Thursday, February 28, 2013

Mutation location is the key to prognosis

Feb. 28, 2013 ? The three most important factors in real estate are location, location, location, and the same might be said for mutations in the gene MECP2, said researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children's Hospital in a report in the journal Cell.

"Where a mutation occurs can affect the severity of the symptoms of the disease," said Dr. Huda Zoghbi, professor of molecular and human genetics at BCM and director of the NRI. Zoghbi, corresponding author of the report, found the MECP2 gene in 1999 and confirmed that deficiency in the protein causes Rett syndrome, a post natal genetic disease that mainly affects girls.

Symptoms influenced by gene location

In the study, she and her colleagues relied on data from rare male patients with disruptions in MECP2 that showed that severity of symptoms could be influenced by the location of the gene mutation. The few boys with this disorder fell into two broad categories: Those who suffered severe brain disease and death before age 4 and those who lived for decades with symptoms similar to that of Rett or developmental delay and other disorders similar to those seen in autism.

Looking at the placement of the mutations in the boys, they hypothesized there was a distinct difference in symptoms seen in boys who had mutations at amino acid 270 in the protein and those who had mutations only slightly farther along, at amino acid 273. The protein is truncated or shorter in those with amino acid 270 mutations than those with the mutation at amino acid 273.

After Steven Baker, a graduate student in the Program in Developmental Biology at BCM, generated and characterized mice that had mutations at the two sites of the protein, he found that mice who had mutations at amino acid 273 lived longer and developed symptoms later than those mice who had mutations at amino acid 270 or those who lacked the MeCP2 protein all together (knock-out mice).

Disruption of topological feature

One reason for the differences could be that the mutation at amino acid 270 disrupts a key topological feature of the DNA -- an AT-Hook domain that is a DNA binding motif. By disrupting this domain, the mutation could affect the way the protein bind the DNA and make the already truncated protein much less effective.

"The participation of patients and their families with Rett researchers really helped us to key in on regions of MeCP2 that are critical for its function," said Baker, who is also an M.D./Ph.D. student in BCM's Medical Student Training Program.

The researchers propose a model for this DNA binding in which MeCP2 binds to sites across the genome. In some spots where this occurs, the protein manipulates the structure of the nearby chromatin.

Chromatin architectural factor

"We think that one function of MeCP2 (the protein associated with the gene) is to alter the architecture of chromatin (the mass of proteins and DNA found in the nucleus of the cell)," said Zoghbi, who is also Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

Baker said, "The picture of MeCP2 as a chromatin architectural factor is emerging from the combined efforts of many laboratories. Understanding how MeCP2 modifies chromatin structure will ultimately allow us to understand why it is so important for neuronal health."

Others who took part in this work include Lin Chen, Angela Dawn Wilkins, Peng Yu and Olivier Lichtarge, all of BCM.

Funding for this work came from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke (HD053862), and the Baylor College of Medicine Intellectual and Developmental Disability Research Center (F30NS066527).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Baylor College of Medicine.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Steven?Andrew Baker, Lin Chen, Angela?Dawn Wilkins, Peng Yu, Olivier Lichtarge, Huda?Yahya Zoghbi. An AT-Hook Domain in MeCP2 Determines the Clinical Course of Rett Syndrome and Related Disorders. Cell, 2013; 152 (5): 984 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2013.01.038

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/~3/76uIPhgyDTg/130228124130.htm

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Grandma Shot Self, Grandsons After Day Care Pickup, Authorities Say

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/grandma-shot-self-grandsons-after-day-care-pickup-authorities-sa/

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

iTunes in the Cloud looks to be hitting more of Europe with TV series, films

iTunes in the Cloud looks to be hitting parts of Europe with TV series, films

While stateside users might complain that we get all the good stuff in Europe first, Apple's iTunes in the Cloud for movies and TV shows has finally got around to rolling in to France and other parts of Europe, eons after it came out in the US. We confirmed that the new functionality works in France, which lets you buy films and TV shows from a computer, Apple TV or iOS device, then download it for free from the cloud on another. Others have reported by Twitter that it's working in Holland and Sweden as well, making it the first big move for the service since it rolled into the UK, Australia and Canada last summer. Until now, users in those nations were only able to download books, apps and music purchased in iTunes from the cloud. There's still no word from Apple about the move, however, and the list of supported countries hasn't been updated for those features -- so we'll enjoy it for now and hope Cupertino doesn't change its mind.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/CemiZA10SDs/

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Flexible Work Is Healthy, Studies Show

Marissa Mayer, CEO of Yahoo!, enacted a policy this week that requires previously remote workers to now spend their days in-office and bars employees from using flexible work hours.

"To become the absolute best place to work, communication and collaboration will be important, so we need to be working side-by-side ... That is why it is critical that we are all present in our offices," read the memo written by head of HR Jackie Reses and obtained by AllThingsD. ?Speed and quality are often sacrificed when we work from home.?

Employees and the general public alike were dismayed by the news -- particularly as many companies move toward more flexible work hours, influenced by reports that a looser work schedule is healthy for workers -- and for the bottom line. Even the White House has compiled a comprehensive report, extolling the attributes to wellbeing of flexible work policies.

It should come as no surprise that Mayer, known for her hard-charging work ethic and her two-week maternity leave, would prefer an all in-house staff. But are flex hours merely a luxurious refuge for the underperforming or, in the current work culture, a necessity for many in the workforce?

Research on employees who use flexible hours and work from home points toward the latter. Studies regularly show that employees who are given some choice as to their schedule and location of work report better self-care behaviors like increased exercise and regular doctors' visits, better sleep habits, less stress, less depression and less work-life conflict.

A 2010 Cochrane research review looked at the results of 10 studies evaluating more than 16,000 people. They found that self-scheduling work time improved a variety of health metrics, including reduced exhaustion, improved sleep (both duration and quality), lowered blood pressure, improved mental health and better self-rated health status. The distinction of self-scheduled, meaning the choice belongs to the employee, is important to note: As the authors wrote in their report, "In contrast, interventions that were motivated or dictated by organizational interests, such as fixed-term contract and involuntary part-time employment, found equivocal or negative health effects."

"Flexible working seems to be more beneficial for health and wellbeing where the individuals control their own work patterns, rather than where employers are in control," review author Clare Bambra, of the Wolfson Research Institute at Durham Univerisy in the UK, said in a statement. "Given the limited evidence base, we wouldn't want to make any hard and fast recommendations, but these findings certainly give employers and employees something to think about."

One well-known study looked deeper into the health impact of flexible work environment by following 608 white-collar workers at the headquarters of Best Buy before and after a flexible ?Results Only Work Environment? policy was implemented. The researchers found that, on average, employees got one additional hour of sleep per work night after flex-hours were implemented and were more likely to exercise. They were more apt to go to the doctor when they needed to and were less likely to go into the office when contagious. From a mental health standpoint, the subjects reported that they felt "greater mastery" of their time, had fewer work-life conflicts and, as a result, felt increased energy, less stress and a self-reported sense of well-being.

"Flex time is a way to get control over work. We can't reduce the overload of tasks, but flexible schedules make it a bit more manageable," co-author of the Best Buy study, Phyllis Moen, Ph.D., McKnight Presidential Endowed Chair of Sociology at the University of Minnesota tells HuffPost. "We now have an elevated intensity of work -- we're expected to work smarter, do more with less and with fewer people. And what has enabled workers to continue to work with this level of intensity is often that they now arrange when they work."

