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Category Archives: Transhuman News

NASA is Moving Forward With Its Plan to Deflect an Asteroid From Earth – Futurism

Posted: July 9, 2017 at 11:43 am

In Brief NASA just approved the first-ever mission to test the possibility of deflecting or redirecting an asteroid on a collision course with Earth. Dubbed the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) the project is moving into its preliminary design phase after receiving approval on June 23. A Plan for Asteroids

Both science and science fiction have made us familiar with what could happen if a large enough asteroid were to hit the Earth. Just look at the fate of dinosaurs and youd glean the prospective outcome would not be a pleasant one. Not wanting us to go the way of the dinosaurs, NASA asks: how do we defend the planet from such a threat?

The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) would be the first-ever mission to test the possibility of deflecting or redirecting an asteroid on a collision course with Earth. The plan is being designed by the The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, who would also manage DART. The projectreceived approval from NASA on June 23, and is now moving from concept development to the preliminary design phase.

DART would be NASAs first mission to demonstrate whats known as the kinetic impactor technique striking the asteroid to shift its orbit to defend against a potential future asteroid impact, Lindley Johnson, planetary defense officer at NASA Headquarters in Washington, said in press release. This approval step advances the project toward an historic test with a non-threatening small asteroid.

In order to figure out if such defense system could work, NASA aims use DART to target a twin asteroid called Didymos. Its expected to have adistant approach to Earth in 2022, and again in 2024. This binary asteroid system includesa larger component(Didymos A, about 780 meters in size) and a smaller one orbiting it (Didymos B, roughly 160 meters).

Using an on-board targeting system, DART would aim atDidymos B after launch. The goal is to shift the asteroids trajectory using kinetic impact; changing its speed by a small fraction of its overall velocity. If the DART mission works, scientists would be able to predict just how much of a nudge a threatening asteroid needs to avoid hitting Earth.

DART is a critical step in demonstrating we can protect our planet from a future asteroid impact, DART investigation co-lead Andy Cheng said in the press release. Since we dont know that much about their internal structure or composition, we need to perform this experiment on a real asteroid. With DART, we can show how to protect Earth from an asteroid strike with a kinetic impactor by knocking the hazardous object into a different flight path that would not threaten the planet.

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Meet the mice who soared through space and back again – The San Gabriel Valley Tribune

Posted: July 8, 2017 at 8:50 pm

Move over, Mickey, Southern California has new rodent celebrities. You might call them Micetronauts 2.0.

The first group of star-trekking mice to ever travel to the International Space Station has returned to their home at a UCLA lab, where theyre being studied for a promising new therapy to regrow lost bone density.

All the rodents from ISS made it back alive and healthy on July4!, said Dr. Chia Soo, a lead researcher on UCLAs NELL-1 study.

A group of forty mice blasted into low-Earth orbit 220 miles up on June 3 from Florida, as part of a robust NASA science mission. Other projects on board included an investigation into mysterious pulsar stars believe to hold keys for better navigation and time-keeping capabilities on Earth, and a fruit-fly study into treating weakened cardiac muscles.

Half the mice in the NELL-1 study are still living on the Space Station and being treated with the protein that Soo and her team believe may spur degraded bone to regrow.

The other half splashed down inside a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft in the Pacific Ocean off Baja California on Monday, and were unloaded the following morning in San Pedro.

The mice passed through the Earths 3,000-degree Fahrenheit atmosphere, at a rate of force equal to about five times their body weight, without injury, scientists said.

They looked really good. They were very healthy, said Louis Stodieck, director of BioServe Space Technologies at the University of Colorado Boulders aerospace-engineering sciences division.

When the 20 still-orbiting astro-mice return to join those now back in the lab, their bone development will be compared.

Stodieck, who managed the rodents complex travel and care accommodations, joined UCLA researchers as the first to greet the returning rodents. During their travel, they lived inside a special habitat and ate moist, nutrient-rich food bars developed by NASA. (Think of a power bar but not quite so sweet, said Stodieck. The mice love it. Its very good, Ive actually tried it.).

Like returning astronauts, the micetronauts appeared initially unsteady in gravity. Their space habitat had mesh walls, allowing them to crawl around with stability.

They get so adapted to microgravity, that gravity probably feels a little hard, Stodieck said. They looked a little bit tenuous, but theyre getting used to it.

Since the Soviet Sputnik program returned the first animals dogs, rodents and insects from a brief trip around the Earth in 1957, the U.S. Space Shuttle program has gone on to return animals from rocket trips.

