Page 1,902«..1020..1,9011,9021,9031,904..1,9101,920..»

Category Archives: Transhuman News

NASA Find Ingredients For Life On Two Ocean Worlds Beyond Earth – Daily Caller

Posted: April 13, 2017 at 11:25 pm

5591857

The Cassini space probe detected hydrogen coming from Saturns moon, Enceladus, which suggests alien life could develop there, according to NASA.

NASA said Enceladus has almost all of the ingredients needed to support life as we know it on Earth, but admitted they found no living organisms. Hydrogen is an excellent source of chemical energy that supports life near deep sea hydrothermal vents on Earth. Scientists think this kind of chemical reaction could have been the origin of life on Earth.

NASA also announcedsimilar activity may be occurring on Jupiters moon, Europa. The Hubble Space Telescope spotted plumes on Europa, suggesting powerful thermal sources on the moons surface.

Enceladus and Europa are protected by an ice shell which maintains a liquid water ocean. Both of these moons are fairly similar and arejudged as the two of the most likely places in our solar system to find alien life. Life on Earth may have emerged from similar deep-ocean hydrothermal vents.

Here on Earth there are a number of things that protect life. With this research, we are making a big step forward towards answering the question, Is there life out there?' associate administratorof NASAs Science Mission Directorate Thomas Zurbuchen said during the NASA press conference announcing the discovery.

Enceladus and Europa probably have watery and salty oceans similar to those of Earths below the ice, likely kept warm by complex gravitational interactions and the planets core.

The search for life beyond Earth has enthralled humans for ages, Republican Rep. Lamar Smith, who chairs the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology, told The Daily Caller News Foundation. The NASA Transition Authorization Act of 2017 directs NASA to continue to search for life and advance the science of astronomy, astrophysics and astrobiology. NASAs effort to search for life on ocean worlds is an important step in these efforts.

The Europa Clipper is a NASA robotic probe intended to launch sometime in the early 2020s. The probewill investigate the icy moons potential for human colonization and alien life.

Geologists announced in September that earthquakes on Earth can produce hydrogen. They concluded that the same kind of Marsquakes could also produce hydrogen on Mars, removing a major barrier to life.The Red Planets atmosphere is rich in oxygen, so an ample supply of hydrogen may indicate that water is more common on Mars than generally believed.

Follow Andrew on Twitter

Send tips to andrew@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact [emailprotected].

Continued here:
NASA Find Ingredients For Life On Two Ocean Worlds Beyond Earth - Daily Caller

Posted in Moon Colonization | Comments Off on NASA Find Ingredients For Life On Two Ocean Worlds Beyond Earth – Daily Caller

Shooting for the Stars, with a Moon Base – NDSU The Spectrum

Posted: at 11:25 pm

ANA SOFIA GUERREIRINHO | PHOTO COURTESY The moon, where Elon Musk is planning his temple of doom.

SpaceXshoots for the stars once again. Well, in this case, its actually our very own moon.

Yep, Luna is getting a facelift as Tesla CEO and SpaceX pioneer Elon Musk plans to build a community on the moon. Construction is planned to begin by 2030 with the help of NASA and a plea for government funding.

Musk has already begun preparation for travel to the moon. Late next year, he plans to take two people on a flyaround the moon through a Gatorade promotional campaign.

Tourism plays a large part in the future of human colonization, Musk said Wednesday afternoon.

While efforts will be made to make space exploration more affordable, estimates for the trip to the moon alone are nearing $1.7 million. Which is far less than his proposed attempt to colonize a mysterious city called Detroit, Michigan. Which only costs $29.

Elon Musk has several projects already in the works on Earth, which he hopes will contribute to his lunar paradise. The most important are arguably the solar powered roofs designed by Tesla Solar. Musk already hopes to make them more affordable than tile roofs and may yet use them to power his moon community.

He also is pushing forunderground tunnels to relieve traffic, which may work towards a tunnel system across the moon. His TBM (Tunnel Boring Machine) has already dug a test trench in LA and will continue to improve tunneling efficiency.

Hoping to maintain an initial population of 1,200, Musk will be making an effort to select who can and cannot travel to the moon to live and work. Everyone must be screened and trained to live in space. As not to let in the wrong clientele, the idea of a wall was briefly tinkered with.

Unfortunately, the vacuum of space was considered too easy to tunnel through. No, Musk will be creating startup programs with the cooperation of NASA that will mass produce space-worthy candidates. Think of it like an astronaut puppy mill. Again, NASA will beg for funding.

