Exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke linked to liver disease

Washington, September 11 (ANI): People can develop liver disease even when they are exposed to second-hand tobacco smoke, according to a study.

Scientists at the University of California, Riverside (UCR) have found that exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke can lead to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), a common disease and rising cause of chronic liver injury wherein fat accumulates in the liver of people who drink little or no alcohol.

For their study, the researchers exposed some mice to second-hand cigarette smoke for a year in the lab, and observed fat build-up in their liver cells, a sign of NAFLD that eventually leads to liver dysfunction.

The researchers focused on two key regulators of lipid (fat) metabolism that are found in many human cells as well: SREBP (sterol regulatory element-binding protein) that stimulates synthesis of fatty acids in the liver, and AMPK (adenosine monophosphate kinase) that turns SREBP on and off.

They found that second-hand smoke exposure inhibits AMPK activity, which, in turn, causes an increase in activity of SREBP.

More active SREBP results in more fatty acids getting synthesized, they say.

The result is NAFLD induced by second-hand smoke, according to the researchers.

“Our study provides compelling experimental evidence in support of tobacco smoke exposure playing a major role in NAFLD development,” said Manuela Martins-Green, a professor of cell biology, who led the study.

“Our work points to SREBP and AMPK as new molecular targets for drug therapy that can reverse NAFLD development resulting from second-hand smoke. Drugs could now be developed that stimulate AMPK activity, and thereby inhibit SREBP, leading to reduced fatty acid production in the liver,” Martins-Green added.

A research article describing the study has been published in the Journal of Hepatology. (ANI)

Newly found natural odours could pave way for developing mosquito repellents

London, Aug 27 (ANI): In a lab study on fruit flies, entomologists led by an Indian origin scientist at the University of California, Riverside, have discovered a novel class of compounds that could help in developing inexpensive and safe mosquito repellents for combating West Nile virus and other deadly tropical diseases.

Under stress, fruit flies emit carbon dioxide (CO2) that serves as a warning to other fruit flies that danger or predators could be nearby.

The fruit flies are able to detect the CO2 and escape because their antennae are equipped with specialized neurons that are sensitive to the gas.

But fruits and other important food sources for fruit flies also emit CO2 as a by-product of respiration and ripening.

Researchers started to wonder how does fruit flied find their way to these foods, despite having an inherent tendency to avoid CO2.

However, Anandasankar Ray, an assistant professor in the Department of Entomology, and Stephanie Turner, his graduate student, have now identified a new class of odorants – chemical compounds with smells – present in ripening fruit that prevent the CO2-sensitive neurons in the antennae from functioning.

They discovered that particularly two odours, hexanol and 2,3- butanedione, are strong inhibitors of the CO2-sensitive neurons in the fruit fly.

The research has strong implications for control of deadly diseases transmitted by Culex mosquitoes such as West Nile virus disease and filariasis, an infectious tropical disease affecting the lymphatic system.

“CO2 emitted in human breath is the main attractant for the Culex mosquito to find people, aiding the transmission of these deadly diseases. In our experiments we identified hexanol, and a related odor, butanal, as strong inhibitors of CO2-sensitive neurons in Culex mosquitoes. These compounds can now be used to guide research in developing novel repellents and masking agents that are economical and environmentally safe methods to block mosquitoes’ ability to detect CO2 in our breath, thereby dramatically reducing mosquito-human contact,” Nature quoted Ray as saying.

Inhibitory odours not only play an important role in modifying insect behaviour, but the study found that some of these odours even have a long-term effect.

For example, the researchers found that some odours silenced the CO2 neuron in the fruit fly well beyond the period of application.

“To our surprise, we found that exposure to a long-term CO2 response inhibitor can exert a profound and specific effect on the behavior of the insect, even after the inhibitor is no longer in the environment.

This means this odorant could potentially be used to keep mosquitoes at bay for longer periods of time, benefiting people in areas where mosquito-transmitted diseases are prevalent,” said Ray.

The results of the study appear in Nature. (ANI)

Murray buys 5.45 million pound house with no tennis court

London, June 19 (ANI): British number one tennis player Andy Murray has reportedly bought a new 5.45 million pound house having a triple garage, a cinema and a Jacuzzi, but no tennis court.
Murray, 22, is to move from his riverside apartment in Wandsworth, south London, for the Regency home in Surrey.

He is expected to share the home with his girlfriend, Kim Sears, 21, an English student at Sussex University, The Telegraph reports.

