‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Season 20 Cast Revealed: 15 Stars Confirmed to Return, 2 Actors Not Coming Back – Just Jared

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Chandra Wilson RETURNING

Deadline reports that Chandra Wilson has signed on to return for season 20. She has been with the show since season one!

James Pickens, Jr. RETURNING

Deadline reports that James Pickens, Jr. has signed on to return for season 20. He has been with the show since season one!

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'Grey's Anatomy' Season 20 Cast Revealed: 15 Stars Confirmed to Return, 2 Actors Not Coming Back - Just Jared

Gen V, Shoresy, and the Anatomy of 2023’s Best Spinoffs – Paste Magazine

Spinoffs represent a foundational pillar propping up American television history, from The Jeffersons to The Walking Dead: Darryl Dixon, Mork & Mindy to Better Call Saul. Sometimes, theyre a unique subversion of the original property, but other times, theyre a cheap replication of what already exists. In an era of franchise exhaustion and repackaged studio products, the term spinoff is becoming a dirtier word with audiences, but two of the years best shows prove theres nothing wrong with the formula. Prime Videos Gen V and Hulus Shoresy are brilliant breakaways from their parent shows, demonstrating how spinoffs can benefit studios and audiences in their quest for entertainment domination.

On paper, Gen V feels like a cash-grab to give The Boys fans another electric-blue hit of darkly comedic superhero debauchery. Prime Video announced that Gen Vs first season would directly roll into The Boys Season 4, making it required watchingwhich can be seen as a cheap tactic to manufacture viewership. Instead, showrunner Michele Fazekas uses the opportunity to flesh out themes found in The Boys on a more granular scale. Godolkin University breeds deeper conversations about Compound V usage without consent, as super-powered students face the harsh realities of their forced-upon fates. Its more hopeful than The Boys, and thrives without relying on cameos or callbacks to Butchers or Homelanders bloody, diabolical antics.

In 2022, Letterkennys Wayne, Jared Keeso, shipped his foul-mouthed hockey lifer Shore (aka Shoresy) to Sudbury for his own self-titled spinoff. Only appearing faceless from behind (as to hide the fact that this character was also played by the star of the show), Shoresys status on Letterkenny was as nothing more than a vehicle for vulgar chirps about double-wheeling Reilly and Jonesys mothers. The question last year before Season 1 was simple: how can a rude and raunchy sidepiece become a focal protagonist? A year later, now with two seasons tucked away, that answer seems even simpler: development. Keeso treats Shoresy as an upside-down sports comedy with women and First Nations characters at the forefront, constantly skewering the athletic machismo that once made Shores zingers so memorable in Letterkenny.

Gen V and Shoresy excel as reinventions of their inspirations. Gen V follows young adults who havent yet been thoroughly corrupted by Vought or forever absorbed into Homelanders #SupeLivesMatter agenda. Where Butcher and Homelander are willing to burn the entire world down for their causes, Jaz Sinclairs hemokinetic Marie Moreau and her classmates fight for something brighter than the cynicism that The Boys emboldens. While there are glancing blows of heartbreak in The Boys, like when Erin Moriartys Starlight recalls her younger years as a pageant supe, Gen V tugs these dangling threads and unravels something miles more insidious. Fazekas and her writers attempt to show how the kids might be alright despite living in a world that wants them dead for countless reasons, but refuses to ignore the angsty teenage drama of growing up a supe without any choice.

Shoresys second season develops a complicated man who, at one time, could have been described as the most off-putting character in Letterkenny. Hes no longer splitting time between Reilly and Jonesys houses; hes adorably chasing the love of his life like a giddy high schooler. Shoresys quips arent missiles fired at his teammates; hes the dedicated captain who will do whatever it takes to motivate everyone toward a win. The Shore of Letterkenny is a caricature of misogynistic player cultures where Shoresy permits actual male ego dissections, expressive commentaries about win at all costs obsessions, and everything that comes along with the freedom of a spinoff. While audiences may expect a carbon copy of the original series in its offshoot, Shoresy never falters when pointedly separating itself from the original series; showrunners should strive to deliver the unexpected like Keeso.