"And yet I can't imagine [Mayer] will tamp down on the intensity of work," Moen adds. "What she's asking for isn't just a relocation shift -- she's ratching up time pressures when you want to be more flexible. Time pressure has a negative effect on people who are going to be expected to work long hours, to work intensely and work smarter.

Further, many of the employees affected by Mayer's new policy are already accustomed to working on their own schedule and in their own environment. What will happen to the health of workers who have grown accustomed to flexible work hours and must now return to their office desks full time?

"We have no studies looking at what happens when you take it away, but the assumption would be that it would have negative effects," says Moen. "It will mean a lack of control -- and feeling a lack of control over one's life is associated with greater psychological stress."

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/25/flexible-work-healthy-marissa-mayer-yahoo_n_2761872.html

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Live from the 'Connecting the Next Billions' keynote with Stephen Elop, Gary Kovacs and more

Live from the Connecting the next billions keynote

Mozilla's Gary Kovacs has been harping on this idea of connecting the next billion or so people to the internet all week -- it's one of the driving philosophies behind Firefox OS. Nokia is looking to bring down the cost of entry to the mobile web with the 105 and 301. Then there are operations like Qtel and Bharti Airtel, that provide cellular service across the developing world and in emerging markets. These companies are all looking to put the democratizing power of the web in the pockets of people across the globe, and they're all here at Mobile World Congress 2013 to discuss just how they plan to do that and why it's so important. To find out what these CEOs, including Stephen Elop, Dr. Nasser Marafih (Qtel) and Sunil Mittal (Bharti Airtel) have to say, check back in at the time below.

February 26, 2013 3:00 AM EST

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/26/live-from-the-connecting-the-next-billions-keynote-with-stephe/

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Countdown To Cuts

By MICHAEL FALCONE ( @michaelpfalcone )

NOTABLES

THE SEQUESTER GOES LOCAL: Just days remain for Congress to agree to a deficit-reduction deal that would avoid triggering the $85 billion package of automatic cuts that would be split among the federal government over seven months, half from the Defense Department. ABC's Matthew Larotonda reports that tables released by the White House yesterday indicate each state would receive penalties to mostly similar programs, including meal assistance for seniors and law enforcement grants. But the release is tailored to outline the individual impact to each state in the union. In a sample from military-heavy Virginia, "90,000 civilian Department of Defense employees would be furloughed, reducing gross pay by around $648.4 million in total." The document also says maintenance on 11 Navy vessels serviced in Old Dominion would be cancelled under the cuts. Three-hundred disadvantaged children in Colorado could lose access to child care. Meanwhile in Louisiana, "1,730 fewer children will receive vaccines for diseases such as measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, whooping cough, influenza, and Hepatitis B due to reduced funding for vaccinations of about $118,000," it reads. http://abcn.ws/UZ8h78

FROM THE SPEAKER'S OFFICE: Michael Steel, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner frames the sequester countdown: "Republicans in the House have voted - twice - to replace President Obama's sequester with smarter spending cuts. The White House needs to spend less time explaining to the press how bad the sequester will be and more time actually working to stop it."

ON THE AGENDA: This morning President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden deliver remarks to the National Governors Association at the White House. ABC's Mary Bruce reports that Obama's meeting with the governors comes as the White House is warning of the state-by-state impact of the sequester in its latest attempt to urge lawmakers to compromise on a deal to avert the looming cuts. Meanwhile, ABC's John Parkinson notes that after a nine-day recess, lawmakers return to the Capitol today with just five days remaining until sequestration kicks in.

ABC NEWS WELCOMES JEFF ZELENY: From ABC News President Ben Sherwood: "I am pleased to announce that Jeff Zeleny is coming to ABC News as our Senior Washington Correspondent covering Congress and politics. ? Over the past 12 years Jeff has traveled to all 50 states and reported from more than two-dozen countries while covering four Presidential campaigns including Barack Obama's road to the White House, the Tea Party movement, Capitol Hill and the inside game of politics. ? A Nebraska native, Jeff is one of the country's premier political journalists. ? Jeff will bring his many talents to all our broadcasts and platforms. No stranger to the Sunday morning shows, he will contribute regularly to our 'This Week' roundtable."

THE ROUNDTABLE

ABC's RICK KLEIN: For the sequester to have done its intended job - that being to never happen at all - both sides needed to hate it roughly equally. The perfect formula seemed to be to pair domestic spending cuts with defense cuts, a sacred cow for a sacred cow. But Republican religion has changed. As The New York Times' Jonathan Weisman and Ashley Parker rightly point out, in today's GOP, fiscal discipline trumps all, even defense spending. The sequester was never going to self-destruct - it had to be destroyed. That would have taken ? cooperation. You can read their story here: http://nyti.ms/124OOWD

ABC's MICHAEL FALCONE: It's not over yet. The 2012 presidential campaign, that it. At least not if you ask former top Mitt Romney strategist, Stuart Stevens, who penned an Op-Ed in the Washington Post today. "There seems to be a desire to blame Republicans' electoral difficulties and the Romney campaign's loss on technological failings. I wish this were the problem, because it would be relatively easy to fix. But it's not." Stevens goes onto argue that it was a generation and message gap that ailed the GOP last year and ultimately lost Romney the election. The Democrats' superior technology was only part of it. Stevens has been re-litigating the campaign in Op-Eds like today's as well as interviews, like his recent conversation with ABC's Jonathan Karl on "This Week." But we're about to get a chance to hear from Romney, himself, about what went wrong in 2012 and what the Republican Party needs to get right going forward: First, with an appearance on "Fox News Sunday" next weekend (the former Republican presidential hopeful's first major interview since the election) and then the week after, with a speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference outside Washington, DC. You can read Stevens' Op-Ed here: http://wapo.st/ZCIqEu

IN THE NOTE'S INBOX:

DEMOCRATS USE REPUBLICANS' SEQUESTER WORDS AGAINST THEM. The American Bridge 21st Century Foundation, an arm of the Democratic super PAC American Bridge 21st Century, is releasing its first non-campaign video today and it's focused on the fight over the sequester on Capitol Hill. The two-minute spot amounts to a response to the Republican Party's "blame Obama for the sequester" talking points. According to a strategist for the group, "We're reminding the world that the only reason it exists is because the GOP held the debt ceiling hostage - and the sequester was what it took to get them to raise it." The video includes footage of top Republicans lauding the deal and calling it a win for the GOP (cameos by House Speaker John Boehner, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Sen. John Cornyn, Rep. Paul Ryan, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Reps. Dave Camp and Jeb Hensarling). WATCH: http://bit.ly/VI2PEK

BUZZ

ANALYSIS: OBAMA FACES 'CLIFF FATIGUE' IN LATEST BUDGET FIGHT. Call it cliff fatigue. After a series of dramatic confrontations with congressional Republicans, an American electorate that has little trust in Washington - and that's seeing a soaring stock market, plus a recovering housing market - looks to be tuning out the latest round of fiscal fighting, at least for now, writes ABC's Rick Klein. That's troublesome news for Obama, and not just for the recurring fights over spending and deficits. As his second-term agenda gets cranking with Congress' return this week, the president needs to convince the public not just on the merits of his priorities but also on the urgency. This may be the only time in his presidency where heavy legislative lifts are realistic. That period is starting with a rough stretch: The spending cuts Obama once guaranteed would never take place now almost definitely will. The fight is displaying Washington at its worst - all accusations and finger-pointing, no real attempts at problem-solving. Both sides have plans, but the president is spending far more energy explaining why the sequester is the Republicans' fault, and how bad the consequences of those cuts will be, than he is trying to negotiate something that would stop it. http://abcn.ws/ZCFB6h

