বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

BlackBerry Z10 tipped to come only in black at launch, white edition to arrive February 15th

BlackBerry Z10 tipped to come only in black at launch, white edition to arrive February 15th

We've had a note in from a well-placed friend who says that RIM's BlackBerry Z10 will only debut in Henry Ford's favorite color: black. Those looking for a white-tinted fruity smartphone will apparently have to wait until February 15th before being able to splash their hard-earned. Either way, as we're but a few short minutes away from Thorsten Heins' big moment, we won't have long to wait for confirmation.

[Thanks, Anonymous]

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/30/white-bbz10-due-feb-15th/

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Video: Sideshow: Hillary Clinton?s lighter moments



>>> it's a compare and contrast kind of a deal. cool, not cool.

>> this is the first trip for some of these players. but a few of them were here a couple years ago far pickup game on my birthday.

>> back to "hardball." you may think you've heard all the arguments for and against gay marriage . here's a new one. laws are needed to protect from unplanned pregnancies among straight couples. to argue in favor of keeping the defense of marriage act , traditional marriage laws, quote, reflect a unique social difficulty with opposite sex couples that is not present with same sex couples. namely the undeniable tendencies to reduce unplanned pregnancies. are you still baffled how that applied to same-sex marriage? well, say since gay couples don't run the risk of unplanned pregnancy si, they don't need to be included in any laws regarding traditional marriage .

>>> also with the push for immigration heating up in recent weeks, have you noticed that the same highly successful companies and individuals seem to get a nod when the president talks about immigration policy ? hat tip to new york magazine for picking up on this trend.

>> recent years one in four high-tech start-ups in america, companies like google and intel --

>> after all immigrants helped start businesses like google and yahoo.

>> it's worth remembering there was a time steel was as manufacturing. but when the name sake of this university, an immigrant by the way.

>> great ventures of carnegie's u.s. steel and google inc . all this was possible because of immigrants.

>> look at intel. look at google. look at yahoo. look at ebay. every one of those was founded by, guess who? an immigrant.

>> mentions from the president have gone to the cofounder of instagram.

>>> finally, travels with hillary, we've seen no shortage over the past four years. all the same the secretary has been game for the lighter moments of her job.

>> can i put one on like you have over there? [ singing ]

>> things got musical on several different occasions. then there was this photo shoot in hawaii with hong kong 's chief executive. that was, in fact, a half dressed torch bearing man dashing behind them. and then there was the speech featuring a knock at kim jong -un.

>> time has honored so many national and global leaders. there's many i haven't had a chance to meet yet. i was sort of hoping kim jong -un would show up. i don't think he's here, but if you catch sight of him, let me know . we're still trying to figure out what he's all about.

>> finally, we can't forget the clinton-approved maim texts from hillary like she's going to love the new justin bieber visit video.

>>> up next, is it next forrer in tea party that seems to be losing steam? that's ahead. you're watching "hardball," the place for politics. my

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/hardball/50644834/

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বুধবার, ৩০ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Google maps out North Korea with crowd-sourced data

3 hrs.

While Google Maps feels like a solid mapping solution, it has some blank spots?? ?particularly when it comes to regions such as?North Korea. But that's all changing thanks to a group of "citizen cartographers" and a tool which allows Google to incorporate crowd-sourced map data into its product.

As?Jayanth Mysore, a senior product manager working on the Google Map Maker project,?explains in a post on the official Google Maps blog, the Map Maker tool?has been around since 2008 and allowed users to "update the maps of the areas they know, and improve their level of detail and accuracy." Crowdsourced data like this is how Google "will build the modern map," Mysore adds, reiterating that without these details, map data is currently "very limited" in some parts of the world.

Efforts to map out North Korea have been made over the last few years, but on Monday, Google was finally ready to officially update the region on Google Maps. "We know this map is not perfect," Mysore acknowledges. "We encourage people from around the world to continue helping us improve the quality of these maps for everyone with Google Map Maker." He adds that, from now on, any further "approved" updates to the North Korean maps will also appear on Google Maps.

The Wall Street Journal's Evan Ramstad points out?that the update of North Korea on Google Maps comes about three weeks after Google's executive chairman Eric Schmidt visited the area (though a Google spokesperson tells NBC News that the visit was unrelated to the timing of the Google Maps update).?During his time in the country, "Schmidt encouraged officials he met in North Korea to make the Internet available to its citizens and end its attempts to restrict information," Ramstad writes.?The Verge's Sam Byford reminds?that Internet access in North Korea remains quite restricted nonetheless, and that odds are that the "vast majority of North Korean citizens" won't be able to access Google's freshly updated maps.

The crowd-sourced cartography includes mass transit, monuments and parks, as well as North Korea's massive gulags, which are signified on Google Maps with a slightly different shading. ?As?the Atlantic notes, "Naturally, the Hwasong Gulag, like any place on Google, already has some jokesters reviewing its?accommodations."?

Mysore dances around these detail in his blog post, and instead focuses on who will be able to take advantage of the information. "While many people around the globe are fascinated with North Korea," he writes, "these maps are especially important for the citizens of South Korea who have ancestral connections or still have family living there."

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/google-maps-out-north-korea-crowd-sourced-data-1C8157346

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Family of 14 gives up everything to live in RV

The Kellogg family in 2012. (Cody, 3 months, not pictured.)

?Every single day is a weekend."

That's how Susie Kellogg, mother of 12, describes family life these days, after she and her husband, Dan, decided to sell their Glenwood Springs, Colorado home last fall, fill up an RV with their children?all of them?and travel the country in search of adventure. Permanently.

All but one of the Kellogg children?aged 3 months to 19 years, each with names ending in a "y"?are home-, er, RV-schooled in the morning. In the afternoon, they explore: kayaking, hiking, camping?anything they want.

?This is what freedom is,? Dan Kellogg told the "Today" show. ?You go after it.?

?I want them to live life in the moment and not be living for tomorrow or ?After my kids are grown? or ?Thank God it?s Friday,?? Susie added.

The eldest child?Kerry, who graduated from high school last spring?gave up a chance to go to college, opting to join the family on the road and work on graphic design.

?[At first] I thought that going in an RV wasn?t normal and was weird,? she told the "Today" show. But "we can do anything we want now. Anything. And nothing is holding us back.?

?I am so ready for this,? Kerry told Denver's Fox 31. ?I am over Glenwood. I just want to enjoy new adventures and see new places.?

The Kelloggs have a website (KelloggShow.com), Twitter feed, Facebook page and YouTube channel to document their travels and promote their unusual way of life. They even penned a parenting guide?"Raising a Badass Family"?that Dan calls "a ramped-up, modern version of that which Dr. Spock and Dr. T. Berry Brazelton pioneered in both the 1940s and 1990s."

From the book's description on Amazon.com:

Filled with practical and compassionate advice for both new parents as well as those knee-deep in their parenting journey, it is a must read for all anxious parents, those suffering from parenting overload and those that simply need a swift kick in the pants. "Raising a Badass Family" delves deeply into the hot issues parents must face today, such as spanking, co-sleeping, daycare, homeschooling, raising teens and so much more.

It's like a real-life, supersized version of the Griswolds.

The Kellogg kids are undeniably close?both figuratively and literally?but Susie says the children are encouraged to socialize, even on the road.

"Our kids encourage each other, they coach each other, they police each other and they love each other," Susie wrote in a recent blog post. "They have built-in BFFs and they are meeting new people in every new stop?both kids and adults."

