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Weslaco students to speak with NASA astronaut on space station … – Monitor
Posted: February 9, 2017 at 5:50 am
Weslaco ISD students will have the opportunity on Thursday to speak to a NASA astronaut aboard the International Space Station.
Arminda Mindy Muoz, public information officer for the district, said on Monday that students will be making the earth-to-space call at around 11 a.m. for a 20-minute conversation scheduled to air live on NASA Television and on the agencys website.
According to a school district press release, Expedition 50 Flight Engineer Peggy Whitson will answer students questions from the Weslaco ISD Performing Arts Center at Central Middle School.
More than 800 students in grades 3-5, as well as Weslaco East High Schools Astronomy Club, will be in the audience, the release read. Whitson launched to the space station on Nov. 17 and will live aboard until the spring.
Described as an in-flight education downlink, the talk is considered an integral component of the NASA Office of Educations efforts to improve education in the field of STEM science, technology, engineering and mathematics in the U.S.
Linking students directly to astronauts aboard the space station through the agency Office of Educations STEM on Station activity provides authentic, live experiences in space exploration, space study and the scientific components of space travel, while introducing the possibilities of life in space, the release read.
The NASA TV streaming video, schedule and downlink information can be found at http://www.nasa.gov/nasatv. For videos and lesson plans highlighting the International Space Stations research, visit http://www.nasa.gov/stemonstation.
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OUT OF THE BOX | Sci-fi returns to its roots in The Expanse – Ventura County Reporter
Posted: at 5:50 am
Science fiction television is in the midst of a resurgence, the least likely culprit of its success being the lowly SyFy Channel. Rebranded from Sci-Fi Channel some years ago, the station had become less science fiction and more wrestling drama cum Sharknado, leaving a struggling genre in the field to rot under a dying sun.
As the world turns, tastes change and studio executives take risks perhaps feeling the pressure from streaming juggernauts Netflix, Hulu and Amazon to give viewers a reason to stick around in the midst of Stranger Things and The Man in the High Castle. Thus SyFy procured several adaptations and originals: 12 Monkeys, Killjoys and, yes, The Expanse.
Based upon the novels by author James S. A. Corey, The Expanse is a futuristic space opera/mystery with many moving parts.
Two hundred years into the future, Earth balances a tenuous relationship with sister planet Mars, colonized by Earthlings long ago and now independent. Between the two are asteroid belt miners who dream of independence as they procure minerals, water and other necessities of life for the two competing planets, always receiving the short end of the deal.
Season 1 begins with what appears to be an attempt to start an interplanetary war. A mining ship known as Canterbury is destroyed by a mysterious vessel, leaving James Holden (English actor Steven Strait) and a ragtag crew of survivors to pick up the pieces while navigating the treacherous political landscape between Earth, Mars and the various pods of rebels and activists that exist elsewhere in the solar system. Meanwhile, detective Joseph Miller (Thomas Jane, notably of The Punisher and Boogie Nights) is conscripted to search for the missing daughter of a space billionaire, which inevitably leads him to investigating the destruction of the Canterbury.
On Earth, United Nations diplomat Chrisjen Avasarala (Shohreh Aghdashloo) conspires and treads political tightropes with the expertise of a spider. As all the parts begin to come together, the web begins to untangle, leaving behind only a mystery beyond her political motivations.
Lets talk a moment about the visuals of the series. Many a time, a great science-fiction series has come along with an excellent premise but the technology to create the world is, well, lacking. A persons suspension of disbelief can only stretch so far before the graphics budget forces you back into reality la a rubber lizard costume or foam space rock. The Expanse is a beautiful series and quite the opposite in tone and nature. Ships are well-designed, and the colony outposts are controlled chaos, inspired by the futuristic landscapes of Blade Runner and Cowboy Bebop. Most of all, the material is taken seriously and presented carefully so as not to breach the thin line between quality and schlock.
Case in point: The time spent making space colonization realistic and familiar. Nothing says world of the future better than when Miller pulls up to a noodle bar, with Asian-inspired text on the banner, and orders a burrito. Coreys original novel is a well-designed effort to humanize the impossible, similar in style to Phillip K. Dicks uncanny ability to make the impossible seem not only possible but, yeah, duh obviously this is what the future will look like.