I know the idea of moving to the final frontier may be scary at first, but at least Elon Musk is man enough brave the cold. Not to mention the undeniable tactical advantage of launching solar-powered nuclear missiles from the surface of the moon towards definitely not Russia. Tesla is a nuclear superpower thanks to Moon Emperor Musk.

I think we should all face the future with the same sense of adventure and determination. Also, we need more funding.

Original post:
Shooting for the Stars, with a Moon Base - NDSU The Spectrum

Posted in Moon Colonization | Comments Off on Shooting for the Stars, with a Moon Base – NDSU The Spectrum

SAU team performing neuroscience and genetic research – Magnoliareporter

Posted: at 11:25 pm

Jeremy Brown of Magnolia is part of a group of Southern Arkansas University students formed to pursue neuroscience and genetic research projects in the College of Science and Engineering during the spring 2017 semester.

Brown is a junior pre-health biological science major.

His project has an SAU-supported grant of $1,250 to research possible genetic engineering techniques.

I believe research plays a big part in applying to professional schools, said Brown. It is also very rewarding to apply concepts and ideas I've learned in class.

Under the guidance of Dr. Mikolaj Sulkowski, assistant professor of biology, and Dr. Gisela Sulkowski, pre-health advisor, the research group meets weekly to conduct presentations on student progress and to facilitate communication among the group.

Throughout the rest of the week, however, students maintain a self-driven schedule.

Dr. Mikolaj Sulkowski says this style of work helps prepare students for research opportunities in their future career.

He was responsible for opening the SAU Laboratory of Neurogenetics in 2016 and was granted an SAU faculty research grant to study gene regulation in the brain.

He has experience writing grants to NASA and the Arkansas IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence (Arkansas INBRE) program aimed at student research opportunities.

Additionally, he has collaborated with National Institute of Health (NIH) researchers in publishing a manuscript to "PLOS Genetics," a peer-reviewed open-access journal.

Southern Arkansas University students and faculty formed to pursue neuroscience and genetic research projects, left to right, Lane Smith, Aniebietabasi Akpan, Dr. Gisela Sulkowski, Dr. Mikolaj Sulkowski, Joseph McDowell, Jeremy Brown, Brishna Hedstrom and Robert Sann. Not pictured, Rebecca Jane Vance (Parnell).

Original post:
SAU team performing neuroscience and genetic research - Magnoliareporter

Posted in Genetic Engineering | Comments Off on SAU team performing neuroscience and genetic research – Magnoliareporter

Warrior Record Online : New genetic engineering turns people into … – Warrior Record Online

Posted: at 11:25 pm

Satire

Happy National Companion Animal Day!!

Have you ever looked at your animal companion (probably a cat) and thought I would love to be you? Well, now you can! With the Mewgaroo Hoodie from Unihabitat in Japan, you can now literally morph into a half breed of a cat and kangaroo.

Why half kangaroo?

First of all, why not? And second because then you have a little pouch to that hold furry fuzzball of a cat. Unless your cat is a diabolical independent pet that comes to you only for food and when it wants attention.

I cant wait to hold my kitty Joey around literally like a Joey these guys are like my heroes, said obsessed cat owner Nat Bobtail.

The producers have genetically modified the material of the sweater to not only conform your DNA into a Mewgaroo kangacat like some science experiment gone wrong to just hold your cat in a pouch which you could do anyway with your HANDS, but it is also really soft and cozy.

Lets make the world half mutant animals, here I come X-Men! Not so special now are you Wolverine?!?! screamed Mat Sphynx, a guy with no cats whatsoever.

Have fun on your National Companion Animal Day!

The satire is based on the following information: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/21/mewgaroo-pet-sweatshirt-very-handsome_n_7354080.html

http://www.museumofanimals.org/#/animal-holidays/4425087

Read the original post:
Warrior Record Online : New genetic engineering turns people into ... - Warrior Record Online

Posted in Genetic Engineering | Comments Off on Warrior Record Online : New genetic engineering turns people into … – Warrior Record Online

How 1800 Pakistanis are helping Penn scientists fight disease – Philly.com

Posted: at 11:25 pm

A common way for scientists to learn what a particular gene does is to breed animals with a mutation in that gene, then study what happens.

That is not an option in humans. But a powerful new study, whose leaders included scientists from the University of Pennsylvania, illustrates the next best option: taking what nature gives you.