More:

This lifestyle also allows our kids to remain kids for as long as they wish. They run, climb trees, build fires, play pranks, wrestle, yell, scream, holler and laugh all day everyday. Dally summed up the enticement of RV life in one simple sentence: ?I like having my house on wheels because I can go anywhere I want without having to pack and plan.? Yes! Freedom. Freedom to do whatever we want, whenever we want! We don?t play well by other people?s rules. We don?t like to be told what we can and cannot do. This nomad life is exactly what we were born to do!

And it doesn?t hurt that sometimes we are treated like rock stars by people who recognize us from YouTube or our blog! I wouldn?t trade my life for anything in the world.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/family-rv-kellogg-show-life-road-151308846.html

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৯ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

THX Tune-Up App: Tweak Any TV From Your Phone

While it may look great in the store, your new flat screen is going to need to be calibrated once you get it home to deliver the best viewing experience. While hardcore videophiles will want to invest in a professional service, this new calibration app from THX covers the basic adjustments that the rest of us actually use. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/GF7qqcOQ-B4/thx-tune+up-app-tweak-any-tv-from-your-phone

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Gnomes to stay on Calif. utility poles for now

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) ? Small paintings of gnomes that have popped up on utility poles have become a community sensation in Oakland, prompting Pacific Gas & Electric Co. to say Tuesday that it will keep them in place for now.

The hand-painted portraits on 6-inch blocks of wood began going up last year in an apparent effort to brighten up the blue-collar California city. There are currently more than 2,000 of the images on utility poles, with many screwed to the bases.

The gnomes have red hats, white beards and brown shoes. Some of the images contain a mushroom.

Word that PG&E planned to remove the paintings sparked an outpouring of support from residents who said the gnomes add character to the city.

PG&E spokesman Jason King planned to meet Tuesday with the artist, who requested to remain anonymous, and a member of the City Council. The utility hopes to eventually relocate the gnome paintings from the poles to other spots in the same neighborhoods.

"We've received a lot of feedback from residents who love the gnomes," King told The Associated Press. "We're looking for solutions. We'll keep them where people can enjoy them."

King said PG&E did not want to encourage such installations, explaining a proliferation of such images could cause damage or make it difficult for crews to access the poles.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gnomes-stay-calif-utility-poles-now-202506730.html

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How Video Sharing Apps Keep Porn Out

Just like Vine, pretty much any of the other "Instagram for video" platforms that have come out in the last couple of years have experienced an inundation of inappropriate content. That's great for Twitter's version because it can learn some quick porn eradication lessons before Apple kicks it out of the app store. For example,?Viddy, "a simple way to share well-produced, bite-size videos with the world,"?had a similar scandal when it first hit the app store, which led Apple to eventually pull the app. But, after some adjustments, the app made its way past Apple's gatekeepers. Trying to find pornos on the app today is difficult, if not impossible. Mobli, another similar service, saw a influx of dirty material when it first launched, too. Yet, it still exists in Apple's anti-porn bubble. And Vine can, too. Here's how:

RELATED: Vine Has a Porn Problem Because Of Course It Does

Hand-by-Hand Deletion?

The Process: If a porno comes across the Mobli platform, one of the members of the staff deletes it, Mobli's VP of Marketing, Dino Decespedes told The Atlantic Wire. While the company's staff keeps 24 hour surveillance on its app, it also uses a third-party service to help with the takedowns.?

RELATED: Turning Instagram Addiction into Dollars

Pros: When a human does something that means a computer can't mess it up. A person will know if something crosses the line, which for Mobli means showing certain body parts, like nipples.?

RELATED: Hackers Discover Government Employees Watch Porn

Cons: It takes a lot humans to watch every video ?and things can slip through. Decespedes told the Wire the people at Mobli delete 50 to 100 items each day.?

RELATED: What $1 Billion Gets You These Days

Community Alert System

The Process: Have members flag inappropriate content. Lots of video and picture sharing app do this. Mobli has what it calls the "Mobli Braintrust" a community of beta users that are active about keeping the service clean.?

RELATED: The Era of Twitter Without Instagram Has Now Begun

Pros: This helps eliminate some of the burden with the individual method described above.?

Cons:?Sometimes totally appropriate non-porny things get flagged. Mobli takes stuff down if it gets two or three reports, said Decespedes.

Tag Bans

The Process: Ban any posts with certain inappropriate hashtags, like NSFW, DildoPlay, etc.?Viddy does this, maintaining a list of keywords which, if used in a title or description, are automatically flagged and then removed, if deemed not-OK by a moderator. It looks like Vine has also started to do this.?

Pros: This requires no human energy, just machines.?

Cons: On the sex-video posting side, it's kind of easy to get around this by creating new hashtags. For example, #pornvine still pulls up some six second nudity on Vine right now, even though tags like #porn and #sex don't surface much anymore. Viddy says it updates its list of banned tags pretty regularly. Also, since a person isn't here to judge, some OK videos might get taken down. If someone uses the term #porn ironically, for example, their video won't be posted. Machines don't do irony.?

Porn Search Ban?

The Process: In addition to flagging certain hashtags, apps can make certain keywords unsearchable. So, if someone does post a sex-clip tagged with #porn, the app can make that post "unsearchable," basically rendering it invisible to most users.

Pros: Again, an automated system reduces the human labor required.?

Cons: The porn still exists on the site. So anyone who follows a user that posts the inappropriate porn will see it.

User Probation Period

The Process: Don't let users have searchable profiles until they prove that they can post?appropriate?videos. ?Viddy does this, requiring members to build up a profile with multiple shares and likes before the stuff gets pushed out to a wider audience.?

Pros:?This ensures spammers and one-off posters don't inundate the site. This one would probably help Vine most, since we suspect people posting 6 second pornos did it more for the novelty than pleasure.?

Cons: That's kind of annoying for the average user who doesn't post that often, but still wants to be a part of the community. Also, someone trying to game the system could play prude for awhile and then post unsuspecting porns.?

Vine could and should use a combination of all of the solutions above if it wants to get the porn under control. Now, it might not want to do that because of Twitter's long history with censorship, or lack thereof. But, if it doesn't want to hear from Apple, it might want to consider taking some of these measures. Porn will always exist on these communities. Vine can, however, make it a little less accesible.?

?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/video-sharing-apps-keep-porn-152738837.html

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'Quantum smell' idea gains ground

The BBC's Jason Palmer visits a perfume store to find out more

A controversial theory that the way we smell involves a quantum physics effect has received a boost, following experiments with human subjects.

It challenges the notion that our sense of smell depends only on the shapes of molecules we sniff in the air.

Instead, it suggests that the molecules' vibrations are responsible.

A way to test it is with two molecules of the same shape, but with different vibrations. A report in PLOS ONE shows that humans can distinguish the two.

Tantalisingly, the idea hints at quantum effects occurring in biological systems - an idea that is itself driving a new field of science, as the BBC feature article Are birds hijacking quantum physics? points out.

But the theory - first put forward by Luca Turin, now of the Fleming Biomedical Research Sciences Centre in Greece - remains contested and divisive.

The idea that molecules' shapes are the only link to their smell is well entrenched, but Dr Turin said there were holes in the idea.

He gave the example of molecules that include sulphur and hydrogen atoms bonded together - they may take a wide range of shapes, but all of them smell of rotten eggs.

"If you look from the [traditional] standpoint... it's really hard to explain," Dr Turin told BBC News.

"If you look from the standpoint of an alternative theory - that what determines the smell of a molecule is the vibrations - the sulphur-hydrogen mystery becomes absolutely clear."

