ScienceDaily: Latest Science News |
- New patient-friendly way to make stem cells for fight against heart disease
- How, in the animal world, a daughter avoids mating with her father: Paternal 'voice' recognition
- Scientists identify key biological mechanism in multiple sclerosis
- Whirligig beetles inspire energy-efficient robots
- First direct evidence linking TB infection in cattle to local badger populations
- Sneak peek at early course of bladder infection caused by widespread, understudied parasite
- Promising drug slows down advance of Parkinson's disease and improves symptoms
- Milk drinkers may yet get heart-healthy omega-3s by the glass
- Mimicking public health strategies could improve cyber security
- Best gifts for children don't require dazzling technology
- New insights into mosquitoes' role as involuntary bioterrorists
- Controversial treatment for autism may do more harm than good, researchers find
- Garbage bug may help lower the cost of biofuel
- Defining career paths in health systems improvement
- Proteins that work at the ends of DNA could provide cancer insight
- Chromatin remodeling: Activating ACL1 with a little help from 'friends'
- Scientists discover water ice on Mercury: Ice and organic material may have been carried to the planet by passing comets
- Autism severity may stem from fear
- Delayed treatment for advanced breast cancer has 'profound effect'
- Human-caused climate change signal emerges from the noise
- Adapting fish defenses to block human infections: Antimicrobial peptide of fish gills inspire clean surfaces
- Post-divorce journaling may hinder healing for some
- Precisely engineering 3-D brain tissues
- The beginning of everything: New paradigm shift for the infant universe
- Body language, not facial expressions, broadcasts what's happening to us
- More solid measure of melting in polar ice sheets: Planet's two largest ice sheets losing ice fast
- X-ray laser helps fight sleeping sickness: Exploiting parasite's weak spot may lead to new treatments
- Grand Canyon as old as the dinosaurs: Dates for carving of western Grand Canyon pushed back 60 million years
- Nanobiotechnology: Versatile 3-D nanostructures using DNA 'bricks'
- Can life emerge on planets around cooling stars?
- Oceanic crust breakthrough: Solving a magma mystery
- Sources of E. coli are not always what they seem
- Mild vibrations may provide exercise-like benefits for obese
- Too much dark matter in galaxy cluster? 'Dark core' may not be so dark after all
- New approach allows past data to be used to improve future climate projections
- Roadmap to metabolic reprogramming for aging
- Biology behind brain development disorder: Mutations in the gene, UBE3B, cause a rare genetic disorder in children
- Resolving debate about how tumors spread
- Insects beware: The sea anemone is coming
- Bacteria hijack host cell process, create their own food supply to become infectious
- First-ever hyperspectral images of Earth's auroras: New camera provides tantalizing clues of new atmospheric phenomenon
- Inviting customer complaints can kill business
- Children with higher intelligence less likely to report chronic widespread pain in adulthood
- Camera trap photo of rare cat wins prize
- From rabbits in Congo, a jump in kids' health
- An ocean away: Two new encrusting anemones found in unexpected locations
- Travels in northeastern Brazil: Unfolding the reptile fauna of Lençóis Maranhenses
- Cancer drug shows promise in eradicating latent HIV infection
- Homicide spreads like infectious disease
- Newly created fly to study how a normal cell turns cancerous
- Greener storage for green energy
- Advancing next generation of high-speed optical communication networks
- Most of the harmful mutations in people arose in the past 5,000 to 10,000 years
- Rules devised for building ideal protein molecules from scratch
- Testicular cancer risk tripled in boys whose testes fail to descend
- Findings support safety of whooping cough vaccine for older adults
- Relative length of adults' fingers indicator of verbal aggression: Prenatal exposure to testosterone linked
- Short-term exposure to essential oils lowers blood pressure and heart rate... but only when exposure is less than one hour
- Making music together connects brains
- Increasing poverty in older age will lead to adverse health outcomes, experts say
New patient-friendly way to make stem cells for fight against heart disease Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:26 PM PST Scientists have developed a patient-friendly and efficient way to make stem cells out of blood, increasing the hope that scientists could one day use stem cells made from patients' own cells to treat cardiovascular disease. |
How, in the animal world, a daughter avoids mating with her father: Paternal 'voice' recognition Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:26 PM PST Paternal recognition – being able to identify males from your father's line – is important for the avoidance of inbreeding, and one way that mammals can do this is through recognizing the calls of paternal kin. This was thought to occur only in large-brained animals with complex social groups, but a new study provides evidence in a tiny, solitary primate that challenges this theory. |
Scientists identify key biological mechanism in multiple sclerosis Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:39 PM PST Scientists have defined for the first time a key underlying process implicated in multiple sclerosis -- a disease that causes progressive and irreversible damage to nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord. This discovery offers new hope for the millions who suffer from this debilitating disease for which there is no cure. |
