Page 3,356«..1020..3,3553,3563,3573,358..3,3703,380..»

Category Archives: Transhuman News

DNA testing gets man off death row after 28 years

Posted: September 2, 2014 at 10:43 pm

DEMETRIUS FREEMAN | Times

54 year old Paul Hildwin, left, sign paperwork with his attorneys associated with the Innocents Project, Trail Attorney Lyann Goudie, middle, and Attorney Marie Parmer, right, during his pretrial at the Hernando County Courthouse in Brooksville on Tuesday morning September 2, 2014. Paul Hildwin was sentenced to death in 1986 for the killing of 42-year-old Vrronzetti Cox, who he testified had picked him up while he was hitchhiking. Hildwin has been on death row for 28 years when the Florida Supreme Court overturned the conviction and sentencing in June when DNA testing revealed that the samples belonged to William Haverty, Cox's boyfriend and also a potential suspect. Hildwin has New lawyers associated with the Innocents Project, Trail Attorney Lyann Goudie and Attorney Marie Parmer. Hildwin waived his right to a speedy trail, which means he will go to trial on Sept. 29.

DEMETRIUS FREEMAN | Times

Paul Hildwin, 54, left, signs paperwork with his attorneys, Lyann Goudie, center, and Marie Parmer, who are associated with the Innocence Project, during his pretrial hearing Tuesday morning at the Hernando County Courthouse in Brooksville. Hildwin was sentenced to death in the 1985 Hernando County killing of 42-year-old Vronzettie Cox, who he testified had picked him up while he was hitchhiking. Hildwin had been on death row for 28 years when the Florida Supreme Court overturned the conviction and sentencing in June after DNA testing revealed that evidence samples belonged to William Haverty, Cox's boyfriend. The date of his retrial had been set for Sept. 29 after Hildwin refused last month to waive his right to a speedy trial. On Tuesday, he reversed his position. His new trial date will be set later.

DNA testing gets man off death row after 28 years 09/02/14 [Last modified: Tuesday, September 2, 2014 10:11pm]

Originally posted here:
DNA testing gets man off death row after 28 years

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on DNA testing gets man off death row after 28 years

Judge overturns murder-rape convictions for 2 who served 30 years

Posted: at 10:43 pm

LUMBERTON, N.C. - A North Carolina judge overturned the convictions Tuesday of two men who have served 30 years in prison for the rape and murder of an 11-year-old girl after another man's DNA was recently discovered on evidence in the case.

Superior Court Judge Douglass Sasser ordered the immediate release of Henry McCollum, 50, and Leon Brown, 46. The half brothers were convicted in the 1983 slaying of Sabrina Buie in Robeson County.

Play Video

Kevin Martin was wrongfully convicted of rape and murder in 1982. Thanks to DNA research, he was awarded a certificate of innocence from a D.C. j...

Lawyers for the men petitioned for their release after DNA evidence from a cigarette butt recovered at the crime scene pointed to another man. That man, who lived close to the soybean field where the dead girl's body was found, is already serving a life sentence for a similar rape and murder that happened less than a month later.

Family members of McCollum and Brown were in the packed courtroom as the judge announced his decision.

"We waited years and years," said James McCollum, Henry's father. "We kept the faith."

Sasser ruled after a day-long evidence hearing during which Sharon Stellato, the associate director North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission, testified about three interviews she had over the summer with the 74-year-old inmate now suspected of killing Buie. The Associated Press does not generally disclose the names of criminal suspects unless they are charged.

According to Stellato, the inmate said at first he didn't know Buie. But in later interviews, the man said the girl would come to his house and buy cigarettes for him, Stellato said.

The man also told them he saw the girl the night she went missing and gave her a coat and hat because it was raining, Stellato said. He told the commission that's why his DNA may have been at the scene.

View post:
Judge overturns murder-rape convictions for 2 who served 30 years

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on Judge overturns murder-rape convictions for 2 who served 30 years

DNA Evidence Frees 2 Men Imprisoned for 30 Years

Posted: at 10:43 pm

Henry McCollum (left) with his lawyer Tuesday. A judge overturned his and his half brother Leon Brown's convictions.

Image: Chuck Liddy/Raleigh News & Observer/MCT via Getty Images

By The Associated Press2014-09-02 23:04:57 UTC

LUMBERTON, N.C. A North Carolina judge overturned the convictions Tuesday of two men who have served 30 years in prison for the rape and murder of an 11-year-old girl after another man's DNA was recently discovered on evidence in the case.

Superior Court Judge Douglass Sasser ordered the immediate release of Henry McCollum, 50, and Leon Brown, 46. The half brothers were convicted in the 1983 slaying of Sabrina Buie in Robeson County. Both are mentally disabled.

