Friday, March 29, 2013

Biological transistor enables computing within living cells

Mar. 28, 2013 ? When Charles Babbage prototyped the first computing machine in the 19th century, he imagined using mechanical gears and latches to control information. ENIAC, the first modern computer developed in the 1940s, used vacuum tubes and electricity. Today, computers use transistors made from highly engineered semiconducting materials to carry out their logical operations.

And now a team of Stanford University bioengineers has taken computing beyond mechanics and electronics into the living realm of biology. In a paper to be published March 28 in Science, the team details a biological transistor made from genetic material -- DNA and RNA -- in place of gears or electrons. The team calls its biological transistor the "transcriptor."

"Transcriptors are the key component behind amplifying genetic logic -- akin to the transistor and electronics," said Jerome Bonnet, PhD, a postdoctoral scholar in bioengineering and the paper's lead author.

The creation of the transcriptor allows engineers to compute inside living cells to record, for instance, when cells have been exposed to certain external stimuli or environmental factors, or even to turn on and off cell reproduction as needed.

"Biological computers can be used to study and reprogram living systems, monitor environments and improve cellular therapeutics," said Drew Endy, PhD, assistant professor of bioengineering and the paper's senior author.

The biological computer

In electronics, a transistor controls the flow of electrons along a circuit. Similarly, in biologics, a transcriptor controls the flow of a specific protein, RNA polymerase, as it travels along a strand of DNA.

"We have repurposed a group of natural proteins, called integrases, to realize digital control over the flow of RNA polymerase along DNA, which in turn allowed us to engineer amplifying genetic logic," said Endy.

Using transcriptors, the team has created what are known in electrical engineering as logic gates that can derive true-false answers to virtually any biochemical question that might be posed within a cell.

They refer to their transcriptor-based logic gates as "Boolean Integrase Logic," or "BIL gates" for short.

Transcriptor-based gates alone do not constitute a computer, but they are the third and final component of a biological computer that could operate within individual living cells.

Despite their outward differences, all modern computers, from ENIAC to Apple, share three basic functions: storing, transmitting and performing logical operations on information.

Last year, Endy and his team made news in delivering the other two core components of a fully functional genetic computer. The first was a type of rewritable digital data storage within DNA. They also developed a mechanism for transmitting genetic information from cell to cell, a sort of biological Internet.

It all adds up to creating a computer inside a living cell.

Boole's gold

Digital logic is often referred to as "Boolean logic," after George Boole, the mathematician who proposed the system in 1854. Today, Boolean logic typically takes the form of 1s and 0s within a computer. Answer true, gate open; answer false, gate closed. Open. Closed. On. Off. 1. 0. It's that basic. But it turns out that with just these simple tools and ways of thinking you can accomplish quite a lot.

"AND" and "OR" are just two of the most basic Boolean logic gates. An "AND" gate, for instance, is "true" when both of its inputs are true -- when "a" and "b" are true. An "OR" gate, on the other hand, is true when either or both of its inputs are true.

In a biological setting, the possibilities for logic are as limitless as in electronics, Bonnet explained. "You could test whether a given cell had been exposed to any number of external stimuli -- the presence of glucose and caffeine, for instance. BIL gates would allow you to make that determination and to store that information so you could easily identify those which had been exposed and which had not," he said.

By the same token, you could tell the cell to start or stop reproducing if certain factors were present. And, by coupling BIL gates with the team's biological Internet, it is possible to communicate genetic information from cell to cell to orchestrate the behavior of a group of cells.

"The potential applications are limited only by the imagination of the researcher," said co-author Monica Ortiz, a PhD candidate in bioengineering who demonstrated autonomous cell-to-cell communication of DNA encoding various BIL gates.

Building a transcriptor

To create transcriptors and logic gates, the team used carefully calibrated combinations of enzymes -- the integrases mentioned earlier -- that control the flow of RNA polymerase along strands of DNA. If this were electronics, DNA is the wire and RNA polymerase is the electron.

"The choice of enzymes is important," Bonnet said. "We have been careful to select enzymes that function in bacteria, fungi, plants and animals, so that bio-computers can be engineered within a variety of organisms."

On the technical side, the transcriptor achieves a key similarity between the biological transistor and its semiconducting cousin: signal amplification.

With transcriptors, a very small change in the expression of an integrase can create a very large change in the expression of any two other genes.

To understand the importance of amplification, consider that the transistor was first conceived as a way to replace expensive, inefficient and unreliable vacuum tubes in the amplification of telephone signals for transcontinental phone calls. Electrical signals traveling along wires get weaker the farther they travel, but if you put an amplifier every so often along the way, you can relay the signal across a great distance. The same would hold in biological systems as signals get transmitted among a group of cells.

"It is a concept similar to transistor radios," said Pakpoom Subsoontorn, a PhD candidate in bioengineering and co-author of the study who developed theoretical models to predict the behavior of BIL gates. "Relatively weak radio waves traveling through the air can get amplified into sound."

Public-domain biotechnology

To bring the age of the biological computer to a much speedier reality, Endy and his team have contributed all of BIL gates to the public domain so that others can immediately harness and improve upon the tools.

"Most of biotechnology has not yet been imagined, let alone made true. By freely sharing important basic tools everyone can work better together," Bonnet said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stanford University Medical Center.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jerome Bonnet, Peter Yin, Monica E. Ortiz, Pakpoom Subsoontorn, and Drew Endy. Amplifying Genetic Logic Gates. Science, 28 March 2013 DOI: 10.1126/science.1232758

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/biochemistry/~3/ED1fLVQ-WsM/130328142400.htm

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Teens' struggles with peers forecast long-term adult problems

Teens' struggles with peers forecast long-term adult problems [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Mar-2013
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Contact: Sarah Mancoll
smancoll@srcd.org
202-289-7905
Society for Research in Child Development

Teenagers' struggles to connect with their peers in the early adolescent years while not getting swept along by negative peer influences predict their capacity to form strong friendships and avoid serious problems even ten years later. Those are the conclusions of a new longitudinal study by researchers at the University of Virginia that appears in the journal Child Development.

"Overall, we found that teens face a high-wire act with their peers," explains Joseph P. Allen, Hugh P. Kelly Distinguished Professor at the University of Virginia, who led the study. "They need to establish strong, positive connections with them while at the same time establishing independence in resisting deviant peer influences. Those who don't manage this have significant problems as much as a decade later."

Researchers followed about 150 teens over a 10-year period (starting at age 13 and continuing to 23) to learn about the long-term effects of their peer struggles early in adolescence. They gathered information from multiple sourcesthe teens themselves, their parents and peers, and by observing teens' later interactions with romantic partners. The teens comprised a racially, ethnically, and socioeconomically diverse group.

Teens who had trouble connecting well with their peers in early adolescence had difficulty establishing close friendships in young adulthood. Teens who didn't connect well at 13 also had more difficulty managing disagreements in romantic relationships as adults.

Teens who had trouble establishing some autonomy and independence with peers (especially with respect to minor forms of deviance such as shoplifting and vandalism) were found to be at higher risk for problems with alcohol and substance use, and for illegal behavior, almost a decade later.

Conversely, teens who were seen as desirable companionsthose deemed empathetic, able to see things from different perspectives and control their impulses, and having a good sense of humorwere more likely to have positive relationships in young adulthood.

Teens who were able to establish some autonomy vis a vis peers' influences were more likely to avoid problematic behavior in young adulthood, with teens who showed they were able to think for themselves in the face of negative peer influences using less alcohol as early adults and having fewer problems with alcohol and substance abuse as young adults. But teens who were seen as desirable companions were more likely to have higher levels of alcohol use in early adulthood and future problems associated with alcohol and substance use.