Whirligig beetles inspire energy-efficient robots Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:39 PM PST While many may have found the movements of whirligig beetles curious, scientists have puzzled over the apparatus behind their energy efficiency -- until now, thanks to a new study. |
First direct evidence linking TB infection in cattle to local badger populations Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:39 PM PST Transmission of tuberculosis between cattle and badgers has been tracked at a local scale for the first time, using a combination of bacterial whole genome DNA sequencing and mathematical modelling. The study highlights the potential for the use of next generation sequencing as a tool for disentangling the impact of badgers on TB outbreaks in cows at the farm level. |
Sneak peek at early course of bladder infection caused by widespread, understudied parasite Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:39 PM PST Using standard tools of the molecular-biology trade and a new, much-improved animal model of a prevalent but poorly understood tropical parasitic disease called urogenital schistosomiasis, researchers were able to obtain "snapshots" of shifting gene activity levels during the early, acute phase of what for most becomes a chronic bladder infection. |
Promising drug slows down advance of Parkinson's disease and improves symptoms Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:38 PM PST Treating Parkinson's disease patients with the experimental drug GM1 ganglioside improved symptoms and slowed their progression during a two and a half-year trial. |
Milk drinkers may yet get heart-healthy omega-3s by the glass Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:38 PM PST Food science researchers may have reeled milk into the fish oil delivery system, showing it is possible to incorporate omega-3 fatty acids into milk and dairy-based beverages in amounts sufficient to promote heart health, without destroying the milk's taste. The innovation may be a way to help people who do not eat fish get some of the heart-healthy benefits of fish oil. |
Mimicking public health strategies could improve cyber security Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:37 PM PST Mimicking public health strategies, such as maintaining good "cyber hygiene," could improve cyber security, according to a new article. |
Best gifts for children don't require dazzling technology Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:37 PM PST Advice for holiday shopping the BEST way: Build skills, Entertain, Stimulate imagination and Teach teamwork. |
New insights into mosquitoes' role as involuntary bioterrorists Posted: 29 Nov 2012 02:37 PM PST Biologists have discovered mosquitoes possess a previously unknown mechanism for destroying pathogens that takes advantage of the peculiarities of the insect's circulatory system to increase its effectiveness. |
Controversial treatment for autism may do more harm than good, researchers find Posted: 29 Nov 2012 01:21 PM PST A controversial treatment for autism spectrum disorder is not only ineffective but may be harmful, according to a new study. |
Garbage bug may help lower the cost of biofuel Posted: 29 Nov 2012 01:21 PM PST One reason that biofuels are expensive to make is that the organisms used to ferment the biomass cannot make effective use of hemicellulose, the next most abundant cell wall component after cellulose. They convert only the glucose in the cellulose, thus using less than half of the available plant material. Researchers have been doing research on an organism that they think could be used to solve this problem. |
Defining career paths in health systems improvement Posted: 29 Nov 2012 12:20 PM PST Among numerous programs aimed at improving the quality and efficiency of the US health care system, training the next generation of experts needed to help lead these efforts has received inadequate, according to three physicians. They propose a framework for career development in what they call "health systems improvement." |
Proteins that work at the ends of DNA could provide cancer insight Posted: 29 Nov 2012 12:20 PM PST New insights into a protein complex that regulates the very tips of chromosomes could improve methods of screening anti-cancer drugs. Researchers determined the binding mechanism of proteins that protect and regulate telomeres, segments of repeating DNA units that cap the ends of chromosomes and a key target of cancer researchers. |
Chromatin remodeling: Activating ACL1 with a little help from 'friends' Posted: 29 Nov 2012 12:19 PM PST Chromatin remodeling —- the packaging and unpackaging of genomic DNA and its associated proteins —- regulates a host of fundamental cellular processes including gene transcription, DNA repair, programmed cell death as well as cell fate. In their latest study, scientists are continuing to unravel the finicky details of how these architectural alterations are controlled. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 12:13 PM PST Mercury, the smallest and innermost planet in our solar system, revolves around the sun in a mere 88 days, making a tight orbit that keeps the planet incredibly toasty. Surface temperatures on Mercury can reach a blistering 800 degrees Fahrenheit -- hot enough to liquefy lead. |
Autism severity may stem from fear Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:35 AM PST New research on autism shows that children with the diagnosis struggle to let go of old, outdated fears. Even more significantly, the study found that this rigid fearfulness is linked to the severity of classic symptoms of autism, such as repeated movements and resistance to change. |
