Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: new + better + chromosome  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


South Wales Evening Post
CHARITY'S STEPPING STONE TOWARDS A BETTER FUTURE
South Wales Evening Post, UK - 17 minutes ago
The good news was that Whitney was not terminally ill but the family would have to face up to a new set of challenges. Trisomy 9 is a rare chromosomal ...
50 years, 50 giant leaps
Independent Online, South Africa - Aug 3, 2008
Chromosome analysis: Using Nasa image-processing technology, human chromosomes are being photographed via cameras mounted on microscopes. ...

BBC News
Schizophrenia studies back genetic theory
ABC Online, Australia - Jul 30, 2008
"What was convincing about these studies is that both studies independently found the same region on the human chromosome, which is reassuring because ...
Genetic hot spots tied to schizophrenia Boston Globe
Gene link to schizophrenia found The Australian
Researchers Discover DNA Link To Schizophrenia RedOrbit
Independent
all 433 news articles »

CBS News
Don?t Be Down On Palin
CBS News, NY - Jul 31, 2008
Yeah, he has an extra chromosome. I keep thinking, in our world, what is normal and what is perfect?? That?s Alaska?s Republican governor, Sarah Palin, ...

Oneindia
The Calcutta Chromosome: Review
Oneindia, India - Jul 18, 2008
... looking for a better prospect elsewhere. However there is surfacing underneath a crave for returning to homeland. The Calcutta Chromosome has a new ...
Mechanism That Explains How Cancer Enzyme Winds Up On Ends Of ...
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 10, 2008
The Terns lab took advantage of the differences between normal and cancer cells of many kinds to better understand the trafficking of telomerase RNA. ...
Eye Movement Disorder Caused By Improper Development Of Motor Neurons
eMaxHealth.com, NC - Aug 2, 2008
In earlier linkage analysis studies, researchers identified a region, or locus, on chromosome 2 that held the genetic mutation unique to the affected family ...
Looking for a moving experience? Dig This
Denver Post, CO - Aug 2, 2008
It isn't just the Y-chromosome crowd that takes a shining to digging dirt. As is typical, half of the day's participants are women. ...
At Yankees' new park, he touches all the bases
The Star-Ledger - NJ.com, NJ - Jul 13, 2008
Like many males who grew up in New York in the 1940s and?'50s, he has an X and Y chromosome and the NY chromosome. So, Trost, 63, understands the new ...
The week, The Bee imparts some trivia
Pocket Gamer, UK - Aug 2, 2008
Sonic Hedgehog is also a name of a gene on chromosome 7 of a human genome. Biologists! 3. In 1980 the American military approached Atari to make a version ...
Source: Google News

Cancer genetics/epigenetics and the X chromosome: possible new links for malignant glioma … -
A Mintz, W Debinski - Crit Rev Oncog, 2000 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... benefit of better understanding tumorigenesis and providing new molecular tools
for better management of HGGs. Also, we propose that the X chromosome may in ...

… mouse oocytes preserve patterns of meiotic spindles and chromosomes better than conventional straws -
SU Chen, YR Lien, HF Chen, KH Chao, HN Ho, YS Yang - Human Reproduction, 2000 - ESHRE
... table: [in this window] [in a new window], Table ... recovery of normal spindle and
chromosomes to various ... spindle morphology and chromosomal pattern better than in ...

New, Male-Specific Microsatellite Markers from the Human Y Chromosome -
PS White, OL Tatum, LL Deaven, JL Longmire - Genomics, 1999 - Elsevier
... allow for better divergence time estimations than compound and ?impure? microsatel-
lite stretches. Finally, the new, human Y-chromosome cosmid library ...

A new gene (DYX3) for dyslexia is located on chromosome 2 -
T Fagerheim, P Raeymaekers, FE Tonnessen, M … - British Medical Journal, 1999 - jmg.bmj.com
... Chromosome analysis of III.31 was normal ... View this table: [in this window] [in a
new window ... and other discrepancies clearly indicate the need for better tests in ...

Drosophila telomeres: new views on chromosome evolution -
ML Pardue, ON Danilevskaya, K Lowenhaupt, F Slot, … - Trends in Genetics, 1996 - Elsevier
... cannot take an external promoter to a new site. ... master gene could give the cell better
control over ... tile amount of telomere sequences on a chromosome can be ...

A New Locus on Chromosome 12p13. 3 for Pseudohypoaldosteronism Type II, an Autosomal Dominant Form … -
S Disse-Nicodcme, JM Achard, I Desitter, AM Houot … - The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2000 - Elsevier
... of hypertension may facilitate this identification and open up new avenues toward
a better understanding of ... a 20?33-cM PHA2A locus on chromosome 1 and ...

Two New Loci for Autosomal Recessive Ichthyosis on Chromosomes 3p21 and 19p12-q12 and Evidence for … -
J Fischer, A Faure, B Bouadjar, C Blanchet-Bardon, … - The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2000 - UChicago Press
... forms of ARI; the new localizations should help to better define these clinical
entities. Because all of our patients with linkage to chromosome 3 presented ...

The CpG Island Searcher: A New WWW Resource -
D Takai - In Silico Biology, 2003 - IOS Press
... However, the fact that a better association of CpG islands ... of 1,147,210 bp of a human
chromosome 20 contig ... Jones / The CpG Island Searcher: A New WWW Resource ...

