18 dead as bus falls into 350 ft gorge near Jammu

Jammu, Sep 7 (ANI): At least 18 passengers died and 23 seriously injured, as the bus they were travelling by fell down into a 350-feet deep gorge on Doda-Jammu Highway in Jammu and Kashmir’ Doda District on Monday morning.

The bus (JK 02 D 7339), carrying at least 35 people, was on its way to Jammu from Doda when it fell into the gorge. The incident occurred near Baglihar Dam site, about 145 kilometers from Jammu near Assa, on National highway alpha 1, where a diversion has been given due the sinking of main road in the dam water. The death toll is expected to increase.

The local police and officials of the district administration reached the incident site and ensured the rescue operation. By Tahir Nadeem Khan (ANI)

Aggressive, not nice, women earn big bucks at work

Washington, July 14 (ANI): Being a nice girl would not take you ahead of others in the professional race, for a new study suggests that being aggressive and having a masculine approach is what makes you earn big bucks at workplace.

The academic study has shown that “alpha male” women earn an average of 40,000 pounds more over their lifetime than female colleagues who are “nice”.

It was found that personality traits are just as important as intelligence in determining how much people earn in their career.

The team found “alpha male” women earn 4 per cent more than those who are deemed to be “passive”-this amount to 40,000 pounds over a lifetime, based on a 40-year career with a 25,000 pounds annual wage.

Scottish businesswoman Michelle Mone, chief executive of the Ultimo lingerie company, agreed that having an assertive manner had aided her success.

Led by Guido Heineck, the study titled ‘Does it Pay to be Nice?’ also showed that “conscientious” women, who display self-control and persistence, generally earn 5 per cent more than sloppy colleagues.

Heineck, from the Institute for Employment Research in Nuremberg, Germany, said personality traits such as “agreeableness” were not beneficial in the workplace.

“Our statistics show that being nice does not pay for women, whereas working hard does. This is probably, in part, because agreeable people are too passive in conflict situations and poorer in wage negotiations,” The Scotsman quoted him as saying.

He added: “Traditionally, women are more passive and likeable at work. This (research] shows that to be successful in the workplace women have to adapt a more alpha male-like behaviour.”

The study was presented at a conference at Essex University. (ANI)

Why H1N1 flu spreads from person to person less effectively than other flu viruses

Washington, July 3 (ANI): Scientists in the US have come up with an genetic explanation for why the new H1N1 “swine flu” virus has spread from person to person less effectively than other flu viruses.

A collaborative team of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have found that the H1N1 strain, which circled the globe this spring, has a form of surface protein that binds inefficiently to receptors found in the human respiratory tract.

“While the virus is able to bind human receptors, it clearly appears to be restricted,” says Ram Sasisekharan, the Edward Hood Taplin Professor and director of the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST) and the lead MIT author of the paper.

He points out that that restricted binding, along with a genetic variation in an H1N1 polymerase enzyme, which was first reported about three weeks ago in Nature Biotechnology, explains why the virus has not spread as efficiently as seasonal flu.

However, flu viruses are known to mutate rapidly, so there is cause for concern if H1N1 undergoes mutations that improve its binding affinity.

“We need to pay careful attention to the evolution of this virus,” says Sasisekharan.

For their study, the researchers compared the new H1N1 strain to several seasonal flu strains, including some milder H1N1 strains, and to the virus that caused the 1918 flu pandemic.

They found that the new strain is able to bind to the predominant receptors in the human respiratory tract, known as umbrella-shaped alpha 2-6 glycan receptors.

However, binding efficiency varies between flu strains, and that variation is partly determined by the receptor-binding site (RBS) within the hemagglutinin protein.

The researchers found that the new H1N1 strain’s RBS binds human receptors much less effectively than other flu viruses that infect humans.

They also observed that the new H1N1 strain spreads inefficiently in ferrets, which accurately mimics human influenza disease including how it spreads or transmits in humans.

When the ferrets were in close contact with each other, they were exposed to enough virus particles that infection spread easily. However, when they were kept separate and the virus could spread only through airborne respiratory droplets, the illness spread much less effectively.