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But these are the first U.S. rodents to participate in a lengthy microgravity research trip, and to board the space stations National Laboratory, Stodieck said.

These studies, with animal models, are few and far between. They are difficult and expensive, he said. Its very important for us, in any of these studies, to maximize their scientific utility. The space station is a tremendous laboratory platform. Were learning a lot of things.

Increasingly, researchers are studying the effects of microgravity on stem cells to understand the full potential of space research.

But the mice are promising some exciting results that could help many people on Earth, according to the scientists.

Astronauts (and micetronauts) experience severe bone loss when they travel outside Earths gravity-laden atmosphere. Floating around in microgravity not only depletes bone mass, it also weakens muscles most notably, heart muscle.

If it can work for microgravity-related bone loss, then it could have increased use for patients one day on Earth who have bone loss from trauma or aging, Soo said.

SpaceXs reusable rockets and spacecraft are enabling U.S. researchers to send experiments to orbit affordably from America for the first time in years.

Five years ago, the self-propelling Dragon became the first commercial spacecraft to dock at the International Space Station. Its able to return to Earth by plopping, Space Shuttle-style, into the ocean.

Its also built to return to space repeatedly throughout its life.

The Dragon craft that returned the 20 mice to Earth on July 3 previously flew to the Space Station in 2014.

SpaceXs business model relies on such high-tech recycling and on a consistent, persistent launch calendar.

Keeping pace with growing customer demand, SpaceX launched its third rocket in 12 days last Wednesday just 48 hours after two successive dramatic last-second aborts on the launch pad.

The mission also carried hundreds of fruit flies for an investigation into the effects of microgravity on the cardiovascular system.

Fruit fly hearts have similar components to humans and are much closer to humans, in some respect, than mice and rats, said Karen Ocorr, who is leading the study at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute in La Jolla.

The research team sent hundreds of flies packed in six tissue box-sized habitats. Four of the boxes carried 2,000 fly eggs, and others carried hundreds of breeding adults, intended to give birth in space to flies that would return to Earth.

We have a team of 12 people who will be present in the lab when we receive the flies back, Ocorr said. Well spend the next month or more trying to understand the effects on their skeletal muscle and heart muscle function, among other things.

People who have long-term illnesses, or are infirm and spend a long time in bed, experience progressive cardiac dysfunctions, she said, adding that this study could help develop new therapies for weak hearts.

Lennox Middle School students will also soon get back research from inside this Dragon. Theyre studying whether lemon-mint plants grow better, worse, or the same in microgravity, as part of the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program.

We wanted to use mint because its something we use a lot in our Hispanic culture, said Nayeli Salgado, one of the Lennox school team members. It has many uses stomach aches, ear aches. You can use it instead of medicine. It takes the pain away.

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Plant Life on the International Space Station is Blossoming – Newsweek

Posted: at 8:50 pm

This article originally appeared on The Conversation.

Gravity is a constant for all organisms on Earth. It acts on every aspect of our physiology, behavior and developmentno matter what you are, you evolved in an environment where gravity roots us firmly to the ground.

But what happens if youre removed from that familiar environment and placed into a situation outside your evolutionary experience? Thats exactly the question we ask every day of the plants we growin our laboratory. They start out here in our earthbound lab, but theyre on their way to outer space. What could be a more novel environment for a plant than the zero-gravity conditions of spaceflight?

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By studying how plants react to life in space, we can learn more about how they adapt to environmental changes. Not only are plants crucial to almost every facet of life on Earth; plants will be critical to our explorations of the universe. As we look to a future of possible space colonization, its vital to understand how plants will fare off planet before we rely on them within space outposts to recycle our air and water and supplement our food.

So even while we stay right here on the ground,our research plantsblast off and head to theInternational Space Station(ISS). Already theyve given us some surprises about growing in zero gravityand shaken up some of our thinking about how plants grow on Earth.

A NASA image shows the International Space Station as it flew over Madagascar, with three of the five spacecraft docked to the station, in this photo taken on April 6, 2016. Tim Peake/ESA/NASA/Handout via Reuters

Learning from Stressed-Out Plants

Plants make especially great research subjects if youre interested in environmental stress. Because theyre stuck in one spotwhat we biologists call sessile organismsplants must cleverly deal in place with whatever their environment throws at them. Moving to a more favorable spot isnt an option, and they can do little to alter the environment around them.

But what they can do is alter their internal environmentand plants are masters of manipulating their metabolism to cope with perturbations of their surroundings. This characteristic is one of the reasons we use plants in our research; we can count on them to be sensitive reporters of environmental change, even in novel environments like spaceflight.