WILL ASHLEY JUDD CHALLENGE MITCH MCCONNELL? The beautiful movie star tries to take on Washington by defeating a powerful Republican leader. It's not a plot line, it's reality: The actress Ashley Judd is making moves to take on GOP Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, reports ABC's Shushannah Walshe. She hasn't announced yet, but her biggest supporter in Kentucky, Democratic Rep. John Yarmuth, told ABC News, "I would be surprised if she doesn't run at this point." Yarmuth, the only Kentucky Democrat in Congress, said he expects the decision to come soon. The race will be one of the most watched in the country, with outside money pouring into the state. Yarmuth said: "It would be a great economic stimulus. It would be Christmas for six months or more," especially for local television stations that would run political commercials. One thing that's guaranteed is it will be a brutal race - a 30-year veteran of Washington against a Hollywood star active in liberal Democratic politics from a legendary family. Judd's mother is the country singer Naomi Judd and her half-sister is the singer Wynonna Judd. Yarmuth says Judd is ready and has even done opposition research on herself to see areas McConnell will try to "exploit." http://abcn.ws/XSC9AD

REP. ELIOT ENGEL: THE SEQUESTER IS 'STUPID.' Speaking Sunday morning on "This Week," Rep. Eliot Engel, D-NY, called the automatic spending cuts - also known as the "sequester" - that are scheduled to go into effect on March 1 a "stupid thing." "I think the sequester was a stupid thing. I voted against it when it first time came up. Congress keeps kicking the can down the road. It's really a ridiculous thing to do. The fact is that we need to do things that are smart, not take a meat cleaver and just hack cuts," Engel said. "I think Congress should sit down and avoid the sequester. And if the sequester kicks in, for a week or two, we should then fix it so it doesn't become a permanent thing." Engel, ranking member on the Foreign Affairs Committee, was joined on the "This Week" roundtable by House Intelligence Committee Chair Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., who warned that sequestration would affect national security. http://abcn.ws/X4E5aI

HOUSE INTEL CHAIR CALLS CHINESE CYBER ATTACKS 'UNPRECEDENTED.' House Intelligence Committee Chair Mike Rogers, R-Mich., said it was "beyond a shadow of a doubt" that the Chinese government and military is behind growing cyber attacks against the United States, saying "we are losing" the war to prevent the attacks. "They use their military and intelligence structure to steal intellectual property from American businesses, and European businesses, and Asian businesses, re-purpose it and then compete in the international market against the United States," Rogers said Sunday morning on "This Week." "It is unprecedented," Rogers added. "This has never happened in the history of the world, where one nation steals the intellectual property to re-purpose it - to illegally compete against the country?and I'll tell you, It is as bad as I've ever seen it and exponentially getting worse. Why? There's no consequence for it." http://abcn.ws/WcAMj8

CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR: WHEN OUT IN THE FIELD, 'I ALWAYS FEAR FOR MY SAFETY.' ABC News' Global Affairs Anchor Christiane Amanpour said when she's out in the field, "I always fear for my safety? all our colleagues do." Before joining the "This Week" foreign policy roundtable this Sunday, Amanpour sat down for a behind-the-scenes web exclusive interview with ABC's Kaye Foley answering viewer questions from Facebook and Twitter on her career and experiences in the Middle East. "Now that doesn't mean to say that I don't go. We do go? Employing that sixth sense that with experience comes, you sort of know when to hold them and when to fold them. You know sort of when to put your foot forward and when to draw back a little bit. You're not out there gung-ho and? out there sort of being a cowboy," Amanpour said. "But you are out there because it is vital to be there to tell the stories. No matter how dangerous it is out there, you cannot just sit back at home as opinion-mongers, armchair warriors, as I like to call people who? think that they can tell you what's going on overseas from sitting back here in New York or Washington or wherever it is in the United States." http://abcn.ws/YuRIvp

WHAT WE'RE READING

" PRIEBUS TRAVELING WEST TO MEET WITH MINORITIES AND TECH EXPERTS," by Roll Call's David M. Drucker. "Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus will head west this week to hear from minority voters and technology experts as a part of his committee's efforts to rebuild and modernize the GOP. Priebus' four-day swing is scheduled to take him to Denver on Monday for a listening session with Hispanic voters and GOP activists, then to Los Angeles on Tuesday for listening sessions with Hispanic and Asian voters. On Wednesday, Priebus will be in San Francisco for meetings with technology experts; a visit to Facebook is included on the chairman's itinerary. Priebus will then travel to Seattle for a meeting focused on early voting, an aspect of voter turnout where Republicans continue to trail the Democrats significantly. Priebus' trip is part of the Growth and Opportunity Project, the RNC's autopsy of what went wrong in the 2012 presidential election and how the GOP can improve its prospects going forward." http://bit.ly/VGZjKR

WHO'S TWEETING?

@jimacostacnn: Fmr Romney strategist Stuart Stevens still litigating what happened last November: http://tinyurl.com/a6s897n

@ RyanLizza: THE HOUSE OF PAIN Can Eric Cantor, the Republican Majority Leader, redeem his party and himself? http://m.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/03/04/130304fa_fact_lizza ?

@SalenaZitoTrib: If you look at a diagram of our electoral history you would see that nothing is permanent in American politics. -> http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2013/02/24/party_dominance_doesnt_last_117144.html#.UStkiMafOXt.twitter ?

@jmartpolitico: From the NGA, how The Hillary Factor could keep a generation of ambitious Dem guvs waiting > http://www.politico.com/story/2013/02/the-hillary-clinton-factor-88007.html ?

@JohnJHarwood: If Medicare spending's already dropped by more than Simpson-Bowles proposed, will Dems still negotiate? My NYT story: http://nyti.ms/ZCcqjZ

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/countdown-cuts-note-141731838--abc-news-politics.html

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Reprogramming cells to fight diabetes

Feb. 22, 2013 ? For years researchers have been searching for a way to treat diabetics by reactivating their insulin-producing beta cells, with limited success. The "reprogramming" of related alpha cells into beta cells may one day offer a novel and complementary approach for treating type 2 diabetes. Treating human and mouse cells with compounds that modify cell nuclear material called chromatin induced the expression of beta cell genes in alpha cells, according to a new study that appears online in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

"This would be a win-win situation for diabetics -- they would have more insulin-producing beta cells and there would be fewer glucagon-producing alpha cells," says lead author Klaus H. Kaestner, Ph.D., professor of Genetics and member of the Institute of Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. Type 2 diabetics not only lack insulin, but they also produce too much glucagon.

Both type 1 and type 2 diabetes are caused by insufficient numbers of insulin-producing beta cells. In theory, transplantation of healthy beta cells -- for type 1 diabetics in combination with immunosuppression to control autoimmunity -- should halt the disease, yet researchers have not yet been able to generate these cells in the lab at high efficiency, whether from embryonic stem cells or by reprogramming mature cell types.

Alpha cells are another type of endocrine cell in the pancreas. They are responsible for synthesizing and secreting the peptide hormone glucagon, which elevates glucose levels in the blood.

"We treated human islet cells with a chemical that inhibits a protein that puts methyl chemical groups on histones, which -- among many other effects -- leads to removal of some histone modifications that affect gene expression," says Kaestner. "We then found a high frequency of alpha cells that expressed beta-cell markers, and even produced some insulin, after drug treatment.

Histones are protein complexes around which DNA strands are wrapped in a cell's nucleus.

The team discovered that many genes in alpha cells are marked by both activating- and repressing-histone modifications. This included many genes important in beta-cell function. In one state, when a certain gene is turned off, the gene can be readily activated by removing a modification that represses the histone.