The house was on sale for 5.45 million pound, but it is not known how much the sports star paid for it. It features a large rear lawn with summerhouse, an indoor swimming pool with sauna and jacuzzi, a library and games room.

Murray’s new neighbours will include Cheryl Cole and her husband Ashley, as well as John Terry and Didier Drogba.

Murray, who is a keen computer games fan, is expected to install PlayStation consoles in many of the rooms. Several of the machines were seen being moved from the London flat this week.

A series of cuddly toys, including large versions of the characters Winnie the Pooh, Tigger and Eeyore, were also spotted being moved. (ANI)

Fletcher asks Man U teammates not to slacken off at lowly Middlesbrough

London, May 2 (ANI): Darren Fletcher has asked his Manchester United teammates not to slacken off at lowly Middlesbrough today.

There is a big contrast between a Champions League semi-final and a trip to the Riverside.

Fletcher said today’s encounter must be taken as seriously as their midweek Euro win over with Arsenal, The Sun reported.

He said: “It is hard to top a Champions League semi-final, but you can’t raise your game for such an occasion and forget about fixtures like Middlesbrough away.

“If you do that, you’ll get hurt. It is why we have to raise our game every time we play,” he added.

Fletcher knows what can happen, having been in the United side that lost 4-1 at Boro in October 2005.

That prompted Roy Keane’s outspoken attack on his teammates and his eventual exit from Old Trafford.

“I was in the team that lost 4-1 up there. It was very disappointing,” Fletcher said. (ANI)

Scientists find key gene that allows plants to survive drought, freezing and heat

Washington, May 1 (ANI): A team of scientists from Canada, Spain and the United States has identified a key gene that allows plants to defend themselves against environmental stresses like drought, freezing and heat.

“Plants have stress hormones that they produce naturally and that signal adverse conditions and help them adapt,” said team member Peter McCourt, a professor of cell and systems biology at the University of Toronto.

“If we can control these hormones we should be able to protect crops from adverse environmental conditions which is very important in this day and age of global climate change,” he added.

The research team, led by Sean Cutler of the University of California, Riverside, has identified the receptor of the key hormone in stress protection called abscisic acid (ABA).

Under stress, plants increase their ABA levels, which help them survive a drought through a process not fully understood.

The area of ABA receptors has been a highly controversial topic in the field of plant biology that has involved retractions of scientific papers as well as the publication of papers of questionable significance.

A receptor is a protein molecule in a cell to which mobile signaling molecules may attach.

Usually at the top of a signaling pathway, the receptor functions like a boss relaying orders to the team below that then executes particular decisions in the cell.

“Scientists have been trying to solve the ABA receptor problem for more than 20 years, and claims for ABA receptors are not easily received by the scientific community,” said Cutler.

This team used a new approach called chemical genomics to identifying a synthetic chemical, designated pyrabactin, which specifically activates an ABA receptor in the model laboratory plant Arabidopsis.

With pyrabactin in hand, it was now possible to directly identify the ABA receptor.

“This approach not only found a gene that had been long sought by the plant science research community, but also showed that chemical genomics can identify new chemicals like pyrabactin that may have profound impacts on the way we farm in both the developing and developed world,” said McCourt. (ANI)

Bopara proving a big hit, clinches No.3 spot

London, Apr 30 (ANI): Indian origin England batsman Ravi Bopara has been preferred for the No.3 position for the first Test against West Indies, beating Michael Vaughan, Ian Bell and Owais Shah to get the coveted spot.

Coach Andy Flower spent Monday with the selectors – Miller, James Whitaker and Ashley Giles – at the National Academy in Loughborough. And the squad they emerged with has set England on a fresh course.

Miller quite rightly insisted that there are any number of players who can force their way back into contention for the Test squad, including Vaughan, he hoped it would send a clear message to the players that consistent, current performance will go rewarded, not reputation or perceived class.

Flower and Strauss both rate Bopara, 23, who impressed with a debut century in his maiden Test in Barbados.

“There was a lot of competition for that batting position, but Bopara now has the opportunity to stake a claim,” said Miller.

“He showed in Barbados he has the ability to play at Test level,” The Daily Express quoted Miller, as saying.

Bell might consider himself the most unlucky after having hit the form at the right time.

“We need to get him more passionate about playing so he doesn’t lose his place again,” said Miller.