Delayed treatment for advanced breast cancer has 'profound effect' Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:35 AM PST Results from a recent study show women who wait more than 60 days to begin treatment for advanced breast cancer face significantly higher risks of dying than women who start therapy shortly after diagnosis. |
Human-caused climate change signal emerges from the noise Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:35 AM PST By comparing simulations from 20 different computer models to satellite observations, climate scientists have found that tropospheric and stratospheric temperature changes are clearly related to human activities. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:35 AM PST Living in an environment teaming with bacteria and fungi, fish have evolved powerful defenses, including antimicrobial peptides located in their gills. Undergraduate researchers are studying the biology and mechanics of one of those peptides with the aim of creating engineered surfaces that can kill bacteria responsible for foodborne illnesses and hospital-acquired infections. |
Post-divorce journaling may hinder healing for some Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:35 AM PST Following a divorce or separation, many people are encouraged by loved ones or health-care professionals to keep journals about their feelings. But for some, writing in-depth about those feelings immediately after a split may do more harm than good, according to new research. |
Precisely engineering 3-D brain tissues Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:34 AM PST Borrowing from microfabrication techniques used in the semiconductor industry, engineers have developed a simple and inexpensive way to create three-dimensional brain tissues in a lab dish. |
The beginning of everything: New paradigm shift for the infant universe Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:34 AM PST A new paradigm for understanding the earliest eras in the history of the universe has been developed. The new paradigm shows, for the first time, that the large-scale structures we now see in the universe evolved from fundamental fluctuations in the essential quantum nature of "space-time," which existed even at the very beginning of the universe. |
Body language, not facial expressions, broadcasts what's happening to us Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:33 AM PST If you think that you can judge by examining someone's facial expressions if he has just hit the jackpot in the lottery or lost everything in the stock market -- think again. Researchers have discovered that -- despite what leading theoretical models and conventional wisdom might indicate -- it just doesn't work that way. |
More solid measure of melting in polar ice sheets: Planet's two largest ice sheets losing ice fast Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:33 AM PST Climatologists have reconciled their measurements of ice loss in Antarctica and Greenland over the past two decades. A second article looks at how to monitor and understand accelerating losses from the planet's two largest continental ice sheets. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:33 AM PST Scientists have mapped a weak spot in the parasite that causes African sleeping sickness, pinpointing a promising new target for treating a disease that kills tens of thousands of people each year. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:33 AM PST An analysis of mineral grains from the bottom of the western Grand Canyon indicates it was largely carved out by about 70 million years ago -- a time when dinosaurs were around and may have even peeked over the rim, says a new study. |
Nanobiotechnology: Versatile 3-D nanostructures using DNA 'bricks' Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:32 AM PST Researchers have created more than 100 three-dimensional nanostructures using DNA building blocks that function like Lego bricks -- a major advance from the two-dimensional structures the same team built a few months ago. |
Can life emerge on planets around cooling stars? Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:31 AM PST New research hints that planets orbiting white and brown dwarfs, even in the habitable zone, face a "difficult path to habitability." |
Oceanic crust breakthrough: Solving a magma mystery Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:06 AM PST Oceanic crust covers two-thirds of Earth's solid surface, but scientists still don't entirely understand the process by which it is made. Analysis of more than 600 samples of oceanic crust reveals a systemic pattern that alters long-held beliefs about how this process works, explaining a crucial step in understanding Earth's geological deep processes. |
Sources of E. coli are not always what they seem Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:06 AM PST Scientists have identified sources of Escherichia coli bacteria that could help restore the reputation of local livestock. Studies suggest that in some parts of California, pathogens in local waterways are more often carried there via runoff from urban areas, not from animal production facilities. |
Mild vibrations may provide exercise-like benefits for obese Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:06 AM PST If you're looking to get some of the benefits of exercise without doing the work, here's some good news. A new research report shows that low-intensity vibrations led to improvements in the immune function of obese mice. If the same effect can be found in people, this could have clinical benefits for obese people suffering from a wide range of immune problems related to obesity. |