Upon studying the genomes of more than 10,000 people in Pakistan, the authors said they had identified more than 1,800 knockouts people in whom copies of a gene inherited from both their mother and father were deficient.

Among them were a man, a woman, and their nine children whose mutations resulted in abnormally low levels of triglycerides, likely protecting them against heart disease. This mutation also has been found in the insular Amish community in Lancaster County.

If drug companies could mimic beneficial effects caused by genetic knockouts (not all are beneficial), it could speed up the search for effective treatments, said Danish Saleheen, an assistant professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at Penns Perelman School of Medicine.

Instead of shooting arrows in the dark to find a drug that would be beneficial, we can now make an informed choice about the beneficial and harmful effects of pharmacological inhibition of a wide range of pathways, said Saleheen, one of the lead authors.

The study, published in the journal Nature, was the result of an international collaboration led by Penn, the Center for Non-Communicable Diseases in Pakistan, the Broad Institute, Harvard, and the University of Cambridge in England.

One of the studys two senior authors was Daniel J. Rader, chair of Penns department of genetics.

The mutations identified in the study touch on so much human biology, from breaking down toxins in the lungs to metabolizing glucose, that it will take years to sort out what they all mean. Some of the genetic pathways could inform drug development, while others may simply guide the pursuit of science.

The scientists focused on Pakistan because of its high rate of marriage between first cousins. That means a greater chance that children are born with two identical copies of the same gene.

Geneticists study the Amish for a similar reason. Marriage between cousins is not practiced there, but certain genetic mutations can become concentrated. In Lancaster County, however, the triglyceride-lowering mutation was found in only one copy of the gene, and so levels of the fatty substance were not as low as in the Pakistani family.

In Pakistan, the scientists identified a total of 1,317 genes that were knocked out in at least one person. Some of the knockouts, such as the triglyceride ones, were present in more than one person, leading to the total of more than 1,800 people.

This was not the first study to identify people without functioning copies of a particular gene, but it is the largest to date.

Saleheen, who is from Pakistan, said the results published this week are just the beginning. He and his colleagues plan to test the genomes of 200,000 participants from his native country, potentially identifying up to 8,000 people with knocked-out genes.

Robert M. Plenge, a scientist at the drugmaker Merck & Co., wrote in the same issue of Nature that the effort by Saleheens team is sure to yield results.

Animal studies will still be needed, Plenge wrote, but the study of these human knockouts will change the nature of the scientific investigation of the genetic basis of human disease.

Published: April 13, 2017 10:16 AM EDT

We recently asked you to support our journalism. The response, in a word, is heartening. You have encouraged us in our mission to provide quality news and watchdog journalism. Some of you have even followed through with subscriptions, which is especially gratifying. Our role as an independent, fact-based news organization has never been clearer. And our promise to you is that we will always strive to provide indispensable journalism to our community. Subscriptions are available for home delivery of the print edition and for a digital replica viewable on your mobile device or computer. Subscriptions start as low as 25 per day. We're thankful for your support in every way.

Read the original post:
How 1800 Pakistanis are helping Penn scientists fight disease - Philly.com

Posted in Human Genetics | Comments Off on How 1800 Pakistanis are helping Penn scientists fight disease – Philly.com

Social anxiety disorder: Researchers study genetic causes – MultiBriefs Exclusive (blog)

Posted: at 11:25 pm

Social anxiety is normal for everyone, except when the anxiety begins to interfere with living a happy and healthy life. Social anxiety disorder (SAD), or social phobia, involves intense anxiety or fear about various social situations and is the third-most common mental health problem in the world today after alcoholism and depression.

About 1 in 8 people (12 percent) have suffered from SAD at some time in their lives. In a given year, about 7 out of every 100 (approximately 15 million) people suffer from this disorder.

Avoiding situations that might include being judged by others is a common behavior of those who suffer from SAD. The feelings that accompany this disorder include anxiety, high levels of fear, nervousness, automatic negative emotional cycles, racing heart, blushing, excessive sweating, dry throat and mouth, trembling, and muscle twitches.

In severe situations, people can develop a dysmorphia concerning part of their body (usually the face) in which they perceive themselves irrationally and negatively. People with SAD are often perceived as shy, quiet, backward, withdrawn, inhibited, unfriendly, nervous, aloof and disinterested.