Molecules can be viewed as a collection of atoms on springs, so the atoms can move relative to one another. Energy of just the right frequency - a quantum - can cause the "springs" to vibrate, and in a 1996 paper in Chemical Senses Dr Turin said it was these vibrations that explained smell.

The mechanism, he added, was "inelastic electron tunnelling": in the presence of a specific "smelly" molecule, an electron within a smell receptor in your nose can "jump" - or tunnel - across it and dump a quantum of energy into one of the molecule's bonds - setting the "spring" vibrating.

But the established smell science community has from the start argued that there is little proof of this.

Of horses and unicorns

One way to test the idea was to prepare two molecules of identical shape but with different vibrations - done by replacing a molecule's hydrogen atoms with their heavier cousins called deuterium.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

There are many, many problems with the shape theory of smell - many things it doesn't explain that the vibrational theory does?

End Quote Prof Tim Jacob University of Cardiff

Leslie Vosshall of The Rockefeller University set out in 2004 to disprove Dr Turin's idea with a molecule called acetophenone and its "deuterated" twin.

The work in Nature Neuroscience suggested that human participants could not distinguish between the two, and thus that vibrations played no role in what we smell.

But in 2011, Dr Turin and colleagues published a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showing that fruit flies can distinguish between the heavier and lighter versions of the same molecule.

A repeat of the test with humans in the new paper finds that, as in Prof Vosshall's work, the subjects could not tell the two apart. But the team then developed a brand new, far larger pair of molecules - cyclopentadecanone - with more hydrogen or deuterium bonds to amplify the purported effect.

In double-blind tests, in which neither the experimenter nor the participant knew which sample was which, subjects were able to distinguish between the two versions.

Still, Prof Vosshall believes the vibrational theory to be no more than fanciful.

"I like to think of the vibration theory of olfaction and its proponents as unicorns. The rest of us studying olfaction are horses," she told BBC News.

"The problem is that proving that a unicorn exists or does not exist is impossible. This debate on the vibration theory or the existence of unicorns will never end, but the very important underlying question of why things smell the way they do will continue to be answered by the horses among us."

Tim Jacob, a smell researcher at the University of Cardiff, said the work was "supportive but not conclusive".

"But the fact is that nobody has been able to unequivocally contradict [Dr Turin]," he told BBC News.

"There are many, many problems with the shape theory of smell - many things it doesn't explain that the vibrational theory does."

And although many more scientists are taking the vibrational theory seriously than back in 1996, it remains an extraordinarily polarised debate.

"He's had some peripheral support, but... people don't want to line up behind Luca," Prof Jacob said. "It's scientific suicide."

Columbia University's Richard Axel, whose work on mapping the genes and receptors of our sense of smell garnered the 2004 Nobel prize for physiology, said the kinds of experiments revealed this week would not resolve the debate - only a microscopic look at the receptors in the nose would finally show what is at work.

"Until somebody really sits down and seriously addresses the mechanism and not inferences from the mechanism... it doesn't seem a useful endeavour to use behavioural responses as an argument," he told BBC News.

"Don't get me wrong, I'm not writing off this theory, but I need data and it hasn't been presented."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21150046#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Constitution Check: What are the limits on the president?s appointment powers?

North-lawn-1987Lyle Denniston looks at Friday?s district court decision over presidential recess appointments and why the case could be headed to the Supreme Court.

The statements at issue:

?The Framers of the Constitution feared the history of tyranny that arose from executive power.? The Constitution provides for presidential nomination and Senate confirmation of appointees for this reason.? The limited exception of recess appointments is a victory for freedom and a lesson to the President to respect legal constraints on his expansive claims for executive power.?

? Senator Charles Grassley, Republican of Iowa and a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, statement to the press on January 25, reacting to a federal appeals court decision sharply limiting presidential authority to fill vacancies at federal government agencies.

?Hundreds of decisions by the National Labor Relations Board could be invalidated and the entire agency effectively shut down.?

? The Alliance for Justice, a Washington-based, liberal advocacy group, in a press release January 25 commenting on the same court ruling.

We checked the Constitution, and?

check
In this age of partisan gridlock in Washington, not many constitutional controversies have more severely tested the core powers of government than disputes over presidential appointments.?? The maneuvering, producing frustration on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue ? ?the White House and the Senate, has been especially tense in the past two years.? It has produced some basic rethinking of just what the Constitution means about the separation of powers between those branches.

Now, a federal appeals court, invoking the power of the judiciary ?to say what the law is,? has stepped in.? And the result was a major shift of constitutional authority from the White House to the Senate, and especially to the Senate?s Republican minority. ??That is what led Senator Grassley to proclaim victory, and the Alliance for Justice to see dire consequences.

The Senate?s GOP leaders, believing that there is too much government regulation of business, have made two federal agencies special targets of their complaint: the National Labor Relations Board, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.?? The most successful tactic had been to try to keep those agencies from getting new leadership, in hopes that they would simply not be able to function.? GOP senators, lacking majority control, used the powers of the Senate filibuster to help prevent confirmation of new members of the NLRB and ? twice ? a new head of the consumer agency that had been created by the new financial regulation law.

President Obama, in response, took advantage of a time when the Senate was out of town, in early January last year, and named three new members of the NLRB and a new consumer agency director, Richard Cordray.?? The president did so using the power, given by the Constitution, to make appointments during Senate recesses.? If the Senate will not confirm nominees to those posts, the president and his aides said, it is the president?s obligation to make sure that those agencies can continue to operate, so he chose to give temporary assignments.? ?The NLRB has to have five members in order to do anything, and it had only two.? The consumer bureau could not function with nobody at the top.

Senate Republicans cried foul, claiming the president had made an unconstitutional power grab.? The president also cried foul, saying the Senate could not take away his appointment power by denying confirmation and then manipulating recesses to thwart temporary appointments.

The result, of course, was a constitutional clash of historic proportions.? And, inevitably, it produced a rash of lawsuits around the country to test who had the better of the constitutional argument.? ?The first appeals court decision emerged last week, and the Senate?s constitutional powers over appointments was the obvious winner.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia drew two conclusions from the Constitution?s grant of presidential power to make appointments during congressional recesses.? First, it ruled that the power only exists when the Senate has taken a formal recess, either at the end of a two-year Congress, or at the end of the first of the biennial sessions of Congress.? And, second, it ruled that the president can only fill temporarily a government post that actually becomes vacant during such a recess.

About Constitution Check

  • In a continuing series of posts, Lyle Denniston provides responses based on the Constitution and its history to public statements about its meaning and what duties it imposes or rights it protects.

What that probably means, in practical terms, is that if a government position subject to the process of presidential appointment and Senate review becomes vacant at any time while Congress is in session, the president can only use the usual process: propose a nominee, and hope for the best in the Senate.?? The president, the court stressed, cannot use the next time the Senate is out of town to fill such a position.

The background of recess appointments by presidents has two very distinct histories.? In the early years of the Constitution, presidents did not use that power very often, and did so only when it was very clear that the Senate could not assemble to perform its usual ?advice and consent? function, so the president had to act.? For most of the past century or more, however, presidents have made regular use of the recess appointment power, at least when the Senate was out of session for more than just a few days.

The D.C. Circuit Court, in a decision that fully embraces the notion that the best way to interpret the Constitution is to understand what it meant in the early years and especially at the founding, ruled that the recess clause has a very limited and precise meaning, and is not open to the flexible interpretation that modern presidents had assumed it had.

The Obama Administration has the option of asking the full Circuit Court to review this decision, which came from a three-judge panel, or of taking the case ? now or later ? to the Supreme Court.?? Because lower courts are split on the issue, the issue ultimately seems likely to go to the Supreme Court for a final reckoning.

