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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Space Station worms' research potential is anything but flat
Posted: January 22, 2015 at 4:48 am
IMAGE:These are image representations of live worms with single, bipolar, triple and quadruple heads for the Flatworm Regeneration investigation aboard the International Space Station. view more
Credit: Dr. Michael Levin, Tufts University
For years, it was assumed the world was flat. Now, we have a laboratory that orbits our big, blue marble. So, it's funny to think of returning to flatness aboard the International Space Station, but this outpost currently houses flatworms for research. The study of these creatures has the potential to be rather robust in implications for regenerative medicine, an area of treatment for repairing or replacing human cells, tissues or organs on Earth to restore normal function. A new study launched aboard SpaceX's fifth commercial resupply services (CRS) mission to the space station examines the reparative processes of flatworms in microgravity.
As flatworms age, or should they encounter cellular damage, they have the ability to renew their cells. For example, if they lose their tail, they can regrow it. A team of researchers from Kentucky Space LLC and the Center for Regenerative and Developmental Biology at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, will use the worms to observe repair processes and wound-healing done by cells in space during the Flatworm Regeneration investigation. This insight could influence the development of medicine on Earth with new methods for repairing damaged tissue from injury or physical impairment.
"We are specifically looking at regenerative processes and applications that could be potentially valuable for use on Earth," said Kris Kimel, president and founder of Kentucky Space. "Much of what has been done in the past has been focused on astronaut health, and you can learn a lot from that, but we're focused primarily on the cellular and molecular level processes that could impact regenerative processes on Earth."
This investigation is a first step toward understanding how gravity affects an organism's mechanisms for repair and renewal. Researchers hope to map the cell signaling processes that help the worms' bodies locate cellular damage and instruct an area or appendage to regrow. They are observing the worms in space to find out how these processes may be disrupted by the lack of gravity.
The research implications not only apply to regenerative medicine, but also to technology development. Engineers may be able to create new algorithms - a set of steps used in mathematics or to design computer processes - based on the knowledge gained from flatworm study in orbit. This could lead to technology that employs these algorithms to reconfigure their own components and energy use in deep space.
Flatworms with amputated heads or tails are contained inside sealed test tubes for this study. The tubes were placed in Biological Research in Canisters (BRIC) hardware and loaded on the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft for delivery to the station. This flatworm investigation does not require power or interaction from the station crew.
"It's a potentially valuable experiment in terms of the results, but in this first iteration, we're making it as self-sustaining as we can," said Kimel.
The research plan stipulates that the flatworms return alive upon landing. They are currently scheduled to return aboard Dragon at the conclusion of SpaceX CRS-5. The research team will analyze regeneration patterns of the space-flown worms and compare them with control worms living in similar conditions on Earth during the study time period.
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Zero-gravity ablution: it's hard to maintain German-style personal hygiene in space
Posted: at 4:48 am
In 1969, US astronaut Russell Schweickart peed into a plastic receptacle in the Apollo 9 capsule on the way to the moon.
The condom-like vessel allowed Schweickart - and the other crew members - to relieve themselves in space.
But they often made a big mess when they removed the receptacle - painfully, they learnt that size does actually matter. The astronauts would reach for the largest of the three receptacles, when perhaps a smaller one was sufficient.
"You only make that mistake once," Schweickart said after his return.
Since then, going to the toilet in space has become easier.
Modern space toilets even allow astronauts a brief, intimate timeout. But personal hygiene remains one of the greatest challenges onboard the International Space Station (ISS).
German astronaut Reinhold Ewald, who stayed at the space station MIR, told DW he was often pushed to the edge of his own limits. "It's not for the highly sensitive," he said.
Make sure you buckle up for the ride
Astronauts have to belt themselves down to the space toilet. Strong sucking pressure allows them to relax on the throne, despite the zero gravity. For missions outside of the craft, diapers can be used.
Reuse everything
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Zero-gravity ablution: it's hard to maintain German-style personal hygiene in space
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Let’s Play Sol 0-Mars Colonization #003 [Deutsch] – Mehr Leben auf dem Mars – Video
Posted: at 4:48 am
Let #39;s Play Sol 0-Mars Colonization #003 [Deutsch] - Mehr Leben auf dem Mars
In dieser Folge schicken wir einen weiteren Astronauten auf den Mars der eine besondere Aufgabe hat. Um die Bevlkerung noch weiter zu erhhen bauen wir noch...