Researchers have thought that social anxiety can be overcome, that cognitive-behavioral therapy literally changes brain circuitry and wiring, and that diligent cognitive-behavioral therapy for SAD will result in brain changes. Supporting this hypothesis, a study in 2013 included brain scan images showing directly where changes were noted in the brain before cognitive-behavioral treatment and after going through cognitive-behavioral treatment.

Medications can only temporarily change brain chemistry, which may be useful in some cases, but these scans showed the change that occurs in the brain as a result of basic cognitive-behavioral treatment intervention. The idea is that the combination of cognitive and behavioral therapy changes the brain, allowing those with SAD to overcome social anxiety.

A new study, however, sheds even more light on this disorder and on a specific serotonin transporter gene called gene SLC6A4, previously implicated in the development of social phobia. The SLC6A4 gene encodes a mechanism in the brain involved in transporting the messenger serotonin, which suppresses feelings of fear and depression and plays an important role in social phobia.

Together with the Clinic and Policlinic for Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy at the University Hospital Bonn, Dr. Andreas Forstner from the Institute of Human Genetics at the University of Bonn is conducting a study into the genetic causes of social phobia.

The researchers genotyped 321 patients with SAD and 804 controls without social phobia and carried out a single-marker analysis to identify a quantitative association between SAD and avoidance behaviors, focusing on single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), where causes of genetic illnesses often lie. They investigated 24 SNPs thought to be the cause of social phobias and other mental disorders.

The patients provided information about their symptoms, including severity. Blood samples were taken to examine participants' DNA. The initial findings provide evidence that the serotonin transporter gene SLC6A4 is frequently correlated with anxiety-related traits. However, researchers are unclear about whether low levels of serotonin contribute to social anxiety or whether social phobia triggers a decrease in serotonin levels.

Genetic studies in SAD are rare, and only a few candidate genes have been implicated so far. This study is the largest association study probing the cause of social phobias to date. The researchers hope this research will help forge better diagnoses and treatment procedures for SAD.

See original here:
Social anxiety disorder: Researchers study genetic causes - MultiBriefs Exclusive (blog)

Posted in Human Genetics | Comments Off on Social anxiety disorder: Researchers study genetic causes – MultiBriefs Exclusive (blog)

DNA expert sues FIU over suspension – Sun Sentinel

Posted: at 11:25 pm

A DNA expert who was suspended last year from his job as a professor at Florida International University is suing the school, accusing administrators of violating his due process rights and costing him at least $19,000 in expert witness fees.

Martin Tracey taught biology at FIU since the 1970s and has testified for more than 20 years on DNA issues. Last spring, after Tracey said he had evidence numerous students were cheating during exams in his Human Genetics course, some of the students filed complaints accusing Tracey of professional misconduct.

The university sided with the students and suspended Tracey for the fall 2016 semester. He was later suspended for the spring 2017 semester and most recently was told to expect to be fired.

According to the lawsuit, Tracey has lost out on $90,000 in wages and another $19,000 in fees he could have charged as an expert witness. The Broward State Attorneys Office had listed Tracey as an expert in 173 pending cases as of last December.

The lawsuit accuses FIU of failing to give Tracey a fair chance to defend himself against the students' accusations.

I was forbidden from being on campus or communicating with any students, Tracey said in an interview Thursday. Even students who wanted to testify for me, I wasnt allowed to ask them.

Tracey said the cheating students were in a computer chat room during an exam, sharing answers with each other. Some students, when confronted, accepted responsibility and a failing grade for the test, Tracey said. Others said they did nothing wrong and filed grievances against Tracey. Tracey said the school didnt give him detailed information about the allegations.

He was ambushed with the evidence against him at a grievance hearing, said his attorney, Jordan Richards.

A spokeswoman for FIU did not have a comment about the lawsuit on Thursday.

rolmeda@SunSentinel.com, 954-356-4457, Twitter @SSCourts and @rolmeda

More:
DNA expert sues FIU over suspension - Sun Sentinel

Posted in Human Genetics | Comments Off on DNA expert sues FIU over suspension – Sun Sentinel

DNA collection bill heads to governor’s desk – Indianapolis Star

Posted: at 11:24 pm

DNA(Photo: Associated Press)

Arguments swirled around a bill that would allow police to collectDNA samples from people arrested for felonies, but who had not yet been convicted.Then Senate President Pro TemDavid Long, R-Fort Wayne,stepped in to call off the vigorous debate.

"We've got a lot of work today," Long said, pressing the senators to vote on the motion to concur.

It passed 36-13. Now, the bill goes to the desk of Gov. Eric Holcomb.