Miller added that in a break with normal practice, the squad for the second Test at the Riverside is to be announced “towards the end” of the Lord’s Test. (ANI)

Keri Hilson Joins Keyshia Cole and The Dream on the 20-City ‘A Different Me’ Tour

Keri Hilson Joins Keyshia Cole and The Dream on the 20-City ‘A Different Me’
Tour

The Tour Kicks off May 13th in Cincinnati, Ohio

SANTA MONICA, Calif., April 20 /PRNewswire/ — Singer/Songwriter Keri Hilson
will join Keyshia Cole and The Dream on the A Different Me tour which will
kick off on May 13th in Cincinnati, Ohio. Riding on the success as a guest
artist on Lil Wayne’s “I Am Music Tour,” Hilson has been given another
opportunity to engage fans with an exciting stage performance during the
20-city tour.

Hilson’s debut album In A Perfect World recently debuted at #1 on Billboard’s
R and B/Hip Hop Chart. Her current single “Knock You Down,” featuring Kanye West
and Ne-Yo, is steadily climbing the charts, and the video landed today at the
#1 spot on BET’s 106 and Park.

Cole and Hilson collaborated on Hilson’s third single “Get Your Money Up,”
which is also featured on the new album.

Stay connected to Keri Hilson by visiting http://www.kerihilsonmusic.com/.

A DIFFERENT ME TOUR DATES
DATE CITY VENUE

Wednesday, May 13 Cincinnati Aronoff Center

Thursday, May 14 Milwaukee Riverside Theatre

Friday, May 15 Chicago Chicago Theatre

Saturday, May 16 Detroit Fox Theatre

Thursday, May 21 Atlanta Fox Theatre

Friday, May 22 Greensboro Special Events Arena

Saturday, May 23 Atlantic City Mark Etess Arena Taj Mahal

Sunday, May 24 NYC WAMU @ MSG

Thursday, May 28 DC Constitution Hall

Saturday, May 30 Norfolk Ntelos Pavilion

Sunday, May 31 Columbia, SC Township Auditorium

Tuesday, June 2 Newark NJPAC

Friday, June 5 Mashantucket, CT MGM Foxwoods

Saturday, June 6 Baltimore Pier Six Pavilion

Tuesday, June 9 Nashville Ryman Auditorium

Thursday, June 11 St. Louis Fox Theatre

Saturday, June 13 Dallas Nokia Live

Sunday, June 14 Houston Reliant Arena

Thursday, June 18 Oakland Paramount Theater

Saturday, June 20 LA Nokia

SOURCE Interscope Records

Yvette Gayle, +1-310-865-6278, fax, +1-310-865-7903, yvette.gayle@umusic.com,
or Fairley McCaskill, +1-310-865-9634, fax, +1-310-865-7903,
fairley.mccaskill@umusic.com, both for Interscope Records

TERI, SPIB to host international conference on ‘Biopesticides: Stakeholders Perspective’

New Delhi, Apr 7 (ANI/Business Wire India): The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) in collaboration with the Society for Promotion and Innovation of Biopesticides (SPIB) will organise the Fifth International Conference from April 26-30 in New Delhi.

The conference will witness the presence of about 600 delegates from around the globe to deliberate on the advancement and promotion of biopesticides from the “stakeholders’ perspectives”.

The conference will have insightful sessions on sustainable agriculture, environmental protection, eco-restoration and climate change.

A special exhibition-BioFair 2009 will feature organizations and industrial companies involved in the field of biopesticides and related topics.

Enthused by the opportunity that ICOB will be held in India, Dr Seema Wahab, Advisor, Dept of Biotechnology, Govt. of India and Organizing Secretary, ICOB-V said “This is the first International Conference on Biopesticides bringing India in the forefront in this specific area which is very important and relevant for sustainable agriculture and environmental protection”.

The conference will provide a platform for its stakeholders participating from various parts of the world-researchers, scientists from public and private sectors, planners, industrialists and end-users to share their knowledge, experiences and learning related to the development, production and application of biopesticides.

The participants will also elaborate the constraints they face, which will help in finding solutions collectively and in evolving a sustainable perspective plan for value chain network to increase the use of biopesticides.

Elaborating on the relevance of Biotechnology and TERI’s role to popularise its use, Dr. Nutan Kaushik, Fellow TERI said, “Food security is a major concern that needs to be tackled and is incorporated in National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) issued by the Government of India. For the past two decades many pests and diseases as major and limiting factors have affected the productivity of several crops. Crop protection plays an integral role in the global production of food which must satisfy increasing consumer demand. Concerns over the environment and human health impacts of chemical pesticides have led to considerable interest in the development of an alternative control method. Keeping this in mind, the conference will be of utmost importance.”

