ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Rare stem cells hold potential for infertility treatments
- Metallic alloy is tough and ductile at cryogenic temperatures
- Knowing how bacteria take out trash could lead to new antibiotics
- Artificial cells take their first steps
- Discrepancy in Greenland temperatures during end of last ice age resolved
- Decoding the role of water in gold nanocatalysis: Secrets behind gold's unexpected oxidation activity uncovered
- Coffee genome sheds light on the evolution of caffeine
- 3-D film no more effective in evoking emotion than 2-D
- Minimally invasive, high-performance intervention for staging lung cancer
- Important regulators of immune cell response identified
- Clues to trapping carbon dioxide in rock: Calcium carbonate takes multiple, simultaneous roads to different minerals
- Small asteroid to safely pass close to Earth Sunday
- Avian influenza virus isolated in harbor seals poses a threat to humans
- Public trust has dwindled in America with rise in income inequality
- Greener neighborhoods lead to better birth outcomes, new research shows
- Ozone pollution in India kills enough crops to feed 94 million in poverty
- Plant-based research prevents complication of hemophilia treatment in mice
- Archerfish target shoot with 'skillfully thrown' water
- Reacting to personal setbacks: Do you bounce back or give up?
- How the brain finds what it's looking for
- Oxidized LDL might actually be 'good guy'
- Life forms appeared at least 60 million years earlier than previously thought
- Atomically thin material opens door for integrated nanophotonic circuits
- A new model for a cosmological enigma -- dark matter: Solving long-standing and troublesome puzzles
- Messenger molecules identified as part of arthritis puzzle
- Time flies: Breakthrough study identifies genetic link between circadian clock and seasonal timing
- Bats change strategy when food is scarce
- Mantle plumes crack continents
- Finding new approaches for therapeutics against Ebola virus
- New research offers help for spinal cord patients
- Bluefin tuna found hunting for mackerel in East Greenland waters
- Disparities persist in early-stage breast cancer treatment
- Breast conserving therapy shows survival benefit compared to mastectomy in early-stage patients with hormone receptor positive disease
- Breast vs. bottle feeding in rhesus monkeys: Marked difference in intestinal bacteria, immunologic development
- Titania-based material holds promise as new insulator for superconductors
- Dreadnoughtus: Gigantic, exceptionally complete sauropod dinosaur
- Nano-pea pod model widens electronics applications
- How good is the fossil record? New study casts doubt on their usefulness
- To clean air and beyond: Catching greenhouse gases with advanced membranes
- Liver injury caused by herbals, dietary supplements rises in study population
- Intestinal barrier damage in multiple sclerosis
- Visualizing plastic changes to brain from magnetic stimulation: Effects of novel treatment method demonstrated
- Cystic fibrosis: Additional immune dysfunction discovered
- First Neanderthal rock engraving found in Gibraltar: Abstract art older than thought?
- Cannabis prevents negative behavioral, physiological effects of traumatic events, rat study shows
- New clues to determining the solar cycle
- Ancient mammal relatives were active at night 100 million years before origin of mammals
- Global epidemic of diabetes threatens to jeopardize further progress in tuberculosis control
- Blood test for 'nicked' protein predicts prostate cancer treatment response
- Climate change science aided by huge but 'invisible' efforts of amateurs
- How much gravity is enough?
- Innovative algorithm spots interactions lethal to cancer
- Longitudinal study explores white matter damage, cognition after traumatic axonal injury
- Wearable sensors to detect firearm use
- New deep sea mushroom-shaped organisms discovered
- Can sleep loss affect your brain size?
