‘Grey’s Anatomy’: If George Had Survived, Here’s Where He Might Have Ended Up – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Greys Anatomy is one of the most beloved medical dramas on the air, a show that has earned significant critical acclaim. Over the years, the core cast of Greys Anatomy has changed a great deal, with many characters being written off the show or killed off in new and interesting ways.

One of the shows original characters, a mainstay in the first few seasons of Greys Anatomy, was Dr. George OMalley. While fans loved George, he was killed off in the sixth season still, that hasnt stopped longtime viewers of Greys Anatomy from wondering what would have happened to George if he had lived.

George OMalley was first introduced to Greys Anatomy viewers in 2005 as a surgical intern at Seattle Grace Hospital. Along with other early-season interns, George worked his way up the ranks, eventually becoming a resident. As played by actor T.R. Knight, George quickly became a mainstay, one of the shows most beloved characters.

Knight received overwhelmingly positive reviews thanks to his work as George, even getting a nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series at the 59th Primetime Emmy Awards. Georges storyline was as inspiring as Knights, and the character went on to become an expert in trauma surgery. Unfortunately, his story came to an end in 2009, after a horrendous bus accident renders him brain-dead.

Fans have never forgotten George, and in a recent Reddit thread, diehard viewers speculated about what the character would be doing now, if he had lived. Discussing what specialty George would have chosen, one fan wrote trauma for sure! But if they chose to develop a different storyline for him leading up to the exit, general or peds couldve been interesting 🙂

Another fan wrote definitely Trauma. He was great under pressure at work, he wouldve been a good trauma surgeon. But if not trauma then peds would be good because hes good with kids. Many other Reddit posters agreed that George would have thrived as a trauma surgeon with one noting that George had, in many ways, already chosen his specialty before he died: He very specifically signed up for the army to be trained as a trauma surgeon. Thats choosing a specialty.

In 2020, fans were treated to a heartbreaking moment when Meredith speaks to George via her subconscious mind. In the dream, George confirms that he wasnt ready to die, in a scene that ripped fans hearts in two. George talking about how he would have chosen to live just smashed my heart into a thousand pieces, one fan wrote.

While George is no longer around on Greys Anatomy, T.R. Knight continued acting after he left the show in 2009. After rising to fame early on, Knight decided to focus his attention on television and stage. He has also worked as an outspoken advocate for LGBTQ+ rights. A few of the TV shows that he appeared in after leaving Greys included The Good Wife, The Catch, When We Rise, Will & Grace, and, most recently, The Flight Attendant. For his work in The Flight Attendant, Knight earned accolades from critics, proving that in the years since he left the set of Greys Anatomy, he hasnt lost any of his skill at developing fascinating characters. Stay tuned to Showbiz Cheat Sheet for all the latest entertainment news!

RELATED:Greys Anatomy: George O Malley Would Have Stayed if He Could Have Would T. R. Knight Have Stayed?

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'Grey's Anatomy': If George Had Survived, Here's Where He Might Have Ended Up - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