"The findings make it clear that establishing social competence in adolescence and early adulthood is not a straightforward process, but involves negotiating challenging and at times conflicting goals between peer acceptance and autonomy with regard to negative peer influences," Allen notes.

"Teaching teens how to stand up for themselves in ways that preserve and deepen relationshipsto become their own persons while still connecting to othersis a core task of social development that parents, teachers, and others can all work to promote," adds Allen.

Teens who managed both of these goals simultaneouslyconnecting with peers while retaining their autonomywere rated by their parents as being most competent overall by age 23. There is a positive pathway through the peer jungle of early adolescence, says Allen, but it is a tricky one for many teens to find and traverse.

###


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Teens' struggles with peers forecast long-term adult problems [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sarah Mancoll
smancoll@srcd.org
202-289-7905
Society for Research in Child Development

Teenagers' struggles to connect with their peers in the early adolescent years while not getting swept along by negative peer influences predict their capacity to form strong friendships and avoid serious problems even ten years later. Those are the conclusions of a new longitudinal study by researchers at the University of Virginia that appears in the journal Child Development.

"Overall, we found that teens face a high-wire act with their peers," explains Joseph P. Allen, Hugh P. Kelly Distinguished Professor at the University of Virginia, who led the study. "They need to establish strong, positive connections with them while at the same time establishing independence in resisting deviant peer influences. Those who don't manage this have significant problems as much as a decade later."

Researchers followed about 150 teens over a 10-year period (starting at age 13 and continuing to 23) to learn about the long-term effects of their peer struggles early in adolescence. They gathered information from multiple sourcesthe teens themselves, their parents and peers, and by observing teens' later interactions with romantic partners. The teens comprised a racially, ethnically, and socioeconomically diverse group.

Teens who had trouble connecting well with their peers in early adolescence had difficulty establishing close friendships in young adulthood. Teens who didn't connect well at 13 also had more difficulty managing disagreements in romantic relationships as adults.

Teens who had trouble establishing some autonomy and independence with peers (especially with respect to minor forms of deviance such as shoplifting and vandalism) were found to be at higher risk for problems with alcohol and substance use, and for illegal behavior, almost a decade later.

Conversely, teens who were seen as desirable companionsthose deemed empathetic, able to see things from different perspectives and control their impulses, and having a good sense of humorwere more likely to have positive relationships in young adulthood.

Teens who were able to establish some autonomy vis a vis peers' influences were more likely to avoid problematic behavior in young adulthood, with teens who showed they were able to think for themselves in the face of negative peer influences using less alcohol as early adults and having fewer problems with alcohol and substance abuse as young adults. But teens who were seen as desirable companions were more likely to have higher levels of alcohol use in early adulthood and future problems associated with alcohol and substance use.

"The findings make it clear that establishing social competence in adolescence and early adulthood is not a straightforward process, but involves negotiating challenging and at times conflicting goals between peer acceptance and autonomy with regard to negative peer influences," Allen notes.

"Teaching teens how to stand up for themselves in ways that preserve and deepen relationshipsto become their own persons while still connecting to othersis a core task of social development that parents, teachers, and others can all work to promote," adds Allen.

Teens who managed both of these goals simultaneouslyconnecting with peers while retaining their autonomywere rated by their parents as being most competent overall by age 23. There is a positive pathway through the peer jungle of early adolescence, says Allen, but it is a tricky one for many teens to find and traverse.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/sfri-tsw032113.php

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Monday, March 25, 2013

John Kerry arrives in Kabul seeking to repair ties with Afghan leader Hamid Karzai

The secretary of state arrived in Kabul this morning just a day after another unannounced visit to Baghdad. Kerry plans to meet with Afghanistan's president Hamid Karzai to discuss political and security issues. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

By Andrea Mitchell and Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

KABUL -- Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Afghanistan?s capital Monday on an unannounced visit that aims to repair fractured ties with President Hamid Karzai.

It is Kerry?s sixth visit to Afghanistan since President Barack Obama took office, but his first as secretary of state.

State Department officials told reporters traveling with Kerry that he is optimistic the U.S. and Afghanistan can overcome recent differences, including an awkward moment earlier this month when Karzai accused the U.S. and the Taliban of colluding to convince Afghans that foreign forces were needed beyond 2014.

Anja Niedringhaus / AP

An Afghan prisoner leaves with his belongings from the Parwan Detention Facility outside Kabul after the U.S. military gave control to Afghan authorities, Monday.

The officials said Kerry was not in Kabul to lecture or chide Karzai, adding that he acknowledged the relationship was ?not always going to be easy.?

Kerry is optimistic the two countries can move in from Karzai?s anti-U.S. rhetoric, which the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan warned was putting the lives of Western troops in danger.

Senior officials on Kerry's plane said the timing was good for the meeting, since the U.S on Monday handed over control of the prison at the Bagram base to Afghan control, an issue of contention for Karzai. U.S. officials say they've been assured the most dangerous prisoners will not be released.

Kerry is expected to travel to the U.S. Embassy compound before heading to meet Karzai at his palace.

Jason Reed / Pool via AP

Secretary of State John Kerry straps himself into the cockpit of an Air Force C-17 aircraft as he prepares to leave Iraq on Sunday.

On Sunday, Kerry visited Iraq before leaving for dinner in the Jordanian capital, Amman, with Pakistan's powerful army chief of staff, Ashfaq Kayani.

The secretary of state is not visiting Pakistan during this trip as the country is in the midst of a political transition.

NBC News' Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

Related:

Kerry urges Iraq to stop arms flow to Syria on Baghdad visit

Full Afghanistan coverage from NBC News

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Pet Pointers: Food stamps for pets - YNN - Your News Now

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A new donation-based program called Pet Food Stamps aims to provide food for pets of low-income families and for food stamp recipients who otherwise could not afford to feed their pets. This program works out of New York and has no affiliation with the federal food stamp program, but uses similar guidelines to access need and is open to anyone in the United States.

A program like this isn?t new. Many animal shelters, rescue groups, low cost clinics and pet supply stores have been working with needy families to help feed their pets for years. David Sturgis, owner of Dog Daze Bakery, also runs a not for profit pet food pantry called ?Hardeko,? which is already maxed out with their donation program.

Sturgis said he has seen the devastating effects of not being able to properly care for a pet.

?If you can?t afford them, you have to give them up, better for family to keep the animal,? said David Sturgis, owner of Dog Daze Bakery.

More than 45,000 pets have already been signed up for the Pet Food Stamp program. Once need and income is verified, the families will receive pet food each month from pet food retailer Pet Food Direct for a six month period.

If your family is currently struggling to feed a pet, before give them up, call your local animal shelter or pet food retailers and ask if they have a pet food pantry program of their own.

To learn more about the donation-based food stamp program for pets, visit PetFoodStamps.org.

Source: http://austin.ynn.com/content/living/pets_animals/290998/pet-pointers--food-stamps-for-pets

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Court weighs US passport dispute over Jerusalem

(AP) ? A federal appeals court has some tough questions about the politically sensitive issue of whether Americans born in Jerusalem can list Israel as their birthplace on their U.S. passports.

A 2002 law says yes, but the State Department says no. That led to a lawsuit by parents of an American boy who was born in a Jerusalem hospital. The United States has refused to recognize any nation's sovereignty over Jerusalem since Israel's creation in 1948, so the boy's passport only says "Jerusalem" as his birthplace.

