Accelerated Genetics may expand operations under new ownership – La Crosse Tribune

Accelerated Genetics in Westby may expand its operation following a potential merger.

Angie Lindloff, vice president of marketing and communications, said staff downsizing isnt likely to occur even if Accelerated Genetics is sold to the larger, Ohio-based Select Sires. It was recently announced the two companies, which specialize in artificial insemination of cattle, may combine forces.

Lindloff said that while there are no guarantees of job security, Westby employees could see more bulls in housing than before. She said Select Sires aims to increase local production for international markets.

My understanding is (Select Sires) wants to keep the Westby facility intact and the people intact, Lindloff said. The goal is, they want that facility to maximize production out of it. Its actually a good thing from a Westby standpoint.

Roughly 70 people work for Accelerated Genetics in Westby, Lindloff said. The municipality is home to multiple Accelerated Genetics production barns, an office and a distribution center.

Select Sires, theyre very interested in the assets at Westby and the people there, Lindloff said. They know what we do there and they understand we have a lot of valuable people.

The Accelerated Genetics production facility houses more than 200 bulls, staff veterinarian Katie Speller said. Speller said the bulls supply genes for Accelerated Genetics national and international markets, including in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East.

Following a potential merger with Select Sires, Lindloff said the company could move to increase Westbys international production capabilities and bring in more cattle.

She said that barns producing semen for the European Union require special permitting, and Select Sires would aim to uptick the number of EU-certified barns in Westby.

Select Sires and Accelerated Genetics have an established business relationship. In 2001, the two companies began collaborative marketing efforts in foreign markets.

Select Sires is now poised to take over Accelerated Genetics, which has struggled financially.

We have been looking at something like this, something different than our current model, because we knew it was getting harder to do business, Lindloff said of Accelerated Genetics. So if we combine forces with somebody, it gives us more resources and just more opportunities to grow together.

Accelerated Genetics operates as a cooperative with member farms in Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and Illinois. Under the potential acquisition, Accelerated Genetics member farms in those states would be rolled into one of Select Sires existing cooperatives.

Select Sires operates across the U.S.

Delegates from Accelerated Genetics are scheduled to cast final votes on the merger later this month. Select Sires did not return a phone call seeking comment by press time.

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Accelerated Genetics may expand operations under new ownership - La Crosse Tribune

A Florida higher-ed official said women’s genetics may be keeping them from equal pay – Washington Post

A Florida college official said Tuesday that women make less money than men because genetically they might lack the skills to negotiate for better pay.

Edward Morton ofthe State University System of Florida made the comments during a board meeting in which members talked about closing the wage gap between male and femalegraduates of the states public university system.Morton, chair of the boards Strategic Planning Committee and a financial adviser from Naples, Fla., said,according to Politico:

Something that were doing in Naples some of our high school students, were actually talking about incorporating negotiating and negotiating skill into curriculum so that the women are given maybe some of it is genetic, I dont know, Im not smart enough to know the difference but I do know that negotiating skills can be something that can be honed, and they can improve. Perhaps we can address than in all of our various curriculums through the introduction of negotiating skill, and maybe that would have a bearing on these things.

Morton apologized for his comment in an email sent to fellow board members shortly after the meeting.

I chose my words poorly. My belief is that women and men should be valued equally in the workplace, he said, adding that the universitys goal is to teach all students how to better negotiate their salaries.

[Utah Republican argues against equal pay for women: Its bad for families and society]

Gov. Rick Scott, who appointed Morton to the board, was among those who quickly criticized Morton for hiscomments. Lauren Schenone, a spokeswoman for Scott, said in a statement that as a father of two daughters, the governorabsolutely does not agree with Mortonscomments.

Gwen Graham, whos seeking the Democratic nomination for governor,tweeted Tuesday night:When I sat at the negotiation table, nothing about my gender or genetics held me back. THIS is why we need more women in state government.

Morton did not return a call seeking comment Wednesday.

Politico reported that during the meeting board members were reviewing areport on gender wage gaps among students who graduated from the university system in 2015.The report, which looked at what students did after graduation and how much theyre earning, found that female graduates from various fieldshave an annual median salary of $37,000, which is $5,500 less than the median salary of male graduates. African American graduates make even less, with an annual median wage of $35,600.

[Here are the facts behind that 79 cent pay gap factoid]

Femalegraduates make less than men even though they account fornearly 60 percent of the graduating class, according to the report.Blacks, Hispanics and whites make up 12 percent, 25 percent and 52 percent of the graduating class, respectively.

During the meeting, Morton said that the wage gap will in some way be self-correcting because the university system has more female graduates than men, according to Politico.

The report also found significant discrepancies in pay among men and women who graduated with the same degrees.The median salaries of women with degrees in biological sciences, business and marketing, communication and journalism, security and protective services, social sciences, and visual and performing arts are from$1,200to $4,400 lower than those of men with similar credentials.The gap among agriculture, liberal arts and physical sciences graduates is even greater from $6,400to $9,400.