Folks have been curious about how plants respond to spaceflight from the very beginning of our ability to get there. We launchedour first spaceflight experimenton Space Shuttle Columbia back in 1999, and the things we learned then are still fueling new hypotheses about how plants deal with the absence of gravity.

Were in Florida, Our Research Plants Are in Space

Spaceflight requires specialized growth habitats, specialized tools for observation and sample collection, and of course specialized people to take care of the experiment on orbit.

A typical experiment begins on Earth in our lab with the planting of dormant Arabidopsis seeds in Petri plates containing a nutrient gel. This gel (unlike soil) stays put in zero gravity, and provides the water and nutrients the growing plants will need. The plates are then wrapped in dark cloth, taken to Kennedy Space Center, and eventually loaded into the Dragon Capsule on top of a Falcon 9 rocket to catch a ride to the ISS.

Once docked, an astronaut inserts the plates into the plant growth hardware. The light inside stimulates the seeds to sprout, cameras record the growth of the seedlings over time, and at the end of the experiment, the astronaut harvests the 12-day-old plants and save them in tubes of preservative.

Once returned to us on Earth, we can run more tests on the preserved samples to investigate the unique metabolic processes the plants engaged while on orbit.

Unraveling it Back in the Lab

One of the first things we found was that certain root growth strategies that everyone had assumed need gravity actually dont require it at all.

To seek out water and nutrients, plants need their roots to grow away from where they are planted. On Earth, gravity is the most important cue for the direction to grow, but plants also use touch (think of the root tip as a sensitive fingertip) to help navigate around obstacles.

Back in 1880, Charles Darwin showed that when you grow plants along a slanted surface, the roots dont grow straight away from the seed, but rather take a jog to one side. This root growth strategy is called skewing.Darwin hypothesizedthat a combination of gravity and the root touching its way across the surface was behind itand for 130 years, thats what everyone else thought too.

But in 2010, we saw that the roots of the plants we grew on the ISS marched across the surface of their Petri plate in aperfect example of root skewingno gravity required. It was quite a surprise. So whats really behind root-skewing on orbit, since its obviously not gravity?

Plants on the ISS do have a potentially second source of information from which they could get a directional cue: light. We hypothesized that in the absence of gravity to point roots away from the direction of the leaves, light plays a bigger role in root guidance.

What we found was that yes, light is important, but not just any light will dothere has to be a gradient of light intensity for it to act as a useful guide. Think of it in terms of a good smell: you can navigate to the kitchen with your eyes closed when cookies are just coming out of the oven, but if the whole house is flooded equally with the scent of chocolate chip cookies, you couldnt find your way.

Adjusting Their Metabolic Toolbox on the Fly

In the absence of gravity, plants cant use the tools theyre used to for navigation, so they had to craft together another solution. They can do that by regulating the way they express their genes. That way they can make more or less of specific proteins that are helpful or not in zero gravity. Various plant parts came up with their own gene regulation strategies.

We found a number of genes involved in making and remodeling cell walls areexpressed differentlyin space-grown plants. Other genes involved with light-sensingnormally expressed in leaves on Earthare expressed in roots on the ISS. In leaves, many genes associated with plant hormone signaling are repressed, and genes associated with insect defense are more active.These same trendsare also seen in the relative abundance of proteins involved in signaling, cell wall metabolism and defense.

These patterns of genes and proteins tell a storyin microgravity, plants respond by loosening their cell walls, along with creating new ways to sense their environment.

We track these gene expression changes in real time by labeling specific proteins with a fluorescent tag. Plants engineered withglowing fluorescent proteinscan then report how they are responding to their environment as it is happening. These engineered plants act as biological sensorsbiosensors for short. Specialized cameras and microscopes let us follow how the plant is utilizing those fluorescent proteins.

Insights from Space

This kind of research gives us new understanding of how plants sense and respond to external stimuli at a fundamental, molecular level. The more we can learn about how plants respond to novel and extreme environments, the more prepared we are for understanding how plants will deal with the changing environments theyre up against here on Earth.

And of course our research will inform collective efforts to take our biology off the planet. The observation that gravity isnt as vital to plants as we once thought is welcome news for the prospect of farming on other planets with low gravity, and even on spacecraft where there is no gravity. Humans are explorers, and when we leave earths orbit, you can bet well take plants with us!

Anna-Lisa Paul is a Research Professor, Graduate Faculty in Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Florida.

