Friday, November 9, 2012

Gene find turns soldier beetle defense into biotech opportunity

ScienceDaily (Nov. 7, 2012) ? New antibiotic and anti-cancer chemicals may one day be synthesised using biotechnology, following CSIRO's discovery of the three genes that combine to provide soldier beetles with their potent predator defence system.

CSIRO researchers, and a colleague at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, published details of the gene identification breakthrough and potential applications recently in the international journal Nature Communications.

"For the first time, our team has been able to isolate and replicate the three genes that combine to make the potent fatty acid that soldier beetles secrete to ward off predators and infection," said CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences research leader Dr Victoria Haritos.

"This discovery is important because it opens a new way for the unusual fatty acid to be synthesised for potential antibiotic, anti-cancer, or other industrial purposes," Dr Haritos said.

Soldier beetles exude a white viscous fluid from their glands to repel potential attacks from predators, as well as in a wax form to protect against infection.

The team found this fluid contains an exotic fatty acid called dihydromatricaria acid, or DHMA, which is one of a group called polyynes that have known anti-microbial and anti-cancer properties.

While DHMA and similar polyyne fatty acids are found in a wide variety of plants, fungi, liverworts, mosses, marine sponges and algae, these compounds have proved very difficult to manufacture using conventional chemical processes. However, Dr Haritos and her team have developed a way to achieve this.

"We have outlined a method for reproducing these polyyne chemicals in living organisms like yeast, using mild conditions" Dr Haritos said.

Soldier beetles are the only animals reported to contain DHMA. This, together with the observation that the beetles forage on plants (such as daisies) which contain a lot of these types of fatty acids, led to previous incorrect conclusions that the DHMA in soldier beetles was derived from their diet.

"Through our research and the gene differences we have discovered, we now know soldier beetles have evolved this same defensive compound entirely independently of its production in plants and fungi," Dr Haritos said.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by CSIRO Australia, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Victoria S. Haritos, Irene Horne, Katherine Damcevski, Karen Glover, Nerida Gibb, Shoko Okada, Mats Hamberg. The convergent evolution of defensive polyacetylenic fatty acid biosynthesis genes in soldier beetles. Nature Communications, 2012; 3: 1150 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms2147

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/health_medicine/genes/~3/BML7UCV9S70/121108104415.htm

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90% Compliance

All Critics (88) | Top Critics (31) | Fresh (79) | Rotten (9)

The point of Compliance, which caused walkouts and shouting matches when it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, is how we are programmed to do things that go against our natural instincts as long as we believe we have the law on our side.

This is one insistent film, more evocative of human behavior than movies that take fewer risks ever could be.

Like a John Hughes movie hijacked by Roman Polanski, this troubling indie effort lays bare the sadomasochism of the American workplace.

Zobel, a second-time feature filmmaker, has put together a skillful, sympathetic but unsparing re-enactment of a small-scale atrocity, and his cast plays it out with natural, understated performances.

Zobel's masterful direction and screenplay heighten the distress of authority figures possessing unseen persuasion over naive employees, exposing a disturbing and haunting look at what some workers are willing to do in order to follow orders.

This is a well-made film, with plausible performances by all the leads, especially Ann Dowd. We feel we know people like this.

I admire the workings of the movie, in the same cool way I might regard a machine gun as a work of art ...

Compliance strips bare the fallacy of equivalent free will. It gets under one's skin in a manner few films do, but sticks in one's head the same way all great ones do.

Without a single bullet in sight, Craig Zobel has crafted an ingenious, dizzying conversation piece of a thriller.

About as far from an easy watch as you could imagine, Compliance is a seedy little story that you'll wind up watching between the cracks in your fingers.

Morally complex look at human behavior leaves you shaking your head in disbelief

Dowd's performance -- showing Sandra's eagerness to please the "cop" and her hesitancy to follow orders -- burns in the mind long after the movie's over.

One of the most deeply disturbing movies of recent vintage.

There's the adage that life is nasty, brutish and short. It's even worse when you're half-naked and locked in a supply room with your boss.

Its skillfully constructed scene-setting montages, its fraught, gliding camera moves and attractive compositions seem judgmental, suggesting the filmmakers are superior to and more sensitive, certainly, than the characters.

'Compliance' takes an extremely unpleasant and nauseating experience for everyone involved and puts this masterful spin on it to make it not only watchable, but a really solid piece of film overall.

There's a humanity here, even for the restaurant manager. But that still doesn't make "Compliance" easy to ingest.

... a sadomasochistic mind-trip ... It has the lingering impact of a gruesome freeway pileup ? you don't want to look, but you can't help yourself.

Compliance will leave you shocked and offended, but it misses out on any opportunity to be anything outside of a dramatization.

Compliance is a difficult film to watch -- walkouts have been reported at more than one screening -- but it's also a calculating and intimate deconstruction of the greater social ills that our fast-food nation faces as a whole.

This psychodrama of ill-advised behavior may well leave you feeling dirty...for what you've watched helplessly and perhaps for what you've countenanced as an American citizen.

So long as you can tolerate the frustration it fosters, it's hard not to appreciate such intelligent provocation.