Lawyers for the men petitioned for their release after DNA evidence from a cigarette butt recovered at the crime scene pointed to another man. That man, who lived close to the soybean field where the dead girl's body was found, is already serving a life sentence for a similar rape and murder that happened less than a month later.

Family members for the men gasped and some sobbed as the judge announced his decision to the packed courtroom. Brown smiled and shook a defense lawyer's hand and McCollum looked spent and relieved.

"We waited years and years," said James McCollum, Henry's father. "We kept the faith."

It was not immediately clear how soon the men will walk free. Procedure requires that they return to the prisons where they have been serving time before they can be processed out.

McCollum has been housed for decades on North Carolina's death row at Central Prison in Raleigh. Brown is assigned to Maury Correctional Institution, a high security prison in Greene County.

See more here:
DNA Evidence Frees 2 Men Imprisoned for 30 Years

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on DNA Evidence Frees 2 Men Imprisoned for 30 Years

Full of Excuses ~ I See You Cry ~ The Human Genome – Video

Posted: at 10:42 pm


Full of Excuses ~ I See You Cry ~ The Human Genome
http://www.fullofexcuses.ca.

By: FOETVROCKS

Continued here:
Full of Excuses ~ I See You Cry ~ The Human Genome - Video

Posted in Genome | Comments Off on Full of Excuses ~ I See You Cry ~ The Human Genome – Video

Tiny Genetic Differences between Humans and Other Primates Pervade the Genome

Posted: at 10:42 pm

See Inside

Genome comparisons reveal the DNA that distinguishes Homo sapiens from its kin

In 1871 Charles Darwin surmised that humans were evolutionarily closer to the African apes than to any other species alive. The recent sequencing of the gorilla, chimpanzee and bonobo genomes confirms that supposition and provides a clearer view of how we are connected: chimps and bonobos in particular take pride of place as our nearest living relatives, sharing approximately 99 percent of our DNA, with gorillas trailing at 98 percent.

Yet that tiny portion of unshared DNA makes a world of difference: it gives us, for instance, our bipedal stance and the ability to plan missions to Mars. Scientists do not yet know how most of the DNA that is uniquely ours affects gene function. But they can conduct whole-genome analyseswith intriguing results. For example, comparing the 33 percent of our genome that codes for proteins with our relatives' genomes reveals that although the sum total of our genetic differences is small, the individual differences pervade the genome, affecting each of our chromosomes in numerous ways.

More in this article: A Monkey's Blueprint

This article was originally published with the title "The 1 Percent Difference."

2014 Scientific American, a Division of Nature America, Inc.

View Mobile Site All Rights Reserved.

Secrets of the Universe: Past, Present, Future

View original post here:
Tiny Genetic Differences between Humans and Other Primates Pervade the Genome

Posted in Genome | Comments Off on Tiny Genetic Differences between Humans and Other Primates Pervade the Genome

On the Horns of the GMO Dilemma

Posted: at 10:42 pm

Can genome-editing technology revive the idea of genetically modified livestock?

Four years ago, Scott Fahrenkrug saw an ABC News segment about the dehorning of dairy cows, a painful procedure that makes the animals safer to handle. The shaky undercover video showed a black-and-white Holstein heifer moaning and bucking as a farmhand burned off its horns with a hot iron.

Fahrenkrug, a molecular geneticist then at the University of Minnesota, thought he had a way to solve the problem. He could create cows without horns. He could save farmers money. And by eliminating the dairy industrys most unpleasant secret, he might even score a public relations success for genetic engineering.

The technology Fahrenkrug believes could do all this is called genome editing (see Genome Surgery and Genome Editing). A fast, precise new way of altering DNA, its been sweeping through biotechnology labs. Researchers have used it to change the genes of mice, zebrafish, and monkeys, and it is being tested as way to treat human diseases like HIV (see Can Gene Therapy Cure HIV?).

With livestock, gene editing offers some extraordinary possibilities. At his startup, Recombinetics, located in St. Paul, Minnesota, Fahrenkrug thinks he can create blue-ribbon dairy bulls possessing traits not normally found in those breeds but present in other cattle, such as lack of horns or resistance to particular diseases. Such molecular breeding, he says, would achieve the same effects as nature might, only much faster. In short, an animal could be edited to have the very best genes its species can offer.

That could upend the global livestock industry. Companies could patent these animals just as they do genetically modified soybeans or corn. Entrepreneurs are also ready to challenge the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which has never approved a GMO food animal. They say gene editing shouldnt be regulated if its used to merely swap around traits within a species. Were talking about genes that already exist in a species we already eat, says Fahrenkrug.