Robert Ferl is the Director of the Interdisciplinary Center for Biotechnology Research, University of Florida.

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GOOD NEWS FROM SCHOOLS: Students attend STEM camp at Piedmont College – Gwinnettdailypost.com

Posted: at 8:49 pm

Rising seventh- through 10th-graders from Lilburn, Radloff and Osborne middle schools, and Meadowcreek and North Hall high schools have spent part of their summer at a STEM camp at Piedmont College.

The goal is to work collaboratively to determine how to create a sustainable colony on Mars.

The Piedmont College Woodrow Wilson Georgia Teaching Fellowship STEM Camp seeks to foster and enhance education in the fields of science, technology, engineering and math.

We seek to inspire the next generation of STEM leaders through learning experiences that promote inquiry and critical thinking, said Bill Nye, the camps director and a science department chair at Meadowcreek High. Moreover, we seek to provide high quality, rigorous and authentic opportunities which promote outstanding academic achievement for all students.

The camp aims to increase campers understanding of survival and sustainability on Mars within activities related to environmental science, biotechnology and engineering robotics.

We believe that through collaborative and well-coordinated efforts, students in secondary schools can find solutions to not only the problems of today, but of the future, Nye said. Students must be challenged to explore possibilities for existence beyond Earth. As Mars is the next most inhabitable planet in the solar system, the exploration of a sustainable life on Mars is warranted.

Nye added that students increased their understanding of biotechnology through DNA extraction and completing a genetic transformation lab by transferring a jellyfish gene into bacteria to witness bioluminescence. The campers applied engineering and coding skills to use a drone to explore a mock Mars landscape, and to program robots to explore regions of interest and extract needed resources. Their further exploration of alternative energy sources will apply their content to energy limitations on Earth as well as Mars.

The field of environmental science has also been explored as students work with simulated Martian soil to determine how to grow crops on Mars and create a sustainable colony. Further explorations into urban agriculture tie directly into the need for locally developed produce and community gardens at Meadowcreek cluster schools and across the community, Nye said.

The instructors for the Piedmont STEM Camp are Woodrow Wilson Fellows in a pre-service teacher graduate program at Piedmont College. These STEM-specialized educators have experience in STEM fields. Theyve been embedded for the past year in math and science courses as intern-partners with a certified teacher and will be experiencing their first year as a classroom teacher in just a few weeks.

This model allows new teachers to develop their craft prior to flying solo and consequently are immediate contributors to their respective departments and colleagues bringing new instructional techniques to the classroom with an emphasis on the application of learning to ensure students are college and career ready upon graduation, Nye said.

The final project for the Piedmont STEM campers was to create a plan for a sustainable Mars colony. Students will have the opportunity to submit their Mars colonization proposal to several NASA competitions including the NASA Ames Space Settlement Contest.

Keith Farner writes about education. Good News from Schools appears in the Sunday edition of the Daily Post.

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Genetically modified food is too advanced for its out-of-date regulations – The Hill (blog)

Posted: at 8:49 pm

Last week, the USDA published a series ofquestionsseeking input to establish a National Bioengineered Food Disclosure Standard, as mandated by amendments to the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946 that went into effect in July 2016.

TheNational Bioengineered Food Disclosure Standard Actrequires the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture to establish disclosure standards for bioengineered food. The Act preempts state-based labeling laws for genetically modified organisms (GMOs), such as those adopted inVermontlast year.

The USDA is considering public input on the disclosure standards untilJuly 17, 2017. Two key issues are under consideration. The first is whether certain genetic modifications should be treated as though they are found in nature for example, a mutation that naturally confers disease resistance in a crop. The second concerns what types of breeding techniques should be classified as conventional breeding among "conventional breeding" techniques are hybridization and the use of chemicals or radiation to introduce random genetic mutations.

These seemingly mundane questions strike at the heart of GMO controversies and implicate the use of breakthrough CRISPR gene editing technologies. Gene editing allows novel and precise genetic modifications to be introduced into crops and animals intended for human consumption. The answers to the USDA's questions are significant because the Disclosure Standard Act exempts from mandatory disclosure genetic modifications obtained without recombinant DNA (rDNA) techniques that can otherwise be found in nature.

However, CRISPR gene editing need not rely on using any foreign DNA and can introduce genetic modifications that mirror those already found in nature. Unlike rDNA and conventional breeding methods, CRISPR technologies introduce genetic changes with far greater accuracy and precision.

