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Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Hydrogen sulfide could be next anti-ageing agent


Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) may play a wide-ranging role in staving off ageing, says a research team from China who has explored the compound’s plethora of potential anti-ageing pathways.
H2S has been gaining increasing attention as an important endogenous signaling molecule because of its significant effects on the cardiovascular and nervous systems, the team noted.
The evidence is mounting, they said, that hydrogen sulfide slows ageing by inhibiting free-radical reactions, by activating SIRT1, an enzyme believed to be a regulator of lifespan, and probably through its interactions with a gene, klotho, which appears to have its own market basket of anti-ageing activity.
Hydrogen sulfide is produced within the human body, and has a variety of important physiological effects. For example, it relaxes the vascular endothelium and smooth muscle cells, which is important to maintaining clean arteries as one ages, explained first author Zhi-Sheng Jiang, of the University of South China, Hunan.

It functions as an antioxidant. And it inhibits expression of pro-inflammatory factors, all of which “imply an important role in ageing and age-associated diseases,” according to the study.
For example, mice lacking CSE, the gene for an enzyme involved in producing H2S, manifest extensive, premature arteriosclerosis, an inevitable consequence of ageing, said Jiang.
The gene, klotho, which appears to be upregulated by hydrogen sulfide, is thought to extend lifespan via a number of different pathways, some of which promote production of endogenous antioxidants, according to the their report.

Produced in the kidneys, it has direct angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibiting activity; that is, it’s an ACE inhibitor, just like certain drugs that mitigate high blood pressure. Not surprisingly, plasma H2S declines with age, and is lower in spontaneously hypertensive rats than in those with normal blood pressure. More generally, a lack of H2S is implicated in cardiovascular disease.
A decline in H2S is also thought to undermine neurological health. Endogenous H2S has been found wanting in an animal model of Parkinson’s disease, and is found to be depressed in the brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease. There are even suggestions, mostly in animal models, but also in human studies, that H2S may be protective against cancer, according to the report.
“Data available so far strongly suggest that H2S may become the next potent agent for preventing and ameliorating the symptoms of ageing and age-associated diseases,” concluded Jiang.
In the future, he asserted, people may take H2S via food, or as an anti-ageing supplement.
The results appeared online ahead of print in the journal Molecular and Cellular Biology.

The peculiar 3D model which allows parents to hold their baby... BEFORE it's even born

Expectant parents who cannot wait to hold their new child can now buy a three-dimensional model of the foetus to cradle and show friends. Japanese inventors have devised a way to transform the commonplace ultrasound scan into an anatomically correct resin replica for parents to handle and keep as a memento. 

The nine-centimetre (3.6-inch) resin model of the white foetus, encased in a transparent block in the shape of the mother's body, is fashioned by a 3D printer after an MRI scan.
FASOTEC, the company offering the 'Shape of an Angel' model, even offers parents a miniature version which could be a 'nice adornment to a mobile phone strap or key chain.' Tomohiro Kinoshita, of FASOTEC, said: 'As it is only once in a lifetime that you are pregnant with that child, we received requests for these kind of models from pregnant women who... do not want to forget the feelings and experience of that time.' 
Expectant parents in Japan who can't wait to show the world what their baby will look like can now buy a 3D model of the foetus
The 'Shape of an Angel' costs 100,000 yen (or around £760), and the company said the ideal time for a scan is around eight or nine months into the pregnancy. For those who would like a less pricey version, the company will start offering a 3D model of the face of the foetus at 50,000 yen - £380 - in December. It will use ultrasound images taken at a medical clinic in Tokyo that has forged a tie-up with the company. 

FASOTEC, originally a supplier of devices including 3D printers, uses a layering technique to build up three-dimensional structures.
The company also produces 3D models of internal organs that can be used by doctors to plan surgery or by medical students for training, a spokesman said. It is also possible that models can be used in hospitals to better inform patients what their problems are, instead of relying on difficult-to-understand diagrams. 
The technology 'realises not only the form but also texture of the model -- for example making it hard or soft', the firm said . 'By making a model that is similar to a real organ or bone, one can simulate operations and practise different surgical techniques.' 

Kinoshita said the company hit upon the idea of making 3D models of unborn babies in the hope that people would become more aware of the technology.
But there are medical benefits too. The company said some medics could also foresee diagnostic possibilities with the models that may help predict difficulties in the birthing process.
 3D model of their unborn child's face
Three-dimensional printers have been around for several decades but advances in the technology mean it is now gaining in popularity in several fields. The machines work in a similar way to an inkjet printer, but instead of ink they deposit layers of material on top of each other, gradually building up the product they are making. 

Where traditional manufacturing only becomes efficient with economies of scale because of the need to produce moulds, 3D printing is capable of producing single copies of relatively complicated objects.
The technology is not yet advanced enough to build telephones or computers but it is already used to make components.