At a hearing Tuesday, the three judges had pointed questions for lawyers representing both sides ? the State Department and the parents.

The hearing came on the same day that President Barack Obama heads to Israel for his first visit there as president.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-19-Born%20in%20Jerusalem-Passport/id-b9cedd5b3cde44388a4e1dd03b5b1fec

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Elizabeth Warren: Minimum Wage Would Be $22 An Hour If It Had Kept Up With Productivity

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) made a case for increasing the minimum wage last week during a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing, in which she cited a study that suggested the federal minimum wage would have stood at nearly $22 an hour today if it had kept up with increased rates in worker productivity.

"If we started in 1960 and we said that as productivity goes up, that is as workers are producing more, then the minimum wage is going to go up the same. And if that were the case then the minimum wage today would be about $22 an hour," she said, speaking to Dr. Arindrajit Dube, a University of Massachusetts Amherst professor who has studied the economic impacts of minimum wage. "So my question is Mr. Dube, with a minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, what happened to the other $14.75? It sure didn't go to the worker."

Dube went on to note that if minimum wage incomes had grown over that period at the same pace as it had for the top 1 percent of income earners, the minimum wage would actually be closer to $33 an hour than the current $7.25.

It didn't appear that Warren was actually trying to make the case for a $22 an hour minimum wage, but rather highlighting the results of a recent study that showed flat minimum wage growth over the past 40-plus years coinciding with surging inequality across a number of economic indicators.

Warren went on to argue that raising the federal minimum wage to over $10 an hour in incremental steps over the next two years -- a cause championed by President Barack Obama in his State of the Union address and since taken up in the Senate -- would not be as damaging for businesses as some critics have argued.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/18/elizabeth-warren-minimum-wage_n_2900984.html

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Larranaga has Miami poised for NCAA run

Miami head coach Jim Larranaga cuts the net after beating North Carolina in an NCAA college basketball game tyo win the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C., Sunday, March 17, 2013. Miami won 87-77. (AP Photo/Bob Leverone)

Miami head coach Jim Larranaga cuts the net after beating North Carolina in an NCAA college basketball game tyo win the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C., Sunday, March 17, 2013. Miami won 87-77. (AP Photo/Bob Leverone)

Miami head coach Jim Larranaga cheers after cutting the final strand of the net following their 87-77 win over North Carolina in an NCAA college basketball game for the championship in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C., Sunday March 17, 2013. (AP Photo/The Times-News, Scott Muthersbaugh)

Miami head coach Jim Larranaga holds the trophy after an NCAA college basketball game against North Carolina in the championship of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C., Sunday, March 17, 2013. Miami won 87-77. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

Miami head coach Jim Larranaga gives a thumbs-up to his team during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against North Carolina in the championship of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C., Sunday, March 17, 2013. Miami won 87-77. (AP Photo/Bob Leverone)

(AP) ? Jim Larranaga was in the Miami locker room before a game during this regular season, talking about the importance of defense, when he decided words were not going to be enough to illustrate his point.

So the 63-year-old, two-time-hip-replacement-patient, white-haired, suit-wearing man fell backward like he was taking a charge, then started shouting.

"When you see that," said senior guard Durand Scott, "you want to run through a wall for this guy."

The wall had no chance. Larranaga's team went out, fully energized, and beat North Carolina by 26.

Larranaga has taken charge of what not long ago looked like a wayward Hurricane program ? leading Miami to the Atlantic Coast Conference championship, a 27-6 record, a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament and quite possibly putting a school that hadn't been to the men's version of the Big Dance since 2008 in position to win a national title.

Miami plays Pacific (22-12) in Austin, Texas on Friday. So on Monday, other than consenting to about a dozen media interviews, Larranaga tried to rest.

"We've got to turn the page," Larranaga said Monday. "When non-conference season was over, we turned the page. Regular season over, turn the page. ACC tournament is over, turn the page. One does not have anything to do with the next. They're all separate events and we need our guys to get some rest, because it was a long, grueling tournament."

Larranaga and the Hurricanes made getting out of that ACC tournament look easy.

Not bad for a guy who, when he decided to pursue the Miami job two years ago, was absolutely convinced he had zero chance of being hired.

"He's a great teacher," Miami President Donna Shalala told The Associated Press. "When you get right down to it, in higher education, there are a handful of really great teachers. Sometimes they're in chemistry, sometimes they're in English, and sometimes they're the basketball coach.

"When we heard he wanted the job, I thought this was an opportunity of a lifetime for the University of Miami."

She might have been right.

At a time when the athletic department has been rocked by a scandal involving a former booster who prompted a long and still-unresolved NCAA investigation ? over things that occurred long before Larranaga arrived ? this men's basketball season has clearly been a ray of light in Coral Gables. The Hurricanes' arena was sold out for many games, bringing Shalala to tears at least once. A pair of ACC titles will be commemorated by banners. The team seems to be an in-vogue pick to win it all.

And whether he wants it or not, Larranaga ? a likely national coach of the year candidate ? is getting much of the credit.

That's why, when the bus carrying the ACC champions arrived back on campus Sunday night, outside the on-campus arena and practice facility that Miami built a few years apart, Larranaga was the first to exit and start giving hundreds of high-fives to delirious, screaming fans. Players waited about a minute before joining the celebration.

"That was his moment," said senior forward-center Kenny Kadji, who carried the trophy off the bus. "That was for him."

Best known for leading George Mason to the Final Four in 2006, Larranaga was a hire at Miami that raised some eyebrows after Frank Haith left for Missouri in 2011.

He arrived with the school very much in a transitional phase, with a change imminent in the athletic director's office, the news of the NCAA scandal about to hit and only a few months after Al Golden was hired to lead the football program. By the time Larranaga even registered a blip on Miami's potential-hire list, the Hurricanes had interviewed five other people and the consensus pick was that Frank Martin ? a Miami native ? would get the job.

Then Larranaga got a phone call, telling him that Martin would not be Miami's guy and urging him to fly to Boston and meet with Miami's hiring committee. Larranaga took the trip, believing Tommy Amaker would be the eventual Hurricanes coach. His interview lasted only an hour, cut short by the news that Miami had hired Shawn Eichorst as athletic director and that he would take over the lead role on the basketball search.

"I told my wife, I got a token interview," Larranaga said.

Eichorst and Larranaga eventually spoke briefly. Eight days passed before they spoke again ? when Eichorst offered the job.

"We're not perfect, but he brings the best out of everybody," Scott said. "He's the one that did it. He came here and told everybody their role, everybody plays their role and everybody's fine with it. When you're winning, everybody's happy."

With all his success, Larranaga has never lost sight of who he is and where he's from.

As a kid who spent 50 cents a day on the 10 Reese's peanut butter cups that served as his lunch, Larranaga played for the legendary Jack Curran at Archbishop Malloy High in New York. Curran died last week, just days before Miami began play in the ACC tournament. Even with a trip to the NCAAs looming ? accompanied by endless hours of preparation for an opponent he and his staff knew little about when the pairings were revealed ? Larranaga will fly to New York on Tuesday for the services for his mentor, then quickly return home without even interrupting the Hurricanes' practice schedule.

"He was like my best friend throughout my life," Larranaga said. "Losing him on Wednesday was very sad for me. But I said to him, 'I'm going to do everything I can to help my team win this ACC tournament in your honor.' And he helped me stay calm throughout the weekend."

It wasn't just that weekend. Players have noticed it all year.

"It was very important and it trickles throughout the team," senior Julian Gamble said. "He's our leader. Throughout the chaos, he stayed even-keeled and told us to keep having fun. You have to control the things you can control, and truth is, there are very few of them."

