Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

Kaikenmaailman jaarittelu ja rupattelu täällä. Kirjoittaminen vaatii rekisteröitymisen.

Moderators: Balam-Acab, Hulluttelu Kuutio, P O L L Y

Post Reply
Message
Author
User avatar
ana-conda
God of PIF
God of PIF
Posts: 39471
Joined: 10 Jul 2004, 19:53
Location: Radan varsi

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#451 Post by ana-conda » 19 Aug 2015, 14:30

Roge Moore wrote:
Tohtori Klops wrote:
ana-conda wrote:
Saat mitä tilaat. wrote:
phys.org/ wrote: Sea slug has taken genes from algae it eats, allowing it to photosynthesize like a plant

Image

How a brilliant-green sea slug manages to live for months at a time "feeding" on sunlight, like a plant, is clarified in a recent study published in The Biological Bulletin.

The authors present the first direct evidence that the emerald green sea slug's chromosomes have some genes that come from the algae it eats.

These genes help sustain photosynthetic processes inside the slug that provide it with all the food it needs.

Importantly, this is one of the only known examples of functional gene transfer from one multicellular species to another, which is the goal of gene therapy to correct genetically based diseases in humans.
"Is a sea slug a good [biological model] for a human therapy? Probably not. But figuring out the mechanism of this naturally occurring gene transfer could be extremely instructive for future medical applications," says study co-author Sidney K. Pierce, an emeritus professor at University of South Florida and at University of Maryland, College Park.

The team used an advanced imaging technique to confirm that a gene from the alga V. litorea is present on the E. chlorotica slug's chromosome. This gene makes an enzyme that is critical to the function of photosynthetic "machines" called chloroplasts, which are typically found in plants and algae.

It has been known since the 1970s that E. chloritica "steals" chloroplasts from V. litorea (called "kleptoplasty") and embeds them into its own digestive cells. Once inside the slug cells, the chloroplasts continue to photosynthesize for up to nine months—much longer than they would perform in the algae. The photosynthesis process produces carbohydrates and lipids, which nourish the slug.

How the slug manages to maintain these photosynthesizing organelles for so long has been the topic of intensive study and a good deal of controversy. "This paper confirms that one of several algal genes needed to repair damage to chloroplasts, and keep them functioning, is present on the slug chromosome," Pierce says. "The gene is incorporated into the slug chromosome and transmitted to the next generation of slugs." While the next generation must take up chloroplasts anew from algae, the genes to maintain the chloroplasts are already present in the slug genome, Pierce says.

"There is no way on earth that genes from an alga should work inside an animal cell," Pierce says. "And yet here, they do. They allow the animal to rely on sunshine for its nutrition. So if something happens to their food source, they have a way of not starving to death until they find more algae to eat. "

This biological adaptation is also a mechanism of rapid evolution, Pierce says. "When a successful transfer of genes between species occurs, evolution can basically happen from one generation to the next," he notes, rather than over an evolutionary timescale of thousands of years.
Image
Jo pelkästään tämän vuoksi maa pallo kannattaisi säästää :salute:
:salute: :happy2:
Alan nyt syömään leviä. Pelkkiä leviä. Hitto soikoon.
Kelaa jos söis hiivaa ja muuttuis kilju tehtaaksi :idea:
Edit: Ei ku ei mitään

User avatar
useita piribooleja piilossa
7k
Posts: 7552
Joined: 28 Feb 2010, 22:53
Location: 500 mk:n seteli

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#452 Post by useita piribooleja piilossa » 19 Aug 2015, 14:48

Tohtori Klops wrote:
Nahkanuijan nuupauttaja wrote:
ana-conda wrote:
Tiedelehti Stara wrote:Kanadalainen Thoth Technology on saanut vihreää valoa uudelle avaruusprojektilleen. Yritys valmistaa avaruuteen ulottuvan tornin, joka toimii hissinä 20 kilometrin korkeuteen. Hissitorni tulee olemaan 20 kertaa korkeampi kuin maailman korkein rakennus Burj Khalifa.

Maailman korkeimman tornin suunnittelija on Brendan Quine. Metro-lehden mukaan avaruussukkulat voivat tulevaisuudessa laskeutua tornin huipulle, jossa on aluksille suunniteltu kiitorata.

