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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Obake – Human Genome Project – Video
Posted: March 31, 2014 at 2:44 am
Obake - Human Genome Project
http://www.last.fm/music/Obake.
By: unvorsum
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Obake - Human Genome Project - Video
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Digitizing Life: Venter gets excited about Human Genome Project – Video
Posted: at 2:44 am
Digitizing Life: Venter gets excited about Human Genome Project
J Craig Venter discusses how he first understood the medical potential of sequencing the human genome. Venter also proclaims La Jolla as the new center of ge...
By: Bradley Fikes
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Digitizing Life: Venter gets excited about Human Genome Project - Video
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Genome evolution: a stochastic approach – Video
Posted: at 2:44 am
Genome evolution: a stochastic approach
Gioved 3 aprile alle 18 presso le Aule Didattiche di Villa San Saverio, Gianrocco Lazzari discute la sua carriera e presenta la sua ricerca sui modelli comp...
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Genome evolution: a stochastic approach - Video
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Skin Woes: Managing Spots and Eczema through Diet and Products – Video
Posted: at 2:43 am
Skin Woes: Managing Spots and Eczema through Diet and Products
I #39;ve been asked time and time again about controlling angry skin, be it due to bouts of eczema or spot flare ups. The answer is, unfortunately, not simple an...
By: Madeleine Spencer
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Skin Woes: Managing Spots and Eczema through Diet and Products - Video
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Dry Skin and Eczema Treatment – OnlineDermClinic – Video
Posted: at 2:43 am
Dry Skin and Eczema Treatment - OnlineDermClinic
Just because you #39;re not getting any sun during the winter doesn #39;t mean your skin care regimen needs to change. gets some advice from. In this tutorial, Chris...
By: Windham Bullard
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Dry Skin and Eczema Treatment - OnlineDermClinic - Video
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Acne Psoriasis Eczema Dermatitis Your GBI #34 – Video
Posted: at 2:43 am
Acne Psoriasis Eczema Dermatitis Your GBI #34
Learn to appreciate your GBI your "GOOD Body Intelligence". Very important is the health of your body and skin. GOOD LUCK !
By: Mike R.
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Acne Psoriasis Eczema Dermatitis Your GBI #34 - Video
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Me and a Titmouse – Video
Posted: at 2:43 am
Me and a Titmouse
Was taking a break on the porch today and had a visitor. Apparently the Titmouse is in the process of lining its nest. It tried several times to get some hai...
By: MelinaJenny
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Me and a Titmouse - Video
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Carbohydrate digestion and obesity strongly linked
Posted: at 2:43 am
New research indicates that obesity in the general population may be genetically linked to how our bodies digest carbohydrates.
Published today in the journal Nature Genetics, the study investigated the relationship between body weight and a gene called AMY1, which is responsible for an enzyme present in our saliva known as salivary amylase. This enzyme is the first to be encountered by food when it enters the mouth, and it begins the process of starch digestion that then continues in the gut.
People usually have two copies of each gene, but in some regions of our DNA there can be variability in the number of copies a person carries, which is known as copy number variation. The number of copies of AMY1 can be highly variable between people, and it is believed that higher numbers of copies of the salivary amylase gene have evolved in response to a shift towards diets containing more starch since prehistoric times.
Researchers from Imperial College London, in collaboration with other international institutions, looked at the number of copies of the gene AMY1 present in the DNA of thousands of people from the UK, France, Sweden and Singapore. They found that people who carried a low number of copies of the salivary amylase gene were at greater risk of obesity.
The chance of being obese for people with less than four copies of the AMY1 gene was approximately eight times higher than in those with more than nine copies of this gene. The researchers estimated that with every additional copy of the salivary amylase gene there was approximately a 20 per cent decrease in the odds of becoming obese.
Professor Philippe Froguel, Chair in Genomic Medicine in the School of Public Health at Imperial College London, and one of the lead authors on the study, said: "I think this is an important discovery because it suggests that how we digest starch and how the end products from the digestion of complex carbohydrates behave in the gut could be important factors in the risk of obesity. Future research is needed to understand whether or not altering the digestion of starchy food might improve someone's ability to lose weight, or prevent a person from becoming obese. We are also interested in whether there is a link between this genetic variation and people's risk of other metabolic disorders such as diabetes, as people with a low number of copies of the salivary amylase gene may also be glucose intolerant."