"To some extent human alpha cells appear to be in a 'plastic' epigenetic state," explains Kaestner. "We reasoned we might use that to reprogram alpha cells towards the beta-cell phenotype to produce these much-needed insulin-producing cells."

Co-authors are Nuria C. Bramswig, Logan Everett, Jonathan Schug, Chengyang Liu, Yanping Luo, and Ali Naji, all from Penn, and Markus Grompe, Craig Dorrell, and Philip R. Streeter from the Oregon Health & Science University. The Oregon group developed a panel of human endocrine cell type-specific antibodies for cell sorting.

The research was supported by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (U01 DK070430, U42 RR006042, U01DK089529, R01DK088383, U01DK089569) and by the Beckman Research Center/NIDDK/Integrated Islet Distribution Program (10028044).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Nuria C. Bramswig, Logan J. Everett, Jonathan Schug, Craig Dorrell, Chengyang Liu, Yanping Luo, Philip R. Streeter, Ali Naji, Markus Grompe, Klaus H. Kaestner. Epigenomic plasticity enables human pancreatic ? to ? cell reprogramming. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2013; DOI: 10.1172/JCI66514

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/top_news/top_science/~3/YsxoP3tN1kI/130223111356.htm

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Zgoda's NBA Insider: Kirilenko lightens load

Timberwolves forward Andrei Kirilenko turned 32 last week, an occasion he celebrated with a trip to Las Vegas over All-Star Weekend before he finalized a decision that confirmed time indeed is moving on.

Kirilenko told the Russian basketball federation that, barring a change of heart, his international playing days are done.

"It is time," he said.

It's time for him to devote his summers to watching his three children grow up.

It's time for what he calls the "next generation" of Russian basketball to take over, one that could be led by Wolves teammate Alexey Shved.

"It's not connected to playing time, I'm not tired, I'm not tired of playing for the national team," he said. "I want to be a better dad."

He played in his first Olympics in Sydney in 2000 and has been the face of Russian basketball ever since then, representing it in European, World and Olympic championships -- and accompanying qualifying events -- nearly every summer since then.

"It's kind of a dilemma: Going around the globe, playing basketball, have fun," he said, "or spend time with your kids and have fun and see how they're growing."

His children -- two boys and a girl, ages 3 to 11 -- won out.

"I was thinking in summer I don't have enough time with my kids," Kirilenko said. "My wife and kids, I want to be around them. I don't want to be dad who's spending two hours and then you don't see your kids. It's a hard decision.

"You want to be around them at this kind of age when they're growing, when they start playing hockey, start playing basketball. You want to see the improvement, not only in sports but in them, the person."

Kirilenko said he has contemplated this decision for the past two or three years, but concluded it was time after he led Russia to a bronze medal at the London Olympics last summer.

This summer would have brought the European championships.

"If they played only a week, I'd be there," said Kirilenko, who can opt out of the remaining year of his two-year, $20 million NBA contract this summer. "But to be professional, you have to have month, two months before tournaments to get the preparation. That's what's killing. I will do my best to help national team any way I can, but I can't give so much time every summer.

"I want to be with my family a little more. I think I already gave a lot, playing 12 years on the national team."

Kirkilenko said the Russian federation president has extended him an open invitation to return if he changes his mind. He says he considers his decision a retirement, but admits he doesn't know how he'll feel about it two or three years from now.

He will be 35 when the next Olympics roll around, in Brazil in 2016.

"It's always good to know you can come back if your emotions change," he said.

Kirilenko said it's time for that next generation now. Russian basketball had Sergi Belov in the 1970s, Arvydas Sabonis in the 1980s and '90s, and now it is time for others, including Shved.

"I think so," Shved said. "Everybody want A.K. to stay on national team, but he played all the time for Russia. He gave everything for us. He wants to stop and stay with his family. That's his choice, and that's really good because he gave us everything."

Win one -- or a bunch -- for Buss

Kobe Bryant ended his eulogy at Thursday's private ceremony that remembered Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss by issuing a challenge to all his teammates during a season in which they are searching for something to save it.

"I encourage all of you to look around the room," he said during a quirky memorial service in which Lakers greats Jerry West, Shaquille O'Neal and Phil Jackson all spoke at the Nokia Theatre across from Staples Center. "Look at the greatness of one man's vision, look at the players that are here, coaches that are here: We have one thing in common, we all believe in Dr. Jerry Buss. We are playing for something bigger than ourselves, bigger than a single season, playing for the memory of a great man, Dr. Jerry Buss."

Just wait until the draft combine

Houston's separate trades with Sacramento and Phoenix -- two of the few made before Thursday's league deadline -- brought the Rockets a top-five lottery talent in forward Thomas Robinson and shed salary to provide more cap space they can use to make a run at perhaps Dwight Howard or Josh Smith this summer.

Rockets coach Kevin McHale isn't impressed, not yet at least.

"I've never seen Cap Room score a basket yet," he told reporters. "I've seen old Cap and his last name is Room. I've yet to see him put a hoop in, haven't seen him block a shot, haven't seen him get a rebound yet. But when Cap Room starts putting up numbers, we should be in great shape."

Looking to team for comfort

San Antonio's Stephen Jackson returned to the team Thursday after taking a three-game leave after his wife, Renata, lost their first child she had been carrying for 6 1/2 months.

"I'm as good as I can be," he told the San Antonio Express-News before Thursday's game in Los Angeles against the Clippers. "I'm happy to be back with the team. I need to be back with the team, just for my own sanity. Basketball and being around these guys helps me a lot, so it's definitely something I needed."

Sunday: 2:30 p.m. vs. Golden State (FSN)

Tuesday: 8 p.m. at Phoenix (FSN Plus)

Thursday: 9:30 p.m. at L.A. Lakers (TNT)

Saturday: 9 p.m. at Portland (Ch. 29)

Player to watch:

Steph Curry, Golden State

Sorry to remind you again, Wolves fans, but ... just think of your team with this guy AND Ricky Rubio on the floor together.

VOICES

? HIS ARM LOOKS LIKE MY HEAD. ?

??  ? ? ?

Wolves guard Ricky Rubio on hulking teammate Nikola Pekovic

Source: http://www.startribune.com/sports/wolves/192643801.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Natural Ways to Reverse Heart Disease | Care2 Healthy Living

With health care costs rising to stratospheric levels, more and more people are turning to so-called ?alternative therapies? to deal with a variety of ailments, from heart disease to Alzheimer?s.

Approximately 40 percent of U.S. adults have used some form of alternative therapy, according to figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

What is alternative therapy?

Rose Kumar, M.D., medical director of the Ommani Center for Integrative Medicine, says that alternative medicine is anything that doesn?t fall under the traditional medical model of care. Examples include: acupuncture, massage, naturopathy, yoga, as well as dietary and lifestyle changes.

?People are hungry for alternative options because traditional medicine is so expensive and focuses more on symptom management,? Kumar says. ?The idea of reversing disease and bringing regeneration and vitality to life isn?t really considered in the traditional medical model.?

Practitioners of alternative therapies seek to treat not only the physical symptoms of an illness, but the emotional, spiritual, nutritional and social contributors to disease.

Alternative medicine for heart disease

When using alternative therapies to treat heart disease, Kumar says two main elements come into play: diet and stress management.

Diet

Study after study points to the cardiac benefits bestowed by a primarily plant-based diet.

Most recently, a nationwide analysis found that following a vegetarian diet could lower a person?s risk of having an adverse cardiac event by 32 percent.