Americans Win Nobel in Chemistry for Work on How Humans Sense the World

Two Americans shared this year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry for deciphering the communication system that the human body uses to sense the outside world and send messages to cells — for example, speeding the heart when danger approaches. The understanding is aiding the development of new drugs.

The winners, Dr. Robert J. Lefkowitz, 69, a professor at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C., and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute researcher, and Dr. Brian K. Kobilka, 57, a professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine in California, will split eight million Swedish kronor, or about $1.2 million

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Serge Haroche, David Wineland win Nobel in Physics

France's Serge Haroche and US researcher David J. Wineland shared the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics, announced Staffan Normark, permanent secretary of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm Tuesday. 

Haroche and Wineland got the awards "for ground-breaking experimental methods that enable measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems", Xinhua quoted Normark as saying. 



Solar Eclipse in Picture That wasn't Visible in Nepal (with pictures)


It was the ones in a life time View when moon comes in between the sun and the earth causing the solar Eclipse. Though Nepalese didn’t have luck to watch this event Skywatchers from Mount Fuji to the Grand Canyon enjoyed a treat: the moon nearly blotting out the sun to create a dramatic 'ring of fire' over a narrow strip of eastern Asia and the western United States.
The annular eclipse, in which the moon passes in front of the sun leaving only a golden ring around its edges, was visible in Asia early Monday and  It then moved across the Pacific - and the international dateline - and was seen in parts of the western United StatesSunday afternoon.
In Japan, 'eclipse tours' were arranged at schools and parks, on pleasure boats and even private airplanes. Similar events were held in Chinaand Taiwanas well, with skywatchers warned to protect their eyes.
Series of Solar Eclipse Seen From Tokyo

In the U.S., viewing parties were held at observatories in Reno, Nevada, and Oakland, California, and elsewhere. In some areas, special camera filters for taking photographs have been sold out for weeks in anticipation of the big event.
Eventually, the moon centered and covered about 96 percent of the sun.
Solar Eclipse(pic shows how it emerge and come to and End 

'That's got to be the prettiest thing I've ever seen, Said Veltri of Salida, in Colorado to Daily Mail.
The eclipse was broadcast live on TV in Tokyo, where such an eclipse hasn't been visible since 1839. Japanese TV crews watched from the top of Mount Fuji and even staked out a zoo south of Tokyo to capture the reaction of the chimpanzees - who didn't seem to notice.
A light rain fell on Tokyo as the eclipse began, but the clouds thinned as it reached its peak, providing near perfect conditions.
Ring Of Fire Seen from New Mexico USA

'It was a very mysterious sight,' said Kaori Sasaki, who joined a crowd in downtown Tokyo to watch event. 'I've never seen anything like it.'
At the TaipeiAstronomical Museumin Taiwan, the spectacle emerged from dark clouds for only about 30 seconds. But the view was nearly perfect against Manila's orange skies.
'It's amazing. We do this for the awe [and] it has not disappointed. I am awed, literally floored,' said astronomical hobbyist Garry Andreassen, whose long camera lenses were lined up with those of about 10 other gazers in a downtown Manila park.
Hong Kong skywatchers weren't so lucky.
'Ring of Fire' eclipses are not as dramatic as a total eclipse, when the disc of the sun is entirely blocked by the moon. The moon is too far from Earth and appears too small in the sky to blot out the sun completely.
Doctors and education officials have warned of eye injuries from improper viewing. 
Before the event started, Japan's Education Minister Hirofumi Hirano demonstrated how to use eclipse glasses in a televised news conference.
Police also cautioned against traffic accidents - warning drivers to keep their eyes on the road.

Astronauts to land on 'planet killer' asteroid


NASA is training a team of astronauts to land on asteroids, which are three million miles from the Earth.
The mission, planned for the next decade, would land on an asteroid travelling at more than 50,000 miles an hour.
The astronauts will drive vehicles on the surface - and pick up skills necessary to destroy ‘planet killer’ asteroids that may approach our planet in future.
The journey to the asteroid and back could take up to a year, according to the Daily Mail.
Major Tim Peake, a former British Army helicopter pilot, and the first official British astronaut with the European Space Agency revealed details of the mission.
Peake and five other astronauts will prepare for the low-gravity environment of the asteroid by spending 12 days in an underwater base off the coast of Florida, 65 feet beneath the Atlantic.
They will live in a capsule 43 feet long by 20 feet wide to simulate the cramped conditions on an asteroid.
asteroid

“With the technology we have available and are developing today, an asteroid mission of up to a year is definitely achievable,” Major Peake said in an interview in the Telegraph.
“These objects are also coming extremely close to Earth all the time, but we rarely hear about it. In the last year we had an asteroid come within Earth’s geostationary orbit, which is closer than some satellites.
“With enough warning we would probably send a robotic mission to deflect an asteroid, but if something is spotted late and is big enough we might come into Armageddon type scenarios where we may have to look at manned missions to deflect it,” he stated.
Peak added, “I would love to go on an asteroid mission. There is a possibility that if things continue at a good pace an asteroid mission could happen within the 2020s and that is within the operational time frame of myself and the other ESA astronauts.” 

