Screening technology used for humans a success for Sherbert the horse – Cornwall Live

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In July 2016, dressage competitor Sherbert the horse was having subtle and occasional lameness issues which owner Libby Gill said was "frustrating" because "one day, or literally one minute he would be fine, the next he would feel lame".

Lameness is an abnormal stance of an animal, usually caused by pain or a mechanical dysfunction. Sherbert suffered from it so badly during a competition at the Badminton Championships last year, that Libby and him were unable to continue despite the lameness being random.

Vets were unable to diagnose Sherbert because, when taken to the vet, he was not appearing lame. Libby was told she had to make Sherbert lame before the vet was able to help, but this was impossible as the lameness would occur on a random basis.

After a chance conversation with a friend Libby heard about Sync Thermology. A type of physiological screening that has been successful for humans for ten years and developed into a service that is accessible for use in veterinary medicine.

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Libby, from Truro, contacted Louisa Jenkins, from Camborne, the Cornwall technician for Sync Thermology.

"Thermography is essentially a test of physiology," Louisa said. "It measures the sympathetic nervous response and detects physiological abnormalities and inflammatory responses."

After consulting the vet Libby took Sherbert to Louisa, who has screening facilities in her yard with medically graded cameras also used on humans.

Louisa Jenkin, Cornwall technician for Sync Thermology.

"I took Sherbert to Louisa's yard as she has the proper facilities there to do it, and it only took about an hour and a half in total from start to finish," Libby said.

"I got the report back really quickly and it identified a few things for us to investigate. I am really pleased my friend mentioned this service to me as without it I might still be going around in circled trying to get to the bottom of it all."

Louisa said she screened Sherbert before and after letting him move around so the screen would show the physiological differences before and after work.

"You see the images and then send them through to our team of vets who interpret the images," Louisa added. "They are also trained in thermography and have interpretation software."

Read more: Man takes Cornish holiday park to court over 'filthy' chalet

The interpretation software allows the vets to pinpoint areas of distress or increased blood flow to certain areas of the animals.

She said pinpointing certain areas has helped vets in the past discover hairline stress fractures related to the area of increased blood flow in the animal.

Sync Thermology has been used on dogs, giraffes and other animals in the zoo. "There are technicians all over the country," Louisa said. "So it's pretty much a national coverage."

Louisa said this service was popular because of the little harm it brings to animals and the fact it is the only form of physiological screening which assists vets in pinpointing a problem.

After taking Sherbert to Louisa and having his issues resolved through the screening, the pair have since had a very successful Winter Dressage Championship in Hartpury in April this year. They were placed fourth in the Preliminary Area Festival Final.

"It was such a great weekend and fantastic experience," Libby said. "Sherbert was really on form and pulled it out of the bag just at the right time, I'm delighted."

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Screening technology used for humans a success for Sherbert the horse - Cornwall Live

Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Lafayette area Business Briefs for July 9, 2017 – The Advocate

LSU AgCenter plans nitrogen fertilizer event

The LSU AgCenter will host the 15th Annual Nitrogen Use Efficiency Conference on Aug. 7-9 at the Lod Cook Hotel and Conference Center, 3848 W Lakeshore Drive, Baton Rouge.

The meeting is designed for individuals from academic institutions and agricultural companies. Focusing on the use of nitrogen fertilizer, presenters will include representatives from the LSU AgCenter, Auburn University, Oklahoma State University, Kansas State University, the University of Arkansas, and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada.

Register online at http://bit.ly/2rIpzZL at no charge.

Keep Louisiana Beautiful will hold its 14th annual state conference and Everyday Heroes Awards Banquet on Sept. 20-21 in Baton Rouge.

The event includes information on the impact of litter on the state economy, natural resources and public safety, and provides resources for establishing beautification programs and environmental education.

Topics include how to become a zero-waste family; creating a successful wildflower program; overcoming nature deficit disorder; marketing to millennials; establishing a citywide Christmas tree mulching program; environmental education; volunteer recruitment; Louisiana Recycling Coalition; and behavioral change and modification.

Exhibit opportunities are available. Registration is $125. To register, view conference details or nominate an individual or group for an Everyday Heroes Award, go to http://www.keeplouisianabeautiful.org.

LSU Agriculture Center entomologists received $935,000 from the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture to study honeybee health.

The AgCenter is one of seven universities to receive part of $6.8 million the USDA is investing in pollinators.

Kristen Healy and Daniel Swale are conducting research on how stress factors affect honeybees. They are working with researchers at the USDA Honey Bee Breeding, Genetics and Physiology Research Unit in Baton Rouge and the largest beekeeper in the country to do a two-year study following 400 hives.

Healys work focuses on mites and the pathogens they transmit. Swale is studying the physiology of bees, which could suffer from relocations.