Some symmetry might be at play for Miami in this tournament. George Mason earned its Final Four ticket by winning two games at the Verizon Center in Washington. If the Hurricanes win two games in Austin, they'll be heading to that very same arena, with a chance to get Larranaga ? who still has plenty of friends and fans in that area ? back to the national semifinals.

Players speak about it openly: Naturally, they want the title, but when pressed to identify a top reason why they want to win, they say for Larranaga.

"Magical seasons don't happen very often," Shalala said. "The great thing about sports is you get the unexpected. You don't get that in many other professions because you sort of build up to it and see it coming. But in sports, on any given day, in any given year, something extraordinary can happen. And that's what happened at the University of Miami."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-18-NCAA-Miami-Larranaga/id-5128998d2a4144d8896e7d2aff5395ea

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Friday, March 15, 2013

Argentina's Bergoglio elected as new pope Francis

By Philip Pullella and Barry Moody

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina was elected in a surprise choice to be the new leader of the troubled Roman Catholic Church on Wednesday, taking the name Francis I and becoming the first non-European pontiff in nearly 1,300 years.

Pope Francis, 76, appeared on the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica just over an hour after white smoke poured from a chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel to signal 115 cardinal electors had chosen him to lead the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics.

"Pray for me," the new pontiff, dressed in the white robes of a pope for the first time, urged the crowd, smiling warmly.

The choice of Bergoglio, who is the first Latin American and first Jesuit pope, was announced by French cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran with the Latin words "Annuntio vobis gaudium magnum. Habemus Papam" ("I announce to you a great joy. We have a pope.")

Francis has became the 266th pontiff in the Church's 2,000-year history at a time of great crisis, with the church under fire over a child sex abuse scandal and torn by infighting in the Vatican bureaucracy.

Jubilant Argentines poured into churches, some crying and praying, after the announcement at the Vatican. "This is a blessing for Argentina," one woman shouted on a Buenos Aires street.

"I hope he changes all the luxury that exists in the Vatican, that he steers the church in a more humble direction, something closer to the gospel," said Jorge Andres Lobato, a 73-year-old retired state prosecutor.

JESUIT ORDER

Although a conservative, Francis is seen as a reformer and was not among the small group of frontrunners identified before the election. The Jesuit order to which he belongs was founded in the 16th century to serve the pope. It is best known for its work in education and the intellectual prowess of its members.

Bergoglio is known as a humble man who leads an austere and sober life without ostentation, travelling by public transport and living in a small apartment outside Buenos Aires.

He is a moderate who is willing to challenge powerful interests and is deeply concerned about the social inequalities in Argentina and elsewhere in Latin America. He has had a sometimes difficult relationship with President Cristina Fernandez and her late husband and predecessor Nestor Kirchner.

Francis has spoken out strongly against gay marriage, denouncing it in 2010 as "an attempt to destroy God's plan".

He was born into a middle-class family of seven, his father an Italian immigrant railway worker and his mother a housewife.

Replacing Pope Benedict, who resigned last month, he overturned one of the main assumptions before the election, that the new pope would be relatively young.

Bergoglio is the oldest of most of the possible candidates and was barely mentioned in feverish speculation about the top contenders before the conclave.

He is the first non-European pope since Syrian-born Gregory III in the eighth century, and the third successive non-Italian pontiff.

Cardinal Angelo Scola
Country: Italy
Age: 71
Titles: Cardinal-Priest of Santi XII Apostoli; Archbishop of Milan

Scola is one of the front-runners to be selected, after many considered him a candidate ... more?

Cardinal Angelo Scola
Country: Italy
Age: 71
Titles: Cardinal-Priest of Santi XII Apostoli; Archbishop of Milan

Scola is one of the front-runners to be selected, after many considered him a candidate following John Paul II's death in 2005. More academic than pastoral, Scola has published over 100 articles in journals of philosophy and theology and is the founder of Oasis, an organization that seeks to bolster the relationship between the Western and Muslim worlds. less?

The Vatican said his inaugural mass would be held on March 19.

U.S. President Barack Obama said the election of Francis "speaks to the strength and vitality of a region that is increasingly shaping our world."

"PRAY FOR BENEDICT"

In brief remarks from the balcony of St. Peter's, Francis called on the faithful to pray for Benedict and said the Church was setting off on a "journey of fraternity, of love, of trust."

It seemed the cardinal electors "went to the end of the world" to find him, he said.

The Vatican said Francis would visit Benedict soon at his temporary home in the summer papal residence outside Rome.

Thousands of people sheltering from heavy rain under a sea of umbrellas had occupied the square all day to await the decision and the crowd swelled as soon as the white smoke emerged.

They cheered wildly and raced towards the basilica as the smoke billowed from a narrow makeshift chimney and St Peter's bells rang.

The tens of thousands in the square cheered even more loudly when Francis appeared, the first pontiff to take that name. "Viva il Papa (pope)," they chanted.

The election was enthusiastically welcomed in Latin America. "I am happy because another European pope would be like eating the same bread every day," said Mexico City cab driver Martin Rodriguez.

"We're happy because we have a new pope and because the choice of a Latin American shows that the Church is opening, is now focused on the entire Church. It's not just a church only focused on Europe," said Leonardo Steiner, general secretary of the national conference of Brazilian bishops.

Frontrunners at the conclave had included Brazilian Odilo Scherer, and Italy's Angelo Scola, who would have returned the papacy to traditional Italian hands after 35 years of the German Benedict XVI and Polish John Paul II.

The decision by cardinal electors sequestered in a secret conclave in the Sistine Chapel came sooner than many experts expected because there were several frontrunners before the vote to replace Pope Benedict.

The cardinals faced a thorny task in finding a leader capable of overcoming crises caused by priestly child abuse and a leak of secret papal documents that uncovered corruption and rivalry inside the Church government or Curia.

Francis will head a Church also shaken by rivalry from other churches, the advance of secularism, especially in its European heartland, and allegations of scandal at the Vatican bank.

The series of crises is thought to have contributed to Benedict's decision to become the first pontiff in 600 years to abdicate.

RIVAL TO RATZINGER IN 2005

Bergoglio was a moderate rival candidate at the 2005 conclave to the conservative Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who went on to become Benedict.

Italian media say he impressed cardinals in pre-conclave meetings where they discussed the Church's problems.

Reserved and humble, Francis does not fit the profile of an active preacher that many cardinals had previously said they were seeking. He studied chemistry before joining the priesthood nearly a decade after losing a lung to respiratory illness.

"He's very humble, I heard that in Buenos Aires he used to take public transport, have an apartment and cook for himself. The fact that he chose the name Francis means a lot. It means we will have a humble, simple pope close to the poor people. But it was a big surprise," said Jules Charette, 54, a Canadian lawyer in St. Peter's Square.

Bands from the Italian armed forces and the Vatican's own Swiss guard army paraded in front of the basilica before the new pope appeared.

The secret conclave began on Tuesday night with a first ballot and four ballots were held on Wednesday. Francis obtained the required two thirds majority in the fifth ballot.

Following a split ballot when they were first shut away amid the chapel's Renaissance splendor on Tuesday evening, the cardinal electors held a first full day of deliberations on Wednesday. Black smoke rose after the morning session to signal no decision.

The previous four popes were all elected within two or three days.

Seven ballots have been required on average over the last nine conclaves. Benedict was clear frontrunner in 2005 and elected after only four ballots.