At the heart of both shows is a desire to be different. The hallmarks of the original series are still there (because you cant entirely turn your back on existing audiences), but theres a fearlessness in the bold choices made to separate these shows from their predecessors. Fazekas was issued no guarantee that The Boys fans would enthusiastically support a collegiate story that veers more toward resonating with Gen Z audiences; Keeso had no idea whether Letterkenny fans would take to a far more sports-driven template that takes cues from Slap Shot, Major League, and the works. That doesnt stop either from testing their fanbase with the allure of different storytelling perspectives. Neither series rewrites what came before beyond recognition, but clearly and successfully steers away from mirror imagery that would just accelerate feelings of market over-saturation.

But even in spite of the push to deliver something different from the series that came before, there is still an appropriate amount of crossover to cling to. Gen V hits the heights of the unprecedentedly horny Herogasm episode of The Boys during its three-episode premiere; Shoresy establishes silly bits just like in Letterkenny, whether it be panini shop wordplay or the Sudbury players affinity for ice cream drumsticks. As much as Gen V and Shoresy abstain from paint-by-numbers mimicry, they still play the hits. Gen V is as stupendously violent and conspiratorially driven as The Boys, while Shoresy still proves Keeso is one of the better television writers handling female characters and dismantling gender tropes in todays scene. The trust has been earned and were still rewarded for our loyalty, as fresh storytelling refuses to completely ignore its acclaimed origins.

Despite having the edge of a previously-established audience built-in, the odds werent totally stacked in these series favors, as sequel, reboot, cinematic universe, and spinoff fatigue have begun to plague audiences everywhere. Defying expectations, Gen V shoulders all the weight of ramping excitement for The Boys Season 4 while telling a standalone story with rich payoffs, new recruits, and archetypal narratives that dont require a cliffhangers duration to appreciatenot to mention how this series had to battle the tossed-around notion of superhero fatigue. Shoresy is hellbent on making you fall in love with a championship-focused hothead who, episode by episode, dares to eradicate preconceptions bred by Letterkenny. And for both of these shows, breaking out in an already oversaturated streaming landscape is an uphill battle in itself, but their popularity with audiences proves that these series eclipse the often negative connotations of spinoffs and sequels, dynamically evolving the original world while expanding it in new and exciting ways.

In todays television era, where producers are searching for expanded universes faster than ever before, Gen V and Shoresy are shining examples of how to execute a spinoff. Everyone involved invests in building out a multidimensional, hit-you-from-all-sides offshoot instead of merely expanding to fulfill immediate-yet-possibly-fleeting demands. Existing molds dont stifle creative teams. Theyre asked to reinterpret a vibe and produce something new that can live up to its predecessor. In both cases, its a smash-hit exercise that trusts individual voices, promotes originality, and proves how spinoffs are just as important of a television staple as brand-new titles destined for their own spinoffsa cycle we should not fear in proper hands.

Matt Donato is a Los Angeles-based film critic currently published on SlashFilm,Fangoria,Bloody Disgusting, andanywhere elsehes allowed to spread the gospel ofDemon Wind. He is also a member of the Hollywood Critics Association. Definitely dont feed him after midnight.

For all the latest TV news, reviews, lists and features, follow @Paste_TV.

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Gen V, Shoresy, and the Anatomy of 2023's Best Spinoffs - Paste Magazine

The 10 Best Episodes of ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ of All Time, Ranked From Lowest to Highest Audience Score – Just Jared

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10. Season 14 Episode 7 (Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story)

After a roller coaster car falls off the track at the county fair, the doctors at Grey Sloan tend to patients who spark memories about ghosts from their past.

9. Season 10 Episode 24 (Fear (Of the Unknown))

Cristina must head to Zurich soon but she is unprepared to leave behind her life in Seattle. Fear runs amok throughout the hospital as an explosion in a shopping mall results in a mass casualty situation.

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The 10 Best Episodes of 'Grey's Anatomy' of All Time, Ranked From Lowest to Highest Audience Score - Just Jared

Predictive Factors for Insulin Resistance in Pediatric Obesity: A Comprehensive Analysis – Physician’s Weekly

The following is a summary of Predicting Insulin Resistance in a Pediatric Population With Obesity, published in the December 2023 issue of Pediatrics by Arajo, et al.