Lyle Denniston is the National Constitution Center?s Adviser on Constitutional Literacy. He has reported on the Supreme Court for 54 years, currently covering it for SCOTUSblog, an online clearinghouse of information about the Supreme Court?s work.

Recent Constitution Daily Stories

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Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/constitution-check-limits-president-appointment-powers-110208100--politics.html

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সোমবার, ২৮ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

The dung beetle as celestial navigator

Only humans, birds, and seals are known to navigate using stars. But the dung beetle does use the Milky Way to chart its path, say scientists.

By Joseph Castro,?LiveScience.com / January 25, 2013

Dung beetles have been shown to use the Milky Way to navigate.Researchers have known for several years that the inch-long insects use the sun or moon as fixed points to ensure they keep rolling dung balls in a straight line - the quickest way of getting away from other beetles at the dung heap. Pictured here, a South African dung beetle.

REUTERS/Marcus Byrne/University of the Witwatersrand

Enlarge

Despite having tiny brains, dung beetles are surprisingly decent navigators, able to follow straight paths as they roll poo balls they've collected away from a dung source. But it seems the insects' abilities are more remarkable than previously believed. Like ancient seafarers, dung beetles can navigate using the starry sky and the glow from the Milky Way, new research shows.

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"This is the first time where we see animals using the Milky Way for orientation," said lead researcher Marie Dacke, a biologist at Lund University in Sweden. "It's also the first time we see that insects can use the stars."

After locating a fresh pile of feces, dung beetles will often collect and roll away a large piece of spherical dung. Last year, Dacke and her colleagues discovered the beetles climb on their dung balls and dance around in circles before taking off. This dance is not one of joy, however; the insects are checking out the sky to get their bearings.

"The dorsal (upper) parts of the dung beetles' eyes are specialized to be able to analyze the direction of light polarization ? the direction that light vibrates in," Dacke told LiveScience. So when a beetle looks up, it's taking in the sun, the moon and the pattern of ambient polarized light. These celestial cues help the beetle avoid accidentally circling back to the poo pile, where other beetles may try to steal its food, Dacke said. [Photos of Dung Beetles Dancing on Poop Balls]

In addition to these cues, Dacke and her team wondered if dung beetles can use stars for navigation, just as birds, seals and humans do. After all, they reasoned, dung beetles can somehow keep straight on clear, moonless nights.

To find out, the researchers timed how long dung beetles of the species Scarabaeus satyrus took to cross a circular arena with high walls blocking views of treetops and other landmarks. They tested the insects in South Africa under a moonlit sky, a moonless sky and an overcast sky. In some trials, the beetles were fitted with cardboard caps, which kept their eyes to the ground. Overall, the beetles had a difficult time traveling straight and took significantly longer to cross the arena if caps or clouds obstructed their view of the sky.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/_kLAbUmFlvs/The-dung-beetle-as-celestial-navigator

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রবিবার, ২৭ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

In breast cancer metastasis, researchers identify possible drug target

Jan. 27, 2013 ? The spread of breast cancer to distant organs within the body, an event that often leads to death, appears in many cases to involve the loss of a key protein, according to UC San Francisco researchers, whose new discoveries point to possible targets for therapy.

In the January 27, 2013 online edition of Nature Cell Biology, UCSF scientists describe for the first time how the protein, known as GATA3 -- which is abnormal or absent in many cases of human breast cancer -- normally acts downstream in biochemical pathways to prevent the distant spread of cancer, an event called metastasis.

The discovery points to a biochemical control point that simultaneously holds in check several key events required for tumor cells to successfully spread.

"When GATA3 is present, it turns off many genes that are active in metastasis," said Zena Werb, PhD, a UCSF professor of anatomy who led the research. "We now have identified the molecular mechanisms involved."

The key finding of the new study is that GATA3 acts downstream biochemically to activate a molecule -- obscure until now -- called microRNA29b. MicroRNA29b in turn stops protein production from other genes that play vital roles in metastasis.

The absence or loss of GATA3 can free cancerous cells to break free from their defined roles and tethers within a tumor, to move away from the tumor mass, to induce cancer-promoting inflammation, and to stimulate the development of new blood vessels that can help spreading cancerous cells regrow as tumors in new locations.

"People knew that some of these genes were turned on in some cancers, but they did not know they were turned on because GATA3 and microRNA29b were turned off," Werb said. "If you have 20 genes that are becoming less active all at once due to microRNA29b, it could have a profound effect."

Working with mice, the researchers found that restoring microRNA29b to one of the most deadly types of breast cancer stopped metastasis. But the researchers also found that if they knocked out the microRNA29b, tumors spread even in the presence of GATA3, suggesting that microRNA29b can be the driver of metastasis.

In the mouse models of breast cancer studied by Werb's team, GATA3 normally restrains cancerous cells from breaking away from the main tumor and migrating to other organs.

It might be possible, Werb said, to develop drugs that inhibit breast cancer metastasis by re-activating these controls in cancerous cells that have lost the normal protein.

Many researchers who study early stages of cancer focus on abnormal genes and proteins that cause cells to expand their numbers rapidly, a hallmark of cancer.

However, the ability to spread to distant places and to eventually cause lethal complications requires not only cell division and tumor growth, but also changes in how the cancerous cell negotiates with its surroundings. This relationship must be altered to permit cancer to spread, according to earlier research findings by Werb and others.

"Many of the key processes in cancer that GATA3 suppresses take place outside the cell, in the surrounding environment," she said.

GATA3 is a master control for luminal cells, which line the milk-carrying ducts of the breast. In essence, GATA3 dictates the defining characteristics of a normal breast cell, Werb said.

Luminal breast cancers are the most common form of the disease, and the hormones estrogen and progesterone drive their growth. Loss of the normal GATA3 protein as luminal breast cancers evolve is associated with a greater risk of death, Werb said, and occurs in roughly 10 percent of luminal breast cancer cases.

But, along with many other proteins, GATA3 also is absent in "triple negative," breast cancers, which are more often fatal. Triple negative breast cancers, which disproportionately affect black women and younger women, do not depend on the hormones, nor do they require a third growth factor, called HER2.

Triple negative breast cancers, which account for roughly one-in-five breast cancers, have been more difficult to target successfully with newer treatments.

"The targeting we would like to do is to give back microRNA29b specifically to breast tumor cells to prevent metastasis," Werb said.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/9MKEP8kbDFI/130127134214.htm

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Mass Human Sacrifice? Pile of Ancient Skulls Found

Archaeologists have unearthed a trove of skulls in Mexico that may have once belonged to human sacrifice victims. The skulls, which date between A.D. 600 and 850, may also shatter existing notions about the ancient culture of the area.

The find, described in the January issue of the journal Latin American Antiquity, was located in an otherwise empty field that once held a vast lake, but was miles from the nearest major city of the day, said study co-author Christopher Morehart, an archaeologist at Georgia State University.

"It's absolutely remarkable to think about this little nothing on the landscape having potentially evidence of the largest mass human sacrifice in ancient Meso-America," Morehart said.

Middle of nowhere

Morehart and his colleagues were using satellite imagery to map ancient canals, irrigation channels and lakes that used to surround the kingdom of Teotihuacan (home to the Pyramid of the Sun), about 30 miles (50 kilometers) from Mexico City. The vast ancient kingdom flourished from around A.D 200 to 650, though who built it remains a mystery. [In Photos: Amazing Ruins of the Ancient World]

In a now drained lake called Lake Xaltocan, around which was essentially rural farmland at the time, Morehart stumbled upon a site with evidence of looting.

