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WHAT IS TRANSHUMANISM? – Nick Bostrom
Posted: September 10, 2015 at 3:44 am
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Transhumanism – creation.com
Posted: September 10, 2015 at 3:44 am
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Variations in cell programs control cancer and normal stem …
Posted: September 8, 2015 at 8:46 pm
September 3, 2015
Tags: Weinberg LabStem Cells + Therapeutic CloningCancer
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. In the breast, cancer stem cells and normal stem cells can arise from different cell types but tap into distinct yet related stem cell programs, according to Whitehead Institute researchers. The differences between these stem cell programs may be significant enough to be exploited by future therapeutics.
Deadly tumor-initiating cells seed metastases throughout the body and cause relapses in patients. Whether these tumor-initiating cells can also be referred to as stem cells, specifically, cancer stem cells, has been up for debate. The question is not purely one of semanticsthe label connotes scientists understanding of those cells identity and inner workings.
Our research establishes for the first time the relationship between the normal stem cell program and the cancer stem cell program, albeit in the context of the mammary gland, says Whitehead Institute Founding Member Robert Weinberg. There may be slight variations on this theme in other epithelial tissues, but at least the relationship is firmly secured in the context of the mammary gland, which seems to be a pretty good model for other epithelial tissues. Tumor-initiating cells are in fact cancer stem cells, but cancer stem cells do not arise from normal stem cells.
The Weinberg labs findings are described in this weeks issue of the journal Nature.
Previous work in the lab has demonstrated that cancer stem cells emerge after undergoing an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which endows the cells with the motility and flexibility required for seeding new tumors. The EMT may also confer on the cells the ability to resist standard chemotherapeutics.
In the current line of research, Xin Ye, who is a senior research associate in the Weinberg lab and the lead author of the Nature paper, used a mouse model that shows which cells within the normal and cancerous mammary gland express the related master regulators Snail and Slug, both of which confer stem-like traits on mammary cells. Slug, for its part, is especially potent in inducing the mesenchymal cell traits that are associated with high-grade, aggressive carcinomas.
Ye determined that different cell types in distinct tissue layers within the mammary gland express and are influenced by these master regulators. Slug, which regulates gland-reconstituting activity in breast tissue, is expressed at higher levels in normal stem cells found in the basal layer of mammary ducts. Snail, a factor first discovered in the context fruit fly embryonic development, is expressed by tumor-initiating cells in the luminal layer of cells in these ducts. Snail has the power to confer aggressive traits on cancer cells that Slug is incapable of doing when it is expressed at normal levels.
Snail-positive cancer stem cells arise in a different population of cells than the cells that harbor normal stem cells, says Weinberg, who is also a professor of biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Director of the MIT/Ludwig Center for Molecular Oncology. Normal stem cells reside in one layer in the mammary duct; cancer stem cells arise in another. What that means is that cancer stem cells do not arise from normal stem cells. This has been a point of much discussion, but now there is evidencefinally!
Such basic insights about the source of cancer stem cells and the differences between normal and cancer cells could provide leads for new cancer therapeutics.
Were starting to realize that a lot of things are regulated differentially in normal versus cancer settings, says Ye. It doesnt even need to be cancer stem cell versus normal stem cellcancer versus normal is really different. If we understand the differences better, we have a better chance of treating this disease.
This work was supported by the National Research Foundation, Singapore (NRFNRFF2015-04), American Cancer Society, Ludwig Foundation, Breast Cancer Research Foundation, National Cancer Institute Program (P01-CA080111, U01-CA184897, R01-CA078461, K99-CA194160), Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation, Mattina R. Proctor Foundation, Helen Hay Whitney Foundation, and Andria and Paul Heafy.
Written by Nicole Giese Rura
* * *
Robert Weinbergs primary affiliation is with Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted. He is also a Professor of Biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Director of the MIT/Ludwig Center for Molecular Oncology.
* * *
Full Citation:
Distinct EMT programs control normal mammary stem cells and tumour-initiating cells
Nature, online September 2, 2015.
Xin Ye (1), Wai Leong Tam (1, 2, 3), Tsukasa Shibue (1), Yasemin Kaygusuz (1), Ferenc Reinhardt (1), Elinor Eaton (1), Robert A. Weinberg (1,4,5).
1. Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA
2. Genome Institute of Singapore, 60 Biopolis Street Singapore 138672, Singapore
3. Cancer Science Institute of Singapore, 14 Medical Drive, Singapore
4. Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
5. Ludwig Center for Molecular Oncology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
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Variations in cell programs control cancer and normal stem ...
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About Diabetes – American Heart Association
Posted: September 8, 2015 at 5:45 am
"Diabetes mellitus," more commonly referred to as "diabetes," is a condition that causes blood sugar to rise to dangerous levels: a fasting blood glucose of 126 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) or more.
How Diabetes Develops
Types of Diabetes
Type 1DiabetesType 1 diabetes is a serious condition that occurs when the pancreas makes little or no insulin. Without insulin, the body is unable to take the glucose (blood sugar) it gets from food into cells to fuel the body. So without daily injections of insulin, people with type 1 diabetes won't survive. For that reason, this type of diabetes is also referred to as insulin-dependent diabetes.
Type 1 diabetes was previously known as juvenile diabetes because it's usually diagnosed in children and young adults. However, this chronic, lifelong disease can strike at any age, and those with a family history of it are particularly at risk.
Health Risks for Type 1 Diabetes
During the development of type 1 diabetes, the body's immune system attacks certain cells (called beta cells) in the pancreas. Although the reasons this occurs are still unknown, the effects are clear. Once these cells are destroyed, the pancreas produces little or no insulin, so the glucose stays in the blood. When there's too much glucose in the blood, especially for prolonged periods, all the organ systems in the body suffer long-term damage. Learn more about the health consequences of diabetes and how to treat it.
Type2DiabetesType 2 diabetes is the most common form of diabetes. Historically, type 2 diabetes has been diagnosed primarily in middle-aged adults. Today, however, adolescents and young adults are developing type 2 diabetes at an alarming rate. This correlates with the increasing incidence of obesity and physical inactivity in this population, both of which are risk factors for type 2 diabetes.
This type of diabetes can occur when:
Precursors to Diabetes
Pre-diabetesPre-diabetes means your body is not fully able to handle the job of converting sugars into energy. If youve been told by your healthcare provider that you have pre-diabetes it also means that without making some healthy changes, your body will most likely eventually develop diabetes. Learn more about pre-diabetes. Insulin Resistance Both type 2 diabetes and pre-diabetes usually result from insulin resistance.
Insulin resistance, which is a condition that affects more than 60 million Americans, occurs when the body can't use insulin efficiently. To compensate, the pancreas releases more and more insulin to try to keep blood sugar levels normal. Gradually, the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas become defective and ultimately decrease in total number. As a result, blood sugar levels begin to rise, causing pre-diabetes and, eventually, type 2 diabetes to develop.
When a fasting individual has too much glucose in the blood (hyperglycemia) or too much insulin in the blood (hyperinsulinemia), it indicates a person may have insulin resistance.
Health Risks of Insulin Resistance
People with insulin resistance are at greater risk of developing type 2 diabetes. They also are more likely to have too much LDL ("bad") cholesterol, not enough HDL ("good") cholesterol, and high triglycerides, which cause atherosclerosis.
Untreated diabetes can lead to many serious medical problems, including heart disease and stroke. That's why it's important to be aware of the symptoms as well as the risk factors and to take appropriate steps to prevent and treat insulin resistance and diabetes.
This content was last reviewed on 6/28/2012.