Yet the report also found that women with degrees in education, engineering, health professions and psychology make from$500 to$3,100 more than their male counterparts annually.

A history of the long fight for gender wage equality. (Daron Taylor/The Washington Post)

Florida is among more than a dozen states with equal pay laws that haveloopholes that allow employers to continue to pay women less, according to the American Association of University Women.Two states, Alabama and Mississippi, have no equal paylaws. And only a handful California, Illinois, Minnesota, Vermont, Massachusetts and Maryland have strong equal pay laws.

Nationally, womens annual earnings are about 80 percent of what men make, according to a recent report by the association.

The report attributes the wage gap partly to differences in career choices and to the fact that parenting more often puts womens professional lives at a disadvantage than it does mens. Twenty-three percent of mothers left the workforce 10 years after graduation, while 17 percent worked part-time, according to the association. Those numbers among fathers were 1 percent and 2 percent, respectively.

Despite factors such as life choices and parenting, women facepay gaps at every education level and in nearly every line of work, the report said.

READ MORE:

In the federal government, how likely is it that a woman will make more than a man?

The poor just dont want health care: Republican congressman faces backlash over comments

Nobody dies because they dont have access to health care, GOP lawmaker says. He got booed.

Continued here:
A Florida higher-ed official said women's genetics may be keeping them from equal pay - Washington Post

DNA Replication Filmed for First Time Shows How Awkward and Random Genetics Is – Newsweek

Researchers at the University of California, Davis, have just reported a small but significant accomplishment: catching the replication of a single DNA molecule on video for the first time. And the footage has revealed some surprising details about this structure on which all life depends.

DNA is composed of two strands bound together in a helical shape, like a twisting ladder. These strands are made of four basesadenine, guanine, cytosine and thymine, abbreviated as A, G, C and T, respectivelystrung together in various patterns and paired in specific ways across the rungs of the ladders. A always pairs with T, and C always pairs with G. Sugar and phosphate molecules help provide architectural support to the ladder-like structure. Human DNA contains about 3 billion bases. Discrete, repeated sequences of bases form the individual genes that encode the instructions for all our working parts. And every time a cell divides, which happens incredibly often, DNA replicates so that each new cell contains a complete copy of our entire genome, or genetic blueprint.

A digital representation of the human genome. Scientists at UC Davis have discovered that DNA replication is not as smooth as they thought. Mario Tama/Getty Images

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The process of DNA replication isa tremendous source of wonder and focus forresearch. The helix must unwind and have each strand copied smoothly and quickly. An enzyme called helicase triggers the unwinding and another called primase initiates the replication process. Athird, called polymerase, travels the length of a strand, adding the requisite base pairs along the way, leaving behind a new strand. Imagine splitting a ladder down the middle and assembling matching halves so that where there was once one ladder now there are two. That is DNA replication, only in place of saws, nails, wood and glue, there are enzymes and many microscopic and complex processes. Mysteries aboundwhen it comes to thishereditary material.

To better probe those mysteries, geneticist and microbiologist Stephen Kowalcyzkowski and colleagues watched DNA from bacteria replicate. They wanted to see exactly how fast the enzymes worked on each strand.

This first-ever view, shown in the video above, revealed a surprise: replication stopped unpredictably and moved at a varying pace. "The speed can vary about 10-fold," Kowalczykowski said in a statement. The two strands also replicated at different speeds.Sometimes the copying stalled on one strand while proceeding on the other. "We've shown that there is no coordination between the strands," said Kowalczykowski. "They are completely autonomous." The process, the researchers report in their study, published in Cell, is much more random than previously suspected.

The three enzymeshelicase, primase and polymeraseare also not alwys in sync. Even if polymerase stops its replication work, helicase can keep unzipping the helix. That lack of coordination leaves the half-helix of DNA exposed and vulnerable to damage. Such exposure is known to trigger repair mechanisms within the cell. Errors in replicating DNA, while often corrected, can also result ingenetic abnormalities that in turn lead to diseases.

This new look at DNA transforms the scientific understanding about replication. "It's a real paradigm shift," saidKowalcyzkowski, "and undermines a great deal of what's in the textbooks."

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DNA Replication Filmed for First Time Shows How Awkward and Random Genetics Is - Newsweek

Genetics Pioneer Craig Venter and Exxon Claim Algae Biofuel Breakthough (Again) – Greentech Media

Every few years, J. Craig Venter of Synthetic Genomics and Exxon issue a joint proclamation about progress in biofuels derived from algae. Venter gets funded, Exxon gets green cred, breathless articles get written in the business press, and we are once again reminded that algae is the fuel of the future.

Venter has made brilliant contributions to modern genetics. He was part of the team that sequenced the second human genome.

