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Energy-saving chaperon Hsp90

Energy-saving chaperon Hsp90
2012-01-16
ATP is the major energy source for most organisms and ATPases are the machines, which utilize this fuel, for example to move muscles or cargo in our body. The very abundant chaperone protein Hsp90 has such an ATPase in each of its two monomers. During the last years experiments had suggested that the movement and conformational changes of ATPase proteins are in general strictly linked to ATP binding and hydrolysis (i.e. fuel consumption). To probe this theory Thorsten Hugel, Professor at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen (TUM) and member of the Nanosystems Initiative ...

2011 Marks Another Year of Strong Support Contract Renewals for Digisonics

2012-01-16
Digisonics, the #1 KLAS rated Cardiology PACS and Structured Reporting vendor for four consecutive years, announced that support contract renewals exceeded 90% once again in 2011. This marks the third consecutive year that support contract renewals have exceeded 90%, a testament to customer confidence in the quality of Digisonics support services. Digisonics' focus on providing best-of-class image management and structured reporting systems combined with commitment to excellence in customer support services has led to consistent recognition by independent research groups ...

Surprising results from smoke inhalation study

2012-01-16
MAYWOOD, Ill. -- A Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine study includes some unexpected findings about the immune systems of smoke-inhalation patients. Contrary to expectations, patients who died from their injuries had lower inflammatory responses in their lungs than patients who survived. "Perhaps a better understanding of this early pulmonary immune dysfunction will allow for therapies that further improve outcomes in burn care," researchers reported. The study is published in the January/February issue of the Journal of Burn Care & Research. First ...

HIA-LI Hosts Long Island Economic Summit; Confidence, Revenue Get Thumbs Up in 18th Annual Economic Survey and Opinion Poll

HIA-LI Hosts Long Island Economic Summit; Confidence, Revenue Get Thumbs Up in 18th Annual Economic Survey and Opinion Poll
2012-01-16
Confidence in the Long Island economy is up compared to the national economy according to the 18th Annual Economic Survey and Opinion Poll conducted by Albrecht, Viggiano, Zureck & Company, P.C. (AVZ) in partnership with Long Island Business News and the Townsend School of Business at Dowling College. Nearly half of the survey respondents indicated that revenue had increased. A panel of Long Island business leaders will discuss the survey findings as HIA-LI, the recognized voice for business on Long Island, hosts the Long Island Economic Summit, Thursday, January 26, ...

The concept of 'overactive bladder' serves better commercial rather than patient interests

2012-01-16
"The overactive bladder syndrome has become an accepted way to simplify a complex array of symptoms and leads people to believe that an overactive bladder is an independent disease in itself. However, the truth is not as simple as this, as there are usually several factors at work explaining the symptoms. This is also one of the reasons why so called overactive bladder medications often do not bring the hoped result," says Kari Tikkinen, MD, PhD, from the HUCS Department of Urology. The article on overactive bladder syndrome, which was co-written by Tikkinen, who currently ...

I recognize you! But how did I do it?

2012-01-16
Are you someone who easily recognises everyone you've ever met? Or maybe you struggle, even with familiar faces? It is already known that we are better at recognising faces from our own race but researchers have only recently questioned how we assimilate the information we use to recognise people. New research by the University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus has shown that when it comes to recognising people the Malaysian Chinese have adapted their facial recognition techniques to cope with living in a multicultural environment. The study 'You Look Familiar: How Malaysian ...

Wearing contact lenses can affect glaucoma measurements

2012-01-16
MAYWOOD, Ill. -- A study about how wearing contact lenses affects glaucoma measurements has been named the top presentation at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine's annual St. Albert's Day research symposium. First author of the study is Marie Brenner, a fourth-year student at Stritch School of Medicine. Brenner and colleagues studied the effects of contact lens wear on retinal nerve fiber layer measurements, which ophthalmologists use to diagnose and manage glaucoma. The researchers found that in patients with lower refractive errors, better quality ...

AGU journal highlights -- Jan. 13, 2012

2012-01-16
The following highlights summarize research papers that have been recently published in Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans (JGR-C), Journal of Geophysical Research-Planets (JGR-E), Journal of Geophysical Research- Biogeosciences (JGR-G), and Geophysical Research Letters (GRL). In this release: Variability of North Atlantic heat transport observed from instrument data Methane exceeds nitrous oxide in rivers' contribution to warming Waste recycling primary source of energy in deep ocean Record Arctic ozone depletion could occur again Traveling supraglacial ...