When the team investigated, they discovered lines of human skulls with just one or two vertebra attached. To date, more than 150 skulls have been discovered there. The site also contained a shrine with incense burners, water-deity figurines and agricultural pottery, such as corncob depictions, suggesting a ritual purpose tied to local farming. [See images from the grisly excavation ]

Carbon dating suggested that the skulls were at least 1,100 years old, and the few dozen analyzed so far are mostly from men, Morehart told LiveScience. The researchers did not release photos of the skulls because the sacrifice victims may have historic ties to modern-day indigenous cultures.

The findings shake up existing notions of the culture of the day, because the site is not associated with Teotihuacan or other regional powers, said Destiny Crider, an archaeologist at Luther College in Iowa, who was not involved in the study.

Human sacrifice was practiced throughout the region, both at Teotihuacan and in the later Aztec Empire, but most of those rituals happened at great pyramids within cities and were tied to state powers.

By contrast, "this one is a big event in a little place," Crider said.

The shrines and the fact that sacrifice victims were mostly male suggest they were carefully chosen, not simply the result of indiscriminate slaughter of a whole village, Crider told LiveScience.

Many researchers believe that massive drought caused the fall of Teotihuacan and ushered in a period of warfare and political infighting as smaller regional powers sprang up, Morehart said.

Those tumultuous times could have spurred innovative ? and bloody ? practices, Crider said.

"Maybe they needed to intensify their activities because everything was changing," she said. "When things are uncertain you try new strategies."

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.?

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mass-human-sacrifice-pile-ancient-skulls-found-152724186.html

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Cool socks, Chicago pride and Pop Rocks at the UFC on Fox 6 weigh-ins

CHICAGO -- The UFC on Fox 6 weigh-ins featured a large, raucous, possibly liquored up crowd of Chicago fight fans, plenty of cool socks, and every fighter making weight. The only fighter who came close to not making weight was Clay Guida. He walked to the scale wearing a custom shirt with the Chicago flag on it and a Chicago flag wristband. He jumped on the scale and was 147, too heavy for featherweight in his first fight at that weight class. He then took off his Chicago Bulls socks and jewelry, and made weight. The only other bit of drama was some jawing between Quinton "Rampage" Jackson and Glover Teixiera.

Read on for a complete list of weights and more pictures from the weigh-in.

MAIN CARD (FOX, 8 p.m. ET)
? Champ Demetrious Johnson (125) vs. John Dodson (124)
? Quinton Jackson (204) vs. Glover Teixeira (206)
? Donald Cerrone (155) vs. Anthony Pettis (155)
? Erik Koch (145) vs. Ricardo Lamas (145)
PRELIMINARY CARD (FX, 5 p.m. ET)
? T.J. Grant (155) vs. Matt Wiman (156)
? Clay Guida (146) vs. Hatsu Hioki (146)
? Pascal Krauss (171) vs. Mike Stumpf (170)
? Ryan Bader (205) vs. Vladimir Matyushenko (205)
? Shawn Jordan (251) vs. Mike Russow (256)
? Rafael Natal (185) vs. Sean Spencer (186)
PRELIMINARY CARD (Facebook, 4:30 p.m. ET)
? David Mitchell (171) vs. Simeon Thoresen (171)

At left, Clay Guida and his Chicago Bulls socks. Donald Cerrone's cowboy boots and Superman socks are at right.

Guida's family had their guy's head on a stick and Guida buttons at weigh-ins. They were loud and supportive of Guida on Thursday, so you can bet they'll be out in numbers at the fights Saturday.

Dodson had Pop Rocks as his post weigh-in snack.

Thanks to Combat Lifestyle for the pictures.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/cool-socks-chicago-pride-pop-rocks-ufc-fox-013831605--mma.html

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শনিবার, ২৬ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Azarenka beats Li, defends Australian Open title

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) ? Victoria Azarenka had the bulk of the crowd against her. The fireworks were fizzling out, and when she looked over the net she saw Li Na crashing to the court and almost knocking herself out.

Considering the cascading criticism she'd encountered after her previous win, Azarenka didn't need the focus of the Australian Open final to be on another medical timeout.

So after defending her title with a 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 victory over the sixth-seeded Li in one of the most unusual finals ever at Melbourne Park, Azarenka understandably dropped her racket and cried tears of relief late Saturday night.

She heaved as she sobbed into a towel beside the court, before regaining her composure to collect the trophy.

"It isn't easy, that's for sure, but I knew what I had to do," the 23-year-old Belarusian said. "I had to stay calm. I had to stay positive. I just had to deal with the things that came onto me."

There were a lot of those things squeezed into the 2-hour, 40-minute match. Li, who was playing her second Australian Open final in three years, twisted her ankle and tumbled to the court in the second and third sets.

The second time was on the point immediately after a 10-minute delay for the Australia Day fireworks ? a familiar fixture in downtown Melbourne on Jan. 26, but not usually coinciding with a final.

Li had been sitting in her chair during the break, while Azarenka jogged and swung her racket around before leaving the court to rub some liniment into her legs to keep warm.

The 30-year-old Chinese player had tumbled to the court after twisting her left ankle and had it taped after falling in the fifth game of the second set. Immediately after the fireworks ceased, and with smoke still in the air, she twisted the ankle again, fell and hit the back of her head on the hard court.

The 2011 French Open champion was treated immediately by a tournament doctor and assessed for a concussion in another medical timeout before resuming the match.

"I think I was a little bit worried when I was falling," Li said, in her humorous, self-deprecating fashion. "Because two seconds I couldn't really see anything. It was totally black.

"So when the physio come, she was like, 'Focus on my finger.' I was laughing. I was thinking, 'This is tennis court, not like hospital.'"

Li's injury was obvious and attracted even more support for her from the 15,000-strong crowd.

Azarenka had generated some bad PR by taking a medical timeout after wasting five match points on her own serve in her semifinal win over American teenager Sloane Stephens on Thursday. She came back after the break and finished off Stephens in the next game, later telling an on-court interviewer that she "almost did the choke of the year."

She was accused of gamesmanship and manipulating the rules to get time to regain her composure against Stephens, but defended herself by saying she actually was having difficulty breathing because of a rib injury that needed to be fixed.

That explanation didn't convince everybody. So when she walked onto Rod Laver Arena on Saturday, there were some people who booed, and others who heckled her or mimicked the distinctive hooting sound she makes when she hits the ball.

"Unfortunately, you have to go through some rough patches to achieve great things," she said. "That's what makes it so special for me. I went through that, and I'm still able to kiss that beautiful trophy."

She didn't hold a grudge.

"I was expecting way worse, to be honest. What can you do? You just have to go out there and try to play tennis in the end of the day," she said. "It's a tennis match, tennis battle, final of the Australian Open. I was there to play that.

"The things what happened in the past, I did the best thing I could to explain, and it was left behind me already."

The match contained plenty of nervy moments and tension, and 16 service breaks ? nine for Li. But it also produced plenty of winners and bravery on big points.

Azarenka will retain the No. 1 ranking she's mostly held since her first Grand Slam win in Melbourne last year.

Li moved into the top five and is heartened by a recent trend of Australian runner-ups winning the French Open. She accomplished that in 2011, as did Ana Ivanovic (2008) and Maria Sharapova (2012).

"I wish I can do the same this year, as well," Li said.

Later Saturday, Bob and Mike Bryan won their record 13th Grand Slam men's doubles title, defeating the Dutch team of Robin Haase and Igor Sijsling 6-3, 6-4.