‘Candyman’ | Anatomy of a Scene – The New York Times

Hi, my name is Nia DaCosta, and I am the director of Candyman. You guys want to hear a scary story? No. Too bad. So, this scene is Troy and Brianna theyre siblings and Briannas boyfriend, Anthony who is an artist and Troys boyfriend. And theyre all together trying to have a nice dinner, but Troy insists on telling a ghost story about the neighborhood that Brianna and Anthony have just moved into. You see Yahya Abdul-Mateen II playing Anthony, Teyonah Parris playing Brianna, Nathan Stewart-Jarrett playing Troy, and Kyle Kaminsky playing Grady. [LAUGHTER] This is a story about a woman named Helen Lyle. She was a grad student a white grad student doing her thesis on the urban legends of Cabrini Green. For research, she came down to Cabrini a few times. You know, asking questions, taking pictures of graffiti, people. And then one day she just snaps. So, the shadow puppets came about when Jordan Peele, whos the co-writer and producer on the film, he came to me and he was like, I think we should do shadow puppets instead of shooting actual flashback scenes. And I was super into it because I did not want to shoot flashback scenes, and I also didnt want to cut in clips from the first movie. And so, we kind of made a decision, O.K., the flashbacks will be shadow puppetry. But then, as I was working with the shadow puppets and trying to figure out where they fit, it turned out they actually were just going to be much more useful. So thats how they ended up in this scene. We wanted it to be very specific to the teller. So every shadow puppet scene has a very specific style and point of view because it is someones way of thinking about the story. Its not necessarily the truth. Helen arrives with a sacrificial offering. [BABY CRYING] And thats why we wanted to also create that separation between fact and fiction, real and fake. And thats why you see the hands moving because its about these people creating a story puppeteering the way we think about these people. And for Troy, because hes trying to tell a scary story, hes being very hyperbolic. Hes also saying things that didnt happen. We made the style very jagged and scary and very much not the sympathetic character of Helen that we know and love from the original film. Is my ros still in the freezer? You dont want the moscato? Moscatos a dessert wine. [CHUCKLES]

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'Candyman' | Anatomy of a Scene - The New York Times

Watch a Scary Story Come to Life in Candyman – The New York Times

In Anatomy of a Scene, we ask directors to reveal the secrets that go into making key scenes in their movies. See new episodes in the series on Fridays. You can also watch our collection of more than 150 videos on YouTube and subscribe to our YouTube channel.

Want to hear a scary story?

That enticing question (or horrifying one, depending on your point of view) begins this scene from the new Candyman (now in theaters), which is both a continuation and a reimagining of Bernard Roses 1992 horror film.

The update is directed by Nia DaCosta and co-written by Jordan Peele (with DaCosta and Win Rosenfield). It still involves the menacing figure who comes after you if you say his name five times in front of a mirror, but this scene reaches back to the story of the original film.

Brianna (Teyonah Parris) and her brother, Troy (Nathan Stewart-Jarrett), are both hanging out one evening with their boyfriends when Troy turns down the lights and turns up the dread to tell a story. It concerns Helen Lyle, one of the main characters (played by Virginia Madsen) from the earlier film, and how one day she just snaps. Killings and snow angels in blood ensue.

Troys story retraces the steps of the earlier films narrative, with some embellishments. Rather than flashing back to footage from the 1992 movie, moments are depicted with shadow puppetry. Narrating the sequence, DaCosta said that she wanted each shadow puppet segment to be specific to the teller because she saw it as someones way of thinking about the story. Its not necessarily the truth. In this scene, hands move the puppets to convey a sense of how the storyteller, Troy, is also manipulating his tale.

Read the 2021 Candyman review.

Read the review of the 1992 film.

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Watch a Scary Story Come to Life in Candyman - The New York Times

Celebrity Wheel of Fortune Season 2: Grey’s Anatomy, Buffy, and Glee Stars Set to Compete! – TV Fanatic

ABC is ready to spin the celebrity wheel of fortune again.

The network on Thursday announced the full list of contestants for the forthcoming second season, and there are some big names.

Celebrity Wheel of Fortune returns with season two on its new night, Sunday, September 26 (8:00-9:00 p.m. EDT), on ABC.

Hosted by pop-culture legends Pat Sajak and Vanna White, the primetime edition welcomes celebrity contestants to spin the worlds most famous Wheel and solve word puzzles for a chance to win up to $1 million.

All of the money won by the celebrity contestants will go to a charity of their choice.

The celebrity contestants include Jason Alexander (Seinfeld), Tatyana Ali, Anthony Anderson, Tituss Burgess (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt), Cheryl Burke (Dancing With the Stars), Brooke Burns, Lacey Chabert, Mario Cantone, Laverne Cox (Orange Is the New Black), Marcia Cross (Desperate Housewives), and Joey Fatone.

Other big names appearing include Vivica A. Fox (Empire), Jeff Garlin, Anthony Michael Hall, Melissa Joan Hart (Sabrina the Teenage Witch), John Michael Higgins, Vanilla Ice, Tara Lipinski, Loni Love, Von Miller, and Michael Mizanin.