The grant includes an extension component so the researchers can determine the best methods to get bee health information to beekeepers and the public.

The USDA estimates honeybees pollinate $15 billion worth of crops.

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Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Lafayette area Business Briefs for July 9, 2017 - The Advocate

Advanced coronary imaging techniques lower health risks: Experts – The New Indian Express

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM:The first annual conference on Coronary Imaging and Physiology by the Society for Coronary Imaging and Physiology began in the state capital on Saturday.Inaugurating the conference SCIP president Dr. C G Bahuleyan said advanced coronary imaging techniques enable accurate detection of heart ailments earlier and minimally invasive surgery with geometric precision. The latest technologies lower the healthcare cost and risks.

Apart from medical experts, organisations, hospitals, healthcare sector, health insurance industry and social service groups and residents associations should work to ensure the entire population has access to modern diagnostic and treatment technologies, he said. Expert cardiologists from India and abroad including faculty from different states, international faculty, scientists and experts in interventional cardiology attended the conference held at Hotel Leela in Kovalam. Major deliberations on pathbreaking medical technologies for diagnosis, superior treatment decisions and surgical interventions are being held at the conference.

Dr. Madhu Sreedharan, organising secretary spoke on the benefits of physiologic-guided cardiac treatments like Fractional Flow Reserve and Instant wave-Free Ratio and the advanced techniques of imaging of blood vessels from inside using Intra Vascular Ultra Sound and Optical Coherence Tomography.

Dr. Keith George Oldroyd, Professor, Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, University of Glasgow, explained various aspects of FFR technique. Dr Sayan Sen, Consultant Cardiologist, Imperial College, London, detailed the greater diagnostic flexibility and more choices offered by IFR.

International faculty and expert cardiologists Dr. Takashi Akasaka, Professor, Wakayam Medical University Japan and Xiu Jian Chen, Associate Chief Physician, Southern Medical University, China led scientific sessions. Dr. Karl Schultz, Professor of Cardiology, University of West Australia will lead the symposium on OCT in planning and optimising angioplasty on Sunday.

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Advanced coronary imaging techniques lower health risks: Experts - The New Indian Express

Neuroscience – amazon.com

Neuroscience, Fifth Edition, is a comprehensive textbook created primarily for medical, premedical, and undergraduate students. In a single concise and approachable volume, the text guides students through the challenges and excitement of this rapidly changing field. The book's length and accessibility of its writing are a successful combination that has proven to work equally well for medical students and in undergraduate neuroscience courses. Being both comprehensive and authoritative, the book is also appropriate for graduate and professional use.

Key features of the Fifth Edition:

*In addition to new figures, all of the art has been modified with a new color palette and digital enhancements.

*All chapters have been updated to reflect current research; new literature citations have been added, as well as new experimental content. Substantial revisions have been made to: Chapter 4, Ion Channels and Transporters, Chapter 6, Neurotransmitters and Their Receptors, and Chapter 8, Synaptic Plasticity; all chapters in Unit IV, The Changing Brain; and all chapters in Unit V, Complex Brain Functions.

*Sylvius included with every book

*An appendix presenting an illustrated narrative of human neuroanatomy plus annotated atlas plates presenting brain sections from Sylvius

RESOURCES

For Students

Companion Website The Neuroscience companion website features review and study tools to help students master the material presented in the neuroscience course. Access to the site is free of charge and requires no access code. The site includes:

*Chapter Summaries: Concise overviews of the important topics covered in each chapter.

*Animations: Detailed animations depict many of the key topics presented in the textbook. Topics such as synaptic transmission, resting membrane potential, information processing in the eye, the stretch reflex, and many others are presented in a dynamic manner that helps students visualize and better understand many of the complex processes of neuroscience.

*Online Quizzes: Available at the instructor's discretion (see For Instructors/Online Quizzing below)

*Flashcards and Key Terms: Flashcard activities help students master the extensive vocabulary of neuroscience. Each chapter's set of flashcards includes all the key terms introduced in that chapter.

Sylvius: An Interactive Atlas and Visual Glossary of Human Neuroanatomy S. Mark Williams, Leonard E. White, and Andrew C. Mace

Sylvius provides a unique computer-based learning environment for exploring and understanding the structure of the human central nervous system. Sylvius features fully annotated surface views of the human brain, as well as interactive tools for dissecting the central nervous system and viewing fully annotated cross-sections of preserved specimens and living subjects imaged by magnetic resonance. Sylvius is more than a conventional atlas; it incorporates a comprehensive, visually rich, searchable database of more than 500 neuroanatomical terms that are concisely defined and visualized in photographs, magnetic resonance images, and illustrations from Neuroscience.

