New approach helps pinpoint genes behind common diseases

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): Challenging the long-held view that common diseases are usually caused by common gene variants (mutations), researchers have now said that the culprits may be numerous rare variants.

And these variants are located in DNA sequences farther away from the original “hot spots” than scientists have been accustomed to look.

Using an approach that detects rare but powerful causal gene variants, the researchers say they have accounted for a significant proportion of the “missing heritability” problem.

This refers to the disappointing fact that, to date, conventional gene-hunting studies have often failed to identify, when searching for gene variants, variants that cause a large proportion of common diseases, such as heart disease, cancers and diabetes.

The new approach draws on existing data from genome-wise association studies (GWAS) that have already been performed, re-analysing the data to pinpoint causal variants that have not been identified previously.

In addition, the technique may allow researchers to identify individuals whose DNA is more likely to carry specific mutations in the causal genes.

“Our approach draws us closer to the goal of personalized medicine, in which treatment will be tailored to an individual”s genetic profile. When we can say that a specific gene mutation causes a patient”s disease, we have more meaningful diagnostic results. Identifying causal variants in disease genes provides an opportunity to develop drugs to rectify the biological consequences of these mutated genes,” said study leader Dr. Hakon Hakonarson, director of the Center for Applied Genomics at The Children”s Hospital of Philadelphia.

By applying their methods to real DNA samples from patients with genetic hearing loss, the researchers” approach helped them to select from GWAS data a subset of cases for sequencing analysis that were most likely to carry causative mutations.

Sequencing the DNA in this subset, the study team found that the majority of those patients carried an actual mutation known to cause hearing loss.

“Our technique suggests that when we do our resequencing follow-up studies, we can identify people who are much more likely to carry a causative gene,” said Kai Wang, who analyzed the dataset.

Hakonarson added: “We present a more efficient approach for mining GWAS data to find the actual causative gene variants that will have future utility in designing therapies.”

The study appears online in The American Journal of Human Genetics. (ANI)

Two key brain regions work in tandem like integrated network

Washington, Apr 20 (ANI): Two important areas in the central nervous system— basal ganglia and the cerebellum—are linked together to form an integrated functional network, say researchers at the University of Pittsburgh.

Each subcortical structure houses a unique learning mechanism.

It is believed that the basal ganglia circuits are involved in reward-driven learning and the gradual formation of habits.

On the other hand, cerebellar circuits are thought to contribute to more rapid and plastic learning in response to errors in performance.

“The basal ganglia and the cerebellum are two major subcortical structures that receive input from and send output to the cerebral cortex to influence movement and cognition,” explained senior author Dr. Peter L. Strick, professor of neurobiology and co-director of the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, Pitt School of Medicine.

“In the past, these two learning mechanisms were viewed as entirely separate, and we wondered how signals from the two were integrated. Using a unique method for revealing chains of synaptically linked neurons, we have demonstrated that the cerebellum and basal ganglia are actually interconnected and communicate with each other,” said Strick.

The finding not only has important implications for the normal control of movement and cognition, but it also helps to explain some puzzling findings from patients with basal ganglia disorders.

“Our findings provide a neural basis for these findings. In essence, the pathways that we have discovered may enable abnormal signals from the basal ganglia to disrupt cerebellar function. The alterations in cerebellar function are likely to contribute to the disabling symptoms of basal ganglia disorders. Thus, a new approach for treating these symptoms might be to attempt to normalize cerebellar activity,” said Strick.

The findings are available online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

UK’s anti-terrorism policy backfiring – lawmakers

Britain’s policy of trying to stop the radicalisation of mainly young Muslims, a central plank of its counter-terrorism strategy, is alienating those it is supposed to be winning over, lawmakers said on Tuesday.

“Prevent”, which aims to cut support for violent extremism and discourage people from becoming terrorists, was backfiring as many Muslims felt it was being used to spy on them, parliament’s Communities and Local Government Committee said.

“The misuse of terms such as ‘intelligence gathering’ amongst Prevent partners has clearly discredited the programme and fed distrust,” said Phyllis Starkey, the committee’s chairman.