By: myNiKa Lets Plays
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Let's Play Sol 0-Mars Colonization #003 [Deutsch] - Mehr Leben auf dem Mars - Video
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Lets Play Sol 0 Blind 7 – Video
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Lets Play Sol 0 Blind 7
Sol 0 is a Mars Colonization Game that is in very early development at time of this recording. Check out the game here: http://www.solzerogame.com/ This is a...
By: Negative Root
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Lets Play Sol 0 Blind 7 - Video
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Future of Food – film animation – Video
Posted: at 4:47 am
Future of Food - film animation
Film documentary produced by Lily Films. I conferred with experts while helping design depictions of the stages of genetic engineering process. Integrated a wide variety of source materials...
By: Kyle Kosup
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Future of Food - film animation - Video
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Jamie Metzl: The US-China Rivalry at the Genetic Frontier (11/12/2014) – Video
Posted: at 4:47 am
Jamie Metzl: The US-China Rivalry at the Genetic Frontier (11/12/2014)
Jamie Metzl, Novelist; Former U.S. Security Official Bruce Pickering, Ph.D., Executive Director, The Asia Society of Northern California Moderator Novelist...
By: Commonwealth Club
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Jamie Metzl: The US-China Rivalry at the Genetic Frontier (11/12/2014) - Video
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Cloning & Genetic Engineering – Video
Posted: at 4:47 am
Cloning Genetic Engineering
By: Rejaul Alam
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Cloning & Genetic Engineering - Video
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Scientists Give Genetically Modified Organisms A Safety Switch
Posted: at 4:47 am
Scientists reprogrammed the common bacterium E. coli so it requires a synthetic amino acid to live. BSIP/UIG via Getty Images hide caption
Scientists reprogrammed the common bacterium E. coli so it requires a synthetic amino acid to live.
Researchers at Harvard and Yale have used some extreme gene-manipulation tools to engineer safety features into designer organisms.
This work goes far beyond traditional genetic engineering, which involves moving a gene from one organism to another. In this case, they're actually rewriting the language of genetics.
The goal is to make modified organisms safer to use, and also to protect them against viruses that can wreak havoc on pharmaceutical production.
To understand what they've done, you may need to remember a bit of basic biology. The enzymes and other proteins in our bodies are all built from building blocks called amino acids. There are usually just 20 amino acids in nature. But George Church, a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School, has created a bacterium that requires an additional amino acid, one made in the lab and not found in nature. His lab did that by rewriting the bacteria's genetic language to add a "word" that calls for this unnatural amino acid.
"So this really makes it a completely new branch of life," Church says.
These modified E. coli bacteria essentially speak a different genetic language from all other life on Earth. That means they can't easily swap genes, which bacteria often do to pick up or get rid of traits. And it also means that these modified E. coli must be fed the synthetic amino acid to survive.
"It will die as soon as you remove that essential nutrient," Church says.
The scientists say this radical re-engineering actually makes these synthetic life forms safer, because if they escape into the wild they'll die. One key question is whether these engineered bacteria can shed the traits that make them dependent on the synthetic amino acid. (Bacteria mutate all the time, picking up new traits and dropping others).
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Scientists Give Genetically Modified Organisms A Safety Switch
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GM microbes created that cant escape the lab
Posted: at 4:47 am
Mediscan/Corbis
Synthetic biologists hope to treat disease in the gut by making Lactobacillus bacteria (pictured) that are dependent on an artificial amino acid.
Critics of genetic engineering have long worried about the risk of modified organisms escaping into the environment. A biological-containment strategy described this week in Nature1, 2 has the potential to put some of those fears to rest and to pave the way for greater use of engineered organisms in areas such as agriculture, medicine and environmental clean-up.
Two US teams have produced genetically modified (GM) bacteria that depend on a protein building block an amino acid that does not occur in nature. The bacteria thrive in the laboratory, growing robustly as long as the unnatural amino acid is included in their diet. But several experiments involving 100billion or more cells and lasting up to 20days did not reveal a single microbe capable of surviving in the absence of the artificial supplement.
Our strains, to the extent that we can test them, wont escape, says Dan Mandell, a synthetic biologist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts, and an author on one of the two studies describing the strategy.
The microbes also do not swap their engineered DNA with natural counterparts because they no longer speak lifes shared biochemical language. Establishing safety and security from the get-go will really enable broad and open use of engineered organisms, says Farren Isaacs, a synthetic biologist at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, who led the other study.