Program Components

*Surface Anatomy Atlases (Photographic, Magnetic Resonance Image, Brainstem Model): Provide a visual introduction to the location and names of the major external features and subdivisions of the human brain.

*Sectional Anatomy Atlases (Photographic, Magnetic Resonance Image, Brainstem and Spinal Cord): Allow the user to explore the internal organization of the brain.

*Pathways: Allows students to follow the flow of information in several important long-tract pathways of the central nervous system.

*Visual Glossary: Searchable glossary providing visual representations, concise anatomical and functional definitions, and audio pronunciation of neuroanatomical structures.

For Instructors

Instructor's Resource Library

View samples on the samples page.

The Neuroscience Instructor's Resource Library includes a variety of resources to help in developing your course and delivering your lectures. The Library includes:

*Textbook Figures and Tables: All the figures and tables from the textbook are provided in JPEG format (both high- and low-resolution), reformatted and relabeled for optimal readability.

*PowerPoint Presentations: A PowerPoint presentation that includes all figures and tables is included for each chapter, making it easy to add figures to your own presentations.

*Atlas Images: All of the images from the book's Atlas of the Human Central Nervous System (which are from Sylvius) are included in PowerPoint format, for use in lecture.

*Animations: All of the animations from the companion website are included for use in lecture and other course-related activities.

*Quiz Questions: All of the questions from the companion website's online quizzes are provided in Microsoft Word format.

*Review Questions: A set of short-answer review questions is provided for each chapter of the textbook (Microsoft Word format), along with a list of chapter-specific key terms.

Online Quizzing Adopting instructors have access to a bank of online quizzes that they can choose to assign or let their students use for self-review purposes. Instructors can use the quizzes as is, or they can create their own quizzes using any combination of publisher-provided questions and their own questions. The online grade book stores quiz results, which can be downloaded for use in grade book programs. (Student access to the quizzes requires instructor registration.)

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Neuroscience - amazon.com

Cornell Postdoc Found Dead in Adirondack Mountain River – Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

11 hours ago Weill institute By Anne Snabes | 11 hours ago

Matthew Miller, a postdoc in the Weill Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology, died Monday in the Ausable river in the Adirondack Mountains.

Police are looking into the death as a drowning. The river had been experiencing tall water levels, according to the Adirondack Daily Enterprise.

Miller earned his Ph.D. from SUNY Upstate Medical University. Miller then worked in the lab of Prof. Anthony Bretscher, molecular biology and genetics, for the past two years where he was doing a cell biology project, trying to understand how cells are polarized, Bretscher said.

He just actually last week made a big breakthrough, which he told us about at group meeting, which we had last Wednesday, Bretscher said. He knocked out two genes out of cultured cells and saw a strong phenotype, which will tell us what those genes do.

Outside the lab, Miller was someone who lived life to the full[est], Bretscher said, known for his passion for hiking.

You never saw him in a sad mood, he said. He was always happy, and he spread happiness to everybody he met.

Miller was also a 46er, meaning that he climbed all 46 peaks in the Adirondacks that are taller than 4,000 feet, Bretscher said.

He had climbed most of them for a second time with his fianc for her to also become a 46er, he added.

Photo Courtesy of Anthony Bretscher

Photo Courtesy of Anthony Bretscher

He had lots of plants at home, he had pets at home, Bretscher said. He chose to live in a rural area as he loved nature and the outdoors.

Rob Gingras, a graduate student in the Bretscher lab and friend of Miller, echoed Bretschers sentiments, characterizing Miller as a fun guy.

Matt was an avid concert-goer, a professional fun-haver and an absolute destroyer of silence, Gingras said. He was great at the work he did, but more importantly he was a great friend to me and all who knew him.

Ccile Sauvanet, a postdoc in the Bretscher lab, also spoke to Millers presence both in and out of the lab, describing that he was talkative, joyful and always joking around.

[The lab is] kind of empty, Sauvanet said. He was kind of a presence. You couldnt miss him.

He was someone who was filling the lab and the space, the whole floor, even the whole institute, Sauvanet said.

Anne Snabes is a sophomore in the College of Arts and Sciences. She is a staff writer for the news department and can be reached at asnabes@cornellsun.com.

We are an independent, student newspaper. Help keep us reporting with a tax-deductible donation to the Cornell Sun Alumni Association, a non-profit dedicated to aiding The Sun.

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Cornell Postdoc Found Dead in Adirondack Mountain River - Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

The trickiest family tree in biology – Nature.com

Illustration by Jasiek Krzysztofiak/Nature

For 18 months in the early 1980s, John Sulston spent his days watching worms grow. Working in twin 4-hour shifts each day, Sulston would train a light microscope on a single Caenorhabditis elegans embryo and sketch what he saw at 5-minute intervals, as a fertilized egg morphed into two cells, then four, eight and so on. He worked alone and in silence in a tiny room at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, UK, solving a Rubik's cube between turns at the microscope. I did find myself little distractions, the retired Nobel prize-winning biologist once recalled.