- Galapagos invasion is global warning
Rare stem cells hold potential for infertility treatments Posted: 04 Sep 2014 12:38 PM PDT Rare stem cells in testis that produce a biomarker protein called PAX7 help give rise to new sperm cells -- and may hold a key to restoring fertility, research suggests. Infertility, which the Centers for Disease Control estimates affects as many as 4.7 million men in the United States, is a key complication of cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy and radiation therapy. |
Metallic alloy is tough and ductile at cryogenic temperatures Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:46 AM PDT |
Knowing how bacteria take out trash could lead to new antibiotics Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:20 AM PDT A team of scientists has reconstructed how bacteria tightly control their growth and division, the cell cycle, by destroying specific proteins through regulated protein degradation. All organisms use controlled protein degradation to alter cell behavior in response to changing environment. A process as reliable and stable as cell division also has to be flexible, to allow the organism to grow and respond. But little has been known about the molecular mechanics of how this works. |
Artificial cells take their first steps Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:19 AM PDT |
Discrepancy in Greenland temperatures during end of last ice age resolved Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:19 AM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:19 AM PDT Researchers have, for the first time, provided direct evidence of a water-mediated reaction mechanism for the catalytic oxidation of carbon monoxide. The work used gold nanoparticles and titanium dioxide as a catalyst to speed the process and determined that water serves as a co-catalyst for the reaction that transforms carbon monoxide into carbon dioxide. |
Coffee genome sheds light on the evolution of caffeine Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:19 AM PDT An international research team has sequenced the genome of the coffee plant Coffea canephora. By comparing genes in the coffee, tea and chocolate plants, the scientists show that enzymes involved in making caffeine likely evolved independently in these three organisms. More than 8.7 million tons of coffee was produced in 2013; it is the principal agricultural product of many tropical nations. |
3-D film no more effective in evoking emotion than 2-D Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:18 AM PDT |
Minimally invasive, high-performance intervention for staging lung cancer Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:18 AM PDT Endoscopic biopsy of lymph nodes between the two lungs (mediastinum) is a sensitive and accurate technique that can replace mediastinal surgery for staging lung cancer in patients with potentially resectable tumors. The new study shows that it is not necessary to perform surgery to confirm negative results obtained through the endoscopic approach during the pre-operative evaluation of patients with this type of cancer. This discovery has many advantages for both the patients and the health-care system. |
Important regulators of immune cell response identified Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:18 AM PDT A more effective method to determine how T cells differentiate into specialized cell types has been identified by researchers. The new approach could help accelerate laboratory research and the development of potential therapeutics, including vaccines. The method may also be used to identify the genes that underlie tumor cell development. |
Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:18 AM PDT |
Small asteroid to safely pass close to Earth Sunday Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:40 AM PDT A small asteroid, designated 2014 RC, will safely pass very close to Earth on Sunday, Sept. 7, 2014. At the time of closest approach, based on current calculations to be about 2:18 p.m. EDT (11:18 a.m. PDT / 18:18 UTC), the asteroid will be roughly over New Zealand. From its reflected brightness, astronomers estimate that the asteroid is about 60 feet (20 meters) in size. |
Avian influenza virus isolated in harbor seals poses a threat to humans Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:16 AM PDT The avian influenza A H3N8 virus that killed harbor seals along the New England coast can spread through respiratory droplets and poses a threat to humans, scientists have found. The findings reinforce the need for continued surveillance of flu viruses circulating in wild and domestic animals to understand the risk the viruses pose to humans, said the study's first author. |
Public trust has dwindled in America with rise in income inequality Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:16 AM PDT Trust in others and confidence in societal institutions are at their lowest point in over three decades, analyses of national survey data reveal. "With the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer, people trust each other less," says one researcher. "There's a growing perception that other people are cheating or taking advantage to get ahead, as evidenced, for example, by the ideas around 'the 1%' in the Occupy protests." |
Greener neighborhoods lead to better birth outcomes, new research shows Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:16 AM PDT |
Ozone pollution in India kills enough crops to feed 94 million in poverty Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:16 AM PDT |
Plant-based research prevents complication of hemophilia treatment in mice Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:16 AM PDT A strategy to prevent one of the most serious complications of hemophilia treatment is underway at an American university. The approach, which uses plant cells to teach the immune system to tolerate rather than attack the clotting factor protein, offers hope for preventing one of the most serious complications of hemophilia treatment. |
Archerfish target shoot with 'skillfully thrown' water Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:15 AM PDT Archerfish hunt by shooting jets of water at unsuspecting prey on leaves or twigs above, knocking them into the water below before gobbling them up. Now, a study finds that those fish are much more adaptable and skillful target-shooters than anyone had given them credit for. The fish really do use water as a tool making them the first known tool-using animal to adaptively change the hydrodynamic properties of a free jet of water. |
