Page 926«..1020..925926927928..940950..»

What is Genetics? – Life Sciences Articles

Posted: August 20, 2020 at 10:52 am

Genetics is the study of heredity. Heredity is a biological process whereby a parent passes certain genes onto their children or offspring.

Every child inherits genes from both of their biological parents and these genes, in turn, express specific traits. Some of these traits may be physical for example hair and eye color etc.

On the other hand, some genes may also carry the risk of certain diseases and disorders that may be passed on from parents to their offspring.

Image Credit: fizkes/Shutterstock.com

The genetic information lies within the cell nucleus of each living cell in the body. The information can be considered to be retained in a book for example. Part of this book with the genetic information comes from the father while the other part comes from the mother.

The genes lie within the chromosomes. Humans have 23 pairs of these small thread-like structures in the nucleus of their cells. 23 or half of the total 46 comes from the mother while the other 23 comes from the father.

The chromosomes contain genes just like pages of a book. Some chromosomes may carry thousands of important genes while some may carry only a few.

The chromosomes, and therefore the genes, are made up of the chemical substance called DNA (DeoxyriboNucleic Acid). The chromosomes are very long thin strands of DNA, coiled up tightly.

At one point along their length, each chromosome has a constriction, called the centromere. The centromere divides the chromosomes into two arms: a long arm and a short arm.

Chromosomes are numbered from 1 to 22 and these are common for both sexes and called autosomes. There are also two chromosomes that have been given the letters X and Y and termed sex chromosomes. The X chromosome is much larger than the Y chromosome.

The genes are further made up of unique codes of chemical bases comprising of A, T, C and G (Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, and Guanine). These chemical bases make up combinations with permutations and combinations. These are akin to the words on a page.

These chemical bases are part of the DNA. The words when strung together act as the blueprints that tell the cells of the body when and how to grow, mature and perform various functions. With age, the genes may be affected and may develop faults and damages due to environmental and endogenous toxins.

Women have 46 chromosomes (44 autosomes plus two copies of the X chromosome) in their body cells. They have half of this or 22 autosomes plus an X chromosome in their egg cells.

Men have 46 chromosomes (44 autosomes plus an X and a Y chromosome) in their body cells and have half of these 22 autosomes plus an X or Y chromosome in their sperm cells.

When the egg joins with the sperm, the resultant baby has 46 chromosomes (with either an XX in a female baby or XY in a male baby).

Each gene is a piece of genetic information. All the DNA in the cell makes up for the human genome. There are about 20,000 genes located on one of the 23 chromosome pairs found in the nucleus.

To date, about 12,800 genes have been mapped to specific locations (loci) on each of the chromosomes. This database was begun as part of the Human Genome Project. The project was officially completed in April 2003 but the exact number of genes in the human genome is still unknown.

Go here to see the original:
What is Genetics? - Life Sciences Articles

Posted in Genetics | Comments Off on What is Genetics? – Life Sciences Articles

Seed Genetics Direct Field Days will be held as scheduled – Ohio’s Country Journal and Ohio Ag Net

Posted: August 20, 2020 at 10:52 am

As fall approaches, Seed Genetics Direct will host its annual field days in Ohio and Indiana between August 25 and Sept. 16 (see schedule below). Seed Genetics Direct is an independent seed company headquartered in Jeffersonville, Ohio that serves the Eastern Corn Belt.

Free and open to the all farmers, field days provide the opportunity for visitors to tour corn and soybean plots to see the performance of 2021 genetics and technologies. Seedsmen will also be available to provide detailed information and answer questions.

Weve added seven new corn hybrids and nine soybean varieties to our lineup for the Eastern Corn Belt. Field days are great opportunity to see products, as well stock up on the best deals of the season. Our September discounts include a 15.5% early-pay discount or a 9.5% savings with John Deere zero percent financing, as well as $10 off per unit of traited corn, said Todd Jeffries, SGD vice president. In addition, we offer explosive treatments at a standard price on corn, soybeans and wheat. These treatments protect from Barley Yellow Dwarf, Fusarium, Pythium, Phytophthora, Phomopsis, Rhizoctonia and more! Our corn treatment also includes N-Hibit and Terios Zn+ for vigor and stress tolerance. Guests can learn more about these offerings during our field days.

Seed Genetics also has several practices in place to protect guests from the spread of COVID-19 during field days. To disperse crowds, SGD field days will occur all day between 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. to ensure plot tours are in groups of 10 or less; guests may arrive at any time. Freshly grilled and individually-packaged food will also be served throughout the day by servers in masks and gloves. SGD will provide guests with disposable masks, gloves and hand-sanitizer as needed, as well as follow all Ohio, Indiana, CDC and OSHA mandates.

Seed Genetics Direct field days will occur as scheduled below. To ensure events have not been cancelled, on the day of the event, please call the SGD main office at 740-505-6545 or check SGDs website (seedgeneticsdirect.com), Facebook or Twitter channels (@seedgenetics).

SGD field days scheduleAll SGD field days are from 11 a.m.- 7 p.m. Guest can arrive at any time.

August 25: Chillicothe, Ohio plot on Schooley Station Road (east of Chillicothe on Route 50, south onLancaster Road, east on Schooley Station) (Bob, Brian, and BJ Brown)

August 26: 2741 Weigand Road, Lockbourne, Ohio 43173 (Bill, Bob and Ross Black)

August 31 and Sept. 1: 4712 Prairie Road Northeast, Washington Court House, Ohio 43160

Sept. 4: 7263 North US Hwy 35, Williamsburg, Ind. 47393

Sept. 8: 8608 North Zaring Road, Scottsburg, Ind. 47170 (Wischmeier Farms)

Sept. 11: 8584 State Route 725 West, Camden, Ohio 45311 (Don Jackson)

Sept. 16: 4614 East State Road 244, Shelbyville, Ind. 46176 (Matt Settles)

Read more:
Seed Genetics Direct Field Days will be held as scheduled - Ohio's Country Journal and Ohio Ag Net

Posted in Genetics | Comments Off on Seed Genetics Direct Field Days will be held as scheduled – Ohio’s Country Journal and Ohio Ag Net

Genetic Study Reveals New Insights On Transatlantic Trade Of Enslaved People – Here And Now

Posted: August 20, 2020 at 10:52 am

Editor's note:This segment includes mentions of sexual violence.