This conference is a part of the series of international conferences held previously in Thailand (1996), China (1998), Malaysia (2002), and Thailand (2005), promoted by the University of California, Riverside, USA, and Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.

It would bring to the fore, the fundamental and applied research on various aspects of biopesticides in pest and disease management in agriculture, forestry, public health, and the urban landscape. (ANI)

TERI, SPIB to host international conference on ‘Biopesticides: Stakeholders Perspective’

New Delhi, Apr 7 (ANI/Business Wire India): The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) in collaboration with the Society for Promotion and Innovation of Biopesticides (SPIB) will organise the Fifth International Conference from April 26-30 in New Delhi.

The conference will witness the presence of about 600 delegates from around the globe to deliberate on the advancement and promotion of biopesticides from the “stakeholders’ perspectives”.

The conference will have insightful sessions on sustainable agriculture, environmental protection, eco-restoration and climate change.

A special exhibition-BioFair 2009 will feature organizations and industrial companies involved in the field of biopesticides and related topics.

Enthused by the opportunity that ICOB will be held in India, Dr Seema Wahab, Advisor, Dept of Biotechnology, Govt. of India and Organizing Secretary, ICOB-V said “This is the first International Conference on Biopesticides bringing India in the forefront in this specific area which is very important and relevant for sustainable agriculture and environmental protection”.

The conference will provide a platform for its stakeholders participating from various parts of the world-researchers, scientists from public and private sectors, planners, industrialists and end-users to share their knowledge, experiences and learning related to the development, production and application of biopesticides.

The participants will also elaborate the constraints they face, which will help in finding solutions collectively and in evolving a sustainable perspective plan for value chain network to increase the use of biopesticides.

Elaborating on the relevance of Biotechnology and TERI’s role to popularise its use, Dr. Nutan Kaushik, Fellow TERI said, “Food security is a major concern that needs to be tackled and is incorporated in National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) issued by the Government of India. For the past two decades many pests and diseases as major and limiting factors have affected the productivity of several crops. Crop protection plays an integral role in the global production of food which must satisfy increasing consumer demand. Concerns over the environment and human health impacts of chemical pesticides have led to considerable interest in the development of an alternative control method. Keeping this in mind, the conference will be of utmost importance.”

This conference is a part of the series of international conferences held previously in Thailand (1996), China (1998), Malaysia (2002), and Thailand (2005), promoted by the University of California, Riverside, USA, and Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.

It would bring to the fore, the fundamental and applied research on various aspects of biopesticides in pest and disease management in agriculture, forestry, public health, and the urban landscape. (ANI)

Speech perception involves multiple senses, not just hearing

Washington, February 12 (ANI): While people generally think of speech as being something they hear, a report now suggests that speech perception involves multiple senses.

Published in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science, the report says that the brain treats speech as something that people hear, see, and even feel.

Psychologist Lawrence D. Rosenblum of the University of California, Riverside, says that people receive a lot of speech information via visual cues, such as lip-reading, and this type of visual speech occurs throughout all cultures.

He says that it is not just information from lips when someone is speaking, people even note the movements of the teeth, tongue and other non-mouth facial features.

The researcher says that it is likely that human speech perception has evolved to integrate many senses together, that is, speech is not meant to be just heard, but also to be seen.

The McGurk Effect is a well-characterized example of the integration between what we see and what we hear when someone is speaking to us.

Rosenblum points out that the phenomenon occurs when a sound is dubbed with a video showing a face making a different sound-for example, the audio may be playing “ba”, while the face looks as though it is saying “va”.

When confronted with this, we will usually hear “va” or a combination of the two sounds, such as “da.”

The McGurk Effect occurs even when participants are aware of the dubbing or told to concentrate only on the audio.

Rosenblum says that this is evidence that once senses are integrated together, it is not possible to separate them.

According to him, studies conducted recently show that this integration occurs very early in the speech process, even before the basic units of speech are established.

Rosenblum suggests that physical movement of speech-the movement of mouths and lips-creates acoustic and visual signals that have a similar form.

He argues that as far as the speech brain is concerned, the auditory and visual information are never really separate, which is why people integrate speech so readily and in such a way that the audio and visual speech signals become indistinguishable from one another.

Rosenblum concludes that visual-speech research has a number of clinical implications, especially in the areas of autism, brain injury and schizophrenia and that “rehabilitation programs in each of these domains have incorporated visual-speech stimuli.” (ANI)