Sasisekharan says that this is consistent with the transmission of this virus seen in humans so far, considering that most outbreaks have occurred in limited clusters, sometimes within a family or a school but not spread much further.

“One of the big payoffs of long-term investments in carbohydrate biology and chemistry research is an understanding of the relationships between cell surface carbohydrate structure and viral infectivity. Tools developed in building such understanding help in the response to events like the recent H1N1 outbreak,” said Jeremy M. Berg, director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health, which partly funded the research.

The researchers also pinpointed a second mutation that impairs H1N1′s ability to spread rapidly.

While recent studies have shown that a viral RNA polymerase known as PB2 is critical for efficient influenza transmissibility, the new H1N1 strain does not have the version of the PB2 gene necessary for efficient transmission.

A research article describing the study has been published in the online edition of the journal Science. (ANI)

Hormonal treatment to big cats in Jaipur zoo

Jaipur, May 14 (ANI): The veterinarians of a zoo in Jaipur are giving hormonal treatment to big cats to help them breed faster.

The big cats include tiger, lion and panther. The Jaipur zoo authorities initiated this special course of ten days as most of the male as well female animals were turning impotent.

The animals kept in captivity become prone to impotency. There are two lions, five tigers and four panthers in Jaipur zoo.

The hormones are being given in the shape of drugs.

“In hormonal treatment, we are giving a preparation of PGF12 alpha. Hormones are effective when ovaration doesn’t happen in animals. A hard structure of corpus lithium develops on ovary. Ovaration cant’ take place until this structure doesn’t regresses. Hence, we are giving hormones for ovaration,” said CP Singh, veterinary doctor, Jaipur zoo.

Hormonal treatment has been proved to be good for deer.

“Hormonal treatment is very important for breeding. We have a limited number of tigers and lions comprising males and females. Some of them are ready for breeding. Big cat population will increase by hormonal treatment,” said Laxman Gaur, superintendent, Jaipur zoo.

Experts believe that population of big cats like tiger is declining at an alarming rate in India. By Lokendra Singh (ANI)

Scientists discover mysterious ‘space blob’ at cosmic dawn

Washington, April 23 (ANI): Using information from a suite of telescopes, astronomers have discovered a mysterious, giant ‘space blob’ that existed at a time when the universe was only about 800 million years old.

Dubbed extended Lyman-Alpha blobs, such objects are huge bodies of gas that may be precursors to galaxies.

This blob was named Himiko for a legendary, mysterious Japanese queen, as it was discovered early in the history of the universe in a Japanese Subaru field.

It stretches for 55 thousand light years, a record for that early point in time. That length is comparable to the radius of the Milky Way’s disk.

But, researchers are puzzled by the object.

Even with superb data from the world’s best telescopes, they are not sure what it is.

Because it is one of the most distant objects ever found, its faintness does not allow the researchers to understand its physical origins.

It could be ionized gas powered by a super-massive black hole; a primordial galaxy with large gas accretion; a collision of two large young galaxies; super wind from intensive star formation; or a single giant galaxy with a large mass of about 40 billion Suns.

“The farther out we look into space, the farther we go back in time,” explained lead author Masami Ouchi, a fellow at the Observatories of the Carnegie Institution who led an international team of astronomers from the US, Japan, and the United Kingdom.

“I am very surprised by this discovery. I have never imagined that such a large object could exist at this early stage of the universe’s history,” Ouchi added.

“According to the concordance model of Big Bang cosmology, small objects form first and then merge to produce larger systems. This blob had a size of typical present-day galaxies when the age of the universe was about 800 million years old, only 6 percent of the age of today’s universe!” Ouchi further added.

No extended blobs have previously been found when the universe was younger.

Himiko is located at a transition point in the evolution of the universe called the reionization epoch.

It’s as far back as we can see to date, and at 55 thousand light years, Himiko is a big blob for that time.