In The Expanse, the eclectic cast of characters, played well and without pretentiousness or even a modicum of eye-rolling dismissal, lifts the series above and beyond the standard SyFy fare of yesteryear. This is a space opera worthy of your time and patience, and oh, what luck! Season 2 began on Feb. 1, and the first season is available on Amazon Prime.
Out of the Box is a column by VCReporter staff and contributors about television and streaming content.
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OUT OF THE BOX | Sci-fi returns to its roots in The Expanse - Ventura County Reporter
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Students colonize Mars moon in Honeywell Aerospace Challenge – Cronkite News
Posted: at 5:49 am
By Josh Orcutt | Cronkite News Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2017
Colonizing a moon of Mars is not an easy task.
However, more than 1,300 students from 20 schools around Arizona flocked to Arizona State University Polytechnic Campus to compete in the 18th annual Honeywell Fiesta Bowl Aerospace Challenge to do just that.
Nearly 300 separate teams of three to five students each created scale models and wrote reports about how they wanted to colonize and sustain a base of operations on Phobos. The reports included written descriptions of the original landing site, sequences of launches and the construction plans of the Phobos base. The teams presented their ideas to judges of the competitions who are Honeywell engineers.
The Aerospace Challenge is one of the largest STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) competitions in the state of Arizona.
There are three days of preliminary rounds. The top two teams with the highest scores from each day will move on to the finals.
Those six teams will have to create a 10-minute oral presentation and answer questions on the spot from Honeywell engineers later this month. The team with the highest score wins an all-expenses paid trip to the Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama, an on-field appearance at the upcoming Fiesta Bowl, as well as plaques commemorating the victory.
A welcome sign greets students to the Honeywell Fiesta Bowl Aerospace Challenge. More than 1,300 students from 20 different Arizona schools competed. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
A view from above of the Honeywell Fiesta Bowl Aerospace Challenge held on Arizona State Universitys Polytechnic Campus in Mesa on Monday, Feb. 6, 2017. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
Seventh grade students Nicholas Kahhan, Sebastian Sanchez and Daniel Wade from Kyrene Altadena Middle School show off their project, codenamed Soup. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
Each groups presentation must include a written report about the logistics of the colonization of Phobos, a moon of Mars, as well as a scale model of their plan. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
Teams are required to build models detailing potential living quarters for the crews on Phobos as well as ways to stay sustainable. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
A judge from Honeywell discusses the plans proposed by Conall Mayo-Shanahan, Trevor Hunter and Eric Elizondo. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
One teams plan for colonizing Phobos, a moon of Mars, stands on display. Over the three days, 1,300 students from 20 schools will get feedback from Honeywell engineers about their plans. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
Students can win medals and awards while competing in the Honeywell Fiesta Bowl Aerospace Challenge. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
The Honeywell Fiesta Bowl Aerospace Challenge is one of the largest STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) program for grade school and middle school students in Arizona. (Photo by Josh Orcutt/Cronkite News)
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Students colonize Mars moon in Honeywell Aerospace Challenge - Cronkite News
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Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Awards $50M+ to 47 Investigators – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News
Posted: at 5:49 am
The Chan Zuckerberg Biohub (CZ Biohub) said today it will commit more than $50 million to fund human disease research by its first cohort of 47 investigators from the faculty of the University of California, Berkeley, Stanford University, and the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF).
Each investigator will receive a five-year appointment and up to $1.5 million toward life science research in their areas of expertise. CZ Biohub said the investigators were selected from several academic departments at the three universities, including biology, chemistry, computer science, engineering, mathematics, and physics.
An international panel of 60 scientists and engineers evaluated more than 700 applications, the Biohub said.
CZ Biohub investigators share our vision of a planet without disease. To realize this vision, we are giving some of the worlds most creative and brilliant researchers access to groundbreaking technology and the freedom to pursue high-risk research, Joseph DeRisi, Ph.D., of UCSF, co-president of the Biohub, said in a statement.
CZ Biohub investigators will challenge traditional thinking in pursuit of radical discoveries that will make even the most stubborn and deadly diseases treatable, added Dr. DeRisi, who co-leads the Biohub with Stephen Quake, D.Phil., of Stanford University.
The investigators have agreed to make their draft publications widely available through pre-print servers to ensure the rapid dissemination of research results, the Biohub said.