Wanya Morris, Jason Mraz, Haley Joel Osment, Donny Osmond, James Pickens Jr. (Grey's Anatomy), Caroline Rhea, Andy Richter, Amber Riley (Glee), and Tori Spelling Beverly Hills, 90210) also star.

Shawn Stockman, Curtis Stone, Jodie Sweetin, Raven-Symon (That's So Raven), Karl-Anthony Towns, Michelle Trachtenberg (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Nia Vardalos, Johnny Weir, and Ali Wentworth round out the cast.

This is an impressive cast for the series, which launched to bumper ratings during its inaugural celebrity run, so it will be fun to see whether it can keep up the pace in the fall.

Celebrity Wheel of Fortune kicks off ABC's primetime lineup on Sundays and will be followed by a new season of Supermarket Sweep.

The Rookie rounds out the night for the network with its fourth season.

Celebrity Wheel of Fortune is produced by Sony Pictures Television, a Sony Pictures Entertainment company. Wheel of Fortune is distributed by CBS Television Distribution.

ABC also announced during its turn at TCA that Steve Harvey will be hosting a primetime court show titled Judge Steve Harvey.

Your thoughts on this cast?

Hit the comments below.

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Paul Dailly is the Associate Editor for TV Fanatic. Follow him on Twitter.

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Celebrity Wheel of Fortune Season 2: Grey's Anatomy, Buffy, and Glee Stars Set to Compete! - TV Fanatic

‘Grey’s Anatomy’: Why Sandra Oh Wanted to Play Cristina Yang – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

When the long-running medical drama Greys Anatomy began in 2005, the first batch of interns in the show was the most integral to the show. The show began exploring the surgical world and reality through the experiences of Meredith, Christina, Izzie, George, and Alex. In this group of five, Sandra Oh played the role of Christina Yang, an ambitious intern who aspired to be a cardiothoracic surgeon. Looking back at her career now, the Emmy-winning actor revealed why she was attracted to Yangs character in the show in a recent interview with Vanity Fair

At the outset, the drama had Meredith Grey, the titular character of the show, as the central role in the plot. Cristina emerged as Merediths closest friend and as the seasons progressed, her person. They were similar in some but different from each other in several ways and that became a driving force in their friendship. Oh said it was that difference between Cristina and Meredith that attracted her to the role.

In the pilot episode, Cristina and Meredith work together on a difficult diagnosis and at the end, Meredith gets to scrub in the surgery. Meredith had told Cristina before they teamed up that the latter could have the surgery if they found the right diagnosis. But in the end, she couldnt refuse the opportunity to participate in surgery on her very first day and took it when it was offered to her.

After the surgery though, both Meredith and Cristina have a mature conversation about how neither of them wanted to compromise on their ambition when it came to surgeries. And just like that, both of them knew that things were good between them. In typical Meredith and Cristina fashion, they decided to not let that be a moment.

The reason why I wanted to play Cristina[Yang] in Greys Anatomy is because dramaturgically at least in the pilot, and again, you never knew if it would go past a pilot, she was the antagonist, Oh said after looking at the clip from the end of the pilot episode.

Oh continued that she found Cristina very interesting and prickly. She saw qualities in her that she didnt see in herself. She also thought that it was better to be able to play the role of a student because of the scope of possibilities a role like that offered.

I just was also at a point where I did not want to play a character of authority, Oh said. I was more interested in the role of the student because you have to find stuff out, you dont have answers. Youre the person trying to find stuff out. Thats where the story is.

Exactly as Oh planned, Cristinas character arc develops perfectly from a student to a renowned cardiothoracic surgeon and a teacher.

Oh also revealed in her interview that after auditioning for Cristina and impressing the show creator Shonda Rhimes with her acting chops, Oh first said no to the role. Her team informed her after her auditions that they couldnt get the studio to make the deal that they thought she deserved.