His hundreds of drawings revealed the rigid choreography of early worm development, encompassing the births of precisely 671 cells, and the deaths of 111 (or 113, depending on the worms sex). Every cell could be traced to its immediate forebear and then to the one before that in a series of invariant steps. From these maps and others, Sulston and his collaborators were able to draw up the first, and so far the only, complete cell-lineage tree of a multicellular organism1.

Although the desire to record an organisms development in such exquisite detail preceded Sulston by at least a century, the ability to do so in more-complex animals has been limited. No one could ever track the fates of billions of cells in a mouse or a human with just a microscope and a Rubiks cube to pass the time. But there are other ways. Revolutions in biologists ability to edit genomes and sequence them at the level of a single cell have sparked a renaissance in cell-lineage tracing.

The effort is attracting not just developmental biologists, but also geneticists and technology developers, who are convinced that understanding a cells history where it came from and even what has happened to it is one of biologys next great frontiers. The results so far serve up some tantalizing clues to how humans are put together. Individual cells from an organ such as the brain could be related more closely to cells in other organs than to their surrounding tissue, for example. And unlike the undeviating developmental dance of C. elegans, more-complex organisms invoke quite a bit of improvisation and chance, which will undoubtedly complicate efforts to unpick the choreography.

But even incomplete cellular ancestries could be informative. Sulstons maps paved the way for discoveries surrounding programmed cell death and small, regulatory RNA molecules. New maps could elucidate the role of stem cells in tissue regeneration or help combat cancer a disease of unharnessed lineage expansion. Theres a real feeling of a new era, says Alexander Schier, a developmental biologist at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who is using genome editing to trace the cell-lineage history of zebrafish and other animals.

A cells history is written in its genome: every mutation acquired that gets passed on to daughter cells serves as a record. In 2005, the computer scientist Ehud Shapiro at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, calculated that researchers could use the natural mutations in individual human cells to piece together how they are related2. He conceived of a corollary (in concept at least) to the C. elegans cell map, which he called the Human Cell Lineage Project. But the field, he says, wasnt ready. When we offered this vision, neither the field nor the name of single-cell genomics existed.

Fast forward a decade, and researchers have developed a suite of powerful tools to probe the biology of lone cells, from their RNA molecules and proteins to their individual and unique genomes. Now, he envisions a way of capturing the developmental course of a human, frame by frame, from fertilized egg to adult. You want the whole movie with 3D frames from beginning to end, he says. To make such a film, its not even necessary to look at the entire genome. Shapiros team is focusing on repetitive stretches of DNA peppered across the genome called microsatellites. These sequences tend to mutate more frequently than other bits of the genome, and his team is working on sequencing tens of thousands of them across the genomes of hundreds of individual human cells to determine how they relate.

Were beginning to see the rules of development in normal human beings.

Christopher Walsh, a neuroscientist and developmental biologist at Boston Childrens Hospital and Harvard Medical School, doubts that researchers will ever reconstruct a complete human cell-lineage map to match that of C. elegans, but even a less than complete tree will pay dividends, he says. Ive been studying cell lineage in the cortex for 25 years, and the idea of studying it directly in the human brain was an inconceivable dream. Now its a reality.

In experiments described in 2015, Walshs team sequenced the complete genomes of 36 cortical neurons from 3 healthy people who had died and donated their brains to research3. Reconstructing the relationship between the brain cells in an individual revealed that closely related cells can be spread across the cortex, whereas local areas can contain multiple distinct lineages. Successive generations of cells seem to venture far from their ancestral homes. One cortical neuron, for instance, was more closely related to a heart cell from the same person than to three-quarters of the surrounding neurons. We were not expecting to find that, Walsh says.

Walshs team is trying to understand how mosaicism in the brain in which some cells harbour different gene variants affects health. They have identified, for example, forms of epilepsy that occur even when just a small percentage of cells in a tiny brain region carry a disease-causing mutation. And they have found that individual neurons from healthy individuals can bear mutations that would cause seizures and schizophrenia if present more widely. It seems from this work that it matters which cells end up with a mutation. The lineage basically determines what diseases are possible, Walsh says.

Reporter Shamini Bundell finds out what can be learned from studying cells one by one.

