Findings from India’s Chandrayaan to provide new understanding of lunar surface

London, September 18 (ANI): India’s Chandrayaan-1 X-ray Spectrometer (C1XS) has gathered data for a total of 30 solar flares, giving the most accurate measurements to date of magnesium, aluminum, silicon, calcium, and iron in the lunar surface.

Although contact was lost with Chandrayaan-1 last month, the enhanced performance of the C1XS instrument, which exceeded its design specification, means that the science team will be able to determine the geochemistry of new areas of the lunar surface, adding some vital pieces to the jigsaw of the mineralogy of the lunar surface.

The miniature C1XS instrument investigated the lunar surface using an effect whereby X-ray illumination from the Sun causes rocks to fluoresce, emitting light at a different wavelength.

This re-emitted light contains spectral peaks that are characteristic of elements contained in the rock, revealing its composition.

Solar flares act like a flash bulb, giving added illumination and allowing C1XS to ‘see’ more elements.

During normal conditions, C1XS could detect magnesium, aluminum, and silicon and collected data on the levels of these elements, enabling detailed mapping of areas of the lunar surface during its operational period.

During the 30 solar flares, C1XS detected calcium and iron (and sometimes titanium, sodium, and potassium) in key areas in the southern hemisphere and on the far side of the Moon.

The spectral resolution of 50 km was much better than previous missions.

According to Professor Grande, “The C1XS team will be analyzing the data collected during the Chandrayaan-1 mission over the next few months, and the results will help us further our knowledge of the Moon and planetary formation.”

In addition, the design of the instrument has been proved very successful in that it withstood passage through the Earth’s radiation belts and went on to produce these wonderful high-resolution spectra. We were able to separate clear peaks for each of the target elements, allowing us not only to identify where they are present but give an accurate estimate for how much is there,” he said.

“The technology developed for C1XS opens up some exciting opportunities for future missions,” he added. (ANI)

New species of lungless salamander found in Appalachian foothills of the US

London, July 9 (ANI): A striking new species of lungless salamander has been found living in a small stream in the Appalachian foothills of the US.

According to a report by BBC News, the salamander, scientifically known as ‘Urspelerpes brucei’, is so distinct that it’s been classified within its own genus, a taxonomic grouping that usually includes a host of related species.

The creature breathes through its skin, and unusually for its kind, males and females have different colouration.

Such a distinct amphibian has not been found in the US for half a century.

The researchers who discovered the creature have dubbed it the ‘patch-nosed’ salamander after the yellow patch on the animal’s snout.

The tiny animal averages just 25 to 26mm long.

The researchers found so few of the animals that either it is highly secretive, or more likely it survives in such small, isolated numbers that it is already at risk of extinction.

“This animal is really a spectacular find,” said Biologist Carlos Camp of Piedmont College in Demorest, Georgia, who led the team which described the new species.

“It is the first genus of amphibian, indeed of any four-footed vertebrate, discovered in the US in nearly 50 years,” he added.

The Appalachian Highlands of the southeastern US is a hot spot for lungless salamander diversity, with species occupying a variety of moist or wet environments including living in streams, underground, among the leaf litter of the forest floor, up cliffs and in trees.

“The salamander fauna of the US, particularly of the southern Appalachians, has been intensively studied for well over a century, so the discovery of such a distinct form was completely unsuspected,” said Carlos.

The amphibian also looks strikingly different to other species.

For a start, it has the smallest body size of any salamander in the US.

It is also the only lungless salamander in the US whose males have a different colour and pattern than females, a trait more characteristic of birds.

Males have a pair of distinct dark stripes running down the sides of the body and a yellow back. Females lack stripes and are more muted in colour.

Males also have 15 vertebrae, one less than females. Yet while most species of lungless salamander have male and females of differing sizes, those of Urspelerpes brucei are close to being equal in size.

Uniquely for such a small lungless salamander, Urspelerpes brucei has five toes, whereas most other small species have reduced that number to four. (ANI)

Eating more and using less energy made dinos gigantic

Sydney, July 9 (ANI): A US scientist has said that some dinosaurs grew larger than today’s elephants because they ate more and used less energy.

According to a report in ABC Science, the study suggests two factors, energy expenditure and food intake, influence the size of animals.

