Monday, October 3, 2011

Scientists discover 'fickle' DNA changes in brain

ScienceDaily (Sep. 30, 2011) ? Johns Hopkins scientists investigating chemical modifications across the genomes of adult mice have discovered that DNA modifications in non-dividing brain cells, thought to be inherently stable, instead underwent large-scale dynamic changes as a result of stimulated brain activity. Their report, in the October issue of Nature Neuroscience, has major implications for treating psychiatric diseases, neurodegenerative disorders, and for better understanding learning, memory and mood regulation.

Specifically, the researchers, who include a husband-and-wife team, found evidence of an epigenetic change called demethylation -- the loss of a methyl group from specific locations -- in the non-dividing brain cells' DNA, challenging the scientific dogma that even if the DNA in non-dividing adult neurons changes on occasion from methylated to demethylated state, it does so very infrequently.

"We provide definitive evidence suggesting that DNA demethylation happens in non-dividing neurons, and it happens on a large scale," says Hongjun Song, Ph.D., professor of neurology and neuroscience and director of the Stem Cell Program in the Institute for Cell Engineering of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "Scientists have previously underestimated how important this epigenetic mechanism can be in the adult brain, and the scope of change is dramatic."

DNA comprises the fixed chemical building blocks of each person or animal's genome, but the addition or removal of a methyl group at the specific location chemically alters DNA and regulates gene expression, enabling cells with the same genetic code to acquire and activate separate functions.

In previously published work, the same Hopkins researchers reported that electrical brain stimulation, such as that used in electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) for patients with drug resistant depression, resulted in increased brain cell growth in mice, due likely to changes in DNA methylation status.

This time, they again used electric shock to stimulate the brains of live mice. A few hours after administering the brain stimulation, the scientists analyzed two million of the same type of neurons from the brains of stimulated mice, focusing on what happens to one building block of DNA -- cytosine -- at 219,991 sites. These sites represented about one percent of all cytosines in the whole mouse genomes.

In collaboration with genomic biologist Yuan Gao, now at the Lieber Institute for Brain Development, the scientists used the latest DNA sequencing technology and compared neurons in mice with or without brain stimulation. About 1.4 percent of the cytosines measured showed rapid active demethylation or became newly methylated.

"It was mind-boggling to see that so many methylation sites -- thousands of sites -- had changed in status as a result of brain activity," Song says. "We used to think that the brain's epigenetic DNA methylation landscape was as stable as mountains and more recently realized that maybe it was a bit more subject to change, perhaps like trees occasionally bent in a storm. But now we show it is most of all like a river that reacts to storms of activity by moving and changing fast." The majority of the sites where the methylation status of the cytosine changed as a result of the brain activity were not in the expected areas of the genome that are traditionally believed to control gene expression, Song notes. Rather, they were in regions where cytosines are low in density, in genomic regions where the function of DNA methylation is not well understood.

Because DNA demethylation can occur passively during cell division, the scientists targeted radiation to the sections of mouse brains they were studying, permanently preventing passive cell division, and still found evidence of DNA demethylation. This confirms, they say, that the DNA methylation changes they measured occurred independently of cell division.

"Our finding opens up new opportunities to figure out if these epigenetic modifications are potential drug targets for treating depression and promote regeneration, for instance," says Guo-li Ming, M.D., Ph.D., professor of neurology and neuroscience.

This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, a McKnight Scholar Award, the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation, the Adelson Medical Research Foundation, and the Johns Hopkins Brain Science Institute.

Authors of the paper from Johns Hopkins in addition to Song and Ming are Junjie U. Guo, Dengke K. Ma, Eric Ford, Mi-Hyeon Jang, Michael A Bonaguidi and Yuan Gao.

Other authors are Huan Mo and Hugh L. Eaves of the Virginia Commonwealth University; Madeleine P. Ball, Harvard Medical School; Jacob A Balazer, Proofpoint Inc.; Bin Xie, Lieber Institute for Brain Development; and Kun Zhang, University of California at San Diego.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions.

Journal Reference:

  1. Junjie U Guo, Dengke K Ma, Huan Mo, Madeleine P Ball, Mi-Hyeon Jang, Michael A Bonaguidi, Jacob A Balazer, Hugh L Eaves, Bin Xie, Eric Ford, Kun Zhang, Guo-li Ming, Yuan Gao, Hongjun Song. Neuronal activity modifies the DNA methylation landscape in the adult brain. Nature Neuroscience, 2011; 14 (10): 1345 DOI: 10.1038/nn.2900

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/DMwExvVXY3Y/110930195143.htm

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US Supreme Court opens, likely to wade into health care debate

It seems inevitable that the US Supreme Court will agree to hear the legal challenge to President Obama?s health care reform law, the Affordable Care Act. As the court opens Monday, gun laws, immigration, racial preferences, and separation of church and state loom as major issues as well.