In 2016, the USDAdeclined to regulatetwo CRISPR crops a mushroom and a waxy corn under regulations governing traditionalGMOs. But other regulatory agencies, including the FDA and EPA, have not yet made determinations on crops or animals modified with CRISPR technology, and uncertainty looms concerning the regulatory status of this new breed ofGMOs.

Opponents ofGMOs, who commonly argue thatGMOsare harmful to human health, decried the USDA's decision not to regulate CRISPR crops and argued thatpowerful corporations had found ways to circumvent the law through technical loopholes in outdated regulations.

Yet three decades of scientific research suggest that present-dayGMOcontroversies are not grounded in scientific fact. For instance, despite frequent rumors aboutGMO-induced cancers, a scientific consensus has now formed to support the health and environmental safety of genetically modified crops for animal and human consumption. That proposition is supported by investigations of theU.S. National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicineas well as scientific panels including the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Medical Association, the European Commission, and National Academies of Science in Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, the United Kingdom, and other countries.

In its rulemaking process, the USDA should rely upon science and facts. With regard to crops and animals with DNA altered through gene editing, rulemakers ought to distinguish among ways that CRISPR technology may be used to edit genes. For instance, CRISPR technology can be used as a DNA construct that is incorporated into the DNA of plant or animal cells, or as a preassembled RNA and protein complex.

How gene editing is carried out matters, because some methods appear to fall within the disclosure requirements while others do not. The law definesbioengineered foodas food that contains genetic material modified through in vitro rDNA techniques. Thus, under the Disclosure Standard Acts statutory constraints, CRISPR food created using DNA constructs that are incorporated into plant or animal cells would likely fall under the mandatory disclosures.

However, food derived from rDNA-free CRISPR gene editing using transient preassembled RNA and protein complexes should be excluded from the bioengineered food definition because such complexes are degraded shortly after gene editing takes place and do not insert themselves into the target organism DNA.

The nuances of ever-evolving biotechnological innovation highlight the complexity of our regulatory system and the need to modernize it. The National Bioengineered Food Disclosure Standard Act is just one of the latest pieces of that regulatory patchwork to emerge. Rules establishing bioengineered food disclosures should be coherent and science-based. Gene editing that uses no foreign DNA, is more precise than conventional breeding methods, and causes genetic modifications already found in nature should not be subject to onerous disclosure standards.

Paul Enrquez is a lawyer and scientist currently doing research in Structural & Molecular Biochemistry at North Carolina State University. His work focuses on the intersection of science and law and has been featured in both legal and scientific journals. He explores rising legal and regulatory issues concerning genome editing in crop production in depth and makes policy recommendations in his recently published article CRISPRGMOs.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the views of The Hill.

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Finding Love in a Lower Manhattan Courthouse – New York Times

Posted: at 8:48 pm

Mr. Lytle quickly denied that accusation and offered his own defense. They were going out eating every day but I was bringing my own lunch, trying to eat healthier, and reading a lot, he said. I guess I was just trying to make the best of the situation, because jury duty is usually never any fun.

But he found out otherwise on May 30, 2014 which happened to be his 27th birthday when he finally accepted one of those lunch offers, and went along with Ms. Nelson and two other jurors to a nearby restaurant/bar.

That day I learned that he has a very funny, subtle and surprising sense of humor, Ms. Nelson said. He notices small quirks in people.

He noticed a lot more than that in Ms. Nelson. She was very attractive and made me laugh, he said. She was also a very intelligent person who knew a lot about science and had a very interesting career.

They began going out for lunch with greater frequency, and one night in June, they went for drinks with four fellow jurors, all of whom disappeared during the course of the evening, leaving Ms. Nelson and Mr. Lytle alone in a social setting for the first time.

Ms. Nelson invited Mr. Lytle back to her apartment to watch an episode of The Bachelor, along with her roommate, and Mr. Lytle accepted. When the show ended, they went dancing at a Manhattan bar.

That was kind of the turning point in our relationship, said Ms. Nelson, who was living on the Upper East Side at the time, while Mr. Lytle lived in Washington Heights.

They were soon dating, and became a more serious item in the days after the trial ended in late July 2014.

The nicest thing about Jordan is that being with him always felt so natural and right, Ms. Nelson said. I met him at a time when I was going on a lot of first dates, and most of them always felt very childish, but Jordan was always kind and considerate and never one to play games. We just seem to balance each other out very well.

Recently, a friend of Ms. Nelsons called to bemoan the fact that she had received a jury duty notice.

It might not be as bad as you think, Ms. Nelson told her. You never know, you might meet your future husband there.