Until recently, much of the information available about where enslaved people were captured before being brought to the Americas came from shipping logs and databases.

These sources detailed ports of embarkation and numbers of people transported, and new data drawn from genetics corroborates much of what historians already knew.

But the data also reveals some revelations both about the intercolonial trade of enslaved people and some of slavery's most brutal atrocities.

The study, which appears in the American Journal of Human Genetics, drew on genetic data from 50,000 23andMe users who agreed to lend their DNA.

The project was started by Joanna Mountain, a geneticist at 23andMe and former Peace Corps volunteer in Kenya who developed a deep interest in what happened to people who were wrenched from that continent into slavery. Mountain joined forces with population geneticist Steven Micheletti on the study that has been years in the making.

The pair worked closely with historians to compare a database of transatlantic slavery records to the genetic connections between people in Africa and people in the U.S. with African ancestry.

They found that there was a very strong bias toward African women contributing to the present-day gene pool compared to African men, and that the bias varies across different regions of the Americas, Mountain says.

In parts of Central America, enslaved African women were contributing 13 to 17 times more to the current day gene pool than enslaved African men, she says.

In discussing this extreme finding with historians and looking through the historical literature, we found indications that men were far less likely to reproduce, partly because they were at higher risk of dying early if they were having to participate in rice farming or sugar cane farming, which was very risky, she explains.

At the same time, enslaved African women were often being forced to reproduce. In parts of Latin America, there would be initiatives to encourage European men to father children with African women in order to do something that they called dilute the African gene pool, she says.

The rape of enslaved African women who were sometimes forced to have children before arriving in the U.S. as a strategy to manipulate the gene pool made their genes more extreme in certain areas.

This is something that we often think of as the past. And yet the repercussions certainly continue to today in the DNA, she says. It's kind of amazing that we see it so strongly in the genetic evidence.

On the over-represented number of Americans with Nigerian ancestry, which the study found is likely due to the intra-continental slave trade

Stephen Micheletti: We see a lot of U.S.-based African Americans with ancestry from Nigeria and specifically connections to the ethnolinguistic groups, the Yoruba, Esan and Igbo. And why this was so surprising is the transatlantic shipping records indicate that people around Nigeria weren't directly arriving in the U.S. in high numbers. But what we have to realize is that enslaved people were being forced between and within the Americas over centuries. So not all the movement was happening across the Atlantic. It was also happening between all these countries and within all of these countries.

On how few Gambian and Senegalese descendants of enslaved people there are in the U.S.

Micheletti: We merge these two regions and call them Senegambia. And we didn't see a lot of Senegambian representation in the U.S. and again, that's another deviance from our expectation given the shipping records. The working hypothesis is Senegambians were typically Asian and African rice cultivators back in Africa and the Europeans were well aware of this. So it's likely that Senegambians that arrived in the United States ended up on rice plantations because of their expertise. And what we know about rice plantations is that they were some of the most dangerous working conditions for enslaved people. One reason is malaria is a huge problem in these swampy rice fields, and there's also other risks like drowning

On the response from 23andMe volunteers

Joanna Mountain: We definitely got at quite a bit of response. And it's provoked some debate regarding enslavement and forced migrations. But also people seeing this story in their own lives. One individual said that whenever I'm in Jamaica and New Orleans, I feel a sense of connection. And for that individual, this study felt very real to him. And so that was super exciting for us.

On people discovering the study and making connections between European DNA and their ancestry

Micheletti: One goal of this study was first to produce the data and then look at the historical records that best support those data. And unfortunately, the records that support those data are these horrible atrocities. And with that, we wanted to make readers aware of these atrocities because they've shaped the genetic landscape across the Americas. And we want people to be aware of the number of enslaved people that were impacted.

... I would say [peoples] eyes are opened by this study because a lot of people may have not heard about this history in the past. And I've received some personal messages that people are happy that we're looking into the history and not just providing a genetic study, but more of a collaborative study with historians and not ignoring all of these atrocities because it's part of their past. People have discovered using services like ours that they have European ancestry and now they have better context for why that is.

The rest is here:
Genetic Study Reveals New Insights On Transatlantic Trade Of Enslaved People - Here And Now

Posted in Genetics | Comments Off on Genetic Study Reveals New Insights On Transatlantic Trade Of Enslaved People – Here And Now

First-Ever Consumer DNA Test to Unlock the Connection Between Genetics and Mental Wellness-Related Behavioral Tendencies – PR Web

Posted: August 20, 2020 at 10:52 am

NEW YORK (PRWEB) August 19, 2020

Living with a mental health challenges can be stressful even during the best of times. Then COVID-19 came along. Quarantine, distancing, not seeing family and loved ones, and economic worries have all added to the struggles of people dealing with mental wellness. On top of that, back-to-school stress is compounding the mental stressors were all dealing with right now. Recently, Amy Edgar, Founder of Childrens Integrated Center for Success and expert in pediatric mental health, teamed with YourUpdateTV to discuss steps we can take to take control of our mental wellness during this uncertain time.

A video accompanying this announcement is available at: https://youtu.be/0WpBE2FWYC0

Parents, many of whom may be dealing with their own mental and emotional struggles, have taken on the burden of worrying about their childs mental health as well. With the back to school season in full swing, stress and anxiety are at an all-time high as families grapple with the reality of additional distance learning, or the potential dangers of returning to the classroom. Its natural for parents to wonder whether the last five months and whatever lies ahead will have a lasting effect on kids mental well-being.

