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Category Archives: Genetic Engineering

South Park Season 1 Episode 7 – An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig – Video

Posted: November 2, 2012 at 12:47 pm


South Park Season 1 Episode 7 - An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig
http://www.southparkseries.com Kyle gets an elephant, but his parents won #39;t let him keep it because it is too big. Mr. Garrison gives a lecture on genetic engineering, which gives Kyle the idea of making a pot-bellied elephant by splicing the genes of his elephant with a pot bellied pig. Terrence bets that he can clone a human before Kyle can make his animal. Kyle and the boys go to the South Park Genetic Engineering Ranch, where they meet a Mephesto. Mephesto takes some blood from Stan, which Terrence uses to make a clone. Chef tells the boys that in order to make a pot-bellied elephant, the elephant would have to make love to a pig. The boys get the animals drunk, and the deed is done, but the Stan clone, starts wreaking havoc on South Park. South Park s01e07 South Park S1e7 s01e7 S1e7 1x7 Season 1 episode 7 tv shows S1 s01 se1 e7 ep7 1x7 4 S01 E7 HQ episodes serie series watch online complete full tv television hd hq part 1 part 2 part 3 part 4. Watch South Park Season 1 Episode 7 An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig full episode watch South Park Season 1 Episode 7 An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig free online watch South Park Season 1 Episode 7 An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig full free watch South Park Season 1 Episode 7 An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig watch online watch full South Park Season 1 Episode 7 An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig watch South Park Season 1 Episode 7 An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig for free watch South Park Season 1 Episode 7 An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig ...From:gvv2503Views:1 0ratingsTime:09:32More inPeople Blogs

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editta braun company: planet LUVOS (clip, 4:30) – Video

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editta braun company: planet LUVOS (clip, 4:30)
planet LUVOS dance movement research: Scaron;pela Vodeb, Dorota Karolina #321; #281;cka, Andrea Maria Handler, Marcella Mancini, Katja Bablick, Sandra Hofsttter, Martyna Lorenc dramaturgy: Gerda Poschmann-Reichenau, composition: Thierry Zaboitzeff, lightdesign: Peter Thalhamer, choreographic assistance: Barbara Motschiunik, Juan Dante Murillo Bobadilla, choreograpy: Editta Braun What remains is greater than man "planet LUVOS", the editta braun company #39;s fascinating dance premiere at the Bruckner Festival - Upper Austrian News, September 29, 2012 The Salzburg choreographer Editta Braun leads us through a blue underwater world back to the origins of life. In her new piece "planet LUVOS", she completes the round dance of surreal body worlds, which began with "Lufus" (1985) and continued with "Lufus, vol. 2", about the dangers of genetic engineering. The viewer sinks into a blue, bubbling waterworld. The only sign that humans exist is the distant sound of a steamship whistle, somewhere far away. And a woman who suddenly finds herself in a kingdom full of strange, but peaceful beings. Seven dancers (Katja Bablick, Andrea Maria Handler, Sandra Hofsttter, Dorota Karolina Lecka, Martyna Lorenc, Marcella Mancini and Spela Vodeb) constitute this symbiotic, sensitive collective. Their legs wave in the air like anemone arms, each movement reacting as fast as lightning to the other . Their bodies lose their humanness and become entities. Naked torsi move like alien beings across the stage ...From:edittabrauncompanyViews:0 0ratingsTime:04:31More inEducation

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editta braun company: planet LUVOS (clip, 4:30) - Video

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Mimic: The Director’s Cut (Blu-ray Trailer) – Video