'Ring of fire' eclipse visible in US this Sunday!! Don't forget to have Life time Experience!!


On Sunday, millions of people around the world will be watching to an amazing sight: an annular solar eclipse in which the moon will cover as much as 94 percent of the sun, leaving a glowing ring of fire. In the US, the eclipse will begin around 5:30 pm PDT and last around two hours. The greatest coverage will be at around 6:30 pm PDT. The last such eclipse to be seen in the UStook place in 1994, and the next will be in 2023 so you can say it a Life Time Experience.
Because some of the sun is always exposed during the eclipse, the amount of daylight falls dramatically - but looking at the ground beneath leafy trees will reveal crescent-shaped sunbeams and rings of light.
Ring of Fire seen due toTotal Solar Eclipse

The 'path of annularity' where the ring of fire can be seen is only about 200 miles wide, covers a swathe of the southern US - southwest Oregon, Northern California, central Nevada, southern Utah, northern Arizona, New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle. The effect should last for around four and a half minutes.
Outside this band, other areas will see a partial eclipse.
"The ring of sunlight during annularity is blindingly bright," cautions NASA's leading eclipse expert Fred Espenak of the Goddard Space Flight Center.
"Even though most of the sun's disk will be covered, you still need to use a solar filter or some type of projection technique. A #14 welder's glass is a good choice. There are also many commercially-available solar filters."
#14 Welder's Glass Best for viewing Solar Eclipse
If you buy one, you'll get another chance to use it two weeks later when Venus makes a transit of the sun. Anyway If you are in Souther US don’t forget to watch the worth Sight of the Solar Eclipse.

Facts about Flesh-eating bacteria


Aimee Copeland, a Georgiagrad student, is fighting for her life because of the flesh-eating bacteria that infected her after she gashed her leg in a river two weeks ago. One of her legs was amputated and her fingers will be too, her father says, because of the spreading infection.
She has a rare condition, called necrotizing fasciitis, in which marauding bacteria run rampant through tissue. Affected areas sometimes have to be surgically removed to save the patient’s life.
Flesh Eating bacteria


HOW OFTEN DO PEOPLE GET THESE INFECTIONS?
The government estimates roughly 750 flesh-eating bacteria cases occur each year, usually caused by a type of strep germ.
However, Aimee Copeland’s infection was caused by another type of bacteria, Aeromonas hydrophila. Those cases are even rarer. One expert knew of only a few reported over the past few decades.
DO MOST PEOPLE SURVIVE?
Yes, but about 1 in 5 people with the most common kind of flesh-eating strep bacteria die. There are few statistics on Aeromonas-caused cases like Copeland’s.
HOW DOES SOMETHING LIKE THIS HAPPEN?
The germs that can cause flesh-eating disease are common in warm and brackish waters like ponds, lakes and streams. They are not a threat to most people. An infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University, Dr. William Schaffner, said: “I could dive in that same stream, in the same place, and if I don’t injure myself I’m going to be perfectly fine. It’s not going to get on the surface of my skin and burrow in. It doesn’t do that.”
But a cut or gash — especially a deep one — opens the door for flesh-eating bacteria.
Foot seen after Infection

IS THERE ANYTHING YOU CAN DO TO AVOID SUCH AN INFECTION?
Prompt and thorough medical care should stop the infection before it spreads. A wound can look clean, but if it’s sutured or stapled up too soon it can create the kind of oxygen-deprived environment that helps these bacteria multiply and spread internally. Once established, these rare infections can be tricky to diagnose and treat.
Also, Aeromonas is resistant to some common antibiotics that work against strep and other infections, so it’s important that doctors use the best medicines.
ARE SOME PEOPLE MORE AT RISK?
Yes, people with weakened immune systems are. Copeland’s family has not said whether she had some type of medical condition that could have made her more vulnerable and relatives could not be reached for comment Monday. Her doctors, meanwhile, have refused interviews.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Electricity generated from harmless viruses (Watch Video)

Scientists including one of an Indian origin have made a breakthrough that could lead to tiny devices that harvest electrical energy from the vibrations of everyday tasks such as shutting a door or climbing stairs. Berkeley Lab scientists have found a way to make harmless viruses harvest mechanical energy, which could then be used, say, to charge a phone as its owner walks along. They've created a generator that produces enough current to operate a small liquid-crystal display. It harvests energy when the user taps a finger on a postage stamp-sized electrode coated with specially engineered viruses which convert the force of the tap into an electric charge.


