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2013-01-04
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VII Peaks-KBR Co-Optivist Income BDC II Declares Special Distribution of $0.077 Per Share
2013-01-04
The Board of Directors of VII Peaks-KBR Co-Optivist Income BDC II, Inc. (the "Company") authorized and declared a special cash distribution equal to $0.077 per share, to be paid to stockholders of record at the close of business December 27, 2012, payable on January 17, 2013.
This special distribution shall be paid exclusive of and in addition to the current annualized distribution of 7.35% per share, based on a $10.00 share price.
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2013-01-04
With Smokers Utopia nothing is off limits when it comes to electronic cigarette reviews and the companies behind them. While other review sites have sales type reviews with nothing but the good, Smokers Utopia covers the dirt on the companies that market them to the public.
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Biologists unlock 'black box' to underground world
2013-01-03
A BYU biologist is part of a team of researchers that has unlocked the "black box" to the underground world home to billions of microscopic creatures.
That first peek inside, recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences – one of the top three scientific journals in the world – may well explain how the number of species in an ecosystem changes the way it functions.
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How computers push on the molecules they simulate
2013-01-03
Because modern computers have to depict the real world with digital representations of numbers instead of physical analogues, to simulate the continuous passage of time they have to digitize time into small slices. This kind of simulation is essential in disciplines from medical and biological research, to new materials, to fundamental considerations of quantum mechanics, and the fact that it inevitably introduces errors is an ongoing problem for scientists.
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have now identified ...
Big brains are pricey, guppy study shows
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Bigger brains can make animals, well, brainier, but that boost in brain size and ability comes at a price. That's according to new evidence reported on January 3rd in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, in which researchers artificially selected guppies for large and small brain sizes.
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Japanese team creates cancer-specific killer T cells from induced pluripotent stem cells
2013-01-03
Researchers from the RIKEN Research Centre for Allergy and Immunology in Japan report today that they have succeeded for the first time in creating cancer-specific, immune system cells called killer T lymphocytes, from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells). To create these killer cells, the team first had to reprogram T lymphocytes specialized in killing a certain type of cancer, into iPS cells. The iPS cells then generated fully active, cancer-specific T lymphocytes. These lymphocytes regenerated from iPS cells could potentially serve as cancer therapy in the future. ...
Revolutionary techniques could help harness patients' own immune cells to fight disease
2013-01-03
The human body contains immune cells programmed to fight cancer and viral infections, but they often have short lifespans and are not numerous enough to overcome attacks by particularly aggressive malignancies or invasions. Now researchers reporting in two separate papers in the January 4th issue of the Cell Press journal Cell Stem Cell used stem cell technology to successfully regenerate patients' immune cells, creating large numbers that were long-lived and could recognize their specified targets: HIV-infected cells in one case and cancer cells in the other. The findings ...
Stanford researchers use stem cells to pinpoint cause of common type of sudden cardiac death
2013-01-03
STANFORD, Calif. — When a young athlete dies unexpectedly on the basketball court or the football field, it's both shocking and tragic. Now Stanford University School of Medicine researchers have, for the first time, identified the molecular basis for a condition called hypertrophic cardiomyopathy that is the most common cause for this type of sudden cardiac death.
To do so, the Stanford scientists created induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPS cells, from the skin cells of 10 members of a family with a genetic mutation that causes the condition. The researchers then ...
In epigenomics, location is everything
2013-01-03
In a novel use of gene knockout technology, researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine tested the same gene inserted into 90 different locations in a yeast chromosome – and discovered that while the inserted gene never altered its surrounding chromatin landscape, differences in that immediate landscape measurably affected gene activity.
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Researchers zero in on cognitive difficulties associated with menopause
2013-01-03
The memory problems that many women experience in their 40s and 50s as they approach and go through menopause are both real and appear to be most acute during the early period of post menopause. That is the conclusion of a study which appears today in the journal Menopause.
"Women going through menopausal transition have long complained of cognitive difficulties such as keeping track of information and struggling with mental tasks that would have otherwise been routine," said Miriam Weber, Ph.D. a neuropsychologist at the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) ...
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