The use of the technology remains experimental and far from the food chain. But some large breeding companies are starting to invest. There may be an opportunity for a different public acceptance dialogue and different regulations, says Jonathan Lightner, R&D chief of the U.K. company Genus, which is the worlds largest breeder of pigs and cattle and has paid for some of Recombinetics laboratory research. This isnt a glowing fish. Its a cow that doesnt have to have its horns cut off.

GMO Bust

To date, GMO food animals have been a complete bust. After the first mice genetically engineered with viral DNA appeared in the 1970s, a parade of other modified animals followed, including sheep that grow extra wool thanks to a mouse gene, goats whose udders made spider silk, and salmon that mature twice as quickly as normal. But such transgenicsanimals incorporating genes from other speciesmostly never made it off experimental farms.

Opponents of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) gathered millions of signatures to stop frankenfoods, and the FDA has held off approving such animals as food. AquaBounty Technologies, the company that made the fast-growing transgenic salmon, has spent 18 years and $70 million trying to get the fish cleared. Two years ago, the University of Guelph, in Ontario, euthanized its herd of enviropigs, engineered with an E. coli gene so they pooped less phosphorus, after giving up hope of convincing regulators.

Read more from the original source:
On the Horns of the GMO Dilemma

Posted in Genome | Comments Off on On the Horns of the GMO Dilemma

Throwing a loop to silence gene expression

Posted: at 10:42 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

2-Sep-2014

Contact: Dr. Sibylle Kohlstdt s.kohlstaedt@dkfz.de German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ)

All human cells contain essentially the same DNA sequence their genetic information. How is it possible that shapes and functions of cells in the different parts of the body are so different? While every cell's DNA contains the same construction master plan, an additional regulatory layer exists that determines which of the many possible DNA programs are active. This mechanism involves modifications of genome-bound histone proteins or the DNA itself with small chemical groups (e.g. methylation). It acts on top of the genetic information and is thus called 'epi'-genetic from the corresponding Greek word that means 'above' or 'attached to'.

"Epigenetics has fundamentally changed our view on how the genetic information is used", says Dr. Karsten Rippe from the German Cancer Research Center, who is studying this process with his team. "Epigenetic modifications can be rapidly set or removed to reversibly change cell function. At the same time, epigenetic patterns can be stably inherited through cell division and possibly also to the next generation."

It turns out that deciphering the cell's 'epigenetic code' is a challenging task: Hundreds of proteins in the cell are linked in large networks to 'write', 'erase' or 'read' about 140 different chemical modifications of histone proteins and DNA that have been identified so far. Understanding how epigenetic regulation operates for a specific part of the genome thus requires an integrative approach that considers the connections between different factors. Accordingly, the researchers, together with their colleagues from the DKFZ and the LMU Munich, conducted a comprehensive analysis of a prototypic epigenetic network. They studied how certain DNA sequences were silenced by histone and DNA methylation that would make the genome instable if active and would thus favor cancer development.

Based on maps of epigenetic signals and interactions of proteins with the genome, they developed a mathematical model for epigenetic silencing. "The silencing mechanism we found works much like throwing a loop with a lasso to catch something", says Katharina Mller-Ott, the first author of the study: "Several factors bind the silencing enzyme stably to certain sites in the genome. Because the DNA randomly moves around and forms transient loops, the enzyme hits other regions in the genome nearby, which then become modified and are switched off."

By virtue of their quantitative description of this process, the researchers were able to predict how the silencing network would react in response to perturbations like changes of the abundance of proteins or the activity of the enzymes involved. The scientists in the groups of Karsten Rippe and Thomas Hfer at the DKFZ are now continuing to further develop and apply their model to deregulated epigenetic signaling in leukemia. By evaluating genome-wide maps of epigenetic signals with mathematical models they are identifying tumor-specific changes in cell samples from patients with blood cancer. Furthermore, they are dissecting how epigenetic signals can be used to predict therapy response and how drugs affect the epigenetic program.

###

The project was supported by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).

View post:
Throwing a loop to silence gene expression

Posted in Genome | Comments Off on Throwing a loop to silence gene expression

Solar Energy Revolution: A Massive Opportunity

Posted: at 10:42 pm

My friend Ray Kurzweil projects the U.S. will meet 100 percent of its electrical energy needs from solar in 20 years. Elon Musk is a bit more conservative, pegging it at 50 percent in that timeframe. While the growth of solar may seem slow to some, its fair to say its in the midst of its deceptive phase, on the road to disruption. For example, a 30 percent increase in solar energy production per year, means 1 percent today grows to 1.3 percent in 3 years. It also means that in 20 years (7 doublings), well see a 128-fold increase. Either way, if Ray and Elon are even close, there is a trillion dollars up for grabs (as well as the future of our planet), and the future is bright. Lets take a closer look at the converging technologies driving this futureThe cost of solar panels is dropping exponentially.The first and most important technological change is the falling cost per watt of silicon photovoltaic cells over the past few decades. Check out the plummeting cost from $76 in 1977, to less than $0.36 today.