Thoth Technologyn toimitusjohtaja Caroline Roberts kertoi, että astronautit noudetaan avaruusasemille tornin kautta. Avaruussukkuloiden ei tarvitse laskeutua maan pinnalle, vaan ne voidaan varustella jatkossa tornin huipulla. Tornin tarkoituksena on myös toimia tankkausasemana.
Image
:shock: :drunken:
:mosh:
Where where you, when they build the ladder to heaven...?

[-o<
Voikohan ton tarvittaessa muuntaa valtavaksi massasingoksi, jolla sitten ammuskellaan järkäleitä tulevassa maailmojen sodassa.
ala siitä sitte Kalevalaa kirjottamaa

User avatar
(entinen Twitter)
eijjole!
Posts: 10996
Joined: 30 Jul 2004, 16:59

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#453 Post by (entinen Twitter) » 19 Aug 2015, 15:02

HotPantsHomo wrote:
Tohtori Klops wrote:
Nahkanuijan nuupauttaja wrote:
ana-conda wrote:
Tiedelehti Stara wrote:Kanadalainen Thoth Technology on saanut vihreää valoa uudelle avaruusprojektilleen. Yritys valmistaa avaruuteen ulottuvan tornin, joka toimii hissinä 20 kilometrin korkeuteen. Hissitorni tulee olemaan 20 kertaa korkeampi kuin maailman korkein rakennus Burj Khalifa.

Maailman korkeimman tornin suunnittelija on Brendan Quine. Metro-lehden mukaan avaruussukkulat voivat tulevaisuudessa laskeutua tornin huipulle, jossa on aluksille suunniteltu kiitorata.

Thoth Technologyn toimitusjohtaja Caroline Roberts kertoi, että astronautit noudetaan avaruusasemille tornin kautta. Avaruussukkuloiden ei tarvitse laskeutua maan pinnalle, vaan ne voidaan varustella jatkossa tornin huipulla. Tornin tarkoituksena on myös toimia tankkausasemana.
Image
:shock: :drunken:
:mosh:
Where where you, when they build the ladder to heaven...?

[-o<
Voikohan ton tarvittaessa muuntaa valtavaksi massasingoksi, jolla sitten ammuskellaan järkäleitä tulevassa maailmojen sodassa.
Mutta saako tosta bongin?

User avatar
Viserys Targaryen
-=00King Of PIF00=-
-=00King Of PIF00=-
Posts: 20924
Joined: 06 Dec 2010, 20:35
Contact:

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#454 Post by Viserys Targaryen » 19 Aug 2015, 15:15

Last edited by Viserys Targaryen on 24 Jan 2017, 19:26, edited 1 time in total.
:madking: "I am Lord of the Seven Kindoms. I don't take orders from savages or their sluts!" :madking:

User avatar
Roge Moore
may contain cat and text
Posts: 25584
Joined: 24 Jun 2013, 17:58

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#455 Post by Roge Moore » 19 Aug 2015, 15:23

ana-conda wrote:
Roge Moore wrote:
Tohtori Klops wrote:
ana-conda wrote:
Saat mitä tilaat. wrote:
phys.org/ wrote: Sea slug has taken genes from algae it eats, allowing it to photosynthesize like a plant

Image

How a brilliant-green sea slug manages to live for months at a time "feeding" on sunlight, like a plant, is clarified in a recent study published in The Biological Bulletin.

The authors present the first direct evidence that the emerald green sea slug's chromosomes have some genes that come from the algae it eats.

These genes help sustain photosynthetic processes inside the slug that provide it with all the food it needs.

Importantly, this is one of the only known examples of functional gene transfer from one multicellular species to another, which is the goal of gene therapy to correct genetically based diseases in humans.
"Is a sea slug a good [biological model] for a human therapy? Probably not. But figuring out the mechanism of this naturally occurring gene transfer could be extremely instructive for future medical applications," says study co-author Sidney K. Pierce, an emeritus professor at University of South Florida and at University of Maryland, College Park.

The team used an advanced imaging technique to confirm that a gene from the alga V. litorea is present on the E. chlorotica slug's chromosome. This gene makes an enzyme that is critical to the function of photosynthetic "machines" called chloroplasts, which are typically found in plants and algae.

It has been known since the 1970s that E. chloritica "steals" chloroplasts from V. litorea (called "kleptoplasty") and embeds them into its own digestive cells. Once inside the slug cells, the chloroplasts continue to photosynthesize for up to nine months—much longer than they would perform in the algae. The photosynthesis process produces carbohydrates and lipids, which nourish the slug.