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About Diabetes - American Heart Association
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Epigenetics – PBS Video
Posted: September 8, 2015 at 2:42 am
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Epigenetics - PBS Video
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Stem Cells News — ScienceDaily
Posted: September 7, 2015 at 12:48 pm
Sep. 3, 2015 A number of illnesses causing blindness can be cured from transplanting cells from the oral cavity. New findings make the treatment accessible to the places where the condition strikes the most ... read more Aug. 26, 2015 Compounds found in purple potatoes may help kill colon cancer stem cells and limit the spread of the cancer, according to a team of ... read more Aug. 20, 2015 Scientists have developed a novel way to engineer the growth and expansion of energy-burning 'good' fat, and then found that this fat helped reduce weight gain and lower blood glucose ... read more How Newts Can Help Osteoarthritis Patients Aug. 20, 2015 Osteoarthritis is the most common form of joint disease worldwide. Now, scientists have taken a leaf out of natures book in an attempt to develop effective stem cell treatment for osteoarthritis, ... read more Regenerating Nerve Tissue in Spinal Cord Injuries Aug. 13, 2015 Researchers are exploring a new therapy using stem cells to treat spinal cord injuries within the first 14 to 30 days of injury. The therapy uses a population of cells derived from human embryonic ... read more Newly Discovered Cells Regenerate Liver Tissue Without Forming Tumors Aug. 13, 2015 The mechanisms that allow the liver to repair and regenerate itself have long been a matter of debate. Now researchers have discovered a population of liver cells that are better at regenerating ... read more Aug. 12, 2015 Scientists have discovered metabolic rejuvenation factors in eggs. This critical finding furthers our understanding of how cellular metabolism changes during aging, and during rejuvenation after egg ... read more Can Stem Cells Cause and Cure Cancer? Aug. 12, 2015 Simply put, cancer is caused by mutations to genes within a cell that lead to abnormal cell growth. Finding out what causes that genetic mutation has been the holy grail of medical science for ... read more Why Statins Should Be Viewed as a Double-Edged Sword Aug. 12, 2015 Statins have significant cardiovascular benefits, but also serious side effects. A new study finds that statin use impairs stem cell function, which helps in slowing atherosclerosis but hinders other ... read more Researcher Studying Advances in Next-Generation Stem Cell Culture Technologies Aug. 10, 2015 A researcher is studying ways to advance the next generation of cell culture technologiesthe removal of stem cells from an organism and the controlled growth of those cells in an engineering ... read more Stem Cells Help Researchers Study the Effects of Pollution on Human Health Aug. 10, 2015 Embryonic stem cells could serve as a model to evaluate the physiological effects of environmental pollutants efficiently and cost-effectively. The use of stem cells has found another facade. In the ... read more Aug. 5, 2015 Scientists have, for the first time, found further evidence of how the differentiation of pluripotent cells is tied to and controlled by the cell cycle clock. This deeper understanding of how cells ... read more From Pluripotency to Totipotency Aug. 4, 2015 While it is already possible to obtain in vitro pluripotent cells (i.e., cells capable of generating all tissues of an embryo) from any cell type, researchers have pushed the limits of science even ... read more Precision Medicine Brought One Step Closer to the Clinic Aug. 3, 2015 A revolutionary, high-throughput, robotic platform has been designed that automates and standardizes the process of transforming patient samples into stem cells. This unique platform for the first ... read more Aug. 3, 2015 Investigators report that they have been able to drive cells to grow into muscle fibers, producing millimeter-long muscle fibers capable of contracting in a dish and multiplying in large numbers. ... read more July 30, 2015 Evaluating drug-induced liver injury is a critical part of pharmaceutical drug discovery and must be carried out on human liver cells. Now, scientists report that they produced large amounts of ... read more How a Single Molecule Turns One Immune Cell Into Another July 30, 2015 All it takes is one molecule to reprogram an antibody-producing B cell into a scavenging macrophage. This transformation is possible, new evidence shows, because the molecule (C/EBPa, a transcription ... read more July 29, 2015 A first-of-its kind prostate 'organoid' grown from human embryonic stem cells has enabled researchers to show that exposure to bisphenol A, a chemical in many plastics, can cause ... read more Scientists Identify Gene Vital for Rebuilding Intestine After Cancer Treatment July 29, 2015 A rare type of stem cell is immune to radiation damage thanks to high levels of a gene called Sox9, researchers have ... read more New Drug for Blood Cancers Now in Five Phase II Clinical Trials July 28, 2015 The safety and dosing of a new drug for treating blood cancers has now been established by a group of scientists. The drug is a small molecule inhibitor that suppresses the activity of a signaling ... read more
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Stem Cells News -- ScienceDaily
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Genome Medicine
Posted: September 7, 2015 at 2:44 am
Medicine in the post-genomic era
Genome Medicine publishes peer-reviewed research articles, new methods, software tools, reviews and comment articles in all areas of medicine studied from a post-genomic perspective. Areas covered include, but are not limited to, disease genomics (including genome-wide association studies and sequencing-based studies), disease epigenomics, pathogen and microbiome genomics, immunogenomics, translational genomics, pharmacogenomics and personalized medicine, proteomics and metabolomics in medicine, systems medicine, and ethical, legal and social issues.