Open science will also be advanced, the Biohub added, through plans to establish share technology platforms where Bay Area scientists can further their research and advance efforts to fight disease.
In addition to its investigator program, the Biohub is pursuing large-scale collaborative projects that include an Infectious Disease Initiative and the Cell Atlas.
The Biohub says that its scientists and engineers will apply advanced technologies to fight against infectious diseases with research focused on four key areas: new detection technologies, new treatments, new ways to prevent infection, and new approaches to rapid response when new threats emerge.
Through the Cell Atlas project, the Biohub aims to build an international collaboration that will map the cell types of the human body. The map, which will be available to researchers worldwide, is intended to help researchers gain new insights into cell biology related to the causes of human disease, potentially leading to new therapies.
The Biohub was launched when Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, M.D., set aside $600 million over 10 years toward a research center that will foster collaborations by professionals across multiple disciplines, including engineers, computer scientists, biologists, chemists, and other innovators.
The Biohub was one of two projects announced in September by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, named for the pediatrician and the Facebook founder, chairman, and CEO. The Initiative also committed $3 billion toward basic research over the next decade, with the audacious goal of curing, preventing, or managing all diseases by the end of the century.
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WillAnd ShouldGene Edited Animals Be Regulated? – Genetic Literacy Project
Posted: at 5:48 am
Alison Van Eenennaam, PhD, Animal Genomics and Biotechnology, University of California, Davis
HIGHLIGHTS:
Gene editing method has been developed to dehorn dairy cows It is unclear whether gene editing will be formally regarded as animal breeding which has not been traditionally regulated Gene edited animals should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis triggered by the novelty of the resulting attributes Regulatory frameworks should consider potential benefits of gene edited animals and the opportunity costs of precluding the use of this technology
Gene editing techniques are now being deployed by agricultural researchers to more precisely modify crops and animals without using foreign genes. This approach may quell some of the public skepticism of more classic transgenic products, often called GMOs. But questions remain about how these new products will be regulated.
The most dramatic advances are focused in the animal sector. Dairy cows, like those of the Holstein breed, naturally grow horns. They are often physically dehorned because they can pose a threat to other cows, as well as to farm workers handling the cattle. The team I lead at the University of California-Davis is collaborating with a company called Recombinetics, which has developed a method to produce dairy cattle that are genetically dehorned. The gene edited cattle are getting their new, horn-free alleles from the naturally hornless Angus breed to create hornless Holsteins.
Although this process mimics natural breeding in many key ways, questions remain about how or if the United States and governments around the world will regulate it. At the current time it is unclear whether gene editing of animals will be formally regulated in the same way as animals containing rDNA constructs that are the more traditional products of genetic engineering.
Animal breeding per se is not regulated by the U.S. government, although it is illegal to sell an unsafe food product regardless of the breeding method that was used to produce it. I am unaware of a unique food safety concern that has been associated with traditional animal breeding methods. Gene editing does not necessarily introduce any foreign rDNA or transgenic sequences into the genome, and many of the changes produced would be indistinguishable from naturally-occurring alleles and variations. As such, many applications will not fit the classical definition of genetic engineering.
For example, many edits are likely to alter alleles of a given gene using a template nucleic acid dictated by the sequence of a naturally-occurring allele from the same species (e.g. the hornless Holsteins carry a polled allele from Angus) [1]. As such, there will be no novel rDNA sequence present in the genome of the edited animal, and likewise no novel phenotype associated with that sequence. It is not evident what unique risks might be associated with an animal that is carrying such an allele given the exact same sequence and resulting phenotype would be observed in the closely-related breed from which the allele sequence was derived [2].
U.S. Regulators So Far Have Not Weighed In
Currently, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) defines genetically engineered (GE) animals as those animals modified by rDNA techniques, including the entire lineage of animals that contain the modification [3]. The rDNA construct in the GE animal is considered a new animal drug and thus is a regulated article under the new animal drug provisions of the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetics Act. These two sentences are potentially contradictory as it is not clear if it is the use of rDNA techniques in the development of a product, or the presence of an rDNA construct (drug) in the product, that is the trigger for regulatory oversight. The use of rDNA techniques does not necessarily result in an rDNA construct in the animal.