How the slug manages to maintain these photosynthesizing organelles for so long has been the topic of intensive study and a good deal of controversy. "This paper confirms that one of several algal genes needed to repair damage to chloroplasts, and keep them functioning, is present on the slug chromosome," Pierce says. "The gene is incorporated into the slug chromosome and transmitted to the next generation of slugs." While the next generation must take up chloroplasts anew from algae, the genes to maintain the chloroplasts are already present in the slug genome, Pierce says.

"There is no way on earth that genes from an alga should work inside an animal cell," Pierce says. "And yet here, they do. They allow the animal to rely on sunshine for its nutrition. So if something happens to their food source, they have a way of not starving to death until they find more algae to eat. "

This biological adaptation is also a mechanism of rapid evolution, Pierce says. "When a successful transfer of genes between species occurs, evolution can basically happen from one generation to the next," he notes, rather than over an evolutionary timescale of thousands of years.
Image
Jo pelkästään tämän vuoksi maa pallo kannattaisi säästää :salute:
:salute: :happy2:
Alan nyt syömään leviä. Pelkkiä leviä. Hitto soikoon.
Kelaa jos söis hiivaa ja muuttuis kilju tehtaaksi :idea:
Olen ruutana, jollet tiennyt.
:batmanbounce:
shitstorm wrote:
12 Sep 2018, 21:31
sössötys on sen tasoista että kortin vois ottaa kokonaan veke, mieshän on syyntakeeton.
Lörsson. wrote:Ainahan autot on joltain surrealistilta hankittu. :x

User avatar
Maidanin Veteraanien Veljesliitto
4k
Posts: 4833
Joined: 02 Apr 2014, 11:44

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#456 Post by Maidanin Veteraanien Veljesliitto » 19 Aug 2015, 16:25

Tiedelehti Stara wrote:Kanadalainen Thoth Technology on saanut vihreää valoa uudelle avaruusprojektilleen. Yritys valmistaa avaruuteen ulottuvan tornin, joka toimii hissinä 20 kilometrin korkeuteen. Hissitorni tulee olemaan 20 kertaa korkeampi kuin maailman korkein rakennus Burj Khalifa.

Maailman korkeimman tornin suunnittelija on Brendan Quine. Metro-lehden mukaan avaruussukkulat voivat tulevaisuudessa laskeutua tornin huipulle, jossa on aluksille suunniteltu kiitorata.

Thoth Technologyn toimitusjohtaja Caroline Roberts kertoi, että astronautit noudetaan avaruusasemille tornin kautta. Avaruussukkuloiden ei tarvitse laskeutua maan pinnalle, vaan ne voidaan varustella jatkossa tornin huipulla. Tornin tarkoituksena on myös toimia tankkausasemana.
Image
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-rocket_spacelaunch#Pneumatic_freestanding_tower wrote:Pneumatic freestanding tower

One proposed design is a freestanding tower composed of high strength material (e.g. kevlar) tubular columns inflated with a low density gas mix, and with dynamic stabilization systems including gyroscopes and "pressure balancing".[35] Suggested benefits in contrast to other space elevator designs include avoiding working with the great lengths of structure involved in some other designs, construction from the ground instead of orbit, and functional access to the entire range of altitudes within the design's practical reach. The design presented is "at 5 km altitude and extending to 20 km above sea level", and the authors suggest that "the approach may be further scaled to provide direct access to altitudes above 200 km".

A major difficulty of such a tower is buckling since it is a long slender construction.
Ainoana lähteenä on "Quine, B. M.; Seth, R. K.; Zhu, Z. H. (2009-04-19). "A free-standing space elevator structure: a practical alternative to the space tether". Acta Astronautica 65 (3–4): 365–375. doi:10.1016/j.actaastro.2009.02.018. hdl:10315/2587. (P. 7.)"

ja Quine, B. M. on varmaan http://thothx.com/about/brendan-quine/ eli sama insinörtti-proffa-äiä.