Prevent is one of the four main strands of Britain’s policy, along with Pursue, Protect and Prepare, set up to deal with the threat from al Qaeda and its related groups.

Brought in two years after the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States in 2001, Prevent became particularly significant after the London suicide bombings in July 2005 carried out by four British Islamists.

It seeks to use police, local government, teachers and youth workers to help communities counter the message of al Qaeda.

But community workers told Reuters this month that the policy had tainted positive projects and it was instead creating unease among many of Britain’s 1.8 million Muslims.

The National Association of Muslim Police even said it had stigmatised Muslims and worsened relations.

In its report, the Communities Committee called for a new approach, saying it was wrong that a department working for community cohesion should be part of a counter-terrorism agenda.

It said there should be an independent investigation into accusations by witnesses giving evidence to the committee who said the strategy was being used by police and spies for intelligence gathering.

The committee accused ministers of trying to “engineer a ‘moderate’ form of Islam, promoting and funding only those groups which conform to this model”.

“In our view, a persistent pre-occupation with the theological basis of radicalisation is misplaced because the evidence suggests that foreign policy, deprivation and alienation are also important factors,” Starkey said.

The government said it was disappointed the report had not taken into account changes made to Prevent in the last year to address criticisms.

“All Prevent activities are designed to support all communities, and particularly Muslim communities in resisting those who target their young people,” a spokesman for the Department for Communities and Local Government said.

“There has been no substantiated evidence that Prevent programmes are keeping Muslim communities under surveillance.”

Michael Holden

‘Times’ online to charge surfers one pound for a day, two pounds a week from June

London, Mar 26(ANI): The News International has announced that customers will be charged to read The Times and The Sunday Times online from June.

Customers will have to pay one pound for a day’s access or two pounds a week subscription.

Both titles will launch new websites in early May, separating their digital presence for the first time and replacing the existing combined site, Times Online.

The sites will be available for a free trial period to registered customers.

Meanwhile, access to the digital services will be included in the seven-day subscriptions of print customers.

News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks said it is a crucial step towards making the business of news an economically exciting proposition.

“We are proud of our journalism and unashamed to say that we believe it has value,” The Independent quoted Brooks, as saying.

“This is just the start. The Times and The Sunday Times are the first of our four titles in the UK to move to this new approach,” he added. (ANI)

Google ends Internet censorship, dares China to make next move

Washington, Mar 23(ANI): After prolonged negotiations with the Chinese Government over the country’s Internet censorship rules, Google finally decided to pull out its China-based website and has began redirecting traffic to an uncensored site in Hong Kong.

Google, however, said that it hopes to keep sales, research and development operations in China.

“We want as many people in the world as possible to have access to our services, including users in mainland China, yet the Chinese government has been crystal clear throughout our discussions that self-censorship is a non-negotiable legal requirement,” The Christian Science Monitor quoted David Drummond, Google’s chief legal officer, as saying in a statement.

“We believe this new approach of providing uncensored search in simplified Chinese from Google.com.hk is a sensible solution to the challenges we”ve faced – it”s entirely legal and will meaningfully increase access to information for people in China,” he added.

Meanwhile, many online free speech advocates believe that the decision to shift base to Hong Kong could be a precursor to a complete departure from China.

“Whether the Chinese people will be able to take advantage of Google search now rests squarely with the Chinese government,” Leslie Harris, president and CEO of the Center for Democracy and Technology, said in a statement.

“If China blocks access, it will finally make clear to the Chinese people who is pulling the levers of censorship in the country,” he added. (ANI)

Body’s cellular machine cuts unwanted genes

London, Mar 22 (ANI): Just like a film director cuts out extraneous footage to create a blockbuster, there exists a cellular machine in our bodies, called the spliceosome, which snips out unwanted stretches of genetic material and joins the remaining pieces to fashion a template for protein production.

However, if the spliceosome makes a careless cut, it could result in a disease.

Using a new approach to studying the spliceosome, a team led by University of Michigan chemistry and biophysics professor Nils Walter, spied on the splicing process in single molecules.