Too much dark matter in galaxy cluster? 'Dark core' may not be so dark after all Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:06 AM PST Astronomers were puzzled earlier this year when NASA's Hubble Space Telescope spotted an overabundance of dark matter in the heart of the merging galaxy cluster Abell 520. This observation was surprising because dark matter and galaxies should be anchored together, even during a collision between galaxy clusters. |
New approach allows past data to be used to improve future climate projections Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:06 AM PST Climate scientists are still grappling with one of the main questions of modern times: how high will global temperatures rise if the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide doubles. Many researchers are turning to the past because it holds clues to how nature reacted to climate change before the anthropogenic impact. The divergent results of this research, however, have made it difficult to make precise predictions about the impact of increased carbon dioxide on future warming. |
Roadmap to metabolic reprogramming for aging Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:05 AM PST To survey previously uncharted territory, a team of researchers have created an "atlas" that maps more than 1,500 unique landmarks within mitochondria that could provide clues to the metabolic connections between caloric restriction and aging. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:04 AM PST A combination of sequencing and mouse models were used to identify the gene responsible for a brain developmental disorder seen in four patients. The study also shows that the biology uncovered in the mouse model helps to understand the symptoms in patients. |
Resolving debate about how tumors spread Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:03 AM PST Scientists have shown for the first time how cancer cells control the ON/OFF switch of a program used by developing embryos to effectively metastasize in vivo, breaking free and spreading to other parts of the body, where they can proliferate and grow into secondary tumors. |
Insects beware: The sea anemone is coming Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:18 AM PST Insects are becoming resistant to insecticides, presenting a growing need to develop novel ways of pest control. New research shows that the sea anemone's venom harbors toxins that could pose a new generation of environmentally friendly insecticides, which avoid insect resistance. These toxins disable ion channels that mediate pain and inflammation, and could also spur drug development aimed at pain, cardiac disorders, epilepsy and seizure disorders, and immunological diseases. |
Bacteria hijack host cell process, create their own food supply to become infectious Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:18 AM PST Bacteria that cause the tick-borne disease anaplasmosis in humans create their own food supply by hijacking a process in host cells that normally should help kill the pathogenic bugs, scientists have found. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:18 AM PST Hoping to expand our understanding of auroras and other fleeting atmospheric events, a team of space-weather researchers designed and built a new camera with unprecedented capabilities that can simultaneously image multiple spectral bands, in essence different wavelengths or colors, of light. The camera produced the first-ever hyperspectral images of auroras -- commonly referred to as "the Northern (or Southern) Lights"-- and may already have revealed a previously unknown atmospheric phenomenon. |
Inviting customer complaints can kill business Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:18 AM PST Giving customers a chance to complain can be a bad idea if customers believe they're to blame for a product's failure, a new study shows. |
Children with higher intelligence less likely to report chronic widespread pain in adulthood Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:18 AM PST There is a correlation between childhood intelligence and chronic widespread pain (CWP) in adulthood, according to a new study. About 10-15 percent of adults report CWP, a common musculoskeletal complaint that tends to occur more frequently among women and those from disadvantaged socioeconomic backgrounds. CWP is a core symptom of fibromyalgia and is one of the most common reasons for consulting a rheumatologist. |
Camera trap photo of rare cat wins prize Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:17 AM PST A photo of a little known Bolivian cat species called an oncilla has been taken by a camera trap. |
From rabbits in Congo, a jump in kids' health Posted: 29 Nov 2012 08:17 AM PST For children in the Democratic Republic of Congo, rabbits are more than furry pets. They are symbol of resilience as the basis of a microfinance program aimed at improving youth health and social outcomes. |
An ocean away: Two new encrusting anemones found in unexpected locations Posted: 29 Nov 2012 07:35 AM PST A group of marine biologists from Japan has discovered two new species of encrusting anemone, thousands of kilometers away from the single other known species of the group. The first species from Madagascar was found in 1972 and never reported again, while the new species are from the Great Barrier Reef in Australia and southern Japan. |
Travels in northeastern Brazil: Unfolding the reptile fauna of Lençóis Maranhenses Posted: 29 Nov 2012 07:35 AM PST Lençóis Maranhenses National Park contains a dune field measuring about 120,000 hectares in the Amazonian transition with Cerrado and Caatinga. In this peculiar Brazilian ecosystem, which reptiles would you expect to encounter most frequently? In order to answer a question like this, biologists spent 235 days in fieldwork, and eventually produced the first list of reptile species in the park. |