Using a mathematical model, study author Dr Brian McNab of the University of Florida, determined that animals that expend more energy and have a faster metabolism, which is typically linked to temperature regulation, have a smaller body mass.

Fast metabolism is a characteristic of large warm blooded animals. They use food to generate heat and maintain a constant body temperature, he writes.

Cold blooded animals, like most reptiles, have a slow metabolism and rely on the environment for body warmth.

McNab has proposed that, rather than use all their energy to maintain body temperature the way warm-blooded animals do, large dinosaurs used their energy to grow.

Large present-day mammals, like the African elephant, haven’t reached sizes similar to dinosaurs because they use most of their energy on temperature regulation, he added.

McNab said that due to their size, large dinosaurs were able to maintain a constant body temperature through thermal inertia and a small surface-to-volume ratio.

As a result, McNab concludes that dinosaurs like sauropods were homeothermic – had an intermediate body temperature.

Palaeontologist Dr John Long, of Museum Victoria, said that the idea that dinosaurs had intermediate body temperatures is not unusual.

He said that some large cold blooded animals can maintain a constant body temperature regardless of the environment – much like warm blooded animals.

“If you think of the giant turtles that live in the cold waters of the Atlantic they can have much higher body temperatures than the sea water around them,” said Long.

He said that the bigger an animal is, the less energy it takes to maintain a constant and higher body temperature.

“They can generate heat through their muscle metabolism,” he said. (ANI)

Army soldier embarks on a cycle expedition

Bangalore, July 2 (ANI): Undeterred by handicaps, a former Indian Army soldier, Probhojit Singh embarked on a bicycle tour across the country to spread the message of peace and harmony.

Singh,41, once a soldier of Jammu Kashmir Rifles, had to leave his battalion in 1989 when he met with a train accident and lost his left arm and toe of his right foot. But he refused to live in a state of helplessness, and decided to do something different.

He embarked on a bicycle tour across India.

Starting his journey from Ambala Cant in Haryana on January 19, 2009 he has since visited across 18 states, covering almost 9646 kilometers.

Through his tour, Singh wants to spread the message of peace and harmony belief in oneself.

“I want to spread the message of peace and harmony, but that takes a second priority, as the message of overcoming all odds forms the first priority of my tour. I want to send across a message to the people that when I being physically challenged can strive to embark on such a tour, then anybody can overcome their impediments to achieve something in life,” he said.

He rests at the local police stations and gets support from army regiments wherever he goes. The Indian army officers believe that Singh represents the spirit of the army, of never giving up.

“He truly reflects the indomitable spirit of the Indian soldier. And we are proud of him. He has already completed 9000 kilometres of the circuit and is on the road for almost 98 days or so,” said Brigadier R.N. Mittal commandant Madras Engineering Group, Bangalore.

Moving through the traffic in cities and towns across the country, Singh displays an undying spirit characteristic of the Indian Army.

He hopes that his endeavor would inspire many to maintain peace and harmony in the country. By Jaipal Sharma(ANI)

Common ancestor of humans and monkeys evolved from primates in Asia

Washington, July 1 (ANI): A new fossil primate from Myanmar suggests that the common ancestor of humans, monkeys and apes evolved from primates in Asia, not Africa, as was earlier believed by researchers.

A major focus of recent paleoanthropological research has been to establish the origin of anthropoid primates (monkeys, apes and humans) from earlier and more primitive primates known as prosimians (lemurs, tarsiers and their extinct relatives).

Prior to recent discoveries in China, Thailand, and Myanmar, most scientists believed that anthropoids originated in Africa.

Earlier this year, the discovery of the fossil primate skeleton known as “Ida” from the Messel oil shale pit in Germany led some scientists to suggest that anthropoid primates evolved from lemur-like ancestors known as adapiforms.

According to Dr. Chris Beard, a paleontologist at Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and a member of the international team of researchers behind the Myanmar anthropoid findings, the new primate, Ganlea megacanina, shows that early anthropoids originated in Asia rather than Africa.

These early Asian anthropoids differed radically from adapiforms like Ida, indicating that Ida is more closely related to modern lemurs than it is to monkeys, apes and humans.

The 38-million-year-old Ganlea megacanina fossils, excavated at multiple sites in central Myanmar, belong to a new genus and species.