It was later that Rhimes asked for Oh specifically that she got the part. Fortunately, for the shows fans, Oh eventually played the part that became a favorite character for many.

RELATED: Greys Anatomy: Sandra Oh on Why Playing Cristina Yang Was a Gift

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'Grey's Anatomy': Why Sandra Oh Wanted to Play Cristina Yang - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

‘Virgin River’: These 3 Actors Also Starred in ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Virgin River has swept fans off their feet since it debuted on Netflix in 2019. The drama series which is based on the book series by Robyn Carr follows Melinda Mel Monroe(Alexandra Breckenridge), a nurse/midwife who leaves her life in Los Angeles for a new chapter in Virgin River. Upon settling in, Mel finds herself drawn to Jack Sheridan(Martin Sheridan), a retired Marine who now owns the towns bar.

While fans of Carrs books will certainly recognize the characters, fans who have been hooked on Greys Anatomy for 17 seasons will also see some familiar faces.

RELATED:Virgin River: Fans Might Not Find out Who Shot Jack for a Long Time

Virgin River has dominated the ratings chart since the third season debuted on Netflix in July 2021. However, Netflix has remained silent about renewing the show for season 4, let alone revealing a release date. Yet, fans shouldnt despair just yet. With such massive ratings, its almost inevitable that Netflix will renew the series. Moreover, some fans are convinced that filming for season 4 is already underway.

Netflix Lifeis reportingthat the cast and crew have been filming new episodes since July 2021 and that production is slated to end in November 2021. Also,The Watershed Grill in North Vancouver, which is the location used for Jacks bar announced on Instagram that they would be closed for filming on Aug. 17 and 18.

If Netflix Life is correct, wed estimate that Virgin River Season 4 will premiere in the spring of 2022.

RELATED:Virgin River: Jack Might Not Be the Father of Charmaines Babies

Fans of Greys Anatomy were probably delighted when they saw some very familiar faces on Virgin River. Fans of the medical drama will certainly recognize Henderson as Dr. Nathan Riggs who was Merideths (Ellen Pompeo) first love interest following the death of her husband Derek (Patrick Dempsey). Henderson starred in a total of 48 episodes of Greys from 2015 to 2017.

Though Zibby Allen portays Jacks sister Brie in Virgin River, in the second season of Greys Anatomy, she appeared in five episodes of the series as Nurse Zibby. Fans might be a little confused by this since Allens character initially wore a name tag that read Angela.

Jenny Cooper might star as Mels protective older sister Jo on Virgin River, but in Greys, she portrayed the villainous Bethany Tanner. Cooper appeared in episode 112 titled, Sledgehammer. Not only did she refuse to accept her daughters sexuality, but she also upset doctors so much that they were forced to call Child Protective Services.

RELATED:Virgin River: Fans Are Convinced Paige Is Already Dead

Greys Anatomy isnt the only place that Virgin River has sourced its actors. Daniel Gillies, who portrayed Elijah Mikaelson inThe Vampire DiariesandThe Originals also plays a pivotal role in the Netflix drama series. On the show, Gillies stars as Mark Monroe, Mels late husband who often appears in flashback sequences. In the first season of Virgin River, fans learned that Mark was a doctor and he and Mel had a whirlwind romance.

However, that fairytale was shattered when their first baby was stillborn. From there, amid their respective grief, the pair never got back in sync especially after continuous rounds of IVF proved unsuccessful. Sadly, in a flashback, we learn that Mark dies in a tragic car crash when a truck hits the vehicle that he and Mel are driving in.

Though Gillies only has a recurring role in the series, we expect to see a lot more of him in season 4 since Mel is pregnant and her pregnancy might be the result of an embryo that she and Mark created prior to his death. Heres what Ill say, somewhat enigmatically: the good news about being the dead husband is that you can appear at any time. Ill leave it at that, Gillies toldMr. WarBurton Magazine.