The new study, which utilizes a technique called fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and a sophisticated microscope that watches single molecules in action, allows researchers to observe in real time the contortions involved in spliceosome assembly and operation.

If molecular-scale standards are considered, the spliceosome is made up of five RNA and 100 or more protein subunits that agilely assemble, step-by-step, into the giant complex when it”s time to carry out its work.

True to the movie director analogy, the spliceosome not only wields the scissors, it”s also “the brain that decides where to cut,” said Walter.

The “footage” it works on is the genetic material contained in RNA molecules.

RNA carries coded instructions for producing the proteins our body needs for building and repairing tissues, regulating body processes and many other sections called introns. The spliceosome”s task is to recognize and excise introns.

Once the introns are removed, the spliceosome can stitch together exons in various combinations.

And owing to this mixing and matching of exons, a relatively small number of genes (a little over 20,000 in humans) can serve as blueprints for a great variety of proteins.

Walter and colleagues spied on the splicing process by attaching fluorescent tags to exons on either side of an intron in a short section of RNA they designed specifically for such studies.

“Conventional wisdom has been that the spliceosome directs the whole splicing process, that the RNA itself has little influence on it. But we saw the RNA molecule flexing on its own, with the intron folding and unfolding in a way that brings the exons closer together, suggesting a more active role for introns,” Nature quoted Walter as saying.

When the team added an extract containing spliceosome components, along with ATP—the energy currency that fuels spliceosome assembly—the distance between exons first increased, then decreased even more, and splicing occurred.

Interestingly, the series of contortions that RNA went through during splicing was not a one-way path; the steps were reversible.

“Imagine the movie director having doubts about what scenes to cut and continuously going back and forth in holding different pieces of footage together before actually making a decision and splicing the film. That”s what we saw happening at the molecular level. To our knowledge, our data provide the first direct glimpse of such reversible conformational changes during the splicing process,” said Walter.

The research is published in Nature Structural and Molecular Biology. (ANI)

Nearby bone cells may trigger some blood cancers

Certain blood cancers may be triggered by signals sent from surrounding bone cells, not by individual cells going bad, and interrupting those signals may offer a new approach to treating leukemia, US researchers said.

“Cancer is generally thought to be a single cell going rogue. It does so by accumulating a series of genetic injuries,” said Dr. David Scadden of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, whose study appears in the journal Nature.

But Scadden and colleagues instead found that genetic changes in bone cells — where blood stem cells reside — can cause mice to develop myelodysplasia, a condition that can lead to an acute form of the blood cancer leukemia.

Studies in mice showed that when the team altered a gene in the bone cells called Dicer1, it had a damaging effect on blood stem cells as well.

“The blood started to take on a picture which resembled a very poorly understood human disease called myelodysplasia,” Scadden, who directs the Center for Regenerative Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, said in a telephone interview.

“It has a complication of developing leukemia,” he said, which is exactly what some of the animals in the study did.

“The reason that this is important is it says the environment can actually become such an important part of the function of the tissue — the blood in this case — that it can lead to the emergence of new genetic abnormalities that can become fatal for the whole organism,” Scadden said.

He said the findings offer a new understanding of the source of some cancers, which can come from outside of cells.

Scadden said interrupting the communication between surrounding cells and cancer cells could offer another approach to making cancer drugs.
Agencies

Bone Stem Cells can be used to mend damaged hips

London, Mar.20 (ANI): Bone stem cells could in future be used instead of bone from donors as part of an innovative new hip replacement treatment, according to scientists at the University of Southampton.

A team from the University’s School of Medicine believe that introducing a patient’s own skeletal stem cells into the hip joint during bone grafting would encourage more successful regrowth and repair.

The grafting technique is used to repair the thigh bone and joint during replacement (known as ”revision”) hip replacement therapy, a procedure in which surgeons introduce donor bone to the damaged area to provide support for the new hip stem.

In this collaborative study between the University of Southampton and The University of Nottingham, researchers will use adult stem cells from bone marrow in combination with an innovative impaction process and polymer scaffolds.