Heavy dental abrasion indicates that Ganlea megacanina used its enlarged canine teeth to pry open the hard exteriors of tough tropical fruits in order to extract the nutritious seeds contained inside.

“This unusual type of feeding adaptation has never been documented among prosimian primates, but is characteristic of modern South American saki monkeys that inhabit the Amazon Basin,” said Dr. Beard.

“Ganlea shows that early Asian anthropoids had already assumed the modern ecological role of modern monkeys 38 million years ago,” he added.

Ganlea and its closest relatives belong to an extinct family of Asian anthropoid primates known as the Amphipithecidae.

Two other amphipithecids, Pondaungia and Myanmarpithecus, were previously discovered in Myanmar, while a third, named Siamopithecus, had been found in Thailand.

A detailed analysis of their evolutionary relationships shows that amphipithecids are closely related to living anthropoids and that all of the Burmese amphipithecids evolved from a single common ancestor. (ANI)

Why cancer patients are more prone to depression

Washington, May 19 (ANI): A new study on rats has shed light on why cancer patients are more prone to depression.

Researchers at the University of Chicago found that tumours produce chemicals, which can produce negative mood swings.

It has long been known that cancer is associated with depression. Experts thought this was likely to be either a result of the trauma of diagnosis, or possibly a side effect of chemotherapy treatment. The new study suggests a third possibility.

“Our research shows that two types of tumour-induced molecules, one secreted by the immune system and another by the stress axis, may be responsible,” said Leah Pyter, a postdoctoral fellow and lead author of a paper.

“Both of these substances have been implicated in depression, but neither has been examined over time frames and magnitudes that are characteristic of chronic diseases such as cancer,” she added.

For the study, the researchers conducted a series of tests on about 100 rats, some of whom had cancer to determine their behavioral responses in tests of emotional state.

They used tests commonly used in testing anti-depressants on rats and found that the rats with tumours became less motivated to escape when submitted to a swimming test, a condition that is similar to depression in humans.

The rats with tumours also were less eager to drink sugar water, a substance that usually attracts the appetites of healthy rats.

The results also showed that the rats with tumours had increased levels of cytokines in their blood and in the hippocampus (the portion of the brain that regulates emotion) when compared with healthy rats.

Cytokines are produced by the immune system, and an increase in cytokines has been linked to depression.

The team also found that stress hormone production also was altered in rats with tumours. The rats with tumours also had dampened production of the stress hormone corticosterone. The hormone helps regulate the impact of cytokines and reducing its production therefore increases the impact of cytokines.

The study is published in the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

William Wordsworth’s letter to fellow poet fetches £8,825 at auction

London, May 2 (ANI): A letter of advice by poet William Wordsworth has sold for 8,825 pounds at an auction.

In the 1840 letter, Wordsworth gives advice to fellow poet Robert Southey.

Wordsworth wrote the letter in response to a request by Southey, who was Poet Laureate at the time, to cast his eye over a poem.

The pair, who both lived in the Lake District, enjoyed a friendly rivalry.n the letter Wordsworth made several suggestions for Southey’s poem ‘My Days Among the Dead are Passed’, reports The Telegraph.

Wordsworth describes the poem as “so profoundly fine and so beautifully characteristic of its author, that I should like the words to be as perfect as care could make them.”

But he goes on to suggest several changes, such as replacing the word “converse” with “commune”, because it is “a word sweeter in sound as well as in feeling.”

Dr Lynda Pratt, a Southey expert at Nottingham University, said: “There was no way he could have changed his poems to suit Wordsworth but perhaps this was just Wordsworth’s way of keeping the channels of communication open.”

According to Pratt, Wordsworth, who succeeded Southey as Poet Laureate in 1843, was “notoriously tactless when commenting on other poets’ work, but didn’t take criticism of his own very well.”

The letter sold at George Kidner Auctioneers in Lymington, Hants, for more than double its estimate. (ANI)

Noted writer Vishnu Prabhakar passes away

Lucknow, Apr. 11 (ANI): Eminent writer, litterateur and Padma Bhushan award winner Vishnu Prabhakar passed away on Saturday in New Delhi.

Dr Prabhakar, who was suffering from chest infection, was admitted to the Maharaja Agrasen Hospital in Punjabi Bagh two weeks ago following complaints of breathing difficulties.