Still, the team of Exxon and Synthetic Genomics have been working on algal biofuels since 2009, and although they are claiming a biofuel "breakthrough" in their latest release, the time frame for commercialization verges on generational as opposed to the decade-scale promises that have been made. Exxon called this a $600 million investment in 2009.

According to the most recent release, the partners have developed an algal strain that has "more than doubled its oil content without significantly inhibiting the strains growth." The research team claims to have modified the algae speciesNannochloropsis gaditana to stretch the algaes oil content from 20 percent to more than 40 percent. (That 40 percent figure has been tossed around by other researchers in recent years, as well.)

The release is careful to stress that this is deep research and "a proof-of-concept approach." Despite the laudatory articles being written, we are not much closer to commercial biofuels derived from algae oil.

In 2009, current U.S. Secretary of State and former Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson said that the venture might not produce real results for another 25 years.

Were still at the research phase in this program, cautions Vijay Swarup, a vice president at ExxonMobil, as quoted in Forbes. Its not just doubling [lipid production], but its understanding why it doubled and how it doubled," he said. "Theres still a long way to go in making an algae that can produce even more fat, live comfortably in saltwater pools outside, and be processed into fuel for cars, planes and trains."

The release notes that an objective of the collaboration "has been to increase the lipid content of algae while decreasing the starch and protein components without inhibiting the algaes growth. Limiting availability of nutrients such as nitrogen is one way to increase oil production in algae, but it can also dramatically inhibit or even stop photosynthesis, stunting algae growth and ultimately the volume of oil produced."

Bloomberg notes that the team "searched for the needed genetic regulators after observing what happened when cells were starved of nitrogen -- a tactic that generally drives more oil accumulation. Using the CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing technique, the researchers were able to winnow a list of about 20 candidates to a single regulator -- they call it ZnCys -- and then to modulate its expression."

As we've reported, from 2005 to 2012, dozens of companies managed to extract hundreds of millions in cash from VCs in hopes of ultimately extracting fuel oil from algae.

The promise of algae is tantalizing. Some algal species contain up to 40 percent lipids by weight, a figure that could be boosted further through selective breeding and genetic modification. That basic lipid can be converted into diesel, synthetic petroleum, butanol or industrial chemicals.

Today, most of the few surviving algae companies have had no choice but to adopt new business plans that focus on the more expensive algae byproducts such as cosmetic supplements, nutraceuticals, pet food additives, animal feed, pigments and specialty oils. The rest have gone bankrupt or moved on to other markets.

The Exxon-SGI partnership is one of the few remaining algae biofuel efforts.

According to some sources, an acre of algae could yield 5,000 to 10,000 gallons of oil a year, making algae far more productive than soy (50 gallons per acre), rapeseed (110 to 145 gallons), jatropha (175 gallons), palm (650 gallons), or cellulosic ethanol from poplars (2,700 gallons).

The question remains: Can algae be economically cultivated and commercially scaled to make a material contribution to humanity's liquid fuel needs? Can biofuels from algae compete on price with fossil-derived petroleum?

Once capital needs, water availability, energy balance, growing, collecting, drying, and algae's pickiness about light and CO2 are factored in -- the answer, so far, is an emphatic no.

Here's a recently compiled list, by no means complete, of algae companies attempting to pivot away from biofuels.

There are many pieces to the algae puzzle that seem like afterthoughts, but which are actually crucial to the economics -- including co-products, nutrients, harvesting, drying and conversion technology. System design and algae type (which seem to be the focus of this and most discussions) are important, but not the only components.

Considering the immense technical risks and daunting capital costs of building an algae fuel company, it doesnt seem like a reasonable venture capital play. And most -- if not all -- of the VCs Ive spoken with categorize these investments as the longer-term, long-shot bets in their portfolio. But given the size of the liquid fuels market, measured in trillions of dollars, not the customary billions of dollars, it makes some sense to occasionally take the low-percentage shot.

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Genetics Pioneer Craig Venter and Exxon Claim Algae Biofuel Breakthough (Again) - Greentech Media

St Andrews celebrates start of graduation season – The Courier

Micahel Palin is joining hundreds of students receiving a degree from St Andrews.

St Andrews was in a celebratory mood yesterday as a week of graduation ceremonies began.

Hundreds of students received their degrees at the start of a hectic week of summer services, with graduates in English, Psychology and International Relations among those to be recognised.

But amid the jubilation was a word of caution for those about to leave the university bubble, with Professor Gill Plain from the School of English saying that those leaving St Andrews would help to play a crucial role in shaping the future of the world.

In 1987 I graduated without paying, or promising, a penny in fees, she said.

So, much has changed in 30 years. But equally, it is hard, at times, not to have a disturbing sense of dj vu.

In 1987 there was a cold war in process, a celebrity in the White House, a female prime minister, a wall in Berlin and widespread fears of nuclear proliferation.

Also proliferating in law and public life were sexism, racism and homophobia. Much has changed, but these uncanny echoes this dj vu should warn us to be vigilant. Cultural attitudes quickly regress in times of instability and hardship.