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Other scientists are uncovering records of lifes earliest events in the genomes of adult cells. In experiments published this year4, Michael Stratton, a geneticist at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Hinxton, UK, and his team sequenced white blood cells from 241 women with breast cancer and looked for mutations found in only a subset of their blood cells. The study revealed mutations that occurred very early in development, perhaps as far back as the two-cell embryo. And they noted that the descendants of these cells do not contribute equally to the blood system of adults. This could be because one cell multiplies more efficiently than the other; or it could, as Stratton suspects, be that by chance one ends up contributing more to a developing fetus than to a placenta or other supporting tissues.

Future studies, Stratton says, will look for bottlenecks in development that limit the contribution of some cell lineages. Were beginning to see the rules of development in normal human beings, he says.

Jay Shendure, a geneticist at the University of Washington in Seattle, still remembers the day he became fascinated with cellular histories. As a 14-year-old with an interest in biology and computers, he wrote a program that modelled a mass of multiplying cells to impress his uncle, a reconstructive surgeon visiting from India. He said, This is amazing. One day youll do the same thing, and instead of a blob it will be a whole baby, Shendure recalls.

Nearly a decade later, Shendure was a first-year graduate student working for the Harvard geneticist George Church. Church presented a list of ideas (all of which, at the time, seemed totally absurd, Shendure says); one of them was to reconstruct the lineages of many cells at once, in a single experiment. Shendure toiled for six months trying to use DNA-flipping enzymes called recombinases to create a readable record in the genomes of bacteria as they divide. Rather than relying on naturally acquired mutations in the genome, the system would essentially create variants to keep track of.

Shendure eventually switched projects, but he revived the idea a few years ago when graduate students Aaron McKenna and Greg Findlay joined his laboratory in Seattle. They realized that the popular genome-editing tool CRISPRCas9 would be ideal for introducing traceable mutations to whatever part of the genome they wanted (see The lines of succession). Teaming up with Schiers lab, they unleashed CRISPRCas9 in two single-cell zebrafish embryos and instructed it to edit DNA barcode sequences that had been engineered into their genomes. They then sequenced these barcodes in cells of an adult animal and used the mutations in them to piece together their lineage5.

The trees they produced show that a small number of early-forming embryonic lineages give rise to the majority of cells in a given organ. More than 98% of one fishs blood cells, for instance, came from just 5 of the more than 1,000 cell lineages that the team traced. And although these five contributed to other tissues, they did so in much lower proportions. They were almost entirely absent from the muscle cells in the heart, for example, which was mostly built from its own small number of precursors. It was profoundly surprising to me, says Shendure. His colleague Schier says he is still trying to make sense of the data.

Jan Philipp Junker, a quantitative developmental biologist at the Max Delbrck Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin, says that the cell-lineage trees of early embryos probably vary greatly between individuals, and that the dominance of particular lineages observed by Shendure and Schiers team could be the result of chance events. The cells of an early embryo move around, and only a fraction of them contribute to the final organism, for example. It would be more revealing, he adds, to track later developmental events, such as the formation of the three germ layers that give rise to different organs, because these events are less governed by luck.

Junker and others have developed a bevy of other CRISPR-based techniques for piecing together developmental histories. He and Alexander van Oudenaarden, a systems biologist at Utrecht University in the Netherlands, applied such an approach to track the regeneration of a damaged fin in zebrafish. Regeneration, they discovered, occurred in the same kind of way as development: few of the cell lineages that gave rise to the original fin were lost when it was remade from stem cells. The finding confirmed previous studies, but the CRISPR-based methods allowed the team to trace lineages of thousands of cells in a single experiment6.

Church says his team has used CRISPR to study mouse development and has managed to record the embryonic cell divisions that give rise to the three major germ layers, which form all the bodys organs7. I dont think were that far away from doing a complete lineage, he says.

Some researchers strive to know not just how an organisms cells relate to one another, but what happened to them along the way. Michael Elowitz and Long Cai, both at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, have developed a lineage tracer that creates fluorescent probes to help them observe the histories of cells as they develop8. Their method can track whether certain developmental genes have been turned on in the past for a given lineage. On 5 July, Elowitz, along with Shendure and Schier, were awarded a 4-year, US$10 million grant from the Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group to combine their technologies. The trio plan to develop synthetic chromosomes that act as tape recorders for cell-lineage history and molecular events.

Such recordings might allow scientists to tinker with a cells development in more delicate ways than current cell-reprogramming techniques allow, says Tim Liu, a synthetic biologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge who is also working on a technology to record a cells history9. You might see some version of these recorders being inserted into the cell therapies of the future, although it wont be for a while, he cautions. Im not going to go and inject my CRISPR recorder into a patient.

Cancer is where new lineage-tracing methods are likely to make waves first. Cancer is a disease of lineage its a disease of stem cells, says Walsh. One question that researchers are starting to tackle is the origin of metastatic cells, which emerge from the primary tumour and invade sometimes distant organs. They tend to be the hardest tumour cells to vanquish and the ones most likely to kill patients.