The Sahitya Akademi award winner, 96, is survived by two sons and two daughters. His wife Sushila Prabhakar died a few years back.

Dr Prabhakar’s condition deteriorated late last night and the end came in early morning, and his family members were by his side when he breathed his last.

In his will, Dr Prabhakar had decided to donate his body organs.

The body will be donated to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).

Prabhakaran was born on January 29, 1912 in the Mirapur village of Muzaffarnagar district in Uttar Pradesh.

Writer of over 50 published works, Dr Prabhakaran had written novels, plays and story collections in his lifetime.

A unique characteristic of his works is that it had elements of patriotism, nationalism and messages of social upliftment.

Dr Prabhakar was awarded Padma Bhushan and the Sahitya Akademi Award for his novel Ardhanarishvara (The Androgynous God or Shiva).

He had also won lot of acclaim for his biography ‘Awara Maseeha’. (ANI)

World’s first cocktail arose in Mesopotamia 5,000yrs ago

Washington, April 6 (ANI): The world’s first cocktail party might have taken place in Mesopotamia 5,000 years ago, if researchers are to be believed.

Researchers at the Pennsylvania University, Philadelphia, have came to this conclusion after studying the evolution of viticulture in the East and West.

They have found some earthenware along the Tigris river showing traces of tartaric acid (an element which is characteristic of the grape fermentation), honey, apple juice, and brew barley (a sort of beer ante litteram).

The researchers say that analyses of some pottery from South Tuscany suggest that this archaic blend was also drunk by Etrurians, a population that knew vine before the Greek arrived in Italy.

Based on these finding, it is assumed that the domestication of vine in Etruria was previous than the diffusion on Greek wine in the South coastlines.

Osvaldo Failla, a researcher at the Milan University, says that it is possible that the wild vine domestication took place in circumscribed areas, and not only after the introduction of external vines.

As part of the Vinum research project, the researchers also analysed the genetic characteristics of various wild vine found at different archaeological places in Maremma (Tuscany) and some vines present in non-anthropized places.

Their studies showed that, where the men were in contact with wild vines, the local genetic variability grew.

It was also possible to genetically distinguish the populations of wild vines deriving from anthropized zones in respect to non-anthropized areas. (ANI)

Henry VIII ‘was devout Catholic’

London, Apr 4 (ANI): Known as the scourge of the Catholic Church, Henry VIII has long been regarded as a religious sceptic, however, a “new extraordinary discovery” has revealed that he was a firm believer in the religion he later attempted to destroy.

A prayer roll (bede) once owned by Henry and inscribed with his own handwriting has emerged. The roll, which is around 13 feet long and 5 inches wide, will be kept for public display for the first time at the British Library’s exhibition ‘Henry VIII: Man and Monarch,’ which opens later this month and marks the 500th anniversary of Henry’s accession.

The roll is made of narrow strips of parchment stitched together, and bears Henry’s official badge of arms and the Tudor rose. It is decorated with a series of illuminations including the Trinity, the Crucifixion and scenes from Christ’s Passion.

Under the central image of Christ’s Passion is an inscription written by Henry, which reads: “Willyam Thomas, I pray yow pray for me your lovyng master: Prynce Henry.”

Inscribed with Latin prayers and religious instructions, the roll explains how the devotions are to be performed and what rewards the faithful might expect, such as remission of time in Purgatory and protection against illness.

Experts reckon that the teenage Henry gave the roll to William Thomas, one of his personal servants in his Privy Chamber, some time between 1505 and 1509, when Henry was the Prince of Wales.

Dr David Starkey, the historian, who has curated the British Library’s exhibition, described the roll as “a very exciting discovery”.

“I knew nothing of its existence until I began my research for the exhibition, so it has been a very exciting discovery. Many academic historians have long argued that Henry was sceptical of religion from his youth, and that this scepticism ultimately led to the break with Rome and the Reformation,” The Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

He added: “But what we have here, for the very first time, is absolute concrete evidence to the contrary. The Ushaw roll shows just how conservative and pious he was as a young man and how he was, in fact, two very different men before and after his divorce.

“We tend to remember Henry for all the extraordinarily revolutionary things he did, but this highlights how incredibly old-fashioned the young Henry was.