So how can parents take back control of mental wellness in the age of COVID-19?

A first-ever consumer DNA test is helping unlock the connection between genetics and mental wellness. One cheek swab will produce results that will help people better understand how genes affect ones predisposition for stress, focus, substance abuse, sleep, and more.

Organized around Genominds proprietary 7 Core Genetic Mental Health Capabilities, the test analyzes 38 genetic variants and their influence on 29 mental health traits. The result is an interactive report that details 59 possible behavioral predispositions specific to each users genetic profile, along with resources and actionable recommendations shown to improve wellness and quality of life. Genomind Mental Health Map is the only DNA test in the consumer market with a specific focus on mental health and wellness, and is available without prescription. The test should not be used as a diagnostic or risk assessment for mental health diseases and disorders.

For more information, visit MentalHealthMap.com and use discount code MHMFALL5.

About Amy Edgar, APRN, CRNP, FNP-C:Amy Edgar is transforming healthcare and embracing our next generation of humans. Ignited by the experience of raising her now 19-year old daughter, Amy founded the Children's Integrated Center for Success in 2014. Weaving together the threads of mom, entrepreneur, teacher, nurse, primary care provider, and science geek, Amy utilizes systems thinking and integrated care delivery models to run her primary care center focused on children with behavioral health needs. From cutting edge genetics research to nutrition consults, speech and equine therapy, school advocates, and marriage counselors CICS strives to reach every child, every time. In 2017, Amy led CICS in connecting career opportunities for children with autism looking for suitable work to capture their own piece of the American Dream, which was realized in the CICS Foundation. Amy continues to practice and provide patient care while championing CICS's virtual healthcare expansion to reach families across and outside of Pennsylvania.

About Genomind:Genomind is a leading mental health company singularly focused on filling the innovation gap in mental health care through novel, genetics-based tools that bring mental health into the era of personalized medicine. Its flagship product, Genomind Professional PGx, is a pharmacogenetic testing service that helps medical professionals guide patients mental health treatment. The Company recently launched Genomind Mental Health Map a direct-to-consumer test that enables a better understanding of the biological basis of mental health, coupled with actionable guidance to help people improve health and wellness. Supported by a world-class genetics lab, a unique heritage of clinical mental health expertise, and a consultative approach, Genomind is advancing a new paradigm of precision medicine in mental health care. Learn more at http://www.genomind.com.

About YourUpdateTV: YourUpdateTV is a social media video portal for organizations to share their content.

Share article on social media or email:

Visit link:
First-Ever Consumer DNA Test to Unlock the Connection Between Genetics and Mental Wellness-Related Behavioral Tendencies - PR Web

Posted in Genetics | Comments Off on First-Ever Consumer DNA Test to Unlock the Connection Between Genetics and Mental Wellness-Related Behavioral Tendencies – PR Web

A genetic map hopes to trace rescued chimps back to their homes – Mongabay.com

Posted: August 20, 2020 at 10:52 am

Experts estimate that nearly 2,000 chimpanzees may be lost to the wildlife trade each year. Once taken from the wild, young chimpanzees that survive the trauma of capture are sold as pets or for entertainment and can end up almost anywhere; theyve been intercepted by authorities in locations all over the globe.

Theyre confiscated in maybe Moscow, or San Francisco, or Hong Kong it can be anywhere and we dont know where they came from, says Peter Frandsen, a conservation genomics researcher at Copenhagen Zoo in Denmark.

Thats a problem when conservationists need to decide which countrys sanctuaries an animal should return to or where it could be safely reintroduced into the wild.

The answer may lie in the chimpanzees own genetic code. A global team of researchers is working to determine how chimpanzee genetics vary based on where the animals come from. By creating this genetic reference map, scientists hope to be able to determine the origins of confiscated chimpanzees as well as identify high-risk areas for wildlife trafficking.

Just a century ago, a million chimpanzees roamed the rainforests and grasslands of Africa. Now, fewer than 200,000 may be left in the wild, and conservationists fear that without widespread change these animals may go extinct in their natural habitats.

Pretty much all of the big conservation threats are facing chimpanzees right now, says Mimi Arandjelovic, a primatologist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany. Logging, mining, all of the extractive industries that are going on in equatorial Africa And then of course theres the huge threat of disease Theres the bushmeat trade, so people hunt and eat apes. And theres the primate pet trade.

Chimpanzees are currently listed as endangered by the IUCN (the western chimpanzee, one of four subspecies, is listed as critically endangered), and their numbers are still declining.

While chimpanzee conservation has many components, researchers say genetic studies are an increasingly important piece of the conservation puzzle.

One recently published study sheds new light on just how valuable genetic information could be in the conservation of this endangered species.

In this study, a group of researchers from Denmark, Spain, Russia and the U.K. analyzed nearly 60,000 ancestry-related genetic markers from captive-born and wild-born chimpanzees. In collaboration with dozens of zoos and sanctuaries across Europe and Africa, the researchers used hair samples to source DNA, a technique that is less invasive and stressful for animals than collecting blood.

Using the genetic data from wild-born chimpanzees whose birthplace was known, the researchers constructed a genetic reference map. They then compared this map with the DNA from chimpanzees who ended up in sanctuaries after being confiscated from illegal wildlife trafficking operations. In this way, researchers were able to estimate where the sanctuary chimpanzees had come from.

So just like popular DNA testing services for humans can tell us about our ancestry and origins, genetic information can reveal where chimpanzees come from.

Frandsen, one of the study authors, says learning where chimpanzees come from is important for many reasons.

For example, he says, genetic analysis provides essential information for captive-breeding programs. Even though chimpanzees may all look similar, there are actually four different accepted subspecies (and a fifth proposed subspecies), each with their own distinct range and unique genetic makeup. But there arent always records about where animals come from and which subspecies they are, which makes it difficult for captive-breeding programs to maintain the integrity of subspecies.