The generator is the first to produce electricity by harnessing the piezoelectric properties of a biological material. It could replace the use of highly-toxic chemicals in current piezoelectric devices.
It could also lead to a simpler way to make microelectronic devices, as the viruses self-assemble into an orderly film.
"More research is needed, but our work is a promising first step toward the development of personal power generators, actuators for use in nano-devices, and other devices based on viral electronics," says Seung-Wuk of Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley.
The M13 bacteriophage only attacks bacteria and is benign to people. It replicates itself by the millions within hours, so there's always a steady supply, and it's easy to genetically engineer.
When pressure is applied to the generator, it produces up to six nanoamperes of current and 400 millivolts of potential - about a quarter the voltage of a triple A battery.
"We're now working on ways to improve on this proof-of-principle demonstration," says Lee. "Because the tools of biotechnology enable large-scale production of genetically modified viruses, piezoelectric materials based on viruses could offer a simple route to novel microelectronics in the future."
Watch Video

New cavity-filling material reverses decay and regenerates tooth structure

A new composite material, which is made up of silver and calcium nanoparticles, could work as a dental filling that kills remaining bacteria so that patients don’t have to make a return trip to the dentist.
Dental fillings replace the part of the tooth drilled out inorder to remove decay. But if any bacteria remains, the cavity can grow right under the filling, Discovery News reported.
The new material, developed by researchers at theUniversity of Maryland, also rebuilds any structure affected by decay, essentially getting rid of the cavity altogether.

Due to their small size, the silver nanoparticles can invade the cellular structure of bacteria and other microorganisms and kill them. Calcium phosphate, also included in the composite, is responsible for building the tooth back up.
There have been questions raised about implementing these materials into toothpaste or mouthwash, but the scientific community isn’t ready to get on board with that just yet.
There is a lot of concern coming from scientists and researchers about the possible harmful affects of human consumption of the particles. Further testing will be conducted on volunteers to sort through the health concerns. 

 

New wireless battery chargers to be Reality soon for all Devices


As Samsung allies with other big tech firms to make the wireless charger widespread, wireless battery charger is possible for other electronic device as well. One of the biggest surprises at Samsung's Galaxy S3 launch last week was a charger that powered the smartphone wirelessly - but now it seems that the technology could soon be widespread.
Samsung, Qualcomm and other tech companies have joined forces to establish a single standard to allow devices to charge wirelessly - using a technology similar to the one in electric toothbrushes today.
Samsung Galaxy SIII

One single charger will 'beam' power to several devices at once - and the chargers could even work in cars.
A single standard could also mean that the new wireless era isn't plagued with the problem of 'finding the right cable' - one wireless technology should (hopefully) work for all. 
Wireless technology leaders Samsung and Qualcomm Incorporated have joined other technology leaders to form the Alliancefor Wireless Power (A4WP), it was announced today.
The A4WP will focus on a new wireless power transfer technology that provides spatial freedom for charging of electrical devices in cars, on tabletops and for multiple devices simultaneously.

Benefits of this wireless power approach include: a transmitter and receiver antenna design that is easily implemented, a simple wireless power control system, and the ability to transfer power through non-metallic surfaces. 
A single specification is envisioned that will address simultaneous charging of multiple devices ranging from very low power products, such as Bluetooth headsets, to today’s most sophisticated tablets.
Jason dePreaux, a research manager at IMS Research comments, ‘Wireless power has the potential to increase convenience and improve the user experience in consumer devices like mobile phones by untethering the charging process.
'For these benefits to be realized, wireless power infrastructure must be deployed to enable wireless charge points in the home, at work, or while traveling without concern for compatibility. Industry alliances will play a critical role in developing this infrastructure.’ 

Google's driverless car now can be seen in Nevada


The Google car that can drive on it own is now eligible to ride on the streets of American State Nevada.
Technically speaking, what this means is that the car - yes, the car itself - has been issued its own driver license. In other words, the state of Nevada feels the inner workings of Google's smart vehicle contain the same capacity of driving ability and human judgment as any physical person sitting behind the wheel.
The car in question is a Prius, and has been loaded with a very special software package originally designed by Google for use in and around the company's headquarters in Mountain View, California.

But it is in Nevada where Google has been spending most of its time with the contraption as of late, since that's the state that it has been able to sweet talk into actually making it legal to take on the streets.
The software within the car uses all sorts of tools, ranging from a set of short-range radar sensors and video cameras to a persistent Internet connection that constantly scans Google Maps for road and traffic updates.
While obviously it is still a highly focused and experimental project, it could be the beginning of a ripple effect on the entire automotive industry.
Of course, Google hasn't really put the car through its full paces just yet. When it goes for a test drive, the car always has trained employees inside, who are able to override the autopilot mechanism at a moment's notice.
Interestingly enough, though, the only time that the driverless car has been in an accident is when it was being driven in manual override mode. It has never shown any safety problems when in its driverless state.