Biocontainment could provide added safety in the biological production of drugs or fuels, where microbes can be kept separate from their surroundings. But the modified bacteria could also permit controlled release into the human body or the environment. Containment might no longer be of the physical kind, says Tom Ellis, a synthetic biologist at Imperial College London who was not involved in the research.
The new technique originated in the laboratory of George Church, a geneticist at Harvard Medical School. Two years ago, Church and his team (which included Isaacs) reported the synthesis of a strain of Escherichia coli that had a reprogrammed genetic code3. Instead of recognizing a particular DNA triplet known as the amber stop codon as an order to terminate protein synthesis, the recoded bacterium read the same instruction as a directive to incorporate a new kind of amino acid into its proteins.
Church and Isaacs have independently made this engineered microbe reliant on unnatural amino acids. The Isaacs team used genomic sequencing to identify sites in essential bacterial proteins where the microbes could incorporate synthetic amino acids without affecting overall function, whereas Churchs group started with the protein structures and added elements to help integrate and accommodate the artificial amino acids.
This is really the culmination of a decade of work, says Church.
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GM microbes created that cant escape the lab
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Mary Lyon obituary
Posted: at 4:47 am
Mary Lyon's research advanced the understanding of X-linked inherited diseases such as haemophilia. Photograph: Adrian Ford
Mary Lyon, who has died aged 89, was one of the foremost geneticists of the 20th century. She used the mouse as a powerful genetic tool to gain fundamental and profound insights into mammalian genetics and the genetic bases of disease.
Perhaps her greatest achievement was to propose in 1961 the theory of X chromosome inactivation, in which she suggested that one of the two X chromosomes in the cells of female mammals is randomly inactivated during early development. This process is now sometimes referred to as Lyonisation, and the theory has had a fundamental impact on research into mammalian genetics and human medical genetics.
Marys work greatly advanced the understanding of X-linked inherited diseases, including Duchenne muscular dystrophy and haemophilia, and explained why women who are carriers of these diseases can display symptoms. It was an early example of an epigenetic phenomenon, whereby changes in the expression of genes are caused not by alterations in the DNA itself but by non-genetic factors. The theory of X chromosome inactivation provided a compelling insight into the mechanisms of genetic regulation and Marys discovery still resonates with contemporary research into how genes are regulated as we develop and grow.
Born in Norwich, to Louise (nee Kirby), a schoolteacher, and Clifford Lyon, a civil servant working for the Inland Revenue, Mary was the eldest of three children. Because of her fathers job, the family moved around the country, to Yorkshire, then Birmingham, and, at the outbreak of the second world war, to Woking, Surrey. It was the prize that Mary won for an essay competition at King Edward VI grammar school in Birmingham, a set of books on wild flowers, birds and trees, that first sparked her interest in biology.
In 1943, she went on to read zoology, physiology and biochemistry at Girton College, Cambridge. Zoology was her main subject, but she became interested in the concept that genes underlie all embryological development, a relatively new idea at the time. Before 1948 women were not official members of the university, so Mary graduated in 1946 with a titular degree.
She began a PhD in genetics with the eminent geneticist and statistician Sir Ronald Fisher at Cambridge, but completed her research under the supervision of Douglas Falconer in Edinburgh, where she had access to better facilities. On completion of her PhD in 1950, she was offered a position in the group of Toby Carter at Edinburgh to conduct research into the genetic hazards of radiation.
In 1954, Carters group and Mary moved to the Medical Research Council Radiobiological Research Unit at Harwell, Oxfordshire. Reflecting wider concerns about the need to understand the mechanisms of radiation damage in the atomic era, a genetics division was established at MRC Harwell under the leadership of Carter, to assess genetic risks based on the incidence and types of genetic damage caused by radiation.Mary and her colleagues made significant contributions to our understanding of mutagenesis mechanisms. However, given Marys fascination with the genetic variants and anomalies that mutagenesis can produce, it seems inevitable now that she would establish an interest in the mouse mutants arising from these radiation studies.
It was her curiosity and fascination with the humble mouse and the extraordinary collection of mouse variants generated at Harwell that led her to the many discoveries that transformed our understanding of mammalian genetics. She recognised the advantages to biomedical science of cryopreservation of mouse mutants and strains; and the archive of frozen mouse embryos at Harwell, which provides such an important repository for biomedical science worldwide, is testament to her foresight.
Mary took over the stewardship of the genetics division from Carter in 1962. She stepped down in the mid-1980s, and officially retired in 1990, but continued to come to the unit several times a week to do academic work and to attend scientific lectures right up to 2012.
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