“It is proof that he actually believed in the religion characteristic of late medieval piety and believed that the sacraments carried out miracles – beliefs which he tried to destroy with the Reformation. It will surprise a lot of people.”

Dr Starkey said that Henry would have used the roll as a talisman that he carried with him, which he would have unrolled when he wished to pray. (ANI)

Congress furious, BJP clueless over legislator’s cusswords, says will cross-check

Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) legislator Fatehsinh Chauhan’s cusswords on Congress president Sonia Gandhi has ruffled the state Congress. BJP leaders, meanwhile, have pleaded ignorance about the whole incident.

“It is BJP culture and the MLA is just following his leader Narendra Modi. Like leader, like follower…they have no control over their language. This is the characteristic of the BJP. It has percolated to the lower rung members as well,” said Himanshu Vyas, GPCC spokesperson. Other party leaders could not be contacted.

BJP spokesperson I K Jadeja expressed ignorance about the matter. “I will have it confirmed from our south Gujarat poll in-charge Bharatsinh Parmar and then give our official reaction on it,” Jadeja said.

Another spokesman, Vijay Rupani, also said he was not aware of it. Interestingly, senior BJP leader Jayanti Barot, when told that the matter was reported in newspapers and the district collector concerned had taken a serious view of this, said, “I am not aware of this. I don’t read newspapers.”

When Newsline tried to contact Chauhan on his cell phone, one Montu answered the call and said Chauhan had gone out of town to attend some social function and that he forgot his cell phone at home. Chauhan has reportedly made himself unavailable after the incident. A call on his landline numbers elicited a similar response.

Assam’s perfume baron Ajmal loves swanky cars, gold

Guwahati, April 1 (IANS) Perfume baron and Asom United Democratic Front (AUDF) leader Badruddin Ajmal is not as rich as was generally believed, but the cleric sure fancies swanky cars and gold jewellery, if one goes by his declaration.

Ajmal declared in his affidavit accompanying his nomination papers for the Silchar parliamentary seat in Assam Tuesday that he has Rs.197,777 cash in hand and his wife Rizwana has Rs.567,329 – both together having little more than Rs.750,000 cash in hand.

But the maulana from the Deoband Islamic seminary in Uttar Pradesh, who sports a flowing beard and skullcap, also has a penchant for driving swanky cars. He claims to have two cars worth about Rs.4.6 million.

Another interesting characteristic: his love for gold and gold jewellery – which seems to be more than what his wife owns.

According to the affidavit, Ajmal declared that he possesses gold worth Rs.322,000, while his wife’s gold jewellery is estimated at Rs.224,000.

‘I don’t believe in money power in elections…all I want is the goodwill and support of people, and of course prayers and blessings from everybody to help me win,’ Ajmal told IANS.

Ajmal is contesting from two constituencies – Silchar in south Assam and Dhubri in the west.

Of the total eight seats where the AUDF is contesting this time, his younger brother Sirajuddin Ajmal is also contesting from two – Nagaon and Kaliabor.

Questions are, therefore, being asked if Ajmal is encouraging dynastic politics.

‘We are considering the winning chances of the candidates while giving party tickets for the elections…there is nothing to suggest family politics in it,’ said Hafiz Rashid Choudhury, working president of the AUDF.

Both brothers are legislators in the Assam assembly after the senior Ajmal floated the AUDF six months before the 2006 state elections in Assam.

But for all those supporters hoping to see Ajmal doling out cash lavishly during the elections, the Maulana’s cash position must have surely come as a shocker.

New enzymes for cheaper biofuel production engineered

Washington, Mar 24 (ANI): Researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and world-leading gene-synthesis company DNA2.0 have created new enzymes for cheaper biofuel production.

Biofuels are made by converting renewable materials-for example, corn kernels, wood chips left over from pulp and paper production, prairie grasses, and even garbage-into fuels and chemicals.

Frances H. Arnold, the Dick and Barbara Dickinson Professor of Chemical Engineering and Biochemistry at Caltech, and her colleagues have constructed 15 new highly stable fungal enzyme catalysts that efficiently break down cellulose into sugars at high temperatures.

Cellulose is the world’s most abundant organic material and cheapest form of solar-energy storage.

Plant sugars are easily converted into a variety of renewable fuels such as ethanol or butanol.

Earlier, less than 10 such fungal cellobiohydrolase II enzymes were known.