Garlic can acts as stronger antibiotics for food-borne illness


Researchers have isolated a compound in garlic that is a 100 times more potent than popular antibiotics in combating Campylobacter bacteria, one of the commonest causes of intestinal illness. Some 2.4 million Americans alone are affected by Campylobacter every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with symptoms including diarrhoea, cramping, abdominal pain and fever.
Garlic

"This work is very exciting to me because it shows that this compound (diallyl sulphide) has the potential to reduce disease-causing bacteria in the environment and in our food supply," says Xiaonan Lu, postdoctoral researcher at the Washington State University, who led the study.
Lu and colleagues looked at the ability of the garlic compound, diallyl sulphide, to kill the bacteria when it is protected by a slimy biofilm that makes it 1,000 times more resistant to antibiotics, the Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy reports.
 They found the compound can easily penetrate the protective biofilm and kill bacterial cells by combining with a sulphur-containing enzyme, changing the enzyme's function and effectively shutting down cell metabolism, according to a Washington statement.
Diallyl Sulphide 


The researchers found that diallyl sulphide was as much as 100 times effective than much of the antibiotics erythromycin and ciprofloxacin and would often work in a fraction of the time.
"This is the first step in developing or thinking about new intervention strategies. Campylobacter is simply the most common bacterial cause of food-borne illness in the United States and probably the world," says Michael Konkel, study co-author who has been researching Campylobacter jejuni for 25 years.
Previously, Lu and colleagues found that diallyl sulphide effectively kills important foodborne pathogens, such as listeria monocytogenes and Escherichia coli O157:H7.

Believe it or not the British lab is growing human spare parts, now organ donation is a thing of the past


'This is a nose we’re growing for a patient next month,’ Professor Alexander Seifalian says matter-of-factly, plucking a Petri dish from the bench beside him.
Inside is an utterly lifelike appendage, swimming in red goo. Alongside it is another dish containing an ear. ‘It’s a world first,’ he says smiling.
‘Nobody has ever grown a nose before.’
His lab is little more than a series of worn wooden desktops strewn with beakers, solutions, taps, medical jars, tubing and paperwork, and looks like a school chemistry lab. 
But it’s from here that Seifalian leads University College London’s (UCL) Department of Nanotechnology and Regenerative Medicine, which he jokingly calls the ‘human body parts store’. 
Seifalian showing Nose made from nanomolecules

As he takes me on a tour of his lab I’m bombarded with one medical breakthrough after another. Daily Mail Reporter Said
At one desk he picks up a glass mould that shaped the trachea – windpipe – used in the world’s first synthetic organ transplant. 
At another are the ingredients for the revolutionary nanomaterial at the heart of his creations, and just beyond that is a large machine with a pale, gossamer-thin cable inside that’s pulsing with what looks like a heartbeat. It’s an artery. 
‘We are the first in the world working on this,’ Seifalian says casually to daily mail reporter. ‘We can make a metre every 20 seconds if we need to.’
‘Other groups have tried to tackle nose replacement with implants but we’ve found they don’t last,’ says Adelola Oseni, one of Seifalian’s team.
‘They migrate, the shape of the nose changes. But our one will hold itself completely, as it’s an entire nose shape made out of polymer.’
Looking like very thin Latex rubber, the polymer is made up of billions of molecules, each measuring just over one nanometre (a billionth of a metre), or 40,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair. Working at molecular level allows the material itself to be intricately detailed. 
Ear made in lab 

