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Lottie Peppers

Gene 'switches' are what really make humans tick - YouTube - 0 views

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    video 2:47 Gene 'switches' are what really make humans tick
Lottie Peppers

Crossing-over: Genetic Recombination - 0 views

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    While genes determine most of our physical characteristics, the exact combination of genes we inherit, and thus our physical traits, is in part due to a process our chromosomes undergo, known as genetic recombination.
Lottie Peppers

What women eat before conception can alter baby's genes: study - Yahoo News - 0 views

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    Yahoo News article 4/30 Published in the journal Nature Communications, the study claims to provide strong evidence that a mother's diet before pregnancy can permanently affect her child's lifelong health by silencing certain genes.
Lottie Peppers

Hope - It's In Our Genes: Dr. Barry Byrne at TEDxUF 2013 - YouTube - 0 views

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    start at 4:00 human genome project translation target rare diseases with gene therapy: 1)Leber's congenital amaurosis- blindness 2) congenitaal AADC deficiency- enzyme responsible for movement 3)  Muscular Dystrophy- Pompe Disease
Lottie Peppers

Gene Therapy - YouTube - 0 views

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    2:27 video overview of gene therapy
Lottie Peppers

Genes to Cognition Online - 0 views

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    Genes to Cognition (G2C) Online is about modern neuroscience. It focuses on cognitive disorders, cognitive processes, and research approaches. Use the dynamic network maps to explore our library of 750+ unique items. Or, use the linear Selected Items menu on top of each map to tour selected content.  Explore, interact, and have fun! 
Lottie Peppers

Gene Therapy's Big Comeback - 0 views

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    Overview of genetic engineering and business assessment of scientific feasibility.  Good overview of past gene therapy attempts.
Lottie Peppers

Loss of memory in Alzheimer's mice models reversed through gene therapy -- ScienceDaily - 0 views

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    Promising animal model work utilizing gene therapy.
Lottie Peppers

Gene therapy and other molecular genetic-based therapeutic approaches - Human Molecular... - 0 views

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    Book Chapter of gene therapy, nice figure on different approaches.
Lottie Peppers

Steps in Cloning a Gene - YouTube - 0 views

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    1:42 video on gene cloning
Lottie Peppers

GMO controversy explained - Yahoo News - 0 views

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    GMOs are organisms that have had their DNA modified through genetic engineering. This is often done by taking a gene from one organism and putting it into another one to alter it in a desirable way. For example, when genetic engineers want to create a corn crop that is resistant to pests, they seek out the trait in Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) soil bacteria that naturally acts as a pesticide. From there, engineers isolate the gene responsible for that trait and directly insert it into the corn's DNA. This corn is then bred with other corn until it's ready to be produced for consumption.
Lottie Peppers

CRACKING THE CODE/CLONING PAPER PLASMID - 0 views

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    "CRACKING THE CODE"/"Cloning Paper Plasmid" activities can (1) serve as a review of the "genetic code" and the role it plays in our life; and, (2) to help students see how genes may be manipulated for genetic research, namely, gene cloning/genetic engineering. The laboratory time, the specialized equipment and expertise to carry out recombinant DNA experiments may be lacking in the high school. Activity 2 will help students conceptualize the mechanics involved in cutting and ligating DNAs into a plasmid vector with "sticky ends" of complementary DNA base pairs.
Lottie Peppers

