Globally, commercial ships emit almost half as much particulate pollution into the air as the total amount released by cars, according to a new study. Ship pollutants affect both the Earth's climate and the health of people living along coastlines.
| Environment | February 26, 2009 09:42 PM |
Globally, commercial ships emit almost half as much particulate pollution into the air as the total amount released by cars, according to a new study. Ship pollutants affect both the Earth's climate and the health of people living along coastlines.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2303 views |
| Microbiology | February 26, 2009 09:42 PM |
The discovery of the molecule, an antibody known as CR6261, is good news for researchers who hope to design a flu vaccine that would give humans lifelong protection against a majority of influenza viruses. The antibody also has the potential to treat those who are unvaccinated and become infected with the flu.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1944 views |
| Biology | February 26, 2009 09:42 PM |
A system of opposing genetic forces determines why mammals develop a single row of teeth, while sharks sport several, according to a study published today in the journal Science. When completely understood, the genetic program described in the study may help guide efforts to re-grow missing teeth and prevent cleft palate, one of the most common birth defects.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 4280 views |
| Biology | February 26, 2009 02:15 AM |
In the real world, odors don't happen one puff at a time. Animals move through, and subsequently distort, plumes of odor molecules that constantly drift, changing direction as the wind disperses them. Now, by exploring how animals smell odors under naturalistic conditions, Rockefeller University scientist Maria Neimark Geffen and her colleagues reveal that the brain encodes these swirling, and complex patterns of molecules using surprisingly little neural machinery. The findings suggest a new theory of how animals smell.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1608 views |
| Biology | February 26, 2009 02:15 AM |
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have unlocked the mystery of a puzzling human disease and gained insight into cardiovascular development, all thanks to a big-hearted fish.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2438 views |
| Molecular & Cell Biology | February 26, 2009 02:15 AM |
Scientists have discovered the secrets of a sophisticated molecule that plays a role in many aspects of human health from fertility to blood pressure; digestion to mental health. This has opened up the potential for discovery of new drugs to treat an enormous variety of conditions.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1901 views |
| Bioinformatics | February 26, 2009 02:15 AM |
Modern genotyping technologies offer new opportunities to explore how genes influence health and disease, but also present the challenge of analyzing huge amounts of genetic and clinical data. With this in mind, investigators at the Lausanne Branch of the international Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (LICR), the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB) and the University Hospital of Lausanne have developed AssociationViewer, a computational tool that displays genetic differences between individuals on a large scale. Presented in the March 1st (Vol. 25/5) issue of Bioinformatics, the software is a public resource that will help scientists and physicians discover new genetic markers for diseases and other conditions.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1684 views |
| Molecular & Cell Biology | February 26, 2009 02:15 AM |
A layer of "dark cells" in the retina that is responsible for maintaining the health of the light-sensing cells in our eyes has been imaged in a living retina for the first time.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1804 views |
| AIDS & HIV | February 24, 2009 09:25 PM |
GALVESTON, Texas – The vast majority of HIV-infected Texas prison inmates who receive antiretroviral therapy while incarcerated experience significant interruptions in HIV treatment after their release into the community. This disturbing finding is the result of a 4-year study of more than 2,000 inmates with HIV infection released from Texas Department of Criminal Justice prisons between January 2004 and December 2007. The study, led by University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston epidemiologist and associate professor Jacques Baillargeon, will appear in the Feb. 25 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1600 views |
| Biology | February 24, 2009 09:25 PM |
"Psychedelica" seems the perfect name for a species of fish that is a wild swirl of tan and peach zebra stripes and behaves in ways contrary to its brethren. So says University of Washington's Ted Pietsch, who is the first to describe the new species in the scientific literature and thus the one to select the name.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2572 views |
| Molecular & Cell Biology | February 24, 2009 09:25 PM |
Scientists from Queen Mary, University of London have discovered that an ancient system of communication found in primitive bacteria, may also explain how plants and algae control the process of photosynthesis.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 3544 views |
| Biology | February 24, 2009 09:25 PM |