Tiedä sitten toimiiko edes monta kilsaa korkea ilmapallotorni kunnolla. Jos toimii, siihen vois olla muuta käyttöä kun kiitoradan laittaminen sinne ylös. Joku maglev-juna joka loppuu siihen yläpäähän ois hiäno. Jos se on käytännössä ilmapalloista rakennettu niin sehän voi kai alkaa tunnelina maanpinnassa ja kaartua ylöspäin eikä tarvitse olla pystysuora alusta loppuun. Elon Muskin hieno Hyperloop sisään ja junalla avaruuteen [-o<

User avatar
Super Dario Fo Fighters
Poistunut käyttäjä
Posts: 59483
Joined: 26 Oct 2006, 20:56
Location: Palazzo della Civiltà di Lavoro

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#457 Post by Super Dario Fo Fighters » 19 Aug 2015, 17:02

ana-conda wrote:
Roge Moore wrote:
Tohtori Klops wrote:
ana-conda wrote:
Saat mitä tilaat. wrote:
phys.org/ wrote: Sea slug has taken genes from algae it eats, allowing it to photosynthesize like a plant

Image

How a brilliant-green sea slug manages to live for months at a time "feeding" on sunlight, like a plant, is clarified in a recent study published in The Biological Bulletin.

The authors present the first direct evidence that the emerald green sea slug's chromosomes have some genes that come from the algae it eats.

These genes help sustain photosynthetic processes inside the slug that provide it with all the food it needs.

Importantly, this is one of the only known examples of functional gene transfer from one multicellular species to another, which is the goal of gene therapy to correct genetically based diseases in humans.
"Is a sea slug a good [biological model] for a human therapy? Probably not. But figuring out the mechanism of this naturally occurring gene transfer could be extremely instructive for future medical applications," says study co-author Sidney K. Pierce, an emeritus professor at University of South Florida and at University of Maryland, College Park.

The team used an advanced imaging technique to confirm that a gene from the alga V. litorea is present on the E. chlorotica slug's chromosome. This gene makes an enzyme that is critical to the function of photosynthetic "machines" called chloroplasts, which are typically found in plants and algae.

It has been known since the 1970s that E. chloritica "steals" chloroplasts from V. litorea (called "kleptoplasty") and embeds them into its own digestive cells. Once inside the slug cells, the chloroplasts continue to photosynthesize for up to nine months—much longer than they would perform in the algae. The photosynthesis process produces carbohydrates and lipids, which nourish the slug.

How the slug manages to maintain these photosynthesizing organelles for so long has been the topic of intensive study and a good deal of controversy. "This paper confirms that one of several algal genes needed to repair damage to chloroplasts, and keep them functioning, is present on the slug chromosome," Pierce says. "The gene is incorporated into the slug chromosome and transmitted to the next generation of slugs." While the next generation must take up chloroplasts anew from algae, the genes to maintain the chloroplasts are already present in the slug genome, Pierce says.

"There is no way on earth that genes from an alga should work inside an animal cell," Pierce says. "And yet here, they do. They allow the animal to rely on sunshine for its nutrition. So if something happens to their food source, they have a way of not starving to death until they find more algae to eat. "

This biological adaptation is also a mechanism of rapid evolution, Pierce says. "When a successful transfer of genes between species occurs, evolution can basically happen from one generation to the next," he notes, rather than over an evolutionary timescale of thousands of years.
Image
Jo pelkästään tämän vuoksi maa pallo kannattaisi säästää :salute:
:salute: :happy2:
Alan nyt syömään leviä. Pelkkiä leviä. Hitto soikoon.
Kelaa jos söis hiivaa ja muuttuis kilju tehtaaksi :idea:
Kiljutehdas + hevosen kyrpä
September. A gentle reminder that autumn is for the poets. Fall is for the rest of us.

- @neinquarterly

User avatar
Myrrys
-=00King Of PIF00=-
-=00King Of PIF00=-
Posts: 28007
Joined: 01 Jan 2011, 19:28
Location: Päästadi
Contact:

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#458 Post by Myrrys » 28 Aug 2015, 12:05

uutinen ja uutinen mut ihan sika siistiä

[gifv][/gifv]
The 3D-printed hand takes 48 hours to make and would cost £1,000 to buy directly from the company that makes it, though it would cost even less if users could make it themselves using the company's open source plans and instructions.
http://www.openhandproject.org/
Cast to Wolves - HKI, crustpunkkaahaus
Kettlehead - HKI, laahaus
Image

User avatar
Nahkanuijan nuupauttaja
-=00King Of PIF00=-
-=00King Of PIF00=-
Posts: 27920
Joined: 02 Sep 2013, 21:33
Location: Primitiivinen villilä

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#459 Post by Nahkanuijan nuupauttaja » 04 Sep 2015, 19:24

Madonreikä Espanjassa!
Science Daily wrote:"Wormholes" are cosmic tunnels that can connect two distant regions of the universe, and have been popularized by the dissemination of theoretical physics and by works of science fiction like Stargate, Star Trek or, more recently, Interstellar. Using present-day technology it would be impossible to create a gravitational wormhole, as the field would have to be manipulated with huge amounts of gravitational energy, which no one yet knows how to generate. In electromagnetism, however, advances in metamaterials and invisibility have allowed researchers to put forward several designs to achieve this.

