In the News
First Tree Genome Published: Cracking Poplar DNA Code Promises New Pos An international consortium, which includes researchers from the Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology at Ghent University, has succeeded in unraveling the first tree genome -- that of the poplar. Moreover, their research indicates that the poplar has about 45,000 genes. This knowledge is a first step toward being able to make trees grow faster or make them easier to process into paper or energy. Antibiotics Protect Nerves In Mice By Turning On Genes A family of antibiotics that includes penicillin may help prevent nerve damage and death in a wide variety of neurological diseases, including Lou Gehrig's disease, dementia, stroke, and epilepsy, Johns Hopkins researchers have found. Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act of 2000 "This Act gives states the option to provide medical assistance through Medicaid to eligible women who were screened for and found to have breast or cervical cancer, including precancerous conditions."Includes a "summary of actions taken by states and affected territories and tribal organizations to accept and implement the Medicaid option provided for by the Act,"as updated through January 2005. From the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Most Babies Receive Recommended Newborn Tests, But Half A Million Stil Nearly 90 percent of U.S. babies are born in states that require screening for at least 21 life-threatening disorders, according to the 2007 March of Dimes Newborn Screening Report Card. In 2005, only 38 percent of infants were born in states that required screening for at least 21 of the 29 genetic and functional conditions recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics. If diagnosed early, these conditions can be managed or treated to prevent severe consequences. NASA Rover Nears Martian Bowl Goal NASA's Mars rover Opportunity is closing in on what may be the grandest overlook and richest science trove of its long mission. During the next two weeks, the robotic geologist is likely to reach the rim of a hole in the Martian surface wider and deeper than any it has visited. The crater, known as "Victoria,"is approximately 750 meters (half a mile) wide and 70 meters (230 feet) deep. Striking Deep Current Reversal In The Tropical Pacific Ocean In two oceanographic surveys conducted in the south-west Pacific Ocean, in October 1999 and April 2000, scientists from this IRD observed a sharp change in direction of equatorial intermediate current between these two dates. Such temporal variability is not new, but in this case its amplitude is strikingly strong. This effect will have to be taken into account if better understanding of ocean-atmosphere exchanges and climate variations is to be achieved. Immune System Police Learn Early And Sometimes Badly Regulatory T cells, which function like immune system police, learn early in life what to protect, and that may include viruses, bacteria and tumors, researchers have shown. Neonatal Care: Better Access To Cool Caps Improves Outcomes, Lowers Co Using a computer-based modeling technique, researchers have found that better access to "cooling caps"for newborns suffering from asphyxia improves outcomes and lowers costs. The findings demonstrate through a computer-based modeling technique, that better availability and placement of "CoolCaps"within a regional healthcare system could lead to a 23 percent reduction in the number of newborns likely to develop permanent damage from hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, a form of asphyxia that damages the central nervous system. Discovery About Obesity Drug Helping Scientists Develop New Cancer Tre Based on their surprising discovery that an obesity drug can kill cancer cells, scientists have made a new finding about the drug's effects and are working to design more potent cancer treatments. What Color Is That Sound? Imagine being able to see or taste sounds, as well as hearing them. Sound like science fiction? For some people, it's reality. This blending of the senses occurs in a rare condition called "synesthesia."In this condition, a stimulus, such as sound, creates a reaction in another sense, as well as the expected sense.
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