may mean that quite closely related viruses can differ in the way they store their genomes; it may mean that the viruses concerned have swapped their RdRp genes. When two viruses infect the same cell at the same time such swaps are more or less compulsory. They are, among other things, one of the mechanisms by which viruses native to one species become able to infect another.

How do genes take on the viral lifestyle in the first place? There are two plausible mechanisms. Previously free-living creatures could give up metabolising and become parasitic, using other creatures cells as their reproductive stage. Alternatively genes allowed a certain amount of independence within one creature could have evolved the means to get into other creatures.

Living creatures contain various apparently independent bits of nucleic acid with an interest in reproducing themselves. The smallest, found exclusively in plants, are tiny rings of RNA called viroids, just a few hundred genetic letters long. Viroids replicate by hijacking a host enzyme that normally makes mRNAs. Once attached to a viroid ring, the enzyme whizzes round and round it, unable to stop, turning out a new copy of the viroid with each lap.

Viroids describe no proteins and do no good. Plasmidssomewhat larger loops of nucleic acid found in bacteriado contain genes, and the proteins they describe can be useful to their hosts. Plasmids are sometimes, therefore, regarded as detached parts of a bacterias genome. But that detachment provides a degree of autonomy. Plasmids can migrate between bacterial cells, not always of the same species. When they do so they can take genetic traits such as antibiotic resistance from their old host to their new one.

Recently, some plasmids have been implicated in what looks like a progression to true virus-hood. A genetic analysis by Mart Krupovic of the Pasteur Institute suggests that the Circular Rep-Encoding Single-Strand-DNA (CRESS-DNA) viruses, which infect bacteria, evolved from plasmids. He thinks that a DNA copy of the genes that another virus uses to create its virions, copied into a plasmid by chance, provided it with a way out of the cell. The analysis strongly suggests that CRESS-DNA viruses, previously seen as a pretty closely related group, have arisen from plasmids this way on three different occasions.

Such jailbreaks have probably been going on since very early on in the history of life. As soon as they began to metabolise, the first proto-organisms would have constituted a niche in which other parasitic creatures could have lived. And biology abhors a vacuum. No niche goes unfilled if it is fillable.

It is widely believed that much of the evolutionary period between the origin of life and the advent of LUCA was spent in an RNA worldone in which that versatile substance both stored information, as DNA now does, and catalysed chemical reactions, as proteins now do. Set alongside the fact that some viruses use RNA as a storage medium today, this strongly suggests that the first to adopt the viral lifestyle did so too. Patrick Forterre, an evolutionary biologist at the Pasteur Institute with a particular interest in viruses (and the man who first popularised the term LUCA) thinks that the RNA world was not just rife with viruses. He also thinks they may have brought about its end.

The difference between DNA and RNA is not large: just a small change to one of the letters used to store genetic information and a minor modification to the backbone to which these letters are stuck. And DNA is a more stable molecule in which to store lots of information. But that is in part because DNA is inert. An RNA-world organism which rewrote its genes into DNA would cripple its metabolism, because to do so would be to lose the catalytic properties its RNA provided.

An RNA-world virus, having no metabolism of its own to undermine, would have had no such constraints if shifting to DNA offered an advantage. Dr Forterre suggests that this advantage may have lain in DNAs imperviousness to attack. Host organisms today have all sorts of mechanisms for cutting up viral nucleic acids they dont like the look ofmechanisms which biotechnologists have been borrowing since the 1970s, most recently in the form of tools based on a bacterial defence called CRISPR. There is no reason to imagine that the RNA-world predecessors of todays cells did not have similar shears at their disposal. And a virus that made the leap to DNA would have been impervious to their blades.

Genes and the mechanisms they describe pass between viruses and hosts, as between viruses and viruses, all the time. Once some viruses had evolved ways of writing and copying DNA, their hosts would have been able to purloin them in order to make back-up copies of their RNA molecules. And so what began as a way of protecting viral genomes would have become the way life stores all its genesexcept for those of some recalcitrant, contrary viruses.

IIIThe scythes of the seas

IT IS A general principle in biology that, although in terms of individual numbers herbivores outnumber carnivores, in terms of the number of species carnivores outnumber herbivores. Viruses, however, outnumber everything else in every way possible.