But the fevered debate which only happened because the measure had to return to the Senate to concur on a minor House change indicates that the use of DNA, while a staple of police investigations for decades, evokes privacy concerns among some Hoosiers.

Also happening in the legislature:Lawmakers push to revive domestic violence gun bill

Will Holcomb sign abortion legislation?

Revenue forecast adds money to state budget talks

If signed into law by the governor, Senate Enrolled Act 322, authored by Sen. Erin Houchin, R-Salem,will broaden Indiana's DNA database, which supporters say will aid police in solving violent crimes such as rape, as well as clear those who may be innocent.

Right now, the state collects DNA upon conviction of crime. But come the end of the year, the proposal would allow police to take a sample upon arrest, making Indiana the 31ststateto do so.

As the bill traveled through the House and the Senate, lawmakers added a number of safeguards to protect innocent people from getting their DNA ensnared by the government through a false arrest. Thechanges came as opponents of the bill raised privacy concerns, predicting a Big Brother-like future of government intrusion oncitizens using their genetic material.

More on DNA collection:Should police take a DNA sample when making arrests?

Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis,suggested that a DNA database could be breached, and used to frame people for crimes they didn't commit.

"If somebody gets your DNA and puts it at a crime scene, you're in trouble," Taylor said.

But supporters of the bill called such scenarios hyperbole, and argued that the practice in which DNA is taken with a cheek swab is similar to fingerprinting. The U.S. Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision in 2013 ruled that collecting DNA upon arrest is constitutionaland does not violate a suspect's Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable search and seizure.

Sen. Brandt Hershman, R-Wheatfield, said some of the arguments from opponents "throw up hypotheticals that border on the silly."

"My fingerprints were taken when Itook the bar, and I didn't commit a crime," he said.

Lawmakers have proposed similar bills in past years, all of which failed to gain traction.

That changedlate last year when police closed two high-profile cases the slaying of an elderly man and attacks on two police stations because of a DNA sample taken on arrestin Ohio.

Before he was accused of shooting and killing an 82-year-old Zionsville man and firing shots at two police stations, Damoine Wilcoxson was arrested for a felony in Indiana, but not convicted. He also was arrested in Ohio, where a DNA sample was taken and placed into a database for comparison to other cases.

While investigating the two cases, police matched a DNA sample taken from a letter left at the scenes of the police station attacks to one in the Ohio database taken from Wilcoxson. Detectives then connected the slaying and the police station attacks with ballistic evidence. Police and prosecutors credited Ohio's expanded DNA database for solving the crimes.

However, some lawmakers were reluctant to expand the DNA database too far.

A similar bill authored by Rep. Greg Steuerwald, R-Avon,advanced in the House, and lawmakers worked together to add protections in the bills. For example, police can only take a DNA sample if a judge has found probable cause for an arrest, according to an amendment. Lawmakers also outlined a number of scenarios in which an individual can remove his or her DNA.

An individual can remove a DNA sample from the database when:

But it is the job of the suspect, not the government, to initiate the process for removal. This was a provision that some opponents took issue with, stating that removal should be automatic if an arrest does not stand. In past hearings, Steuerwald argued that the person charged would have the most incentive to follow up.

The measure requires police to inform a suspect of the removal process when taking a DNA sample. Then, if the circumstances qualify, the individual would fill out a form to expunge the DNA from the system.

Holcomb now has the option to sign or veto the bill, or allow it into law without his signature. Stephanie Wilson, a spokeswoman for the governor, said he is tracking all bills that head to his desk.

"He will consider carefully before making a decision," she said.

Steuerwald said he is confident the governor will sign the bill.

"This is one of the greatest law enforcement tools we have done here this entire session," he said.

Call IndyStar reporter Madeline Buckley at (317) 444-6083. Follow her on Twitter:@Mabuckley88.

Read or Share this story: http://indy.st/2pdF0HN

Read the original here:
DNA collection bill heads to governor's desk - Indianapolis Star

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on DNA collection bill heads to governor’s desk – Indianapolis Star

DNA used to track fish in Hudson and East rivers – Asbury Park Press – Asbury Park Press

Posted: at 11:24 pm

Some anglers won't have to tell big fish stories after their success April 8 on trout fishing opening day. iPhone video by Peggy Wright Peggy Wright

Map shows the two sites where samples were taken in the DNA fish hstudy(Photo: Courtesy of the Rockefeller University/Monmouth University)

For the first time, scientists have recorded a spring fish migration by conducting DNA tests on water samples.