Frandsen says its important for captive-breeding programs to preserve these unique subspecies. Modern zoos are often referred to as Noahs Arks. You could call it a living museum sample, he says. So, we want to make sure that [zoo populations] resemble what you would find in the wild.

That way, he says, if a subspecies goes extinct in the wild, it wouldnt be lost altogether and eventually individuals of that subspecies could be reintroduced to the wild from these captive populations.

But genetic information may be even more valuable for combating animal trafficking.

Arandjelovic, who was not involved in the 2020 study by Frandsen and colleagues, says its unfortunately common for people to kill chimpanzee mothers for bushmeat and sell the babies as pets. Chimpanzees that are recovered from this wildlife trade can be candidates for reintroduction into the wild, so knowing where they came from is essential for deciding where they should be released.

Although Frandsen acknowledges that reintroduction can be challenging, especially as animals get older, he says its still very important. Theyre filling up in the sanctuaries, they dont have enough space and one of the main goals is to reintroduce as many as they can, he says. The sanctuary shouldnt be the endpoint for these chimpanzees if theres an opportunity to relocate them. Determining where an animal came from using genetic data may give it a better chance at a successful return to the wild.

Its possible that genetic data could even help prevent chimpanzee trafficking altogether. Identifying where chimpanzees in the illegal pet trade have come from could reveal poaching hotspots, thus allowing countries to appropriately target anti-poaching efforts. This is especially important in places where conservation funding may be limited.

But Frandsen says they dont yet have enough data to identify these high-risk areas. In this early proof-of-principle project, researchers analyzed just a few dozen animals that were rescued from the wildlife trade and ended up in sanctuaries. Frandsen says there are about 1,000 chimpanzees currently in African sanctuaries; the research team wants to expand their data collection to include these animals so that they can build a more accurate picture of poaching hotspots.

Future projects also include collecting more data from individuals born at known locations to build a more detailed genetic reference map, Frandsen says. The more detailed this map is, the more accurately researchers can determine where a trafficked animal has been taken from.

For some of the subspecies, we have pretty good data from the wild, Frandsen says. But for some of the other subspecies we are still data-deficient. So right now, the plan is to fill those knowledge gaps on the map.

Arandjelovic agrees that having accurate and detailed genetic reference maps is very important for determining the provenance of apes confiscated from the pet trade. She says the technique used in the present study analyzing thousands of different markers provides very detailed information about an individual. However, because of the cost and the specialized supplies needed to run this sort of analysis, it often cannot be done in the chimpanzees country of origin.

She says she wants to see if a reference map could be built using a simpler and cheaper technique that analyzes fewer locations in the genome. This technique would have the advantage of being more feasible to carry out in the countries where chimpanzees live. It would be great if we didnt have to export the samples, if we could do everything in-country, she says. That would be faster (we dont have to deal with permits), but we can also start capacity-building and having people in the country of origin do that work instead of sending it to Europe or North America. On the other hand, its not yet clear if this simpler technique would provide enough genetic information to create a useful reference map.

Frandsen and Arandjelovic agree that this is just the beginning for the application of genetic techniques to locate the origins of trafficked animals. The present study is a proof of concept, Frandsen says. So, theres a lot of work ahead to complete this project, but this is just for the chimpanzees, he says. Its also really a blueprint for other conservation projects. There are a ton of other taxa that this could be applied to.

Citation:

FEEDBACK: Use this form to send a message to the author of this post. If you want to post a public comment, you can do that at the bottom of the page.

The rest is here:
A genetic map hopes to trace rescued chimps back to their homes - Mongabay.com

Posted in Genetics | Comments Off on A genetic map hopes to trace rescued chimps back to their homes – Mongabay.com

Is bipolar disorder genetic? Yes, but that doesn’t guarantee you’ll develop it – Insider – INSIDER

Posted: August 20, 2020 at 10:52 am

Bipolar disorder, formerly known as manic depression, is a mental health disorder that involves extreme mood swings. It is estimated around 4.4% of adults in the US will experience bipolar disorder in their lifetimes. The average age of onset is 25, but it can also occur in teenagers and children.

Experts don't know exactly what causes bipolar disorder, but research suggests that there is both a genetic component and environmental one that contribute to its development.

"Bipolar disorder is characterized by having a history of depressive episodes but more specifically at least one manic episode," says Jared Heathman, MD, a psychiatrist in Houston, Texas. "Manic symptoms include grandiosity, decreased need for sleep, increased rate of speech, flight of ideas, distractibility, and impulsive behaviors that contribute to social or occupational dysfunction."

A hereditary disease is one that can be passed on through genetic material, like from a parent to one of their children. For some hereditary diseases, like one type of breast cancer, physicians know exactly which gene causes the issue, and therefore, how likely it is to be passed along.

The exact genes related to bipolar disorder aren't known, which makes it difficult to explain the exact mechanisms of how the condition is passed on genetically. The leading theory is that several different genes contribute to bipolar disorder, each in a small way.

"Bipolar disorder works on something called a diathesis-stress model, meaning that someone inherits a greater likelihood of the disorder, but some sort of severe physical or mental stress can activate that tendency," says Aimee Daramus, PsyD, a licensed clinical psychologist and author of Understanding Bipolar Disorder: The Essential Family Guide.

According to a Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience study published in 2012, people who have one first-degree relative like a parent or sibling with bipolar disorder have a 15% to 35% greater chance of also developing the condition. If someone has two first-degree relatives with bipolar disorder, their chances of having the disorder increase to 75%.

Heathman says people with bipolar disorder have around a 10% chance of having children with the disorder, too. According to him, "most cases" of the condition happen in families where a relative already has bipolar but not all of them.

For bipolar disorder, genetics is just one part of the equation, and needs to be considered alongside other risk factors.