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'Virgin River': These 3 Actors Also Starred in 'Grey's Anatomy' - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

An exceptional fossil confiscated by the Brazilian Police reveals new details about the anato… – Market Research Telecast

A fossil that was confiscated in 2013 by the Brazilian Police during a raid in Santos (So Paulo state) turned out to be the specimen of the tapejrido clade, a subgroup of flying reptiles of the order of the pterosaurs. more complete and best preserved that has recovered so far in Brazil.

The limestone slabs in which the remains of Tupandactylus navigans were preserved in a way exceptional, they conserve the practically complete skeleton, including the skull and post-skull, as well as remnants of soft tissues adhered to the sagittal crest, a Brazilian research team detailed in a study published this Wednesday at PLOS ONE.

Although there is an abundant fossil record of these reptiles that thrived during the early Cretaceous, between 145 and 100 million years, in what is now Brazil. Most of them only preserve partial remains, so the confiscated specimen allowed paleontologists to describe for the first time the shape of the premaxillary crest, the proportions and shape of the dental crest, as well as the axial skeletal anatomy.

Some of the new features discovered, such as the length of its neck, the difference in size between the front and rear limbs, as well as the pronounced sagittal crest, suggest that the Tupandactylus navigans had a terrestrial foraging lifestyle, as These characteristics may have made it difficult to fly short distances, which is especially useful when escaping from predators.

However, the analysis of the fossil also showed that this pterosaur had the physiological adaptations to maintain a propelled flight, such as the presence of the notarium bone, formed by the fusion of the thoracic vertebrae, a wide anchoring surface for the pectoral muscles, as well as divisions in the composition of the wings that would have been fundamental during the glide.

Further research on the rare fossil will be necessary, the academics note, in order to determine how the newly discovered features contributed to a foraging lifestyle, as well as its potential to increase performance in flight.

From agreement to Victor Beccari, co-author of the publication, the sample studied was recovered along with 3,000 other fossils that were destined for the museums of the Global North [pases industrializados] or, worse still, for private collectors! However, thanks to the police intervention now the Tupandactylus navigans is protected by the Institute of Geosciences of the University of So Paulo and is part of the exhibition Fossils of Araripe

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Collective Efforts to Increase Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Genetics Department Make Steady Progress – Yale School of Medicine

Every two weeks, members of the Yale Genetics Diversity Advisory Committee (DAC) come together to discuss ways to address equity and inclusion across all underrepresented memberships within the department. These discussions are centered around four major areas: i) understanding the challenges that members of our community from underrepresented backgrounds face, ii) scrutinizing and formalizing a more equitable approach to hiring, iii) educating members of the community at all career stages and job functions in how to eliminate current exclusionary practices, and iv) investing in the support and retention of underrepresented minorities within the department. The committee operates within a network of Yale-wide diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts led by Deputy Dean and Chief Diversity Officer Dr. Darin Lattimore together with Associate Dean of Diversity and Inclusion & Associate Chief Diversity Officer Rochelle Smith, both from the Yale School of Medicines Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.

DAC was formed in October 2020 and is led by the Vice Chair of Diversity in the department, Dr. Valentina Greco. The overarching goal of DAC is to provide a lens through which to scrutinize and improve all departmental practices to embrace, enrich, and support a greater diversity within the departmental membership. The committee members partner closely with departmental members and leadership to achieve this. DAC members also act as representatives for other community members at their professional level undergraduate, post-graduate, graduate students, post-doc, administrative staff and lab professionals, clinical staff, and junior and senior faculty updating their peers on DAC efforts and bringing forth the concerns of their circles to the committee. Committee members communicate regularly with each other through a Slack platform, educating themselves and supporting each other in this critical work. The committee members are individuals with diverse backgrounds and different lived experiences who must be brave, vulnerable, and open with each other as they discuss the resistance within and outside the community to implement cultural change.