It is possible that gene editing nucleases might introduce double stranded breaks at locations other than the target locus, and thereby induce alterations elsewhere in the genome [4]. Such off-target events are analogous to spontaneous mutations that occur in conventional breeding and are specifically induced in unregulated mutagenesis breeding, and can be minimized by careful selection of the guide sequence that targets the specific DNA sequence to be cut as well as the design of the gene editing reagents [5]. There are groups working on ways to rapidly identify and suppress such potential off-target effects [6]. Complete sequencing of polled calves derived from two independent cell lines to 20X coverage did not find any off-target introgression of the polled allele, nor any insertion- deletions (indels) ascribable to off-target DNA cleavage by the TALENs.[1].
Globally, governments and regulators are currently deliberating about how gene-edited animals should be regulated, if at all. It is no coincidence that there have been a slew of recent policy papers from normally unobtrusive public sector breeders and academicians from around the world discussing the need for regulation of genome editing to be science-based, proportional to risk, product focused and fit for purpose [2, 7-11].
Current Regulations of Transgenics Dont Clearly Apply
Many agencies around the world are involved with the regulation and governance of genetically engineered animals besides the U.S. FDA, including the European Medicine Agency (EMA), the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)/World Health Organization (WHO). The definition of a genetically engineered animal differs among these different agencies.
The Codex Alimentarius (Codex), or Food Code, was established by FAO and WHO to develop harmonized international food standards, which protect consumer health and promote fair practices in food trade. In 2008 the Codex developed the science- based Guideline for the Conduct of Food Safety Assessment of Foods Derived from Recombinant-DNA Animals (GL68-2008) [12] which provides internationally-recognized recommendations for assessing the nutrition and safety of food from GE animals. In that document, a Recombinant-DNA Animal is defined as an animal in which the genetic material has been changed through in vitro nucleic acid techniques, including rDNA and direct injection of nucleic acid into cells or organelles.
The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety (CPB) is an international agreement which aims to ensure the safe handling, transport and use of any living modified organism. The CPB defines Living modified organism to mean any living organism that possesses a novel combination of genetic material obtained through the use of modern biotechnology, and specifically excludes techniques used in traditional breeding and selection.
Likewise, the EU definition of a genetically engineered organism included in Directive 2001/18/EC encompasses an organism, with the exception of human beings, in which the genetic material has been altered in a way that does not occur naturally by mating and/or natural recombination..
Many applications of gene editing would result in products that have modifications that could occur by mating and/or natural recombination, and carry no novel combination of genetic material or rDNA construct. Additionally, many modifications would be indistinguishable from the naturally occurring variation that is the basis of all animal breeding programs and, in fact, evolution. The only way to tell the difference would be for the breeder to state whether the genetic variations in their germplasm was naturally occurring (which could include crossbreeding and mutation breeding induced by human intervention) or obtained via gene editing.
In this way it is somewhat analogous to cloning which makes an identical copy of an organism a genetic twin. The milk, meat and eggs from cloned animals are indistinguishable from the products produced by conventionally bred animals. In the United States the FDA determined there were no unique risks associated with products derived from clones and this process is allowed to be used in animal breeding programs. Conversely, animal cloning is prohibited in some countries in the EU where the process- based regulatory approach judged the process unacceptable on ethical grounds.
Lines Blurry as to What Constitutes Genetic Engineering
Most recently the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (NAS) [13] concluded that the distinction between conventional breeding and genetic engineering is becoming less obvious. Some emerging genetic engineering technologies (like gene editing) have the potential to create novel varieties that are hard to distinguish genetically from varieties produced through conventional breeding or processes that occur in nature.
The NAS reasoned that conventionally bred varieties are associated with the same benefits and risks as genetically engineered varieties. They further concluded that a process-based regulatory approach is becoming less and less technically defensible as the old approaches to genetic engineering become less novel and as emerging processes such as genome editing and synthetic biology fail to fit current regulatory categories of genetic engineering. They recommended a tiered regulatory approach focused on any intended and unintended novel characteristics of the end product resulting from the breeding methods that may present potential hazards, rather than focusing regulation on the process or breeding method by which that genetic change was achieved.
Ideally gene edited animals will be considered on a case-by-case basis using such a tiered regulatory approach triggered by the novelty of the resulting attributes or phenotypes displayed by the animal. There is a need to ensure that the extent of regulatory oversight is proportional to the unique risks, if any, associated with the novel phenotypes.