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Mimic: The Director #39;s Cut (Blu-ray Trailer)
Guillermo Del Toro (Pan #39;s Labyrinth, Hellboy) presents "Mimic" like you #39;ve never seen it before in a visually stunning Director #39;s Cut. Starring Academy Award winner Mira Sorvino (Mighty Aphrodite), Charles S. Dutton (A Time To Kill) and Josh Brolin (True Grit), "Mimic" brings the epic battle between man and nature to life when a team of scientists discover that their experiment in genetic engineering has gone horribly awry. Recut and presented with in-depth special features that take you inside the film, "Mimic: The Director #39;s Cut" restores Guillermo del Toro #39;s vision for this chilling modern cult classic. This film is not rated. Produced released by Miramax Films, an Filmyard Holdings company. Distributed by Lionsgate Entertainment.From:BMTPTrailerCentralV4Views:14 0ratingsTime:01:51More inEntertainment

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Port Townsend Food Coop: A Sad Story of GMO Crop Cross Pollination – Video

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Port Townsend Food Coop: A Sad Story of GMO Crop Cross Pollination
In front of the Port Townsend Food Coop, member Jim Salter tells a story of a friend of his in Canada that lost his organic crops because a neighbor #39;s GMO crop spread into his fields. I-522 is an initiative to the Washington State legislature to establish mandatory labeling of foods produced through genetic engineering. As recommended by the Secretary of State, the LabelitWA group needs to turn in at least 320000 signatures to ensure they have 241153 valid signatures by December 31, 2012 in order to get on the November 2013 ballot. I-522, "The People #39;s Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act," is simple. The initiative would require food sold in retail outlets to be labeled if the ingredients are produced through genetic engineering. An estimated 70 percent of non-organic processed foods contain some #9472; or several #9472; genetically engineered ingredients. http://www.labelitwa.org http California 2012 Prop 37 Playlist http://www.youtube.com Sponsor RAAW Foods (Non-GMO Project Verified) http://www.raawfoods.comFrom:digitalreporterViews:0 0ratingsTime:02:42More inTravel Events

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PUT IT IN YOUR MOUTH! Yes to Prop 37 — it’s your right to know what’s in your food! – Video

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PUT IT IN YOUR MOUTH! Yes to Prop 37 mdash; it #39;s your right to know what #39;s in your food!
PUT IT IN YOUR MOUTH The Wonderful World of GMO Concerned Citizens: James Franco Elijah Wood Adrian Grenier Rosanna Arquette Daniel Masterson Eric Warehiem Amy Ferguson Ana Calderon Oliver Cantu Sonmanto Team: Richard Head played by John Pick Suey Slinger played by William Lemon III Dr. Rodney Miracle played by Alex Wallman Created by: Alex Wallman Ana Calderon Directed Edited by: Kyle McCullough, Ryan Kuhlman Alex Wallman After Effects by: Ryan Kuhlman Written by : Alex Wallman Corn Man Animation by: Daniel Cardenas "Yes on 37" plate photo by: Bart Cooke Audio techs: Juan Palacio, Ryan Kuhlman and Kyle McCullough Spanish Translation by: Pedro Cheryl Calderon Oliver Cantu Further articles: French study in which rats that were fed genetically modified corn grew tumors: http://www.huffingtonpost.com A short video clip about the above: http://www.youtube.com Germany bans genetically modified corn: http://www.nytimes.com Study showing crop yields not increased by genetic engineering: http://www.ucsusa.org This video brought to you courtesy of concerned citizens of California who demand the right to know what #39;s in their food! VOTE YES ON PROP 37!From:Alex WallmanViews:4481 77ratingsTime:04:00More inComedy

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PUT IT IN YOUR MOUTH! Yes to Prop 37 — it's your right to know what's in your food! - Video

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Research and Markets: Therapeutic Antibody Engineering: Current and Future Advances Driving the Strongest Growth Area …

Posted: at 12:47 pm

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/kknlff/therapeutic) has announced the addition of Woodhead Publishing Ltd's new book "Therapeutic antibody engineering: Current and future advances driving the strongest growth area in the pharmaceutical industry" to their offering.