The work was a collaboration ofRockefeller University and the Urban Coast Institute at Monmouth University.

According to the study's report, environmental DNA called eDNA,collectedfrom one-litersamples drawn weekly from New York's East and Hudson rivers over six months last year, revealed the presence or absence of several key fish species passing through the water on each test day.

READ: Fishermen not on board with Hudson Canyon sanctuary

READ:State prepares plan to dredge Little Egg Inlet

The bits of DNA recovered found the presence of menhaden, herring species, black sea bass, striped bass, tautog (blackfish), mummichog, bay anchovy, bluefish, oyster toadfish, Atlantic silverside, and conger eel. In total it found the presence of 42species.

Using eDNAisa way to monitor fish migrations that involves a fraction of the effort and cost of trawling, all without harming the fish, the study said.

It also said itcan be used toestimate the abundance and distribution of diverse fish species and other forms of marine life in the dark waters of rivers, lakes, and seas.

It has some kinks, for example, some DNA could not be exactlydistinguished, notably some in the herring family,

The testsalsoturned up DNA of fish species that are not found in New York waters but are commonly eaten by New Yorkers, such as tilapia, red snapper, and salmon.

It lead the researchers to conclude of those species DNA entered via the wastewater system.

Dan Radel: 732-643-4072; dradel@gannettnj.com

Read the original here:
DNA used to track fish in Hudson and East rivers - Asbury Park Press - Asbury Park Press

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on DNA used to track fish in Hudson and East rivers – Asbury Park Press – Asbury Park Press

Ancient DNA showcases a war between our hominid ancestors and viruses – ExtremeTech

Posted: at 11:24 pm

Viruses reproduce by infiltrating living cells and taking over the biological machinery inside. Its an insidious process that can leave the host with a life-threatening illness, a mild fever, or no ill effects at all. Recent advances in medical science have allowed humans to combat viruses like never before, but a new study from researchers at Rockefeller University shows how our primate ancestors may have waged war on a virus with only the weapon of evolution.

Viruses dont leave behind fossil evidence, but sometimes their DNA can survive as part of their victims, and thats where the team went looking in this case. Thestudy focuses on an ancient virus known as HERV-T, which began infecting primates some 32 to 43 million years ago. HERV-T is a retrovirus (just like HIV), which means it carried its genetic material around as RNA. Eukaryotic cells (like ours) are DNA-based, so one of the first things HERV-T did upon gaining access to a cell was turn its RNA into DNA, then it stuffed it into the cells DNA to be duplicated.

HERV-T has long since gone extinct, but the researchers were able to find its remains in the genetic material of various primates. The germline cells like fetal cells, sperm progenitors, and eggs that were infected with HERV-T passed the viral genes down over the eons. This is what allowed the team to construct a timeline for the rise and fall of HERV-T, and find out how our ancestors might have killed it.

When HERV-T began popping up in primates around 40 million years ago, it used a protein on host cells called MCT1 to gain access. The virus used a protein called ancHTenv to link up with that protein, like a key in a lock. The team also found a remarkably well-preserved version of that protein hiding in the DNA of primates (including humans), which theyve named hsaHTenv. Its not uncommon for organisms to pick up a bit of nucleic acid here and there from viruses, but the nature of this gene suggests some interesting possibilities. The team used the remaining genetic code to reconstruct the ancient virus protein and study its function, which was a scientific first.

The life cycle of a retrovirus.

Scientists postulate that hsaHTenv was captured by our hominid ancestors cells around 19 million years ago. This gene was used by cells to produce the key protein of the virus independent of the virus itself. This in turn allowed cells to immunize themselves. Basically, hsaHTenv could bind to MCT1 particles in the cell, preventing them from being added to the cells membrane. With no MCT1 on the surface, the virus had no way to infect the cell. In the space of a few million years, HERV-T died out as its pool of hosts shrunk.

Not all researchers are convinced by the data, but such is the nature of science. Its possible the presence of hsaHTenv in primate genomes is due to some other factor, not its use as a weapon against ancient retroviruses. Still, its a fascinating hypothesis that warrants further study.

Now read: How DNA sequencing works

Original post:
Ancient DNA showcases a war between our hominid ancestors and viruses - ExtremeTech

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on Ancient DNA showcases a war between our hominid ancestors and viruses – ExtremeTech

Page 1,902«..1020..1,9011,9021,9031,904..1,9101,920..»