Virgin birth may be sharks” secret survival strategy

London, April 30 (ANI): Parthenogenesis – a form of asexual reproduction found in females, where growth and development of embryos occurs without fertilization by a male – may be part of an extreme survival strategy for sharks, say researchers.

In parthenogenesis, females” eggs start dividing without being fertilised. This produces daughters that are genetically similar to the mother.

It was first observed in a captive hammerhead shark in 2001, but this was an isolated incident, and the shark pup died after three days, making it difficult to say much about its evolutionary significance.

Kevin Feldheim at the Field Museum in Chicago, and an international team of colleagues, have now shown that the incident was not exceptional and sharks born from a virgin mother can survive for many years.

The team were inspired by the 2001 birth to keep eggs produced by a captive white-spotted bamboo shark at the Belle Isle Aquarium of the Detroit Zoological Institute.

The female had never encountered a male during her adult life and biologists had assumed the eggs were infertile.

To their surprise seven incubated eggs produced two pups that survived five years before they were transferred to another facility. Genetic analysis confirmed that they were parthenogens.

“This suggests that parthenogenesis is a viable shark survival strategy,” New Scientist quoted Paulo Prodohl of Queen”s University Belfast, UK, as saying.

The findings have been published in the Journal of Heredity. (ANI)

Ancient Irish skeletons could help solve mystery of rare genetic bone disease

Dublin, August 25 (ANI): Two ancient skeletons with a rare genetic bone disease unearthed from a medieval Irish graveyard may hold key insights for medical experts in solving the mysterious ailment.

The two skeletons – one around 800-years-old and the other 1,100-years-old – dug up along with the remains of more than 1,000 men, women and children from the Ballyhanna graveyard site at Ballyshannon, Co Donegal, have attracted the attention of international medical researchers.

There have only been 16 cases of the hereditary bone growth disorder, now known as multiple osteochondromas, identified in ancient remains worldwide.

Dr Eileen Murphy, an archaeology lecturer at Queen’s University Belfast, believes that the discovery of the remains – afflicted by massive bone growths – could help modern-day clinicians glean more information about that unusual debilitating condition.

According to Dr Murphy, the two cases could “help inform clinicians” in understanding the disease.

“I think it is good for clinicians to look at how diseases change and the way they turn up in the body over time. Some of the Jericho cases (dating from the Middle Bronze Age) are very old and can show if it has progressed in any way or mutated,” said Dr Murphy, who is writing a paper on the two cases.

A sample of the 800-year-old remains from Skeleton 331 known as ‘Ballyhanna Man’ was sent to a genetics unit in Italy for further examination.

“We took a sample of the bone to send off to genetics units but the DNA in the bone was too degraded,” Dr Murphy explained.

However, the research team holds hopes that in the future, a specialized laboratory may be able to extract DNA of sufficient quality for analysis to provide clues as to the evolution of the disease, which is estimated to affect one in 50,000 people.

Researchers from the Institute of Technology in Sligo and Queen’s University Belfast are collaborating on the Ballyhanna project.

The 800-year-old remains of the worst-affected man, who died aged between 25 to 35 years old, showed he would have been physically disabled due to massive bony projections.

It is likely that he would have suffered from pain and have been recognized by others as having a physically debilitating condition from a young age.

The remains of the other man, who died a few hundred years earlier aged around 35-50 years, had less prominent growths.

In both cases, they were interred in the community graveyard, suggesting they were not shunned and treated as equals. (ANI)

Kamalesh Sharma elected chancellor of Queen’s University Belfast

London, Aug 25 (ANI): Commonwealth Secretary General Kamalesh Sharma has been appointed as the new chancellor of the Queen’s University Belfast (QUB).

Sharma succeeds Senator George J. Mitchell.

Sharma has been the Secretary General of the Commonwealth of Nations from 2008, having previously served as the High Commissioner for India in London.

He was elected to the position of Secretary General over Michael Frendo, foreign Minister of Malta, during the biennial Commonwealth Summit in Kampala, Uganda in2007.

He took over from Sir Don McKinnon of New Zealand on April 1. 008.

He served as India’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations before his retirement from IFS.

From 2002 to 2004, he served as U.N. Secretary General’s special representative to East Timor. (ANI)

Dogs play doc, can sniff out diabetes danger

AYLESBURY (ENGLAND): Dogs are being trained in Britain as potential life-savers to warn diabetic owners when their blood sugar levels fall to dangerously low levels, experts said. Man’s best friend already has been shown capable of sniffing out certain cancer cells, and dogs have long been put to work in the hunt for illegal drugs and explosives.

Their new front-line role in diabetes care follows recent evidence suggesting a dog’s hyper-sensitive nose can detect tiny changes that occur when a person is about to have a hypoglycemic attack. A survey last December by researchers at Queen’s University Belfast found 65% of 212 people with insulin-dependent diabetes reported that when they had a hypoglycemic episode their pets had reacted by whining, barking, licking or some other display.

