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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Electron Holography Produces First Image of a Single Protein



A non-destructive method for imaging single proteins could help solve one of the biggest challenges in biology
KFC 

The behaviour and function of proteins is largely determined by their shape.  So one of the great ongoing quests in biology is to understand and model the structure of proteins. 
That's a tricky task. Biologists currently do it using techniques such as X-ray crystallography, which requires millions of protein chains to form into a crystal.  The trouble is that most proteins don't form crystals. And even when they do, not all the molecules will be in the same conformation and so the diffraction pattern can end up being a kind of average of several different shapes.
That's why biologists know the shape of less than 2 per cent of the proteins in humans.
What's needed, of course, is a way of imaging individual proteins. One idea is to us x-rays or electron beams to do the trick and indeed some groups have had some success with this technique. But the disadvantage is that beams with an energy of a few KeV tend to destroy biomolecules so it's not clear how accurate these images can be. Nether is it possible to view the molecules over time.
Today, Jean Nicholas Longchamp and pals at the University of Zurich in Switzerland have found a way round this. These guys make the entirely sensible suggestion of imaging proteins using low energy electron beams that don't destroy biomolecules. 
At this energy, electron beams have a wavelength of a nanometre or so, making them perfect not just for imaging with atomic resolution, but for holography. 
And that's exactly what these guys have done. They've created an electron hologram of a protein molecule called ferritin--that's the football-shaped protein that stores and releases iron and is found in almost all living things.
The technique is fairly straightforward. They mix ferritin and carbon nanotubes in water which they then allow to evaporate. This leaves carbon nanotubes with single ferritin proteins bonded to them.
The evaporation takes place in a sieve-like container and leaves some of the ferritin-carrying nanotubes suspended across the holes in the sieve. That allows Longchamp and co to send the low energy electron beam from one side of the hole and then record the interference pattern on the other. 
The result is the first atomic resolution electron hologram of ferritin ever made in a non-destructive way. "We have reported the very first non-destructive investigation of an individual protein by means of  low-energy electron holography," they say.
They've even compared their images to ones of ferritin imaged with high energy electrons and are able to show the damage that the high energy bombardment causes.
That's exciting news. The problem of accurately determining the structure, and therefore the function, of proteins is a major headache for biologists and one that low energy electron holography could help to solve quickly. "The sample preparation method can be applied to a broad class of molecules," say Longchamp and friends.
They now want to improve the resolution of their technique and have a number of tricks up their sleeves that they are no doubt investigating.
Given that the techniques is relatively straightforward and inexpensive, expect to see an explosion of interest in single molecule structural biology at atomic resolution.
Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1201.4300: Non-Destructive Imaging Of An Individual Protein

A Massive Solar Eruption, the Strongest in 7 Years, Has Earth Bracing for a Radiation Storm



Sunday's M9-Class Solar Flare, Whose Associated CME is Now Earth-Bound NASA/SDO and the AIA Consortium
There was a time when one rarely had to worry about incoming doom born of outer space, but that time is not now. Between mysterious space ballsfalling satellite after falling satellite after falling satellite, and the buildup to 2013’s solar maximum, the sky seems more threatening these days. Just ask NOAA, today warning of the strongest solar storm since 2005 currently en route to Earth, spawned by a massive M8.7 class flare that erupted from the solar surface late last night.
Just shy of 11:00 p.m. Eastern U.S. time last night, NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory picked up a huge flash of ultraviolet energy from a massive flare erupting from sunspot 1402. The storm was also picked up by the Solar Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and the Stereo mission, all of which contributed data to NASA and NOAA.

That data says that a burst of highly energetic particles known as a coronal mass ejection, or CME, is hurtling toward the home planet at a rate of about 1,400 miles per second. That burst of radiation isn’t expected to hit Earth squarely but to deliver a glancing blow to the northern part of Earth’s magnetic envelope as early as tomorrow morning. That means people at lower latitudes may be in for some good auroras, but it also means there is some risk to satellites, communications, and aircraft.
Those threats aren’t thought to be all that serious at this time--NASA says the crew aboard the International Space Station is not in any danger, and NOAA officials say the resulting solar storm activity should be moderate. Still, polar flights on Earth are likely to be rerouted tonight and tomorrow until this latest storm has blown over.