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Researchers Brought Back a Pox Virus Using Mail-Order DNA and it Only Cost $100000 – Futurism

Posted: at 8:47 pm

In Brief Researchers have revived an extinct horsepox virus using synthetic DNA strands ordered for about $100,000. This opens up new possibilities for researchers looking to make better vaccines, but also the potential for these viruses to become bioweapons. Reviving Extinct Viruses

Canadian researchers revived an extinct horsepox virus last year on a shoestring budget, by usingmail-order DNA. That may not seem like a big deal, until you consider that this relatively inexpensivetechnique could be used by anyone perhaps even to bring back something like smallpox, one of the most feared diseases in humanitys history. The teams research which remains unpublished was intended to create better vaccines and even cancer treatments. ThoughDavid Evans of the University of Alberta, the research lead, admitted that he also undertook the project to prove that it could be done. And, that itwouldnt necessarily require a lot of time, money, and even biomedical skill or knowledge. As he toldScience,The world just needs to accept the fact that you can do this and now we have to figure out what is the best strategy for dealing with that. Thus reigniting a powerful debate in the biomedical science community.Click to View Full Infographic

The researchers bought overlapping DNA fragments from a commercial synthetic DNA company. Each fragment was about 30,000 base pairs long, and because they overlapped, the team was able to stitch them together to complete the genome of the 212,000-base-pair horsepox virus. When they introduced the genome into cells that were already infected with a different kind of poxvirus, the cells began to produce virus particles of the infectious horsepox variety. While horsepox doesnt infect humans, other pox viruses do: and if the technique works to recreate one kind of pox virus, it could likely work for others as well. This technique was first demonstrated by another group of researchers in a Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper in 2002.

The idea that it would someday be possible to synthesize poxviruses is nothing new. In 2002, virologists assembled the poliovirus from scratch. However, this new work certainly does raise disturbing questions about how modern biotechnology could help terroristsweaponize viruses, which has in turnprompted a discussion about the regulation of science: There is always an experiment or event that triggers closer scrutiny, and this sounds like it should be one of those events where the authorities start thinking about what should be regulated, Northern Arizona University anthrax expert Paul Keim told Science.

This work also changes the longstanding debate about what to do with the worlds few remaining smallpox samples. While scientists have argued about whether to destroy them or study them, if the viruses or viruses very much like them could be manufactured, it wouldnt matter what happened to those samples.You think its all tucked away nicely in freezers, but its not, National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases virologist Peter Jahrling told Science. The genie is out of the lamp.

This brings us back to David Evans of the University of Alberta, who led the horsepox research. Pox viruses are common and infect many animals (including humans), but after it was eradicated, whats left of the dreaded smallpox virus isheld at CDC and cannot be studied. Evans had initially requested the use of existing horsepox samples from the CDC, but his request was declined because his purposes were commercial. So, instead, he synthesized a new virus instead, hoping to gain some insight into creating better vaccines. This is the most successful vaccine in human history, Evans said of the smallpox vaccine in Science,the foundation of modern immunology and microbiology, and yet we dont know where it came from.There is a huge, interesting academic question here.

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Camping Is A Part Of My Jewish DNA – Forward

Posted: at 8:47 pm

I was taken aback when I read Peter Beinarts article, Is Judaism a Big Tent? just a few days after returning from a four week kayaking trip with my daughter through our ancestral homeland of Lithuania. Each day, we paddled along Lithuanian rivers, large and small the Neris, Levuo, Nevezis, Nemunas, and Minija and each night, we camped on the bank in our well-used tent.

I have been backpacking, paddling, and tent camping for many years. I have hiked the Appalachian Trail, trekked in Nepal and Patagonia, and kayaked and canoed rivers across the United States. Here in my home state of Idaho, my family and I have spent countless nights happily ensconced in our tents on the slopes of the Northern Rockies. I have met other Jews on nearly all of these trips. Every one of them has known perfectly well how to set up a tent.

Beinarts article perpetuates a stereotype born of too many Woody Allen movies. The notion that camping or farming is not part of our Diaspora DNA is just factually wrong. Its also hurtful to the many American Jews who find spiritual nourishment in the natural world.