Scientists in the Department of Physics at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona have designed and created in the laboratory the first experimental 'wormhole' that can connect two regions of space magnetically. This consists of a tunnel that transfers the magnetic field from one point to the other while keeping it undetectable -- invisible -- all the way.

The researchers used metamaterials and metasurfaces to build the tunnel experimentally, so that the magnetic field from a source, such as a magnet or a an electromagnet, appears at the other end of the 'wormhole' as an isolated magnetic monopole. This result is strange enough in itself, as magnetic monopoles -- magnets with only one pole, whether north or south -- do not exist in nature. The overall effect is that of a magnetic field that appears to travel from one point to another through a dimension that lies outside the conventional three dimensions.

The 'wormhole' in this experiment is a sphere made of different layers: an external layer with a ferromagnetic surface, a second inner layer, made of superconducting material, and a ferromagnetic sheet rolled into a cylinder that crosses the sphere from one end to the other. The sphere is made in such a way as to be magnetically undetectable -- invisible, in magnetic field terms -- from the exterior.

The magnetic wormhole is an analogy of gravitational ones, as it "changes the topology of space, as if the inner region has been magnetically erased from space," explains Àlvar Sánchez, the lead researcher.

These same researchers had already built a magnetic fibre in 2014: a device capable of transporting the magnetic field from one end to the other. This fibre was, however, detectable magnetically. The wormhole developed now, though, is a completely three-dimensional device that is undetectable by any magnetic field.

This means a step forward towards possible applications in which magnetic fields are used: in medicine for example. This technology could, for example, increase patients' comfort by distancing them from the detectors when having MRI scans in hospital, or allow MRI images of different parts of the body to be obtained simultaneously.
Edelweiss wrote:saatanan nuupauttaja , en tiedä. :cry:

User avatar
ana-conda
God of PIF
God of PIF
Posts: 39471
Joined: 10 Jul 2004, 19:53
Location: Radan varsi

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#460 Post by ana-conda » 07 Sep 2015, 12:56

ISS kuuta vasten:
Image
Edit: Ei ku ei mitään

User avatar
ana-conda
God of PIF
God of PIF
Posts: 39471
Joined: 10 Jul 2004, 19:53
Location: Radan varsi

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#461 Post by ana-conda » 08 Sep 2015, 10:37

Jää nallet voivatkin selvitä :flower:
tiede.fi wrote:Karibut korvaavat hylkeet ruokavaliossa.
Image
Jääkarhut voisivat selvitä Kanadassa ilman jäätäkin. Ne saisivat ravintonsa karibuista ja lumihanhen munista Hudsoninlahden alueella. Näin osoittavat uudet laskelmat, joita tekivät PLoS One -tiedelehteen Linda Gormezano ja Robert Rockwell.
Uusissa laskelmissa on verrattu jääkarhujen hylkeistä saamia kaloreita ravintoon, jota ne söisivät jäiden kadottua. Hylkeitä jääkarhu voi pyytää vain jäätiköiltä.
”Jääkarhujen on nähty syövän hyvinkin erilaista ravintoa jo kauan sitten”, sanoo Rockwell, joka on tutkinut arktista ekologiaa Hudsoninlahdella jo lähes 50 vuotta.
Aiemmat tutkimukset ovat ennustaneet, että jääkarhut voivat kuolla nälkään, kun jääpeite pohjoisnavan ympärillä ohenee ja vetäytyy vuosi vuodelta.
Jääkarhut käyttävät karibun ja hylkeen saalistamiseen suunnilleen verran energiaa. Saaliit ovat suunnilleen sama kokoakin.
Lumihanhen munien keräilyyn jääkarhu tarvitsee hyvin vähän energiaa. Lumihanhien kanta kestää tutkijoiden mukaan jääkarhujen verotusta.
Edit: Ei ku ei mitään

User avatar
ana-conda
God of PIF
God of PIF
Posts: 39471
Joined: 10 Jul 2004, 19:53
Location: Radan varsi

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#462 Post by ana-conda » 10 Sep 2015, 09:56

talousläämä.fi wrote:Suomen metsistä löytyi uusi sienilaji: "Jauhekaarnahiippo"
Terve tuloa jauhe kaarna hiippo :salut:
Edit: Ei ku ei mitään