A team of scientists, led by the University of Exeter, has used game theory to explain the bizarre behaviour of a group of ravens. Juvenile birds from a roost in North Wales have been observed adopting the unusual strategy of foraging for food in 'gangs'. New research, published in the journal PLoS One (on Wednesday 25 February 2009), explains how this curious behaviour can be predicted by adapting models more commonly used by economists to analyse financial trends.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2406 views |
| Molecular & Cell Biology | February 24, 2009 09:25 PM |
Stem cells scientists at UCLA showed for the first time that human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells can be differentiated into electrically active motor neurons, a discovery that may aid in studying and treating neurological disorders.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1314 views |
| Biotechnology | February 24, 2009 09:39 AM |
Scientists have developed a way to manipulate bacteria so they will grow mutant sugar molecules on their cell surfaces that could be used against them as the key component in potent vaccines.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 3556 views |
| Gene Therapy | February 23, 2009 02:05 PM |
A new UCLA AIDS Institute study has found that gene therapy can be developed as a safe and active technique to combat HIV.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 4841 views |
| Health & Medicine | February 23, 2009 02:05 PM |
Wash away your gray? Maybe. A team of European scientists have finally solved a mystery that has perplexed humans throughout the ages: why we turn gray. Despite the notion that gray hair is a sign of wisdom, these researchers show in a research report published online in The FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org) that wisdom has nothing to do with it. Going gray is caused by a massive build up of hydrogen peroxide due to wear and tear of our hair follicles. The peroxide winds up blocking the normal synthesis of melanin, our hair's natural pigment.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 4797 views |
| Biology | February 23, 2009 02:05 PM |
Great Ape Trust of Iowa scientist Dr. Serge Wich and three other internationally respected orangutan experts have edited a book set for release in the United States this month that, for the first time, compares data collected at every known orangutan research site and examines the information to discern differences and similarities among orangutan species, subspecies and populations.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1036 views |
| Microbiology | February 20, 2009 01:06 AM |
A new website has been launched which allows scientists everywhere to collaborate on the identification of bacterial strains. This new resource, described in the open access journal BMC Biology, provides a portal for electronic bacterial taxonomy.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1808 views |
| Health & Medicine | February 20, 2009 01:06 AM |
A team of researchers from Princeton University and the Drexel University College of Medicine has found that the parasite that causes malaria breaks down an important amino acid in its quest to adapt and thrive within the human body. By depleting this substance called arginine, the parasite may trigger a more critical and deadlier phase of the disease.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2000 views |
| Molecular & Cell Biology | February 20, 2009 01:06 AM |
A major mystery about the origins of life has been resolved. According to a study published in the journal Nature, two Université de Montréal scientists have proposed a new theory for how a universal molecular machine, the ribosome, managed to self-assemble as a critical step in the genesis of all life on Earth.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1972 views |
| Biology | February 20, 2009 01:06 AM |
Mating can be exhausting. When fruit flies mate, the females' genes are activated to roughly the same extent as when an immune reaction starts. This is shown in a study at Uppsala University that is now appearing in the scientific publication, Journal of Evolutionary Biology.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 3203 views |
| Biotechnology | February 20, 2009 01:06 AM |
For millions of Americans with cancer, the side effects of chemotherapy and other treatment drugs can be devastating. But new drug-delivery research based on nano- and microtechnology from Tel Aviv University might provide much-needed relief, as well as more effective cancer treatment.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2888 views |
| Biology | February 20, 2009 01:06 AM |
Trees do it. Bees do it. Even environmentally stressed fish do it. But Prof. Yossi Loya from Tel Aviv University's Department of Zoology is the first in the world to discover that Japanese sea corals engage in "sex switching" too.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1871 views |
| Microbiology | February 20, 2009 01:06 AM |
Bacteria that cause urinary tract infections (UTIs) make more tools for stealing from their host than friendly versions of the same bacteria found in the gut, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the University of Washington have found.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1714 views |
| Molecular & Cell Biology | February 18, 2009 07:49 PM |
In their ongoing study of the processes involved in embryonic development in fruit flies, researchers at WPI's Life Sciences and Bioengineering Center at Gateway Park have identified the function of a protein that sticks out of the embryonic cell membrane like an antenna and processes signals needed for the flies' wings to develop properly.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2058 views |