At the Cancer and Bio-Detection Dogs research centre in Aylesbury, southern England, animal trainers are putting that finding into practice and honing dogs’ innate skills. The charity has 17 rescue dogs at various stages of training that will be paired up with diabetic owners, many of them kids. “Dogs have been trained to detect certain odours down to parts per trillion, so we are talking tiny, tiny amounts. Their world is really very different to ours,” chief executive Claire Guest said.

The move into diabetes followed the case of Paul Jackson, who told Guest and her team about his dog Tinker who warns him when his sugar levels get too low and he is in danger of collapsing. “It’s generally licking my face, panting beside me. It depends how far I have gone before he realises,” Jackson said. The centre was started five years ago by orthopaedic surgeon John Hunt, who wanted to probe anecdotes about dogs pestering their owners repeatedly on parts of their body that were later found to be cancerous. Tinker has now been trained and is a fully qualified Diabetic Hypo-Alert dog, complete with red jacket to announce himself as a working assistance animal.

Queen’s University Belfast confers honorary doctorate on Kalam

LONDON: Internationally-renowned space scientist and former President A P J Abdul Kalam was conferred with honorary Doctorate of Laws by Queen’s University Belfast, a prominent varsity based in Northern Ireland.

Dr Kalam, who is popularly known as India’s ‘missile man’, received the honour at a special ceremony last evening from Vice Chancellor of the University Professor Peter Gregson for “distinction in public service.”

The ceremony was the latest development in QUB’s growing connections with India, where the university has recently forged several dynamic academic partnerships.

Gregson said: “Through Dr Kalam’s outstanding abilities as a world statesman, scientist, educator and visionary, he has inspired millions in his native India and around the world.

“It is a significant honour for Queen’s to host this visit from the former leader of one of the world’s most thriving and exciting countries. A number of distinguished Indian institutions hold a special place within the Queen’s family of academic partners and Dr Kalam’s visit is a tangible example of the educational, research, business and cultural links between India and Northern Ireland.”

Queen’s has produced the world’s first low-cost technology to provide arsenic-free water to people in India and has been selected by the British Council to provide groundwater management training in regions polluted by arsenic.

As part of its Centenary celebrations last year, the university launched its Queen’s-India Lecture Series. Lord Diljit Rana, India’s Honorary Consul to Northern Ireland, and Northern Ireland’s Minister for Employment and Learning, Sir Reg Empey were present on the occasion.

A former Principal Scientific Adviser to the Government of India, Dr Kalam is also an award-winning aerospace engineer who played a leading role in many of India’s most recent technological breakthroughs, including the landing of India’s first unmanned lunar spacecraft in November last year.

In 2007, he was awarded the prestigious King Charles II medal of the Royal Society and in April this year he became the first Asian to receive the Hoover Medal, America’s top engineering prize.

Sir Reg Empey, Minister for Employment and Learning, said: “The conferment of an honorary degree on Dr Abdul Kalam, a pre-eminent scientist and a widely respected former President, reflects the breadth and depth of the collaborations between Queen’s University and India.

“My department strongly supports the collaborations being forged in seeking to further strengthen the vital bridge between India and Northern Ireland.”

QUB’s links with India include student exchanges between the School of English and Hyderabad University under the Prime Ministers Initiative and a research partnership with the National Institute of Immunology, Delhi which focuses on cancer biology and is supported by the Ministry of Biotechnology.

In 2008, QUB opened the East India Water Research Centre in partnership with Bengal Engineering and Science University and India’s Institute of Environmental Management and Studies.

Scientists discover eco-friendly way for wood dissolution (Corrected)

Washington, May 21 (ANI): Scientists at Queen’s University, Belfast, have discovered a new eco-friendly method of dissolving wood using ionic liquids that may help its transformation into popular products such as bio fuels, textiles, clothes and paper.

Dr Hector Rodríguez and Professor Robin Rogers from the University’s School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering worked along with The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, to come up with a more cost and energy efficient way of processing wood.

Their solution may see a new sustainable future for industry based on bio-renewable resources.

At present, wood is broken down mainly by the Kraft pulping process, which originates from the 19th century and uses a wasteful technology relying on polluting chemicals.

The key reason for tolerating this method is that it is very difficult to break down and separate the different elements of wood.

Until now, any alternatives to the process have presented similar problems.

The Queen’s researchers found that chips of both softwood and hardwood dissolved completely in ionic liquid and only mild conditions of temperature and pressure were needed.

By controlled addition of water and a water-acetone mixture, the dissolved wood was partially separated into a cellulose-rich material and pure lignin.

This process is much more environmentally-friendly than the current method as it uses less heat and pressure and produces very low toxicity while remaining biodegradable.