Reacting to personal setbacks: Do you bounce back or give up? Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:11 AM PDT Sometimes when people get upsetting news – such as a failing exam grade or a negative job review – they decide instantly to do better the next time. In other situations that are equally disappointing, the same people may feel inclined to just give up. How can similar setbacks produce such different reactions? It may come down to how much control we feel we have over what happened, according to new research. |
How the brain finds what it's looking for Posted: 04 Sep 2014 10:11 AM PDT |
Oxidized LDL might actually be 'good guy' Posted: 04 Sep 2014 09:12 AM PDT A team of investigators has made a thought-provoking discovery about a type of cholesterol previously believed to be a 'bad guy' in the development of heart disease and other conditions. "Based on our analysis, we were surprised to find that, instead of increasing the amount of cholesterol uptake and accumulation in the macrophage foam cells, mildly oxidized LDL almost completely prevents increases in cholesterol," a researcher said. |
Life forms appeared at least 60 million years earlier than previously thought Posted: 04 Sep 2014 09:12 AM PDT |
Atomically thin material opens door for integrated nanophotonic circuits Posted: 04 Sep 2014 09:12 AM PDT |
A new model for a cosmological enigma -- dark matter: Solving long-standing and troublesome puzzles Posted: 04 Sep 2014 09:12 AM PDT |
Messenger molecules identified as part of arthritis puzzle Posted: 04 Sep 2014 09:12 AM PDT The way in which some cells alter their behavior at the onset of osteoarthritis has been identified for the first time by researchers. "We've not discovered the cause of arthritis, but this does shed light on the process of how the disease manifests itself. To develop new drugs to treat one of the leading causes of disability requires the fullest possible understanding of the condition and this discovery is part of that overall picture," one researcher concluded. |
Time flies: Breakthrough study identifies genetic link between circadian clock and seasonal timing Posted: 04 Sep 2014 09:11 AM PDT New insights into day-length measurement in flies have been uncovered by researchers. The study has corroborated previous observations that flies developed under short days become significantly more cold-resistant compared with flies raised in long-days, suggesting that this response can be used to study seasonal photoperiodic timing. Photoperiodism is the physiological reaction of organisms to the length of day or night, occurring in both plants and animals. |
Bats change strategy when food is scarce Posted: 04 Sep 2014 08:12 AM PDT Bats could be more flexible in their echolocation behavior than previously thought, according to a new study into the foraging techniques of the desert long-eared bat. Gleaning bats usually have long ears for the detection of faint sound cues and low wing loading to allow them to carry heavy loads -- features that increase drag and are linked to slower flight. So why would bats adapted to one foraging mode (gleaning), adopt another (hawking)? |
Mantle plumes crack continents Posted: 04 Sep 2014 07:38 AM PDT |
Finding new approaches for therapeutics against Ebola virus Posted: 04 Sep 2014 07:38 AM PDT New ways to identify drugs that could be used to treat Ebola virus infection are the focus of recent study. Researchers have looked at what proteins inside a cell are critical for the functions of Ebola virus and are hijacked by the virus to help with infection. One of the proteins they have targeted is known as VP24. This protein disrupts signalling in infected human cells and disrupts the body's immune system and the fight against the virus. |
New research offers help for spinal cord patients Posted: 04 Sep 2014 07:38 AM PDT |
Bluefin tuna found hunting for mackerel in East Greenland waters Posted: 04 Sep 2014 07:34 AM PDT On a warm summer day in August 2012, Greenlandic fishermen and biologists caught an unusual catch while conducting an exploratory fishery for mackerel. Three large bluefin tuna were among the several tonnes of mackerel that were caught that summer. The presence of bluefin tuna in waters near Greenland is a very rare event, and there are no other scientific reports of its presence so far north as the Denmark Strait. |
Disparities persist in early-stage breast cancer treatment Posted: 04 Sep 2014 07:33 AM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2014 07:33 AM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2014 06:30 AM PDT Infant rhesus monkeys receiving different diets early in life develop distinct immune systems that persist months after weaning, a study has shown. While the researchers expected different diets would promote different intestinal bacteria (microbiota), they were surprised at how dramatically these microbes shaped immunologic development. Specifically, breast-fed macaques had more "memory" T cells and T helper 17 (TH17) cells, which are known to fight Salmonella and other pathogens. |
Titania-based material holds promise as new insulator for superconductors Posted: 04 Sep 2014 06:30 AM PDT |
Dreadnoughtus: Gigantic, exceptionally complete sauropod dinosaur Posted: 04 Sep 2014 06:30 AM PDT The new 65-ton (59,300 kg) dinosaur species Dreadnoughtus schrani is the largest land animal for which body mass can be accurately calculated. Its skeleton is the most complete ever found of its type, with over 70 percent of the bones, excluding the head, represented. Because all previously discovered supermassive dinosaurs are known from relatively fragmentary remains, Dreadnoughtus offers an unprecedented window into the anatomy and biomechanics of the largest animals to ever walk the Earth. |
Nano-pea pod model widens electronics applications Posted: 04 Sep 2014 06:27 AM PDT A new theoretical model explains how a nanostructure, such as the nano-pea pod, can exhibit localized electrons. Periodic chain-like nanostructures are widely used in nanoelectronics. Typically, chain elements include the likes of quantum rings, quantum dots, or quantum graphs. Such a structure enables electrons to move along the chain, in theory, indefinitely. The trouble is that some applications require localized electrons —- these are no longer in a continuous energy spectrum but in a discrete energy spectrum, instead. |