“If this was the discovery of a class of objects that are ancestors of today’s galaxies, there should be many more smaller ones already found-a continuous distribution,” said Carnegie’s Alan Dressler, a member of the team. (ANI)

Why diabetics have high blood glucose levels

Washington, April 8 (ANI): A research team, including an Indian-origin boffin, has shed light on why people with diabetes have high blood glucose levels.

Researchers at Joslin Diabetes Center have shown for the first time that insulin plays a significant role in suppressing levels of glucagon, a hormone involved in carbohydrate metabolism and regulating blood glucose levels.

According to researchers, the new findings could lead to development of a drug aimed at targeting glucagon levels.

“This is a very important finding because until now scientists have only speculated that insulin may be involved in keeping glucagon levels in check,” said Rohit N. Kulkarni, M.D., Ph.D., Principal Investigator in the Joslin Section on Cellular and Molecular Physiology and senior author of the study

Produced by the alpha cells in the pancreas, glucagon acts on the liver to help raise blood glucose when it becomes low. It has the opposite effect on the liver as insulin, which is released from pancreatic beta cells to lower blood glucose when it is high.

In a healthy individual, the two counter each other to keep blood glucose levels balanced. In individuals with long-standing type 1 or type 2 diabetes, inappropriate glucagon secretion can increase the chances of hypoglycemia (low blood glucose levels) and can interfere with insulin therapy.

The finding suggests that for people with either type 1 or type 2 diabetes, a therapeutic approach could be developed to target insulin receptors or proteins in alpha cells in order to suppress glucagon secretion.

In addition, the research may also help in the understanding of why patients with type 1 diabetes in particular, who are required to inject insulin on a regular basis, are at risk for hypoglycemia.

Kulkarni said that it was thought that this increased risk was linked in some way to insulin receptors in the alpha cells, an idea that today’s study suggests is in fact the case.

“This gives us some insight into the cause of hypoglycemia, the most common complication in patients with type 1 diabetes,” he said.

“Injecting insulin leads to a decrease in blood glucose. If it starts to go too low, glucagon normally kicks in to prevent hypoglycemia. But, what happens in diabetes is the alpha cells become desensitized by repeated insulin injections over many years and they start to behave abnormally. We believe this is linked to insulin receptor function,” he added.

In the study, researchers created a genetically engineered mouse model in which pancreatic alpha cells – those that secrete glucagon – were modified so that they did not contain insulin receptors. The idea was to explore the role of insulin in regulating glucagon secretion.

The modified mice exhibited elevated glucagon levels and also showed impaired glucose tolerance, as is seen in diabetes.

“This is the first genetic model wherein we provide definitive proof that insulin is able to suppress glucagon in mammals,” Kulkarni said.

The study is published in the April issue of Cell Metabolism. (ANI)

Nicotine may affect bodily processes more broadly than earlier thought

Washington, April 4 (ANI): Brown University scientists have found that nicotine is not only addictive, but it also has the ability to interfere with several cellular interactions in the body.

The researchers say that their findings may be helpful in developing better treatments for various diseases, considering that pharmaceutical companies rely on basic research to identify new cellular interactions that can serve as targets for potential new drugs.

Professor Edward Hawrot and his graduate students William Brucker and Joao Paulo set out to provide a more basic understanding of how nicotine affects the process of cell communication through the mammalian nervous system.

They looked specifically at the alpha-7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor in mouse brain tissue, which is very similar to a receptor that exists in humans.

The researchers said that 55 proteins were found to interact with the alpha-7 nicotinic receptor, and that those connections were previously unknown.

“This is called a “nicotinic” receptor and we think of it as interacting with nicotine, but it likely has multiple functions in the brain,” Hawrot said.

“And in various, specific regions of the brain this same alpha-7 receptor may interact with different proteins inside neurons to do different things,” he added.

He revealed that one in particular – the G alpha protein – was among the most unexpected proteins to be identified in the study, as it is usually associated with a completely different class of receptors.

The researcher says that the importance of this finding can be understood from the fact that G alpha proteins are involved in many different biochemical and signalling processes throughout the brain and the rest of the body.

According to him, 40 percent of all G alpha proteins all currently used therapeutic drugs target a member of the large GPCR family of receptors.