But the new enzymes, not only boast remarkable stabilities, but also degrade cellulose over a wide range of conditions.

Most biofuels used today are made from the fermentation of starch from corn kernels. That process, although simple, is costly because of the high price of the corn kernels themselves.

Agricultural waste, such as corn stover (the leaves, stalks, and stripped cobs of corn plants, left over after harvest), is cheap. These materials are largely composed of cellulose, the chief component of plant-cell walls. Cellulose is far tougher to break down than starch.

An additional complication is that while the fermentation reaction that breaks down cornstarch needs just one enzyme, the degradation of cellulose requires a whole suite of enzymes, or cellulases, working in concert.

Arnold and Caltech postdoctoral scholar Pete Heinzelman created the 15 new enzymes using a process called structure-guided recombination.

Using a computer program to design where the genes recombine, the researchers “mated” the sequences of three known fungal cellulases to make more than 6,000 progeny sequences that were different from any of the parents, yet encoded proteins with the same structure and cellulose-degradation ability.

After analysing the enzymes encoded by a small subset of those sequences, the researchers could predict which of the more than 6,000 possible new enzymes would be the most stable, especially under higher temperatures (a characteristic called thermostability).

“Enzymes that are highly thermostable also tend to last for a long time, even at lower temperatures. And, longer-lasting enzymes break down more cellulose, leading to lower cost,” said Arnold.

Using the computer-generated sequences, researchers synthesized actual DNA sequences, which were transferred into yeast in Arnold’s laboratory. The yeast produced the enzymes, which were then tested for their cellulose-degrading ability and efficiency.

Each of the 15 new cellulases was more stable, worked at significantly higher temperatures (70 to 75 degrees Celsius), and degraded more cellulose than the parent enzymes at those temperatures.

“This is a really nice demonstration of the power of synthetic biology,” said Arnold.

The study is published in the early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Madonna’s toyboy insists he didn’t cheat on her with lingerie model

London, Mar 24 (ANI): Queen of Pop Madonna’s alleged toyboy lover Jesus Luz has claimed that he did not cheat on her with a lingerie model as his mother was close by.

Luz agreed that he danced with model Luciano Costa at a party in his native Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, but affirms she is just a ‘friend’, reports the Sun.

Luz said: “I danced with her, but I danced with everyone at the party. My mum was at my side (at the party) and never would I become intimate with a woman if my mum was nearby – even if I was interested in that person.”

Luz was photographed embracing Costa as they danced. He claims his mother Christiane was close by but she wasn’t.

Luz and Costa were photographed again the next day in a park.

However, Luz said: “I have nothing with Luciana. The next day I met her on the beach and greeted her normally. The press created this story.”

The 22-year-old Brazilian model refused to confirm he was dating Madonna and insisted the singer does not control him.

“Even if it is true that I am with her, I would never reveal these details. I was never one to comment on my personal life and that won’t change now. This is a characteristic of my personality,” he said. (ANI)

Potential new drug target to stop Alzheimer’s progression identified

Washington, Mar 20 (ANI): Scientists have moved a step closer to developing a drug that could actually stop the progress of Alzheimer’s disease.

They have identified a molecule that can form the basis for a new therapy for the neurodegenerative disease.

A typical characteristic of the brains of Alzheimer’s patients is the presence of amyloid plaques, which are abnormal accumulations of the _-amyloid protein between the neurons. The sticky _-amyloid arises when the amyloid precursor protein is cut into pieces incorrectly.

The ?-secretase complex – which cuts proteins at a specific place – plays a major role in the creation of these plaques.

However, this complex (group of proteins that work together) is also involved in the regulation of a series of other essential proteins such as Notch, which plays a crucial role in the development of an embryo.

This is why many of the medicines in development that act on the whole ?-secretase complex run up against toxic side effects.

Under the direction of Bart De Strooper, and in collaboration with researchers in other countries, Lutgarde Serneels, Jerome Van Biervliet and their colleagues have been studying the ?-secretase complex in a variety of tissues.

They have now been able to demonstrate that the complex assumes a different shape and function according to the tissue in which the secretase is active.

For their research on Alzheimer’s disease, the researchers used mouse models. They found that deactivating the variant, Aph1B ?-secretase, in Alzheimer mice leads to reduced formation of the plaques, without any harmful side effects.