According to Professor Robin Rogers, “This is a very important discovery because cellulose and lignin have a wide variety of uses. Cellulose can be used to make products such as paper, biofuels, cotton and linen, as well as many other commodity materials and chemicals.”

“Lignin can be used to create performance additives in various applications, such as strengthening cars and airplanes with a fraction of the weight of conventional reinforcement materials. It is also a source of other chemicals which are mainly obtained from petroleum-based resources,” he said.

“The discovery is a significant step towards the development of the biorefinery concept, where biomass is transformed to produce a wide variety of chemicals,” said Dr Hector Rodríguez.

“Eventually, this may open a door to a truly sustainable chemical industry based on bio-renewable resources,” he added.

The researchers are hoping to eventually achieve better dissolution under even softer conditions and are also trying to achieve complete separation of the different elements in one single step.(ANI)

Liam Neeson finally becomes a graduate after 40 years

London, May 8 (ANI): Almost 40 years after enrolling in Queen’s University, Belfast, Oscar-nominated actor Liam Neeson has finally received his doctorate from the university.

The ‘Schindler’s List’ actor, born in Ballymena, was still an undergraduate at Queen’s in 1971 as a Physics and Computer Science student, when he left to work in ‘Guinness’.

And Vice-Chancellor Professor Peter Gregson finally awarded the 56-year-old actor an honorary doctorate in New York.

The actor said that he would “finally” be able to tell his mother that he had graduated.

On the occasion, the professor even spilled out some details from the actor’s original university application form from 1970.

Gregson awarded the actor with a Doctorate of the University for his Outstanding Contribution and Service to the Arts.

Neeson said that Northern Ireland would “always be home”.

“I have often found that no matter where I meet people in the world, there is a path that leads back to Queen’s,” the BBC quoted him as saying.

He added: “Queen’s University flies the flag for the arts in Northern Ireland and beyond. It is to be commended on its commitment to the arts sector and in nurturing new talent through its broad range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses.”

Liam Neeson has starred in more than 50 television and film productions and was nominated for an Oscar for his performance as Oskar Schindler in Schindler’s List.

In March, his wife of 15 years, Natasha Richardson, died of head injuries after a fall at a ski resort in Quebec. (ANI)

Crabs not only suffer pain but remember it as well

Washington, March 27 (ANI): A new study by a Queen’s University Belfast academic has shown that crabs not only suffer pain but that they retain a memory of it.

The study, which looked at the reactions of hermit crabs to small electric shocks, was carried out by Professor Bob Elwood and Mirjam Appel from the School of Biological Sciences at Queen’s.

Professor Elwood, who previously carried out a study showing that prawns endure pain, said his research highlighted the need to investigate how crustaceans used in food industries are treated.

Hermit crabs have no shell of their own so inhabit other structures, usually empty mollusc shells.

Wires were attached to shells to deliver the small shocks to the abdomen of the some of the crabs within the shells.

The only crabs to get out of their shells were those which had received shocks, indicating that the experience is unpleasant for them.

This shows that central neuronal processing occurs rather than the response merely being a reflex.

Hermit crabs are known to prefer some species of shells more strongly than others and it was found that that they were more likely to come out of the shells they least preferred.

The main aim of the experiment, however, was to deliver a shock just under the threshold that causes crabs to move out of the shell, to see what happened when a new shell was then offered.

Crabs that had been shocked but had remained in their shell appeared to remember the experience of the shock because they quickly moved towards the new shell, investigated it briefly and were more likely to change to the new shell compared to those that had not been shocked.

According to Professor Elwood, “There has been a long debate about whether crustaceans including crabs, prawns and lobsters feel pain.”

“We know from previous research that they can detect harmful stimuli and withdraw from the source of the stimuli but that could be a simple reflex without the inner ‘feeling’ of unpleasantness that we associate with pain,” he said.

“This research demonstrates that it is not a simple reflex, but that crabs trade-off their need for a quality shell with the need to avoid the harmful stimulus,” he added.

“Trade-offs of this type have not been previously demonstrated in crustaceans. The results are consistent with the idea of pain being experienced by these animals,” he explained. (ANI)

Scientists develop novel way to fight MRSA

Washington, Mar 26 (ANI): Researchers at Queen’s University Belfast have developed new agents to fight MRSA and other so-called hospital superbugs that are resistant to antibiotics.

The fluids are a class of ionic liquids that not only kill colonies of these dangerous microbes, they also prevent their growth.

A team of eight researchers, led by Brendan Gilmore and Martyn Earle, from the Queen’s University Ionic Liquid Laboratories (QUILL) Research Centre developed these new antimicrobial agents.

Many types of bacteria, such as MRSA, exist in colonies that adhere to the surfaces of materials. The colonies often form coatings, known as biofilms, which protect them from antiseptics, disinfectants, and antibiotics.

