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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Ancestry.com DNA results – Video

Posted: April 25, 2014 at 1:44 pm


Ancestry.com DNA results
About a month ago I took an ancestry.com dna test. Here are my results and opinion about the experience.

By: Natalie Russell

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Ancestry.com DNA results - Video

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HTC Droid DNA OTA 4.4.2 kitkat with sense 5.5 update – Video

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HTC Droid DNA OTA 4.4.2 kitkat with sense 5.5 update
a look at the official 4.4.2 kitkat firmware from htc for the dna released today on the 24th. it has sense 5.5 with zoe and a bunch of other upgrades.

By: Cameron Brown

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HTC Droid DNA OTA 4.4.2 kitkat with sense 5.5 update - Video

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DID I HAVE A SON 26 YEARS AGO…I NEED THE DNA TRUTH! – Video

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DID I HAVE A SON 26 YEARS AGO...I NEED THE DNA TRUTH!
At the age of 34, Nicora wants to know if Carl is her biological father. She never felt fully accepted by him or his family. When Nicora became ill with Sickle Cell Anemia and needed blood,...

By: Trisha Goddard

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DID I HAVE A SON 26 YEARS AGO...I NEED THE DNA TRUTH! - Video

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Droid DNA Gets KitKat, Google Accidentally Sells More Glass? BBQLinux Android Dev Guide Available – Video

Posted: at 1:44 pm


Droid DNA Gets KitKat, Google Accidentally Sells More Glass? BBQLinux Android Dev Guide Available
Android KitKat for the Verizon Droid DNA is being rolled out! That and much more news is covered by Jordan, as he reviews all the important stories from this week. Included in this week #39;s news...

By: xdadevelopers

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Droid DNA Gets KitKat, Google Accidentally Sells More Glass? BBQLinux Android Dev Guide Available - Video

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Bloody souvenir not from decapitated French king DNA

Posted: at 1:44 pm

The DNA in the calabash belonged to a single person whose genetic signature, from northern Italy, was not 'compatible' with King Louis XVI's known, more central-European ancestry

PARIS, France Two centuries after the French people beheaded King Louis XVI and dipped their handkerchiefs in his blood, DNA analysis has thrown new doubt on the authenticity of one such rag kept as a morbid souvenir.

The contents of an ornately-decorated gourd alleged to hold traces of the king's dried blood has long been the subject of scientific disagreement, with tests throwing up contradictory results.

On Thursday, April 24, a team from Europe and the United States said they had sequenced the full genome of the DNA in the squash, and found it was unlikely to be from someone tall or blue-eyed both features ascribed to the 18th century monarch.

"The results of these analyses do not support the royal identity of the sequenced genome," the authors concluded in a study in the journal Nature Scientific Reports.

Researchers have been trying for years to verify a claim imprinted on the calabash that: "On January 21, Maximilien Bourdaloue dipped his handkerchief in the blood of Louis XVI after his decapitation" in Paris in 1793.

He is then said to have placed the fabric in the dried, hollow gourd and had it embellished with portraits of revolutionary heroes.

In 2010, a study said DNA analysis of blood traces found inside the ornate vegetable revealed a match for someone of Louis' description, including his blue eyes.

One of the authors of that paper, Carles Lalueza-Fox of the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona, also participated in the latest study, which contradicts the blue-eyed finding.

He told Agence France-Presse (AFP) the latest DNA analysis was much more complete: "we have now the whole genome of the person (in) the gourd."

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Pronounce Medical Words Genome – Video

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Pronounce Medical Words Genome
This video shows you how to say Genome. How would you pronounce Genome?

By: Medical 101

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Pronounce Medical Words Genome - Video

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What are the benefits to society of the Human Genome Project? – Video

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What are the benefits to society of the Human Genome Project?
Excerpts from New Wedding Planet #39;s Course Video Tutorial: #39;Wedding Entrepreneurship II #39; Learn how to identify the wedding coordinator duties demanded by different client groups in your local...

By: Society 6th

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What are the benefits to society of the Human Genome Project? - Video

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Genome Of Golden Eagle Could Lead To More Effective Conservation Strategies

Posted: at 1:44 pm

April 25, 2014

Image Caption: This is a golden eagle. Credit: Todd Katzner

Purdue University

Purdue and West Virginia University researchers are the first to sequence the genome of the golden eagle, providing a birds-eye view of eagle features that could lead to more effective conservation strategies.

Their study calls into question long-held assumptions about golden eagle vision, indicating that the raptors may not be as sensitive to ultraviolet light as previously thought. The genome also suggests that golden eagles could have a sharper sense of smell than researchers realized.

Additionally, the genome provides thousands of genetic markers that will help researchers track populations and monitor eagle mortality.

Having the golden eagle genome in hand could directly affect the way we make conservation and management decisions, said Jacqueline Doyle, postdoctoral research associate and first author of the paper.