The 2011-2012 US Supreme Court term, set to begin Monday, is best described by a case that isn?t even on the docket yet.

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It now seems inevitable that the justices will agree to hear the legal challenge to President Obama?s health care reform law, the Affordable Care Act.

The case, HHS v. Florida, would instantly transform the high court?s upcoming nine-month session from an interesting and important collection of legal disputes into an historic constitutional showdown with major political implications ? in a presidential election year.

The legal challenge threatens one of President Obama?s most ambitious accomplishments, the attempted wholesale reformation of the health care insurance market to extend health insurance to millions of Americans who otherwise couldn?t afford it.

Usually, the Supreme Court?s term is defined on the eve of the first Monday in October by the array of cases the justices have already agreed to hear and decide.

The unusual feature of the start of this year?s term is that the ?Obamacare? case isn?t the only blockbuster looming on the high court?s horizon. In the weeks ahead, the justices are set to consider taking up a string of other potential landmark cases that could further transform the new term into a clash of constitutional titans. They include disputes examining:

? Whether the Second Amendment protects a right to carry a gun in public places for self-defense.

? Whether the use of racial preferences in university admissions programs is unconstitutional.

? Whether Arizona?s tough immigration law, SB 1070, is preempted by federal statutes and the more gentle policy positions embraced by the Obama administration.

? Whether large crosses erected on public roadsides in Utah and a Ten Commandments display in an elected judge?s courtroom in Ohio violate the separation of church and state.

In addition to that unprecedented cluster of potential mega-cases, the high court is already set to hear a dispute involving the power of the Federal Communications Commission to punish broadcast television stations for showing brief nudity or failing to bleep dirty words during prime time programming.

The case, FCC v. Fox Television, will examine whether the FCC?s indecency enforcement procedures violate the First and Fifth Amendments. At issue is the government?s attempt to police the public air waves to prevent not only obscene material, but also indecent communications offensive to a family-oriented audience.

The current indecency enforcement effort stems from a 1978 high court decision that upheld sanctions against stations that broadcast comedian George Carlin?s famous routine on the seven dirty words you can?t say on the public air waves.

For years, the FCC enforced a policy against the systematic and repeated use of offensive words, most of which had been identified ? effectively and repeatedly ? by Mr. Carlin.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ju5ntTOI70U/US-Supreme-Court-opens-likely-to-wade-into-health-care-debate

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Sunday, October 2, 2011

US report cites flaws at credit rating agencies

(AP) ? U.S. securities regulators say their first annual review of the nation's credit rating agencies finds the companies aren't doing enough to protect their own financial integrity.

The Securities and Exchange Commission report released Friday was mandated by the sweeping financial industry reforms passed last year.

Regulators examined 10 credit rating agencies, including the three largest: Standard & Poor's, Moody's and Fitch.

The report didn't specifically identify which of the credit rating agencies suffered the most troubling weaknesses.

But it chastised the 10 agencies for a series of problems, including inadequate controls over employee conflicts of interest. Regulators also found the companies sometimes didn't even follow their own procedures.

Some examples cited in the report:

? The agencies had inadequate policies to prevent conflicts that arose when analysts and agency employees own stock in companies they rated

? Two of the three big agencies didn't have specific policies to prevent such conflicts when a company they rated held a substantial stake in their agency.

? One agency failed to follow its own formulas for rating securities.

? Another delayed informing investors about changes in its formulas.

The SEC staff conducted its examination from December 2009 through August 2010. The SEC hasn't determined if any of the findings represent a significant breach of regulations, but the report left that possibility open for future action.

Despite improvements made by some since a previous examination in 2008, there are still problems at all of them, including failures in some cases to follow their own policies, the report said.

The three big agencies have been blamed for helping fuel the 2008 financial crisis by giving high ratings to risky mortgage securities. Those investments later soured when the housing market went bust.

Critics say the agencies have a built-in conflict of interest because they are paid by the same companies they rate.

__

Liedtke reported from San Francisco.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-09-30-SEC-Credit%20Rating%20Agencies/id-acf4896f099a4928963c588de845f599

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The Medical Minute: Breast Cancer Screening | GantDaily.com

October 1, 2011 at 4:00 AM by Gant Team ? ?