Insulin resistance (IR) affects overweight and obese kids and teens, and its important to catch it early to avoid long-term problems. For a study, researchers sought to find factors that can be used to predict IR and create a multivariate model that could do this correctly. They did a cross-sectional study of demographic, clinical, and biochemical data from a group of patients who went to a specialized Pediatric Nutrition Unit in Portugal over 20 years. To identify IR, they made multivariate regression models.

People who took part were randomly split into two groups: a model group that worked on building predictive models and a confirmation group that checked the studys results against the model. Results: 1423 people between the ages of 3 and 17 took part in their study. They were randomly split into two groups: the model group (n = 879) and the evaluation group (n = 544). The predictive models, which used demographic and clinical factors that were not used in other models, were good at telling the difference [area under the curve (AUC): 0.8340.868; sensitivity: 77.0%83.7%; specificity: 77.0%78.7%] and had high negative predictive values (88.9%91.6%).

Adding fasting glucose or triglycerides/HDL cholesterol index to the models based on clinical factors did not make them better at diagnosing, but adding fasting insulin seemed to make the model better at telling the difference (AUC: 0.996). During the evaluation, the model that considered demographic and clinical factors along with insulin had a high accuracy rate for detecting IR (AUC: 0.978) and consistently high negative predictive values (90%96.3%) for all models. Conclusion: Models based on demographic and clinical factors can help find kids and teens who are moderately or highly likely to have IR and would benefit from a fasting insulin test.

Source: journals.lww.com/jpgn/abstract/2023/12000/predicting_insulin_resistance_in_a_pediatric.19.aspx

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Predictive Factors for Insulin Resistance in Pediatric Obesity: A Comprehensive Analysis - Physician's Weekly

Locals partner to open pediatric clinic in Brookhaven – Daily Leader – Dailyleader

Published 2:58 pm Thursday, December 28, 2023

BROOKHAVEN Ole Brook Kids Pediatric Clinic Co-owners Kayla Thurman and Amber Martin hope to serve the community with their new business. Both are certified nurse practitioners. Martin has 24 years of pediatric experience and Thurman has 11 years of pediatric experience.

The new pediatric clinic will open at 301-C US51 S, hopefully, by the end of January. The location can be found on Dr. Louie Wilkins Drive just south of Walgreens.

For the last four or five years, Thurman and Martin have shared a small office space and worked closely together. Thurman said she saw ways to help the local community and an opportunity to fill a need for a purely pediatric clinic in Brookhaven. She shared her idea with Martin and they went in together to open up the practice.

We would see so many patients who didnt have any other places to go but didnt need an emergency room or adult urgent care. We are pediatric trained and will offer something new, Thurman said. In the last year, it just came up. It was a God thing. It fell in place perfectly. We needed a physician to partner with us and my preacher recommended someone I used to know. Every piece has been put together. It is a huge leap of faith. Now our idea and dream is a reality.

Ole Brook Kids will be located in a former dentist office. Renovations have been mostly cosmetic and the once red brick exterior was painted now snow white. Martin said the building is owned by Hunter Posey who happened to have the perfect space for them. It all fell into place.

The clinic will treat fevers, coughs, acute illnesses, minor injuries and simple wound repairs. Their mission statement states they understand illness and injuries dont always happen between 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will work to provide care outside of those hours. Martin said they plan to be open with longer hours during the week and be open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday. Wellness visits, sports physicals and vaccinations will also be offered by the clinic.

Thurman and Martin have practiced in Brookhaven long enough that Martin is confident they will have a client base to start.

The connections we have made have been remarkable. It has fallen in place. This is a community that is well connected with people excited to be a part of a small business, Martin said. We felt led. The support in the few things we have put out there has been humbling and amazing. We care about our patients and look to our work as service.

Thurman said they plan to be Big enough to serve you and small enough to know you.

Careers of service

Thurman received her bachelors of science in nursing from the University of Mississippi Medical Center in 2012 and started her career in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at UMMC. She earned her masters of science in nursing from the University of Alabama Birmingham as a pediatric nurse practitioner in 2015. She is originally from Monticello.