Given there is currently not a single genetically engineered animal being sold for food anywhere in the world despite more than 30 years since the first genetically engineered livestock were produced in 1985, animal breeders are perhaps the group most aware of the chilling impact that regulatory gridlock can have on the deployment of potentially valuable breeding techniques.
From a personal perspective I am agnostic as to which specific breeding method I use to achieve genetic progress in my research whichever works consistently, and enables the best rate of genetic progress is the one I would prefer to use if the regulations associated with the use of that technique are not prohibitive. Unfortunately, this has not been the case for genetic engineering for the past 20 years of my career. This has effectively precluded the use of this method in my research and by public sector breeders globally.
I have watched with growing frustration as the expensive regulatory system focused on the use of genetic engineering in agricultural breeding programs has wasted millions, if not billions, of dollars evaluating safe products. Those funds could have been better used to research to solve pressing agricultural problems. Agricultural production systems are complicated and complex and there are no black and white answers no forbidden or perfect solutions. Every solution has tradeoffs, also known as risk and benefits, as with every other decision we make in life.
If regulations around gene editing ultimately work to impede the seamless integration of gene editing methods with conventional animal breeding programs, they will effectively preclude the use of this technique in such programs. Idealistically, the best regulatory approach is one that allows new technologies to be used while preventing unacceptable risks to animal and human health or the environment. Here the definition of unacceptable becomes contentious, with some arguing that any level of risk is unacceptable.
However, in a world facing burgeoning animal protein demands, it important to ensure that regulatory frameworks also appropriately consider and weigh the potential benefits of gene edited animals to global food security. Perhaps as importantly should also be a careful evaluation of the opportunity cost associated with precluding the use of gene editing technology in animal breeding programs, something that has rarely been considered for genetically engineered crops. Doing nothing by forestalling progress on potential solutions to global problems is in fact doing something, and opportunity costs should also be a consideration in the evaluation of new plant and animal varieties.
This piece was adapted by the author and expanded from A. L. Van Eenennaam. 2017. Genetic Modification of Food Animals. Current Opinion in Biotechnology.
Alison Van Eenennaam is an Animal Genomics and Biotechnology Cooperative Extension Specialist in the Department of Animal Science at the University of California, Davis. Her publicly-funded research and outreach program focuses on the use of animal genomics and biotechnology in livestock production systems. She earned her B.S. from the University of Melbourne in Australia, and both her M.S. and Ph.D. degrees were earned from the University of California, Davis, in animal science and genetics, respectively.
References
The Genetic Literacy Project is a 501(c)(3) non profit dedicated to helping the public, journalists, policy makers and scientists better communicate the advances and ethical and technological challenges ushered in by the biotechnology and genetics revolution, addressing both human genetics and food and farming. We are one of two websites overseen by the Science Literacy Project; our sister site, the Epigenetics Literacy Project, addresses the challenges surrounding emerging data-rich technologies.
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WillAnd ShouldGene Edited Animals Be Regulated? - Genetic Literacy Project
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DNA Deceit? Genetic Testing and It’s Legitimacy – WLTX.com
Posted: at 5:48 am
Are those DNA tests you take accurate? Do they work?
Chuck Ringwalt, wltx 11:35 PM. EST February 08, 2017
D.N.A. Deceit? Genetic Testing and Its Legitamacy (Photo: Ringwalt, Charles)
Columbia, SC (WLTX) - It's not unusual to want to learn more about yourself and after a few clicks online, you could be drowning in information. There are dozens of genetic tests offering the latest and greatest ways to answering your questions. You send them some salvia or a swab from your cheek and from that, they'll analyze your D.N.A., but sometimes the results you get back aren't definitive.
Richard Moody works at WLTX. He's adopted and said he doesn't have a desire to learn about his birth parents, but is interested in learning more about himself.
"Where did I originate? Where did our people, where did my people originate? And anything I could find out having to do for health reasons," Moody said.
Moody turned to genetic testing. He first used Ancestry D.N.A and about a year later used 23andMe
With some of his saliva packed and shipped, he waited for the results. What he got back provided some answers, but also raised some questions.