New phenotype of the cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy mapped to chromosome 19: migraine as … -
M Verin, Y Rolland, F Landgraf, H Chabriat, B … - British Medical Journal, 1995 - jnnp.bmj.com
... arteriopathy (CADASIL) recently mapped to chromosome 19 ... The new acronym "cerebral
autosomal dominant arteriopathy ... CADASILM) is proposed to better describe this ...

Characterization of Ancestral and Derived Y-Chromosome Haplotypes of New World Native Populations -
NO Bianchi, CI Catanesi, G Bailliet, VL Martinez- … - The American Journal of Human Genetics, 1998 - Elsevier
... first settlements in Beringia and the New World (Hoeffecker ... the Native American
aborigine Y chromosome with higher ... markers to develop a better understanding of ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

New technique will produce a better chromosome map

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Researchers at the University of Illinois have developed a simple and economical technique for imaging and mapping fruit fly chromosomes. This new approach will enable them to construct the first accurate map of the chromosomes and tease out the secrets hidden in their stripes.

Their work appears online May 6 in advance of publication in the journal Nature Methods.

Fruit flies are well suited for chromosome studies because some of their cells contain gigantic, “polytene” chromosomes, each built up of more than 1,000 parallel copies of DNA strands. When stained, condensed, dark bands and lighter regions (interbands) give the chromosomes a striped appearance.

For more than 70 years, cytogeneticists have used a hand-drawn map of the bands of fruit fly polytene chromosomes, with the shape and location of these structures only vaguely delineated. This map, first published in 1935, and generations of light and electron micrographs have yielded an imprecise guide to the chromosomes.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Traditional methods of chromosome preparation have limited usefulness for those hoping to sort out how the bands and interbands relate to the underlying genetic sequence, said cell and developmental biology research specialist Dmitri Novikov, who developed the new technique. The genome of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, was sequenced in 2000, and yet its relationship to chromosome structure remains unclear.

“Since we want to know what genes are involved in the development of different structures in living systems, this is the first structure to look at,” Novikov said. “This is the starting point: the appearance of the genes themselves.”

Cell and developmental biology professor and lead investigator Andrew S. Belmont and visiting scientist Igor Kireev, of Moscow State University, are co-authors on the paper. Belmont is in the U. of I. Institute for Genomic Biology and the Center for Biophysics and Computational Biology.

Current methods for preparing polytene cells for viewing under a light microscope involve using a thumb, pencil, forceps or other instrument to maneuver and press the cells between a glass coverslip and slide. Only about 10 percent of the slides processed this way provide useable images and even those rarely offer crisp structural details, Novikov said.

The new approach includes two components: the use of mechanical devices to spread and flatten the cells, and the application of computer-based image processing to analyze hundreds of examples of the same chromosomes. With so many crisp images to analyze, computer algorithms can accurately calculate the number, shape and location of the chromosome bands.

“Two researchers might see the same image differently,” said graduate research assistant Mert Dikmen, who uses computer vision technologies under the supervision of Beckman Institute professor Thomas Huang to analyze the images. “Our system will give an impartial estimate of the band location. It will not be researcher-dependent. It will be objective.”

To improve chromosome spreading, researchers use a rotary tool that vibrates the coverslip surface for several minutes. A simple mechanical vise applies up to two tons of force to each slide, rendering the preparations very thin and high in contrast. This allows the production of much clearer, information-packed images.

The technique has other advantages: Because it relies on light microscopy, it is faster and more economical than electron microscopy, with comparable or superior results.

With a more accurate chromosome map, researchers will next use fluorescent immunostaining of proteins that bind to specific DNA sequences. These landmarks will help them tease out the relationship of the sequence to the physical structure.

The new approach will allow scientists to answer fundamental questions about chromosome structure, Novikov said. Such questions have relevance across species.

Editor’s note: To reach, call 217-333-8372; e-mail: novikov@uiuc.edu.

 

New Class Of Nontoxic Cancer Treatments Found By UK Researchers

A new class of compounds developed by two University of Kentucky researchers shows promise as a nontoxic treatment of some cancers previously treated with toxic chemotherapy, the researchers report today.

In a study published in the academic journal Chemistry & Biology, UK pharmaceutical sciences graduate student Abby Ho mentored by assistant professor Kyung-Bo Kim and ophthalmology and visual sciences assistant professor Royce Mohan describe a compound that acts directly on LMP2, a component of the immune proteasome variant that has been identified abundantly expressed in certain types of tumors, including some prostate cancers.

The compound, dubbed UK-101, inhibits LMP2 while not attacking normal cells, indicating that it could be an effective cancer treatment that does not produce the kinds of unpleasant side effects reported by many patients currently treated with broadly acting proteasome inhibitors and chemotherapeutics. Kim and Mohan also suggest that UK-101 may be useful in treating a number of diseases in which LMP2 is involved. The researchers are particularly excited about UK-101's potential in treating inflammatory conditions associated with arthritis, rheumatism and cardiovascular diseases.

The researchers report success in using the compound in tests in prostate cancer cells. Importantly, Kim and Mohan point out that in test using highly sensitive vascular endothelial cells obtained from blood vessels that UK-101 was found to be non toxic because they lacked expression of this LMP2 immunoproteasome target.


Contact: Dan Adkins
University of Kentucky
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
Continue News With: News3 ; News4 ; News5 ; News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast