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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Political Blotter: Former challenger praises Brown for DNA law

Posted: September 29, 2014 at 4:44 am

This is a sampling from Bay Area News Group's Political Blotter blog. Read more and post comments at http://www.ibabuzz.com/politics.

Sept. 23

Somebody note the date and time: Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, the conservative former gubernatorial candidate who spent much of the spring trashing Gov. Jerry Brown, just said something nice about ... Gov. Jerry Brown.

Brown on Friday signed Donnelly's AB 1697, the DNA Protection Act, which prohibits using the state's criminal-justice DNA database from being used as a source of material for testing, research or experiments by any person, agency or entity seeking to find a causal link between genetics and behavior or health.

"I would like to thank Governor Brown for standing with me once again to defend the civil liberties of all Californians," Donnelly, R-Twin Peaks, said in a news release. "California will continue to use DNA samples for forensics, missing persons, collecting evidence or other legal means. With AB1697 now law, we have prevented government from abusing our privacy. We have protected the civil rights of all Californians from this high tech tyranny."

Donnelly said the new law is critical to protecting those who've been arrested from the government's genetic snooping.

"Currently, the government of California has hoarded over 1.8 million DNA samples," he said. "As the cost of DNA sequencing decreases and the ability to process large amounts of data increases, the state has the unprecedented ability to link genetics with criminal activity. While this may sound like the movie 'Minority Report,' it is no longer science fiction. Thanks to AB1697 becoming law, the DNA of every Californian will be safe from being violated by an ever-intrusive government."

The bill certainly wasn't controversial. The Assembly passed it 78-0, and the state Senate passed it 33-0.

Sept. 24

A national marijuana advocacy group is filing papers with the secretary of state's office Wednesday to form a committee in support of a 2016 ballot measure for recreational legalization.

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Political Blotter: Former challenger praises Brown for DNA law

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DNA Is A Test For Koh Tao Case

Posted: at 4:44 am

KOH TAO: 200 samples have brought cops no closer to killers, writes Wassayos Ngamkham.

As the number of DNA tests on suspects in the murder of two British tourists on Koh Tao exceeds 200, doubts have been raised as to whether the tests are leading investigators any closer to the killers.

On Thursday, investigators submitted a report to deputy police chief Pol Gen Somyot Pumpanmuang saying 209 DNA samples from 179 people, and other material evidence, had been collected for examination. The results are expected today.

However, forensic experts and Royal Thai Police adviser Jarumporn Suramanee said DNA tests alone could not lead to a solution.

He said the tests are just a way to solve the missing links of a murder case.

"It [DNA examination] is just a piece of the jigsaw leading to the murderer," said Pol Gen Jarumporn.

Police investigators can only see the whole picture of the crime if they piece together all the witness accounts, evidence and the environment where the killing took place.

It is a task that requires keen observation and patience, he said.

In his view, however, DNA tests of more than 200 samples were "too many", particularly when taking the cost of lab tests into account.

Authorities have spent more than 860,000 baht on the DNA tests, but the results have yet to lead to the killer.

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DNA tests will attempt to identify body of car crash victim

Posted: at 4:44 am

DNA tests are to be carried out to positively identify a body found in a car which burst into flames after crashing into a tree in Co Mayo in the early hours of yesterday morning.

Firemen from Westport and Castlebar fought the blaze which followed the single vehicle impact near Fahy National School on the Castlebar to Newport (R311) road around 1.30 am.

The car was well ablaze by the time fire crews arrived and there was nothing they could do to save the occupant. The vehicle was reduced to a charred shell in the inferno.

There is no indication from gardai as to whether the body recovered was that of a male or female. The remains were taken to Mayo General Hospital in Castlebar where a post mortem was being arranged today.

A Garda spokesman in Westport said DNA tests will be required to positively identify the victim.

Mayo chief fire officer, Seamus Murphy described the incident as most unusual and said the car involved had been burnt beyond all recognition.

Gardai at Westport (098-25555) are appealing for witnesses.

The Co Mayo crash was one of several over the weekend bringing to 141 the number of people killed on the Republics roads so far this year. The number is one more than the equivalent period last year.

Also yesterday morning a 27-year-old man lost his life when he was struck by a truck while walking along the hard shoulder of the Ennis Road in Limerick at about 6.45 am. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The driver of the truck was not injured.

Meanwhile the 22 month-old-boy who died when he was struck by a van while playing in the garden of his home at Crieve Glebe, Letterkenny on Friday evening at around 6.45pm has been named as Joshua Coyle.

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Fighting diseases via genome editing

Posted: at 4:43 am

The human body is pretty great, but it could use a few tweaks from time to time.

Thats the philosophy of a group of scientists developing a way to edit genomes, a cutting-edge field that could be the answer to many significant diseases and help researchers better understand the human body.

Thanks to these discoveries, scientists can now replace specific parts of the DNA of cells, making a disease weaker or a person less susceptible to the disease, for example. In the case of HIV, which is unable to infect people without a specific protein, genome editing can modify the specific part of the genome so the person no longer produces the protein and the person can no longer be infected with HIV.

We take out cells, correct it ... and put the cell back into the person, said Feng Zhang, a researcher at the Broad Institute in Cambridge. Its a biotechnology that allows us to go into the genome, the DNA of a cell, and make very exact changes within the DNA.

It is process that can take weeks, requiring the removal of in the case of HIV all of the blood cells so the change can be made to the cells.

Zhang said sickle cell anemia is another disease that could be tackled by genome editing, but any virus including Ebola that has a mutation that can be exploited at the genetic level could be addressed by the process.

He is credited with developing CRISPR, a new method of genome editing that his colleagues say made the practice dramatically more widespread.