Dr Mario Falchi, also from Imperial's School of Public Health and first author of the study, said: "Previous genetic studies investigating obesity have tended to identify variations in genes that act in the brain and often result in differences in appetite, whereas our finding is related to how the body physically handles digestion of carbohydrates. We are now starting to develop a clearer picture of a combination of genetic factors affecting psychological and metabolic processes that contribute to people's chances of becoming obese. This should ultimately help us to find better ways of tackling obesity."
Dr Julia El-Sayed Moustafa, another lead author from Imperial's School of Public Health, said: "Previous studies have found rare genetic variations causing extreme forms of obesity, but because they occur in only a small number of people, they explained very little of the differences in body weight we see in the population. On the other hand, research on more common genetic variations that increase risk of obesity in the general population have so far generally found only a modest effect on obesity risk. This study is novel in that it identifies a genetic variation that is both common and has a relatively large effect on the risk of obesity in the general population. The number of copies of the salivary amylase gene is highly variable between people, and so, given this finding, can potentially have a large impact on our individual risk of obesity."
The first step of the study involved the analysis of genetic data from a Swedish family sample of 481 participants, recruited on the basis of sibling-pairs where one was obese and the other non-obese. The researchers used these data to short-list genes whose copy number differences influence body mass index (BMI), and identified the gene coding for the enzyme salivary amylase (AMY1) as the one with the greatest influence on body weight in their analysis. They then investigated the relationship between the number of times the AMY1 gene was repeated on chromosome 1 in each individual and their risk of obesity, by studying approximately 5,000 subjects from France and the UK.
The researchers also expanded their study to include approximately 700 obese and normal-weight people from Singapore, and demonstrated that the same relationship between the number of copies of the AMY1 gene and the risk of obesity also existed in non-Europeans.
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Carbohydrate digestion and obesity strongly linked
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Activists to appeal US judge's ruling on Baidu's censorship
Posted: at 2:42 am
A group of activists are hoping to appeal a U.S. judges ruling that treated the censorship on Chinese search engine Baidu as free speech.
In making the ruling, District Judge Jesse Furman equated the censorship to a newspaper exercising its editorial right to publish what it wants. But Stephen Preziosi, lawyer for the eight pro-democracy activists, said in an email Saturday that the comparison was wrong, and that the court had a fundamental misunderstanding of how search engines work.
The appeal is planned to be filed later this week, Preziosi wrote.
In 2011, the eight activists filed a lawsuit, claiming that Baidu violates U.S. free speech laws by censoring pro-democracy works on its search engine for users in New York.
But last Thursday, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York dismissed the lawsuit, and ruled that Baidu had the right to create a search engine that favors certain political speech over another.
Newspapers have to manage costs and spacing on the paper in selecting what they publish, but search engines operate by indexing all content on the Web, Preziosi said. In Baidus case, the company worked to proactively exclude the pro-democracy works from its search engine, he added.
This constitutes the denial of the right to freedom of speech, Preziosi said.
Baidu has declined to comment. But as a company operating in China, Baidu must follow the nations strict rules on censorship, including the blocking of content deemed inflammatory or anti-government.
As Baidu can also be accessed outside its home country, Preziosi said the search engine is helping to bring Chinese censorship to the U.S. Those anti-democratic policies are being foisted upon people within the United States, he added.
But lawyers representing Baidu have called Thursdays ruling a victory for free speech rights.
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Activists to appeal US judge's ruling on Baidu's censorship
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Rand Paul on Gun Control Executive Order_ Obama is Not ‘King’ – Video
Posted: at 2:42 am
Rand Paul on Gun Control Executive Order_ Obama is Not #39;King #39;
debt crisis 2013, 2013, 2012, 2014, economy 2013 predicitions, economy 2013, 2013 economy, gold 2013, silver 2013, silver 2013 predictions, collapse, dollar,...
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Rand Paul on Gun Control Executive Order_ Obama is Not 'King' - Video
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