Her career took her to Blair E. Batson Childrens hospital to work in the Pediatric Emergency Department. Thurmans husband is Dillon Thurman and they have three children Kinley, John Luke and Fisher Thurman. She is an active member of Grace Life Church in Brookhaven. Outside of nursing, she enjoys watching her childrens activities and spending time with family.

Thurmans interest in pediatrics began in middle school. She said in high school as soon as she got her drivers license she would drive up to Jackson to volunteer at the childrens hospital.

Working with kids you take care of the whole family. You have a fulfillment and get to watch them grow. You are with them a while, Thurman said. I wanted to come back home and serve my own community. I had a dream of opening up my own clinic. I presented the idea to Martin and she said yes so here we are. We are trusting God and His will. He has worked it all out.

One of the reasons she enjoys working with pediatrics is due to the resilience of kids. They tend to bounce back faster and children offer a challenge because they do not always fit the box.

Martin graduated with a bachelors of science in nursing from the University of Southern Mississippi in 1999. She began her career working in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at UMMC. In 2012, Martin continued her education and earned a masters of science in nursing from the University of South Alabama. She is originally from Gulfport.

She is married to Brad Martin. Their children are Makayla, Mallory and Maddox. All three children have kept Martin busy with local activities and sports. They are active members of Calvary Baptist Church.

Outside of nursing, Martin serves as an adjunct teacher for the Mississippi College nursing program. She teaches courses in registered nursing, the bachelors of science in nursing and masters of science in nursing programs. Her time at UMMC prepared her for pediatric medicine.

I always wanted to be a nurse and loved neonatal care. It all led to pediatrics. When my husband was in school in Georgia I worked at a hospital there. They encouraged me to go back to school to do this and I have loved it ever since, Martin said. It has been about connections with people. One door opens and then you step through it. You see children a lot. I had always thought about having my own pediatric clinic. It brings back your passion when you have ownership of it.

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Locals partner to open pediatric clinic in Brookhaven - Daily Leader - Dailyleader

Infants Pay the Price When Parents Battle Food Insecurity and Benefits Red Tape – Research Horizons – Research Horizons

Study led by Chidiogo Anyigbo, MD, MPH and colleagues at Cincinnati Childrens documents early signs of emotional and behavioral disruption in households under stress, reinforcing the need to assure stable access to healthy nutrition from day one.

Taking on the parenting duties to support a newborn child is stressful enough when everything goes well.

But when parents living in under-resourced conditions also must battle government red tape to stay enrolled in important food benefit programs, the stress measurably affects their babies emotional and behavioral health, according to research published Dec. 26, 2023, in JAMA Pediatrics.

Given the importance of the first year of life to overall brain development, addressing disruptions to food security is a problem that requires rapid intervention, according to lead author Chidiogo Anyigbo, MD, MPH, a clinician and researcher with the Division of General and Community Pediatrics at Cincinnati Childrens.

A number of studies have associated household food insecurity with poor pediatric mental health outcomes including depression, externalizing and internalizing behaviors, and hyperactivity, Anyigbo says. But those studies have focused almost exclusively on children aged nine months and older. To our knowledge this is the first study to document the association between household food insecurity and problems accessing nutrition benefits programs and behavioral challenges during the first six months. This finding is important because at this stage of child development, every month matters, and early intervention can have lifelong benefits.

The American Academy of Pediatrics provides many recommendations for preventative screening for a childs physical and mental health. While pediatricians can use blood tests, scanners and other tools to learn many things about an infants health, understanding how their environments influence mental health is no simple task.

This study used two measurement tools routinely administered during primary care pediatric well visits to identify populations of infants at early risk of behavioral challenges due to factors such as impact of food insecurity or public benefits programs. Overall, the study analyzed data from more than 1,500 infants, 90% of whom lived with families receiving or qualified to receive public health insurance (Medicaid).

The researchers started with a screening tool that assesses health-related social needs (HRSNs) before the age of 4 months. They compared that information to another standard tool called the Baby Pediatric Symptom Checklist (BPSC), which is given at age 6 months.

The HRSN data reveals a constellation of problems that under-resourced families can face, including challenges meeting basic needs for food, housing, and safety. But in this study, researchers found a particular correlation between reports of food insecurity and difficulties maintaining benefits, and infant behaviors measured in more detail at age 6 months.

Overall, about 26% of the families studied reported babies exhibiting unusual amounts of behavioral dysfunction such as inflexibility, difficulty with routines, and irritability. The more problems reported in the HRSN data, the more problems were found later in the BPSC data.

Specifically, when two or more problems appeared on the HRSN screening, children were twice as likely to exhibit behavior concerns on their BPSC screening test that were serious enough to prompt clinical review, Anyigbo says.

We already know that food insecurity can increase emotional distress, increase aggravation, and weaken the attachment between parent and child, Anyigbo says. Now with screening tools that can detect these concerns at an early age, we have an opportunity to intervene.

Pediatricians and primary care clinics have near-universal access to infants and are well-positioned to help connect families to food pantries and community food banks. They also can help families connect with parent support programs, services to assist with insurance coverage, and programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC).

Anyigbo has already begun working on an online platform and QR code project to help more families who speak a variety of languages navigate the hassles of qualifying for food benefits through the WIC program. Read more about the $326,000 grant awarded for that project.

The idea that these kinds of support systems are needed isnt especially new, Anyigbo says. What is new is that the evidence indicating how vital it is for healthy infant behavioral development to address food insecurity right away. Challenges accessing public nutrition benefits such as WIC may further compound the deleterious effects of food insecurity on infant behavioral functioning. This is particularly relevant given ongoing calls for Congress to act to fully fund the WIC program.

In addition to Anyigbo, Cincinnati Childrens co-authors included Chunyan Liu, MS, Shelley Ehrlich, MD, ScD, MPH, Allison Reyner, MS; Robert Ammerman, PhD; and Robert Kahn, MD, MPH.

Funding sources for the study include the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (KL2TR001426) and a Young Investigator Award from the Academic Pediatric Association.

A six-year study led by experts at Cincinnati Childrenspublished Oct. 16, 2023,inJAMA Pediatricsfound alarming evidence of unhealthy behavioral trajectories starting as early as age 2 among families affected by low income and other social stressors.

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Infants Pay the Price When Parents Battle Food Insecurity and Benefits Red Tape - Research Horizons - Research Horizons

RSV Roundtable: Addressing the senior population – Contemporary Pediatrics

Welcome to the fourth episode of our 5-episode series; respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) Roundtable, a collaborative project fromContemporary Pediatrics,Contagion, andContemporary OB/GYN.

This series discusses several aspects of RSV including incidence rates, vaccines, and immunizations.

In this episode, our panel evaluates challenges in providing RSV vaccination to the senior population, including the lack of a "one size fits all" recommendation and risk factors such as heart failure that are more common in this population.

Our panel of clinicians includes:

This series will release a new episode every Friday through January 5, 2024.

For a full list of already published episodes, click here.

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RSV Roundtable: Addressing the senior population - Contemporary Pediatrics

Charleroi biology students team up online with scientists for research projects – The Mon Valley Independent

Submitted Shown, from left, are Charleroi Advanced Placement biology students Bailey Gillen, Addacie Durka, Angela Mathers, Suki Yu, Lairah Dipietrantonio and McKenna Shields. They recently had their work on two separate projects featured on planting science.org. Missing from the photo is Aiden Iadanza, who also participated on one of the teams.

By TAYLOR BROWN Senior Reporter [emailprotected] Charleroi High School Advanced Placement biology students will have their work recognized as model projects for other learners. The project got its start after CAHS science teacher Michele Piatt participated in a research study funded by the National Science Foundation to determine if in-person teacher professional development is more effective than virtual teacher training based on student outcomes. As part of the project, her AP biology students completed several lab activities on the bioenergetic processes of photosynthesis and cell respiration using the plantingscience.org website investigation theme, Power of Sunlight. Students were divided into small groups and each group was assigned to their own scientist mentor that they communicated with on the plantingscience.org platform throughout their investigations. The scientist mentors were volunteers who work in the plant science field all over the world. The project ended with the students designing their own experiment and sharing their results with their scientist mentor. Two of the groups in Piatts AP biology class had their projects nominated, judged and were awarded recognition as Star Projects, which will now be used as models for other learners and researchers. The group Lets Take a Cellfie comprised students Lairah Dipietrantonio, Angela Mathers, McKenna Shields and Suki Yu. Their mentor, Nora Gavin-Smyth, works at the Chicago Botanic Garden and Northwestern University. The goal of their project was to see if the pH of a solution would increase/decrease with the presence of either oxygen or cellular respiration. This group really worked together to communicate with their scientist mentor at every step of the investigation, Piatt said. They were vary thorough in their discussions and asked intriguing questions. The design of their experiment was innovative as they used additional materials beyond the Planting Science investigations. The second group, Plants vs. AP Bio comprised Addacie Durka, Bailey Gillen and Aiden Iadanza.

