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Malaria parasites entering red blood cells Image: Cocha Banner Magazine
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Issue no. 39, 2011 Published: Nov 11, 2011 |
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Malaria vaccine hope after blood entry route discovered | Brain analysis can help predict psychosis: study | Single-molecule 'electric car' taken for test drive | Speed-of-light experiment to be repeated | Re-programmable cells to create new life forms | Kilogram faces quantum diet after weight problem | Artificial intelligence joins the fossil hunt | 'Urine power' tests are successful | Carbon monoxide calms city dwellers down |
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| Malaria vaccine hope after blood entry route discovered |
The route all strains of the most deadly malaria parasite use to enter
red blood cells has been identified by researchers at the Sanger
Institute in Cambridge. The scientists involved said the finding offered
'great hope' for the development of an effective vaccine.
There are many malaria parasites but Plasmodium falciparum is the most
deadly. It is exceptionally good at evading and bamboozling the immune
system. Within five minutes of being bitten by a malaria-carrying
mosquito, the parasite is already hiding inside the liver. It then
emerges from the liver at a different stage in its life cycle and
infects red blood cells, where it starts reproducing.
The human immune system struggles to build up resistance to malaria and
researchers have struggled in the laboratory. There is still no approved
vaccine against malaria. Large scale trials of the most advanced
prototype - RTS,S - showed it halved the risk of getting malaria.
The Sanger Institute study looked at the moment the parasite infected a
red blood cell. They were looking for proteins on the surface of
Plasmodium and red blood cells which were necessary for the parasite to
identify its target and invade. Others had been found before, but none
were universally used. The team discovered that 'basigin', a receptor on
the surface on red blood cells, and 'PfRh5', a protein on the parasite,
were crucial. In all strains of Plasmodium falciparum tested so far,
interrupting the link protected the blood cells from attack. |
| BBC News / Nature
Nov 10, 2011 |
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| Brain analysis can help predict psychosis: study |
Computer analysis of brain scans could help predict how serious or long
term a psychotic patient's illness may become and help doctors make more
accurate decisions about how best to treat them, according to
researchers from King's College London's Institute of Psychiatry and
University College London. They found that using computer algorithms to
analyze MRI brain scans can predict a patient's outcome.
In future the method could lead to a quick reliable way of predicting
how a patient's illness will develop, allowing doctors to give the best
treatments to those most in need and avoid giving long courses of
antipsychotic drugs to people with only very mild forms of psychosis.
Psychosis is a condition that affects people's minds, altering the way
they think, feel and behave. The most common forms of psychosis are part
of mental illnesses such as schizophrenia - which affects around 24m
people worldwide - and bipolar disorder, but psychotic symptoms can also
occur in conditions like Parkinson's disease and alcohol or drug abuse. |
| Reuters / Psychological Medicine
Nov 07, 2011 |
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| Single-molecule 'electric car' taken for test drive |
Scientists have shown off what can be described as the world's smallest
electric car - made of a single, carefully designed molecule. The
molecule has four branches that act as wheels, rotating when a tiny
metal tip applied a small current to them. With 10 electric bursts, the
car was made to move six billionths of a metre.
The approach joins recent single-molecule efforts, and seems to overcome
the forces that often dominate at such tiny scales. The 'batteries' of
the electric car come by way of the tip of what is called a scanning
tunnelling microscope - an extraordinarily fine point of metal that ends
in just an atom or two.
As the tip draws near the molecule, electrons jump into it. The motor of
the approach lies with the four 'molecular rotors' that act as the car's
wheels; they undergo a change in shape when they absorb the electrons. |
| BBC News / Nature
Nov 09, 2011 |
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| Speed-of-light experiment to be repeated |
Researchers at CERN, the world's largest laboratory in Switzerland,
announced last month that tiny neutrinos had been observed travelling
marginally faster than light. But the results met with widespread
scepticism within the scientific community, not least because Einstein's
theory of special relativity - one of the cornerstones of modern physics
- makes such a feat impossible.
The results from the Opera experiment appeared to show that the
particles had travelled 732km through the Earth from CERN to the Gran
Sasso laboratory in Italy marginally faster than light would have done.
According to Einstein nothing should be able to travel faster than
light, and evidence that neutrinos were capable of doing so would have a
fundamental impact on our understanding of the universe and of time. The
findings were so unlikely and of such critical importance that the
researchers chose not to claim a 'discovery', instead inviting
scientists across the world to scrutinise their data for errors.
Now the team will rerun their experiment with some alterations which
they hope will rule out many of the supposed flaws in their findings. |
| Telegraph
Oct 28, 2011 |
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| Re-programmable cells to create new life forms |
An international team of scientists has embarked on an ambitious
research project to develop an in vivo biological cell that can be
reprogrammed like a computer operating system. It could revolutionise
synthetic biology, they say, and would pave the way for scientists to
create completely new and useful forms of life.
'We are looking at creating a cell's equivalent to a computer operating
system in such a way that a given group of cells could be seamlessly
re-programmed to perform any function without needing to modify its
hardware,' says prof. Natalio Krasnogor of the University of Nottingham.
'We are talking about a highly ambitious goal leading to a fundamental
breakthrough that will, ultimately, allow us to rapidly prototype,
implement and deploy living entities that are completely new and do not
appear in nature, adapting them so they perform new, useful functions.'