Cancer drug shows promise in eradicating latent HIV infection Posted: 29 Nov 2012 07:35 AM PST Breakthrough drugs help people to live longer with HIV, but more research is needed for an actual cure. One challenge involves eradicating the virus when it is latent in the body. New research suggests the cancer drug, JQ1, may be useful in purging latent HIV infection by activating the virus in the presence of potent therapy -- essentially a dead end for the virus. |
Homicide spreads like infectious disease Posted: 29 Nov 2012 07:35 AM PST Homicide moves through a city in a process similar to infectious disease, according to a new study that may give police a new tool in tracking and ultimately preventing murders. |
Newly created fly to study how a normal cell turns cancerous Posted: 29 Nov 2012 07:35 AM PST The wing of a fruit fly may hold the key to unraveling the genetic and molecular events that transform a normal cell into a cancerous one. The study, conducted on Drosophila melanogaster has reproduced each of the steps known to take place when a healthy cell turns cancerous. The researchers have thus provided an inexpensive and effective model that will allow to scrutinize the genes and molecules involved in each step. |
Greener storage for green energy Posted: 29 Nov 2012 07:34 AM PST Renewable energy solutions like wind and solar operate on nature's timetable. When the sun blazes or when the breeze blows, power is plentiful—but not necessarily at the moments when consumers need it, like on a hot, calm summer night. |
Advancing next generation of high-speed optical communication networks Posted: 29 Nov 2012 07:32 AM PST Scientists have recently achieved a breakthrough in the research of high-speed optical communications by increasing the speed of optical communication networks by 40 times. |
Most of the harmful mutations in people arose in the past 5,000 to 10,000 years Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:39 AM PST A study of the age of more than 1 million single-letter variations in the human DNA code reveals that most of these mutations are of recent origin, evolutionarily speaking. They arose as a result of explosive population growth, which provides more chances for new mutations to appear in offspring. Many of these mutations are harmful, some have no effect, and others are beneficial now or may provide an adaptive advantage for future generations. |
Rules devised for building ideal protein molecules from scratch Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:39 AM PST By following certain rules, scientists can prepare architectural plans for building ideal protein molecules not found in the real world. Based on computer renditions, previously non-existent proteins can be produced from scratch in the lab. In our imperfect world, proteins can be beset by bulges, kinks, strains, and improperly buried parts, and many diseases arise from protein malformations. The researchers achieved a library of several ideal structures. The principles could aid in designing drugs, vaccines, industrial enzymes, fuels, and pollutant removers. |
Testicular cancer risk tripled in boys whose testes fail to descend Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:39 AM PST Boys whose testes have not descended at birth -- a condition known as cryptorchidism -- are almost three times as likely to develop testicular cancer in later life, finds a new analysis. |
Findings support safety of whooping cough vaccine for older adults Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:37 AM PST A new study of the safety of the tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis vaccine supports the recommendation that those 65 and older get the vaccine to protect themselves and others, particularly young babies, from pertussis. The findings come as reported US cases of the bacterial infection, also known as whopping cough, are at the highest level since the 1950s. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:37 AM PST A new study links verbal aggression to prenatal testosterone exposure. Scientists used the 2D:4D measure to predict verbal aggression. This study is the first to use this method to examine prenatal testosterone exposure as a determinant of a communication trait. |
Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:34 AM PST The scents which permeate our health spas from aromatic essential oils may provide more benefits than just a sense of rest and well-being. |
Making music together connects brains Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:34 AM PST Anyone who has ever played in an orchestra will be familiar with the phenomenon: the impulse for one's own actions does not seem to come from one's own mind alone, but rather seems to be controlled by the coordinated activity of the group. And indeed, interbrain networks do emerge when making music together – this has now been demonstrated. Scientists used electrodes to trace the brain waves of guitarists playing in duets. They also observed substantial differences in the musicians' brain activity, depending upon whether musicians were leading or following their companion. |
Increasing poverty in older age will lead to adverse health outcomes, experts say Posted: 29 Nov 2012 06:34 AM PST Many people will be much poorer than they had expected in their older age and this has profound implications for the health of our ageing population claims an editorial. |
You are subscribed to email updates from ScienceDaily: Latest Science News To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
ليست هناك تعليقات:
إرسال تعليق