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Lottie Peppers

Your World - www.biotechinstitute.org - 0 views

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    Student friendly online "your world" magazines, on a variety of topics.
Lottie Peppers

Special Series: 7 Billion - National Geographic Magazine - 0 views

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    A special year-long series on population from National Geographic magazine
Lottie Peppers

Johns Hopkins Magazine - 0 views

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    In depth article touching on cancer advances.
Lottie Peppers

Science News | - 0 views

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     Daily news articles, blogs and biweekly magazine covering all areas of science
Lottie Peppers

Steve Silberman: The forgotten history of autism - YouTube - 0 views

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    Decades ago, few pediatricians had heard of autism. In 1975, 1 in 5,000 kids was estimated to have it. Today, 1 in 68 is on the autism spectrum. What caused this steep rise? Steve Silberman points to "a perfect storm of autism awareness" - a pair of doctors with an accepting view, an unexpected pop culture moment and a new clinical test. But to really understand, we have to go back further to an Austrian doctor by the name of Hans Asperger, who published a pioneering paper in 1944. Because it was buried in time, autism has been shrouded in misunderstanding ever since. (This talk was part of a TED2015 session curated by Pop-Up Magazine: popupmagazine.com or @popupmag on Twitter.)
Lottie Peppers

Why Couldn't She Stand Up for More Than a Minute - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Diagnosis article, woman kept passing out
Lottie Peppers

Measuring the Planet's Health in Vibrant Shades of Green - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    A new study, published and reviewed in Nature magazine, shows the changes in shades of green (a proxy for plant health) in response to certain environmental factors - in this case, temperature, water availability and cloud cover.
Lottie Peppers

Magic Bullets - National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science - 1 views

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    This clicker case was designed to teach students about basic enzyme structure, mechanisms of enzyme inhibition, and mechanisms of drug resistance. The story follows Oliver Casey, a patient afflicted with Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML). CML is caused by a chromosomal mutation that affects the tyrosine kinase ABL, an enzyme important in regulating cell growth and proliferation. The chromosomal mutation gives rise to the BCR-ABL fusion gene that produces a constitutively active ABL kinase, which causes the leukemia. In May 2001, the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of a rationally designed tyrosine kinase inhibitor, imatinib (Gleevec®), for the treatment of CML. During that same month, Gleevec made the cover of TIME magazine, described as "new ammunition in the war on cancer." The case is structured for a flipped classroom environment in which students view preparatory videos (including one by the author) on their own before beginning the case. Written for a first-year introductory biology course, the case could also be adapted for AP/Honors high school biology or a cancer biology course.
Lottie Peppers

Lost Colonies | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    Dubilier is hardly alone in her plight. A heaping teaspoon of soil or a shot of ocean water may contain as many as one million bacterial species. Many of them are potential gold mines of chemicals and metabolites with medicinal, engineering, and energy applications. But when researchers have tried to culture these microbes in the lab, only a minority of cells form colonies. Clearly, nutrients, a carbon source, and time are usually not enough to coax bacteria isolated from the wild to grow in a laboratory setting. So what's the missing ingredient?
Lottie Peppers

How Did Life Begin on Earth? | Quanta Magazine - 0 views

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    Origins of life with self-replicating molecules
Lottie Peppers

Exome Study Reveals Novel Disease-Linked Alleles | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    In a unique twist on human genomics studies that seek to identify genetic variants linked to human disease, researchers have combined whole-exome sequencing of 50,726 adults with the individuals' long-term electronic health record (EHR) data. The effort, by researchers at the Geisinger Health System in Pennsylvania and Regeneron Genetics Center, a subsidiary of New York-based Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, has yielded novel disease-linked variants, including loss-of-function alleles. The team behind the project, called DiscovEHR, has also found that about one in 30 of the individuals harbors a deleterious genetic variant for which a screen or treatment already exists. The group's analysis is described in two papers published today (December 22) in Science.
Lottie Peppers

Humans Never Stopped Evolving | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    Six years ago, Yale University's Stephen Stearns and colleagues took advantage of a long-running study in Framingham, Massachusetts, to assess whether the effects of natural selection could be discerned among the people in the multigenerational study population. Over the last seven decades, public-health researchers have been monitoring the residents of Framingham, noting their vital statistics as well as blood sugar and cholesterol levels to understand the factors that lead to heart disease. As the initial group of research subjects got older, the study started to include their children, and then their grandchildren. The records provide a unique view of the health of a segment of the American population since 1948.
Lottie Peppers

How Plants Evolved Different Ways to Make Caffeine | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    Plant species belonging to divergent branches of the evolutionary tree are known to have independently evolved caffeine production. According to scientists at Western Michigan University, caffeine-producing plants have taken a number of different biochemical routes to synthesize the stimulant. Coffee, tea, cocoa, orange, and guaraná plants make caffeine using an array of enzymes and substrates, the researchers reported in PNAS this week (September 20).
Lottie Peppers

Fat Dads' Epigenetic Legacy | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    Children with obese fathers have different epigenetic markings on the gene for insulin-type growth factor 2 (IGF2)-which is important during fetal growth and development-than children with fathers of normal weight.
Lottie Peppers

The Rise of Heads | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    A researcher has gathered a piece of evidence that helps shed light on the evolutionary transition from soft-bodied animals with no well-defined heads to hard-bodied animals that sported heads. The clue comes from one of the oldest fossilized brains ever found-a more than 500 million-year-old specimen of the Cambrian arthropod Odaraia alata found in western Canada.
Lottie Peppers

The Origins of O | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    HIV jumped from apes to humans at least four times, as evidenced by genetically distinct groups of the virus that have been detected: M, N, O, and P. While N and P have had little impact, M is responsible for the pandemic affecting millions of individuals, and O has infected another 100,000.
Lottie Peppers

CRISPR "Kill Switches" for GMOs | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    An environmentally dependent method to excise particular genes and eliminate genetically modified organisms (GMOs) if they leave the lab, published this week (May 19) in Nature Communications, uses an inducible CRISPR/Cas9 genome-editing system to snip out vital pieces of the E. coli genome.
Lottie Peppers

Science Illustrators: Making the invisible visible | EARTH Magazine - 0 views

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    This laborious process did not result from any lack of talent on Buell's part - he's revered among illustrators. Rather, he faced a challenging task: drawing something no one ever had seen or ever could see. In addition to making science visually appealing and easier to understand, this is what science illustrators do. They make the invisible visible.
Lottie Peppers

Image of the Day: Incredible Edible Corn | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    It took about 9,000 years and alterations in six genetic pathways to transform the inedible grass teosinte (left) into the corn we eat today (right). (Center: a first generation hybrid between teosinte and corn)
Lottie Peppers

Batch Effect Behind Species-Specific Results? | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    With a dozen or so 140-character dispatches (including three heat maps), Gilad suggested the results published in PNAS were an anomaly-a result of how the tissue samples were sequenced in different batches. If this "batch effect" was eliminated, he proposed, mouse and human tissues clustered in a tissue-specific manner, confirming previous results rather than supporting the conclusions reported by the Mouse ENCODE team.
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