But whatever todays politicians ultimately decide, you will be the generation that determines whether 30 years from now, we are living in a bunker, or celebrating the possibilities of an open, outward-facing and tolerant society.

Whatever your politics and preferences, in coming here, in being part of this university, you have chosen to be part of a community that respects the opinions of others.

Yesterdays graduation ceremony also saw the conferral of two honorary degrees.

Writer and broadcaster Dr Richard Holloway was recognised for his work with the British Medical Association and as a member of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, receiving a Doctor of Letters.

Meanwhile, Mexican novelist and politician Professor Laura Esquivel also received a Doctor of Letters for her contribution to literature and politics.

Later this week, legendary comedian, writer and broadcaster Michael Palin will be honoured by the ancient seat of learning.

The Pole to Pole star will be the third Monty Python member to be recognised, along with John Cleese and Terry Jones, when he receives an honorary degree on Friday.

Originally posted here:
St Andrews celebrates start of graduation season - The Courier

NHS to close Bristol IVF centre leaving ‘devastated couples’ – Bristol Post

Couples seeking IVF treatment to have a baby will have to travel to Cardiff when NHS bosses in Bristol close the clinic.

North Bristol NHS Trust has told couples it has "decided to discontinue the provision" at Southmead Hospital, and the clinic will close at the end of November.

The decision has been taken by NHS bosses because individual local GPsgroups that pay for the service have cut back on who is eligible for in vitro fertilisation treatment on the NHS, and how many 'cycles' they are eligible for.

That has meant the number of people receiving IVF treatment at Southmead Hospital on the NHS has dwindled over the past couple of years, and now the majority of the people treated there are actually paying thousands of pounds from their own pockets.

NHS bosses in North Bristol said that does not fit with the ethos of the NHS - and their resources would be better put into other much-needed NHS services.

It will mean there will be nowhere in the city, where the world's first IVF conceived baby Louise Brown lives, that will carry out the treatment.

All those having fertility treatment will be able to continue their current cycle, but it is understood that no new patients will be taken on.

There is no other place to undergo IVF processes either privately or through the NHS in Bristol, which means that couples struggling to conceive may be sent to Cardiff and neighbouring hospital trusts to have the procedure carried out.

The news has prompted a backlash from people who have used the service both privately and through the NHS including pregnant Sarah OMahony.

She said: There is no other physical or mental illness I know of which affects you as much as the pain of being infertile.

This decision will leave couples devastated.

North Bristol NHS Trust currently runs a number of fertility services from Southmead Hospital including fertility assessment, investigations and surgery.

The letter states that these services will still continue, but the actual process of IVF the removal of a womans egg cells for fertilisation and the reinsertion of the fertilised egg in to the womans womb - will no longer be available.

The Trust told patients: Following a review last year, the Trust has decided to discontinue the provision of Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) licensed fertility services such as IVF from the end of November 2017.

This decision has been made in order to focus on providing acute NHS services.

Patients currently having treatment or in treatment planning at BCRM will be able to complete their cycles and gametes and embryos currently in storage at the centre will continue to be stored by a licensed regulated provider.

The letter suggests that the decision has been taken because there has been a reduction in the number of NHS patients receiving IVF.

However, Ms OMahony said this is likely because of stricter rules on the age and circumstances of women eligible to undergo IVF on the NHS.

The closure of the service will also affect women who plan to privately fund IVF treatment as both the private and NHS procedures were carried out at Southmead hospital.

Ms OMahony has spent 40,000 on privately funding five cycles of IVF treatment and is now five months pregnant with her first child.

The 42-year-old said: Because I was over 40 I was not permitted to undergo IVF on the NHS, but I still used the same facility for all five of my cycles.

If I had heard this news last year I would have been devastated, heartbroken, and I can imagine that is how lots of couples will feel.

Ms OMahony who started her first cycle in 2015 - said even adding a little extra time on to hospital and clinic journeys will affect women undergoing treatment.

She said: When you start off they essentially give you medication to induce the menopause and that leaves you feeling tired and drained and awful.

I know going to say Cardiff isnt that much further in distance, but when you are feeling that unwell it is a huge thing.

And it isnt like you are popping over for a check-up, if you are having a procedure you may have to stay overnight and if they need to see you it might not be possible to get over quickly there are lots of reasons why I think it is a bad idea.

Ms OMahony is looking forward to giving birth in October, but has said it might make her and other women think twice about going in for IVF.

There are a lot of misconceptions around IVF, she said.

People say why should we be paying for you to have a baby but infertility is physically debilitating.

I personally think that it would be more cost effective to keep the clinic open because it must surely cost more to the Trust to treat women depression and health problems associated with them not being able to have children.

Would-be parents come from all over the Bristol area and further afield - with Clinical Commissioning Groups, the NHS organisations run on a county or area basis by GPs - sending couples to Southmead from as far away as Wiltshire, Somerset and Gloucestershire.

