The first demonstration that a single
adult stem cell can self-renew in a mammal was reported at the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) 48th Annual Meeting, Dec. 13-17, 2008 in San Francisco. The transplanted adult stem cell and its differentiated descendants restored lost function to mice with hind limb muscle tissue damage.
Meiosis, the process of halving a germ cell’s chromosomes in preparation for egg or sperm production, has been one of the most studied areas of cell biology. But in mammals, the field has been divided over the question of whether meiosis is triggered by a signal within a cell or by a signal coming from the cell’s environment.
Now new research from the lab of Whitehead Director David Page reveals that both sets of signals are needed to initiate meiosis.
Determining the mechanisms that shape biological membranes has long been a tricky business.
Like a factory assembly line, eukaryotic cells are organized into membrane-bound, functional compartments called organelles. For instance, the nucleus is the repository of genetic information and houses the machinery that creates the messenger RNA transcripts, which direct the synthesis of new protein. Secreted proteins are synthesized in a second organelle, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which are exported to the cell surface by a third organelle, the Golgi complex. All membrane bound organelles are characterized by dynamic changes in membrane structure that are closely coupled to the function of these compartments.
You're in the store and you have a choice between buying Gears Of War 2, with its innovative third-person tactical action gameplay and jaw-dropping graphics with effects like ambient occlusion, dynamic shadows and advanced destructible environments, or, oh yeah, some jewelry thing your wife mumbled something about wanting for Christmas.
What goes through your mind as you consider these tough choices? And, of more importance to retailers, how can they manipulate this process for their benefit?
A possible new therapeutic target for pancreatic cancer, the most lethal form of human cancer, has been identified in the proteins whose DNA recipe comes from the gene named "Seven-In-Absentia," according to researchers at the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) 48th Annual Meeting, Dec. 13-17, 2008 in San Francisco.
In their studies with Drosophila melanogaster at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine in Minnesota, scientists found a link between the "Seven-In-Absentia" or SINA gene and the aggressive cellular transformation, oncogenesis and metastasis that characterize pancreatic cancer.
Scientists already knew that a mutation in the K-RAS gene underlies the abnormal, excessive cell growth of pancreatic cancer.
GSM 3G Middle East, DUBAI, UAE, December 14 /PRNewswire/ -- Acision, the world's leading messaging company, will be showcasing products and features from its four core business domains - Messaging, Mobile Broadband, Mobile Marketing and Charging - at this year's GSM 3G Middle East, the leading event for the telecom industry in this region. Acision will be exhibiting at stand No. 8.50 on 15th - 16th December 2008, and representatives will be on hand to discuss how Acision's expertise within these domains can resolve both infrastructure and revenue challenges faced by operators in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) today.
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has discovered carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of a planet orbiting another star. The Jupiter-sized planet, called HD 189733b, is too hot for life, but the Hubble observations are a proof-of-concept demonstration that the basic chemistry for life can be measured on planets orbiting other stars. Organic compounds also can be a by-product of life processes and their detection on an Earthlike planet someday may provide the first evidence of life beyond our planet.
Previous observations of HD 189733b by Hubble and the Spitzer Space Telescope found water vapor. Earlier this year, Hubble found methane in the planet's atmosphere.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, California and AMSTERDAM, December 13 /PRNewswire/ --
- Recent Study Reveals Substantial Group of Traditionally Miscategorized HER2+ Patients
Dr. Michael Knauer from the Netherlands Cancer Institute today announced data uncovering a substantial group of traditionally miscategorized low risk HER2+ patients. Agendia's highly accurate breast cancer tumor recurrence test, MammaPrint(R), was used to differentiate between patients at high and low risk for recurrence.
Stepping onto a scale after a calorie-filled holiday season isn't an activity many 21st-century Americans relish.
But in the late 19th century, scales were all the rage at festive gatherings — the 1800s' answer to Guitar Hero.
"A family would think it fun to weigh themselves before and after a big holiday dinner to see how much they had gained," said Deborah I. Levine, Ph.D., an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Modeling Interdisciplinary Inquiry Fellowship Program in the Humanities and Social Sciences in Arts&Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis.
"Knowing your weight was a novelty, a kind of parlor trick, before scales became widely available through mass production," said Levine.
When faced with a difficult decision, we try to come up with the best choice by carefully considering all of the options, maybe even resorting to lists and lots of sleepless nights. So it may be surprising that recent studies have suggested that the best way to deal with complex decisions is to not think about them at all—that unconscious thought will help us make the best choices. Although this may seem like an appealing strategy, new research in Psychological Science cautions that there are limitations in the efficacy of unconscious thought making the best decisions.