With this discovery, the researchers are once again opening a way toward the development of medicines that deactivate ?-secretase.

By concentrating on a variant of the complex that cuts proteins specifically in the brain – the Aph1B ?-secretase complex – the formation of the plaques can be prevented, while the other functions of ?-secretase are not affected.

This raises hopes for a drug that, for the first time, will succeed in stopping Alzheimer’s disease.

The journal Science is publishing the results of this research. (ANI)

Earliest feathered dinosaur discovered in China

London, March 19 (ANI): An analysis of a dinosaur fossil found in China has revealed a primitive form of feather that may have evolved much earlier than was previously thought, as it dates back to 100 million years.

The dinosaur fossil was discovered by Xiao-Ting Zheng at the Shandong Tianyu Museum of Nature and colleagues in China.

According to a report in Nature News, they found the fossil in Liaoning that has long feather-like structures sticking up from its body. Based on the bones present, it looks like it was small, active, agile, and probably eating a mix of insects, small vertebrates and plants.

The team has identified the species as a heterodontosaurid from the Early Cretaceous period, which began about 144 million years ago.

“Heterodontosaurids are exceptionally rare, and previously unknown from Asia,” said Richard Butler at the Natural History Museum in London. This fossil “confirms that heterodontosaurids, one of the oldest groups of dinosaurs, survived into the Cretaceous”, he added.

Dinosaurs are divided into two main orders: saurischians, which have forward-pointing pubic bones, and ornithischians, which have backward-pointing pubic bones.

All previous feathered theropods belong to the saurischian order, whereas the new fossil belongs to the ornithischian.

The find “pulls the origin of feathers down into the Triassic, when the saurischian and ornithischian lineages of dinosaurs split”, said Philip Currie at the University of Alberta in Canada.

The feathery structures found on this heterodontosaurid, dubbed Tianyulong confuciusi, are not like those found on modern birds or even on some of the smaller, more bird-like theropods.

Whereas modern feathers are flexible and have a central shaft with vanes that run off either side at angles, the feathers on T. confuciusi are all relatively stiff and lack vanes.

Hai-Lu You, one of the palaeontologists who identified T. confuciusi, believes that the fossil supports the idea of a single evolution of feathers.

“We still have some missing data between T. confuciusi and feathered theropod dinosaurs, but I think further discovery will fill these gaps,” he said.

If this proves to be true, then many dinosaurs may once have sported feather-like structures, with descendant species losing the characteristic later on.

The specimen supports arguments that dinosaurs may have used feathers for display.

“If these are protofeathers, then they were not related in any way to flight,” explained Butler. “The fact that the filaments over the tail are so long and stiff suggests a possible display function,” he added. (ANI)

Oceans were filled with oxygen 700 million years earlier than believed

Sydney, March 17 (ANI): An international team of geologists has claimed that photosynthesizing life forms created an excess of oxygen in the oceans 700 million years earlier than previous estimates suggest.

According to a report in ABC News, bands of haematite in the Marble Bar Cherst reveal the presence of aerobic bacteria nearly 3.5 billion years ago.

The research pushes back the earliest appearance of photosynthesizing organisms from 2.7 to 3.46 billion years ago.

Microscopic organisms such as cyanobacteria create oxygen as a by-product of photosynthesis.

The timing of their first appearance is hotly debated as it provides clues as to how early life on earth evolved.

Until now, the earliest evidence of photosynthesis was microscopic fossils found in shale rocks in Western Australia dating from 2.7 billion years ago.

Now, a team of Japanese, US and Australian scientists, led by Dr Masamichi Hoashi of the Kagoshima University, Japan, have found evidence for oxygen in ancient sea water from marine sedimentary rocks in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

The evidence comes from tiny crystals of the iron-oxide mineral haematite in a 160-metre-long core section that forms part of the Marble Bar Chert.

Haematite can form in the presence of aerobic (oxygen-loving) bacteria in the water, or by photo-electric processes in the upper 10 metres of seawater.

According to the researchers, haematite crystals in the Marble Bar Chert formed in water at least 200 meters deep, because microscopic analysis of the rocks show no sign of wave action or other structures characteristic of shallow-water sediments.