In preparatory meetings before the conclave, the cardinals seemed divided between those who believe the new pontiff must be a strong manager to get the dysfunctional bureaucracy under control and others who are looking more for a proven pastoral figure to revitalize their faith across the globe.

Apart from Brazil's Scherer and Italy's Scola, a host of other candidates from numerous nations had also been mentioned as potential popes - including U.S. cardinals Timothy Dolan and Sean O'Malley, Canada's Marc Ouellet and Argentina's Leonardo Sandri.

But the frontrunners list never mentioned Bergoglio.

(Additional reporting by Naomi O'Leary, Catherine Hornby, Crispian Balmer and Tom Heneghan in Rome, Dave Graham in Mexico City, Ana Flor in Brasilia, Nicolas Misculin and Juliana Castilla in Buenos Aires; Writing by Barry Moody; Editing by Keith Weir, Alastair Macdonald and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cardinals-begin-voting-earnest-pope-face-church-crisis-000110012.html

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

New pope's first tweet: 'HABEMUS PAPAM FRANCISCUM'

The new pope wasted little time in issuing his first tweet: "HABEMUS PAPAM FRANCISCUM," which translates to: "We have Pope Francis."

The message on Twitter came within 30 minutes or so of Pope Francis I being named, and to show the power of social media, it was retweeted 25,000 times within 10 minutes.

"The Twitter account @pontifex was created for the exclusive use of the pope," Paul Tighe, secretary of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, previously stated on the Vatican Radio, as the world wondered what would happen to the Twitter account once Pope Benedict XVI left the Vatican.

Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi had said that it would be up to the next leader of the Catholic Church whether or not he would use the @Pontifex Twitter account.

The pope emeritus was the first to use the account, starting last December. The word "pontifex" not only means pope in Latin, but traces its roots back to Roman times and also means "bridge builder," suggesting unity, a Vatican official told the AP at that time.

Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, 76, of Buenos Aires was named leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics on Wednesday. His introduction via social media followed his stepping out onto the balcony of St. Peter?s Basilica to greet the tens of thousands gathered in the square below.

Fullcoverage:Pope Francis I: Argentina's Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio is new Catholic leader

LIVE Special Report hosted by Brian Williams

Check out Technology, GadgetBox, TODAY Tech and In-Game on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/new-popes-first-tweet-habemus-papam-franciscum-1C8852354

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Pilot lights may be culprit in deadly Kansas City blast

By Kevin Murphy

KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) - An investigation into a deadly natural gas explosion that flattened a Kansas City restaurant last month found the blast was set off in the kitchen, where pilot lights on a stove and hot water heater were still burning, according to a report released on Wednesday.

The Kansas City Fire Department's investigation into the February 19 blast that killed a server and injured 15 others concluded that the fire and explosion were both accidental.

While it found the fire originated in the cooking area of the kitchen, it stopped short of blaming the pilot lights as the certain cause for the blast.

The explosion came about an hour after a construction crew severed an underground natural gas line near the restaurant, creating a strong smell of gas. The report listed that as the cause of the leak that led to the explosion.

The explosion killed Megan Cramer, a server at the well-known restaurant. Other employees as well as Missouri Gas Energy workers were hurt, some seriously. The explosion and fire destroyed the restaurant and damaged surrounding buildings.

Firefighters arriving at the restaurant after the odor was detected warned management about the leak and advised them to have all ignition sources in the building extinguished, the report said.

Restaurant staff put out candles at tables and began shutting down other ignition sources in the kitchen, the report said.

But after the explosion, a restaurant manager told a fire investigator that staff did not put out pilot lights on the stove or hot water heater, the report said.

Fire Department spokesman James Garrett declined comment on Wednesday on whether investigators believed the lit pilot lights caused the explosion, but he said the department would have more comment on Thursday.

The report was conducted by the fire department, the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

(Editing by James B. Kelleher and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pilot-lights-possible-culprit-deadly-kansas-city-explosion-004652714.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Update March 12th: Communications meltdown, energetic upswing

Hey everyone!! ?Sorry I've been offline running insanely all day (as per usual, only more so) so I haven't been able to actually sit and write any updates. ?Soooooo..... here it comes all at once. ?Ready?

First off I have to thank Caleb from the top and bottom of my heart for his comments last night on the OPPT-IN Radio Show on Freedom Reigns- you can listen to the archive of the show HERE

Caleb held the contrast beautifully and opened a can of worms that needed to be opened- said words that needed to be said. A lot of people had expectations of what Caleb would sound like and were rather shocked when he wasn't just a male version of Heather, lol! A lot of people listened to him with only half an ear it seems and put a lot of words into his mouth that he didn't say. A lot of people created assumptions in their minds that had no basis in reality.

A lot of that will be addressed tonight on The Collective Imagination Radio show- you can listen in HERE at 8pm est. We will get Heather on tonight come hell or high water, lol.

I want to talk about communications, which of course leads into the first article I'm posting, but first I need to ask a favour.

I realize that people are on edge and wound pretty tightly right now. There are a lot of us hurting financially and struggling in daily life. ?BUT..... I ask people to please use discernment. Please read things carefully. ?The article I posted yesterday "From This Moment On" starts with a huge heading that states:

PLEASE NOTE! THIS IS ONE PERSONS VISION OF WHAT MAY, POSSIBLY, BE ACCOMPLISHED BY WIDE SPREAD ACCEPTANCE AND UTILIZATION OF THE ONE PEOPLE'S PUBLIC TRUST!

It is a work of Fiction. ?A visualization and motivation, if you will. ?IT IS NOT REAL. ? I received texts in the middle of the night asking about when they would get their Liberty Cards. ?One of my sources who's highly involved in all aspects of the new financial system that the PTW have been trying to push, received calls all night (including at 2:30 in the morning) from people claiming that the OPPT has released Liberty cards and wanting him to tell them if these cards were part of the Prosperity Packages or part of the St. Germaine Trust........

.......Seriously people?! ?Please read things carefully.

Back to the communications topic.

There are days when we laugh our asses off because of the blatant interference going on in our daily communications. ?Emails regularly go missing, skype rooms/conversations don't update for hours and some messages don't appear until sometimes a full day later. Computer files go missing- several times I've recorded important conversations (and KNOW that it's recording) and the file mysteriously vanishes..... and of course the famous "drop off line as soon as a buzz word is mentioned". ?Heather and I can talk about family stuff no problem, then as soon as we start seriously talking.... she drops offline. ?Or, AK will drop offline and Heather suddenly can't hear me, or vice versa. ?Hell, last week Heather mentioned "Rothchilds" on the TCL radio show and immediately no one in the radio audience could hear her.... until she said "Ok, no more mention of the Rothchilds".....

.... it seriously is getting laughably ridiculous.

Hence AK's letter below. ?I laughed my ass off when I read it last night.

The last two articles tie in together nicely..... hot topics on my brain and heart right now.

Open Letter to The Galactics


Dear Galactics,

We know you are there and have been there for many years. ?We know you got a Star Trek "Prime Directive" non-interference thing unless you get a request from this planet. ?We get that. And we thank you for your courtesy and consideration. ?Its a good deal more polite than the buggers that were here for the last 6000 years who have been running the show much to our detriment.

However, our governments have had 60 years to get the people up to speed on you guys and they have utterly failed and sand bag even now to give the people the straight scoop. ?See they lied for 60 years, and they don't know how to admit they lied. ?So that's a bit of a Catch 22 you and us have to work around.