There are environmental and behavioral factors that might increase your risk of developing bipolar disorder. These include:

The relationship between alcohol use or drug use and bipolar disorder isn't fully understood. However, studies found that substance abuse and bipolar disorder can interact with each other to make symptoms significantly worse. A 2004 study published in the journal Bipolar Disorders evaluated 4,310 people receiving treatment for bipolar disorder at Veterans Administration (VA) facilities. Researchers found that 25% of these patients had alcohol use disorder, 10.4% abused cocaine, and 4.4% abused opiates.

"Some drugs are connected with a greater likelihood of developing bipolar if the genetic likelihood is there," Daramus says. For example, Daramus says, "Habitual cannabis use before someone's first mood episode is connected to an earlier age of onset."

A 2008 review published in Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience looked at various studies about brain imaging in individuals with bipolar disorder and found there may be structural differences in the brain of those with bipolar disorder.

Specifically, a 2017 study published in Molecular Psychiatry found differences in the hippocampus, a part of the brain associated with memory and learning. People with bipolar disorder had abnormal shapes and less volume in that area.

Many conditions are comorbid with bipolar disorder, like depression, anxiety, and PTSD. A 2018 paper published in the American Journal of Psychiatry looked at 6,788 people who experienced substance-induced psychosis a condition where alcohol or drugs induce delusions or hallucinations and found that 32.2% developed bipolar disorder or schizophrenia.

The exact relationship between bipolar disorder and these other illnesses isn't fully understood, but people who suffer from them should also know how to recognize bipolar symptoms, and seek treatment if they appear.

According to a 2016 paper in the International Journal of Bipolar Disorders, experiencing trauma in childhood is connected with a higher risk of developing bipolar disorder. This may include:

Survivors of childhood trauma can have more severe cases of bipolar than people who didn't have those experiences. The researchers aren't certain of what causes the link, but suggest that childhood trauma can affect the way people respond to stressors as adults.

If you have a parent or a family member with bipolar disorder and are worried you may develop the same condition, Heathman says there's no known way to prevent it. But, you can learn how to manage the symptoms. "

A healthy lifestyle that includes a healthy diet and regular, adequate sleep can reduce the frequency of bipolar events," Heathman says.

People with a family history of bipolar disorder should also know the common symptoms, and how to seek professional help if they see signs of behavior that could be related to bipolar disorder.

Much more research is necessary to pin down the exact causes of bipolar disorder, including any specific genetic links and how hereditary the condition is. While bipolar can be a difficult condition to live with, many people do extremely well with medication and/or therapy, under the supervision of a physician.

View post:
Is bipolar disorder genetic? Yes, but that doesn't guarantee you'll develop it - Insider - INSIDER

Posted in Genetics | Comments Off on Is bipolar disorder genetic? Yes, but that doesn’t guarantee you’ll develop it – Insider – INSIDER

Extreme Weather Just Devastated 10m Acres in the Midwest. Expect More of This – Resilience

Posted: August 19, 2020 at 8:58 am

I know a stiff wind. They call this place Storm Lake, after all. But until recently most Iowans had never heard of a derecho. They have now. Last Monday, a derecho tore 770 miles from Nebraska to Indiana and left a path of destruction up to 50 miles wide over 10m acres of prime cropland. It blew 113 miles per hour at the Quad Cities on the Mississippi River.

Grain bins were crumpled like aluminum foil. Three hundred thousand people remained without power in Iowa and Illinois on Friday. Cedar Rapids andIowaCity were devastated.

The corn lay flat.

Iowas maize yield may be cut in half. A little napkin ciphering tells me the Tall Corn State will lose $6bn from crop damage alone.

We should get used to it. Extreme weather is the new normal. Last year, the villages of Hamburg and Pacific Junction, Iowa, were washed down the Missouri River from epic floods that scoured tens of thousands of acres. This year, the Great Plains are burning up from drought. Western Iowa was steeped in severe drought when those straight-line winds barreled through the weak stalks.

A multi-decade drought is under way in the Central Plains and the south-west. Wildfires are spreading from Arizona to California, and are burning ridges north of Los Angeles not licked by flames since 1968. Cattle in huge Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma feedlots will drink the Ogallala Aquifer dry in 20 years. This drought, which could rival or exceed the Medieval Drought that occurred about AD1200, could last 30 to 50 years, according to research from the Goddard Space Institute. It will become difficult to grow corn in southern Iowa, and impossible in western Kansas. By mid-century, corn yields could decline by 30%, according to the Iowa State University climatologist Dr Gene Takle.

Takle notes that the 20th century was the wettest on record. This could be the driest.

The last century was our Goldilocks period, Takle said. Just right. And that period is coming to an end.

We have cyclone bombs in winter and derechos on top of tornadoes. We have 500-year floods every 10 years. And we have a steady increase in night-time temperatures and humidity that makes it difficult for the corn to breathe even with the latest in genetic engineering. Protein content in the kernel is falling. Livestock and plants fall prey to new diseases and pests along with extreme heat stress.

It will lead to a reckoning more quickly than most of us realize.

The pandemic exposed the fragility of the food supply when meat processing plants teetered last spring for lack of healthy workers. Prices shot up 50% at the grocery counter.

Farmers didnt share in that windfall. Corn prices are at a 10-year low in a broken industrial system propped up by government design.

When Takle was a teenager, baling hay in 1960, there were 18-20 days a year when the temperature would get above 90 degrees. By the end of the century, Takle warns, this region could be scorched by temperatures over 100 degrees 50 to 60 days a year.

Soil that can hold water and defy heat is losing that capacity to erosion driven by extreme rains. Poor soil, combined with the extreme heat Takle describes, assures crop failures. Takle said corn crops could fail every other year if we go on with business as usual pumping out carbon.

Its already happening in Latin America. Decades of drought are driving Guatemalan campesino refugees to Storm Lake to work in meatpacking. Similarly, epic migrations were driven by the Medieval Drought. It is believed that the Mill Creek people who settled here were driven north up the Missouri River to the Dakotas as they were droughted out of Iowa. That drought also led to wars in Europe, not unlike the contemporary conflicts and migrations in Africa whose roots are in failing agricultural and food systems.