Though it is one of the most widespread avian species, the golden eagle is threatened throughout much of its range by poaching, shrinking habitats and fatal collisions with wind turbines. An estimated 67 golden eagles are killed annually at a single wind farm the Altamont Pass Wind Resource Area in central California a heavy toll on a species that reproduces slowly and can live up to 30 years, said J. Andrew DeWoody, professor of genetics and senior author of the study.

One recently proposed method of reducing turbine-related eagle deaths was to coat wind turbines with ultraviolet-reflective paint, thereby heightening their visibility to eagles, which were thought to be sensitive to ultraviolet light. But the golden eagle genome suggests that eagle vision is rooted in the violet spectrum like human sight rather than the ultraviolet.

We find little genomic evidence that golden eagles are sensitive to ultraviolet light, Doyle said. Painting wind turbines with ultraviolet-reflective paint is probably not going to prevent eagles from colliding with turbines.

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Genome Of Golden Eagle Could Lead To More Effective Conservation Strategies

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Tsetse fly genome reveals weaknesses: International 10-year project unravels biology of disease-causing fly

Posted: at 1:43 pm

Mining the genome of the disease-transmitting tsetse fly, researchers have revealed the genetic adaptions that allow it to have such unique biology and transmit disease to both humans and animals.

The tsetse fly spreads the parasitic diseases human African trypanosomiasis, known as sleeping sickness, and Nagana that infect humans and animals respectively. Throughout sub-Saharan Africa, 70 million people are currently at risk of deadly infection. Human African trypanosomiasis is on the World Health Organization's (WHO) list of neglected tropical diseases and since 2013 has become a target for eradication. Understanding the tsetse fly and interfering with its ability to transmit the disease is an essential arm of the campaign.

This disease-spreading fly has developed unique and unusual biological methods to source and infect its prey. Its advanced sensory system allows different tsetse fly species to track down potential hosts either through smell or by sight. This study lays out a list of parts responsible for the key processes and opens new doors to design prevention strategies to reduce the number of deaths and illness associated with human African trypanosomiasis and other diseases spread by the tsetse fly.

"Tsetse flies carry a potentially deadly disease and impose an enormous economic burden on countries that can least afford it by forcing farmers to rear less productive but more trypanosome-resistant cattle." says Dr Matthew Berriman, co-senior author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. "Our study will accelerate research aimed at exploiting the unusual biology of the tsetse fly. The more we understand, the better able we are to identify weaknesses, and use them to control the tsetse fly in regions where human African trypanosomiasis is endemic."

The team, composed of 146 scientists from 78 research institutes across 18 countries, analysed the genome of the tsetse fly and its 12,000 genes that control protein activity. The project, which has taken 10 years to complete, will provide the tsetse research community with a free-to-access resource that will accelerate the development of improved tsetse-control strategies in this neglected area of research.

The tsetse fly is related to the fruit fly -- a favoured subject of biologists for more than 100 years -- but its genome is twice as large. Within the genome are genes responsible for its unusual biology. The reproductive biology of the tsetse fly is particularly unconventional: unlike most insects that lay eggs, it gives birth to live young that have developed to a large size by feeding on specialised glands in the mother.

Researchers found a set of visual and odour proteins that seem to drive the fly's key behavioural responses such as searching for hosts or for mates. They also uncovered the photoreceptor gene rh5, the missing link that explains the tsetse fly's attraction to blue/black colours. This behaviour has already been widely exploited for the development of traps to reduce the spread of disease.

"Though human African trypanosomiasis affects thousands of people in sub-Saharan Africa, the absence of a genome-wide map of tsetse biology was a major hindrance for identifying vulnerabilities, says Dr Serap Aksoy, co-senior author from the University of Yale. "This community of researchers across Africa, Europe, North America and Asia has created a valuable research tool for tackling the devastating spread of sleeping sickness."

Tsetse flies have an armament of salivary molecules that are essential for feeding on blood. The team found one family of genes, the tsal genes, that are particularly active in the salivary glands of the tsetse fly. This allows the tsetse fly to counteract the responses from the host to stop bloodfeeding. This finding and several others are explored in more detail in eight research papers that accompany the publication of the tsetse fly genome in Science.

"This information will be very useful to help develop new tools that could reduce or even eradicate tsetse flies," says Dr John Reeder, Director of the Special Programme for Research Training in Tropical Diseases, at WHO. "African sleeping sickness is understudied, and we were very pleased to help bring together so many research groups to work collaboratively with the one shared goal in sight -- the elimination of this deadly disease."

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Tsetse fly genome reveals weaknesses: International 10-year project unravels biology of disease-causing fly

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Eczema Skin Care Tips 101 – Learn How Changing Your Mindset Can Help to Cure Eczema – Video

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Eczema Skin Care Tips 101 - Learn How Changing Your Mindset Can Help to Cure Eczema
http://www.VanishEczema.net Eczema is an inflammatory disease of the skin that affects a lot of person worldwide. Everyone can be affect by eczema. Eczema ca...

By: Eline Hortig

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