10 Delicious Vegetarian Recipes

According to Kumar, this research has helped people realize that expensive, invasive surgical interventions are not the only way to treat heart disease. These treatments, while beneficial for managing certain symptoms, didn?t have the same disease-reversing capabilities are a heart-healthy diet.

Inflammatory foods (refined sugar, alcohol, red meat, trans fats) are the leading cause of coronary artery disease, Kumar notes in her book, ?Becoming Real: Harnessing the Power of Menopause for Health and Success.?

?When you?re combating heart disease, diet should be emphasized. Eating needs to be easy, simple and fun,? she says.

Here are some of her diet tips:

  • Divide your plate properly. Half should contain colorful, organic vegetables (spinach, kale, bell peppers); one quarter should contain organic proteins (beans, tofu, lentils, fish, chicken); and one quarter should contain organic, complex carbohydrates (wild rice, brown rice, pasta, quinoa).
  • Snack on seeds, nuts and organic berries (especially blueberries and strawberries)
  • Drink water and green tea. Coffee is okay in moderation.
  • Quell sugar cravings with minimal amounts of dark chocolate

A note on herbal medicine

Certain herbs are thought to bestow heart health benefits including: Ginko (lowers blood pressure; increases circulation), Hawthorn berries (expands coronary arteries), and Ginger (cuts down on blood clotting and reduces cholesterol).

The scientific evidence behind these claims is minimal, so anyone considering herbal remedies should consult their doctor first.

Read on to discover the important role of stress-management for heart health?

Related
Morning Heart Attacks Can Be Deadly
How Winter Woes Can Wreak Havoc on Your Heart
Go Red: Heart Disease is Top Killer of Women

Natural Heart Disease Treatments Offered By Alternative Medicine originally?appeared on?AgingCare.com.

Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/natural-ways-to-reverse-heart-disease.html

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Legal team misled convicted rapist Andrew Luster, witnesses say ...

Andrew Luster is escorted from Los Angeles International Airport by federal agents in 2003 after he was apprehended in Mexico. Credit: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times.

A great-grandson of cosmetics magnate Max Factor says he was misled by members of his legal team and is seeking a reduction in his 124-year rape sentence, as well as a new trial.

Andrew Luster says the attorneys urged him to flee the country rather than face rape charges, according to witnesses in a court hearing Wednesday.

The hearing, which is being held at the Ventura County Courthouse before retired Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Kathryne Ann Stoltz, is expected to last into next week. Luster left the country in 2003 while out on bail on charges related to videotaped sexual encounters he had with unconscious women. He was convicted in absentia.

Months later, bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman apprehended him at a taco stand in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Chapman went on to star in a TV reality show, while Luster went to Mule Creek State Prison in Ione, Calif.

A state appeals court last spring agreed that Luster's unusually long sentence should be reconsidered in light of claims that he had been poorly represented "in a textbook case of grasping lawyers seeking fame and fortune."

In a blue jail jumpsuit and orange T-shirt, the 49-year-old former surfer smiled at his old friend Darryl Genis, one of several witnesses who appeared Wednesday. A Santa Barbara attorney who specializes in drunk-driving cases, Genis recounted how the two met while surfing at Hollister Ranch.

Offering Luster apologies for his candor, Genis testified that his old surfing buddy was "childlike" and failed to comprehend that he could be sentenced to more than 100 years after he was convicted. Luster had been "able to live a life on vacation," Genis said, never rooting himself in such concerns as earning a living. Luster's financial advisor, Albert Gersh, had particularly harsh words for Richard G. Sherman, a Luster attorney who he said advised his client to head for the border.

Sherman, who died in 2011, and one of his investigators "encouraged him to leave the country ? they said he'd be murdered in prison," Gersh said. The financial advisor said he told Luster that fleeing was "the stupidest idea I'd ever heard."

In court, Deputy Dist. Atty. Michelle Contois expressed skepticism that Luster bolted only because Sherman and his investigator frightened him with repeated tales of death behind bars.

"Luster could have terminated their services if he didn't like the advice he was getting," she said.

ALSO:

Funeral set today for deputy killed in Dorner shootout

Two killed as SUV crashes into tree, catches fire in Valley

Hotel guests horrified after tourist's body is found in water tank

-- Steve Chawkins in Ventura

Photo: Andrew Luster is escorted from Los Angeles International Airport by federal agents in 2003 after he was apprehended in Mexico. Credit: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times.

Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2013/02/legal-team-misled-convicted-rapist-andrew-luster-witnesses-say.html

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Q&A-Tennis-Federer's heart is in South Africa

GOVHU, South Africa (Reuters) - Roger Federer was back in South Africa for the first time in eight years and it was not long before he was surrounded by a swarm of three-year-old toddlers tugging at his shirt and hankering to play a game of tennis.

Unlike many of the fans the 17-times grand slam champion usually encounters, these children hold a special place in the Swiss champion's heart as his charitable foundation is helping to educate them.

Federer showed the children how to play tennis, joined them in a game of hopscotch and read out stories to a captive audience before sitting down with Reuters to chat about the pressures faced by top athletes, being in his South African mother's homeland, and what he hopes to achieve during the 10th anniversary of the Roger Federer Foundation.

REUTERS: Your trip here has coincided with the bail hearing of paralympian Oscar Pistorius. Pistorius's story has put a particular spotlight on sporting heroes. Do you think there's a lot of pressure put on professional athletes?

FEDERER: Everybody handles it (pressure and stress) differently. My success came gradually, which was helpful, even though I was always considered a great talent, someone who could become world number one. So it wasn't a huge surprise that I made it to world number one and won Wimbledon, but for me it was.

To handle that stardom, the red carpets, the photo shoots, people all of a sudden recognizing you and following you in everyday life, it's a bit weird. It's strange and it can have funny effects on you in terms of do you like it or don't you like it. Some people run away from it, some people embrace it, I found a good middle ground.

It's tricky, especially (because) people love fairytale stories; take you down, put you back up, put you down. And obviously the more famous you become, the more great everything seems when things goes well, and the worse they seem when things don't go so well.

I realized that when I was world number one, I would play an average match and people would say ?you played so well, it's unbelievable'. And when I would play incredibly they would say ?oh my god, we've never seen this tennis before in my life'. So it's always an exaggeration, the whole thing, and that's what we live in, unfortunately.

REUTERS: So are we paying undue attention to Pistorius because of who he is?

FEDERER: This is now a particular story, it's very difficult. You can't compare this one to any other....

REUTERS: How important is it to take time out?

FEDERER: For me vacation and family time is as important as training. So I try to take to take at least 10 days if not two weeks of holiday. After the Australian (Open in January) I took two weeks of vacation, all I did was spend time with my family.

I couldn't handle this daily stress of people recognizing me, signing autographs, doing press, playing matches, the pressure, people always in my face.

I need to get away from it all. So that when I do come back to the game, I'm hungry, and I'm in the mood to sign autographs, I'm in the mood to do interviews. Not that it becomes a drain and it becomes a burden, because when it's that, the fun goes away then you stop, it's just as simple as that.

REUTERS: It's been a decade since you set up the Roger Federer Foundation which funds pre-school and primary education in Africa and Switzerland. What are you doing to mark the anniversary?

FEDERER: We were thinking of doing different things. Most important was that I definitely do the trip this year, that has been my number one priority. I went to Ethiopia a few years ago but I really wanted to come back to South Africa.

My heart is in South Africa, through my mum. My mum being from here, me spending a lot of time here as well, I feel most connected to this part of the world.

Obviously I would like to see other ones (projects in the five other African countries) as well, but coming here, being able to do something in South Africa and also visiting my family was important.