‘Inside this nanomaterial are thousands of small holes,’ says Seifalian.
‘Tissue grows into these and becomes part of it. It becomes the same as a nose and will even feel like one.’
When the nose is transferred to the patient, it doesn’t go directly onto the face but will be placed inside a balloon inserted beneath the skin on their arm. 
After four weeks, during which time skin and blood vessels can grow, the nose can be monitored, then it can be transplanted to the face.
At the cutting edge of modern medicine, Seifalian and his team are focusing on growing replacement organs and body parts to order using a patient’s own cells. There would be no more waiting for donors or complex reconstruction – just a quick swap. 
And because the organ is made from the patient’s own cells, the risk of rejection should, in theory, be eliminated.
Unsurprisingly, the recipe for the breakthrough biocompatible material used is a closely guarded secret. 
From those who have lost noses to cancer to others mutilated by injury, it’s hoped this revolutionary process could transform thousands of lives. 
‘We seed the patient’s own cells on to the polymer inside a bioreactor,’ says Oseni. 
This is a sterile environment mirroring the human body’s temperature, blood and oxygen supply. 
‘As the cells take hold and multiply, so the polymer becomes coated. The same methods could be applied to all parts of the face to reconstruct those of people who have had severe facial traumas.’
 ‘The full success of these implants needs to be tested with a larger number of patients in clinical trials,’ says Seifalian.
Such is the speed of progress that regenerative medicine is now moving on from replacing heart valves and rebuilding faces to potentially curing blindness and accelerating the study of some of the most debilitating diseases. 
The UK is at the forefront of this research, with work on a £54 million MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine in Edinburgh completed earlier this year.
Until recently, regenerative medicine focused mostly on embryonic stem cells as these were the most versatile. They are called pluripotent, meaning they have the ability to become any cell type – blood, muscle, etc. 
By contrast, adult stem cells can replicate themselves endlessly, but only as the cell they began life as – skin cells replicate as skin cells, muscle cells as muscle cells.
But the moral debate surrounding embryonic stem cell research is controversial. 
Stem cells are taken from human embryos, which are destroyed in the process. 
In 2007, Professor Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University managed to create pluripotent cells from adult stem cells, potentially removing the need for embryonic stem cells completely.
These are known as induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPSCs. He was in part inspired by Professor Ian Wilmut, who was knighted for his role in the creation of Dolly the cloned sheep.
‘In the same way Dolly made us think maybe we could change cells, Yamanaka proved it could be done,’ says Wilmut.
‘This makes you think you can produce any cell type, producing nerves or muscle from skin cells, for example.’
This has been proved recently with the news that scientists at Cambridge Universityhave created brain cells from skin cells which could help with the search for new treatments for Alzheimer’s, stroke and epilepsy.
Sitting on a desk inside Seifalian’s laboratory is the mould for the trachea which he and his team created. It was recently implanted into a patient making it the world’s first ever synthetic organ transplant. 
The patient in question, a 36-year-old Eritrean man, had a large cancerous tumour in his throat that was rapidly spreading towards his lungs. The transplant was successful, and the patient is now out of hospital and recovering well.
On another bench in the lab lies an ear ready for seeding, while next door the team is working on heart valves that won’t even need seeding before implantation, having been developed instead to attract the cells they need once implanted. 
This will allow them to grow in the body instead of bioreactors and, along with an insertion method that removes the need to open the chest, could revolutionise heart bypass surgery.
‘Normally for heart bypass you take a section of vein from the patient’s leg or arm. But 30 per cent of patients don’t have suitable veins so can’t have the operation. No alternative currently exists for them,’ says Seifalian. 
‘We are the first in the world with this. Nobody else is even close. It has been successful in animal trials; this year it will be going for patient trials’.
While Seifalian and his team keep developing potential implants, on the other side of Londonanother team led by Professor Pete Coffey, the London Project to Cure Blindness, is using stem cells to tackle age-related macular degeneration, the most common form of age-related sight loss, which affects 513,000 people in the UKalone. 
‘There’s nothing that can be done for those with the disease,’ says Coffey. ‘There’s a real unmet need here.’
The aim is to replace the diseased cells with healthy new ones, restoring vision. 
Unlike Seifalian’s team, Coffey’s is using embryonic stem cells because in every experiment to date they are the only ones that work.
On the issue of working with embryonic stem cells Coffey is clear.
‘One thing I always face is that the term embryo has a different meaning for different people.
'The embryo in this case is five days old, and I know under various religious definitions that’s life, but I see this as similar to organ donation. That embryo cannot survive on its own.’
Most embryonic cells used in research, including Coffey’s, are from IVF treatment where a large surplus of embryos is part of the process. Unwanted embryos can be donated to research, otherwise, as Coffey says, ‘they’re disposed of.’
 ‘A human embryonic cell keeps reproducing itself naturally, so one cell generates everything we need – we’ve banked the duplicates in nitrogen chambers in three different countries – which means this cell could service a clinical population of 28 million. Isn’t that worth it?’
Coffey’s project is perhaps the most advanced major regenerative medicine project in the world today, scheduled for clinical trials with patients later this year. But even success in a patient trial is no guarantee a treatment will ever reach the mass market.
‘The sad thing is the time frame here,’ says Paul Whiting, executive director of Pfizer’s regenerative medicine arm, who is working closely with Coffey’s project. 
‘Even things that seem close are probably ten years away, while many are 20 to 50 years away. We need to know if these things will do long-term harm before they can reach patients, so it will be a gradual progression over at least 50 years.’
And a recent study illustrates just how far the divide between laboratory success and clinical reality could be: researchers at California University have found that mice treated with iPSCs made from their own skin cells ultimately reject the transplants.
When asked about this, Wilmut agrees it was valid but also says it was ‘a very preliminary observation’, another piece of the puzzle leading toward full understanding of the subject. There are also concerns that the reprogramming process used to create iPSCs might cause cancer in those same cells.
But back in Seifalian’s labs, the raw energy remains. 
‘Before, the idea was you rob Peter to pay Paul, taking one bit of the body to reconstruct another, but now the idea of being able to grow tissues in a lab and to reconstruct the body is huge,’  says Adelola Oseni.
‘If we can grow a heart, a lung or a trachea in a lab, we don’t need to wait for donors. 
'This work has massive implications for the way we function as clinicians and the way medicine is practised.’
Source : Daily Mail 



Biggest full moon of the year is due tonight as 'supermoon' set to fill sky today