It will be up to those CCGs and not North Bristol NHS Trust where those couples are sent instead from November, but the nearest alternative is in Cardiff or Birmingham for both NHS-funded couples or people paying for it themselves.

A joint statement from North Bristol NHS Trust and Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire CCG said: "Licensed fertility services for NHS and self-funded patients will continue to be provided by North Bristol NHS Trust (NBT) until the end of November and plans are in development to ensure that the transfer of care to a new provider or providers, happens as smoothly as possible.

"Local CCGs are committed to the ongoing provision of licensed fertility services for NHS patients and have begun the process of recommissioning a provider to take over from the Trust.

"Services will be commissioned on the same basis as before and patients will be able to access the same range of licensed treatments, including IVF. The new NHS provider will be confirmed in the autumn.

"Patients are being notified of developments and further information is available on the CCGs websites and the website of the Bristol Centre for Reproductive Medicine."

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NHS to close Bristol IVF centre leaving 'devastated couples' - Bristol Post

Changing the identity of cellular enzyme spawns new pathway – Phys.Org

June 21, 2017 by Tom Fleischman

Integral membrane proteins, or IMPs, are a major class of proteins that play crucial roles in many cellular processes, including the catalysis of disulfide bonds, which are essential for the function and stability of many proteins such as antibodies, which have significant therapeutic potential.

But IMPs are intrinsically hydrophobic and thus have low solubility in watery environments. Their natural environment is within the lipid bilayer membrane of a cell, which makes it difficult to study their structure and function.

A previously reported method involving standard recombinant DNA techniques and some novel design principles enabled a team of Cornell chemical engineers to make large quantities of functional IMPs simply and inexpensively all without the use of harsh chemicals or detergents, which are typically used today. That team, led by Matt DeLisa, the William L. Lewis Professor of Engineering in the Robert Frederick Smith School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, has now used that protein engineering method to convert a membrane-bound enzyme into a water-soluble biocatalyst that functions directly in the aqueous inner cell.

"You can redesign these tricky proteins, making them water-soluble, and perhaps really surprisingly, they can continue to catalyze their natural biological reactions," said DeLisa, principal investigator for "A water-soluble DsbB variant that catalyzes disulfide-bond formation in vivo," published June 19 in Nature Chemical Biology.

"To our knowledge, this is the first example of creating a water-soluble IMP that retains its natural catalytic activity but does so in an entirely new cellular environment," DeLisa said. "And because it's a genetically engineered construct, it can be expressed like any other soluble protein with very little effort or difficulty."

First author is Dario Mizrachi, former postdoctoral associate in chemical and biomolecular engineering who's now an assistant professor at Brigham Young University. Collaborators included Michael-Paul Robinson, doctoral student in chemical and biomolecular engineering, and Mehmet Berkmen of New England Biolabs.

The group's previous work detailed a method they called SIMPLEx (Solubilization of Integral Membrane Proteins with High Levels of Expression), for shielding IMPs from water and enabling the production of large quantities of these difficult-to-make proteins. Using recombinant DNA techniques, they stitched together an artificial membrane protein with an identity crisis one that maintains its biological function, but thinks it's soluble in water.

This latest work is the first application of that technique. The group used their identity-switched IMPs to make disulfide bonds, a type of post-translational modification that occurs in many proteins and influences nearly all aspects of normal cell biology and pathogenesis.

The group targeted the bacterial integral membrane enzyme DsbB, a central biocatalyst in disulfide bond formation, although DeLisa believes the technique is transferrable to myriad other membrane proteins.

Using the SIMPLEx method, the group converted membrane-bound DsbB into a water-soluble biocatalyst that could be readily expressed in the E. coli cytoplasm, where it spawned disulfide-bond formation in a range of protein targets.

Disulfide bonds are key players in many therapeutic proteins, such as monoclonal antibodies. Many cancer drugs employ these molecules, which can mimic or enhance the immune system's attack on tumor cells.

The ability to take the catalyst out of the lipid membrane and put it in the cytoplasm, DeLisa said, allows scientists to make these antibodies in potentially more favorable locations in the cell.

"We could make this pathway in the cytoplasm [or] we could move everything to a different subcellular compartment like the periplasm, or potentially take the entire pathway out of the cell and reconstitute it in a cell-free system," DeLisa said. "The point is, we create a tremendous amount of flexibility in terms of making these bonds by essentially turning a membrane protein into a soluble enzyme."

Explore further: New nanoparticle technology to decipher structure and function of membrane proteins

More information: Dario Mizrachi et al. A water-soluble DsbB variant that catalyzes disulfide-bond formation in vivo, Nature Chemical Biology (2017). DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.2409

Researchers at Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, have developed a nanoparticle technology that can be used to stabilise membrane proteins so that their structure can be studied in a lipid environment. The method, described in ...