Therapeutic Antibody Engineering examines all aspects of engineering monoclonal antibodies and analyses the effect that various genetic engineering approaches will have on candidates of the future. Chapters in the first part of the book provide an introduction to monoclonal antibodies, their discovery and development and the fundamental technologies used in their production. In the following chapters, the book covers a number of specific issues relating to different aspects of antibody engineering, including variable chain engineering, targets and mechanisms of action, classes of antibody and the use of antibody fragments, among many other topics. The last part of the book examines development issues, the interaction of human IgGs with non-human systems, and cell line development, before a conclusion looking at future issues affecting the field of therapeutic antibody engineering.

Key Topics Covered:

- Introduction to biologics and monoclonal antibodies

- Value proposition for therapeutic monoclonal antibodies and Fc fusion proteins

- Antibody structure-function relationships

- Fundamental technologies for antibody engineering

- Sources of antibody variable chains

- Variable chain engineering - humanization and optimization approaches

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Is there a difference between GE & GMO?

Posted: at 12:47 pm

Enter the rainy season and I turn to my inside chores...removing dried seeds from their seed pods.

And catching up on my reading ... checking up on what is new in the world of seeds. Namely, in the genetic engineering sector.

I stumbled onto an article about the difference between the GE and GMO designation. This author stated there is a definite difference between the two terms ... and she is right to a point.

Technically, GMO ... genetically modified organism ... refers to any plant that has been hybridized through pollen transference ... by humans, bees or any other natural process. So any cultivar such as 'Early Girl' tomato and Hosta 'June' are, in fact, GMOs.

'Early Girl' has been purposely bred by hand pollination to produce an early-ripening tomato. 'June' arrived on the gardening scene as a naturally-occurring sport of another hosta ... 'Halcyon'.

The GMO designation also holds true for those varieties that have been crossed within their own family ... broccoli with kale, apricot with plum, plum with cherry. These have all been done by humans using conventional pollen-transfer methods. Sounds a bit weird perhaps, but a perfectly plausible possibility in nature.

I do not think the pluerry ... the plum/cherry cross ... has been released to the market just yet. But the others are available.

In fact, cherry-plum hybrids have been around since the late 19th century. I found one reference listing over 20 different cultivars.

As for the apricot-plum hybrids ... they are called Pluots if the plant has predominantly plum parentage or Apriums if the parentage leans to the apricot side. Both are registered trademark names.

Then there is broccolini ... also known by several other names such as Asparation, brocoletti and Tenderstem. (The first and last are both trade registered names.) This is a natural cross between broccoli and kai-lan, a Chinese broccoli.

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Is there a difference between GE & GMO?

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Food labeling regulations

Posted: October 16, 2012 at 4:24 pm

Re: your Oct. 14 editorial, The propositions:

The Star believes that agencies at the federal and state levels should make sure foods are safe and properly labeled, but they are not doing. So, it is now up to the people to take food safety matters into their own hands when it comes to genetic engineering and the resulting effect on our health and the health of our families.

Proposition 37 is neither complicated nor technical, and rather than properly managing genetic engineering, federal and state agencies are leaving it in the hands of the chemical companies to assure us that our food is safe when it comes to genetic engineering.

Proposition 37 requires labeling of products that contain first generation genetically modified organisms - plain and simple. If these chemical companies, big agriculture, etc., are so proud of their laboratory created, genetically modified food, we say they should be proud to put a label on them so we know what we are buying, or not.

We have a right to know what we are eating, just like the citizens of the 50 other countries that already label genetically engineered food.

- Cyndi and Jude Egold,

Moorpark

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Food labeling regulations

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Genetic 'remix' key to evolution of bee behavior, researchers find

Posted: October 15, 2012 at 10:21 pm

ScienceDaily (Oct. 15, 2012) Worker bees have become a highly skilled and specialized work force because the genes that determine their behaviour are shuffled frequently, helping natural selection to build a better bee, research from York University suggests.

The study, to be published October 15 at 3pm EST in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences), sheds light on how worker bees -- who are sterile -- evolved charismatic and cooperative behaviours such as nursing young bees, collecting food for the colony, defending it against intruders, and dancing to communicate the location of profitable flowers to nestmates.