One of the areas where DAC is currently focusing its efforts on is the departments hiring practices, closely collaborating with faculty members and departmental leadership to develop an approach that both attracts and enriches for diverse memberships. To this end, DAC has recently provided extensive review and feedback of departmental guidelines for the recruitment of new junior faculty. These guidelines span from the initial wording of the advertisement to procedures detailing best practices for scoring applications, conducting interviews, and advancing candidates at each stage of review. Once approved, the guidelines will help to ensure that diversity is embedded in every faculty search going forward as a core value of the department, and that proactive steps to promote diversity in faculty hiring are consistently taken, regardless of who is directing the search.

Just as important as diversifying the candidate pool is ensuring that the department can support and retain its diverse faculty members. On its own, recruiting diverse candidates will not fix problems of equity and inclusion in the department this would only perpetuate such problems by creating a false sense that the culture has become more inclusive and supportive simply through diverse recruitment efforts, instead of addressing the underlying barriers that have traditionally excluded diverse members in the first place. To provide an authentically supportive environment for vulnerable memberships within the department, DAC is helping to implement an infrastructure for everyday processes, ranging from mentoring to promotion criteria, that continually scrutinizes and improves itself to be equitable for everyone.

DAC meetings create intentional spaces for scrutiny and to brainstorm solutions. However, it is also important to note that efforts to address inequity have been underway in the department even before the formation of DAC. In 2019, Dr. Caroline Hendry, Scientific Director and Advisor to the Chair of Genetics, spearheaded the Program to Support and Retain Women Faculty in Genetics, partnering with long-time advocate of gender equity Dr. Valentina Greco, as well as senior women faculty in the department Dr. Lynn Cooley, Dr. Valerie Reinke, and Dr. Hui Zhang. The program was designed in consultation with Dr. David Berg, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and an expert in organizational behavior and group and intergroup relations. The program takes a holistic approach to both support the professional advancement of women faculty in Genetics and to begin to break down the socio-cultural barriers that have impeded their advancement thus far. The Program to Support and Retain Women Faculty in Genetics has equipped me with tools to develop my managerial skills on a more personalized basis, says Dr. Kaelyn Sumigray, Assistant Professor of Genetics. She shares that the program provided a much-needed support system for developing my research program at a critical time in my career. The program spans four key areas: i) creating opportunities for women to become leaders, ii) scrutinizing and reassigning the distribution of burden and invisible labor in the department, iii) deconstructing gender stereotypes that limit career progression, and iv) establishing best practices for life-work integration. Importantly, the program includes men in the department insofar as they must be willing to take an active role in recognizing and addressing their privilege and role in perpetuating the structural, cultural and organizational barriers that have so far restricted womens careers in science from advancing on par with their male colleagues. Many aspects of the program can and are applied to other groups that are currently underrepresented in the department not just women in order to support and retain all vulnerable memberships.

More recently, the committee has expanded its efforts in training and educating the department on topics primarily at the intersection of race and genetics and issues of discrimination. The Equity Journal Club (EJC) was established by the departments trainees and staff in response to the social movement that came from the murder of George Floyd. It is another example of a diversity initiative that existed prior to DAC, and DAC is now working to expand the initiative and incorporate it into the more routine Research in Progress forum in the department as part of the departments ongoing educational mission. It is a sign of our commitment to learn and improve as a collective group," says Maria Benitez, a Genetics student and DAC representative. The DAC and EJC are in the midst of planning speaker events open to the Yale community to expand the conversation around the intersection of racism, genetic research, and health equity. DAC members also have a vision of putting together a library, compiling literature on anti-racism and systemic discrimination that anyone can access to educate themselves.

Dismantling structural bias and discrimination against people of diverse racial and ethnic groups, persons with disabilities, the LGBTQ+ community, people from low socioeconomic backgrounds, and other vulnerable memberships is a long-term project. It cannot be solved by one individual leader, but requires peers to unite as followers of a movement that collectively desires and is willing to make the effort for change. Dr. Greco emphasizes the need for each member in the Yale Genetics community to bring a dedicated and serious commitment to change ourselves in order to make space for others. The exceptionalism and individualism that academia is built on is antithetic to the notion that talent is widespread. Furthermore, consciously or unconsciously, we perpetuate with our actions the false belief that talent can only be found in the few memberships consistent with the appearances of those who currently hold the most power and privilege, Greco continues. DAC believes that this ideological disconnect is the biggest resistance that the department faces in moving forward with DEI initiatives. Members of the department must realize that talent is present in groups that have historically and continue to be only tolerated, suppressed, or entirely excluded at various levels on the academic ladder.