This makes sense. Though viruses can induce host behaviours that help them spreadsuch as coughingan inert virion boasts no behaviour of its own that helps it stalk its prey. It infects only that which it comes into contact with. This is a clear invitation to flood the zone. In 1999 Roger Hendrix, a virologist, suggested that a good rule of thumb might be ten virions for every living individual creature (the overwhelming majority of which are single-celled bacteria and archaea). Estimates of the number of such creatures on the planet come out in the region of 1029-1030. If the whole Earth were broken up into pebbles, and each of those pebbles smashed into tens of thousands of specks of grit, you would still have fewer pieces of grit than the world has virions. Measurements, as opposed to estimates, produce numbers almost as arresting. A litre of seawater may contain more than 100bn virions; a kilogram of dried soil perhaps a trillion.

Metagenomics, a part of biology that looks at all the nucleic acid in a given sample to get a sense of the range of life forms within it, reveals that these tiny throngs are highly diverse. A metagenomic analysis of two surveys of ocean life, the Tara Oceans and Malaspina missions, by Ahmed Zayed of Ohio State University, found evidence of 200,000 different species of virus. These diverse species play an enormous role in the ecology of the oceans.

A litre of seawater may contain 100bn virions; a kilogram of dried soil perhaps a trillion

On land, most of the photosynthesis which provides the biomass and energy needed for life takes place in plants. In the oceans, it is overwhelmingly the business of various sorts of bacteria and algae collectively known as phytoplankton. These creatures reproduce at a terrific rate, and viruses kill them at a terrific rate, too. According to work by Curtis Suttle of the University of British Columbia, bacterial phytoplankton typically last less than a week before being killed by viruses.

This increases the overall productivity of the oceans by helping bacteria recycle organic matter (it is easier for one cell to use the contents of another if a virus helpfully lets them free). It also goes some way towards explaining what the great mid-20th-century ecologist G. Evelyn Hutchinson called the paradox of the plankton. Given the limited nature of the resources that single-celled plankton need, you would expect a few species particularly well adapted to their use to dominate the ecosystem. Instead, the plankton display great variety. This may well be because whenever a particular form of plankton becomes dominant, its viruses expand with it, gnawing away at its comparative success.

It is also possible that this endless dance of death between viruses and microbes sets the stage for one of evolutions great leaps forward. Many forms of single-celled plankton have molecular mechanisms that allow them to kill themselves. They are presumably used when one cells sacrifice allows its sister cellswhich are genetically identicalto survive. One circumstance in which such sacrifice seems to make sense is when a cell is attacked by a virus. If the infected cell can kill itself quickly (a process called apoptosis) it can limit the number of virions the virus is able to make. This lessens the chances that other related cells nearby will die. Some bacteria have been shown to use this strategy; many other microbes are suspected of it.

There is another situation where self-sacrifice is becoming conduct for a cell: when it is part of a multicellular organism. As such organisms grow, cells that were once useful to them become redundant; they have to be got rid of. Eugene Koonin of Americas National Institutes of Health and his colleagues have explored the idea that virus-thwarting self-sacrifice and complexity-permitting self-sacrifice may be related, with the latter descended from the former. Dr Koonins model also suggests that the closer the cells are clustered together, the more likely this act of self-sacrifice is to have beneficial consequences.

For such profound propinquity, move from the free-flowing oceans to the more structured world of soil, where potential self-sacrificers can nestle next to each other. Its structure makes soil harder to sift for genes than water is. But last year Mary Firestone of the University of California, Berkeley, and her colleagues used metagenomics to count 3,884 new viral species in a patch of Californian grassland. That is undoubtedly an underestimate of the total diversity; their technique could see only viruses with RNA genomes, thus missing, among other things, most bacteriophages.

Metagenomics can also be applied to biological samples, such as bat guano in which it picks up viruses from both the bats and their food. But for the most part the finding of animal viruses requires more specific sampling. Over the course of the 2010s PREDICT, an American-government project aimed at finding animal viruses, gathered over 160,000 animal and human tissue samples from 35 countries and discovered 949 novel viruses.

The people who put together PREDICT now have grander plans. They want a Global Virome Project to track down all the viruses native to the worlds 7,400 species of mammals and waterfowlthe reservoirs most likely to harbour viruses capable of making the leap into human beings. In accordance with the more-predator-species-than-prey rule they expect such an effort would find about 1.5m viruses, of which around 700,000 might be able to infect humans. A planning meeting in 2018 suggested that such an undertaking might take ten years and cost $4bn. It looked like a lot of money then. Today those arguing for a system that can provide advance warning of the next pandemic make it sound pretty cheap.