Any lab with any biological expertise can do it, said Charles Gersbach of Duke University, who is studying genome editing for genetic diseases.

By breaking the DNA in a specific place, the cells self-repair mechanism is triggered, but instead of reforming the same DNA sequence, CRISPR provides a new template.

When you make a cut in the region you want to fix, you can fool the cell into putting in the right information, Zhang said.

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Human genome was shaped by an evolutionary arms race with itself

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15 hours ago

New findings by scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, suggest that an evolutionary arms race between rival elements within the genomes of primates drove the evolution of complex regulatory networks that orchestrate the activity of genes in every cell of our bodies.

The arms race is between mobile DNA sequences known as "retrotransposons" (a.k.a. "jumping genes") and the genes that have evolved to control them. The UC Santa Cruz researchers have, for the first time, identified genes in humans that make repressor proteins to shut down specific jumping genes. The researchers also traced the rapid evolution of the repressor genes in the primate lineage.

Their findings, published September 28 in Nature, show that over evolutionary time, primate genomes have undergone repeated episodes in which mutations in jumping genes allowed them to escape repression, which drove the evolution of new repressor genes, and so on. Furthermore, their findings suggest that repressor genes that originally evolved to shut down jumping genes have since come to play other regulatory roles in the genome.

"We have basically the same 20,000 protein-coding genes as a frog, yet our genome is much more complicated, with more layers of gene regulation. This study helps explain how that came about," said Sofie Salama, a research associate at the UC Santa Cruz Genomics Institute who led the study.

Retrotransposons are thought to be remnants of ancient viruses that infected early animals and inserted their genes into the genome long before humans evolved. Now they can only replicate themselves within the genome. Depending on where a new copy gets inserted into the genome, a jumping event can disrupt normal genes and cause disease. Often the effect is neutral, simply adding to the overall size of the genome. Very rarely the effect might be advantageous, because the added DNA can itself be a source of new regulatory elements that enhance gene expression. But the high probability of deleterious effects means natural selection favors the evolution of mechanisms to prevent jumping events.

Scientists estimate that jumping genes or "transposable elements" account for at least 50 percent of the human genome, and retrotransposons are by far the most common type.

"There have been successive waves of retrotransposon activity in primate evolution, when a transposable element changed to become expressed and replicated itself throughout the genome until something turned it off," Salama said. "We've discovered a major mechanism by which the genome is able to shut down these mobile DNA elements."

The repressors identified in the new study belong to a large family of proteins known as "KRAB zinc finger proteins." These are DNA-binding proteins that repress gene activity, and they constitute the largest family of gene-regulating proteins in mammals. The human genome has over 400 genes for KRAB zinc finger proteins, and about 170 of them have emerged since primates diverged from other mammals.

According to Salama, her team's findings support the idea that expansion of this family of repressor genes occurred in response to waves of retrotransposon activity. Because repression of a jumping gene also affects genes located near it on the chromosome, the researchers suspect that these repressors have been co-opted for other gene-regulatory functions, and that those other functions have persisted and evolved long after the jumping genes the repressors originally turned off have degraded due to the accumulation of random mutations.

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Genome editing opens possibilities for genetically modified livestock

Posted: at 4:43 am

Scientists said they believe they are on the cusp of developing new strains of livestock using DNA technology that may improve meat and milk production while alleviating consumer fears, according to an MIT Technology Review article published in September.

A June poll by ABC News found that barely more than a third of the public believes that genetically modified foods are safe to eat, yet a consensus among scientists and industry professionals alike said the exact opposite.

While there is controversy surrounding genetically modified organisms, most concerns center around genetically modified plants, developed by splicing specific DNA from one plant species into another. Scientists are developing a new technology called genome editing they believe will revitalize the concept of genetically modified livestock since the process involves genes in animals that are currently in the food supply.

Jennifer Bormann, associate professor of animal breeding and genetics, said using this technology can improve cattle quality without changing the quality of meat or milk consumers get from the animal.

When changing one specific gene, all other genes are unaffected, Bormann said. It would be possible to change a gene that affects meat or milk. If, for example, you wanted to make the meat more tender, you might change a gene that has been proven to make meat tender.

She also said the genome editing technology doesnt create any food safety concerns because, we have been doing it for a long time in plants, and the same product could be created without the use of this technology.

We could do the same thing with traditional breeding by crossing and backcrossing repeatedly to introgress the gene of interest, Bormann said. It would just take many generations of crossing and many years.

Karen Batra, director of food and agriculture communications for the Biotechnology Industry Organization, said genetic engineering is the deliberate modification of the animals genome using techniques of modern biotechnology.

Many might be surprised to know that genetically engineered animals are just like normal cows, pigs, goats and fish only better, Batra said. They all contain a specific gene that makes them better than their conventional counterparts.

Batra also said that by incorporating genes from other organisms in a process called transgenesis, genetically engineered animals are being developed to address five broad goals. The goals are to advance human health, enhance food production and quality, mitigate environmental impact, optimize animal welfare and improve industrial products.

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What Is The Definition Of Contact eczema – Medical Dictionary Free Online – Video

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What Is The Definition Of Contact eczema - Medical Dictionary Free Online
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Essential Oils for Babies and Children – Eczema – Video

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Essential Oils for Babies and Children - Eczema
Learn about how I treated my baby #39;s eczema with natural ingredients and essential oils.

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What Is The Definition Of Contact eczema, allergic – Medical Dictionary Free Online – Video

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What Is The Definition Of Contact eczema, allergic - Medical Dictionary Free Online
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Eyelid Psoriasis Treatment – Video

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Eyelid Psoriasis Treatment
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