A.D. Gordon was an important Zionist thinker, but his understanding of Diaspora history as completely cut off from nature was, and remains, ill-conceived. The Zionists New Jew was not really all that new. Nearly every far-flung village in Lithuania that we passed through was once home to a thriving Jewish community. The Litvaks did not all live in Vilna and Kovno. They made their homes in the forests and along the rivers, in shtetlach such as Yaneve, Sapizishok, Babtai, Gorzd, and countless others. So, too, in Poland and the Ukraine. These Jews rowed rafts down the rivers, shipping timber to the Baltic Sea. They grew cucumbers, harvested and wove flax, and kept farm animals such as sheep, goats, and cows. Tevye the dairy man did not get his milk wholesale from a warehouse. And they built and prayed and studied in barn-like wooden synagogues, filled with gorgeous folk-art paintings of local flora and fauna.

That is my American Jewish spiritual DNA.

And for what its worth, unless you work for Sierra Designs or North Face or some other outdoor company, you do not construct or build a tent. You pitch it.

Rabbi Dan Fink is the rabbi of Ahavath Beth Israel in Boise, Idaho.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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A whole-genome sequenced rice mutant resource for the study of biofuel feedstocks – Phys.Org

Posted: at 8:47 pm

July 5, 2017 Genome-wide distribution of fast-neutron-induced mutations in the Kitaake rice mutant population (green). The genome-wide distribution of mutations indicates a non-biased saturation of the genome. Colored lines (center) represent translocations of DNA fragments from one chromosome to another. Credit: Guotian Li and Rashmi Jain/Berkeley Lab

Rice is a staple food for over half of the world's population and a model for studies of candidate bioenergy grasses such as sorghum, switchgrass, and Miscanthus. To optimize crops for biofuel production, scientists are seeking to identify genes that control key traits such as yield, resistance to disease, and water use efficiency.

Populations of mutant plants, each one having one or more genes altered, are an important tool for elucidating gene function. With whole-genome sequencing at the single nucleotide level, researchers can infer the functions of the genes by observing the gain or loss of particular traits. But the utility of existing rice mutant collections has been limited by several factors, including the cultivars' relatively long six-month life cycle and the lack of sequence information for most of the mutant lines.

In a paper published in The Plant Cell, a team led by Pamela Ronald, a professor in the Genome Center and the Department of Plant Pathology at UC Davis and director of Grass Genetics at the Department of Energy's (DOE's) Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), with collaborators from UC Davis and the DOE Joint Genome Institute (JGI), reported the first whole-genome-sequenced, fast-neutron-induced mutant population of Kitaake, a model rice variety with a short life cycle.

Kitaake (Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica) completes its life cycle in just nine weeks and is not sensitive to photoperiod changes. This novel collection will accelerate functional genetic research in rice and other monocots, a type of flowering plant species that includes grasses.

"Some of the most popular rice varieties people use right now only have two generations per year. Kitaake has up to four, which really speeds up functional genomics work," said Guotian Li, a project scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and deputy director of Grass Genetics at JBEI.

In a previously published pilot study, Li, Mawsheng Chern, and Rashmi Jain, co-first authors on The Plant Cell paper, demonstrated that fast-neutron irradiation produced abundant and diverse mutations in Kitaake, including single base substitutions, deletions, insertions, inversions, translocations, and duplications. Other techniques that have been used to generate rice mutant populations, such as the insertion of gene and chromosome segments and the use of gene editing tools like CRISPR-Cas9, generally produce a single type of mutation, Li noted.

"Fast-neutron irradiation causes different types of mutations and gives different alleles of genes so we really can get something that's not achievable from other collections," he said.

Whole-genome sequencing of this mutant population - 1,504 lines in total with 45-fold coverage - allowed the researchers to pinpoint each mutation at a single-nucleotide resolution. They identified 91,513 mutations affecting 32,307 genes, 58 percent of all genes in the roughly 389-megabase rice genome. A high proportion of these were loss-of-function mutations.

Using this mutant collection, the Grass Genetics group identified an inversion affecting a single gene as the causative mutation for the short-grain phenotype in one mutant line with a population containing just 50 plants. In contrast, researchers needed more than 16,000 plants to identify the same gene using the conventional approach.

"This comparison clearly demonstrates the power of the sequenced mutant population for rapid genetic analysis," said Ronald.

This high-density, high-resolution catalog of mutations provides researchers opportunities to discover novel genes and functional elements controlling diverse biological pathways. To facilitate open access to this resource, the Grass Genetics group has established a web portal called KitBase, which allows users to find information related to the mutant collection, including sequence, mutation and phenotypic data for each rice line.