User avatar
Sasse netä
Matti Partanen
Matti Partanen
Posts: 70098
Joined: 05 Dec 2013, 12:38
Location: Kotiviinipöntöllä

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#463 Post by Sasse netä » 10 Sep 2015, 10:03

Super Dario Fo Fighters wrote:
ana-conda wrote:
Roge Moore wrote:
Tohtori Klops wrote:
ana-conda wrote:
Saat mitä tilaat. wrote:
phys.org/ wrote: Sea slug has taken genes from algae it eats, allowing it to photosynthesize like a plant

Image

How a brilliant-green sea slug manages to live for months at a time "feeding" on sunlight, like a plant, is clarified in a recent study published in The Biological Bulletin.

The authors present the first direct evidence that the emerald green sea slug's chromosomes have some genes that come from the algae it eats.

These genes help sustain photosynthetic processes inside the slug that provide it with all the food it needs.

Importantly, this is one of the only known examples of functional gene transfer from one multicellular species to another, which is the goal of gene therapy to correct genetically based diseases in humans.
"Is a sea slug a good [biological model] for a human therapy? Probably not. But figuring out the mechanism of this naturally occurring gene transfer could be extremely instructive for future medical applications," says study co-author Sidney K. Pierce, an emeritus professor at University of South Florida and at University of Maryland, College Park.

The team used an advanced imaging technique to confirm that a gene from the alga V. litorea is present on the E. chlorotica slug's chromosome. This gene makes an enzyme that is critical to the function of photosynthetic "machines" called chloroplasts, which are typically found in plants and algae.

It has been known since the 1970s that E. chloritica "steals" chloroplasts from V. litorea (called "kleptoplasty") and embeds them into its own digestive cells. Once inside the slug cells, the chloroplasts continue to photosynthesize for up to nine months—much longer than they would perform in the algae. The photosynthesis process produces carbohydrates and lipids, which nourish the slug.

How the slug manages to maintain these photosynthesizing organelles for so long has been the topic of intensive study and a good deal of controversy. "This paper confirms that one of several algal genes needed to repair damage to chloroplasts, and keep them functioning, is present on the slug chromosome," Pierce says. "The gene is incorporated into the slug chromosome and transmitted to the next generation of slugs." While the next generation must take up chloroplasts anew from algae, the genes to maintain the chloroplasts are already present in the slug genome, Pierce says.

"There is no way on earth that genes from an alga should work inside an animal cell," Pierce says. "And yet here, they do. They allow the animal to rely on sunshine for its nutrition. So if something happens to their food source, they have a way of not starving to death until they find more algae to eat. "

This biological adaptation is also a mechanism of rapid evolution, Pierce says. "When a successful transfer of genes between species occurs, evolution can basically happen from one generation to the next," he notes, rather than over an evolutionary timescale of thousands of years.
Image
Jo pelkästään tämän vuoksi maa pallo kannattaisi säästää :salute:
:salute: :happy2:
Alan nyt syömään leviä. Pelkkiä leviä. Hitto soikoon.
Kelaa jos söis hiivaa ja muuttuis kilju tehtaaksi :idea:
Kiljutehdas + hevosen kyrpä
[-o<
Stanford researchers genetically engineer yeast to produce opioids

It typically takes a year to produce hydrocodone from plants, but Christina Smolke and colleagues have genetically modified yeast to make it in just a few days. The technique could improve access to medicines in impoverished nations, and later be used to develop treatments for other diseases.

By Tom Abate
Stephanie Galanie, Smolke Lab graphic of fermentor with representations of organisms that contributed genes to bioengineered yeast

A team led by Stanford bioengineer Christina Smolke succeeded in finding more than 20 genes from five different organisms and engineering them into the genome of baker's yeast. They created two different microbial assembly lines, each of which converted sugar into one of two medicinal compounds: thebaine or hydrocodone. The circles on the left represent the organisms that contributed genes to the bioengineered yeast: (from top) California poppy, rat, goldthread, bacteria and opium poppy.

For thousands of years, people have used yeast to ferment wine, brew beer and leaven bread.

Now researchers at Stanford have genetically engineered yeast to make painkilling medicines, a breakthrough that heralds a faster and potentially less expensive way to produce many different types of plant-based medicines.

Writing today in Science, the Stanford engineers describe how they reprogrammed the genetic machinery of baker's yeast so that these fast-growing cells could convert sugar into hydrocodone in just three to five days.