By Alison L. Chetlen

It can be difficult to sort through the many messages regarding breast cancer screening. Fancy billboards seen along the highways, recommendations made by your neighbor or the local newscaster, or mixed messages throughout the internet can cause confusion. What is the best way to screen for breast cancer?

The easy answer is that mammography is the only imaging method that has been proven to decrease mortality from breast cancer. Three decades of research show that mammography saves lives.

Although there have been some controversial studies on what age to begin screening mammograms, the largest breast cancer screening trial ever performed involved a million women over 16 years and proved that screening mammography reduced breast cancer deaths in women ages 40 to 49 by 29 percent. A more recent Swedish study demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in breast cancer death rate by 30 percent of screening women ages 40 to 74 after these 130,000 women were followed for 29 years. Just recently, the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology stated its position in support of screening women beginning at age 40, which now corresponds with the positions of the American Cancer Society, American College of Radiology, Society of Breast Imaging, American Society of Breast Disease and many other major medical associations with demonstrated expertise in breast cancer care. Hence, women should begin getting annual mammograms at age 40.

Recent research has examined the use of whole breast ultrasound and MRI exams for breast cancer screening in addition to mammography. Breast ultrasound is used frequently to further evaluate a suspicious area seen on mammography, but it is not widely accepted as a screening tool. For women of sufficiently high risk for the development of breast cancer, the American Cancer Society recommends annual mammography plus MRI screening. Screening with mammography plus MRI has consistently outperformed mammography plus whole breast ultrasound for very high risk women.

Tomosynthesis is a 3-D screening method recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use along with digital mammography, but not as a replacement. Multiple images of the breast are acquired at different angles during a sweep of the X-ray tube, allowing radiologists to see around overlapping structures.

Additionally, there are newer FDA-approved methods such as molecular breast imaging and positron emission tomography, which are physiologic studies to assist in detection or diagnosis of breast cancer.

Molecular breast imaging, also called breast-specific gamma imaging, is a nuclear medicine procedure where radiopharmaceutical agents are injected intravenously and concentrate in the breast. A high-resolution, breast-specific camera measures the amount of the activity that gets localized in the breast. A focal area with more radioactivity indicates higher metabolic activity and may correspond to a cancer. This method is sometimes use to evaluate patients when breast MRI is indicated but not possible.

Positron emission mammography (PEM) has been used to image larger tumors, but has generally been less successful at identifying the small tumors that are the subject of screening efforts. PEM involves the use of a pair of dedicated gamma radiation detectors placed above and below the breast and mild breast compression to detect coincident gamma rays after administration of a positron-emitting radionuclide. Refinements in technology are still under way to improve the value of these methods. Most importantly, these newer technologies cannot replace mammography and do not ultimately replace biopsy for tissue diagnosis.

Finally, another method women may hear about is thermography. Thermography produces an image of the breast showing the pattern of temperatures at or near the skin surface. On June 2, 2011, the FDA issued a safety communication warning women and health care providers that thermography is not a safe alternative to mammography. The warning was issued in response to inappropriate claims by thermography facilities and websites promoting thermography as a replacement for mammography. The American Cancer Society, National Cancer Institute, and Society of Breast Imaging all have stated that no study has ever shown that thermography is an effective screening tool for finding breast cancer early and that thermography should not be used as a substitute for mammograms.

?Something old, something new? captures the essence of breast cancer screening. Although there are new and exciting methods being developed and refined, ?good old? mammography remains the standard of care for breast cancer screening.

Tune-in to abc27 at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 13 for ?Hope & Courage: A Tribute to Breast Health,? the annual call-in show featuring Penn State Hershey breast specialists and patients.

Alison L. Chetlen is an assistant professor in the Department of Radiology and a breast imaging specialist at?Penn State Hershey Breast Center.


Source: http://gantdaily.com/2011/10/01/the-medical-minute-breast-cancer-screening/

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In Home Female Personal Trainer ? Health and Fitness can be ...

A lot of people have a tendency to view physical exercise as a unfortunate requirement ? something they should endure to be able to live longer and feel great. Even though there?s no avoiding the reality that exercising will almost always be a little more difficult, physically speaking, as compared to sitting on the sofa and munching on snacks while watching television, there is no reason that it can?t be exciting and fun as well. Ladies searching for a enjoyable way to get fit must look into using an in home female Irving personal trainer. With countless approaches to enable you to feel better without feeling like you?re simply grinding away, these professionals are the most effective answer for women.