Affiliate Boosters to Give Away GBP1,000 in Cash -- 80% Commission Offered to All Affiliates

Affiliate Boosters to Give Away GBP1,000 in Cash -- 80% Commission Offered to All Affiliates
2012-01-16
Affiliate Boosters will be giving away GBP1,000 in cold hard cash at the London Affiliate Conference 2012. All affiliates attending the LAC are eligible to win. There will be 2 draws with a GBP500 prize each and to be in for a chance of winning. Affiliates can enter by dropping off a business card at the Affiliate Boosters booth, stand 115 and 116 at some point throughout the 2 days. The two drawings will take place at 15:45 on Friday, 27th of January, and at 16:15 on Saturday, 28th of January at the Affiliate Boosters stand. Head of Affiliate Boosters, Lawrence ...

Keeping an eye on the Universe

Keeping an eye on the Universe
2012-01-16
The University of Arizona's Catalina Sky Survey keeps a watchful eye on asteroids that might cross the Earth's path. A byproduct of that effort is the largest database compiling the brightnesses of 200 million objects in the universe, including supernovae and stars torn up by super-massive black holes. The night sky is filled with objects such as asteroids that dash across the sky and others – such as exploding stars and variable stars – that flash, dim, and brighten. Studying such phenomena can help astronomers better understand the evolution of stars, massive black ...

Avis Israel Provides Economical iPad 2 Option for Rental Customers

Avis Israel Provides Economical iPad 2 Option for Rental Customers
2012-01-16
Devoted to making sure the Israel car rental experience is a positive one, Avis Israel has recently provided an option to rent an iPad 2 with unlimited Wi-Fi connectivity and included GPS for $16 a day to all rental car customers. Soon to be available throughout Israel, the new service is immediately available at the following central branches: Ben Gurion Airport, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. The iPad 2 is a tablet computer designed, developed and marketed by Apple. It serves primarily as a platform for audio-visual media including books, periodicals, movies, music, games, ...

Researchers identify possible receptor for key breast cancer regulator

2012-01-16
A key protein potentially involved in regulating breast cancer progression has been identified by researchers at Clarkson University in Potsdam, N.Y. Led by professor Costel Darie, the team worked to identify the binding partner of Tumor Differentiating Factor (TDF), a pituitary hormone that had previously been shown to reduce cancer progression in breast cancer cells. Earlier studies had shown that breast cancer cells treated with TDF lost their cancerous characteristics and began acting like normal mammary cells, suggesting that TDF had tumor-suppressing capabilities. ...

Unconventional New Book Offers Lighthearted, Hands-On Approach to Small-Business Marketing and Promotion

2012-01-16
During a marketing presentation in early 2011, an attendee asked Dr. Joe Webb, "Does a plumber need a Web site?" This question inspired an unconventional new business book, written with "co-conspirator" Richard Romano, about a handful of interesting and motivated characters facing small-business sales and marketing challenges. A year and a half's worth of conversations with graphic communications professionals and small business owners across the country and around the world answered the question, and led to the book's title "Does a Plumber Need ...

Faulty proteins may prove significant in identifying new treatments for ovarian cancer

2012-01-16
PORTLAND, Ore. -- A constellation of defective proteins suspected in causing a malfunction in the body's ability to repair its own DNA could be the link scientists need to prove a new class of drugs will be effective in treating a broad range of ovarian cancer patients, an Oregon Health & Science University Knight Cancer Institute study found. These research results, published this week in PLoS ONE, have prompted additional exploration into whether the patient population included in clinical trials for drugs that target the enzyme poly ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) should ...

Walk this way: Scientists and MBL physiology students describe how a motor protein 'steps out'

Walk this way: Scientists and MBL physiology students describe how a motor protein steps out
2012-01-16
MBL, WOODS HOLE, MA -- Just like people, some proteins have characteristic ways of "walking," which (also like human gaits) are not so easy to describe. But now scientists have discovered the unique "drunken sailor" gait of dynein, a protein that is critical for the function of every cell in the body and whose malfunction has been associated with neurodegenerative disorders such as Lou Gehrig's disease and Parkinson's disease. The research, which was led by Samara Reck-Peterson of Harvard Medical School and partially conducted in the MBL Physiology Course, received advance ...

WorkBoat.com Maritime Industry Recruitment and Retention Webinar set for Jan. 25; Speakers from Crowley Maritime, Workboat Academy, MITAGS/PMI and WorkBoat.com to Participate

2012-01-16
In the highly competitive commercial marine industry, employers must find a way to recruit, retain and compensate employees. What are the best strategies, training, and research that can be utilized to meet the demands of a growing industry? What makes industry employees happy, productive and loyal? Maritime employee recruitment, retention and compensation will be the topic of the WorkBoat.com webinar on Wednesday, Jan. 25, at 1 p.m. (eastern). To register for the webinar, visit www.WorkBoat.com. Cost to attend the webinar is $59. Individuals can also purchase the ...