Perhaps the most disturbing movie of the year. Not a horror film, but given that we can't excuse the behavior as belonging to illegal aliens or felons eluding of the law ... maybe it's a new strain of horror after all.

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/compliance_2012/

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Is Election Predictor Nate Silver A Witch? Probably. And Quantified Self Data Will Make You One Too

Nate Silver WitchScientists are yesterday's wizards and demigods. And Nate Silver is a scientist. One whose ability to predict the outcome of elections is so precise, it's nearly indistinguishable from magic. That's why IsNateSilverAWitch.com is so funny. But really what his flawless prediction of the presidential election signifies is the coming of age of the quantified universe.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QqvuWyQld20/

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Google Releases Free Siri Competitor for iOS

Watch out Siri. Google updated its Google Search app for iOS Tuesday, and the app now features a robust, intuitive voice search functionality that gives Siri a run for the money.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/o1S24CEq1nU/

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Emergency Communications for the LDS Church - Howard's Notebook

? The LDS (the Mormons) have an emergency communications system for the Mormon Church:

?

??Amateur radio

When all other communication methods fail, amateur radio (HAM) has proven to be extremely effective and reliable. Amateur radio operators provide their own equipment and expertise, and they practice and prepare to provide emergency communications. [definitions and links to ARES and RACES will be needed].

The church has an emergency communications organization that includes amateur radio operators at church headquarters and select Bishop Storehouses specifically trained to provide Emergency Response Communications (ERC)??

? They use more than just Amateur radio but I just posted the ham part above.? You can see more on their church/religion communications plan at:? LDS Tech

?? I find it very strange and very odd and a bit scary that Mitt Romney wants to do away with FEMA.
Plus now since Hurricane Sandy hit he is refusing to talk about his plan to do away with FEMA.? The media has been asking him and he will not say a word about it.
? You would think that he would have to answer.? You would think that he could come up with some sort of statement.? But he just will not answer the questions.?
?? I would think that would hurt? him big time but he refused to release his tax return and that does not seem to have hurt him.

Use this unique QR (Quick Response) code with your smart device. The code will save the url of this webpage to the device for mobile sharing and storage.

Source: http://hnbbs.net/?p=5050&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=emergency-communications-for-the-lds-church

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'Pitch' event will take place thanks to student record label | Daily ...

Five of Five Music Entertainment, a student-driven record label on Cal State Northridge?s campus, is holding a talent search and running a showcase on Nov. 7 called ?The Pitch? to find their new band of the year.

Five of Five have accepted band applications through their website from bands interested in an opportunity to sign a deal with their record label. Each band was required to submit three songs, a short biography, two current photos, and contact information. Anyone could apply, whether they have CSUN students or not.

The top three bands, chosen by the co-producers and announced via Facebook, will perform at the showcase to win the votes of audience and executives. Junior Marcee Fitzpatrick, 23, a music industries student and co-executive producer of Five of Five Studios, said the winner will receive the support of the recording studio along with a few perks.

?This year we are facilitating a music video, a cd release party, a portfolio, physical and electronic press kits in addition to representation,? said Fitzpatrick. ?We encourage all bands of all genres and ages to apply.?

The independent record label was founded by Joel Leach, a music professor, in 1997. Carey Christensen, music industries professor at CSUN, re-branded the label in 2011 and wanted to create a work atmosphere for students by giving them the opportunity to professionally represent a band.

The process develops through a yearlong course where students are given leadership and team position within the following departments:? production, marketing, artist management, and events. Five of Five has spent the semester hunting through Southern California, searching for talent in the streets.

According to Fitzpatrick, the record label?s main goal is to ?discover and develop? amateur bands into professionals. The history behind the studio?s name is based on a similar music theory. ?Five of Five? is a musical term that refers to a chord, transitioning from one key to another.

Billy Lawler, 24, a music studies major and a member of the industry marketing team for Five of Five, compares this process to this similar theory. Lawler explains it as a pivot point for the bands. Just as the keys transition, the bands shift from amateurs to professionals.

A good example of this transformation is last year?s winner, Monroe. The band performed at the Big Show this October with the chance to open for hip-hop artist Big Sean.

Co-producers Fitzpatrick and McElver also mentioned their philanthropic plans for the upcoming semester. Once a winner is chosen, they will begin collaborating with the band to plan possible benefit concerts and fundraisers to donate artist proceeds to raising social awareness.

According to Garrett McElver, 25, a senior majoring in music industries and the co-producer of Five of Five Music Entertainment, this year?s event will be much bigger than last time.

?We will be having a red carpet this year with a step and repeat banner in the lobby during the networking reception,? said McElver. ?Students will even be given a chance to submit their votes via text after the show.?

The event begins at 6 p.m., giving attendees a chance to network, take photos, meet professionals in the industry, mingle with the artists, and visit the clubs.Doors open at the Plaza Del Sol at 7 p.m. The event, dubbed ?The Pitch,? begins at? 7:30 p.m. at the Plaza Del Sol in the USU. Tickets are available at the Associated Students Ticket Office. Prices are $10 for general admission and $5 for students.

Source: http://sundial.csun.edu/2012/10/pitch-event-will-take-place-thanks-to-student-record-label/

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