A team of scientists from MIPT, Research Center Jlich (Germany), and Institut de Biologie Structurale (France) has developed a new approach to membrane protein crystallization. For the first time, the scientists have showed ...

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Integral membrane proteins, or IMPs, are a major class of proteins that play crucial roles in many cellular processes, including the catalysis of disulfide bonds, which are essential for the function and stability of many ...

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Changing the identity of cellular enzyme spawns new pathway - Phys.Org

Newly identified protection mechanism serves as first responder to cellular stress – Phys.Org

June 21, 2017

Researchers at the University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute have identified a new type of rapid-response defense mechanism that helps protect cells from environmental stress while giving slower, well-known protection systems time to act.

"It's like a first responder rushing to an alarm while the larger response team mobilizes," said Natsuko Jin, a postdoctoral research fellow in the lab of LSI faculty member Lois Weisman and lead author of a study scheduled to be published June 21 in the Journal of Cell Biology.

Generally, when cells are put under stress, adaptation mechanisms kick in. They trigger transcriptional machinery and, through gene expression, the cell produces new proteins to respond to the stress and keep itself alive.

In yeast, a single-cell organism often used to study fundamental cellular biology, a much faster type of response was also observedan immediate and short-lived spike in the production of a signaling lipid that is usually seen only in miniscule quantities.

When the scientists short-circuited the yeast's ability to generate this rapid response, the yeast succumbed to an environmental stress at catastrophic rates.

"This is the first time an early protection pathway that works faster than gene expression has been identified," Jin said. "Since many of the key players have been preserved by evolution up into people and other mammals, our investigations suggest this and other types of early protection pathways may exist more broadly, and they may respond to different types of cellular stress."

For this study, the yeast were put into an environment with a high concentration of saltwhat scientists call high osmolarity. Within a few minutes, each cell responds by setting off a signaling cascade that activates a key protein kinaseHog1which travels from the cell's cytoplasm into the nucleus, where it promotes changes in gene expression. These changes in gene expression take between 30 minutes and an hour to start to have an effect, and up to two hours to be fully activated.

Meanwhile, the researchers also observed a sharp, immediate spike in a signaling lipid known as PI3,5P2, which is produced by an organelle called the vacuole in yeast. The yeast vacuole is similar to the lysosome in complex organisms.

"Within one minute you see a five-fold elevation of this lipid," said Weisman, senior author on the study and professor of cell and developmental biology at the U-M Medical School. "Within five minutes, it's a 20-fold increase. Then, without us doing anything else to the cells, it plateaus and drops off."

When regular yeast were put into this high salt, or hyperosmotic, environment for four hours, most did just fine.

When the researchers used genetic manipulation to knock out the well-known, longer-term response pathway that produces Hog1, 30 percent of the cells died.

"Still, 70 percent did just fine," Weisman said.

But when they removed the cell's ability to produce PI3,5P2, 80 percent died.

"So we know it's doing something protective before the gene expression kicks in," she said. "If they don't have it, most die."

Exactly how PI3,5P2 conveys a benefit to the cell is not yet understood, Jin said. The current study examined the upstream regulators of the signaling lipid, and demonstrated they were distinct both in time and space from the action of the Hog1 pathway.

She also said that while the observation that PI3,5P2 spikes under hyperosmotic conditions dates back to the late 1990s, its role had previously been unclear. Jin's investigation started with the desire to understand what causes the spike and what physiological role it might play.

Explore further: Yeast study yields insights into cell-division cycle

Studies using yeast genetics have provided new, fundamental insights into the cell-division cycle, researchers at the University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute report.

In multicellular animals, cells communicate by emitting and receiving proteins, a process called signaling. One of the most common signaling pathways is the transforming growth factor b (Tgf-b) pathway, which functions in ...

Control of RNA lifespan is vital for the proper functioning of our cells. Marc Bhler's group at the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research (FMI) has discovered a novel mechanism determining the fate of RNA ...

Although all cells in an organism have the same DNA, cells function differently based on the genes they express. While most studies of gene expression focus on activities in the cell's nucleus, a new Cornell study finds that ...

Dr. Zhi-Liang Zheng, a biology professor and plant scientist in the Department of Biological Science, published a paper last month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) that demonstrates a connection ...

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The same mechanisms that quickly separate mixtures of oil and water are at play when controlling the organization in an unusual part of our DNA called heterochromatin, according to a new study by researchers at the Department ...

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Newly identified protection mechanism serves as first responder to cellular stress - Phys.Org

Open imaging data for biology – Phys.org – Phys.Org

June 21, 2017 Credit: European Bioinformatics Institute EMBL-EBI

A picture may be worth a thousand words, but only if you understand what you are looking at. The life sciences rely increasingly on 2-D, 3-D and 4-D image data, but its staggering heterogeneity and size make it extremely difficult to collate into a central resource, link to other data types and share with the research community.