A team led by cancer geneticist Nick Navin at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston published lineage maps of two colon cancers in May10. The results showed that liver-invading metastatic cells shared many DNA mutations with the primary tumours they came from, suggesting that the metastasis had emerged at a late stage and hadnt needed a bunch of new mutations to spread. Lineage mapping could also show whether tumours really develop from single cells, as geneticists have argued, or whether they originate from multiple cells, as some imaging studies have suggested. Navin suspects that similar work could be used to direct treatment. His team and others are tracing cancer-cell lineages in patients as they begin taking drugs. They hope these studies can spot resistant lineages, allowing doctors to pick better treatments and switch medicines in time to make a difference.

Cancer is a disease of lineage its a disease of stem cells.

At the moment, however, promise in the field far exceeds the reality. And Sulstons lineage maps of C. elegans still loom large over current efforts. Stephen Quake, a bioengineer at Stanford University in California, devised his own method for tracking cellular ancestry through CRISPR and decided to test it in the worm11. Its nice to have a gold standard, Quake says. He and his team sequenced the cells of a mature animal after CRISPR had mutated its genome during development. The efforts took much less time than the year and a half that Sulston spent with his microscope. But Quake says that the picture they developed was also less than complete. Yes, it captured a key transition in roundworm development the segregation of cells bound for the intestine and those that give rise to the rest of the body but it lacked the exquisite detail Sulston observed with his eyes. Ill be perfectly blunt. Im not very impressed with my results, says Quake, who hadnt even planned to publish the work until he saw the rush of other papers using similar techniques. No one has really got it licked yet, he says.

There is an argument to be made that Sulston set the bar too high with C. elegans. This whole concept of a lineage tree is very much influenced by this classic work, says Junker. And that may deserve a rethink.

In fish, mice and humans, no two individuals cell lineage trees are likely to look exactly the same, and each probably changes throughout the individuals lifetime, as tissues repair and regenerate themselves. Junker and others hope that the new techniques will allow biologists to ask questions about the variability in lineage trees between individuals, between their organs and as they age. As Schier puts it: We dont know how many ways there are to make a heart.

It is that vast unknown that could make such work transformative, says Elowitz: It would change the kinds of questions you could ask. Sulstons map led biologists into uncharted territory, says Schier, and this could do the same. We cant tell you what exactly were going to find, but there is a sense that were going to find some new continents out there.

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The trickiest family tree in biology - Nature.com

Two leading researchers join URI’s George & Anne Ryan Institute for Neuroscience – URI Today (press release)

KINGSTON, R.I., July 6, 2017 Two scientists who collaborate on groundbreaking approaches to neurodegenerative disease are relocating to the University of Rhode Island from Stony Brook University in New York. Individually and as a team, William Van Nostrand and John Robinson have made significant discoveries that advance the understanding of Alzheimers disease and other conditions caused by damage to and destruction of brain cells.

Bringing these two top-notch scientists to the Ryan Institute is a coup for URI, said Paula Grammas, executive director of the Ryan Institute. Bill and John bring decades-long records of innovative and productive research that meshes well with the mission of the Institute, and we are excited to welcome them as colleagues to our faculty and mentors to our students.

Van Nostrand will join the faculty this summer as professor of biomedical and pharmaceutical science and Herrmann Professor of Neuroscience. He is a professor of neurosurgery at Stony Brook University, where he has been on the faculty since 1995.

He was the first to purify and characterize amyloid precursor protein, the progenitor of the amyloid-beta (A-beta) protein. A-beta clumps into plaques in the brain tissue of Alzheimers disease patients, and may contribute to the brain cell death that causes the memory loss, cognitive decline and dementia associated with the disease. Van Nostrands research focuses on understanding causes abnormal accumulation of the A-beta protein found in Alzheimers disease and a related condition called cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA).

Understanding how the various forms of amyloid operate and interact in CAA and Alzheimers disease is a path to better understanding both diseases. Our goal is ultimately to identify mechanisms of disease that could be targets for new treatments, Van Nostrand said.

Robinson will arrive in early 2018. He has been on the Stony Brook faculty since 1994, most recently as professor of psychology. At URI he will be professor of psychology and Ryan Research Professor of Neuroscience.

He has studied the cognitive and behavioral effects of abnormal A-beta in animal models of disease developed in Van Nostrands lab. Their collaboration has revealed, for instance, that the A-beta accumulations around blood vessels seen in animal models of CAA are associated with an earlier decline in brain function compared to Alzheimers-like A-beta clumps near brain cells.