Based on their observations, the researchers came to the conclusion that the alpha-7 receptors have a much broader role in the body than previously suspected, and that the newly identified associated proteins could also be affected when nicotine binds to the alpha-7 receptor.

Hawrot believes that his team’s work may lead to the development of new treatments to combat smoking addiction.

He even says that the new findings may have future implications for diseases like schizophrenia, as recent studies have suggested that some cases of this condition are linked with deletions where a block of genes, including the gene for the alpha-7 receptor, is missing.

For their research, Hawrot and his colleagues studied mice genetically engineered to lack the alpha-7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, and compared them with normal mice.

The findings of the study have been published in the Journal of Proteome Research. (ANI)

US nuclear relic dating back to 1944 found in bottle

London, March 3 (ANI): Scientists have found a discarded bottle at a waste site in the US that contains the oldest sample of bomb-grade plutonium made in a nuclear reactor, dating back to 1944.

According to a report by BBC News, the sample dates to 1944 and is a relic from the infancy of the US nuclear weapons programme.

A team from the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory used nuclear forensic techniques to date the sample and track down its origins.

The type of plutonium in the bottle – known as Pu-239 – is a so-called alpha emitter. These alpha particles are too bulky to penetrate skin or paper, but they can cause poisoning if swallowed or inhaled.

It has a half-life (the time it takes for half the radioactive nuclei in a sample to decay) of 24,110 years.

The bottle in question was discovered in a burial trench at the Hanford nuclear site in Washington state, north-western US.

Established as part of the Manhattan Project in 1943, Hanford was home to the world’s first full-scale plutonium production facility.

The Manhattan Project was the US’ bid to build the world’s first nuclear weapon during World War II. The project’s roots lay in fears that Nazi Germany was investigating similar technology.

The Hanford site is now the focus of a massive environmental cleanup effort due to high levels of radioactive waste that remain at the site.

While excavating a burial trench in December 2004, clean-up personnel discovered a safe which contained a jug filled with whitish liquid slurry.

Further tests revealed the bottle contained a type of plutonium made by re-processing spent fuel in a manner consistent with early operations at Hanford.

Realising the historic potential of the find, Jon Schwantes and colleagues from the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory carried out further tests on the sample.

In order to determine its age, the researchers analysed the different forms, or isotopes, of plutonium and uranium in the sample.

They found it had been separated from the spent fuel in 1944.

In order to determine which reactor had produced the sample, they compared plutonium isotope ratios from the contents of the bottle against technical data from nuclear research reactors that were operating at the time the sample was made.

Their results strongly suggested the plutonium was manufactured at the prototype X-10 reactor at Oak Ridge in Tennessee, which began operating in 1943, a year after the Manhattan Project was authorised. (ANI)

Idea of infinity stretched back to third century B.C.

Washington, Feb 18 (ANI): A new analysis of a medieval manuscript has pushed back the first mathematical use of the concept of actual infinity by some 2,000 years, all the way back to the third century B.C.

The manuscript in question is a tattered page of parchment on which a medieval monk in Constantinople copied the third century B.C. work of the Greek mathematician Archimedes.

Infinity is one of the most fundamental questions in mathematics and still remains an unsolved riddle.

Mathematicians today refer to actual infinity as an uncountable set of numbers such as the number of points existing on a line at the same time, while a potential infinity is an endless sequence that unfolds consecutively over time.

The parchment page, which pushes back the first use of the concept of infinity, comes from the 348-page Archimedes Palimpsest, the oldest copy of some of the Greek genius’ writings.

They were hidden for centuries because a monk partly scraped them off the animal-skin parchment in the 13th century A.D. to clear the pages to print a prayer book.

Also, a forger painted pictures over the prayer book hundreds of years after that.

A scholar named Johan Ludvig Heiberg in 1906 studied the written remnants behind the religious words to discover the Palimpsest, finding evidence of Archimedes’ systematic use of the concept of infinity in a portion of the document called the Method of Mechanical Theorems.

In the past few years, the Palimpsest was re-examined at a far higher level of detail using a hair-thin X-ray scanning technique at Stanford University’s Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource in California.