The International Energy Agency predicts that we will produce 662 GigaWatts of solar energy by 2035 following a $1.3 trillion investment in this area, but frankly this estimate is highly conservative. The second technology at play is satellite-Earth imaging, which enables companies like solar City to make rapid and accurate decisions on solar panel installations. These days, an installer can check out your rooftop on Google Earth and determine in minutes if you are a good candidate. Super-simple.Energy Storage Mechanisms Are Improving RapidlyThe third key technology transforming our energy economy is battery storage. The ability to take solar energy captured during the day, and time-shift it into the night. Here to the change has been very significant, with a 50%+ reduction over the past four years, and an additional 50%+ reduction by 2020.

In addition to this ongoing cost reduction, were about to see a massive increase in battery production. Teslas Gigafactory alone will produce 35 Gigawatts worth of the batteries by 2020, more than 2013s total global battery production capacity.

Electric Vehicles (EVs)Teslas Gigafactory also supports the production of 500,000 electric vehicles per year. The rapid rise (see below) of Electric Vehicle (EV) production will play a critical role as well.

6 Ds: Tying It All Together The convergence of solar, batteries and EVs will democratize energy production and offer billions of people access to cheap, carbon-neutral energy. Looking at solar energy thru my 6 Ds paradigm of exponential technologies may offer some added insights:

Read the rest here:
Solar Energy Revolution: A Massive Opportunity

Posted in Human Longevity | Comments Off on Solar Energy Revolution: A Massive Opportunity

Extinctions during human era worse than thought

Posted: at 10:42 pm

9 hours ago A new and more precise recalculation of the normal background extinction rate what it would be without the human presence shows the rate to be lower, meaning that the rate of extinction in the human era is as much as 10 times worse than had been thought. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

It's hard to comprehend how bad the current rate of species extinction around the world has become without knowing what it was before people came along. The newest estimate is that the pre-human rate was 10 times lower than scientists had thought, which means that the current level is 10 times worse.

Extinctions are about 1,000 times more frequent now than in the 60 million years before people came along. The explanation from lead author Jurriaan de Vos, a Brown University postdoctoral researcher, senior author Stuart Pimm, a Duke University professor, and their team appears online in the journal Conservation Biology.

"This reinforces the urgency to conserve what is left and to try to reduce our impacts," said de Vos, who began the work while at the University of Zurich. "It was very, very different before humans entered the scene."

In absolute, albeit rough, terms the paper calculates a "normal background rate" of extinction of 0.1 extinctions per million species per year. That revises the figure of 1 extinction per million species per year that Pimm estimated in prior work in the 1990s. By contrast, the current extinction rate is more on the order of 100 extinctions per million species per year.

Orders of magnitude, rather than precise numbers are about the best any method can do for a global extinction rate, de Vos said. "That's just being honest about the uncertainty there is in these type of analyses."

From Fossils to Genetics

The new estimate improves markedly on prior ones mostly because it goes beyond the fossil record. Fossils are helpful sources of information, but their shortcomings include disproportionate representation of hard-bodied sea animals and the problem that they often only allow identification of the animal or plant's genus, but not its exact species.

What the fossils do show clearly is that apart from a few cataclysms over geological periodssuch as the one that eliminated the dinosaursbiodiversity has slowly increased.

The new study next examined evidence from the evolutionary family treesphylogeniesof numerous plant and animal species. Phylogenies, constructed by studying DNA, trace how groups of species have changed over time, adding new genetic lineages and losing unsuccessful ones. They provide rich details of how species have diversified over time.

View original post here:
Extinctions during human era worse than thought

Posted in Human Longevity | Comments Off on Extinctions during human era worse than thought

Best Facial Cream Moisturizer for Dry Skin, Eczema, Acne Treatment – Video

Posted: at 10:42 pm


Best Facial Cream Moisturizer for Dry Skin, Eczema, Acne Treatment
http://bit.ly/1lvUyCZ This is my testimonial about using raw shea butter as my facial cream moisturizer for acne treatment. I have used numerous products over the years in search of acne solution....

By: Eternal Beauty

Visit link:
Best Facial Cream Moisturizer for Dry Skin, Eczema, Acne Treatment - Video

Posted in Eczema | Comments Off on Best Facial Cream Moisturizer for Dry Skin, Eczema, Acne Treatment – Video

Page 3,356«..1020..3,3553,3563,3573,358..3,3703,380..»