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Lottie Peppers

Gene-environment interplay | Science - 0 views

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    The advent of increasingly powerful and inexpensive DNA sequencing methods is changing many aspects of genetics research. In particular, human genome sequencing is transforming our understanding of many aspects of human biology and medicine. However, we must be careful to remember that genes alone do not determine our futures-environmental factors and chance also play important roles.
Lottie Peppers

Researchers discover gene behind 'sixth sense' in humans | Science | AAAS - 0 views

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    A soft brush that feels like prickly thorns. A vibrating tuning fork that produces no vibration. Not being able to tell which direction body joints are moving without looking at them. Those are some of the bizarre sensations reported by a 9-year-old girl and 19-year-old woman in a new study. The duo, researchers say, shares an extremely rare genetic mutation that may shed light on a so-called "sixth sense" in humans: proprioception, or the body's awareness of where it is in space. The new work may even explain why some of us are klutzier than others.
Lottie Peppers

Fighting sepsis with cancer drugs | Science | AAAS - 0 views

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    Inflammation may help you fight off invading microbes, but it can also kill you, leading to insufficient blood flow and even organ failure. A new study shows that some cancer drugs may be able to quell the excessive inflammation that occurs in conditions such as sepsis, which is responsible for more than 250,000 deaths in the United States each year.
Lottie Peppers

The gene editor CRISPR won't fully fix sick people anytime soon. Here's why | Science |... - 0 views

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    CRISPR still has a long way to go before it can be used safely and effectively to repair-not just disrupt-genes in people. That is particularly true for most diseases, such as muscular dystrophy and cystic fibrosis, which require correcting genes in a living person because if the cells were first removed and repaired then put back, too few would survive. And the need to treat cells inside the body means gene editing faces many of the same delivery challenges as gene transfer-researchers must devise efficient ways to get a working CRISPR into specific tissues in a person, for example. CRISPR also poses its own safety risks. Most often mentioned is that the Cas9 enzyme that CRISPR uses to cleave DNA at a specific location could also make cuts where it's not intended to, potentially causing cancer.
Lottie Peppers

TE What is Biology? | CK-12 Foundation - 0 views

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    Online Textbook district hyperlinked, Teacher's Edition
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

An On-Line Biology Book - 0 views

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    Online biology textbook from Estrella Mountain Community College, Michael J. Farabee, Ph.D.
Lottie Peppers

Newsela | Five babies near Chicago get measles; are enough Americans vaccinated? - 0 views

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    The announcement comes about a week after the state's first case of measles of the year was confirmed. Cook County health officials would only identify the person with measles as a suburban resident who is older than 18. At the time, officials listed three places where others might have come into contact with the measles patient in mid-January - including two in Palatine.
Lottie Peppers

Forensics gone wrong: When DNA snares the innocent | Science | AAAS - 0 views

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    Its accuracy has made DNA evidence virtually unassailable. A landmark report published by the National Research Council in 2009 dismissed most forensics as unproven folk-wisdom but singled out DNA as the one forensic science worthy of the name. Yet in recent years Hampikian and other geneticists have begun to question the technology. Thanks to a series of advances-including the polymerase chain reaction, which can multiply tiny amounts of DNA-it's now possible to detect DNA at levels hundreds or even thousands of times lower than when DNA fingerprinting was developed in the 1980s. Investigators can even collect "touch DNA" from fingerprints on, say, a glass or a doorknob. A mere 25 or 30 cells will sometimes suffice. This heightened sensitivity can easily create false positives
Lottie Peppers

Activities Preview | RI-ITEST Project Portal - 2 views

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    The goal of RI-ITEST is to prepare diverse students for careers in information technologies by engaging them in exciting, inquiry- based learning activities that use sophisticated computational models in support of a revolutionary science curriculum. Teachers will incorporate interactive computer models developed under the Science of Atoms and Molecules (SAM) project at the Concord Consortium. These materials were specifically designed to support a deeper understanding of science made possible through interactive computer simulations and the new physics-chemistry-biology sequence. Connections will be made between the models students use to learn science and possible careers in research and industry where computer modeling is used.
Lottie Peppers