The 10 years are important to us. I still feel we're in the beginning of everything. Ten years sounds like a long time but it's changed a lot in terms of the kids we're able to reach and the money we're able to put out there to help.

In this regard I was thinking of doing another 'Match for Africa' again which I did two or three years ago with (Rafa)Nadal when I was able to raise up to $3 million. I don't know if this year will be the year to do it but I hope to.

REUTERS: Is it important for people in your kind of position to 'give back'?

FEDERER: Sometimes it's not always about the money. If people were willing to give time, to talk, to inspire, to help; because at the end of the day it comes down to the people who help the kids get smarter and get better at the end of the day.

Of course you need money to be able to do that sometimes, not everywhere in the world, but here particularly you do, its clear, its visible.

REUTERS: Is it important to do it?

FEDERER: I think you have to do what you feel is right to do. I don't think there's a certain obligation, but it would be a missed opportunity if you didn't because, let's not forget how incredibly lucky... I can only speak for myself; how incredibly lucky I feel that I made my hobby my job and my dream at the end of the day.

Sometimes with little effort I can raise so much awareness or raise so much money in one event, that other people would take a long long time to raise - I feel I would be selfish if I were to not share that with other people.

REUTERS: Your twin daughters are almost four years old now. Does having a family make you better or slow you down?

FEDERER: I thought it would maybe slow me down a bit just because everybody says so. I'm happy that again I was able to prove that its possible to have a family and play well. Not only do I have a family but I have twin girls, so it was super intense in the first years, it's still very intense now. But I made it work. I have an incredible wife who is so supportive and is willing to travel.

At (the) Rotterdam (tournament last week) I was by myself, and I didn't feel the same. Maybe that's one of the reasons I didn't play well, who knows? I miss them much.

I'm happy that I'm able to combine both at the same time. Nine, 10 years ago I never thought of me being a dad, playing tennis, winning the big titles.

In the dream or vision, you always see yourself with the trophy, but you never see yourself with the trophy looking at your kids like what happened at Wimbledon last year. I'm happy I had the opportunity to live through that, those memories will be with me for a lifetime.

NB: The Roger Federer Foundation supports 40 pre-schools in Limpopo province and spends over $3 million a year on educational projects in South Africa, Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Ethiopia and Federer's home country Switzerland.

Over 50,000 children benefited from the foundation's efforts in 2012 to improve quality education in pre-schools and primary schools.

(Editing by Pritha Sarkar and Ed Osmond)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/q-tennis-federers-heart-south-africa-024621384--ten.html

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

White House unveils new Michelle Obama portrait

DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend, "Doug" (24), and I (22) have been in a long-distance relationship for a year, but we were friends for a couple of years before that. I had never had a serious relationship before and lacked experience. Doug has not only been in two other long-term relationships, but has had sex with more than 15 women. One of them is an amateur porn actress.I knew about this, but it didn't bother me until recently. Doug had a party, and while he was drunk he told one of his buddies -- in front of me -- that he should watch a certain porn film starring his ex-girlfriend. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/white-house-unveils-michelle-obama-portrait-195006392.html

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Bolivia leader unable to visit Chavez at hospital

A mural depicting Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez and the words in Spanish "Healing" covers a wall along a downtown street in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013. Chavez's sudden return to Venezuela after more than two months of cancer treatments in Cuba has fanned speculation that the president could be preparing to relinquish power and make way for a successor and a new election. Chavez remained silent and out of sight after his return was announced on his Twitter account Monday. The government said he was continuing unspecified medical treatments at Caracas' military hospital. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

A mural depicting Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez and the words in Spanish "Healing" covers a wall along a downtown street in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013. Chavez's sudden return to Venezuela after more than two months of cancer treatments in Cuba has fanned speculation that the president could be preparing to relinquish power and make way for a successor and a new election. Chavez remained silent and out of sight after his return was announced on his Twitter account Monday. The government said he was continuing unspecified medical treatments at Caracas' military hospital. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

Evo Morales, right, President of Bolivia, listen to speakers at a United Nations General Assembly meeting, marking the global launch of the International Year of Quinoa of Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013 in New York. President Morales has been named Special Ambassador for the International Year of Quinoa, to raise awareness of the nutritional, economic, environmental and cultural value of quinoa, a food that has been traditionally cultivated for thousands of years in Andean communities. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

William Montoya, 28, a supporter of Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez, holds a picture of Chavez with his daughters, Maria Gabriela, left, and Rosa Virginia that reads in Spanish "We shall overcome!" as he stands outside the military hospital where Chavez is allegedly receiving treatment, in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013. Chavez's sudden return to Venezuela after more than two months of cancer treatments in Cuba has fanned speculation that the president could be preparing to relinquish power and make way for a successor and a new election. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

A poster of Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez decorates a motorbike at a moto-taxi station near the military hospital where Chavez is allegedly receiving treatment in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013. Chavez's sudden return to Venezuela after more than two months of cancer treatments in Cuba has fanned speculation that the president could be preparing to relinquish power and make way for a successor and a new election. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

A woman peers through a bus window that is covered in the Spanish words: "Chavez is alive" near the military hospital where President Hugo Chavez is allegedly receiving treatment in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013. Chavez's sudden return to Venezuela after more than two months of cancer treatments in Cuba has fanned speculation that the president could be preparing to relinquish power and make way for a successor and a new election. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

(AP) ? Bolivian President Evo Morales said Wednesday that he was unable to meet with his friend and ally Hugo Chavez when he came to the military hospital in Caracas where the Venezuelan president is undergoing unspecified cancer treatment.

Morales had arrived at the hospital on Tuesday night along with Vice President Nicolas Maduro in a convoy of vehicles escorted by troops on motorcycles, and the Bolivian leader left later on without speaking to journalists who were waiting outside the hospital.

"I wasn't able to meet him," Morales said at a news conference at the United Nations. "I was only able to meet the head doctor and his family, but my understanding is that they are very encouraged."

Morales added, however, that Chavez has been going through "the most difficult moments in his life" and is still facing serious health problems.

"Now that he's returned to Caracas it's a great relief," Morales said.

Chavez's return to Venezuela from Cuba was announced by the government on Monday after a 10-week stay on the island during which he underwent a fourth cancer-related surgery and treatment for complications including a severe respiratory infection.

The government hasn't released any images of the president since his return, and Chavez's long absence from public view has been stirring renewed speculation about a possible new presidential election if his illness eventually forces him to relinquish power. Chavez hasn't spoken publicly since before his Dec. 11 surgery.

It was the second time that Morales has tried to see Chavez since his latest surgery. The Bolivian leader traveled to Havana in December but later gave few details about the quick trip. The visits underscore Chavez's importance to a generation of Latin American leftists who consider the Venezuelan president the heir of Fidel Castro and his efforts to stand up to what they consider U.S. imperialism.

Morales sidestepped a question on whether he would take a more prominent role in the region, along with Ecuador's leftist President Rafael Correa, now that Chavez has been sidelined at least temporarily. But he became nostalgic when discussing how much Chavez and Castro had helped him institute policies of nationalization and other reforms when he first took office in 2006.

"It really does pain me that Fidel Castro is no longer president, and particularly as well now that my brother president Chavez is in a very difficult spot with his health," Morales said.

In Venezuela on Wednesday, Maduro spoke on television about the jubilation among Chavez's supporters who celebrated his arrival in the streets.

"Venezuela is filled with love and happiness because we have commander Hugo Chavez Frias here in our homeland," Maduro said. He recalled that Chavez had personally told his government officials in Havana that it was time for him to return home to continue his "complementary treatments" in Venezuela.