In a two-year study, funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC), researchers aim to improve the outcomes of this high impact procedure.

“Surgeons currently use bone from donors during bone grafting, so introducing a patient’s own stem cells to create a living cell or material composite would be a totally new approach,” comments Professor Richard Oreffo, an expert in musculoskeletal science at the University of Southampton, who is leading the project.

“This is very much the beginning of a project to investigate the potential for this new technique, but our preliminary work suggests this may have significant therapeutic implications.”

When a hip joint is damaged, part of the thigh bone or femur, including the ball, can be removed and a new, artificial joint fixed to the remaining thigh bone. Revision hip replacement occurs when that artificial joint needs to be changed.

Professor Oreffo will introduce the stem cells to the hip joint using a scaffold, or support structure, which is designed to protect them, and a new impaction process. The polymer scaffolds will be developed by Professors Steve Howdle and Kevin Shakesheff, experts in chemistry and tissue engineering at the University of Nottingham.

Professor Howdle explains: “Building upon strong collaborations with tissue engineering experts, this new grant will allow researchers at Nottingham to take their materials nearer to the clinic.

“This could have great benefits for patients, and also offer a significant cost saving for healthcare authorities; but first we need to verify and build upon our preliminary data.”

“A major part of the work at Nottingham will involve scaling up the supercritical fluid processing apparatus to create larger and more uniform batches of polymer scaffolds for testing.”

Dr Chris Watkins, MRC’s Translation Theme Leader, says: “Resilience, repair and replacement is a priority research area in the MRC’s strategic plan, ‘Research Changes Lives’. This study highlights how a regenerative approach can offer real hope in addressing a significant problem for an ageing population.”

This funding will allow the groups to build on initial studies that show that degradable polymer scaffolds prepared using supercritical carbon dioxide technology can have a dramatic effect on surgical procedures, such as inserting a hip implant in revision hip surgery.

The provisional studies carried out in Southampton show that the polymers can aid bone formation through the creation of a living cell/material composite and aid attachment of the hip implant.

Limited impact tipped from valuation shift

A senior State Government official says a new system of land valuations should have little impact on residential property owners.

The Government has agreed to start using “site valuations” from next year in line with other states.

The change has been made after negotiations with developer and business groups,

Director General of the Department of Environment and Resource Management John Bradley says the new valuation should be comparable if no earth or drainage works have been carried out on a residential property.

“It’s only where your property’s required some improvement where there’ll be any difference at all,” he said.

“That is why we say this move to site valuation is not expected to have any significant impact on the valuations of residential property in Queensland.”

Evan Hall from lobby group The Tourism and Transport Forum has welcomed the new approach to land valuation says he wants to study the detail.

“This is a method that is used in all other states – it is tried and tested and the industry understands it,” he said.

“That means they are going to have a great deal more predictability about what their land tax will be in the future.

“The Government has assured us they are more than happy to consult on how that legislation would impact on tourism businesses but the site valuation method that they are proposing is on the whole a good method.”

Mr Hall says the forum wants to make sure there are no huge adjusment costs in moving to a new land tax arrangement.

“But it is fairer and it is simpler and it is gonna take out a lot of the heat of the land tax valuations,” he said.

“It really ideally should not make much difference at all to the land tax bill that each tourism business would get.

“What it is going to do is provide certainty that you are not going to have wild fluctuations from one year to the next.”

Winds turbines may hasten extinction of endangered vulture in Spain

London, September 7 (ANI): The results of a new study indicate that winds turbines might be hastening the local extinction of an endangered vulture in southern Spain.

Studies have so far focused on the short-term effects of wind turbines, looking at the number of bird collisions per turbine per year.

According to a report in New Scientist, Martina Carrete of the Donana Biological Station in Seville and colleagues took a new approach.

They recorded the number of Egyptian vulture carcasses with collision injuries found around 675 wind turbines in southern Spain between 2004 to 2008.

They then plugged this information and data on wind turbine locations and vulture nesting sites across Spain into a computer model to predict what will happen to the entire population of Spanish birds over the next 100 years.