Hydrocodone and its chemical relatives such as morphine and oxycodone are opioids, members of a family of painkilling drugs sourced from the opium poppy. It can take more than a year to produce a batch of medicine, starting from the farms in Australia, Europe and elsewhere that are licensed to grow opium poppies. Plant material must then be harvested, processed and shipped to pharmaceutical factories in the United States, where the active drug molecules are extracted and refined into medicines.

"When we started work a decade ago, many experts thought it would be impossible to engineer yeast to replace the entire farm-to-factory process," said senior author Christina Smolke, an associate professor of bioengineering at Stanford.

Now, though the output is small – it would take 4,400 gallons of bioengineered yeast to produce a single dose of pain relief – the experiment proves that bioengineered yeast can make complex plant-based medicines.

"This is only the beginning," Smolke said. "The techniques we developed and demonstrate for opioid pain relievers can be adapted to produce many plant-derived compounds to fight cancers, infectious diseases and chronic conditions such as high blood pressure and arthritis."
From plant to test tubes

Many medicines are derived from plants, which our ancestors chewed or brewed into teas, or later refined into pills using chemical processes to extract and concentrate their active ingredients. Smolke's team is modernizing the process by inserting precisely engineered snippets of DNA into cells, such as yeast, to reprogram the cells into custom chemical assembly lines to produce medicinal compounds.

An important predecessor to the Stanford work has been the use of genetically engineered yeast to produce the anti-malarial drug artemisinin. Traditionally artemisinin has been sourced from the sweet wormwood tree in similar fashion to how opiates are refined from poppy. Over the last decade, as yeast-based artemisinin production has become possible, about one third of the world's supply has shifted to bioreactors.

The artemisinin experiments proved that yeast biosynthesis was possible, but involved adding only six genes. The Stanford team had to engineer 23 genes into yeast to create their cellular assembly line for hydrocodone.

"This is the most complicated chemical synthesis ever engineered in yeast," Smolke said.

Her team found and fine-tuned snippets of DNA from other plants, bacteria and even rats. These genes equipped the yeast to produce all the enzymes necessary for the cells to convert sugar into hydrocodone, a compound that deactivates pain receptors in the brain.
Rod Searceyresearch team members Isis Trenchard, Christina Smolke, Stephanie Galanie and Kate Thodey

Research team members: (from left) postdoctoral researcher Isis Trenchard, assistant professor of bioengineering Christina Smolke, chemistry graduate student Stephanie Galanie and research associate Kate Thodey

"Enzymes make and break molecules," said Stephanie Galanie, a PhD student in chemistry and a member of Smolke's team. "They're the action heroes of biology."

To get the yeast assembly line going, the Stanford team had to fill in a missing link in the basic science of plant-based medicines.

Many plants, including opium poppies, produce (S)-reticuline, a molecule that is a precursor to active ingredients with medicinal properties. In the opium poppy, (S)-reticuline is naturally reconfigured into a variant called (R)-reticuline, a molecule that starts the plant down a path toward the production of molecules that can relieve pain.

Smolke's team and two other labs recently independently discovered which enzyme reconfigures reticuline, but even after the Stanford bioengineers added this enzyme into their microbial factory, the yeast didn't create enough of the opioid compound. So they genetically tweaked the next enzyme in the process to boost production. Down the line they went, adding enzymes, including six from rats, in order to craft a molecule that emerged ready to plug pain receptors in the brain.
Engineered with a purpose

In their Science paper, the Stanford authors acknowledged that a new process to make opioid painkillers could increase concerns about the potential for opioid abuse.

"We want there to be an open deliberative process to bring researchers and policymakers together," Smolke said. "We need options to help ensure that the bio-based production of medicinal compounds is developed in the most responsible way."

Smolke said that in the United States, where opioid medicines are already widely available, the focus is on potential misuse. But the World Health Organization estimates that 5.5 billion people have little or no access to pain medications.

"Biotech production could lower costs and, with proper controls against abuse, allow bioreactors to be located where they are needed," she said.

In addition to bioengineering yeast to convert sugar into hydrocodone, the Stanford team developed a second strain that can process sugar into thebaine, a precursor to other opioid compounds. Bio-produced thebaine would still need to be refined through sophisticated processes in pharmaceutical factories, but it would eliminate the time delay of growing poppies.

"The molecules we produced and the techniques we developed show that it is possible to make important medicines from scratch using only yeast," she said. "If responsibly developed, we can make and fairly provide medicines to all who need."