HOW TO BECOME THE MOST WANTED EMPLOYEE



If you are wondering why you are unable to find work or why you are not being paid what you would like to be, here are your answers. This marketing veteran shares why you are not where you want to be and how you can fix it!
Business Insider recommends…
The way we do business is changing fast and in order to keep up, your entire mentality about work has to change just as quickly.
Unfortunately, most people aren’t adapting fast enough to this change in the workplace, says marketing guru Seth Godin in an interview with the Canadian talk show “George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight” (via Pragmatic Capitalism).
According to the founder of Squidoo.com and author or 13 books, the current “recession is a forever recession” because it’s the end of the industrial age, which also means the end of the average worker.
“For 80 years, you got a job, you did what you were told and you retired,” says the former vice president of direct marketing at Yahoo! People are raised on this idea that if they pay their taxes and do what they’re told, there’s some kind of safety net, or pension plan that’s waiting for them. But the days when people were able to get above average pay for average work are over.
If you’re the average person out there doing average work, there’s going to be someone else out there doing the exact same thing as you, but cheaper. Now that the industrial economy is over, you should forget about doing things just because it’s assigned to you, or “never mind the race to the top, you’ll be racing to the bottom.”
Instead of waiting around for someone to tell you that you matter, take your career into your own hands. In other words, don’t wait for someone else to pick you and pick yourself! If you have a book, you don’t need a publisher to approve you, you can publish it yourself. It’s no longer about waiting for some big corporation to choose you. We’ve arrived at an age where you choose yourself.
Get the entire story at Business Insider!
 

FIVE THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT WORKING FROM HOME




5 Myths About Being a Home-Based Business

Why pay the expense for an office (and make the commute) when you have all the tools you need at home to run your business?

By Eric Markowitz |  @EricMarkowitz| Jan 19, 2012
Ever wonder what the secret to being a happy entrepreneur is? I know at least 11 founders that might argue that it’s working from home. These deliriously happy 11 were featured in this year’s annual list of “businesses you can start in your pajamas“—our tongue-in-cheek way of telling their story about forsaking the office and working from home. The entrepreneurs featured here weren’t just Web start-ups or service firms, either. Many even made and sold real products—clothing and cheese, for instance—right from their homes. Some of them, like Melissa Lanz, owner of The Fresh 20, had actually opened an office when she launched her business, but decided to close it when she recognized it as an unnecessary expense. “In six months, I visited the office five times,” she says. “It made me feel stupid.”
Others, like Michael Cheng, owner of eCoupons.com, cited the flexibility and convenience of having an office in his house. “As a small business owner, I find myself working all the time one way or the other and it’s nice to have all my equipment in the next room,” he says. He, too, decided to close down an office.
Still, there’s plenty of skepticism that surrounds the concept of being home-based. Can your business scale? Will clients think less of you? How do you establish a corporate culture among employees? And, maybe most importantly, how will it affect your work/life balance?
The entrepreneurs interviewed here insist that there are workarounds to these problems, arguing the benefits of working from home outweigh any negatives that might be incurred from not having a traditional office space. Here’s five myths about working from home—and why they should be dispelled.
1) Clients won’t take you seriously.
One oft-cited fear of maintaining a home-based business is that, depending on the industry, clients won’t take you as seriously if you’re home-based. This can be especially true for service-based industries, like marketing or public relations, where inviting a client to a luxurious office space with 20-foot conference tables can make you seem like you’re a more established firm.
There are tricks to make you seem “bigger” than you actually are (e.g. buying a 1-800 number or hiring a virtual secretary to answer your phones), but that stigma may very well be dying off: the number of entrepreneurs who operate home-based businesses increased from 3.47 million in 1999 to 4.34 million in 2005 (a 25 percent increase), according to the most recent U.S. Census data. And according to Steve King of Emergent Research, who studied this trend with more recent data, that number could be closer to 6.6 million now.
2) Working virtually makes you less productive.
Plenty of management surveys argue otherwise—that employees who work remotely actually get more done.
British Telecom, for example, says it gets 20 percent more work out of its 10,000 home workers. The Computing Technology Industry Association found that 67 percent of the companies they polled said home-based employees were more productive, largely because they spent less time commuting. And a study by CareerBuilder found that 35 percent of virtual workers spend eight or more hours “at the office.”
Melissa Lanz, CEO and founder of The Fresh 20, sees this in her own business. “I don’t think that by sitting in a cubicle, you’re any more productive,” she says. “I find that my virtual workers are able to get more done because they have more flexibility. They might be doing it at 11 p.m. at night, but it works for them. There’s a sense of boredom about sitting in an office and you can get distracted.”
Continue reading this article at INC.com after the break!
 