When York University researchers examined the honey bee genome, they discovered that the genes associated with worker behaviour were found in areas of the genome that have the highest rate of recombination. Recombination represents a shuffling of the genetic deck: recombination in the ovaries of a queen shuffles the chromosomes she inherited from her parents. As a result, the queen's female offspring are likely to inherit mosaic chromosomes with different combinations of mutations, says Biology Professor Amro Zayed, whose lab conducted the research.

Recombination allows natural selection to act on specific mutations without regard to neighbouring mutations.

"If I'm a good rower in a dragon boat with 49 poor rowers, I am going to lose all of my races. But if teams were shuffled after every race, I'll likely have a better chance of winning. I may even get to be in a boat with 49 good rowers just like myself," says Zayed. "The same thing happens with mutations on a chromosome. Recombination makes the evolutionary fate of mutations independent of their surrounding neighbours, which enhances the process of natural selection.."

The team believes that they have solved one of the mysteries of the honey bee's genome, says postdoctoral research associate Clement Kent, lead author on the study.

"The honey bee has the highest rates of recombination in animals -- ten times higher than humans. Our study shows that this high degree of genetic shuffling has turned on the evolutionary faucet in parts of the bee genome responsible for orchestrating worker behaviour," says Kent. "This can allow natural selection to increase the fitness of honey bee colonies, which live or die based on how well their workers 'behave'."

The study, "Recombination is associated with the evolution of genome structure and worker behavior in honey bees" was coauthored by Kent, Zayed, and graduate students Shermineh Minaei and Brock Harpur. The research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Province of Ontario.

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Can vaccines be delivered via the lungs instead of by injection?

Posted: at 10:21 pm

Public release date: 15-Oct-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Vicki Cohn vcohn@liebertpub.com 914-740-2100 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News

New Rochelle, NY, October 15, 2012In addition to the obvious benefit of eliminating the need for an injection, new vaccine delivery methods via the lungs offer particular advantages for protecting against infectious agents that enter the body through the respiratory track. A comprehensive review article that presents the current status, challenges, and opportunities of pulmonary vaccine delivery is published in Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free online on the Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery website.

In "Pulmonary Vaccine Delivery: A Realistic Approach?" Wouter Tonnis and coauthors from University of Groningen and National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (Bilthoven), The Netherlands, describe the unique physiology and immune responsiveness of the respiratory track that make pulmonary vaccine delivery such an attractive alternative to traditional injections. Although pulmonary vaccination is still a young field, with much more research needed, evidence suggests administration of a vaccine to the lungs can induce a local immune response more effectively than conventional types of vaccine delivery, in addition to stimulating antibody production throughout the body. This could be especially important for combating pathogens that cause pulmonary diseases.

"The lung is an immunologic powerhouse that remains largely unexplored. Theoretically we should be able to avoid needles and simply inhale our vaccines," says Editor-in-Chief Gerald C. Smaldone, MD, PhD, Professor and Chief, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at SUNY-Stony Brook.

###

About the Journal

Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery is an authoritative peer-reviewed journal published bimonthly in print and online. It is the Official Journal of the International Society for Aerosols in Medicine. The Journal is the only authoritative publication delivering innovative articles on the health effects of inhaled aerosols and delivery of drugs through the pulmonary system. Topics covered include airway reactivity and asthma treatment, inhalation of particles and gases in the respiratory tract, toxic effects of inhaled agents, and aerosols as tools for studying basic physiologic phenomena. Complete tables of content and a sample issue may be viewed on the Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery website.

About the Publisher

Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers is a privately held, fully integrated media company known for establishing authoritative peer-reviewed journals in many promising areas of science and biomedical research, including Pediatric Allergy, Immunology, and Pulmonology, High Altitude Medicine & Biology, and Microbial Drug Resistance. Its biotechnology trade magazine, Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News (GEN), was the first in its field and is today the industry's most widely read publication worldwide. A complete list of the firm's 70 journals, books, and newsmagazines is available online on the Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers website.

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