Maybe you have visited the fitness center and stared at the long row of treadmills, fearing one more twenty or thirty minute journey on them just like the last dozen times you visited? You are not alone, and even though you can get real results from them, many people find it difficult to muster up the motivation to keep with it. Your in home female personal trainer Irving TX will show up each day with a workout routine tailor made for you. Instead of one long run on a treadmill you can actually devote the same length of time moving through multiple exercise sessions.

That isn?t the only way that an in home female personal trainers in Irving TX helps keep it fresh, however. Your female fitness instructor will have a deep bag of tricks, and can provide you with new workout routines on an nearly continuous basis. You?ll never feel like you?re just doing the same kind of thing since your actual workout is always improving. And since you are working together with another woman instead of a man, you are able to relax knowing that your female trainer is coming up with workout routines which are developed exclusively to help women recapture their fitness.

A great in home female Irving personal trainer understands that the science of physical exercise is always evolving. Instead of sticking with the same routines, a great trainer will constantly learn new techniques as they?re produced and will change together with fitness science. And since they?re evolving, so will your workout routines. If a new breakthrough finds a healthier way to tone your abs or shed some pounds, you will be among the first to use it. With the assistance of a female personal trainer, you will always have fun and exciting exercise routines to do. Exercise won?t be completely easy, however it doesn?t have to be monotonous and boring, either.

Source: http://www.realityfire.com/in-home-female-personal-trainer-health-and-fitness-can-be-easier-than-you-think/

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Saturday, October 1, 2011

Articles Inventory ? Going swimming As a Wholesome Recreation

Lots of people enjoy going swimming around the globe. It is a greatly well-liked type of entertainment. It?s also the valued form of sport in several areas.

As for an activity, swimming is an extremely safe one. When compared with additional sports activities, going swimming truly leads to very few accidental injuries. Many people love to go to public pools, ponds, and water parks for any lovely relaxing day because of this.

People are also increasingly interested in becoming healthy and fit. We all want to look great and feel great. Pros who operate in the health as well as health and fitness areas just about all suggest going swimming as an excellent part of a fitness program because of this.

The benefits of going swimming tend to be wide and many. This enhances cardio stamina and also circulation. Swimmers are also fitness their own muscle tissue as well as creating strength too. It is the perfect all-purpose low impact aerobic fitness exercise.

Going swimming conditions the entire body. That is not it?s only benefit however. It?s also an excellent tension buster. Many people swim in part to unwind as well as rejuvenate. Swimming is also a wonderful way to control fat and obtain into which much better form you have been wanting. With swimming it is the complete connection with health and relaxation, which is why more and more people who have the resources have pools at their home.

Numerous powerful swimmers pursue their enthusiasm as an occupation also. Guards at seashores and pools are powerful swimmers who save people who are not able to go swimming as well as beginning to flounder. Other swimmers get work because instructors or teachers, as well as assist new swimmers build their own abilities as well as refine technique.

The human body is designed for floating. Humans are buoyant. Because of this, drinking water offers much more resistance than does air. Working out in the water, consequently, is a superb thing for the metabolic process. Swimmers build strength as well as endurance quite quickly.

New swimmers should not make an effort to train themselves in order to go swimming because this is not safe. This is especially harmful if they?re doing it in a lake such as the sea, that has power that may attract one away without any discover. Pointed in the deep finish of a pool is just as harmful, with no one without the proper encounter must look into carrying this out. They ought to begin with guidance from a swimming trainer that oversees all of them through the understanding process till they reveal the ability to drift on their own. Should you enter in the drinking water not understanding how you can swim the outcomes could be disastrous.

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Source: http://www.articlesinventory.com/going-swimming-as-a-wholesome-recreation-2.html

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Xperia Pro showing up Oct. 6?

Android Central

 

British online retailer Clove has put the forthcoming Sony Ericsson Xperia Pro up for pre-order, claiming an October 6th release date for the device.

If this is the phone for you, then in the UK at least it'll set you back £322 ($524) off contract. Bearing passing resemblance to the Xperia Play, the Pro has a full slide out QWERTY keyboard in place of the game controls, and we know how much some of you love your QWERTY's.

As with all recent devices out of the Xperia stable, the Pro is packing similar specs to its siblings. It comes with Gingerbread on board, a 3.7" display complete with the mobile Bravia technology, the 8.1 megapixel Exmor R camera from the Arc S, HD video recording and HDMI out. 

via Social Barrel
More: Sony Ericsson Xperia Pro - Hands on at MWC 11


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/mCb0guY-jSE/xperia-pro-showing-october-6

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