Cold temperatures may help shed pounds | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    Gut microbes-the collection of bacteria and other organisms that inhabit our intestines-have been shown to play a role in a wide variety of conditions from asthma to obesity. But researchers still don't know precisely how they contribute to obesity. To gain a better understanding, a team led by physiologist Mirko Trajkovski from the University of Geneva in Switzerland has been following up on any leads he can to learn about the link between these microbes and metabolism. Trajkovski knew from past research that getting rid of some gut bacteria in mice makes them less able to maintain their internal body temperature in the cold. He wondered whether there might be a connection between gut microbes, external temperature, and weight control.
Lottie Peppers

Weight gain-and loss-can alter men's sperm | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    Men, your sperm know how heavy you are. A new study reveals that sperm carry different chemical tags on their DNA depending on whether their owner is lean or obese. The findings suggest that men may be able to pass information about the availability of food in their environment down to their offspring, which could influence their child's odds of being overweight.
Lottie Peppers

Got allergies? Blame parasites | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    Why are millions of people allergic to peanuts or pollen, but hardly anyone seems to have a reaction to rice or raisins? Because only some of these things carry molecules similar to those found in parasites that send our immune systems into hyperdrive, according to a new study. The advance could help researchers predict what other foods might cause allergies.
Lottie Peppers

Gene drive turns insects into malaria fighters | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    The war against malaria has a new ally: a controversial technology for spreading genes throughout a population of animals. Researchers report today that they have harnessed a so-called gene drive to efficiently endow mosquitoes with genes that should make them immune to the malaria parasite-and unable to spread it. On its own, gene drive won't get rid of malaria, but if successfully applied in the wild the method could help wipe out the disease, at least in some corners of the world. The approach "can bring us to zero [cases]," says Nora Besansky, a geneticist at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, who specializes in malaria-carrying mosquitoes. "The mosquitos do their own work [and] reach places we can't afford to go or get to."
Lottie Peppers

'Junk DNA' tells mice-and snakes-how to grow a backbone | Science | AAAS - 1 views

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    Why does a snake have 25 or more rows of ribs, whereas a mouse has only 13? The answer, according to a new study, may lie in "junk DNA," large chunks of an animal's genome that were once thought to be useless. The findings could help explain how dramatic changes in body shape have occurred over evolutionary history. Scientists began discovering junk DNA sequences in the 1960s. These stretches of the genome-also known as noncoding DNA-contain the same genetic alphabet found in genes, but they don't code for the proteins that make us who we are. As a result, many researchers long believed this mysterious genetic material was simply DNA debris accumulated over the course of evolution. But over the past couple decades, geneticists have discovered that this so-called junk is anything but. It has important functions, such as switching genes on and off and setting the timing for changes in gene activity. 
Lottie Peppers

https://www.learner.org/courses/biology/support/3_compev.pdf - 0 views

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    Taxonomy, the practice of classifying biodiversity, has a venerable history. Although early natural historians did not recognize that the similarities and differences among organisms were consequences of evolutionary mechanisms, they still sought a means to organize biological diversity.
Lottie Peppers

Genetic mysteries of the biggest trees - San Francisco Chronicle, 2017-09-26 - 0 views

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    Redwood trees, those ancient living monuments to California's past, are as mysterious to science as they are magnificent, so a team of researchers led by a San Francisco conservation group is attempting to unlock the genetic secrets of the towering conifers. Scientists affiliated with the nonprofit Save the Redwoods League are attempting for the first time to sequence the genomes of coast redwood trees and their higher-elevation cousins, the giant sequoias, a complex and expensive undertaking that experts hope will help preserve the trees' ancient groves as the climate changes over the next century.
Lottie Peppers

This protein is mutated in half of all cancers. New drugs aim to fix it before it's too... - 0 views

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    She wanted to understand the effects of mutations that the gene for p53 is prone to. In dozens of simulations, she and her colleagues tracked how common p53 mutations further destabilize the already floppy protein, distorting it and preventing it from binding to DNA. Some simulations also revealed something else: a fingerhold for a potential drug. Once in a while, a small cleft forms in the mutated protein's core. When Amaro added virtual drug molecules into her models, the compounds lodged in that cleft, stabilizing p53 just enough to allow it to resume its normal functions.
Lottie Peppers

Geckos evolve rapidly in Brazil after new dam constructed | Science | AAAS - 0 views

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    In just 15 years, the lizards' heads have grown larger-an adaptation that allows them to eat a wider assortment of insects made available by the dam's creation. The find may portend other rapid evolutionary changes across the globe as humans continue to dramatically alter the natural landscape.  
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