Stanford has patents on the technology and Smolke and researchers on her team have formed a company. The other co-authors of her Science paper are research associate Kate Thodey, postdoctoral researcher Isis Trenchard and undergraduate Maria Filsinger Interrante.
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2015/augu ... 81315.html
Image
Lempi piffaajani
2020: memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=11478
2021: memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=623
2022: member list.php

User avatar
Max Martini
kaljaasi
Posts: 90658
Joined: 31 May 2011, 13:11
Location: Puhveliklubi

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#464 Post by Max Martini » 10 Sep 2015, 11:33

ana-conda wrote:Jää nallet voivatkin selvitä :flower:
tiede.fi wrote:Karibut korvaavat hylkeet ruokavaliossa.
Image
Jääkarhut voisivat selvitä Kanadassa ilman jäätäkin. Ne saisivat ravintonsa karibuista ja lumihanhen munista Hudsoninlahden alueella. Näin osoittavat uudet laskelmat, joita tekivät PLoS One -tiedelehteen Linda Gormezano ja Robert Rockwell.
Uusissa laskelmissa on verrattu jääkarhujen hylkeistä saamia kaloreita ravintoon, jota ne söisivät jäiden kadottua. Hylkeitä jääkarhu voi pyytää vain jäätiköiltä.
”Jääkarhujen on nähty syövän hyvinkin erilaista ravintoa jo kauan sitten”, sanoo Rockwell, joka on tutkinut arktista ekologiaa Hudsoninlahdella jo lähes 50 vuotta.
Aiemmat tutkimukset ovat ennustaneet, että jääkarhut voivat kuolla nälkään, kun jääpeite pohjoisnavan ympärillä ohenee ja vetäytyy vuosi vuodelta.
Jääkarhut käyttävät karibun ja hylkeen saalistamiseen suunnilleen verran energiaa. Saaliit ovat suunnilleen sama kokoakin.
Lumihanhen munien keräilyyn jääkarhu tarvitsee hyvin vähän energiaa. Lumihanhien kanta kestää tutkijoiden mukaan jääkarhujen verotusta.
Jotenkin oon kuvitellu, että hylkeitten suuri rasvapitoisuus olis jääkarhuille yllättävän tärkeetä.
Do please go on, this is the least fascinating conversation I've ever had.

User avatar
ana-conda
God of PIF
God of PIF
Posts: 39471
Joined: 10 Jul 2004, 19:53
Location: Radan varsi

Re: Päivän sika siisti tiede uutinen

#465 Post by ana-conda » 10 Sep 2015, 11:35

Guy Incognito wrote:
ana-conda wrote:Jää nallet voivatkin selvitä :flower:
tiede.fi wrote:Karibut korvaavat hylkeet ruokavaliossa.
Image
Jääkarhut voisivat selvitä Kanadassa ilman jäätäkin. Ne saisivat ravintonsa karibuista ja lumihanhen munista Hudsoninlahden alueella. Näin osoittavat uudet laskelmat, joita tekivät PLoS One -tiedelehteen Linda Gormezano ja Robert Rockwell.
Uusissa laskelmissa on verrattu jääkarhujen hylkeistä saamia kaloreita ravintoon, jota ne söisivät jäiden kadottua. Hylkeitä jääkarhu voi pyytää vain jäätiköiltä.
”Jääkarhujen on nähty syövän hyvinkin erilaista ravintoa jo kauan sitten”, sanoo Rockwell, joka on tutkinut arktista ekologiaa Hudsoninlahdella jo lähes 50 vuotta.
Aiemmat tutkimukset ovat ennustaneet, että jääkarhut voivat kuolla nälkään, kun jääpeite pohjoisnavan ympärillä ohenee ja vetäytyy vuosi vuodelta.
Jääkarhut käyttävät karibun ja hylkeen saalistamiseen suunnilleen verran energiaa. Saaliit ovat suunnilleen sama kokoakin.
Lumihanhen munien keräilyyn jääkarhu tarvitsee hyvin vähän energiaa. Lumihanhien kanta kestää tutkijoiden mukaan jääkarhujen verotusta.
Jotenkin oon kuvitellu, että hylkeitten suuri rasvapitoisuus olis jääkarhuille yllättävän tärkeetä.
Näistä tulee poro dieetillä varmaan laihoja ko saamelaiset.
Edit: Ei ku ei mitään

Post Reply