It remains unclear what treatments Chavez is currently receiving, though medical experts say it could be more chemotherapy or other sorts of drug treatments, depending on the type of pelvic cancer he is fighting.

His supporters have been showing their support writing celebratory slogans on the windows of buses and cars in Caracas, such as "Chavez is alive" and "He's back."

The Venezuelan government also sought to buttress the official stance that Chavez remains in charge by issuing a statement strongly criticizing the U.S. State Department for a spokeswoman's remarks about a possible transition in the country.

The Venezuelan government said the comments by State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland "constitute a new and rude interference by the government in Washington in the internal affairs of Venezuela."

Nuland referred to the possibility of a new presidential election in Venezuela when asked on Tuesday about Chavez's return from Cuba.

"It is obviously a matter for Venezuelans to decide how the transition is going to take place," Nuland told reporters in Washington. "Should President Chavez become permanently unavailable to serve, our understanding is that the Venezuelan Constitution requires that there be an election to seek a new president."

She said the U.S. government "would hope that that election would be free and fair and balanced."

Chavez's government said Nuland's statements "have generated deep indignation among the Venezuelan people." It said that "the only transition being proposed is the transition toward Bolivarian socialism" being pursued by Chavez's government

Venezuela's sharply worded statement contrasted with recent remarks by Foreign Minister Elias Jaua, who said in a televised interview on Sunday that Chavez has instructed diplomats to seek improved relations with the United States.

The U.S. Embassy in Caracas has been without an ambassador since July 2010, when Chavez rejected the U.S. nominee for ambassador accusing him of making disrespectful remarks. That led Washington to revoke the visa of the Venezuelan ambassador.

Despite such diplomatic tensions, the United States remains the leading buyer of Venezuelan oil.

___

Edith M. Lederer reported from the United Nations. Ian James in Caracas and Eva Font at the United Nations contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-20-LT-Venezuela-Chavez/id-86cf410aafad48928d0ed0a99eceb254

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Caffeine linked to low birth weight babies

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Maternal nutrition is important to a developing embryo and to the health of the child later in life. Supplementing the diet with specific vitamins is known to increase health of the foetus for example folic acid (vitamin B9) reduces the risk of spina bifida. However not everything an adult might consume is beneficial to a developing baby. New research published in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Medicine shows that caffeine is linked to low birth weight babies and that caffeine from coffee in linked to increasing length of pregnancy.

Along with nutrients and oxygen, caffeine feely passes the placental barrier, but the developing embryo does not express the enzymes required to inactivate it efficiently. The WHO currently suggests a limit of 300mg per day during pregnancy but some countries recommend a limit of 200mg, which can be less than a single cup of coffee from some high street cafes.

To investigate the impact of maternal caffeine during pregnancy on babies, a research team from the Norwegian Institute for Public Health used information about mother's diet and birth details collected over ten years. After excluding women with medical and pregnancy-related conditions almost 60,000 pregnancies were included in the study. All sources of caffeine were monitored in the study: coffee, tea, fizzy drinks, as well as food including cocoa-containing cakes and deserts and chocolate.

Explaining their results, Dr Verena Sengpiel, from Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden, who led the project said, "Although caffeine consumption is strongly correlated with smoking which is known to increase the risk for both preterm delivery and the baby being small for gestational age at birth (SGA). In this study we found no association between either total caffeine or coffee caffeine and preterm delivery but we did find an association between caffeine and SGA. This association remained even when we looked only at non-smoking mothers which implies that the caffeine itself is also having an effect on birth weight."

In fact they found that caffeine from all sources reduced birth weight. For a child of expected average weight (3.6kg) this equates to 21-28g lost per 100mg caffeine per day. But it was not just caffeine, but the source of caffeine, which affected pregnancy outcomes. Caffeine from all sources increased the length of the pregnancy by 5hr per 100mg caffeine per day, but caffeine intake from coffee was associated with an even longer gestational length - 8hr extra for every 100mg caffeine per day.

This association means that it is not just the caffeine in coffee which increases gestational length but either there must be a substance in coffee which is responsible for the extra time or there is a behaviour associated with coffee drinking not present in women who drink only tea (for example). SGA babies are at higher risk of both short term and lifelong health problems and it seems from these results that since even 200-300mg caffeine per day can increase the risk of SGA by almost a third these recommendations need to be re-evaluated.

###

BioMed Central: http://www.biomedcentral.com

Thanks to BioMed Central for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126872/Caffeine_linked_to_low_birth_weight_babies

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

How Republicans Are Looking to Close the Digital Divide Against Democrats

As Robert Draper underscored in last week?s?New York Times?magazine cover story, the Republican Party is engaged in serious soul-searching about why they were so badly outgunned by the Democrats on the technology front in the last election. One of the most telling anecdotes in the story: The suggestion that Mitt Romney?s campaign manager, Stuart Stevens, could be the last such figure not to tweet as part of strategy.

In conversations with leading Republican digital strategists, there?s an acknowledgment that the path to closing the tech gap will be difficult. Republicans are a more hierarchical party and rely on many of the same consultants that have been around since the days of Ronald Reagan. These digital-first Republican operatives argue that Democrats could have the advantage for years to come unless significant changes are made to the way the party conducts its business.

But they did offer myriad suggestions on how to shake things up, and help the party in the process.?Here are the most notable suggestions:

Give ideas room to breathe, and engage GOP techies.

Several GOP strategists said that there are plenty of tech-savvy conservatives who could lend a lot of help to campaigns, but they lack experience on the trail. So they?re usually passed over for jobs in favor of more-seasoned campaign veterans.?

?We have to be willing to give [them] an opportunity to flourish and thrive within the party apparatus, and not to partition our resources, meaning to folks who have done campaigning a certain way for so many years,? said Cyrus Krohn, former digital strategist for the RNC who since started his own company.

But to get new ideas into the pipeline, this new wave of engineers and social-media experts need to be brought on board and become an essential part of the campaign infrastructure. Ideas, even if they don?t end up working out, need to be tried out and tested. For a party that hasn?t had the stomach to go experimental lately, it?s a tough sell ? but one that?ll need to be made.

?It?s tougher for new ideas to grow and flourish because resources are so heavily focused on things that worked before,? says Kristen Soltis Anderson, GOP pollster and vice president of The Winston Group.

?There?s kind of this reluctance when processes have been guided for a very long time by gut instinct, by experts who have 20 to 30 years? experience, who have done political campaigns,? said Michael Turk, the RNC?s first eCampaign director.

Many digital-first conservatives tend to hail from the more-libertarian wing of the party, which is another reason they?re not quite so readily accepted ? or are interested ? in the GOP?s establishment culture.

Come to terms with the hierarchical nature of the party.?

Democrats successfully engaged and empowered their grassroots activists. On the flip side, the often-tense relationship between the GOP establishment and tea-party base has made it tough for the party to compete. The problem becomes even more complex once outside groups are thrown into the mix, since they can?t coordinate with official campaigns or parties.

One former national GOP strategist put it this way: ?The official campaigns themselves (individually) are very centralized, and always have been. But now these centralized organizations are now one of many silos in an overall decentralized political environment.?

RedState cofounder Ben Domenech suggests that a centralized organization of some sort could actually help lead to better ideas and products. He compared it to a venture-capital model; an organization can invest in small projects that can be tested and then share the lessons with others.

?The Right is always going to be hierarchical,? Domenech says. ?But instead of hierarchy getting in the way, what if you essentially said, this is going to be an organization that will be at the center.?

Developing open-source technologies ? software that lets users modify and improve upon the code and data ? is another important component to empowering the new wave of digital activists.