The moon is set to get a lot bigger tonight - at least from our perspective on Earth. And the 'Supermoon' - the nickname for a perigee full moon, closer to the Earth than usual - could cause tides to rise around the world as the moon's close 'fly past' exerts 42 per cent more tidal force.
The moon will appear bigger and brighter - sky-watchers promise this 'supermoon' will be 16 per cent brighter than most when it begins today at 3.35pm GMT, 11.35am EDT.
At 11.34pm, the moon will be about 221,802 miles from Earth - about 15,300 miles closer than average.
Super Moon Seen Earlier 

Full Moons vary in size because of the oval shape of the Moon's orbit. It is an ellipse with one side (perigee) about 50,000 km closer to Earth than the other (apogee).
Nearby perigee moons are about 14% bigger and 30% brighter than lesser moons that occur on the apogee side of the Moon's orbit.
A perigee full Moon brings with it extra-high ‘perigean tides,’  but this is nothing to worry about, according to America's NOAA space-weather predicting agency.

In most places, lunar gravity at perigee pulls tide waters only a few centimeters (an inch or so) higher than usual.  'To view this weekend's supermoon to best effect, look for it just after it rises or before it sets, when it is close to the horizon. There, you can catch a view of the moon behind buildings or trees, an effect which produces an optical illusion, making the moon seem even larger than it really is,' said Space.com, which reported the phenomenon

The best time to look is when the Moon is near the horizon. That is when illusion mixes with reality to produce a truly stunning view.
For reasons not fully understood by astronomers or psychologists, low-hanging Moons look unnaturally large when they beam through trees, buildings and other foreground objects.

New method can make even muddy water safe for drinking


A scientist at Michigan Technological Universityhas developed a simple, cheap way to make water safe to drink, even if it's muddy. It's easy enough to purify clear water. The solar water disinfection method, or SODIS, calls for leaving a transparent plastic bottle of clear water out in the sun for six hours.
That allows heat and ultraviolet radiation to wipe out most pathogens that cause diarrhea, a malady that kills 4,000 children a day in Africa.
It's a different story if the water is murky, as it often is where people must fetch water from rivers, streams and boreholes.

 'In the developing world, many people don't have access to clear water, and it's very hard to get rid of the suspended clay particles,' said Joshua Pearce, an associate professor of materials science and engineering.
'But if you don't, SODIS doesn't work. The microorganisms hide under the clay and avoid the UV,' he explained.
Thus, to purify your water, you first have to get the clay to settle out, a process called flocculation.
Working with student Brittney Dawney of Queen's University in Ontario, Pearce discovered that one of the most abundant minerals on Earth does this job very well: sodium chloride, or simple table salt.
 Salt is inexpensive and available almost everywhere. And it doesn't take very much to make muddy water clear again.
 'The water has a lower sodium concentration than Gatorade,' Pearce said.
 This would still be too much salt to pass muster as American tap water, but American tap water is not the alternative.
 'I've drunk this water myself. If I were somewhere with no clean water and had kids with diarrhea, and this could save their lives, I'd use this, no question,' he added.
Salt works best when the suspended particles are a type of clay called bentonite. The technique doesn't work as well with other kinds of clay.
However, by adding a little bentonite with the salt to water containing these different clays, most of the particles glom together and settle out, creating water clear enough for SODIS treatment.
Pearce and Dawney are running more tests on water containing various types of clays, and they are also investigating different soil types across Africa to see where their methods might work the best.
Their paper has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene for Development and will appear in June. 

Daily glass of pomegranate boosts sexual desire in Both man and Women


Do you use Viagra as you don’t have sexual desire if Yes leave the Viagra and start drinking pomegranate Juice Every day it doesn’t only increases Sexual desire but also save us Heart disease and Cancer
Men and women who drank a daily glass of the fruit’s juice for a fortnight experienced a surge in the hormone testosterone, which increases sexual desire in both genders
The latest achievement claimed for pomegranates, which are already acclaimed as a superfood, will be welcome among those who would prefer a natural aphrodisiac.
The study, by researchers from Queen MargaretUniversity in Edinburgh, involved 58 volunteers aged between 21 and 64.
By the end of the fortnight both sexes had seen ‘significantly increased’ testosterone levels.
For men this affects traits such as facial hair, a deep voice and greater sexual urges.
It is also produced in female adrenal glands and ovaries, raising a woman’s sex drive and strengthening bones and muscles.
As a side effect, increased testosterone can help raise mood and memory and even relieve stress such as ‘pre-match nerves’ or stage fright, said the study.
Previous research on pomegranate juice has found it full of antioxidants which can help ward off heart diseases and help blood circulation.
The superfood’s ingredients also help fight various forms of cancer, alleviate the symptoms of osteoarthritis and cure stomach upsets and even conjunctivitis.
The Edinburgh research measured testosterone levels, blood pressure and, using a scientific scale, levels of 11 emotions including fear, sadness, guilt, shyness and self-assurance.
Testosterone levels increased between 16 per cent and 30 per cent among the subjects, while blood pressure plummeted.
Positive emotions rose and negative feelings fell.