80% of Americans believe UFOs are a reality. ?Sure our corporate owned TV news people still ridicule such things, but since the Iraq war, none of us believe TV news anymore anyway. They blew their credibility long ago. We thank them for showing us very clearly who they really work for, the contrast is complete and utterly clear, its bankers, defense companies and pharmaceutical companies. ?None of which really have our health and well being upper most in mind.

I propose that you can do something for us, to help us do our thing, The One People, and it will speed things along.

One of the issues we face is constant meddling with our emails, delaying them for hours sometimes, intercepting and jamming our chat, voice and video conferencing, especially internationally. This costs us countless hours of delay and frustration. ?Those who claim to rule to preserve freedom are actively trying to stop freedom.

The Czechoslovakian peaceful "Velvet Revolution" overthrow of communism led by V?clav Havel was quite a remarkable event in 1989, and might be a model of how we can proceed. Initially a low tech affair, copies of playwright V?clav Havel writings on freedom and human rights were photocopied and mimeographed covertly and passed person to person and was quite effective in organizing a ground base of popular support for what need to be done to free the country from communist tyranny. ?Yet, it was a slow process and involved much manual labor.

The Internet as we have it now was not in place 1989, hard to imagine I know, but being an older computer user, that's the way it was back then. Sheesh... I am really dating myself as an old fart now aren't I?

I remember reading in one of the computer trade magazines of that time that some mysterious gentlemen from Japan showed up in Prague with suitcases of computer modems which they distributed freely. ?It was a simple move, and not that expensive really, and they plugged into already existing computers. ?Ad-hoc networks were quickly established using computer bulletin board systems over existing telephone lines and that greatly sped up the pace of change during the Velvet Revolution. ?It was one of the most peaceful changes in government the world has ever seen.

Our task is similar, but its not so much governments that we have a beef with, its private corporations operating under the guise of the people's governments. And they are as corrupt as the communists were.

Here's what we need, and we know you have the technical expertise, I've already received Galactic emails and I know you interface to our Internet. ?You can reply through our GFL liaison person who you already put in contact with us. ?We know who they are.

Our Internet is just a bastardization of what exists in the Galaxy, just not as fancy. ?But still pretty useful. ? ?Here's a few items that I think you could provide that would help in the interim:

1) ?WIFI adapters that interface through your etheric networks to your high speed backbone connections into our Internet (yes I know our RF based WIFI stuff is not all that healthy, but for now its ?a temporary solution until we have better alternatives built into our computers, smart phones and tablet devices. ?These adapters should use class B, C, N and AC wireless ethernet protocols, universally accepted by this planet's computing devices. ?We'd like to bypass some Rothschild owned middle men.

2) Point to Point Personal communication devices that bypass terrestrial phone systems. ?Surely you must have some sort of quantum phone thingy right? ?The capability to act as terrestial WIFI hot spot would be useful, so perhaps item 1) above can be folded into Item 2). ?HBO is optional. ?:)

3) Reliable video conferencing and voice chat capability, hosted on your servers and secured by you, connected to our Internet and accessible from our Internet. ?Un-hackable and uncrackable. Face it, Facebook sucks. ?And they censor.

4) Short notice point to point earth transportation. ?Just let us know what protocol to use with you.

Now if this violates any Galactic non-interference thing, we can have Heather write up a little UCC waiver for all applicable dimensions that free you from any liability and karmic consequences of this request. ?We promise we won't sue in Galactic court.

Sincerely
Your friendly Galactic little brothers and sisters on earth.

http://americankabuki.blogspot.ca/2013/03/open-letter-to-galactics.html

First, the kitties got me up, as I heard the ?I?ve caught a rodent and I want you to see it but don?t you dare try to take it away? growl. So the rodent was hiding under the refrigerator, there were three cats watching underside, and I knew no more resting would be had. I chose to leave the rodent team on their own, as they are experts at catching those sorts of beings.

The deal is, I got this message as I drove here, that, you know, if you have allowed your telepathic communication abilities to open up,?that?s?how the ?Galactics? are going to talk to you. So that will be ?Disclosure?? Telepathically? For?you.

Now maybe a more ?3D-oriented? human would be ?disclosed to? by a more 3D encounter. And that appears to have been occurring for a number of years. [wow... right now my vision has gone way out of focus... like I'm not here anymore]

We?re back. After about 5 minutes out of focus.

The other thing is, from my view, the ?Galactics? sometimes speak very directly, and it may even ?tick you off?. Although some I?m sure have infinite patience, others will just tell it like it is, and ?tough bull burgers if you don?t ?like? it. Grow up and listen up and stop whining and follow our Guidance. Or not.?

At this phase in Gaia?s development, there seems to be a sort of ?less and less patience? with delaying tactics, or whining, or pataleta c?smica (Cosmic Tantrums). Perhaps it?s because it?s time to ?grow up?. ?Grow up? and put on the clothing of our?Higher?Self. Or even better said, our ?Galactic?Garments?.

So I guess that?s my Galactic Rant for the day!

12MAR

Many will feel a sense of ?falling apart?, or ?blowing up? of individual world views, and, particularly in those who have self-termed ?Light Workers?, the ?Grand Removal of Light-worker Blinders? occurs in these next days.

We of the GaiaPortal ?irePort school would request a continuous open mind to all possibilities of awakening to Higher Expansion.

We also remind you that ?humanity to Hue-manity? evolution involves embracing the process of moving from ?analyzing? to ?knowing?.

Source: http://removingtheshackles.blogspot.com/2013/03/update-march-12th-communications.html

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Suspect sought after four shot, killed in New York

HERKIMER, N.Y. (AP) ? Police SWAT teams and a helicopter have converged on a jewelry store in one of two upstate New York villages where four people were killed and at least two others wounded in separate shootings.

The Utica Observer-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/WnbdK0 ) reports that police are focusing on Freddy's Jewelers on Main Street in Herkimer, where two people were fatally shot at a car wash and oil change business.

The newspaper reports that officials in the neighboring village of Mohawk, where two other people were killed in a barbershop, seem to think the suspect is still on foot somewhere. Other reports suggest he may have been picked up by a taxi.

A nearby college describes the gunman as being in his 60s, with a white beard and driving a red Jeep Cherokee.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/4-killed-ny-shops-police-search-suspect-155730840.html

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Polo takes the bait: A better 'mousetrap' discovered in fruit flies might stop a human cancer-driving kinase in its tracks

Mar. 13, 2013 ? A seemingly obscure gene in the female fruit fly that is only active in cells that will become eggs has led researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research to the discovery of a atypical protein that lures, traps, and inactivates the powerful Polo kinase, widely considered the master regulator of cell division. Its human homolog, Polo-like kinase-1 (Plk1), is misregulated in many types of cancer.

Stowers Investigator and senior author R. Scott Hawley, Ph.D., hopes that this highly selective kinase trap might give drug developers, who are working to inhibit Polo's crucial role in driving the multiplication of cancer cells, a new method to inactivate Polo without blocking other vital kinases in normal cells. "Our discovery will give people who do drug discovery a new way of thinking about inhibitors for Polo kinase," says Hawley. "At least that's my hope."

In a paper published in this week's online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the Stowers researchers reveal in detail how Matrimony (Mtrm) stops the Polo kinase in its tracks in egg cells in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Hawley calls the most likely method by which Mtrm might bind and repress Polo the "mousetrap model." The Matrimony protein, which is expressed only in developing oocytes or egg cells, offers the Polo kinase "cheese" at its N-terminal end in the form of three phosphorylated amino acids that resemble Polo's favored canonical binding sites: phospho-serine or phospho-threonine residues.