Sunday's men's final features two-time defending champion Novak Djokovic and U.S. Open winner Andy Murray. Djokovic is seeking to become the first man in the Open era to win three titles in a row in Australia.

Azarenka was planning a night of partying to celebrate her second major title, with her friend Redfoo and the Party Rock crew, and was hopeful of scoring some tickets to the men's final.

She said she needed to let her hair down after a draining two weeks and hoped that by being more open and frank in recent times she was clearing up any misconceptions the public had of her.

"When I came first on the tour I kind of was lost a little bit," he said. "I didn't know how to open up my personality. It's very difficult when you're alone. I was independent since I was, you know, 10 years old. It was a little bit scary and I wouldn't show my personality.

"So the (last) couple of years I learned how to open up to people and to share the moments. I wasn't really good before. I hope I got better. It's your judgment."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/azarenka-beats-li-defends-australian-open-title-164301228--spt.html

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ShelterBox Expands Reach in Syrian Refugee Crisis, Response Teams En Route to Jordan

International disaster relief organization, ShelterBox, is en route to Jordan after the government released an urgent appeal for aid as an ?unprecedented? amount of Syrian refugees continue to enter the country.

Sarasota, FL (PRWEB) January 25, 2013

International disaster relief organization, ShelterBox, is en route to Jordan after the government released an urgent appeal for aid as an ?unprecedented? amount of Syrian refugees continue to enter the country.

ShelterBox responds following disasters such as earthquake, flood, tsunami, hurricane, cyclone or conflict by delivering boxes of aid. Each box contains a disaster relief tent, stove, water filtration system, blankets and other items necessary to help families live independently and with dignity in the months following disaster.

Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh released a statement Thursday, requesting international aid after 20,000 Syrians crossed into the country in a single week. Judeh described the influx as ?unprecedented, larger than any other time in the last two years.?

In response to the country?s appeal, members of the highly trained ShelterBox Response Team (SRT) are en route to Jordan to assess the need for emergency shelter and other aid.

Although ShelterBox had prepositioned its aid with the Jordanian Red Crescent in December 2012, the need for additional emergency shelter and supplies is imminent.

ShelterBox first responded to the Syrian refugee crisis in October 2012, by delivering 500 boxes of winterized aid to the Domiz refugee camp in the Kurdistan region of Iraq. By December 2012, ShelterBox aid was also distributed in Syria, to a total of 710 families living families living in the Al-Salameh camp near the Turkey border.

An additional SRT is currently in Lebanon, awaiting the arrival of ShelterBoxes and assessing the need for more, in response to the Lebanese government?s request for aid earlier this month.

ShelterBox is also responding to the typhoon in the Philippines, bushfires in Australia and flooding in Nigeria.

ABOUT SHELTERBOX USA

Since 2000, ShelterBox has provided shelter, warmth and dignity following more than 200 disasters in over 85 countries. ShelterBox instantly responds to earthquake, volcano, flood, hurricane, cyclone, tsunami or conflict by delivering boxes of aid. Each iconic green ShelterBox contains a disaster relief tent for an extended family, stove, blankets and water filtration system, among other tools for survival. ShelterBox?s American affiliate, ShelterBox USA is headquartered in Sarasota, Florida. Individual tax-deductible donations to ShelterBox USA can be made at http://www.shelterboxusa.org, 941-907-6036 or via text message by sending SHELTER to 20222 for a one-time $10 donation.

Erin Holdgate
ShelterBox USA
(941) 907-6036 100
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/shelterbox-expands-reach-syrian-refugee-crisis-response-teams-011645295.html

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For Chavez impersonator, cancer no laughing matter

MIAMI (AP) ? It's an hour before showtime, and Gustavo Rios is transforming himself into Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

A makeup artist paints his skin a dark olive tone. A plastic mole is glued strategically on the upper right corner of his forehead. Large, latex ears and a short, black wig cover his head as he squints and purses his lips in front of a mirror.

He mimics Chavez with comical, exaggerated precision, his voice billowing in a triumphant tone and his hands prancing in the air. It's a mockery that came with a price in Venezuela, where the boisterous, domineering president has carefully cultivated his image as a widely supported savior: Rios was taunted, threatened, robbed, even had his car set ablaze.

Rios fled Venezuela, and now his act is featured in a Spanish-language show broadcast on U.S. airwaves. Meanwhile, the real Chavez lies ill in a Cuban hospital recovering or suffering ? no one seems to know exactly ? from complications following cancer surgery in December.

He dresses in the president's iconic red and pokes fun at being in the hospital. On a recent show, he stood chained to an IV but danced to the 1980 hit "Celebration" as he played Nintendo Wii. What he doesn't do: mention the word "cancer." Rios knows what cancer is like. His own father has it.

"Cancer is a very grueling illness," he says, his voice solemn.

Rios first did his Chavez impression on a radio show called "Con Las Pilas Puestas" ? "With the Batteries On" ? in Maracaibo, a city along the western coast of Venezuela that is his family's hometown. He pretended to talk with the presidents of Cuba, Russia and Iran and Osama bin Laden about conquering the world. On one episode, he schemed to kidnap the president of the United States and torture him with hours of Mexican norteno music, a folk genre that features the accordion and has roots in polka.

Not everyone thought it was funny. Supporters of Chavez, who for years has condemned U.S. capitalism and pushed a socialist platform, called him names: Weakling. Imperialist. Oligarch. On four occasions, his car was robbed. Then it was set on fire outside the studio in midday. There were threatening messages, notes that promised death.

Eventually, he took his wife and 3-year-old son and filed for political asylum in Miami, home to the largest Venezuelan population outside the South American country ? most of them fiercely anti-Chavez.

"It was terrible," he says. "Leaving my family was the worst."

He had no contacts, no real way of making a name for himself in radio again. So the now 40-year-old comedian did what most immigrants do: He washed dishes. Delivered pizzas. Painted buildings. Meanwhile, Rios also put together a demo tape of his impressions ? he does more than 80 public personalities ? and dropped it off at studios. A Cuban actor who had worked in Venezuela and was on the radio in Miami heard it and called him for an interview.

"He was one of the first people I listened to imitating Chavez," said the actor, Omar Moynelo. "For me, it was a great find."

More and more Venezuelans were leaving their country and settling in Miami. There were comedians in the city imitating Fidel Castro, but no one impersonating Chavez.

Four years ago, Rios landed a job on MegaTV. Around the same time, his father was diagnosed with prostate cancer. Rios was still waiting for his U.S. citizenship and could not go back to Venezuela to be with him. As his father went through chemotherapy and radiation, Rios tried to console him on the phone, send money and make him laugh with clips of his impressions.

Then, nearly two years ago, Chavez was diagnosed with the same disease. Officials have never confirmed what type of cancer he has, but Chavez has now undergone repeated surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation. He has not been seen in public since Dec. 11.

At first, Rios thought it was another temporary setback or even a ploy; Chavez would go to Cuba and emerge victoriously once again. But then came the day of his inauguration. Chavez was still absent. Rios and the writers at MegaTV were careful to strike a balance: Funny but not cruel. And if it is confirmed Chavez is in his final days, Rios says he'll stop the act altogether.

"A sickness like that, no one should make fun of," he says.

So Rios skirts around it. Felipe Viel, the host of "Esta Noche Tu Night," tells the audience they are getting a live transmission from Chavez's hospital room. Rios then appears in a red pajama and green military jacket. Sometimes, he is in a wheelchair, ill but startlingly robust. He acts childish and throws pills on the floor.

On Thursday's episode, he was up and swaying his hips to a Nintendo dance game. A nurse in a low-cut white uniform entered the room. He flirts, and she flirts back. He resists her romantic proposition.