| Environment | February 18, 2009 07:49 PM |
Globally, tropical trees in undisturbed forest are absorbing nearly a fifth of the CO2 released by burning fossil fuels.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2959 views |
| Stem Cell Research | February 18, 2009 07:49 PM |
A Johns Hopkins engineer is trying to coax human stem cells to turn into networks of new blood vessels that could someday be used to replace damaged tissue in people with heart disease, diabetes and other illnesses.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 3299 views |
| Health & Medicine | February 18, 2009 12:46 AM |
Scientists at the Moores Cancer Center at the University of California, San Diego, Stanford University School of Medicine and other centers have identified a mechanism by which a chronic form of leukemia can progress into a deadlier stage of the disease. The findings may provide physicians with an indicator of when this type of cancer – chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) – is progressing, enabling them to make more accurate prognoses for the disease and improved treatment choices.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2453 views |
| Molecular & Cell Biology | February 18, 2009 12:46 AM |
Research scientists in Bonn have succeeded in deriving so-called brain stem cells from human embryonic stem cells. These can not only be conserved almost indefinitely in culture, but can also serve as an inexhaustible source of diverse types of neural cell. The scientists have also shown that these neural cells are capable of synaptic integration in the brain. Their results have been published in the latest edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1626 views |
| Biology | February 18, 2009 12:46 AM |
Because of the distinct lack of grocery stores in outer space, scientists are looking for ways to provide food for long-term space missions.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 2675 views |
| Biology | February 18, 2009 12:46 AM |
As the popularity of organic produce increases with consumers, growers need more options to manage pests naturally.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1819 views |
| Biotechnology | February 18, 2009 12:46 AM |
For centuries, animals have been our first line of defense against toxins. A canary in a coalmine served as a living monitor for poisonous gases. Scientists used fish to test for contaminants in our water. Even with modern advances, though, it can take days to detect a fatal chemical or organism.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1444 views |
| Health & Medicine | February 18, 2009 12:46 AM |
An early warning system, more than a decade in development, successfully predicted the 2006-2007 outbreak of the deadly Rift Valley fever in northeast Africa, according to a new study led by NASA scientists.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1931 views |
| Microbiology | February 16, 2009 07:55 PM |
If a picture is worth a thousand words, then Rice University's precise new image of a virus' protective coat is seriously undervalued. More than three years in the making, the image contains some 5 million atoms -- each in precisely the right place -- and it could help scientists find better ways to both fight viral infections and design new gene therapies.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1854 views |
| Health & Medicine | February 16, 2009 07:55 PM |
Arab-American women living in southeast Detroit whose conservative dress limits their exposure to sun should be taking a vitamin D supplement to boost their dangerously low serum levels, according to a study published by Henry Ford Hospital researchers.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1502 views |
| Biotechnology | February 16, 2009 07:55 PM |
A Duke University-led team has brought powerful software to the never-ending arms race between antibiotics and germs. Working together, computer scientists and biochemists have developed and laboratory-tested a computer program that can show experimentalists how to change the machinery that bacteria use to make natural antibiotics.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1464 views |
| Health & Medicine | February 16, 2009 07:55 PM |
A video imaging technique demonstrates that the soft palate, the tissue at the back of the roof of the mouth, is more elongated and angled in patients with obstructive sleep apnea both when they sleep and when they are awake, according to a report in the February issue of Archives of Otolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1095 views |
| Biology | February 15, 2009 03:01 PM |
Social isolation affects how people behave as well as how their brains operate, a study at the University of Chicago shows.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 3426 views |
| Biology | February 15, 2009 03:01 PM |
Earth's unique, forbidding ice oceans of the Arctic and Antarctic have revealed a trove of secrets to Census of Marine Life explorers, who were especially surprised to find at least 235 species live in both polar seas despite a distance of more than 13,000-kilometer distance in between.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 1719 views |
| Microbiology | February 12, 2009 02:10 PM |
Dr. Marcia Blackman and her research team at the Trudeau Institute have followed up on an intriguing report published in the journal Nature in May 2007 by Dr. Herbert Virgin, et al., showing that mice persistently infected with certain forms of herpesvirus, which can establish lifelong latent infections, are resistant to infection with bacterial pathogens.
| Full story | 0 Comments | 4046 views |