IVLeaving their mark

THE TOLL which viruses have exacted throughout history suggests that they have left their mark on the human genome: things that kill people off in large numbers are powerful agents of natural selection. In 2016 David Enard, then at Stanford University and now at the University of Arizona, made a stab at showing just how much of the genome had been thus affected.

He and his colleagues started by identifying almost 10,000 proteins that seemed to be produced in all the mammals that had had their genomes sequenced up to that point. They then made a painstaking search of the scientific literature looking for proteins that had been shown to interact with viruses in some way or other. About 1,300 of the 10,000 turned up. About one in five of these proteins was connected to the immune system, and thus could be seen as having a professional interest in viral interaction. The others appeared to be proteins which the virus made use of in its attack on the host. The two cell-surface proteins that SARS-CoV-2 uses to make contact with its target cells and inveigle its way into them would fit into this category.

The researchers then compared the human versions of the genes for their 10,000 proteins with those in other mammals, and applied a statistical technique that distinguishes changes that have no real impact from the sort of changes which natural selection finds helpful and thus tries to keep. Genes for virus-associated proteins turned out to be evolutionary hotspots: 30% of all the adaptive change was seen in the genes for the 13% of the proteins which interacted with viruses. As quickly as viruses learn to recognise and subvert such proteins, hosts must learn to modify them.

A couple of years later, working with Dmitri Petrov at Stanford, Dr Enard showed that modern humans have borrowed some of these evolutionary responses to viruses from their nearest relatives. Around 2-3% of the DNA in an average European genome has Neanderthal origins, a result of interbreeding 50,000 to 30,000 years ago. For these genes to have persisted they must be doing something usefulotherwise natural selection would have removed them. Dr Enard and Dr Petrov found that a disproportionate number described virus-interacting proteins; of the bequests humans received from their now vanished relatives, ways to stay ahead of viruses seem to have been among the most important.

Viruses do not just shape the human genome through natural selection, though. They also insert themselves into it. At least a twelfth of the DNA in the human genome is derived from viruses; by some measures the total could be as high as a quarter.

Retroviruses like HIV are called retro because they do things backwards. Where cellular organisms make their RNA from DNA templates, retroviruses do the reverse, making DNA copies of their RNA genomes. The host cell obligingly makes these copies into double-stranded DNA which can be stitched into its own genome. If this happens in a cell destined to give rise to eggs or sperm, the viral genes are passed from parent to offspring, and on down the generations. Such integrated viral sequences, known as endogenous retroviruses (ERVs), account for 8% of the human genome.

This is another example of the way the same viral trick can be discovered a number of times. Many bacteriophages are also able to stitch copies of their genome into their hosts DNA, staying dormant, or temperate, for generations. If the cell is doing well and reproducing regularly, this quiescence is a good way for the viral genes to make more copies of themselves. When a virus senses that its easy ride may be coming to an end, thoughfor example, if the cell it is in shows signs of stressit will abandon ship. What was latent becomes lytic as the viral genes produce a sufficient number of virions to tear the host apart.

Though some of their genes are associated with cancers, in humans ERVs do not burst back into action in later generations. Instead they have proved useful resources of genetic novelty. In the most celebrated example, at least ten different mammalian lineages make use of a retroviral gene for one of their most distinctively mammalian activities: building a placenta.

The placenta is a unique organ because it requires cells from the mother and the fetus to work together in order to pass oxygen and sustenance in one direction and carbon dioxide and waste in the other. One way this intimacy is achieved safely is through the creation of a tissue in which the membranes between cells are broken down to form a continuous sheet of cellular material.

The protein that allows new cells to merge themselves with this layer, syncytin-1, was originally used by retroviruses to join the external membranes of their virions to the external membranes of cells, thus gaining entry for the viral proteins and nucleic acids. Not only have different sorts of mammals co-opted this membrane-merging trickother creatures have made use of it, too. The mabuya, a long-tailed skink which unusually for a lizard nurtures its young within its body, employs a retroviral syncytin protein to produce a mammalian-looking placenta. The most recent shared ancestor of mabuyas and mammals died out 80m years before the first dinosaur saw the light of day, but both have found the same way to make use of the viral gene.