Hawley explains, "The way we think of it, the N-terminal region of Matrimony serves as bait. To Polo, it looks like a canonical binding site with three such residues, saying 'Come look at me. I've got a phosphate and I'm a serine. Or I'm a threonine and I've got a phosphate,' because that's what Polo wants." As soon as Polo takes the bait, the C-terminal end of Matrimony wraps around Polo and represses its function. If the N-terminal phosphates are the cheese in the mousetrap, the C-terminus would be the lever. "It springs, and Polo is trapped and repressed," he says.

"Polo is at the top of the regulatory hierarchy in almost all dividing cells," Hawley continues. "It phosphorylates targets that either phosphorylate or dephosphorylate other targets in every regulatory pathway in cell division. The fact that egg cells need to shut down Polo function to divide is a fascinating exception to this rule."

Hawley discovered the Matrimony gene in 2003. Over time, the Hawley lab learned that Mtrm was a critical player in the cell divisions that occur as an egg is being made. Using fly genetics, the researchers knocked out one and then both copies of the Mtrm gene in female flies. With one functioning Mtrm gene, the oocytes could make it through the two rounds of meiosis absolutely required for haploid reproduction, albeit with a high risk of chromosome defects. With both copies of Mtrm disabled, the oocyte suffered catastrophic destruction of chromosomes and other structures required for cell division. Yet, Mtrm also turned out to be a rare example in Drosophila of a protein that can stably bind (and turn off) Polo kinase.

Mtrm seemed to be facilitating meiotic cell division by shutting down Polo. But how did the Mtrm protein manage to slow Polo and stop its action? Answering that question took seven years. According to Hawley, it required important collaborations with the Stowers Institute's core facility in proteomics to characterize the Mtrm::Polo interaction and with the Stowers imaging facility to use an advanced imaging technology to follow the interaction of the two proteins in living oocytes. The project was initially started by S. Kendall Smith, an M.D.-Ph.D. student from the University of Kansas Medical School. After Smith graduated, Amanda Bonner, a research technician, assumed full responsibility for guiding the project and bringing it to its completion.

The project's success helped Bonner transition from her position as a technician in Hawley's lab to a graduate student in the first class of the new Stowers graduate school. The experimental results speak for themselves, she says. "The important thing was finding a small protein that can inhibit Polo. It provides some real therapeutic possibilities because Polo is misregulated in so many types of cancer. To find something small and specific to Polo that doesn't interact with anything else is pretty exciting."

For a basic researcher like Hawley, making a discovery that might have direct therapeutic impact is doubly exciting. "We are a Drosophila genetics lab, but there are lots of people out there in drug discovery working on Polo. I'm hoping that someone like that will read this and my other papers and think, 'I wonder if I can use this as a means of turning down Polo kinase'." Making a basic discovery about cancer is thrilling in another way for Hawley. "I have been funded by the American Cancer Society for almost 26 years, and I've been an American Cancer Society Research Professor for the last nine years. During that time, I think my contributions to chromosome biology have added to basic research that helps us understand how tumor cells divide. Now, I've actually done something that has a practical application."

Researchers who also contributed to the work include Stacie E. Hughes, Jennifer A. Chisholm, Brian D. Slaughter, Jay R. Unruh, Kimberly A. Collins, Jennifer M. Friederichs, Laurence Florens, Selene K. Swanson, Marissa C. Pelot, Danny E. Miller, Michael P. Washburn, Sue L. Jaspersen, all at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research.

The work was funded by the Stowers Institute for Medical Research and the American Cancer Society.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stowers Institute for Medical Research.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. A. M. Bonner, S. E. Hughes, J. A. Chisholm, S. K. Smith, B. D. Slaughter, J. R. Unruh, K. A. Collins, J. M. Friederichs, L. Florens, S. K. Swanson, M. C. Pelot, D. E. Miller, M. P. Washburn, S. L. Jaspersen, R. S. Hawley. PNAS Plus: Binding of Drosophila Polo kinase to its regulator Matrimony is noncanonical and involves two separate functional domains. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1301690110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/vaWB1VoVulU/130313123519.htm

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Job seekers use Pinterest to showcase 'living resume'

Amy Craparo / Pinterest

Amy Craparo, owner of Wow Factor Cakes in Charlotte, N.C., uses Pinterest as a portfolio for her creations.

By Isolde Raftery, TODAY

The social media site Pinterest is known for its eye-appealing recipes, wedding pictures and DIY projects ? and it?s also becoming a place for pinners to market themselves professionally.

Sarah Gubara of Baltimore, Md., describes?her Pinterest boards?as a ?living resume,? a place where she can show off her accomplishments and her interests. One of her boards includes articles she has written, but the rest are mostly personal: wedding ideas and places she'd like to travel.?

?When you?re applying for jobs, no one has the time to listen to people tell their story,? Gubara said. ?I felt that Pinterest displays your personality visually.?

Gubara, 23, works for Maroon PR (she said she ?stalked? her future co-workers on Pinterest to learn more about them) said she has been contacted via Pinterest to speak on a panel and to write an article. She has since created a company page that she can pull up on her phone and at a conference or meeting.?

?When you connect with someone on LinkedIn ? and I like LinkedIn a lot ? there?s not that two-way street. It?s more of a Rolodex,? Gubara said.

Pinterest ? one of the fastest-growing social networks with 28.9 million visitors, according to comScore ??loves that some of its users market themselves on the site.

?Whether it?s a photographer displaying a portfolio, a local wedding planner showcasing event concepts, or a teacher organizing classroom projects and ideas, people use Pinterest in a number of interesting, inspiring ways for their careers,? said spokeswoman Annie Ta.????

Self-branding on Pinterest can be tricky, however, as the site rewards being personal. But branding expert Maria Elena Duron, founder of marketing firm Buzz to Bucks in Midland, Texas, says that allows employers to get a better read on applicants? personalities and whether they would be a good fit.

Duron recommends using a professional profile photo ? similar to one used on LinkedIn ? and writing a short profile in the third-person, using keywords an employer might use in a Google search engine. ?

Duron suggests signing up for LinkedIn?s advanced feature ? free for the first month ? and taking note of which keywords send searchers to your profile. Tweak your LinkedIn profile until you?re happy with who lands on your profile, and then use those words for your Pinterest page. And, of course, list your full name.

?If you?re looking for a marketing position, one of the boards could be greatest marketing books, and you pin every marketing book,? Duron said. Also, she recommends maintaining control of your boards. ?Do not share boards for your personal Pinterest page.?

The Pinterest portfolio is a natural for artists and designers but also works for words-oriented people. Duron posts her blog items on Pinterest, which allows a reader to see a bulletin board of her posts. The trick: Upload an image and attach a URL.?

Balance personal items with pins from other boards, says Melissa Taylor, a teacher from Denver, Colo. and author of?Pinterest Savvy. ?Nobody likes a braggart,? Taylor said.

Some small companies, particularly those in the wedding industry, have also come to rely on Pinterest to display their work. ?Amy Crapero, owner of Wow Factor Cakes in Charlotte, N.C., posts her own cakes and also the gowns and haute-couture that inspire them.

It also helps with clients, she said, who find it hard to ?communicate verbally what they?re thinking visually.?

?If a client says, ?I want my cake to be lacy, I can go to Pinterest and do a search on ?lace cakes? that they have posted and all the lace cakes will pop up and a variety of styles of lace cakes.?

Wow Factor has three employees and one intern, so Pinterest, which is free to use, has helped in a small way. Craparo said several brides a month walk in after spotting her cakes on Pinterest.