Blind man can see the world after implanting Bionic Eye Microchips


'I've dreamed in colour for the first time in 20 years': Blind British man can see again after first successful implant of 'bionic' eye microchips
It was the ‘magic moment’ that released Chris James from ten years of blindness.
Doctors switched on a microchip that had been inserted into the back of his eye three weeks earlier.
After a decade of darkness, there was a sudden explosion of bright light – like a flash bulb going off, he says.
Now he is able to make out shapes and light. He hopes his sight – and the way his brain interprets what the microchip is showing it – will carry on improving.
Mr James, 54, is one of two British men who have had their vision partly restored by a pioneering retina implant.
Chip of 3mm by 3mm that is planted to sufferers Eye
The other, Robin Millar, one of Britain’s most successful music producers, says he has dreamed in colour for the first time. 

Both had lost their vision because of a condition known as retinitis pigmentosa, where the photoreceptor cells at the back of the eye gradually cease to work.
Their stories bring hope to the 20,000 Britons with RP – and to those with other eye conditions such as advanced macular degeneration which affects up to half a million.
Mr James had a ten-hour operation to insert the wafer-thin microchip in the back of his left eye at the Oxford University Eye Hospital six weeks ago. Three weeks later, it was turned on..
Mr James, who lives in Wroughton, Wiltshire, with his wife Janet, said of his ‘magic moment’: ‘I did not know what to expect but I got a flash in the eye, it was like someone taking a photo with a flashbulb and I knew my optic nerve was still working.’
Chip Pairs with This External Device to Process Image

The microchip has 1,500 light sensitive pixels which take over the function of the retina’s photoreceptor rods and cones.
One of the first tests was making out a white plate and cup on a black background.
 Mr James, who works for Swindon Council, said to Daily mail ‘It took a while for my brain to adjust to what was in front of me, but I was able to detect the curves and outline of these objects.’
Tim Jackson, a consultant retinal surgeon at King’s College Hospital and Robert MacLaren, a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Oxford and a consultant retinal surgeon at the Oxford Eye Hospital, who are running the trial, say it has ‘exceeded expectations’ with patients already regaining ‘useful vision’.

  Ten more Britons with RP will be fitted with the implants, which are also being tested in Germanyand China. The device, made by Retina Implant AG of Germany, connects to a wireless power supply buried behind the ear. This is connected to an external battery unit via a magnetic disc on the scalp. The user can alter the sensitivity of the device using switches on the unit.
Mr Jackson said: ‘It’s difficult to say how much benefit each patient will get, this pioneering treatment is at an early stage.
Surgeon Robert Mclaren

‘But it’s an exciting and important step forward. Many of those who receive this treatment have lost their vision for many years. The impact of them seeing again, even if it is not normal vision, can be profound and at times quite moving.’ Mr Millar, 60, who was behind Sade’s Diamond Life album, has been blind for 25 years. He said: ‘Since switching on the device I am able to detect light and distinguish the outlines of objects.
‘I have even dreamt in very vivid colour for the first time in 25 years so a part of my brain which had gone to sleep has woken up! I feel this is incredibly promising and I’m happy to be contributing to this legacy.’

Sun like star may be home to 9 alien planets!!


A sun-like star, which is already known to host five alien planets, may actually have nine full-fledged worlds, according to a new study. If the planetary arrangement is confirmed, it would outnumber our own solar system and set a new record for the most populated system of extrasolar planets yet found.
The sun-like star, named HD 10180, is situated nearly 127 light-years away from Earth. In an earlier study that was published in August 2010, astronomers discovered five confirmed alien worlds and two planetary candidates. Now a new study confirms both previous candidates in the HD 10180 system, and also indicates that two more planets could be orbiting the star.
This could bring the tally up to nine planets, asserted lead author Mikko Tuomi, an astronomer at the University of Hertfordshire in the UK.

"The data indicates that there are not only seven but likely as many as nine planets in the system," Tuomi said.
"The two new planets appear to have orbital periods of roughly 10 and 68 days and masses of 1.9 and 5.1 times that of Earth, which enables the classification of them as hot super-Earths, i.e. planets with likely scorchingly hot rocky surfaces."
Tuomi re-analyzed observations collected between November 2003 and June 2010 by the planet-hunting HARPS spectrograph instrument, which is mounted on a 3.6-meter telescope at the European Southern Observatory in La Silla, Chile, Fox News reported.
Since the newly detected candidates are still unproven, more research is required to determine if they are bonafide planets, and not erroneous signals.
"While the existence of the larger of these two is well supported by the data, the signal corresponding to the smaller one exceeds the detection threshold only barely, which gives it a very small but non-eligible probability of being a false positive," Tuomi added.
The study has been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.

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