Epigenetic Influences and Disease | Learn Science at Scitable - 0 views

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    The external environment's effects upon genes can influence disease, and some of these effects can be inherited in humans. Studies investigating how environmental factors impact the genetics of an individual's offspring are difficult to design. However, in certain parts of the world in which social systems are highly centralized, environmental information that might have influenced families can be obtained. For example, Swedish scientists recently conducted investigations examining whether nutrition affected the death rate associated with cardiovascular disease and diabetes and whether these effects were passed from parents to their children and grandchildren (Kaati et al., 2002). These researchers estimated how much access individuals had to food by examining records of annual harvests and food prices in Sweden across three generations of families, starting as far back as the 1890s. These researchers found that if a father did not have enough food available to him during a critical period in his development just before puberty, his sons were less likely to die from cardiovascular disease. Remarkably, death related to diabetes increased for children if food was plentiful during this critical period for the paternal grandfather, but it decreased when excess food was available to the father. These findings suggest that diet can cause changes to genes that are passed down though generations by the males in a family, and that these alterations can affect susceptibility to certain diseases. But what are these changes, and how are they remembered? The answers to questions such as these lie in the concept of epigenetics.
Lottie Peppers

Personalized medicine and pharmacogenomics - Mayo Clinic - 0 views

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    Pharmacogenomics holds the promise that drugs might one day be tailored to your genetic makeup. By Mayo Clinic Staff Modern medications save millions of lives a year. Yet any one medication might not work for you, even if it works for other people. Or it might cause severe side effects for you but not for someone else. Your age, lifestyle and health all influence your response to medications. But so do your genes. Scientists are working to match specific gene variations with responses to particular medications.
Lottie Peppers

Iron levels in brain predict when people will get Alzheimer's - health - 19 May 2015 - ... - 0 views

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    Researchers at the University of Melbourne in Australia followed 144 older people who had mild cognitive impairment for seven years. To gauge how much iron was in their brains, they measured ferritin, a protein that binds to the metal, in their cerebrospinal fluid. For every nanogram per millilitre people had at the start of the study, they were diagnosed with Alzheimer's on average three months earlier. The team also found that the biggest risk gene for Alzheimer's, ApoE4, was strongly linked with higher iron, suggesting this is why carrying the gene makes you more vulnerable.
Lottie Peppers

Targeting Protein Domains with CRISPR | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

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    Current CRISPR-based screens often mutate the beginning of a gene, which sometimes results in the expression of a functional protein variant. To circumvent this problem, researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) designed CRISPR guide RNAs that would mutate the portion of a gene encoding a domain on the surface of the protein where a small molecule could bind to alter the protein's function. The team had previously identified such a binding pocket on the protein BRD4, and a small molecule inhibitor that binds in the pocket is an effective leukemia treatment.
Lottie Peppers

UNC-Chapel Hill research suggests RNA from fathers works harder | News & Observer News ... - 0 views

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    de Villena and his colleagues counted the RNA molecules produced and found that genes from the father produced on average more RNA than genes from the mother. (And remember, RNA directs the production of proteins, which are the workhorses of the body's development and function.) The implication? "It's not only what you inherit, but from whom you inherit," he said.
Lottie Peppers

DNA 'spool' modification affects aging and longevity | Cornell Chronicle - 0 views

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    Research on a modified protein around which DNA is wrapped sheds light on how gene regulation is linked to aging and longevity in nematodes, fruit flies and possibly humans. The research has implications for how gene expression is regulated, and could offer a new drug target for age-related diseases.
Lottie Peppers

A Short History of Breeds | Teaching Genetics with Dogs - 0 views

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    Dogs are excellent models for studying genetics, especially disease genetics. Work done in the last 20 years has shown that dogs share many gene-related disorders with people. Each breed is a closed reproductive population with distinct rates of heritable diseases, which dramatically increases the odds of finding disease-related loci. In creating new dog breeds, we reduce the gene pool within those populations, and fix many alleles. This homogeneous background makes it much easier to map QTLs and perform linkage analyses
Lottie Peppers

18 Things You Should Know About Genetics - YouTube - 0 views

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    Gene Screen BC 2011 Participant. 18 Things You Should Know About Genetics is an animated film that presents fundamental background information about genetics, as well as offering some quirky but interesting facts about DNA, genes and genetics. It was created to be an upbeat, fun educational short film to initiate and draw interest to this sometimes daunting and seemingly complex subject matter.
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