How good is the fossil record? New study casts doubt on their usefulness Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:46 AM PDT |
To clean air and beyond: Catching greenhouse gases with advanced membranes Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:46 AM PDT |
Liver injury caused by herbals, dietary supplements rises in study population Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:46 AM PDT Liver injury caused by herbals and dietary supplements increased from 7% to 20% in a U.S. study group over a ten-year period, research shows. According to the study, liver injury caused by non-bodybuilding supplements is most severe, occurring more often in middle-aged women and more frequently resulting in death or the need for transplantation than liver injury from bodybuilding supplements or conventional medications. |
Intestinal barrier damage in multiple sclerosis Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:46 AM PDT |
Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:45 AM PDT Tinnitus, migraine, epilepsy, depression, schizophrenia, Alzheimer's: all these are examples of diseases with neurological causes, the treatment and study of which is more and more frequently being carried out by means of magnetic stimulation of the brain. However, the method's precise mechanisms of action have not, as yet, been fully understood. |
Cystic fibrosis: Additional immune dysfunction discovered Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:45 AM PDT |
First Neanderthal rock engraving found in Gibraltar: Abstract art older than thought? Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:45 AM PDT The first example of a rock engraving attributed to Neanderthals has been discovered in Gorham's Cave, Gibraltar. Dated at over 39,000 years old, it consists of a deeply impressed cross-hatching carved into rock. Its analysis calls into question the view that the production of representational and abstract depictions on cave walls was a cultural innovation introduced into Europe by modern humans. On the contrary, the findings support the hypothesis that Neanderthals had a symbolic material culture. |
Cannabis prevents negative behavioral, physiological effects of traumatic events, rat study shows Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:42 AM PDT |
New clues to determining the solar cycle Posted: 03 Sep 2014 05:41 PM PDT Approximately every 11 years, the sun undergoes a complete personality change from quiet and calm to violently active. The height of the sun's activity, known as solar maximum, is a time of numerous sunspots, punctuated with profound eruptions that send radiation and solar particles out into the far reaches of space. However, the timing of the solar cycle is far from precise. |
Ancient mammal relatives were active at night 100 million years before origin of mammals Posted: 03 Sep 2014 05:41 PM PDT |
Global epidemic of diabetes threatens to jeopardize further progress in tuberculosis control Posted: 03 Sep 2014 05:38 PM PDT 15% of adult TB cases worldwide are already attributable to diabetes, studies show. These diabetes-associated cases correspond to over 1 million cases a year, with more than 40% occurring in India and China alone. If diabetes rates continue to rise out of control, the present downward trajectory in global TB cases could be offset by 8% (ie, 8% less reduction) or more by 2035, warn the authors of a new article. |
Blood test for 'nicked' protein predicts prostate cancer treatment response Posted: 03 Sep 2014 05:37 PM PDT Prostate cancer patients whose tumors contain a shortened protein called AR-V7, which can be detected in the blood, are less likely to respond to two widely used drugs for metastatic prostate cancer, according to results of a study. If large-scale studies validate the findings, the investigators say men with detectable blood levels of AR-V7 should avoid these two drugs and instead take other medicines to treat their prostate cancer. |
Climate change science aided by huge but 'invisible' efforts of amateurs Posted: 03 Sep 2014 01:36 PM PDT |
Posted: 03 Sep 2014 01:35 PM PDT Keeping upright in a low-gravity environment is not easy, and NASA documents abound with examples of astronauts falling on the lunar surface. Now, a new study suggests that the reason for all these moon mishaps might be because its gravity isn't sufficient to provide astronauts with unambiguous information on which way is 'up'. |
Innovative algorithm spots interactions lethal to cancer Posted: 03 Sep 2014 01:35 PM PDT An ideal anti-cancer treatment -- one that's immediately lethal to cancer cells, harmless to healthy cells, and resistant to cancer's relapse -- is still a dream. New research takes a step closer to the realization of that dream with an innovative computer algorithm that spots cancer-busting 'genetic partners' whose interactions are lethal to cancer cells. |
Longitudinal study explores white matter damage, cognition after traumatic axonal injury Posted: 03 Sep 2014 01:26 PM PDT Traumatic Axonal Injury is a form of traumatic brain injury that can have detrimental effects on the integrity of the brain's white matter and lead to cognitive impairments. A new study investigated white matter damage in the acute and chronic stages of a traumatic axonal injury in an effort to better understand what long-term damage may result. |
Wearable sensors to detect firearm use Posted: 03 Sep 2014 01:26 PM PDT |
New deep sea mushroom-shaped organisms discovered Posted: 03 Sep 2014 01:26 PM PDT |
Can sleep loss affect your brain size? Posted: 03 Sep 2014 01:16 PM PDT Sleep difficulties may be linked to faster rates of decline in brain volume, according to a study. "It is not yet known whether poor sleep quality is a cause or consequence of changes in brain structure," said a study author. "There are effective treatments for sleep problems, so future research needs to test whether improving people's quality of sleep could slow the rate of brain volume loss. If that is the case, improving people's sleep habits could be an important way to improve brain health." |
Galapagos invasion is global warning Posted: 03 Sep 2014 10:33 AM PDT |
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