The results could be everything from new sources of food to medical
breakthroughs such as drugs tailored to the individual and the growth of
new organs for transplant patients. The project - dubbed Towards a
Biological Cell Operating System, or AUdACiOuS - will begin by
attempting to make e.coli bacteria much easier to program. |
| TG Daily
Nov 08, 2011 |
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| Kilogram faces quantum diet after weight problem |
The guardians of the world's most important standards of weights and
measures have turned to quantum physics to try to resolve a dilemma.
Since 1889, the kilogram has been defined in accordance with a piece of
metal kept at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in the
Paris suburb of Sevres. Ninety-percent platinum and 10-percent iridium,
the British-made cylinder was proudly deemed at its founding to be as
inalienable as the stars in the sky. It is kept under three glass cases
in a safe in a protected building, the Pavillon de Breteuil.
In 1992 came a shock: the famous kilo was no longer what it should be.
Over a century the prototype had changed by around 50 microgrammes
compared to six other kilos also stored in Sevres. The enigma poses a
theoretical challenge to physicists, and complicates the work of labs
which need ultra-precise, always-standard measurement.
It is a bedrock of the International System of Units (SI), the world's
most widely-used system of measurement units for daily life, precision
engineering, science and trade. The SI has seven 'base units' - the
kilo, metre, second, ampere, kelvin, mole and candela - from which all
other units are derived. But unlike its counterparts, the kilo is the
last unit that is still defined by a material object.
The masters of the SI have now decided to phase out the kilo cylinder
and to replace it by a fixed value based on the Planck Constant, which
corresponds to the smallest packet of energy, or quanta, that two
particles can exchange. On October 21, the General Conference on Weights
and Measures (CGPM) agreed to use the constant to calculate the value of
the kilo. But adopting this 'will not be before 2014', after experiments
to assess the accuracy of measurement techniques to ensure accuracy to
within 20 parts per billion. |
| Yahoo / AFP
Nov 07, 2011 |
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| Artificial intelligence joins the fossil hunt |
The traditional image of the fossil-hunting palaeontologist - traipsing
across parched badlands armed with nothing but hand tools and a sharp
eye - may be in for an overhaul. Artificially intelligent software that
scans satellite images of potential dig sites could greatly increase the
number of fossils unearthed. A predictive model developed by researchers
from Western Michigan University and Washington University uses neural
networks to spot promising fossil sites from satellite data.
The team began by feeding the software a list of known locations in the
10,000 km2 Great Divide basin, labelling them either as being
fossil-rich or belonging to one of four other categories - barren,
forest, scrub or wetland. Rather than telling the system what to look
for to identify each type of location, they had it analyse six bands of
visible and infrared light recorded by the Landsat 7 satellite and come
up with its own identifying marks.
Next the software sorted unknown areas of the basin into the five
categories. Using only the satellite data, the computer had learned that
the area's fossil sites were in sandstone - but not all sandstone has
fossils at the surface. To distinguish fossil-rich sandstone, the team
added two other requirements to the software. The rocks had to be 50
million years old and the land had to be sloped by at least 5 degrees,
so erosion was likely to have exposed fossils. They also modified the
computer model to account for the 15m resolution of the satellite data,
which meant that pixels often spanned more than one type of surface.
The team compared model predictions with the characteristics of other
known locations they had not fed into the computer. It correctly
identified 79% of the known fossil sites as likely to contain fossils,
and correctly classified 84% of all the other locations. |
| New Scientist
Nov 08, 2011 |
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| 'Urine power' tests are successful |
Research into producing electricity from urine has been carried out by
scientists at the University of the West of England (UWE) in Bristol. It
is claimed the publication of a research paper into the viability of
urine as a fuel for Microbial Fuel Cells (MFCs) is a world first.
MFCs contain the same kind of bacteria that is found in soil, the human
gut or waste water from sewers. 'Regulating the flow' The bacteria
anaerobically (without oxygen) respire just like any other living
organism, and this process gives off electrons. Those electrons are then
passed through an electrode and a measure of electricity is generated.
Bacteria feed on the urine, which they effectively use as a fuel to
continue to breathe and give off electrons.
The researchers say tests have produced small amounts of energy, but
more research could produce 'useful' levels of power. |
| BBC News
Nov 09, 2011 |
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| Carbon monoxide calms city dwellers down |
Carbon monoxide in cities could actually be drugging residents into
placidity, according to scientists at Tel Aviv University. They say that
their research indicates that low levels of the poisonous gas can have a
narcotic effect. And this helps city dwellers cope with other urban
stresses, such as noise levels.
The discovery was made as part of a wider project designed to study the
impact of environmental stressors on the human body. Most environmental
observation stations are to be found outside city centres, and the
researchers wanted to measure how people living in an urban environment
confronted stressors in their daily lives.
They asked 36 healthy individuals between the ages of 20 to 40 to spend
two days in Tel Aviv, Israel's busiest city. These people travelled
various routes to sites such as busy streets, restaurants, malls and
markets, by public and private transportation or by foot. Meanwhile,
researchers monitored the impact of heat and cold, noise pollution,
carbon monoxide levels, and social load, or the impact of crowds.
The participants reported to what extent their experiences were
stressful, and this was compared with sensor data that measured heart
rate and pollutant levels. Noise pollution emerged as the biggest source
of stress. But the most surprising findings related to the levels of CO
that the participants inhaled. Not only were these much lower than
predicted - around 1-15 parts per million every half hour - but the gas
appeared to have a narcotic effect on the participants, counteracting
the stress caused by noise and crowd density. |
| TG Daily
Nov 09, 2011 |
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