The impacts of climate change are real and profound for our most basic industry: food. Fortunately, sound science tells us that we can make a real impact on climate change by planting less corn and more grass that sequesters carbon. Paying farmers to build soil health and retain water is a better investment than writing a crop insurance check for drought. Farmers on the frontlines of climate change are trying to become more resilient to extreme weather by planting permanent grass strips in crop fields, and planting cover crops for the winter that suck up nitrogen and CO2. The rate of adaptation would be quickened if conservation funding programs were not always under attack.

The derecho is yet another destructive reminder that heat leading to extreme storms will destroy our very food sources if we dont face the climate crisis now.

Teaser photo credit: National Weather Service (Quad Cities Office) https://www.weather.gov/dvn/summary_081020 Author: Glenn Rushworth

View post:
Extreme Weather Just Devastated 10m Acres in the Midwest. Expect More of This - Resilience

Posted in Genetic Engineering | Comments Off on Extreme Weather Just Devastated 10m Acres in the Midwest. Expect More of This – Resilience

Viewpoint: Is there a scientific basis to ban gene drive technology that can rid us of virus-carrying rodents and mosquitoes? – Genetic Literacy…

Posted: August 19, 2020 at 8:58 am

Gene drives may be invaluable tools to control the spread of parasites, invasive species, and disease carriers. But the technology has faced strong opposition from activist groups and some mainstream scientists based on environmental and food safety. Are these concerns valid?

On June 30, some 80 environmental organizations, led by Greenpeace EU, Friends of the Earth Europe and Save Our Seeds, signed an open letter to the European Commission asking for support for a global moratorium on gene drive technology. The advocacy groups claimed that the release of gene drives poses serious and novel threats to biodiversity and the environment at an unprecedented scale and depth.

Citing a report by the European Network of Scientists for Social and Environmental Responsibility (ENSSER), the coalition wrote:

in light of the unpredictabilities, the lack of knowledge and the potentially severe negative impacts on biodiversity and ecosystems, any releases (including experimental) of Gene Drive Organisms into the environment be placed on hold to allow proper investigation until there is sufficient knowledge and understanding.

The environmental claims were unsupported by any documents other than the report by ENSSER, a controversial group of anti-biotechnology activist scientists co-founded by Gilles-ricSralini, best known for his retracted and discredited 2012 paper linking GMOs to cancer in rats.

The European parliament has already supported such a moratorium, an act that echoes EUs precautionary approach to genetic engineering, transgenic organisms and gene editing. The EU stated reasons include:

Recent advances in genetics and synthetic biology, particularly the development of CRISPR gene editing tools, have given scientists a powerful way to address problems created by pests, from mosquitoes to rodents, that vector disease to humans. In classical genetics, genes that offer adaptation benefits to individuals tend to increase their occurrence in the population while genes that reduce fitness tend to disappear.

Gene drives are genetic sequences designed to spread strongly and become present in every individual of a targeted species after a few generations. The genes may offer benefits, be neutral for adaptation purposes, or hinder their carriers survival and reproduction potential.Generation after generation, it would relentlessly copy and paste the gene it carried, until the gene and the desired trait was present in every descendant.Because the spread of a trait happens over generations, a gene drive works best in species that reproduce quickly, like insects and rodents

Gene drives are the first genetic constructs that can theoretically affect a population in its entirety, and quickly. It could even lead to the extinction of entire species, as gene drive critics allege. Species extinction has been part of life and evolution for all of Earths history. Although the data are fuzzy and contested, the UN Convention on Biological Diversity concluded that 150-200 plant, insect bird, and mammal species go extinct every day.

The likelihood that a gene drive will destroy a species in part or in whole, such as the infectedAedes aegyptimosquito species that carries the Zika, dengue and chingunya viruses and offers no known environmental benefits, is nonetheless daunting to some. On the one hand, gene drives could be used to eradicate disease such as malaria and yellow fever by controlling the mosquitoes that transmit them. On the other hand, critics fear that the technology will open a Pandoras Box; removing a species that theoretically could resultin what is popularly and controversially known as the butterfly effect.

As imagined by MIT meteorologist Edward Lorenz 60 years ago, a tiny environmental changesay an extinction of a pestcould dramatically and unpredictably result in unpredictable or even catastrophic consequences (Lorenz imagined abutterflyflapping its wings and causing a typhoon).

In the last few years, various groups have called for a global moratorium on gene drives. Such attempts were resisted at the 2016 and 2018 United Nations Conventions on Biological Diversity, mainly due to the strong opposition of many scientists and sub-Saharan African nations hardest hit by disease-vectored pests. Nevertheless, gene drive opponents have gained traction and gene drive research and applications face significant regulatory obstacles across the world (see Genetic Literacys Global Gene Editing Regulation tracker for a country-by-country analysis).

What does the scientific evidence say about gene drives and their environmental consequences?

There are over 3,000 mosquito species, likely a fraction of the number of species that have existed over some 100 million years. A handful of these (Aedes, Anopheles, and Culex species) are disease vectors and transmit infections such as malaria, yellow fever, the West Nile virus, Zika, and dengue fever. Mosquito-borne disease account for more than 17% of all infectious diseases and cause more than 700,000 deaths every year. These mosquitoes are mostly invasive in their ecological distributions.

Ultimately, there seem to be few things that mosquitoes do that other organisms cant do just as wellexcept perhaps for one, reported Nature magazine ina 2010 article A World Without Mosquitoes.

They are lethally efficient at sucking blood from one individual and mainlining it into another, providing an ideal route for the spread of pathogenic microbes. The Nature article concluded that wiping out mosquitoes wouldnt be a badthing. In fact, they could restore rather than harm the ecosystem. The same can be inferred for most parasitic insects, which are specialized to a particular host and normally dont have an extended ecological interactions network.