“We have shown that when pitted against the ionic liquids we developed and tested, biofilms offer little or no protection to MRSA, or to seven other infectious microorganisms,” Earle said.

Ionic liquids, just like the table salt sprinkled on food, are salts. They consist entirely of ions – electrically-charged atoms or groups of atoms.

However, unlike table salt, which has to be heated to over 800o C to become a liquid, the ionic liquid antibiofilm agents remain liquid at the ambient temperatures found in hospitals.

One of the attractions of ionic liquids is the opportunity to tailor their physical, chemical, and biological properties by building specific features into the chemical structures of the positively-charged ions (the cations), and/or the negatively-charged ions (the anions).

“Our goal is to design ionic liquids with the lowest possible toxicity to humans while wiping out colonies of bacteria that cause hospital acquired infections,” Earle said.

The discovery is published in the scientific journal Green Chemistry. (ANI)

Studying asteroid before impact may lead to advance warning system for Earth

London, March 26 (ANI): Astronomers, for the first time, have observed a rare asteroid as it was hurtling towards our planet and have captured the only spectrum of it before it exploded in our atmosphere, which may lead to an advanced warning system for Earth.

The observation was made by UK astronomers, using the Science and Technology Facilities Council’s (STFC) William Herschel Telescope on La Palma.

The asteroid in question – 2008 TC3 – an 80 ton, 4 meter asteroid with a rare composition, was first sighted by US telescopes on 6th October 2008.

Subsequent observations by an international army of professional and amateur astronomers led to the discovery that it was racing towards our planet and was due to enter the atmosphere the following morning.

“This was the first ever predicted impact of an asteroid with the Earth and the very first time an asteroid of any size has been studied before impact,” said Professor Alan Fitzsimmons, from the Queen’s University Belfast.

“The faint observed brightness implied a small size, which in turn meant there was little advance warning,” he added.

According to Fitzsimmons, “It was important to try and figure out what type of asteroid it was before impact, which would give us a better idea of its size and where it came from.”

“This event shows we can successfully predict the impact of asteroids even with a short warning time, and obtain the astronomical observations necessary to estimate what will happen when the asteroid reaches us,” he said.

The spectrum gathered by the UK astronomers allowed them to obtain information on the size and composition of the asteroid and to establish the first direct link between an asteroid and the individual meteorites produced as it breaks up in our atmosphere.

Not only does this help to validate the whole process of remotely surveying asteroids, but comparing the asteroid and meteorite data tells us that 2008 TC3 may have only spent a few million years existing in the Inner Solar system before it hit our planet.

“This asteroid was made of a particularly fragile material that caused it to explode at a high 37 km altitude, before it was significantly slowed down, so that the few surviving fragments scattered over a large area,” explained Dr. Peter Jenniskens of the SETI institute in California.

“The recovered meteorites were unlike anything in our meteorite collections up to that point,” he added. (ANI)

“Corkscrew” waves on Sun may help solve solar mystery

Washington, March 20 (ANI): New pictures have revealed that mysterious “corkscrew” waves appear to be pushing heat from the sun’s surface to its outer atmosphere, which could help solve the mystery of how the sun is able to heat its atmosphere to millions of degrees hotter than its surface.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the pictures were taken with the help of the Swedish Solar Telescope in the Canary Islands.

The telescope was used to watch the motion of bright spots in the sun’s atmosphere that correspond to the release of millions of degrees of heat.

“These are vast, vast areas on the surface of the sun,” said study co-author David Jess, a solar physicist at Queen’s University Belfast in Ireland.

Each spot spans about 267,190 square miles (430,000 square kilometers), twice the size of the United Kingdom, but minuscule compared with the total area of the sun, he added.

“The spots are common over the sun’s surface, especially during energetic phases of the star’s 11-year cycles of high and low activity,” Jess said.

Each bright spot represents a place where the sun’s magnetic field lines form clusters that guide so-called Alfven waves into the atmosphere, according to the researchers.

First proposed in the 1940s, Alfven waves were finally detected in 2007, in solar plasmas.

But, a mystery remained: Are the observed waves purely magnetic or magneto-acoustic?

Magnetic waves would move in a corkscrew fashion, while magneto-acoustic waves would move back and forth like sound waves from a plucked guitar string.

The waves seen by the research team traveled at more than twice the speed of sound, moving through the sun’s surface layers for just a few moments, on average, before spilling their energy into the thin outer layers of the atmosphere.

“This creates the bright spots, which twisted left and right like corkscrews, possibly proving that Alfven waves are magnetic,” Jess said.

The finding may eventually allow scientists to use Alfven waves to revolutionize Earth’s energy needs.

“Now that we know how the sun uses Alfven waves, we may be able to reproduce them in power plants to distribute energy from fusion-an as-yet uncontrollable form of nuclear power created when two atoms fuse together,” Jess said. (ANI)