Eyeing resources, India, China, Brazil, Japan, other countries want a voice on Arctic Council

Eyeing resources, India, China, Brazil, Japan, other countries want a voice on Arctic Council
2012-01-16
With an eye on rapid changes in the resource-rich Arctic, countries like China, India and Brazil, which have no Arctic territories, are nonetheless knocking on the door of the increasingly influential Arctic Council looking for admission as permanent observers. The issue has divided existing members, with Russia and Canada most strongly opposed. It is among the major questions with which Canada will have to grapple as it prepares to chair the Council next year. It will also feature prominently on the agenda of a two-day meeting on the future of the Arctic Council, January ...

Mass. General researchers find novel way to prevent drug-induced liver injury

2012-01-16
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have developed a novel strategy to protect the liver from drug-induced injury and improve associated drug safety. In their report receiving advance online publication in the journal Nature Biotechnology, the team reports that inhibition of a type of cell-to-cell communication can protect against the damage caused by liver-toxic drugs such as acetaminophen. "Our findings suggest that this therapy could be a clinically viable strategy for treating patients with drug-induced liver injury," says Suraj Patel, PhD, of the ...

Neural balls and strikes: Where categories live in the brain

2012-01-16
Hundreds of times during a baseball game, the home plate umpire must instantaneously categorize a fast-moving pitch as a ball or a strike. In new research from the University of Chicago, scientists have pinpointed an area in the brain where these kinds of visual categories are encoded. While monkeys played a computer game in which they had to quickly determine the category of a moving visual stimulus, neural recordings revealed brain activity that encoded those categories. Surprisingly, a region of the brain known as the posterior parietal cortex demonstrated faster and ...

Engineering team completes ambitious Antarctic expedition in the 'deep-field'

2012-01-16
A team of four British engineers has returned to the UK after completing a gruelling journey to one of the most remote and hostile locations on the planet to put in place equipment and supplies for an ambitious project later this year. Enduring temperatures of minus 35°C the Subglacial Lake Ellsworth 'Advance Party' has successfully paved the way to explore an ancient lake buried beneath 3 km of Antarctic ice. A powerful 'tractor-train' towed nearly 70 tonnes of equipment across Antarctica's ice over deep snow and steep mountain passes. In December a science and engineering ...

Good parents are predictable -- at least when it comes to corn

Good parents are predictable -- at least when it comes to corn
2012-01-16
The problem is the sheer number: In the family tree of modern-day corn, there are two main groups with 10,000 pure-breed lines each. Each of these lines could potentially be used for producing a new variety by means of cross-breeding. In mathematical terms, that equates to 100 billion possibilities. In terms of corn, however, a parent's performance is no indicator of what potential lies hidden in their offspring. Even the feeblest of parents can produce mighty offspring when cross-bred. But time is of essence: Currently it takes approximately 10 years for breeders to ...

Researchers use sugar to halt esophageal cancer in its tracks

2012-01-16
Scientists working at the Medical Research Council have identified changes in the patterns of sugar molecules that line pre-cancerous cells in the esophagus, a condition called Barrett's dysplasia, making it much easier to detect and remove these cells before they develop into esophageal cancer. These findings, reported in the journal Nature Medicine, have important implications for patients and may help to monitor their condition and prevent the development of cancer. Oesophageal cancer is the fifth biggest cause of cancer death in the United Kingdom and the eighth leading ...

Scientists shed new light on link between 'killer cells' and diabetes

2012-01-16
Killer T-cells in the human body which help protect us from disease can inadvertently destroy cells that produce insulin, new research has uncovered. The study provides the first evidence of this mechanism in action and could offer new understanding of the cause of Type 1 diabetes. Professor Andy Sewell, an expert in human T-cells from Cardiff University's School of Medicine worked alongside diabetes experts from King's College London to better understand the role of T-cells in the development of Type 1 diabetes. The team isolated a T-cell from a patient with Type ...

Ultra short telomeres linked to osteoarthritis

2012-01-16
Telomeres, the very ends of chromosomes, become shorter as we age. When a cell divides it first duplicates its DNA and, because the DNA replication machinery fails to get all the way to the end, with each successive cell division a little bit more is missed. New research published in BioMed Central's open access journal Arthritis Research & Therapy shows that cells from osteoarthritic knees have abnormally shortened telomeres and that the percentage of cells with ultra short telomeres increases the closer to the damaged region within the joint. While the shortening of ...

CSHL team introduces automated imaging to greatly speed whole-brain mapping efforts

2012-01-16
Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. – A new technology developed by neuroscientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) transforms the way highly detailed anatomical images can be made of whole brains. Until now, means of obtaining such images – used in cutting-edge projects to map the mammalian brain -- have been painstakingly slow and available only to a handful of highly specialized research teams. By automating and standardizing the process in which brain samples are divided into sections and then imaged sequentially at precise spatial orientations in two-photon microscopes, ...
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