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Lottie Peppers

Using CRISPR To Learn How a Body Builds Itself - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Sulston worked alone, in silence, hunched over a microscope for eight hours a day. By studying and drawing worms of various ages, he figured out the ancestor and descendants of each of their cells. It was a monumental piece of science. Sulston mapped the complete history of an individual, the comprehensive family tree of a single body. "We had the entire story of the worm's cells from fertilized egg to adult," he later said, upon accepting the Nobel Prize for his work.
Lottie Peppers

Long-Dreaded Superbug Found in Human and Animal in U.S. - Phenomena: Germination - 0 views

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    Department of Defense researchers disclosed Thursday in a report placed online by the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy that a 49-year-old woman who sought medical care at a military-associated clinic in Pennsylvania last month, with what seemed to be a urinary tract infection, was carrying a strain of E. coli resistant to a wide range of drugs. That turned out to be because the organism carried 15 different genes conferring antibiotic resistance, clustered on two "mobile elements" that can move easily among bacteria. One element included the new, dreaded gene mcr-1.
Lottie Peppers

More People Are Seeking Genetic Testing, But Counselors Aren't Keeping Up : Shots - Hea... - 0 views

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    She says people became much more willing to talk about their genetic predispositions and seek out testing for conditions like Alzheimer's disease and cystic fibrosis. The number of patients seeking genetic counseling and testing has increased dramatically, according to a 2014 study that looked at how Jolie's announcement affected interest in testing. But the number of genetic counselors, the people who help both doctors and patients make sense of these tests, hasn't expanded enough to keep up with that demand. There are just 4,000 certified genetic counselors in the country today. That's one for every 80,000 Americans.
Lottie Peppers

Regenerative medicine approach improves muscle strength, function in leg injuries; Deri... - 0 views

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    Damaged leg muscles grew stronger and showed signs of regeneration in three out of five men whose old injuries were surgically implanted with extracellular matrix derived from pig bladder, according to a new study. Early findings are from a human trial of the process as well as from animal studies.
Lottie Peppers

Genes for memory (lesson) :: DNA Learning Center - 0 views

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    Genes for memory- swimming mice knock out lesson
Lottie Peppers

Fact sheets - 0 views

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    The Australian Stem Cell Centre (ASCC), developed the following fact sheets in respect of stem cell science and related topics. Please note that whilst the Fact Sheets were updated shortly before the ASCC closed in 2011, users should note that they are no longer being updated and be aware that the content in them may be out of date. Although the content of the fact sheets is unlikely to have been superseded please do not rely on them for any decision-making purposes and they should be used as part of a wider reading program on the subjects.
Lottie Peppers

Using DNA to Trace Human Migration | HHMI's BioInteractive - 1 views

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    All living humans originated from populations of ancestors who migrated out of Africa less than 100,000 years ago. Learn how scientists have used genetic markers to trace the migration routes and origins of modern human populations.
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

Antarctica's Blood Falls are a sign of life below ground - environment - 28 April 2015 ... - 0 views

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    The groundwater is cold, deep and twice as salty as seawater, but the water streaming out of Blood Falls, which teems with microbes, tells us that it is unlikely to be lifeless. "The fact that the [water] contains metabolically active micro-organisms that appear to be suited to life in a dark, cold brine supports the idea that life should persist throughout the subsurface," says Mikucki. If so, those microbes could be fuelling life in the Southern Ocean. By breaking down iron-containing rocks they might be dumping as much as 170 million kilograms of iron into the ocean each year, according to the researchers' estimates, helping to explain why marine productivity is seasonally very high near to the coast.
Lottie Peppers

Genome | The Changing Face of Clinical Trials - 0 views

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    Within a year, Stein's team had designed a clinical trial protocol that turned standard research practices around 180 degrees, launching what it now calls the Signature Clinical Trial Program. Instead of a patient traveling to one of several research sites, Novartis would send the investigational drugs to his or her local oncologist's office. Instead of testing hundreds or thousands of genetically unscreened patients, the company would accept only patients who had the genetic markers the drugs were supposed to target. Instead of waiting months, patients could access the treatments in two or three weeks. Instead of running a large-scale trial to investigate one or two questions, clinicians could conduct smaller, rapid proof-of-concept studies to quickly rule out the tumor types that don't respond to a study agent and identify other tumor types that are potentially treatable with the drug and worthy of further study.
Lottie Peppers

Asthma cure on the horizon? | Foundation for Biomedical Research - 0 views

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    Millions of people suffer from asthma, a frightening disease that makes you feel like you're drowning. Using both mouse and human cells - and a humanized mouse to show how human type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2) work in the body, researchers at Janssen Research and Development, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School are figuring out ILC2's role in asthma. Their findings have important implications in the quest for effective asthma therapies!
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

Snakebites deadly as other diseases in West Africa | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    West Africa was under the media spotlight this year-and rightly so after nearly 11,000 people died in the largest Ebola outbreak ever recorded. But although the disease flickers in and out of the public consciousness, a new study shows that another killer was nearly as deadly: snakebites.
Lottie Peppers

Wolves and Monkeys: Unusual Hunting Buddies - Extinction Countdown - Scientific America... - 0 views

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    It turns out that some monkeys make better hunting partners than prey. That's the case on the Ethiopian highlands, where two unusual species have developed an equally unusual co-dependency. The relationship benefits both canine and primate, although at least one or two nearby rodent species might regret it.
Lottie Peppers

New Technology High School - Napa, CA - 0 views

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    The backbone of New Tech High's unique learning environment is project-based learning (PBL). Instead of handing out daily assignments, teachers assign periodic projects that require critical thinking, creativity, collaboration, and communication.
lloyshel

Diffusion, Osmosis and Active Transport | Concord Consortium - 0 views

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    Movement of ions in and out of cells is crucial to maintaining homeostasis within the body and ensuring that biological functions run properly. The natural movement of molecules due to collisions is called diffusion. Several factors affect diffusion rate: concentration, surface area, and molecular pumps. This activity demonstrates diffusion, osmosis, and active transport through 12 interactive models. Start by following the path of a molecule of dye in water, create concentration gradients on either side of a cell membrane and watch the movement of substances in and out of a cell, and monitor the movement of oxygen into red blood cells with and without hemoglobin.
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    Awesome interactive player
Lottie Peppers

Contents of Essentials of Cell Biology | Learn Science at Scitable - 0 views

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    The cellular life cycle, also called the cell cycle, includes many processes necessary for successful self-replication. Beyond carrying out the tasks of routine metabolism, the cell must duplicate its components - most importantly, its genome - so that it can physically split into two complete daughter cells. The cell must also pass through a series of checkpoints that ensure conditions are favorable for division.
Lottie Peppers

Five Reasons To Thank Plankton - YouTube - 0 views

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    4:30 video For too long plankton have slaved away in obscurity, making the world a better place for generations of ungrateful humans. Until now. Find out how much you owe these little guys with Nature Video's Five Reasons To Thank Plankton.
Lottie Peppers

Bacteria May Be Remaking Drugs in Sewage - Scientific American - 0 views

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    When researchers tested wastewater before and after treatment at a Milwaukee-area treatment plant, they found that two drugs-the anti-epileptic carbamazepine and antibiotic ofloxacin-came out at higher concentrations than they went in. The study suggests the microbes that clean our water may also piece some pharmaceuticals back together.
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