Explore further: Scientists discover gene that influences grain yield

More information: Guotian Li et al, The Sequences of 1,504 Mutants in the Model Rice Variety Kitaake Facilitate Rapid Functional Genomic Studies, The Plant Cell (2017). DOI: 10.1105/tpc.17.00154

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A whole-genome sequenced rice mutant resource for the study of biofuel feedstocks - Phys.Org

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UK’s chief medical officer calls for gene testing revolution in cancer treatment – Daily Nation

Posted: at 8:45 pm

Saturday July 8 2017

Kenyans mark World Cancer Day on February 4, 2016 in Eldoret town. Tiny errors in DNA code can lead to cancer and other illnesses. PHOTO | JARED NYATAYA | NATION MEDIA GROUP

A revolution in the search for cancer treatments has been proposed by Englands chief medical officer.

Prof Sally Davies wants gene-testing to be introduced on a routine basis.

I want the National Health Service to be offering genomic medicine, that means diagnosis of our genes, to patients where they can possibly benefit, she said.

GENETIC TESTS Testing, she said, should be standard across cancer care as well as some other areas of medicine, including rare diseases and infections.

Doctors are already using genetic tests to identify and better treat different strains of the infectious disease, tuberculosis.

Humans have about 20,000 genes, bits of DNA code or instructions that control how our bodies work.

Tiny errors in this code can lead to cancer and other illnesses.

Gene-screening can reveal these errors by comparing tumour and normal DNA samples from the patient.

Professor Davies says in about two-thirds of cases, this information can improve their diagnosis and care.

Doctors can tailor treatments to the individual, picking the drugs most likely to be effective.

Currently, genetic testing in England is done at 25 regional laboratories, as well as some other small centres.

Professor Davies wants to centralise the service and set up a national network to ensure equal access to the testing across the country.

She said one hurdle could be doctors themselves, who dont like change.

Patients should persuade them to move from a local to a national service. *** Joe Furness was in Newcastle upon Tyne when he was invited to a party in London.

A three-hour, one-way train trip would cost him 78.50 (Sh10,517) and a plane flight 106, but Joe, aged 21, is a poor student and didnt have much money.

What he did have however was time. So Joe decided to take a detour via Spain.

CAR HIRE Flying from Newcastle to the Spanish island of Menorca cost him 16.00.

There he hired a car for 7.50 and spent the night in it, while sipping a 4.50 cocktail.

Next morning he flew to London for 11.00, joined the party, then grabbed a lift home with a pal afterwards.

Total cost of 39 was a saving of 39.50 on a train journey from Newcastle and 67 on a flight.

Distance travelled was 2,350 miles, against 290 miles from the North to London. *** Bradley Lowery is a six-year-old boy who won the hearts of the nation by campaigning for his beloved Sunderland Football Club and for its top scorer, Jermaine Defoe.

TV film of Defoe holding a smiling Bradley in his arms before a recent game appeared on nationwide television.

What everyone knows, of course, is that Bradley is dying from the childhood cancer neuroblastoma.

A fund-raising campaign raised money for him and will be used for other sick children when Bradley dies.

Now it seems fraudsters have been setting up pages on the internet claiming to be collecting for the boys cause.

His family have warned against them. Please be vigilant, they said in a message on Facebook.

You have to wonder, how low can some people stoop?

*** Some 400 plastic bottles are sold per second in this country and millions end up, along with other garbage, in the worlds oceans.

In fact, scientists calculate that by 2050, the oceans will contain more plastic by weight than fish.

The opposition Labour party is pressing for the introduction of a money-back return scheme, which has been introduced in many other countries and has proved successful in reducing the scale of littering.

You pay a bit extra for your drink but you get it back if you return the bottle, which the drinks company then recycles.

Coca-Cola, among others, is backing the idea. *** Famous one-liners:

Doctors recommend eight glasses of water per day. Why does this seem impossible when eight glasses of beer is so easy? Anonymous.

If you want to know what God thinks of money, look at the people he gave it to. American writer Dorothy Parker.

The two most beautiful words in the English language are Cheque enclosed. Dorothy Parker.

PLAGIARISM I asked God for a bike but I know He doesnt work that way, so I stole a bike and asked for forgiveness. Internet.

I wouldnt say I was the best football manager in the business, but I was in the top one. Brian Clough, British football manager.

To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research. Anonymous

England and America are two countries separated by a common language. Irish writer George Bernard Shaw.

If I agreed with you, then we would both be wrong. Internet.

Interior Cabinet Secretary collapsed in his house and was rushed to hospital by family and

He is becoming the Presidents go-to-guy when things need to be fixed.

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UK's chief medical officer calls for gene testing revolution in cancer treatment - Daily Nation

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