The party had actually been moving toward a more open tech environment. In the lead-up to the 2010 election, the Republican National Committee developed an open-source API platform that would have let state parties and others access the central party?s database and build upon it. That project was shut down after years of development, something Turk?has called??a tragic miscalculation.?

Pour resources into digital nuts and bolts.

You can?t just have useful technology or good databases if you don?t have the digital platform that can actually make use of it and let it grow over time ? it?s like trying to run a good smartphone app on an outdated smartphone. GOP political strategist Soren Dayton uses a war analogy to illustrate the conundrum: ?Part of the reason World War I was so bloody was that they had the basic tools of modern warfare, but they didn?t know how to use them in smart ways. So they just sat in trenches and shot at each other,? he said. ?We need technology, but we need to use it more effectively.?

Building out a technological infrastructure that isn?t so centralized and that can adapt over time, like that open-source API platform the RNC had been working on, could counteract some of the issues the national party has experienced with the changing of hands. ?There?s very little continuity because chairmen come in and they want to make their mark, and they bring in their own people and we?re in this perpetual state of resetting,? Krohn says.

Resources are already going into digital initiatives. One of the GOP?s congressional campaign committees has begun to beef up its digital game. The National Republican Congressional Committee expanded its digital team from three to 10 members, with?the committee billing it?as the largest such team in Republican politics. Other strategists are starting to explore ways to utilize the behavioral sciences, much like?the Democrats did in 2012.

Develop and test like crazy in 2013.

If Republicans want to get ahead of the Democrats? digital game by 2014?s midterms, their best chance is during the off-year 2013 gubernatorial and senate special elections. It?s a time when the GOP could develop and fund applications and tech solutions.

?Once we hit January 2014, it?s going to be heads down on focusing on the midterms, and people aren?t going to have the tolerance level to experiment and test or fund new capabilities, because we as a party fall into a traditional campaign cycle,? Krohn said.

The?Virginia?governor?s race, in particular, could end up a technological battleground.

The gubernatorial race between Republican Ken Cuccinelli and Democrat Terry McAuliffe is shaping up to be very competitive, and could serve as a bellwether for the 2014 midterms. State law allows unlimited contributions, which could help fund some proposed innovations.

But remember, technology isn?t the silver bullet.

The Democratic technology edge wasn?t the only reason President Obama won in 2012.

?We can target people really well, we can build systems that allow us to have a lot of data about every voter,? says?Anderson. ?We also have to make sure that the message we?re delivering and the policy behind that message is worthy and relevant to younger generations.?

Of all of the identity crises the GOP is grappling with, the tech gap is probably the least controversial. Many people within the party acknowledge it?s a problem, says Domenech. ?There is no big group force of people saying we don?t need to do anything on tech,? he said.

But, he added, ?That?s separate from the message part. You have to have a message to connect with people. Otherwise, just being better at the connection part is not going to be enough.?

CORRECTION: The RNC's open-source API platform was developed in the lead up to the 2010 election, not 2008.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/republicans-looking-close-digital-divide-against-democrats-121429741--politics.html

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NO Horse Slaughter! | TulsaPets Magazine Online

Blaze's

Horse slaughter is not a humane alternative to responsible horse care; we have laws in Oklahoma to stop animal neglect.?? The entities that want to open slaughter houses include the Unwanted Horse Coalition; despite the name, that is not an animal welfare organization, it is a consortium of horse breeding registries including the American Quarter Horse Association.? Is that because ?too many? are okay as long as they can keep making money?

Say no to HB 199 and SB 375

Please contact your legislator to tell them to vote NO to horse slaughter in Oklahoma ask that they let you know how they voted on horse slaughter.? Find your legislator at http://www.oklegislature.gov/FindMyLegislature.aspx

?

When contacting your own legislator, tell them that you are a constituent.

?

A sample e mail:

Dear? ________________;

I urge you to vote NO on HB 1999 and SB 735, the measures that would make Oklahoma into the horse slaughter capitol of the US. Horse slaughter is not part of our legacy.

Contrary to what the proponents say, this measure only helps those who breed horses.? Slaughter will not make a problem go away; it will make overbreeding profitable and ensure the breeding of excess horses.? Especially in view of the EU issues, if this international industry downsizes, Oklahoma could be left with many more unwanted horses that we are concerned about now.

Horse slaughter has been found to be tied to organized crime (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/feb/15/horsemeat-scandal-the-essential-guide#113), with large-scale Oklahoma horse slaughter dealer George Baker indicted on February 8 by a grand jury with counts that include conspiracy and racketeering. The indictment covered nine Oklahoma counties and extended to Texas; we do not need this ?underworld? industry (http://www.ktul.com/story/19138023/six-men-indicted-for-stealing-livestock-breeding-vehicles).

Responsible ownership is the answer; horse slaughter is not. The equation is not starve or be butchered.? We have laws to prevent starvation. Oklahoma should not be the horse killing state.

No to HB1999 and SB 375.

?

?

Then:

In the coming weeks ?ag? organizations and other interests will work together to decide what legislative bills they support. ?This issue affects all Oklahomans.

Even though they speak about the ?sad? abundance of unwanted horses, most of the nationwide entities that support reopening horse slaughter are involved in breeding more horses.? ?

The following organizations are active at our capitol.? Please let them know that you hope they will join us in saying NO to horse slaughter in Oklahoma. ???

Oklahoma Chamber of Commerce (Oklahoma City) use link: http://www.okstatechamber.com/contact

Oklahoma Chamber of Commerce (Tulsa) webmaster@tulsachamber.com

Oklahoma Cattlemen?s Association- please call them at (405) 235-4391 and ask them to not support (or oppose) the horse slaughter bill.? Horse slaughter is not a part of Oklahoma?s legacy and it is not a part of our agricultural heritage.?

Oklahoma Farm Bureau use link: ?http://www.okfarmbureau.org/index.php?action=about.contactus

Oklahoma Sheriff?s and Peace Officers Association? headquarters@ospoa.org

Oklahoma Sheriff?s Association use link:?

?http://www.oklahomasheriffs.com/about-the-osa/contact-us/ ?

Oklahoma Tourism and Recreation information@travelok.com

Oklahoma Veterinary Medical Association admin@okvma.org

?

A Sample e-mail to these organizations is:

?

Dear? [name of organization]

During this session, please do not join forces with those who support the ?horse slaughter? measures before the Oklahoma legislature.

Oklahoma needs jobs and infrastructure, not get-rich-quick schemes and crime.? Horse slaughter is not part of our legacy and it is not a promising business for us.

Contrary to what the proponents say, this measure helps those who breed horses.? Slaughter will not make a problem go away; it will make overbreeding profitable and ensure the ongoing breeding of excess horses.

Horse slaughter has been found to be tied to organized crime (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/feb/15/horsemeat-scandal-the-essential-guide#113), with large-scale Oklahoma horse slaughter dealer George Baker indicted on February 8 by a grand jury with counts that include conspiracy and racketeering. The indictment covered nine Oklahoma counties and extended to Texas; we do not need an ?underworld? industry (http://www.ktul.com/story/19138023/six-men-indicted-for-stealing-livestock-breeding-vehicles).

Responsible ownership is the answer; horse slaughter is not. The equation is not starve or be butchered.? We have laws to prevent starvation. Oklahoma should not be the horse killing state.

Please stand with Oklahoma on common sense and do not join with the horse slaughter proponents.

No to HB1999 and SB 375.

Sincerely,

________________________________________

Source: http://www.tulsapetsmagazine.com/2013/02/no-horse-slaughter/

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