Invasive species also cause significant environmental hazards. Cane toads, having no natural predators, are slowly taking over the Australian continent from the northeast. Invasive fish from the red sea are wrecking havoc in the Mediterranean marine ecosystems. Rodents have spread in every conceivable corner of the earth, displacing vulnerable local fauna.

Gene drives might be one of the only ways to contain their spread, protecting biodiversity. They can be a powerful conservation tool that targets only the organism of interest, unlike contemporary pest management techniques such as the use of insecticides that attack all insects indiscriminately, or introduction of natural predators from other ecosystems (that by default disturb the food chains and interactions network).

It is possible for a DNA sequence to jump from one species to the other through a process called horizontal gene transfer. This theoretically could happen between insects, which appears to lend support to the argument that there is at least a small chance for a gene drive to move from species to species with unforeseen consequences.

The truth is that gene drives can be designed to target a very specific area of the genome, unique for a species. The modern gene drives use the precise CRISPR base editing technologies to spread to the population. In the off chance that the DNA encoding the gene drive will enter the reproductive cells of an individual from the other species, the editing system will have no template to act upon and the gene will be lost. One may argue that CRISPR has a chance for off-target activity, but a gene drive needs maximum efficiency to act as a gene drive. If the CRISPR doesnt work at 100%, the DNA sequence will be subject to the typical laws of inheritance and will disappear from the genetic pool

The ability to introduce genetic information to a wild population, which will spread to every individual, is unfortunately a dual use technology. The technology can theoretically be exploited to make biological weapons, though theres no indication that such a weapon is or has been developed. As gene drives can work well across many generations and require a large amount of offspring, they are unable to directly harm humans, crops, and farm animals. But a gene drive could be used to enhance the fitness of a crop-eating insect or a disease-carrying rodent.

The solution to this potential hazard is more research (and definitely not a research moratorium). Anyone with the means (which are considerable, so no lone bioterrorists or rogue scientists) and intent to cause harm can already research into such applications and will ignore aUN-imposed technology ban. The research community needs to develop the means to detect and monitor any malicious gene drive release and counter any offensive use.

The question on who and how should approve gene drive projects isnt easy to answer. A gene drive isnt contained by country borders, and the outdated GMO regulation framework existing in most countries is scientifically outdated and practically inadequate to handle such applications.

Moreover, the technology cannot be monopolized by a few countries or private companies. Each project is different. The approval should be a result of consensus among numerous stakeholders. There should also be a defined way to monitor how the gene drive spreads and how to handle liability claims if there are negative effects.

With populism growing and fewer people willing to trust the judgment of regulators and scientists, the rhetoric around complex innovations has become increasingly polarized, with both sides stuck fighting a high-stakes battle for public opinion. The issue is complex, and any decisions cannot be left to scientists, state organizations, and companies alone. But it also cannot be left solely in the hands of environmental organizations with little or no understanding of the science and with an ideological agenda that doesnt necessarily serve the public.

Environmental groups have often resorted to hyperbole as the debate over gene drives has unfolded. At the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, in 2018, a coalition of activists compared gene drives to the atomic bomb and accused researchers of using malaria as a Trojan horse to cover up the development of agricultural gene drives for corporate profit.A handful of small NGOs in the US, collectively known as SynBioWatch, have taken to describing gene-drive researchers as a cabal. The Canadian anti-biotechnology organization ETC Group claims aggressively spreads misinformation on social media, including claims that gene-drive honeybees could supposedly be controlled with a beam of light.

Meanwhile, Florida Keys is experiencing the largest dengue fever outbreak in a decade, with close to 40 cases already documented. The outbreak has led the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District to enter a partnership with UK-based, US-owned Oxitec that could lead to the Keys becoming the first U.S. trial site for genetically modified Aedes aegypti mosquitoes.

With a technology that can prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths per year, it is unethical to peremptorily ban it because it doesnt fit a few peoples worldview of what is natural. One may argue that governments and regulators should have no say whether one species should go extinct or not. But one can also question why activist groups in North America or Europe should be able to insert themselves in life and death decisions, preventing initiatives across the globe that could save millions of lives and protect our populations health and crops, and promote biological diversity.

Kostas Vavitsas, PhD, is a Senior Research Associate at the University of Athens, Greece. He is also a steering committee member of EUSynBioS. Follow him on Twitter@konvavitsas

Read more:
Viewpoint: Is there a scientific basis to ban gene drive technology that can rid us of virus-carrying rodents and mosquitoes? - Genetic Literacy...

Posted in Genetic Engineering | Comments Off on Viewpoint: Is there a scientific basis to ban gene drive technology that can rid us of virus-carrying rodents and mosquitoes? – Genetic Literacy…

We’re using microbes to clean up toxic electronic waste here’s how – The Conversation UK

Posted: August 19, 2020 at 8:58 am

If you were to stack up all the electronic waste produced annually around the world it would weigh as much as all the commercial aircrafts ever produced, or 5,000 Eiffel towers. This is a growing tsunami according to the UN, and its fed by all the phones, tablets and other electronic devices that are thrown away each day.

Of the 44.7 million metric tonnes of electronic waste (often shortened to e-waste) produced around the world in 2017, 90% was sent to landfill, incinerated, or illegally traded. Europe and the US accounted for almost half of this the EU is predicted to produce 12 million tonnes in 2020 alone. If nothing is done to combat the problem, the world is expected to produce more than 120 million tonnes annually by 2050.

Rich countries in Europe and North America export much of their e-waste to developing countries in Africa and Asia. A lot of this ends up accumulating in landfills, where toxic metals leach out and enter groundwater and food chains, threatening human health and the environment.

As daunting as this problem seems, were working on a solution. Using a process called bioleaching, were extracting and recycling these metals from e-waste using non-toxic bacteria.