The results suggest that if the number of wind turbines stays the same as it is today, the population will go extinct 10 years sooner than if there were no wind farms.

If the number of turbines stays the same as it is today, the vultures’ demise will happen much earlier. (ANI)

Novel device to wash away bedsores, chronic ulcers

Washington, Aug 27 (ANI): Researchers at Tel Aviv University have developed a unique device, called Dermastream, which could heal bedsores and chronic ulcers in bedridden elderly and infirm.

When ill, such people are prone to painful and dangerous pressure ulcers, and diabetics are susceptible to wounds caused by a lack of blood flow to the extremities.

“The problem is chronic,” said Prof. Amihay Freeman of TAU’s Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology.

And thus, he developed Dermastream, that uses a solution to whisk away dead tissue, bathing the wound while keeping dangerous bacteria away.

The device provides an enzyme-based solution that flows continuously over the wound, offering an alternative treatment to combat a problem for which current treatments are costly and labour-intensive.

Freeman said that Dermastream has already passed clinical trials in Israeli hospitals and may be available in the U.S. within the next year.

Dermastream employs a special solution developed at Freeman’s TAU laboratory, thus offering a new approach to chronic wound care- a specialty known as “continuous streaming therapy.”

“Our basic idea is simple. We treat the wound by streaming a solution in a continuous manner. Traditional methods require wound scraping to remove necrotic tissue. That is expensive, painful and extremely uncomfortable to the patient.

And while active ingredients applied with bandages on a wound may work for a couple of hours, after that the wound fights back. The bacteria build up again, creating a tedious and long battle,” said Freeman.

Dermastream “flows” under a plastic cover that seals the wound, providing negative pressure that promotes faster healing.

The active biological ingredient, delivered in a hypertonic medium, works to heal hard-to-shake chronic wounds.

Freeman said that while traditional bandaging methods may take months to become fully effective, Dermastream can heal chronic wounds in weeks.

Dermastream is intended for use in hospitals, nursing homes, outpatient clinics and homecare.

Freeman has founded a company that is currently collaborating with a Veterans Association hospital in Tucson, AZ, to bring the technology to the U.S. market.

“My solution helps doctors regain control of the chronic wound, making management more efficient, and vastly improving the quality of their patients’ lives,” concluded Freeman. (ANI)

New technique to help Parkinson’s patients speak louder

Washington, Aug 26 (ANI): Scientists from Purdue University’s Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences have come up with a novel technique that would help Parkinson’s patients speak louder.

“People with Parkinson’s disease commonly have voice and speech problems,” said Jessica Huber, an associate professor in Purdue’s Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences.

“At some point in their disease they will have some form of voice or speech disorder that generally occurs a little later in the disease,” she added.

The most common therapy, the Lee Silverman voice treatment program, trains patients to speak louder in one-hour sessions four days a week for a month.

“Some Parkinson’s patients do great with this approach, but others do not. They forget to keep speaking louder the minute they have left the therapy room,” said Huber.

Lee Silverman tends to work less for people with later stages of disease or those who have some cognitive decline.

Huber used a new approach: The patients were asked to speak louder while a recording of background “multitalker babble noise” was played. The noise is essentially the sound of a restaurant full of patrons, but without the clattering silverware and clinking glasses.

“They had an easier time getting louder when I had the noise in the room,” she said.

“Ordinarily, when I asked them to be twice as loud they would say they couldn’t. They couldn’t speak 10 decibels louder, but when I turned on the babble noise, they spoke over 10 decibels louder,” she added.

In the device built by engineering resources manager Jim Jones and senior research engineer Kirk Foster, both in the Weldon School, the voice-activated device automatically plays the background babble when the person begins to speak.

A sensor placed on the neck detects that the person has begun to speak and tells the device to play the babble through an earpiece worn by the patient.

“I got the idea that if we train them with a natural cue in their everyday environment, we will probably get better results. We ask them to wear the system for about four hours a day as they go about their daily routine,” she added.(ANI)

Commando battalions and women RPF squads for passenger security

New Delhi, July 3 (ANI): The Indian Railways will raise Commando Battalions and will increase the number of women commandos. This has been envisaged in the Railway Budget 2009-10 presented in the Lok Sabha today.