"The paparazzi will take our photos!" he exclaims.

"Speaking of that," the nurse with curly, blond hair says, "did you see the photo in El Pais?"

Earlier Thursday, the Spanish newspaper had withdrawn a photo from its website and print editions that alleged to show Chavez with tubes in his mouth after discovering it was fake.

The phone rings. It's the secretary of the Organization of American States. She's coming to visit. The fake Chavez quickly hides all evidence of his Nintendo games.

Rios says he wants to make those jokes in Venezuela the way U.S. comedians imitate and make fun of presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush.

"I want the Chavistas to laugh with us," he says. "You have to know how to laugh at yourself."

And he wants to be in Venezuela with his father, who is still undergoing chemotherapy. But he knows his imitations aren't welcome there and worries about what might happen if he returns. It won't be safe to mock Chavez there until he's gone, and by then, Rios will have to find a new act.

In Miami, his Chavez and other impersonations have earned him recognition. People notice and thank him on the streets for making them laugh. At the studio, an audience of about 20 people sit in metal folding chairs, chuckling at his charades. It's a momentary relief, for them and Rios.

"It helps me get rid of all that energy," he says, "all those things one carries inside."

___

Follow Christine Armario on Twitter at: http://www.twitter.com/cearmario

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chavez-impersonator-cancer-no-laughing-matter-213309928.html

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Disorder at Work

Proteins without a definite shape can still take on important jobs

By Tanya Lewis

Web edition: January 24, 2013
Print edition: February 9, 2013; Vol.183 #3 (p. 26)

Enlarge

In its unbound state, some parts of the p53 protein take on a definite structure (gray model) while other regions remain flexible and disordered (other colors).

Credit: P. Tompa/Trends in Biochemical Sciences 2012

Richard Kriwacki refused to give up on his protein. He had tried again and again to determine its three-dimensional shape, but in every experiment, the protein looked no more structured than a piece of cooked spaghetti.

Normally, this lack of form would be a sign that the protein had been destroyed, yet Kriwacki knew for a fact it could still do its job in controlling cell division. While discussing the conundrum with his adviser in the atrium of their La Jolla, Calif., lab, insight dawned: Maybe the floppy protein didn?t take shape until it attached to another protein. Kriwacki raced off to do yet another experiment, this time combining his protein, p21, with a partner. Sure enough, Kriwacki got what he was looking for. Once joined, a seemingly ruined mess gave way to a neatly folded structure. The finding defied a foundational dogma of biology, that structure determines function.

Nearly everything the human body does, from shuttling oxygen through the bloodstream to digesting a meal, relies on proteins. These biological workhorses are composed of chains of molecules called amino acids. Whenever a chain is made, conventional scientific wisdom says, electrical forces cause it to immediately bend into helical ribbons and tight zigzags, which twist further into even more defined three-dimensional forms. The resulting shape determines what other molecular players the protein can bind to and thus what it can accomplish in a cell. Unfolded proteins were thought to result only from intolerable conditions that render a protein useless, such as extreme heat or acidity.

But since around the time of Kriwacki?s discovery more than 15 years ago, disorder has surfaced as a key player in the protein world. ?Intrinsically disordered proteins,? or IDPs, turn out to play vital parts in controlling cellular processes. More than one-third of all human proteins, in fact, may be partially or completely disordered in structure, floating around like strands of wet noodles. ?The roles that disordered regions can play are quite diverse,? says Kriwacki, now at St. Jude Children?s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.

Enlarge

Some disordered protein regions, such as the one below (in purple), take shape once they meet up with another protein (gray).

Credit: H.J. Dyson and P.E. Wright/Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2005

To better understand how something so flexible can be functional, researchers are now taking a closer look at how the disordered proteins interact with other proteins. The disordered dissidents can behave as switches, quickly turning cellular processes on or off in response to changing conditions, or as shape-shifting ensembles that integrate multiple signals before telling a cell to get a job done. Studying the interactions of intrinsically disordered proteins may even yield insight into certain diseases and lead to new treatments.

Floppiness exposed

Disordered proteins flew under the radar for so long because the standard technique for determining a protein?s structure, known as X-ray crystallography, requires that the protein retain a set shape long enough to be crystallized. Scientists had found a few examples of proteins that couldn?t be crystallized, but these were thought to be anomalies.

When Kriwacki encountered the troublesome p21 protein, he was working with molecular biologists Jane Dyson and Peter Wright at the Scripps Research Institute. Dyson and Wright were using a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance, or NMR, spectroscopy, which reveals a molecule?s form based on the magnetic properties of its atoms? nuclei as opposed to its crystal structure. ?Peter and Jane?s lab at the time was the world-leading protein NMR lab,? says Kriwacki. Advances in NMR were what allowed him to finally figure out what his protein looked like.

Enlarge

STRUCTURE SPECTRUM

Choosing to label a protein as disordered or ordered is not always straightforward. Some proteins are as wiggly as cooked spaghetti, while others can be mostly structured with just a few regions that dabble in disorder.

Credit: H.J. Dyson and P.E. Wright/Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2005

After p21, examples of these proteins just kept turning up. You don?t need to go looking for them, Dyson says, ?they?ll come looking for you, believe me.? In 1999, Dyson and Wright published a landmark review paper in the Journal of Molecular Biology that set the stage for a new protein paradigm. There were too many examples to be mere outliers; it was clear that something bigger was going on. ?We were finding that these proteins were not only unstructured, but had to be,? Dyson says.

Meanwhile, other scientists were independently building a strong case for the existence of intrinsically disordered proteins. Keith Dunker, a bioinformatician at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, and Peter Tompa, a protein chemist at the Free University of Brussels, were both leading efforts to predict disorder mathematically. ?The main thing we did was to determine that unstructured proteins have a fundamentally different amino acid composition compared to structured proteins,? Dunker says.

A protein?s mix of amino acids can create regions that are either hydrophilic (?water-loving?) or hydrophobic (?water-hating?). Structured proteins that exist in solution typically fold into spherical shapes with a hydrophilic shell enclosing a hydrophobic core. But disordered proteins contain few, if any, hydrophobic regions, so they don?t fold up. They also tend to have more electrically charged portions. ?If you look at these differences, you can anticipate that they?re not going to fold into a 3-D structure,? Dunker says. To help study the differences, he and his colleagues developed ?DisProt,? a database of proteins that experiments have shown to be disordered.

Though scientists often speak of ?structured proteins? and ?intrinsically disordered proteins? as if they are distinct classes, along the way it has become clear that any particular protein?s degree of disorder falls on a spectrum, from precise rigidity to complete disarray. Proteins can also migrate along that spectrum from one moment to another, shifting into different versions of themselves. Many disordered proteins, including p21, eschew their wiggly nature when binding to a partner protein ? like a string puppet snapping to attention. Others fold to a more limited extent upon binding, and some never shape up at all.

Enlarge

PROTEIN POWER

View larger image | Because of its disorder, a protein known as I?B? can act as a switch that turns a host of cellular behaviors on and off. It?s I?B??s interaction with another disordered protein, NF?B, that makes this regulatory role possible. Source: H.J. Dyson and E.A. Komives/Iubmb Life 2012

Credit: S. Egts

Fold for a cause

How a protein?s degree of disorder enables its function is now a hot topic of research. Ongoing efforts suggest some disordered proteins act like switches, triggering or stopping an action in response to a signal. This makes them well-suited for controlling activities such as the production of other proteins, cell growth or division, and the sending of cellular signals.