The influence of estrogen on female mood changes



Women are often troubled with cyclical mood changes. Studies have shown a relationship between emotional disorders associated with the menstrual cycle and changes in estrogen level. The authors reviewed related research in the fields of neuroscience, psychology and endocrinology. Findings were published in Science China Life Sciences.
Women's emotional responses can vary significantly premenstrually. They may become depressed or grumpy during menstruation or the premenstrual phase, known as premenstrual syndrome (PMS). Roughly 75% of reproductive-age women report premenstrual mood swings or physical discomfort. Brain scans show a significant increase in activity in the medial orbitofrontal cortex related to emotional processing premenstrually, even if women's emotional responses do not vary significantly. The relationship between estrogen and emotion was first investigated over 100 years ago, and it has been shown that estrogen can improve mood. Research has shown that during prepuberty, boys are twice as likely as girls to need psychotherapy. However, the opposite is true postpubertally. Women are twice as likely to develop anxiety or depressive disorders compared to men. Women's increased vulnerability to depressive disorders typically occurs between the beginning of puberty and the age of 55, in concert with estrogen level changes. In addition, it is believed that about 95% of women have recurrent psychosis or a noticeable increase in negative emotions along with the fluctuation in endogenous estrogen level. Therefore, understanding the relationship between estrogen level changes and cyclical mood disorders can provide a theoretical basis for improving female physical and mental health.
In their paper titled "Estrogen Impacts on Emotion: Psychological, Neuroscience and Endocrine Studies", Professor Luo Yue-Jia from the College of Brain and Cognitive Sciences of Beijing Normal University and Dr. Chen Chunping from the Institute of Psychology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences systematically reviewed research in the fields of neuroscience, psychology and endocrinology. The paper was published in Science China: Life Sciences. The authors hope the study will contribute to a better understanding of how estrogen affects female mood.
Estrogen has a wide range of effects on the body and brain. It exerts influence on the central nervous system through complex mechanisms of physiology and psychology. It can affect the generation and efficiency of neurotransmitters in the amygdala, hippocampus and prefrontal lobes, which are important brain areas related to emotion and cognition. It also plays a role in changing emotional behavior by acting on the hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis. The genetic transcription of estrogen receptors can modulate emotional behavior, and estrogen can influence emotional processing via neuropsychological factors. It enhances the coding of emotion and recognition accuracy for facial expressions. Estrogen can also affect emotional arousal and change the intensity of emotional experiences.
Clinicians have long recognized estrogen's therapeutic potential for mood change. Self-rated depression scores among oophorectomized women with depressive symptoms are significantly decreased by administration of estrogen, alone or in combination with the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor fluvoxamine. In addition, estrogen replacement therapy is often used in postmenopausal women to improve mood, energy level and general well-being. However, estrogen is not simply a natural "physiological protectant". Some have reported that estrogen administration does not improve mood and even causes fear and anxiety. Therefore, the impact of estrogen on emotion varies and may depend on the individual's current state and the situation.
The authors believe that hormones do not exert an absolute and singular effect on the body. They regulate physical and psychological changes in numerous dimensions. Thus, the influence of estrogen on women's emotion is related to multiple systems. If we achieve a comprehensive understanding of the internal mechanisms related to emotional changes and estrogen, we can provide a theoretical support system to help address female emotional disorders. The authors also believe that the psychological, neurological and endocrine systems are interdependent. Therefore, an effective blending of psychology, biology and physiology is needed. This was the original intention of the paper.
Currently, a team led by Professor Luo Yue-Jia in cooperation with Professor Huang Ruiwang from South China Normal University continues to carry out related studies using electroencephalograms and magnetic resonance imaging as well as behavioral and biochemical techniques. In addition to the study of the relationship between estrogen and emotion, we have extended the research to ovarian hormones and complex social cognition.
More information: Chen C P, Cheng D Z, Luo Yue-Jia. Estrogen Impacts on Emotion: Psychological, Neuroscience and Endocrine Studies. SCI CHINA Life Sci, 2011, 41(11).
Provided by Science in China Press
"The influence of estrogen on female mood changes." January 22nd, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-01-estrogen-female-mood.html
 

Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

A picture is worth a 1000 words











HOW TO GROW GROWTH CAPITAL



Is Private Equity Right For Your Business?

Private equity’s been getting a bad rap recently. But for some business owners, it’s the best way to get growth capital.

If you ask the average small business owner where to get a loan, most can easily provide a few answers right off the top of their head. After all, they probably have a bank account, so they might mention their bank and maybe remember where they went the last time they sought financing.
Now, if you ask these same business owners where to raise private equity for their company, they’re not so quick to answer. Most entrepreneurs, when asked where to find private equity, find their way to suggesting you check with a lawyer or accountant, and a handful may talk about a private equity investor they have met or who has approached them.
But the difference in answers is stark.
It can be like the tale of two ships in the night―small business owners seeking a new source of capital and private equity funds searching for companies where they can put their capital to work―often struggling to find each other.
I frequently hear from small business owners that they don’t know where to turn for capital or, more specifically, that their geography is underserved by capital providers. And this isn’t the only barrier for small companies—many private equity funds are interested in companies of only a certain size or industry and with certain cash flow profiles.
Private equity funds are attracted to companies they can understand, where they can add value (at the right price), and with a management team they can connect with. After that, private equity investors will of course put the highest priority on the transactions they think are best for their fund.
When small business owners approach us to raise capital, we try to familiarize them with the pros and cons of private equity.
  • The upside: Access to capital beyond what a bank would traditionally finance, and perhaps the opportunity to pursue a long-sought-after growth or acquisition initiative that just needed the ready cash to finance.
  • The downside: Private equity is expensive. Funding from a bank in almost any stage of an economic or credit cycle is always cheaper.
The biggest cost, though, isn’t necessary financial—it’s in allowing someone else into your business as a partner. Small business owners frequently don’t appreciate how uninvolved their lenders are in their business. Sure, the lender needs regular statements, regular payments and abidance with covenants, but he or she really isn’t involved in the day-to-day operations of your company. A private equity investor, on the other hand, takes a different tack. The investors will create a board (or take a board seat if you already have a board), set strategy, map out guidelines for future capital infusions, and draft a compensation structure, among other things.
Continue reading this article at Inc.com after the break!
 