Presenting the Budget, Mamata Banerjee said that women RPF squads would be deployed for security of women passengers, particularly in sections where a large number of women travel alone regularly.

She said that though law and order is a State subject, the Railways would work together with all the agencies concerned to ensure safe journey for the passengers.

Regarding the safety related matters, she said that the present mechanism of cost sharing for the construction of road over bridges and road under bridges between the Railways and the State Governments needed to be reviewed as such bridges are extremely important from safety point of view.

The Minister emphasised that a new approach in this regard would be developed with assured funding to ensure turnkey execution of these projects and sought Planning Commission’s support in this regard.

“Anti-Collision device will be put in place in 1700 km in two years. This device prevents train collision and is operational in 1736 track so far,” she said. (ANI)

Duck-billed dino ate unlike anything alive today

Washington, June 30 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have found evidence that the duck-billed dinosaurs – the Hadrosaurs – had a unique way of eating, unlike any living creature today.

Working with researchers from the Natural History Museum, the study uses a new approach to analyze the feeding mechanisms of dinosaurs and understand their place in the ecosystems of tens of millions of years ago.

According to paleontologist Mark Purnell of the University of Leicester Department of Geology, who led the research, “For millions of years, until their extinction at the end of the Cretaceous, duck-billed dinosaurs – or hadrosaurs – were the world’s dominant herbivores.”

They must have been able to break down their food somehow, but without the complex jaw joint of mammals they would not have been able to chew in the same way, and it is difficult to work out how they ate.

It is also unclear what they ate. They might have been grazers, cropping vegetation close to the ground – like today’s cows and sheep – or browsers, eating leaves and twigs – more like deer or giraffes.

Not knowing the answers to these questions makes it difficult to understand Late Cretaceous ecosystems and how they were affected during the major extinction event 65 million years ago.

“Our study uses a new approach based on analysis of the microscopic scratches that formed on hadrosaur’s teeth as they fed, tens of millions of years ago,” said Purnell.

“The scratches have been preserved intact since the animals died. They can tell us precisely how hadrosaur jaws moved, and the kind of food these huge herbivores ate, but nobody has tried to analyze them before,” he added.

The researchers sadi that the scratches reveal that the movements of hadrosaur teeth were complex and involved up and down, sideways and front to back motion.

According to Paul Barrett palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum, “This shows that hadrosaurs did chew, but in a completely different way to anything alive today. Rather than a flexible lower jaw joint, they had a hinge between the upper jaws and the rest of the skull.”

“As they bit down on their food the upper jaws were forced outwards, flexing along this hinge so that the tooth surfaces slid sideways across each other, grinding and shredding food in the process,” he said. (ANI)

Teleportation may soon be a reality!

Sydney, June 22 (ANI): Australian scientists have developed a new method for transmitting data with light that may lead to the development of teleportation technology and super-fast quantum computers.

According to a report in www.news.com.au, the research team, from the Australian National University, developed a new approach to generating quantum entanglement in beams of light using only two parts.

Quantum entanglement is a process in which two objects are linked together in such a way that any changes to the properties of one can be measured from the other regardless of the distance between them.

This process of linking particles has existed for a few years, but according to team leader Dr Jiri Janousek, this new method allows it to be achieved in a much simpler way.

“Usually, when you want to generate entanglement you need a lot of sources of light and a lot of receivers but we found a way to use only one source and one receiver to generate and measure entanglement,” Dr Janousek said.

Dr Janousek and his team’s new method involves entangling two specially modified beams of light so that changes to the amplitude or phase of one beam can be measured with the other.

Dr Janousek said that by only using two parts, it allows the technology to be more easily scaled up opening a number of potential uses in technologies ranging from computing, communications and even teleportation.

“This finding is one more piece in the puzzle towards the future realisation of quantum computers, which would be many times faster and more powerful than existing computers,” he said.

“For teleportation, you again need a source of entangled beams; so in effect, it could be used for teleportation as well,” he added.