The orientation and nature of the grains of haematite also show that it precipitated directly from the seawater, rather than forming later from other processes, such as the movement of groundwater, they added.

“These data strongly suggest that oxygenic photoautotrophs flourished in the photic zone of the 3.46 billion-year-old oceans and supplied molecular oxygen to the deep water,” said the researchers.

Professor Hiroshi Ohmoto from the NASA Astrobiology Institute and Department of Geosciences at the Pennsylvania State University said that other data backs their claim for an early development of photosynthesizing life.

“Recently accumulated massive amounts of geochemical and biochemical data can be better explained by a theory postulating the emergence of oxygenic photosynthesis and the development of a fully oxygenated atmosphere in the very early evolutionary stage,” said Ohmoto.

“Once cyanobacteria appeared in one area of the ocean, it probably took less than 10 million years to fully oxygenate the atmosphere and oceans,” he added. (ANI)

Why immoral behaviour leaves a “bad taste in the mouth”

Washington, Feb 27 (ANI): Immoral behaviour really does leave a “bad taste in the mouth”, claims a new study, which found that disgust over an unfair social situation is hard-wired into the human body as strongly as the reaction to a foul taste.

The University of Toronto study shows a link between moral disgust and more primitive forms of disgust related to poison and disease.

“Morality is often pointed to as the pinnacle of human evolution and development,” says lead author Hanah Chapman, a graduate student in the Department of Psychology.
However, disgust is an ancient and rather primitive emotion which played a key evolutionary role in survival. Our research shows the involvement of disgust in morality, suggesting that moral judgment may depend as much on simple emotional processes as on complex thought,” the expert added.

The study has been published in Science.

To reach the conclusion, scientists examined facial movements when participants tasted unpleasant liquids and looked at photographs of disgusting objects such as dirty toilets or injuries.

Then they compared these to their facial movements when they were subjected to unfair treatment in a laboratory game. From analysis, the research team found that people make similar facial movements in response to both primitive forms of disgust and moral disgust.

The research employed electromyography, a technique that uses small electrodes placed on the face to detect electrical activation that occurs when the facial muscles contract.

In particular, they focused on movement of the levator labii muscle, which acts to raise the upper lip and wrinkle the nose, movements that are thought to be characteristic of the facial expression of disgust.

“We found that people show activation of this muscle region in all three situations – when tasting something bad, looking at something disgusting and experiencing unfairness,” Chapman added. (ANI)

Newly discovered brain protein leads to new model for Alzheimer’s disease

London, Feb 20 (ANI): While trying to unravel the normal function of a protein implicated in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), scientists have discovered a naturally occurring protein that provides a new therapeutic target for the disease.

The new finding, by scientists in California and France, rules out the current theory that AD is a disease of toxicity stemming from damage caused by sticky plaques that collect in the brain.

However, the Buck Institute for Age Research and the CNRS (Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique) study points to the condition as a disorder involving an imbalance in signalling between neurons.

One of the mysteries of AD has been the normal function of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) that are concentrated at the points where neurons connect.

Although the sticky amyloid plaques are believed to be the biggest characteristic of AD resulting from APP, but there’s not much evidence to prove that APP exists simply to cause Alzheimer’s disease.

In the study, scientists have shown that APP binds to netrin-1, a protein that helps to guide nerves and their connections in the brain, as well as helping nerve cells to survive.

When netrin-1 was given to mice that have a gene for Alzheimer’s disease their symptoms were reversed, and the sticky amyloid was reduced.

The results suggest that the long-held belief that AD is caused by brain cell damage inflicted by the amyloid plaques may be wrong.

Instead, the disease apparently stems from an imbalance between the normal making and breaking of connections in the brain, with netrin-1 supporting the connections and the amyloid breaking the connections – both by binding to APP and activating normal cell programs.

It was found that netrin-1, not only binds to APP keep the nerve cells alive and connected, but it also shut down the production of the amyloid, all of which makes it an interesting potential therapeutic.

“We now believe that APP is part of a ‘plasticity module’ that functions in normal memory and forgetting, and that netrin-1 gives us an important starting point to restore the normal balance, ” Nature quoted Buck Institute Faculty Member Dale Bredesen, MD, who led the California half of the French-Californian collaborative research, as saying.

The study appears online in the Nature publication Cell Death and Differentiation. (ANI)