"Yeah. It would have been really cool if they were identical. Then I would have gone, 'Ah-Ha.' Now I go, 'Ehh,'" said Moody. Ancestry D.N.A estimated that his ancestry comprised mostly like those from Western Europe at 49 percent.
This included the countries of Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, Luxembourg, and Liechtenstein.
23&Me estimated that Richard is also European, but not primarily Western. These result said Moody was British and Irish at 53.5 percent and only 13.6 percent French and German.
"When you see something and you're going for information, it makes me a little uneasy just because they say two different things. From a broad perspective they say the same thing, but when you get granular, they go in opposite directions. 23&Me was a lot more granular," Moody said.
"It's good. It's fun information, but you do have to look at it as just that and not necessarily something to hang your hat on," Whitney Dobek said.
Dobek is a genetic counselor at the University of South Carolina's School of Medicine.
"These labs will take a sample from an individual, get the DNA information on those regions, see what the patterns are of variation and then they will compare that to their reference and what we know from the research and be able to use algorithms and determine what percentage ancestry you might be and how likely it is that you might have blue eyes," said Dobek.
Dobek admitted she's also taken 23andMe test andsaid these types of services run digitally. She said there is no one looking through a microscope, but millions of pieces of data being run through hard drives. "The testing itself is very computerized. It's done with this chip technology. That even our clinical genetic labs use and they're able to quickly pull down all of your variants out of your D.N.A and upload that into a computer and do the comparisons that way," she said. "The variation between the different labs has to do with the data that they are pulling from, so every lab has their own reference that they're looking at and depending on which lab you're pulling from, you're going to get slightly different answers because they're pulling from slightly different data and in addition to that they may be looking at slightly different variations within your D.N.A, so it's not necessarily that your ancestry isn't there. It just might be that that part of your D.N.A wasn't looked at."
And even though Moody said he has his reservations, he still very interested.
"You know, it's not one hundred percent correct, but it is it's absolutely noteworthy. It also says you're not likely to have cheek dimples. Well I don't, so it was right about that," he said.
( 2017 WLTX)
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DNA Deceit? Genetic Testing and Privacy Concerns – WLTX.com
Posted: at 5:48 am
DNA deceit? Are you putting your information in the wrong hands in order to learn more about your family history. News19's Chuck Ringwalt finds out.
Chuck Ringwalt, wltx 10:57 PM. EST February 08, 2017
D.N.A. (Photo: Ringwalt, Charles)
Columbia, SC (WLTX) - Companies like Ancestry D.N.A and 23andMe tout a more in-depth ancestry breakdown through analyzing your D.N.A for a relatively low cost. You get just that, but what else do they get in return?
"It kind of frightens me in a way because, you know, golly, just one little bit of saliva and they can tell a lot about me," Richard Moody said.
Moody works at WLTX and decided to have his D.N.A tested.
He said he didn't realize how much he was giving up when he sent out his saliva and checked the user agreement.
"Okay well now law enforcement can get it. Well, I haven't committed any crimes, however, what's the next thing that they're going to release and say, 'They can get it?' Is it a testing facility or whatever? That bothers me," he said.
Moody took two tests using Ancestry D.N.A and 23andMe. When you give your consent these companies have the authority to use and share your information for certain purposes like the service they provide, business improvements, advertising and research.
In certain cases they might be forced to hand over your information to the authorities if ever required by law. In an 2015 interview with CBS This Morning CEO of 23andMe Anne Wojcicki said they take your privacy seriously.
"We do everything we can to protect your privacy. And we've said under subpoenas, etc. We would do everything we can to fight those. Obviously you need to comply with law enforcement," she said.
According to 23andMe, the company has only receivedfour requests in the past 10 years and have been successful in their refusal to provide the data.
Consumer protection attorney Dave Maxfield said always read the fine print.
"You've given up a lot in exchange for something. Is it worth it? I mean you have to decide for yourself, but you have to decide as an informed consumer," he said.
Knowing what he does now, Moody said he would have paid more attention to the documents, but it wouldn't have stopped him from taking the tests.
"I would have still done it," he said.
This is part one of our story. Another aspect you may be concerned about is your results. Are they accurate? We had some questions about Moody's he took the two tests and ended up with two different sets of results. Tune in to News 19 at 11 p.m. for "D.N.A. Deceit? Genetic Testing and Its Legitimacy".