?The first time, (the bride) came in with a picture of our cake -- I don?t know if she realized it was our cake,? Craparo said. ?She said, ?I like this one.? It was neat to see it unfold as a tool that they?re using.?

Related content:

Resume with cookies: Standing out in job market

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    Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2013/03/12/17213724-job-seekers-turn-to-pinterest-to-showcase-living-resume?lite

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Kathy Gyngell - Conservative Home

Kathy Gyngell is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Policy Studies

Screen shot 2013-03-10 at 20.05.57Last week, Nick Clegg attacked what he defined as the outdated notion that men should go out to work while women stayed at home to look after the children.? He said the idea that the mother should be the primary carer ? even straight after the birth of her child - was frankly absurd.? ?It is the absurd Mr Clegg who is out of date and out of touch.

Next week, a group of highly intelligent and educated young mothers will be lobbying politicians to change such gender-equality driven childcare policies before it is, frankly, too late. They are concerned about the damage already done to children?s psychological welfare and to the institution of the family itself by state-prescribed care in cr?ches and daycare centres.

They abhor the bias against stay-at-home mothers that politicians like Nick Clegg advance and deeply resent their exclusion from the family policy debate ?and their marginalisation as unenlightened and old fashioned. They are neither. They are beleaguered. Understandably, they don?t want to upset working mothers. But they are right to insist that we can no longer ignore the evidence of large-scale studies in the United States and surveys from the UK and also Sweden, a country that has embraced daycare to such an extent that the mother?s right to stay at home has been virtually eliminated.? Sweden is on the brink of taking the family into state ownership.

In our feminist society, such mothers are treated as outcasts by the metropolitan progressive who dominate politics and the media.? As Dr Aric Sigman, an authority on the impact of daycare on young children, has said: ?If women?s rights have been hard won, so too has the ability to publish and discuss openly the inconvenient potential effects of daycare on children.?

The damage done to young minds and hearts has become the new taboo. It is still not discussed at the policy table, because it makes for such uncomfortable reading. If it is uncomfortable for the mothers corralled into work too soon (whether for financial or career reasons), it is even more so for feminists who drive universal childcare policy and for the politicians who?ve pushed childcare as an equal lifestyle alternative to mothercare. It is not. I found that out when I went back to work eleven weeks after the birth of my first baby. I struggled for a year against my maternal instinct before I had the sense and the strength to give into it and to look after my baby myself.?

At that time, back in the late 1980s, I had to resist the reassurances of such child care luminaries as Claire Raynor and Penelope Leach, who I was at the time producing on TV-am. They said I must not feel guilty about my return to work. Yet these were women who understood far better than most the infant?s need for maternal ?attachment?.? Such was the pressure of feminist thought even then.? They did though introduce me to a mass of child development literature, that gave me the confidence to make my mind up for myself and follow my heart.

Feminists said? that the post-war psychologist John Bowlby?s seminal works on attachment and maternal deprivation had been discredited.? I found them revelatory. I began to listen to my instincts, to understand that biological imperative for survival that my baby uniquely needed me.? Sacrificing children?s needs on the altar of feminism was short-sighted and not the route to fulfilment. So against the strongly feminist fashion of the time I opted to give up work become a stay-at-home mum. I was lucky to be able to afford to do so. Other mothers who later wrote to me at the time about their distress and anguish at having to go back to work were not so fortunate.

Since then the push for childcare has been relentless. Between 1990 and 2001, the number of? day nurseries, where children? as young as three months are parked for as many as nine hours a day,? leapt? from 87,500 to 285,100.? Today, thanks to Labour?s childcare subsidies (which now run into billions) and to the working and child tax credits they introduced (ones that discriminate against one-earner families) 57 per cent of 0-2s and 90 per cent of three to 3-4s? are now in some kind of formal childcare, ranging from childminders to day centres and nursery classes.

A disturbing 440,000 of 0-2s spend long hours in day centres ? 17 per cent of that age group. Now the Coalition government plans to have 40 per cent of all two-year-olds in day care by 2014 ? when they deem their ?education? should now start. Society must have an honest framework to review these policies ? policies which ought? be based on choice not dogma.? Mothers at Home Matter are pushing for this at an event at the House of Commons this week. It will be attended by the Swedish sociologist Jonas Himmelstrand.

He warns that Sweden, where 95 per cent of 2-5 year olds are put in day care, has witnessed a severe decline in child development and school performance.? Sweden?s universal childcare is not a model for other countries. Psychological disorders, including anxiety, have tripled since the 1980s, when daycare centres first began to feature heavily in Swedish child development. The childcare economic equation has not added up; as the state is unable to sustain its cost, quality has deteriorated dramatically. Early exposure to large groups of peers has detrimentally effected the psychological maturation of children and young people, learning and the transference of culture between generations. ?It is?, he says, ?at the root of bullying, teenage gangs, promiscuity and the flat-lining of culture.?

We can already see frightening similarities here where even teachers of nursery classes are finding discipline a challenge. Leading UK child psychologist Oliver James explains: ?Early care sets our emotional thermostat. Having a responsive mother who is there for the child in the early years is the best possible care?..Studies show that day care is less good for under three year-olds than child minders, who are less good than nannies, who are less good than close relatives, who are less good than parents.? He knows, as do other child psychologists and sociologists, that these findings are not unique to Sweden.

Professor Jay Belsky was involved for more than fifteen years with the most intensive investigation into the effects of childcare ever which followed some 1,000 American children growing up in 10 locations across the USA, from birth to age 15 (called the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development).? It revealed a clear and definitive association between early and extensive child care experience, especially center-care exposure, with what psychologists describe as ?externalizing behaviour? problems? including aggression, from two years old through to the child?s 11th year, regardless of family background or other factors.

He also reported the contagious effects of childcare later in the classroom: ?The more children there were in kindergarten classrooms that had extensive histories of child care, especially in centers, the more aggressive and disobedient were all the children in the class. ...even children with limited child care experience could end up behaving more like children with lots of child care experience than like other children with limited child care experience if they were in classrooms made up of lots of children with early and extensive child care histories.?

Nor can the effects of childcare on behavior be put down to American culture.? In the UK too, children who spent more time in group care, mainly nursery care are more likely to have behavioural problems, particularly hyperactivity, than home cared children; and? that under-twos who spent long hours in day care were more likely to exhibit anti-social behaviour when they start school. These were the findings of the authoritative Family Children and Childcare Study.

All these findings make it clear that we disregard the feelings and the experiences of our infants at our peril. Nor is it just the children we need to watch out for, but mothers too, who are constantly pressured to relinquish responsibility for their nurturing role.? Swedish mothers who, like here, largely find themselves in low paid jobs often( ironically, looking after other women?s children) take more sick leave than in any other country in Europe, despite the generous 12 month maternity leave they are initially given.?

When asked why they opt for the highly subsidised state childcare they cite the punitive tax system where, like here, a single-earner family pays more in tax than its dual-earner equivalent, taking the childcare subsidy into account. They want to spend more time with their infants and children.

Yet Nick Clegg says; ?It?s heartbreaking to watch women who feel forced to lower their ambitions for themselves. And it?s heartbreaking to see fathers missing out on being with their children.? What is heartbreaking is that he, like so many politicians today, is so blind to children?s real needs ? and that his childcare policies are so dogmatically cast through the prism of adult sexual politics and women?s rights.

Source: http://conservativehome.blogs.com/platform/2013/03/kathy-gyngell-of-cpsthinktank-it-breaks-my-heart-that-nick-clegg-is-so-blind-to-what-mothers-really-.html

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