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DNA-PK inhibition boosts Cas9-mediated HDR
Transient pharmacological inhibition of DNA-PKcs can stimulate homology-directed repair following Cas9-mediated induction of a double strand break, and is expected to reduce the downstream workload.
Genomics of epilepsy
Candace Myers and Heather Mefford review how advances in genomic technologies have aided variant discovery, leading to a rapid increase in our understanding of epilepsy genetics.
CpG sites associated with atopy
Thirteen novel epigenetic loci associated with atopy and high IgE were found that could serve 55 as candidate loci; of these, four were within genes with known roles in the immune response.
Longitudinal 'omic profiles
A pilot study quantifying gene expression and methylation profile consistency over a year shows high longitudinal consistency, with individually extreme transcript abundance in a small number of genes which may be useful for explaining medical conditions or guiding personalized health decisions.
Ovarian cancer landscape
Exome sequencing of mucinous ovarian carcinoma tumors reveals multiple mutational targets, suggesting tumors arise through many routes, and shows this group of tumors is distinct from other subtypes.
NGS-guided cancer therapy
Jeffrey Gagan and Eliezer Van Allen review how next-generation sequencing can be incorporated into standard oncology clinical practice and provide guidance on the potential and limitations of sequencing.
ClinLabGeneticist
A platform for managing clinical exome sequencing data that includes data entry, distribution of work assignments, variant evaluation and review, selection of variants for validation, report generation.
Semantic workflow for clinical omics
A clinical omics analysis pipeline using the Workflow Instance Generation and Specialization (WINGS) semantic workflow platform demonstrates transparency, reproducibility and analytical validity.
Stephen McMahon and colleagues review treatments for pain relief, which are often inadequate, and discuss how understanding of the genomic and epigenomic mechanisms might lead to improved drugs.
View more review articles
Errors in RNA-Seq quantification affect genes of relevance to human disease
Robert C and Watson M
Genome Biology 2015, 16:177
Exploiting single-molecule transcript sequencing for eukaryotic gene prediction
Minoche AE, Dohm JC, Schneider J, Holtgrwe D, Viehver P, Montfort M, Rosleff Srensen T, Weisshaar B et al.
Genome Biology 2015, 16:184
Analysis methods for studying the 3D architecture of the genome
Ay F and Noble WS
Genome Biology 2015, 16:183
Graded gene expression changes determine phenotype severity in mouse models of CRX-associated retinopathies
Ruzycki PA, Tran NM, Kefalov VJ, Kolesnikov AV and Chen S
Genome Biology 2015, 16:171
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Genome Medicine
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Virginia Diabetes and Endocrinology
Posted: September 7, 2015 at 2:43 am
Welcome
Our group'smission is to provide personal servicefor patients who have a variety of medical concerns, with an emphasis on Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Internal Medicine. The Physicians withVirginia Diabetes & Endocrinology,P.C.have proudly served the greater Richmond area for over 20 years.
Ourhealth care teamincludes board certified Endocrinologists, Internists, and Nurse Practitioners, as well asa friendly, compassionatesupport staff.Pleaseexplore our website to learn more about Virginia Diabetes & Endocrinology, P.C., our health care providers, and the care and services we offer.
As part of our ongoing effort to provide the highest quality of care, we are proud to introduce our web-based patient portal. This gives patients the opportunity to use the power of the "Web" to track your health care progress in our medical office. We encourage you to take advantage of this new opportunity to play an active role in managing your healthcare.
Visit the portal at health.eclinicalworks.com/vadiabetes To pay your bill on line please click the following link or paste it in your browser https://www.medfusion.net/secure/portal/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.login&dest=paymybill&gid=4116
For patients interested in obtaining individual health and nutrition goals, Specialty Nutrition and Health is arewardingoption. Their Dietitians are available in our Midlothian office. Visit http://www.specialtynutritionandhealth.comto find out more about the practice, their staff and additional locations.
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Virginia Diabetes and Endocrinology
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Cell culture – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Posted: September 7, 2015 at 2:43 am
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Cell culture – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Posted: September 6, 2015 at 6:43 pm
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