( 2017 WLTX)
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Phoenix police use DNA composite to try to help solve 2005 cold case – AZCentral.com
Posted: at 5:48 am
Snapshot flier(Photo: The Republic)
Phoenix police for the first timehave turned to technology that uses DNA samples to generate facial composites, in an effort to solve a 12-year-old caseinvolving a newborndiscarded in an airport trash can.
Detectives with the Phoenix PoliceCold Case Squadhave been searching for the mother of the baby girl since 2005, when the babywas found dead in a Sky Harbor International Airport trash bin. The cleaning crew found the newborn in a women's restroom with her umbilical cord still attached, police said.
Now, using the advanced technology, police have developed a computer-generated composite showing themost likely traits of a person who shares the DNA found at the crime scene.Something as simple as blood left at the crime scene can now be used to re-create what a person of interest may look like, police said on Wednesday.
Sandra Rodriguez, the original investigator on the case, said Wednesday the case has stuck with her ever since.
"It (the case) didn't go anywhere. There was just too much information and we just couldn't narrow it, or I couldn't narrow it down," Rodriguez said.
Rodriguez and several Phoenix cold-case detectives, who also met with the media on Wednesday,saidthey developed a profile on the mother that went into the national database but never received ahit on it. They since have exhausted their investigative possibilities and now areturning to the DNA technology to generate a composite, the first time the department has used the technology.
Parabon Snapshotis a DNAphenotyping, ancestry, and kinship analysis tool, according to the Police Department. By using DNA samples, the forensic DNA-analysisservicepredicts the physical appearance and ancestry of an unknown person.
The DNA phenotyping technology is able to create what looks like an avatar of a human based off what their DNA describes as being the most likely traits that they may possess. From freckles to eye color to which region of the world a person may have originated from, the technology is able to vividly suggest what a possible suspect may look like, though police stressed it is not considered a guarantee of a person's appearance.
The technology produces a report and composite profile based off the extracted DNA. However, DNA alone cannot provide weight or age information, said police, who added that a standardsample test costs $3,600.
With the help of the new composite depicting what the infant's mother may look like, police are seeking the public's help in finding any new leads in the case.
The Snapshot prediction results aredifferent from a sketch, where a victim will describe the features of a suspect to then be drawn out. Instead, Snapshot considers probabilities of certain traits and similar characteristics that a person of interest may possess based on their DNA, in this case shared by the mother and the newborn.
Cold-case detectives said they are unsure if they will use this technology on future cases.
Anyone with information about the case is asked to call Phoenix police at 602-262-6141 or Silent Witness at 480-948-6377 (WITNESS).
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Police: Nuclear DNA led to suspect in Karina Vetrano killing – Newsday
Posted: at 5:48 am
Chanel Lewis is arraigned in Queens Criminal Court on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2017. Lewis was charged with murder in the strangulation death of Karina Vetrano, 30, as she jogged on a park trail near her Howard Beach home on Aug. 2, 2016. (Credit: Charles Eckert/Pool)
DNA recovered from the body of slain Howard Beach jogger Karina Vetrano was the best kind of genetic evidence for investigators to use to find her suspected killer, said a law enforcement official familiar with the case.
Crime scene detectives found nuclear DNA on Vetrano when her body was discovered the night of Aug. 2 in the weeds of Spring Creek Park in Queens, the official said.
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DNA Match Links Man To Interlochen Crash – Traverse City Ticker
Posted: at 5:48 am
DNA evidence connected an Interlochen man to a 2015 crash that severely injured a woman, according to charges filed this week.
Jeremy Allen Bower, 25, faces charges of operating with a suspended license causing serious injury and leaving the scene of a serious injury accident stemming from a July 1, 2015 crash on M-137 near Interlochen.
A driver told Grand Traverse County Sheriffs deputies that a Mercury Cougar swerved into his lane and crashed into him head-on, severely injuring one passenger.
The Mercury driver attempted to drive away and then fled on foot when his car would no longer drive. Deputies found a large amount of blood in the abandoned car which they sent to the state police crime lab to be sequenced.
Deputies later requested a DNA sample from Bower. The two DNA samples matched, according to the charges, which carry five years in prison.
Bower is also charged as a two-time habitual offender because he has a previous conviction for delivery of marijuana.
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