Brain MRIs may provide an early diagnostic marker for dyslexia



Children at risk for dyslexia show differences in brain activity on MRI scans even before they begin learning to read, finds a study at Children's Hospital Boston. Since developmental dyslexia responds to early intervention, diagnosing children at risk before or during kindergarten could head off difficulties and frustration in school, the researchers say. Findings appear this week in the online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Developmental dyslexia (dyslexia that's not caused by brain trauma) affects 5 to 17 percent of all children; up to 1 in 2 children with a family history of dyslexia will struggle with reading themselves, experiencing poor spelling and decoding abilities and difficulties with fluent word recognition. Because of problems recognizing and manipulating the underlying sound structures of words (known as phonological processing), children with dyslexia have difficulty mapping oral sounds to written language.
The Children's Hospital Boston researchers, led by Nora Raschle, PhD, of the Laboratories of Cognitive Neuroscience, performed functional MRI imaging in 36 preschool-age children (average age, 5 1/2) while they performed tasks requiring them to decide whether two words started with the same speech sound. They used an elaborate protocol to get these young children to hold still in the MRI scanner.
During the phonological tasks, children with a family history of dyslexia had reduced metabolic activity in certain brain regions (the junctions between the occipital and temporal lobes and the temporal and parietal lobes in the back of the brain) when compared with controls matched for age, IQ and socioeconomic status.
"We already know that older children and adults with dyslexia have dysfunction in the same brain regions," says senior investigator Nadine Gaab, PhD, also of the Laboratories of Cognitive Neuroscience. "What this study tells us is that the brain's ability to process language sounds is deficient even before children have reading instruction."
In both the at-risk and control groups, children with high activation in these brain areas had better pre-reading skills, such as rhyming, knowing letters and letter sounds, knowing when two words start with the same sound, and being able to separate sounds within a word (like saying "cowboy" without the "cow").
The children at risk for dyslexia showed no increase in activation of frontal brain regions, as has been seen in older children and adults with dyslexia. This suggests that these regions become active only when children begin reading instruction, as the brain tries to compensate for other deficits.
Studies have shown that children with dyslexia often have negative experiences in school, being labeled as lazy or unmotivated. Their frustration can lead to aggressive, impulsive and anti-social behaviors and an increased likelihood of dropping out of high school and entering the juvenile justice system.
"We hope that identifying children at risk for dyslexia around preschool or even earlier may help reduce the negative social and psychological consequences these kids often face," says Raschle.
While various neuropsychological interventions are available for dyslexia, the condition generally isn't diagnosed until the child has reached third grade, when they are less effective, Gaab adds.
"Families often know that their child has dyslexia as early as kindergarten, but they can't get interventions at their schools," she says. "If we can show that we can identify these kids early, schools may be encouraged to develop programs."
Gaab and Raschle plan to follow the children over time to see if the brain patterns they observed correlate with a later diagnosis of dyslexia They just received a large NIH grant to extend their study, and are actively enrolling preschool-aged children (for information on enrollment, contact the Gaab lab.
Provided by Children's Hospital Boston
"Brain MRIs may provide an early diagnostic marker for dyslexia." January 23rd, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-01-brain-mris-early-diagnostic-marker.html
 

Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Black tea lowers blood pressure



THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA   



In a world-first, scientists at The University of Western Australia and Unilever have discovered that black tea can significantly lower blood pressure.

Their research is published this week in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

Lead author Research Professor Jonathan Hodgson of UWA's School of Medicine and Pharmacology said high blood pressure could significantly increase people's risk of heart disease.

"There is already mounting evidence that tea is good for your heart health, but this is an important discovery because it demonstrates a link between tea and a major risk factor for heart disease," he said.

In the study, 95 Australian participants aged between 35 and 75 were recruited to drink either three cups of black tea or a placebo with the same flavour and caffeine content, but not derived from tea.

After six months, the researchers found that compared with the placebo, participants who drank black tea had a lower 24-hour systolic and diastolic blood pressure of between 2 and 3 mmHg.

Systolic blood pressure is the blood pressure when the heart beats (contracts) to push blood through the body. Diastolic blood pressure measures the amount of pressure in between beats, when the heart is at rest.

Professor Hodgson said more research is required to better understand how tea may reduce blood pressure, although earlier studies reported a link between tea drinking and the improved health of people's blood vessels.
Editor's Note: Original news release can be found here.

Early detection hope for ovarian cancer



GARVAN INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL RESEARCH   

spanteldotru-chromosome-istock
Ovarian cancer is notoriously difficult to detect early and once its diagnosed, patients tend to die quickly - this breakthrough could help scientists detect the disease earlier and save lives.
Image: spanteldotru/iStockphoto
Australian scientists have identified biochemical changes that commonly occur in the DNA of women with ovarian cancer, which may help diagnose the cancer at an earlier stage in the future.

Using whole genome DNA profiling methods, Brian Gloss, Dr Philippa O’Brien and Professor Susan Clark from Sydney’s Garvan Institute of Medical Research have identified a panel of six genes that are affected by an epigenetic process known as ‘ DNA methylation’ in ovarian cancer.

The Garvan team collaborated with Professor Neville Hacker, Director Gynaecological Cancer Unit, Royal Hospital for Women Randwick, who provided tumour samples from ovarian cancer patients, as well as tissue samples from normal ovaries.

The findings are published in the journal Cancer Letters, now online.

Ovarian cancer is not easily diagnosed early, and people with advanced disease tend to die quickly.