Lately, Dyson has been working with Elizabeth Komives of the University of California, San Diego to study a duo of proteins, NF-kappaB and I-kappa-B-alpha. Together, the proteins control a host of vital phenomena in cells, from growth and development to immunity and stress response. The proteins, which both contain disordered regions, normally exist bound together as a complex within a cell. When the cell receives a signal, such as a hormone molecule binding to its surface, I?B? is tagged for destruction and degraded. NF?B is released and sent to the nucleus. There, NF?B binds to the DNA, turning on genes that hold the instructions for making specific proteins.

One of the proteins produced is more I?B?, which allows the response to be switched off again when it is no longer needed. I?B? binds to NF?B and strips it from the DNA, Dyson and Komives reported last year in IUBMB Life. It?s not yet clear how the stripping process works, but the disordered regions of I?B? appear to cast around like a fishing line to find NF?B and peel it off the DNA. The new complex of NF?B and I?B? leaves the nucleus and returns to its resting state within the cell. Thanks in part to the disordered regions, the cell can respond flexibly and rapidly to external stimuli.

Enlarge

Alpha-synuclein, a protein implicated in Parkinson?s disease (spots show abnormal clumping in brain stem), may be disordered in its healthy state.

Credit: S. Rajan/WikiMedia Commons

While NF?B and I?B? become mostly structured upon binding, other IDPs remain highly dynamic. One example is Sic1, a disordered protein found in yeast that prevents DNA replication and thus keeps cells from dividing. A 2008 study led by Julie Forman-Kay of the University of Toronto and then-colleague Tanja Mittag revealed how proteins such as Sic1 function as ?dynamic ensembles? of disordered states. Sic1 contains six short disordered regions that take turns binding in a ?pocket? of a partner protein. At any given moment, only one of Sic1?s six regions sits inside the pocket, while the other regions remain disordered. Each of these six regions is susceptible to modifications that can deactivate it in a way that prevents it from binding. All six of them must be ready to bind for Sic1 to hold onto its protein partner and stave off cell division. Each segment?s activation is like a weight added to one side of a balance ? only with enough weights does the scale tip.

While some disordered regions play active roles in sensitive responses, others serve only to hold more structured areas together like beads on a string. The disordered protein complex CBP/p300 has several structured regions connected by long, floppy ?flexible linkers.? The linkers form a malleable scaffold for bringing together the structured parts of the protein complex, controlling how and when these other players interact.

In sickness and health

Historically, before IDPs took off, anything other than a properly structured protein was considered a disease risk. This was a reasonable conclusion, given that diseases often result when proteins take forms they aren?t meant to, a process called misfolding. Today, though, scientists know that a disordered protein is not the same as a misfolded one.

Still, IDPs, like any proteins, can misfold. And misfolded proteins known to play roles in some high-profile diseases have recently turned out to be disordered. The tau protein, for example, forms the characteristic protein tangles seen in Alzheimer?s disease. Same, it seems, for alpha-synuclein and Parkinson?s disease. Some scientists think disordered proteins may be more prone to misfolding than other types, but the relationship is not yet clear. By understanding the full range of protein folding behavior, scientists hope to gain insight into the causes of such diseases.

Homing in on interactions involving disordered proteins could also lead to new approaches to treatment. Drug developers have traditionally focused on creating molecules that bind to highly structured proteins that carry out reactions in a cell. That means binding to what?s called an ?active site.? But the new understanding of IDPs opens possibilities for designing drugs that instead interfere with protein-protein interactions, by binding to intrinsically disordered proteins or binding to a site on a partner protein where the IDP attaches.

?The idea of targeting disordered proteins themselves remains very challenging,? Kriwacki says. ?Much more feasible is to target binding sites on folded [partner] proteins.? If a short sequence of a disordered protein is known to bind to another protein that triggers a disease state, a small molecule could mimic that sequence, binding to the partner protein and deactivating it. An anticancer drug developed by the pharmaceutical company Roche is made from Nutlin-3a, a chemical that works in just this way. Nutlin-3a prevents an IDP commonly associated with cancer, p53, from interacting with its partner protein.

Of course, scientists? current understanding of disordered proteins assumes that the versions studied in lab dishes are in fact disordered in cells, a notion some researchers challenge.

Disorder doubters

As with any paradigm shift, the idea that proteins can be disordered but still functional has its skeptics. ?I think the majority of people accept disorder,? says Wright, ?but there are still a few critics.? Most studies of IDPs are conducted in lab dishes rather than in living cells, because today?s techniques, for the most part, aren?t sensitive enough to allow the study of proteins at the low amounts present in actual cells. Scientists commonly use bacterial cells to create many copies of a protein. The protein is then isolated and studied under artificial conditions. This has led some researchers to question whether the apparently disordered state of IDPs is merely an artifact of the lab environment. In the true setting of a cell, which is much more crowded with other molecules, the proteins might be folded, the critics argue.

Neuroscientist Dennis Selkoe of Harvard Medical School and colleagues published a controversial paper in 2011 suggesting that alpha-synuclein protein, widely believed to be disordered in its healthy form, actually exists in a structured state inside cells. Selkoe?s team studied alpha-synuclein obtained from human brain cells grown in a lab dish, reporting that the protein appears to occur naturally as a helix-shaped ?tetramer? of four proteins as opposed to a single, unstructured protein.

But the findings are highly contested, and others have failed to replicate them. Philipp Selenko, a biochemist at the Leibniz Institute of Molecular Pharmacology in Berlin, used NMR to show that alpha-synuclein was unstructured inside intact E. coli bacteria. Biologist Guy Lippens of Lille University of Science and Technology in France and colleagues have shown that tau protein, too, appears unstructured in immature frog egg cells. Still, says Lippens, the question of whether all lab-studied IDPs are truly disordered in cells remains open.

Assuming the proteins are unstructured, another mystery is how they evade degradation. Cells have machinery that recognizes proteins that haven?t folded properly and digests them. One theory posits that since IDPs lack regions of the type the degradation system recognizes, the disordered proteins appear to the cell as folded proteins. Another theory holds that ?chaperone? proteins bind to IDPs to stabilize them so they don?t get eaten up by the cell. A third theory suggests that IDPs are tightly regulated and kept at low levels in the cell, broken down when they are not needed. Studying proteins under natural conditions ? in cells ? will help provide the answer.

Despite a growing awareness of disorder in proteins, much more research remains to be done. In this chaotic new view of the protein world, scientists must reexamine everything they have assumed about structure and function. ?Just like in physics,? Tompa says, ?the protein universe seems to have this dark matter we have neglected, which now turns out to be important in cells.?


Loose jobs
Intrinsically disordered proteins, or IDPs, have important regulatory and signaling jobs in cells (some outlined below). Their disorder is thought to make them better at these tasks, by enabling quick and flexible responses to the changing conditions that cells face.

  • Cell cycle activities? Disordered proteins help control when and how a cell grows and divides.

  • Transcription? These proteins turn on and off the copying of genes (DNA) into protein-making instructions (RNA).

  • Translation ?IDPs are involved in the reading of RNA to make proteins.

  • Signal transduction? The flexibility of intrinsically disordered proteins allows them to convert a signal coming from outside the cell into a response that shows up within the cell.

  • Self-assembly of multiprotein complexes? IDPs help bring together different proteins to form larger structures ? such as the ribosome, a molecular machine that serves as the site of protein synthesis.

  • Cargo transport? These proteins play a role in moving large molecules around a cell along the fibers making up the cell?s skeleton.

  • Apoptosis ?Disordered proteins can mediate a cell suicide pathway.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/347758/title/Disorder_at_Work

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