To address this challenge, scientists at the University of Dundee, the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), the University of Bristol and the University of Cambridge have launched a prototype repository for imaging data: the Image Data Resource (IDR). This free resource, described in Nature Methods, is the first general biological image repository that stores and integrates data from multiple modalities and laboratories.

The IDR also reveals the potential impact of sharing and reusing imaging data for the life sciences.

Pooling resources

"Imaging will only be truly transformative for science if we make the data publicly available," explains Alvis Brazma, a lead author and Senior Scientist at EMBL-EBI. "Scientists should be able to query existing data to identify commonalities and patterns. But to make this possible we need a robust platform where researchers can upload their imaging data and easily access data from other experiments. The Image Data Resource is the first step towards creating a public image data repository for the life sciences."

There are many resources worldwide in which people publish imaging data, but none of these repositories is both generic and linked to other relevant bio-molecular data. This means that for all the effort that goes into them, it is difficult to reuse these datasets in new studies.

There are many reasons why sharing imaging data has been so difficult until now most notably the heterogeneity and complexity of the image data, but also a critical mass of storage, compute and curation expertise.

"Imaging data is large, yes, but the real challenge is that it is heterogeneous and multidimensional," says Jason Swedlow, senior author of the study and Professor of Quantitative Cell Biology at the University of Dundee. "Curating, storing and analysing imaging data require significant effort and computing power. The creation of the IDR prototype was only possible thanks to a strong collaboration between several scientific organisations."

Nice picture but what does it mean?

IDR contains a broad range of imaging data, including high-content screening, super-resolution microscopy, time-lapse and digital pathology imaging. But it's not just the diversity of data types that makes the resource unique; it is the additional information available that creates the added value.

"IDR doesn't just show you an image or a video of a cell. It also tells you what the image is about, where it was taken, by whom and what conclusions can be drawn from it," continues Brazma.

The new resource integrates imaging data with molecular and phenotype data. IDR includes information on experimental protocols: parameters, analyses and the effects scientists have observed in cells and features, for example. This makes it possible for users to analyse gene networks potentially revealing previously unknown interactions on a scale that would not be possible for individual studies. That requires a staggering amount of storage and compute power. The IDR collaboration was able to launch their project successfully thanks to the Embassy Cloud resource and support at EMBL-EBI.

The Image Data Repository

The prototype public image repository contains a broad range of data, including:

Demonstrating success

The Swedlow group at Dundee and the Carazo Salas group at the University of Bristol used IDR to illustrate how shared imaging data can push the boundaries of research. Using data deposited in the IDR, they identified genes from different studies that, when mutated or removed, caused cells to elongate and stretch out. They put together information from several different studies and built a gene network, which gives a clear view on how these genes affect cell shape an important property to consider in metastatic cancer.

"Expanding the public archives to include imaging is of huge interest to the biotech industry and drug development companies. It offers potential to identify new therapies and targets, and broadens the scope of research by allowing scientists around the world to access each other's imaging datasets," adds Swedlow.

"Bioimaging technologies are currently revolutionising life science. Sharing the rapidly increasing amount of image data is the key to enabling ground-breaking future research," says Jan Ellenberg, Head of EMBL's Cell Biology and Biophysics Unit and Coordinator of Euro-BioImaging, the pan-European infrastructure for imaging technologies. "For this reason image data archiving and sharing is a high priority for EMBL, and for Euro-BioImaging's future general data services, which can build on the IDR pilot example."

Next steps

So far, the collaborators have proven that IDR is both possible and useful. The next step is to secure the support and investment needed to transform the prototype into a production-ready imaging infrastructure.

IDR's software and technology is open source, so it can be accessed and built into other image data publication systems. This promotes and extends publication and re-analysis of scientific data.

Explore further: 'Big Data' resource raises possibility of research revolution

More information: Eleanor Williams et al. Image Data Resource: a bioimage data integration and publication platform, Nature Methods (2017). DOI: 10.1038/nmeth.4326

Journal reference: Nature Methods

Provided by: European Bioinformatics Institute EMBL-EBI

A group of UK scientists involving researchers from the University of Bristol have demonstrated how aggregating image data from laboratories all around the world has the potential to revolutionise scientific research.

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The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) has announced financial support for the Human Cell Atlas, which is using sequencing technology to redefine every cell in the body. Funding and engineering support from CZI will enable ...

Advances in genetic sequencing and other technologies have led to an explosion of biological data, and decades of openness (both spontaneous and enforced) mean that scientists routinely deposit data in online repositories. ...

The collaboration of two leading cell image resource centers now provides a more extensive and advanced facility for archiving, sharing, and analyzing microscope images in great detail. The American Society for Cell Biology ...

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Researchers at the University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute have identified a new type of rapid-response defense mechanism that helps protect cells from environmental stress while giving slower, well-known protection ...