Yale Genetics DAC and members of DEI committees across Yale continue to reflect on privilege and take action to make the department and the institution a more equitable place. Though there is still so much to be done, with the ongoing activism of DAC members and the collaboration of the entire department, Yale Genetics is determined to build a more inclusive environment for all.

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Collective Efforts to Increase Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Genetics Department Make Steady Progress - Yale School of Medicine

Dr. Kevin Cavanaugh to speak on Peterson Corn Genetics on Saturday – The Times

Friday, August 27, 2021 4:00 AM

Dr. Kevin Cavanaugh, President of Peterson Corn Genetics, based in Story City, IA and relocated to Cicero, will speak at this Saturdays meeting of the Cicero Kiwanis Club.

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The Bat Elixir: Geneticists Suspect that the Flying Mammal Holds the Key to Extended Healthy Life | The Weather Channel – Articles from The Weather…

A bat in flight.

Bats have developed a pretty bad rap sheet in the last few years. First, pop culture painted these mammals as a form of the blood-sucking Dracula, and then they were villainised for allegedly triggering a pandemic. Indeed, these poor creatures can't seem to catch a break! Aside from being adorable, bats have several other redeeming qualities like being the only mammals capable of flying and finding food even in complete darkness.

Of late, experts in genetics have uncovered a few startling facts about these Chiropterans, which could imply that they may hold the secret to healthy ageing. With the COVID-19 pandemic turning the spotlight on bats, their unique ability to stay alive against unmatched odds has also come under scrutiny.

The relationship between the size of a mammal, its metabolism, and lifespan is relatively straightforward. The larger the mammal, the slower its metabolism is, and this means a longer lifespan. While we humans ourselves are an exception to this rule, these flying mammals also deviate from this trend.

Some bats are known to live for 40 yearsthat's eight times longer than the lifespan of other animals their size! This unusually long lifespan of bats has always aroused the curiosity of scientistsit prompted them to ask the question, what was it that made these bats live longer?

The gene expression pattern in bats is very unique and has been associated with DNA repair, autophagy, immunity and tumour suppression, ensuring an extended health span for bats. Now, scientists are wondering if we could replicate a few such attributes on humans as well!

There's a cap-like structure called the telomere present at the end of each chromosomea microscopic threadlike part of the cell that carries part or all of the genetic material. This unique structure protects your chromosomes from damage. Every time your cells replicate, the chromosome loses just a little bit of the telomere. As time passes, this telomere gets very short, and either rides the wave of ageing or causes the cell to self-destruct. To put it succinctly, the shortening of your telomeres is why you age.

While this seems inevitable, studies conducted in the last few years revealed that the telomeres do not shorten in long-lived species of batslike the Myotis genus. This means that these species can protect their DNA for an unusually long-time in their lifespan.

A bat pup.

It's common knowledge that in humans, the body's ability to heal and repair any damage decreases considerably as we age. But researchers studied the genome of young, middle-aged, and old bats and found that their ability to repair DNA and damage caused by age increased as they grew older.

Another quality that contributes to their longevity is their ability to control their immune responses. With an over-excited immune response, humans tend to succumb to infections like COVID-19 quicker. In COVID-19 patients with regulated immune responses, the risk of ending up on the ventilator is much lower, reveals research.

Similarly, a controlled immune response could be why bats are able to carry numerous deadly pathogens like the coronavirus without succumbing to them easily.

Humans and bats have many similar genes but with a tweak here and a nip there. So, if we could someday discover what factors elicit these controlled immune responses and telomere shortening avoidance in bats and replicate it in humans, it would be a massive leap towards the utopian dream of a healthy, long life!

**

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