This is not the only way that animals make use of their ERVs. Evidence has begun to accumulate that genetic sequences derived from ERVs are quite frequently used to regulate the activity of genes of more conventional origin. In particular, RNA molecules transcribed from an ERV called HERV-K play a crucial role in providing the stem cells found in embryos with their pluripotencythe ability to create specialised daughter cells of various different types. Unfortunately, when expressed in adults HERV-K can also be responsible for cancers of the testes.

As well as containing lots of semi-decrepit retroviruses that can be stripped for parts, the human genome also holds a great many copies of a retrotransposon called LINE-1. This a piece of DNA with a surprisingly virus-like way of life; it is thought by some biologists to have, like ERVs, a viral origin. In its full form, LINE-1 is a 6,000-letter sequence of DNA which describes a reverse transcriptase of the sort that retroviruses use to make DNA from their RNA genomes. When LINE-1 is transcribed into an mRNA and that mRNA subsequently translated to make proteins, the reverse transcriptase thus created immediately sets to work on the mRNA used to create it, using it as the template for a new piece of DNA which is then inserted back into the genome. That new piece of DNA is in principle identical to the piece that acted as the mRNAs original template. The LINE-1 element has made a copy of itself.

In the 100m years or so that this has been going on in humans and the species from which they are descended the LINE-1 element has managed to pepper the genome with a staggering 500,000 copies of itself. All told, 17% of the human genome is taken up by these copiestwice as much as by the ERVs.

Most of the copies are severely truncated and incapable of copying themselves further. But some still have the knack, and this capability may be being put to good use. Fred Gage and his colleagues at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, in San Diego, argue that LINE-1 elements have an important role in the development of the brain. In 2005 Dr Gage discovered that in mouse embryosspecifically, in the brains of those embryosabout 3,000 LINE-1 elements are still able to operate as retrotransposons, putting new copies of themselves into the genome of a cell and thus of all its descendants.

Brains develop through proliferation followed by pruning. First, nerve cells multiply pell-mell; then the cell-suicide process that makes complex life possible prunes them back in a way that looks a lot like natural selection. Dr Gage suspects that the movement of LINE-1 transposons provides the variety in the cell population needed for this selection process. Choosing between cells with LINE-1 in different places, he thinks, could be a key part of the process from which the eventual neural architecture emerges. What is true in mice is, as he showed in 2009, true in humans, too. He is currently developing a technique for looking at the process in detail by comparing, post mortem, the genomes of different brain cells from single individuals to see if their LINE-1 patterns vary in the ways that his theory would predict.

VPromised lands

HUMAN EVOLUTION may have used viral genes to make big-brained live-born life possible; but viral evolution has used them to kill off those big brains on a scale that is easily forgotten. Compare the toll to that of war. In the 20th century, the bloodiest in human history, somewhere between 100m and 200m people died as a result of warfare. The number killed by measles was somewhere in the same range; the number who died of influenza probably towards the top of it; and the number killed by smallpox300m-500mwell beyond it. That is why the eradication of smallpox from the wild, achieved in 1979 by a globally co-ordinated set of vaccination campaigns, stands as one of the all-time-great humanitarian triumphs.

Other eradications should eventually follow. Even in their absence, vaccination has led to a steep decline in viral deaths. But viruses against which there is no vaccine, either because they are very new, like SARS-CoV-2, or peculiarly sneaky, like HIV, can still kill millions.

Reducing those tolls is a vital aim both for research and for public-health policy. Understandably, a far lower priority is put on the benefits that viruses can bring. This is mostly because they are as yet much less dramatic. They are also much less well understood.

The viruses most prevalent in the human body are not those which infect human cells. They are those which infect the bacteria that live on the bodys surfaces, internal and external. The average human microbiome harbours perhaps 100trn of these bacteria. And where there are bacteria, there are bacteriophages shaping their population.

The microbiome is vital for good health; when it goes wrong it can mess up a lot else. Gut bacteria seem to have a role in maintaining, and possibly also causing, obesity in the well-fed and, conversely, in tipping the poorly fed into a form of malnutrition called kwashiorkor. Ill-regulated gut bacteria have also been linked, if not always conclusively, with diabetes, heart disease, cancers, depression and autism. In light of all this, the question who guards the bacterial guardians? is starting to be asked.