Robinson has also worked on studies related to learning, depression, dementia caused by alcoholism and the impact of exercise in reducing the onset and severity of neurologic diseases. At URI, Robinson will help set up and manage a new center for behavioral studies. I have enjoyed tremendously the interactions with numerous colleagues over the years and I look forward to meeting and working with my new colleagues at URI similarly, he said.

Why URI?

Moving an established research enterprise from one university to another is a complicated undertaking, but Robinson and Van Nostrand see clear reasons to join the Ryan Institute and URI.

Everyone I spoke to saw this as an exciting time for URIa turning point, Robinson said. The optimism about and enthusiasm for neuroscience and health-and-wellness research here builds on existing strengths and the clear path of the Ryan Institute to be a highly visible catalyst of this movement as well.

Van Nostrand said, I am excited about the mission of the Ryan Institute, the passion and support of Tom Ryan to build this institute, and the support from President Dooley and Provost DeHayes on down through the deans and faculty. It is clear that the mission here is to build a premier neuroscience institute with a focus on neurodegenerative diseases. I saw this as a unique and exciting opportunity to get in on the early stages of the Institute being formed and play a strong part in its foundation and growth.

As further evidence of the opportunities available at URI, Van Nostrands full-time lab staff is moving with him, including three researchers, a postdoctoral fellow and a graduate student. Van Nostrand and Robinsons work has been consistently funded by federal and private agencies, and they will transfer about $4.1 million in grant funding to URI.

Neuroscience Researchers Facts

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Two leading researchers join URI's George & Anne Ryan Institute for Neuroscience - URI Today (press release)

Pacific Neuroscience Institute Affiliates with Providence Health & Services Saint John’s Medical Foundation – PR Newswire (press release)

SANTA MONICA, Calif., July 7, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Providence Health & Services announced today a new affiliation with Pacific Neuroscience Institute, a multispecialty group of more than 30 physicians and researchers renowned for providing cutting-edge, minimally invasive treatments, as well as conducting breakthrough research and clinical trials to advance the care of patients with neurological and cranial disorders.

The physicians of PNI will join the Saint John's Medical Foundation, which is composed of Westside physician groups with a range of specialties who practice at Providence Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica. The new PNI Clinic is currently under construction at 2125 Arizona Ave., adjacent to Saint John's Health Center, and is expected to open in early 2018.

PNI physicians also will provide neurosurgery, interventional neuro-radiology and neuro-oncology inpatient care and emergency stroke center services, as well as operate an outpatient clinic at Providence Little Company of Mary Medical Center in Torrance.

"Our partnership with PNI brings a team of extraordinary specialists, their state-of-the-art facilities and their globally recognized research to Providence Saint John's and its John Wayne Cancer Institute, and to our South Bay hospitals," said Erik Wexler, chief executive, Providence St. Joseph Health, Los Angeles Region. "More importantly, they will participate in our Neuroscience Clinical Institute, which serves across the seven-state Providence St. Joseph Health system to advance treatment and improve outcomes for patients with complex neurological disorders."

PNI is a leader in neurosciences, operating eight centers of excellence:

"Our PNI clinicians and researchers have a long and fruitful relationship with Providence Saint John's, the John Wayne Cancer Institute and the Saint John's Health Center Foundation, and we are excited to build upon this decade-long collaboration," said Daniel F. Kelly, M.D., neurosurgeon and director of PNI and its Brain Tumor and Pituitary Disorders Centers. "By affiliating with Providence, we greatly strengthen our ability to provide comprehensive, compassionate care for our patients, while developing novel treatments for the future."

Dr. Kelly's PNI co-founders include Chester F. Griffiths, M.D., FACS, a head and neck, and ear, nose and throat surgeon; neuro-oncologist Santosh Kesari, M.D., Ph.D., and neuro-ophthalmologist Howard R. Krauss, M.D.

"This new affiliation with PNI propels Providence in its continuing strategy to build expertise in the neurosciences across Southern California advancing research, technology, innovation and quality patient care," said Marcel Loh, chief executive, Providence Saint John's Health Center.

Providence has more than 500 affiliated physicians from the South Bay to Santa Clarita who are aligned with the six Los Angeles Area Providence medical centers. This new affiliation will equip PNI with a management services program to provide operating and administrative support for clinical operations.

CONTACT: Zara Jethani 818-209-4070 EMAIL: 166897@email4pr.com

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/pacific-neuroscience-institute-affiliates-with-providence-health--services-saint-johns-medical-foundation-300484496.html

SOURCE Pacific Neuroscience Institute Foundation

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Pacific Neuroscience Institute Affiliates with Providence Health & Services Saint John's Medical Foundation - PR Newswire (press release)

Most Relationships Survive Infertility Challenges – WebMD – WebMD

By Robert Preidt

HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, July 7, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- There's good news for couples who are struggling to conceive.