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Open imaging data for biology - Phys.org - Phys.Org

Researchers find new mechanism for genome regulation – Phys.Org

June 21, 2017 Liquid-like fusion of heterochromatin protein 1a droplets in the embryo of a fruit fly. Credit: Amy Strom/Berkeley Lab

The same mechanisms that quickly separate mixtures of oil and water are at play when controlling the organization in an unusual part of our DNA called heterochromatin, according to a new study by researchers at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).

Researchers studying genome and cell biology provide evidence that heterochromatin organizes large parts of the genome into specific regions of the nucleus using liquid-liquid phase separation, a mechanism well known in physics but whose importance for biology has only recently been revealed.

They present their findings June 21 in the journal Nature, addressing a long-standing question about how DNA functions are organized in space and time, including how genes are regulated to be silenced or expressed.

"The importance of DNA sequences in health and disease has been clear for decades, but we only recently have come to realize that the organization of sections of DNA into different physical domains or compartments inside the nucleus is critical to promote distinct genome functions," said study corresponding author, Gary Karpen, senior scientist at Berkeley Lab's Biological Systems and Engineering Division.

The long stretches of DNA in heterochromatin contain sequences that, for the most part, need to be silenced for cells to work properly. Scientists once thought that compaction of the DNA was the primary mechanism for controlling which enzymes and molecules gain access to the sequences. It was reasoned that the more tightly wound the strands, the harder it would be to get to the genetic material inside.

That mechanism has been questioned in recent years by the discovery that some large protein complexes could get inside the heterochromatin domain, while smaller proteins can remain shut out.

In this new study of early Drosophila embryos, the researchers observed two non-mixing liquids in the cell nucleus: one that contained expressed genes, and one that contained silenced heterochromatin. They found that heterochromatic droplets fused together just like two drops of oil surrounded by water.

In lab experiments, researchers purified heterochromatin protein 1a (HP1a), a main component of heterochromatin, and saw that this single component was able to recreate what they saw in the nucleus by forming liquid droplets.

"We are excited about these findings because they explain a mystery that's existed in the field for a decade," said study lead author Amy Strom, a graduate student in Karpen's lab. "That is, if compaction controls access to silenced sequences, how are other large proteins still able to get in? Chromatin organization by phase separation means that proteins are targeted to one liquid or the other based not on size, but on other physical traits, like charge, flexibility, and interaction partners."

The Berkeley Lab study, which used fruit fly and mouse cells, will be published alongside a companion paper in Nature led by UC San Francisco researchers, who showed that the human version of the HP1a protein has the same liquid droplet properties, suggesting that similar principles hold for human heterochromatin.

Interestingly, this type of liquid-liquid phase separation is very sensitive to changes in temperature, protein concentration, and pH levels.

"It's an elegant way for the cell to be able to manipulate gene expression of many sequences at once," said Strom.

Other cellular structures, including some involved in disease, are also organized by phase separation.

"Problems with phase separation have been linked to diseases such as dementia and certain neurodegenerative disorders," said Karpen.

He noted that as we age, biological molecules lose their liquid state and become more solid, accumulating damage along the way. Karpen pointed to diseases like Alzheimer's and Huntington's, in which proteins misfold and aggregate, becoming less liquid and more solid over time.

"If we can better understand what causes aggregation, and how to keep things more liquid, we might have a chance to combat these types of disease," Strom added.

The work is a big step forward for understanding how DNA functions, but could also help researchers improve their ability to manipulate genes.

"Gene therapy, or any treatment that relies on tight regulation of gene expression, could be improved by precisely targeting molecules to the right place in the nucleus," says Karpen. "It is very difficult to target genes located in heterochromatin, but this understanding of the properties linked to phase separation and liquid behaviors could help change that and open up a third of the genome that we couldn't get to before."

This includes targeting gene-editing technologies like CRISPR, which has recently opened up new doors for precise genome manipulation and gene therapy.

Explore further: Discovery of a novel chromosome segregation mechanism during cell division

More information: Amy R. Strom et al, Phase separation drives heterochromatin domain formation, Nature (2017). DOI: 10.1038/nature22989

When cells divide, chromosomes need to be evenly segregated between daughter cells. This equal distribution of chromosomes is very important to accurately pass on genetic information to the next generation. Abnormal chromosomal ...

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The same mechanisms that quickly separate mixtures of oil and water are at play when controlling the organization in an unusual part of our DNA called heterochromatin, according to a new study by researchers at the Department ...

Researchers at the University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute have identified a new type of rapid-response defense mechanism that helps protect cells from environmental stress while giving slower, well-known protection ...

Gelada malesa close relative to baboonspay attention to the loud calls of a rival to gain information about his relative fighting ability compared to themselves, a new study indicated.

(Phys.org)A team of researchers from South Korea, the U.K. and the U.S. has used computational methods to follow chromosomal rearrangements in seven genomes. In their paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy ...

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Researchers find new mechanism for genome regulation - Phys.Org