Women diagnosed at a late stage – the majority – have a 30% 5-year survival rate. Women diagnosed at an early stage have a 90% 5-year survival rate.

Although ovarian cancer is a relatively rare disease, it is the leading cause of death due to gynaecological cancers, and the sixth leading cause of cancer death in women. Around one in 70 women will develop the cancer, and around one in 100 women will die from it.

Ovarian cancers are usually diagnosed once the disease has spread past the pelvis and into other organs including the stomach, bowel and lungs. They are typically very hard to get rid of with surgery and they tend to become rapidly resistant to chemotherapeutics.

“This was one of first studies that used whole genome techniques to directly profile DNA methylation aberrations in ovarian cancer - with the aim of identifying diagnostic biomarkers,” said Brian Gloss, who focused on the project for his PhD.

“When we started in 2008, most other research groups were investigating single genes known to be methylated in other cancers. We decided to make use of new whole genome technologies – using DNA methylation profiling and gene expression profiling.”

“We wanted to see exactly which methylation changes led directly to aberrant gene silencing. In other words, which methylation changes have a functional role in ovarian cancer.”

“We did our discovery process in cell lines and then validated our findings in 27 cancers versus 12 normal ovarian tissue samples.”

“One of the key methylated genes we identified was a novel gene, which had not been identified as being misregulated in any cancer before.”

“When we then analysed a further 100 tumours, we found that the novel biomarker gene was methylated in 80% of them.”

“This paper represents the first half of our work. The next step will be to see how our panel of biomarker genes is methylated in a larger cohort of ovarian tumours, and to identify the function of our novel gene.”

“The most difficult aspect of ovarian cancer is that it is a molecularly heterogeneous disease, meaning that each tumour can be quite different from the next.”

“We need to show, therefore, that our panel of biomarkers will be a sufficiently rigorous diagnostic tool, able to catch the requisite number of tumours."
Editor's Note: Original news release can be found here.

பூமியை இன்று தாக்குகிறது சூரியப்புயல்: நாசா எச்சரிக்கை




சூரியனிலிருந்து வரும் அதிசக்தி வாய்ந்த காந்தப் புயல் பூமியை இன்று தாக்கும் என்று அமெரிக்க நாசா விண்வெளி ஆய்வு மையம் தெரிவித்துள்ளது.
இதுபற்றி கடந்த 6 வருடங்களாக விண்வெளி ஆராய்ச்சியில் நாசா ஈடுபட்டு வருகிறது.
இந்த சூரிய புயல் இன்று நொடிக்கு 2000 கிலோ மீற்றர் வேகத்தில் பூமியை நோக்கி வரும் என நாசா தெரிவித்துள்ளது.
சூரிய புயலின் தாக்கம் அமெரிக்கா, ஐரோப்பா, ஆசிய நாடுகளில் இருக்கும் என்றும் உயர் ரக அலைவரிசை ரேடியோவை பயன்படுத்தும் விமானங்களில் தொடர்பு துண்டிக்கப்படும் என்றும் விண்வெளியில் ஆராய்ச்சியில் ஈடுபட்டுள்ளவர்கள் மையங்களில் இருந்து பாதுகாப்பான இடத்துக்கு சென்று விடும்படியும் நாசா எச்சரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளது.
சூரிய புயல் தாக்கும் போது மின் தடை ஏற்படும் என்றும் நாசா தெரிவித்துள்ளது.

!! Attractive Sarees !!









Funny Lesson


A woman goes to the Doctor, worried about her husband’s temper and
threatening manner.
The Doctor asks: "What's the problem?
The woman says: "Doctor, I don't know what to do. Every time my husband
comes home drunk, he threatens to slap me around."
The Doctor says: "I have a real good cure for that. When your husband
comes home drunk, just take a glass of water and start swishing it in
your mouth. Just swish and swish but don't swallow it until he goes to
bed and is asleep."

Two weeks later the woman comes back to the doctor looking fresh and
reborn.

The woman says: "Doctor that was a brilliant idea! Every time my
husband came home drunk, I swished with water. I swished and swished,
and he didn't touch me!
How does the water do that?"
The Doctor says: "The water does it all. It’s keeping your mouth shut
that does the trick...."