Those who are undergo fertility treatment are no more likely to break up, according to a new study. It's been suggested that the disappointment of infertility and the stress of treatment can push relationships to the breaking point.

But a study of more than 40,000 women in Denmark who had fertility treatment between 1994 and 2009 found no link between it and separation or divorce. Researchers said 20 percent split up within 16 years, compared to 22 percent of women who were not treated.

The study was presented this week at the annual meeting of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology in Geneva, Switzerland.

Researcher Mariana Martins said the findings should reassure couples who have had or are considering in vitro fertilization.

"Findings on the security of relationships and parenthood can be particularly helpful in supporting patients' commitment to treatment," said Martins, a psychology faculty member at the University of Porto in Portugal.

"We have previously found that subjects who divorce, re-partner and come back to treatment are the ones that five years before had the most stress," she said in a meeting news release. "We also know that despite all the strain that this infertility can bring, going through [assisted reproduction treatment] can actually bring benefit to a couple's relationship, because it forces them to improve communication and coping strategies."

Studies presented at meetings should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

WebMD News from HealthDay

SOURCE: European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology, news release, July 5, 2017

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Most Relationships Survive Infertility Challenges - WebMD - WebMD

Constitutive resistance to viral infection in human CD141 – Science (subscription)

Research ArticleDENDRITIC CELLS

* These authors contributed equally to this work.

Present address: INSERM U955, IMRB Equipe-16, VRI, F-94010, Creteil, France.

Present address: Drukier Institute for Childrens Health, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY 10021, USA.

+ See all authors and affiliations

Science Immunology 07 Jul 2017: Vol. 2, Issue 13, eaai8071 DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.aai8071

Aymeric Silvin

Immunity and Cancer Department, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, 75005 Paris, France.

Chun I Yu

Baylor Institute for Immunology Research, Dallas, TX 75204, USA.The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine, Farmington, CT 06032, USA.The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME 04609, USA.

Xavier Lahaye

Immunity and Cancer Department, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, 75005 Paris, France.

Francesco Imperatore

Centre dImmunologie de Marseille-Luminy, Aix Marseille University, UM2, INSERM U1104, CNRS UMR7280, France.

Jean-Baptiste Brault

Institut Curie, PSL Research University, CNRS, UMR144, Molecular Mechanisms of Intracellular Transport, 75005 Paris, France.

Sylvain Cardinaud

Centre dImmunologie et des Maladies Infectieuses-Paris, Pierre and Marie Curie University UMRS C7, INSERM U1135, CNRS ERL 8255, Paris, France.INSERM U955, IMRB Equipe-16, Vaccine Research Institute (VRI), F-94010, Creteil, France.

Christian Becker

Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine; and Immunology Institute, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 10029, USA.

Wing-Hong Kwan

Department of Microbiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.Global Health and Emerging Pathogens Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.

Ccile Conrad

Immunity and Cancer Department, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, 75005 Paris, France.

Mathieu Maurin

Immunity and Cancer Department, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, 75005 Paris, France.

Christel Goudot

Immunity and Cancer Department, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, 75005 Paris, France.

Santy Marques-Ladeira

Immunity and Cancer Department, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, 75005 Paris, France.

Yuanyuan Wang

Baylor Institute for Immunology Research, Dallas, TX 75204, USA.

Virginia Pascual

Baylor Institute for Immunology Research, Dallas, TX 75204, USA.

Esperanza Anguiano

Baylor Institute for Immunology Research, Dallas, TX 75204, USA.

Randy A. Albrecht

Department of Microbiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.Global Health and Emerging Pathogens Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.

Matteo Iannacone

Division of Immunology, Transplantation and Infectious Diseases, IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, 20132 Milan, Italy.

Adolfo Garca-Sastre

Department of Microbiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.Global Health and Emerging Pathogens Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.

Bruno Goud

Institut Curie, PSL Research University, CNRS, UMR144, Molecular Mechanisms of Intracellular Transport, 75005 Paris, France.

Marc Dalod

Centre dImmunologie de Marseille-Luminy, Aix Marseille University, UM2, INSERM U1104, CNRS UMR7280, France.

Arnaud Moris

Centre dImmunologie et des Maladies Infectieuses-Paris, Pierre and Marie Curie University UMRS C7, INSERM U1135, CNRS ERL 8255, Paris, France.

Miriam Merad

Precision Immunology Institute, Human Immune Monitoring Center, Tisch Cancer institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.

A. Karolina Palucka

Baylor Institute for Immunology Research, Dallas, TX 75204, USA.The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine, Farmington, CT 06032, USA.The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME 04609, USA.

Nicolas Manel

Immunity and Cancer Department, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, 75005 Paris, France.

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Constitutive resistance to viral infection in human CD141 - Science (subscription)