Read more: Global electronic waste up 21% in five years, and recycling isn't keeping up

It might surprise you to learn that those toxic metals are actually very valuable. Its a bitter irony that the e-waste mountains collecting in the worlds poorest places actually contain a fortune. Precious metals are found in your phone and computer, and each year US$21 billion worth of gold and silver are used to manufacture new electronic devices. E-waste is thought to contain 7% of the worlds gold, and could be used to manufacture new products if it could be recycled safely.

With an estimated worth of US$62.5 billion a year, the economic benefits of recycling e-waste are clear. And it would help meet the shortfall for new natural resources that are needed to manufacture new products. Some of the elements on a printed circuit board essentially the brain of a computer are raw materials whose supply is at risk.

Other elements found in electronics are considered some of the periodic tables most endangered. There is a serious threat that they will be depleted within the next century. With todays trends of natural resource use, natural sources of indium will be depleted in about 10 years, platinum in 15 years and silver in 20 years.

But recovering these materials is more difficult than you might imagine.

Pyrometallurgy and hydrometallurgy are the current technologies used for extracting and recycling e-waste metals. They involve high temperatures and toxic chemicals, and so are extremely harmful to the environment. They require lots of energy and produce large volumes of toxic gas too, creating more pollution and leaving a large carbon footprint.

But bioleaching has existed as a solution to these problems as far back as the era of the Roman Empire. The modern mining industry has relied on it for decades, using microbes mainly bacteria, but also some fungi to extract metals from ores.

Microorganisms chemically modify the metal, setting it free from the surrounding rock and allowing it to dissolve in a microbial soup, from which the metal can be isolated and purified. Bioleaching requires very little energy and so has a small carbon footprint. No toxic chemicals are used either, making it environmentally friendly and safe.

Despite how useful it is, applying bioleaching to e-waste has mostly been an academic pursuit. But our research group is leading the first industrial effort. In a recent study, we reported how we managed to extract copper from discarded computer circuit boards using this method and recycle it into high-quality foil.

Different metals have different properties, so new methods must be constantly developed. Extracting metals by bioleaching, though pollution-free, is also slower than the traditional methods. Thankfully though, genetic engineering has already shown that we can improve how efficiently these microbes can be used in green recycling.

After our success recycling metals from discarded computers, scientists are trying other types of e-waste, including electric batteries. But developing better recycling techniques is only one piece of the puzzle. For a completely circular economy, recycling should start with manufacturers and producers. Designing devices that are more easily recycled and tackling the throw-away culture that treats the growing problem with indifference are both equally vital in slowing the oncoming tsunami.

See the original post here:
We're using microbes to clean up toxic electronic waste here's how - The Conversation UK

Posted in Genetic Engineering | Comments Off on We’re using microbes to clean up toxic electronic waste here’s how – The Conversation UK

Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Market COVID 19 Analysis With Key Players, Applications, Trends and Forecasts to 2026- Syngenta, KWS, DowDuPont,…

Posted: August 19, 2020 at 8:58 am

Latest Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Market report evaluates the impact of Covid-19 outbreak on the industry, involving potential opportunity and challenges, drivers and risks and market growth forecast based on different scenario. GlobalPlant Breeding and CRISPR Plant industryMarket Report is a professional and in-depth research report on the worlds major regional market.

Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant market report provides a detailed analysis of global market size, regional and country-level market size, segmentation market growth, market share, competitive Landscape, sales analysis, the impact of domestic and global market players, value chain optimization, trade regulations, recent developments, opportunities analysis, strategic market growth analysis, product launches, area marketplace expanding, and technological innovations.

Get Exclusive FREE Sample of Report on Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant market at:https://www.worldwidemarketreports.com/sample/341699

Top Players Listed in the Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Market Report are Syngenta, KWS, DowDuPont, Eurofins, SGS

Market Segmentations:Global Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant market competition by top manufacturers, with production, price, revenue (value) and market share for each manufacturer.

Based on type, report split into Molecular Breeding, Hybrid Breeding, Genome Editing, Genetic Engineering, Conventional Breeding

Based on the end users/applications, this report focuses on the status and outlook for major applications/end users, consumption (sales), market share and growth rate for each application, including Oilseeds & Pulses, Cereals & Grains, Fruits & Vegetables, Others

Impact of Covid-19 on Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Industry 2020

Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Market report analyses the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on the Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant industry. Since the COVID-19 virus outbreak in December 2019, the disease has spread to almost 180+ countries around the globe with the World Health Organization declaring it a public health emergency. The global impacts of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are already starting to be felt, and will significantly affect the Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant market in 2020.

The outbreak of COVID-19 has brought effects on many aspects,like massive slowing of the supply chain; stock market unpredictability; falling business assurance, growing panic among the population, and uncertainty about future.

Get Impact Analysis of CORONA Virus/COVID19 and be smart in redefining business strategies-https://www.worldwidemarketreports.com/covidimpact/341699

The report introduces Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant basic information including definition, classification, application, industry chain structure, industry overview, policy analysis, and news analysis. Insightful predictions for the Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Market for the coming few years have also been included in the report.

In the end, Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant report provides details of competitive developments such as expansions, agreements, new product launches, and acquisitions in the market for forecasting, regional demand, and supply factor, investment, market dynamics including technical scenario, consumer behavior, and end-use industry trends and dynamics, capacity, spending were taken into consideration.

Important Key questions answered inPlant Breeding and CRISPR Plant market report:

Any Quiry or Customization, Please Fill the Form, will deliver you in 24 hrs-https://www.worldwidemarketreports.com/quiry/341699

Link:
Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Market COVID 19 Analysis With Key Players, Applications, Trends and Forecasts to 2026- Syngenta, KWS, DowDuPont,...

Posted in Genetic Engineering | Comments Off on Plant Breeding and CRISPR Plant Market COVID 19 Analysis With Key Players, Applications, Trends and Forecasts to 2026- Syngenta, KWS, DowDuPont,…

Page 926«..1020..925926927928..940950..»