Stanford classicist Reviel Netz asked Uwe Bergmann of the Stanford scanning facility to focus on the edge of a torn page, where Heiberg had figured just one line of text was missing.

The X-rays produced images of phosphorus and calcium from the ink used on the document.

Netz examined the scan and was able to deduce the presence of previously unseen Greek letters, kappa and alpha, which were likely followed by an iota to spell the Greek word for “and.”

This led Netz to conclude that two lines were missing, rather than one and to arrive at a new reading of the passage, according to Bergmann.

“Scholars are now talking about some new words which are emerging in the reconstruction of the evidence in introduction to the Method, that Archimedes’ concept of infinity was rather different from what was previously thought,” Bergmann said.

In fact, the new reading reveals that Archimedes was engaged in math that made conceptual use of actual infinity. (ANI)

Dog owners’ aggression rubs off on their pets: Study

Washington, Feb 18 (ANI): Dogs owned by people who use confrontational or aversive methods to train their violent pets will continue to remain aggressive, unless training techniques are modified, according to a new survey.

Researchers at University of Pennsylvania conducted a year-long survey of dog owners, which also showed that using non-aversive or neutral training methods-such as additional exercise or rewards-elicited very few aggressive responses.

“Nationwide, the No. 1 reason why dog owners take their pet to a veterinary behaviorist is to manage aggressive behaviour. Our study demonstrated that many confrontational training methods, whether staring down dogs, striking them or intimidating them with physical manipulation does little to correct improper behavior and can elicit aggressive responses,” said Meghan E. Herron, lead author of the study.

Researchers from the School of Veterinary Medicine at Penn said that primary-care veterinarians needed to advise owners of the risks associated with such training methods, and provide guidance and resources for safe management of behaviour problems.

The team produced a 30-item survey for dog owners who made behavioural service appointments at Penn Vet.

The questionnaire asked dog owners about how they had previously treated aggressive behaviour, whether there was a positive, negative or neutral effect on the dogs’ behaviour and whether aggressive responses resulted from the method they used.

Owners were also asked from where did they learn the training technique they employed.

Out of the 140 surveys completed, the most frequently listed recommendation sources were “self” and “trainers”.

Many confrontational methods like “hit or kick dog for undesirable behaviour” (43 percent), “growl at dog” (41 percent), “physically force the release of an item from a dog’s mouth” (39 percent), “alpha roll” physically-rolling the dog onto its back and holding it (31 percent), “stare at or stare down” (30 percent), “dominance down”-physically forcing the dog down onto its side (29 percent) and “grab dog by jowls and shake” (26 percent) elicited an aggressive response from at least 25 percent of the dogs on which they were attempted.

Also, dogs brought to the hospital for aggressive behaviour towards familiar people were more likely to respond aggressively to some confrontational techniques than dogs brought in for other behavioural reasons.

“This study highlights the risk of dominance-based training, which has been made popular by TV, books and punishment-based training advocates. These techniques are fear-eliciting and may lead to owner-directed aggression,” said Herron.

The study was aimed at assessing the behavioural effects and safety risks of techniques used historically by owners of dogs with behaviour problems.

The study has been published in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science. (ANI)

Mills & Boon turns to rugby to make novels racier

London, Jan 6 (ANI): Mills & Boon, the world’s most prolific romance publisher, has teamed up with Rugby Football Union to create a series of rugby themed romance novels.

The books will feature handsome rugby heroes and their glamorous love interests.

“Our mission statement is to do for rugby what Jilly Cooper did for polo – to give it an air of sexiness and glitz and glamour,” said Guardian.co.uk quoted series editor Jenny Hutton as saying.

Clare Somerville, Mills & Boon”s sales and marketing director said: “You don”t have to like rugby to like the books.”

“They”ve got all the elements of a quintessential Mills & Boon romance: jet-set locations, hunky alpha male heroes and hot sex, but in a rugby context,” she added.

The first novel to be published is by Sarah Morgan titled The Prince”s Waitress Wife. It will be launched just before the start of the RBS Six Nations Championships. (ANI)