But, Dr Janousek said that it will be a while before this technology works its way into any consumer devices.

“We always talk about 50 years as where we could get real machines that could use the technologies which we have developed so far,” he said. (ANI)

Genes behind ageing process identified

London, May 26 (ANI): British scientists have identified genes that control the ageing process.

The finding could lead to new drugs to prevent illnesses from heart disease to Alzheimer’s.

In the laboratory, researchers have found that mutations could extend the lifespan of animals such as worms, fruit flies and mice, and appear to play the same role in humans.

Professor Linda Partridge, director of the Institute of Healthy Ageing at University College London, has said that the research could help in the treatment or delay of many diseases simultaneously with medication.

She added that tackling the very causes of ageing, instead of treating the symptoms, could be the best way of dealing with the diseases that result from it.

In her opinion, such scientific advances are offering up hope to improve health during ageing in humans and inspiring a new wave in ageing research.

“Research on the diseases associated with ageing is generally done by separate communities of research workers who read different journals, attend different conferences and generally do not communicate with each other,” The Telegraph quoted Partridge as saying.

She added: “But by tacking the causes of ageing itself we could treat, or at least delay, a broad spectrum of conditions simultaneously.”

Drugs, which inhibit the nutrient pathways in humans, could replicate the effects of a healthy diet.

And thus, they can act not only to increase lifespan but also to target a broad range of ageing related diseases such as cardiovascular disease, cancers, diabetes and Alzheimer’s.

Partridge said that the research indicates a new approach to the treatment of age-related conditions.

“The major burden of ill health is in the older section of the population. The new discoveries about ageing have raised the prospect of increasing the number of years that people enjoy in good health, with broad-spectrum preventative medicines for the diseases of ageing,” said Linda.

She will present the findings at a public lecture at the Royal Society in London. (ANI)

New approach may pave way for effective HIV vaccine

Washington, May 23 (ANI): Using gene transfer technology, scientists have developed a new approach to overcome the biggest hurdle in the development of an effective HIV vaccine.

The researchers used gene transfer technology, which produces molecules that block infection, to successfully protect monkeys from infection by a virus closely related to HIV-the simian immunodeficiency virus, or SIV-that causes AIDS in rhesus monkeys.

“We used a leapfrog strategy, bypassing the natural immune system response that was the target of all previous HIV and SIV vaccine candidates,” Nature magazine quoted study leader Dr. Philip R. Johnson, chief scientific officer at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, as saying.

Johnson developed the novel approach over a ten-year period, but warned that many hurdles still remain before the technique could be translated into an HIV vaccine for humans.

Most attempts at developing an HIV vaccine have used substances aimed at stimulating the body’s immune system to produce antibodies or killer cells that would eliminate the virus before or after it infected cells in the body. But, the approach has not been proved fruitful until now.

However, the approach used in the current study was divided into two phases-in the first phase, researchers created antibody-like proteins (called immunoadhesins) that were specifically designed to bind to SIV and block it from infecting cells.

After it was proven to work against SIV in the laboratory, DNA representing SIV-specific immunoadhesins was engineered into a carrier virus designed to deliver the DNA to monkeys.

The researchers chose adeno-associated virus (AAV) as the carrier virus because it is a very effective way to insert DNA into the cells of a monkey or human.

In the second part of the study, the team injected AAV carriers into the muscles of monkeys, where the imported DNA produced immunoadhesins that entered the blood circulation.

After a month of administrating the AAV carriers, the immunized monkeys were injected with live, AIDS-causing SIV.

It was found that the majority of the immunized monkeys were completely protected from SIV infection, and all were protected from AIDS, unlike a group of unimmunized monkeys, who were infected by SIV, and two-thirds died of AIDS complications.

“To ultimately succeed, more and better molecules that work against HIV, including human monoclonal antibodies, will be needed,” said Johnson and his co-authors.

The study has appeared in the online version of Nature Medicine. (ANI)

New approach may pave way for effective HIV vaccine

Washington, May 18 (ANI): Using gene transfer technology, scientists have developed a new approach to overcome the biggest hurdle in the development of an effective HIV vaccine.