To read the rest of the story, please see a copy of Thursdays Mon Valley Independent, call 724-314-0035 to subscribe or subscribe to our online edition at http://monvalleyindependent.com.

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Charleroi biology students team up online with scientists for research projects - The Mon Valley Independent

Why ‘resurrection biology’ is gaining traction around the world – FOX 17 West Michigan News

(CNN) Resurrection biology attempting to bring strings of molecules and more complex organisms back to life is gaining traction in labs around the world.

The work is a far cry from the genetically engineered dinosaurs that escape in the blockbuster movie Jurassic Park, although for some scientists the ultimate goal is de-extinction and resurrecting animals and plants that have been lost.

Other researchers are looking to the past for new sources of drugs or to sound an alarm about the possibility of long-dormant pathogens. The field of study is also about recreating elements of human history in an attempt to better understand how our ancestors might have lived and died.

Here are four fascinating research projects in this emerging field that launched or made significant progress in 2023.

Warmer temperatures in the Arctic are thawing the regions permafrost a frozen layer of soil beneath the ground and potentially stirring viruses that, after lying dormant for tens of thousands of years, could endanger animal and human health.

Jean-Michel Claverie, a professor emeritus of medicine and genomics at the Aix-Marseille University School of Medicine in Marseille, France, is seeking to better understand the risks posed by what he describes as zombie viruses by resurrecting viruses from earth samples from Siberia.

Claverie managed to revive a virus in 2014 that he and his team isolated from the permafrost, making it infectious for the first time in 30,000 years by inserting it into cultured cells. In his latest research, published in February, Claverie and his team isolated several strains of ancient virus from multiple samples of earth representing five new families of viruses. For safety, he had chosen to study a virus that could only target single-celled amoebas, not animals or humans.

The oldest was nearly 48,500 years old, based on radiocarbon dating of the soil, and came from a sample of earth taken from an underground lake 52 feet (16 meters) below the surface. The youngest samples, found in the stomach contents and coat of a woolly mammoths remains, were 27,000 years old.

That amoeba-infecting viruses are still infectious after so long is a signal of a serious potential public health threat, Claverie said.

We view these amoeba-infecting viruses as surrogates for all other possible viruses that might be in the permafrost, Claverie told CNN earlier this year.

Our reasoning is that if the amoeba viruses are still alive, there is no reason why the other viruses will not be still alive, and capable of infecting their own hosts.

For bioengineering pioneer Csar de la Fuente, Presidential Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania, the past is a source of opportunity that has opened up a new front in the fight against drug-resistant superbugs.

Advances in the recovery of ancient DNA from fossils mean that detailed libraries of genetic information about extinct human relatives and long-lost animals are now publicly available.

The machine biology group he leads at UPenn uses intelligence-based computational methods to mine this genetic information and identify small protein, or peptide, molecules they believe to have bacteria-fighting powers. He has discovered promising compounds from Neanderthals and ice age creatures such as the woolly mammoth and giant sloth.

It has enabled us to uncover new sequences, new types of molecules that we have not previously found in living organisms, expanding the way we think about molecular diversity, de la Fuente said. Bacteria from today have never faced those molecules so they may give us a better opportunity at targeting the pathogens that are problematic today.

Most antibiotics come from bacteria and fungi and have been discovered by screening microorganisms that live in soil. But in recent decades, pathogens have become resistant to many of these drugs because of widespread overuse.

While de la Fuentes approach is unorthodox, the urgency to identify possible candidates has never been greater as the global population faces nearly 5 million deaths every year that are associated with microbial resistance, according to the World Health Organization.