The viruses that prey on the bacteria are an obvious answer. Because the health of their hosts hostthe possessor of the gut they find themselves inmatters to these phages, they have an interest in keeping the microbiome balanced. Unbalanced microbiomes allow pathogens to get a foothold. This may explain a curious detail of a therapy now being used as a treatment of last resort against Clostridium difficile, a bacterium that causes life-threatening dysentery. The therapy in question uses a transfusion of faecal matter, with its attendant microbes, from a healthy individual to reboot the patients microbiome. Such transplants, it appears, are more likely to succeed if their phage population is particularly diverse.

Medicine is a very long way from being able to use phages to fine-tune the microbiome. But if a way of doing so is found, it will not in itself be a revolution. Attempts to use phages to promote human health go back to their discovery in 1917, by Flix dHrelle, a French microbiologist, though those early attempts at therapy were not looking to restore balance and harmony. On the basis that the enemy of my enemy is my friend, doctors simply treated bacterial infections with phages thought likely to kill the bacteria.

The arrival of antibiotics saw phage therapy abandoned in most places, though it persisted in the Soviet Union and its satellites. Various biotechnology companies think they may now be able to revive the traditionand make it more effective. One option is to remove the bits of the viral genome that let phages settle down to a temperate life in a bacterial genome, leaving them no option but to keep on killing. Another is to write their genes in ways that avoid the defences with which bacteria slice up foreign DNA.

The hope is that phage therapy will become a backup in difficult cases, such as infection with antibiotic-resistant bugs. There have been a couple of well-publicised one-off successes outside phage therapys post-Soviet homelands. In 2016 Tom Patterson, a researcher at the University of California, San Diego, was successfully treated for an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection with specially selected (but un-engineered) phages. In 2018 Graham Hatfull of the University of Pittsburgh used a mixture of phages, some engineered so as to be incapable of temperance, to treat a 16-year-old British girl who had a bad bacterial infection after a lung transplant. Clinical trials are now getting under way for phage treatments aimed at urinary-tract infections caused by Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus infections that can lead to sepsis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections that cause complications in people who have cystic fibrosis.

Viruses which attack bacteria are not the only ones genetic engineers have their eyes on. Engineered viruses are of increasing interest to vaccine-makers, to cancer researchers and to those who want to treat diseases by either adding new genes to the genome or disabling faulty ones. If you want to get a gene into a specific type of cell, a virion that recognises something about such cells may often prove a good tool.

The vaccine used to contain the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo over the past two years was made by engineering Indiana vesiculovirus, which infects humans but cannot reproduce in them, so that it expresses a protein found on the surface of the Ebola virus; thus primed, the immune system responds to Ebola much more effectively. The World Health Organisations current list of 29 covid-19 vaccines in clinical trials features six versions of other viruses engineered to look a bit like SARS-CoV-2. One is based on a strain of measles that has long been used as a vaccine against that disease.

Viruses engineered to engender immunity against pathogens, to kill cancer cells or to encourage the immune system to attack them, or to deliver needed genes to faulty cells all seem likely to find their way into health care. Other engineered viruses are more worrying. One way to understand how viruses spread and kill is to try and make particularly virulent ones. In 2005, for example, Terrence Tumpey of Americas Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and his colleagues tried to understand the deadliness of the influenza virus responsible for the pandemic of 1918-20 by taking a more benign strain, adding what seemed to be distinctive about the deadlier one and trying out the result on mice. It was every bit as deadly as the original, wholly natural version had been.

The use of engineered pathogens as weapons of war is of dubious utility, completely illegal and repugnant to almost all

Because such gain of function research could, if ill-conceived or poorly implemented, do terrible damage, it requires careful monitoring. And although the use of engineered pathogens as weapons of war is of dubious utilitysuch weapons are hard to aim and hard to stand down, and it is not easy to know how much damage they have doneas well as being completely illegal and repugnant to almost all, such possibilities will and should remain a matter of global concern.

Information which, for billions of years, has only ever come into its own within infected cells can now be inspected on computer screens and rewritten at will. The power that brings is sobering. It marks a change in the history of both viruses and peoplea change which is perhaps as important as any of those made by modern biology. It is constraining a small part of the viral world in a way which, so far, has been to peoples benefit. It is revealing that worlds further reaches in a way which cannot but engender awe.

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This article appeared in the Essay section of the print edition under the headline "The outsiders inside"

Original post:
Viruses have big impacts on ecology and evolution as well as human health - The Economist