The researchers used gene transfer technology, which produces molecules that block infection, to successfully protect monkeys from infection by a virus closely related to HIV-the simian immunodeficiency virus, or SIV-that causes AIDS in rhesus monkeys.

“We used a leapfrog strategy, bypassing the natural immune system response that was the target of all previous HIV and SIV vaccine candidates,” Nature magazine quoted study leader Dr. Philip R. Johnson, chief scientific officer at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, as saying.

Johnson developed the novel approach over a ten-year period, but warned that many hurdles still remain before the technique could be translated into an HIV vaccine for humans.

Most attempts at developing an HIV vaccine have used substances aimed at stimulating the body’s immune system to produce antibodies or killer cells that would eliminate the virus before or after it infected cells in the body. But, the approach has not been proved fruitful until now.

However, the approach used in the current study was divided into two phases-in the first phase, researchers created antibody-like proteins (called immunoadhesins) that were specifically designed to bind to SIV and block it from infecting cells.

After it was proven to work against SIV in the laboratory, DNA representing SIV-specific immunoadhesins was engineered into a carrier virus designed to deliver the DNA to monkeys.

The researchers chose adeno-associated virus (AAV) as the carrier virus because it is a very effective way to insert DNA into the cells of a monkey or human.

In the second part of the study, the team injected AAV carriers into the muscles of monkeys, where the imported DNA produced immunoadhesins that entered the blood circulation.

After a month of administrating the AAV carriers, the immunized monkeys were injected with live, AIDS-causing SIV.

It was found that the majority of the immunized monkeys were completely protected from SIV infection, and all were protected from AIDS, unlike a group of unimmunized monkeys, who were infected by SIV, and two-thirds died of AIDS complications.

“To ultimately succeed, more and better molecules that work against HIV, including human monoclonal antibodies, will be needed,” said Johnson and his co-authors.

The study has appeared in the online version of Nature Medicine. (ANI)

Pillai says delaying Doha talks will hinder global trade

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Commerce Secretary G K Pillai said on Thursday that the dilly-dallying over the Doha round talks will further hinder prospects of global trade.

“They (WTO) are now saying that we now need a completely new approach. After eight years of Doha, they want negotiations. A new approach could take another five years. So the choice is you want to raise new issues and delay it and then reopen the whole thing after five years,” Pillai said.

Addressing a conference hosted by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) here, Pillai spoke on the level of uncertainty looming over the Doha round slated for January 2010 because of the US Trade Representative (USTR) suggestion of a totally ‘new approach’.

The theme of the conference was ‘Doha Round of Negotiations in World Trade Organisation (WTO): Taking stock and the way ahead’.

The new approach, Pillai said, may re-open negotiations on agreed issues and raise new issues such as labour and environment.

“It is not just one or two issues but there is a whole round of issues which need to be discussed at the Doha round. They are saying that the US has given too much in the negotiations and got too little in return,” the Commerce Secretary said.

The Obama administration is mulling over how to proceed with the long-running Doha round of world trade talks, which the US farm groups and manufacturers have criticized.

The USTR had complained that the USA was giving too much in negotiations and getting too little in return. (ANI)

Bill Clinton believes US foreign policy is doing well under Obama

Virginia (US), May 14 (ANI): Former US President Bill Clinton believes American foreign policy is being managed well by the Obama administration, and does not give much value to criticisms of it by former Vice -President Dick Cheney.

At a campaign event for Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe, Clinton said he disagreed with Cheney’s assertion that Obama’s foreign policies have made the nation less safe.

“I like this new approach. I think it will serve us well,” he said, referring to the administration’s diplomatic outreach to countries that were isolated by Bush officials.

In a round of media appearances, Cheney has criticized the Obama administration on a number of issues, including releasing memos detailing Bush-era enhanced interrogation techniques.

Asked whether he was surprised by Cheney’s criticisms, Clinton said: “He feels very strongly about it. I think that the president and secretary of state will prove to have better aim in foreign policy.” (ANI)