Extinctions are happening at a faster pace than ever. For some scientists, a path to staunching this loss could be trying to resurrect lost creatures from the past.

Biotechnology and genetic engineering startup Colossal Biosciences announced in January that it wants to bring back the dodo an odd-looking flightless bird that lived on the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean until the late 17th century and reintroduce it to its once native habitat.

The company is working on other equally ambitious projects that will incorporate advances in ancient DNA sequencing, gene-editing technology and synthetic biology to bring back the woolly mammoth and the thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger.

Geneticists at Colossal Biosciences have found cells that act as a precursor for ovaries or testes in the Nicobar pigeon, the dodos closest living relative, that can grow successfully in a chicken embryo. The scientists are now investigating whether these cells called primordial germ cells, or PGCs can turn into sperm and eggs.

The company plans to compare the genomes of the dodo and the Rodrigues solitaire, an extinct bird closely related to the dodo, to identify how they differ. Then it will edit the PGCs of a Nicobar pigeon so it expresses the physical traits of a dodo.

The edited cells will then be inserted into the embryos of a sterile chicken and rooster. With the introduction of the edited PGCs, the chicken and rooster will be capable of reproducing, and, in theory, their offspring will resemble the dodo thanks to the hybridized pigeon DNA in their reproductive systems.

Physically, the restored dodo will be indiscernible from what we know of the dodos appearance, said Matt James, chief animal officer of Colossal Biosciences, told CNN in a November email.

Even if the researchers are successful in this high-stakes endeavor, they wont be making a carbon copy of the dodo that lived four centuries ago but an altered, hybrid form instead.

Colossal Biosciences has partnered with the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation to conduct a feasibility study to assess where to best locate the birds if the experiment is successful. However, finding a home may prove challenging.

Mauritius is a relatively small island that has changed significantly since the dodo went extinct.

Despite being one of the most famous birds in the world, we still know virtually nothing about the dodo, so how it interacted with its environment is impossible to know, said Julian Hume, an avian paleontologist and research associate at Londons Natural History Museum, who has studied the bird.

Because of the complexity of recreating a species from DNA, even if it was possible, (it) can only result in a dodo-esque creature. It will then take years of selective breeding to enhance a small pigeon into a large flightless bird. Remember, nature took millions of years for this to happen with the dodo, he added.

Visitors to Denmarks Moesgaard Museum can sniff the scent of an Egyptian mummification balm last used 3,500 years ago.

The evocative smell was recreated from ingredients identified by studying residues left in two canopic jars discovered in Egypts Valley of the Kings in 1900. The two jars once contained some of the remains of an ancient Egyptian noblewoman known as Senetnay.

The exact recipes used in the mummification process have long been debated because ancient Egyptian texts dont name precise ingredients.

The invesetigation, led by Barbara Huber, a doctoral researcher of archaeological chemistry at the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology in Germany, identified the balm ingredients using a variety of highly advanced analytical techniques.

She found the balms contained beeswax, plant oils, animal fats, resins and the naturally occurring petroleum product bitumen. Compounds such as coumarin and benzoic acid were also present. Coumarin, which has a vanilla-like scent, is found in pea plants and cinnamon, while benzoic acid occurs in resins and gums from trees and bushes.

The balms differed slightly between the two jars, which means that different ingredients may have been used depending on which organ was being preserved.

In the jar used to store Senetnays lungs, researchers detected fragrant resins from larch trees and something thats either dammar from trees found in India and Southeast Asia, or resin from Pistacia trees that belong to the cashew family.

The presence of such a vast array of ingredients, including exotic substances like dammar or Pistacia tree resin, indicates that extremely rare and expensive materials were used for her embalming, Huber told CNN when the research was published in August. This points to Senetnays exceptional status in society.

The scent was then recreated with the help of French perfumer Carole Calvez and sensory museologist Sofia Collette Ehrich.

The first time I encountered the scent, it was a profound and almost surreal experience, Huber said.

After spending so much time immersed in the research and analysis, to finally have this tangible, aromatic connection to the ancient world was moving. It was like holding a faint echo from the past.

Editor's note:CNNs Ashley Strickland and Tom Page contributed to this report

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Why 'resurrection biology' is gaining traction around the world - FOX 17 West Michigan News