Friday, December 16, 2011

Glow of recognition: New detectors could provide easy visual identification of toxins or pathogens

ScienceDaily (Dec. 14, 2011) ? Researchers at MIT have developed a new way of revealing the presence of specific chemicals -- whether toxins, disease markers, pathogens or explosives. The system visually signals the presence of a target chemical by emitting a fluorescent glow.

The approach combines fluorescent molecules with an open scaffolding called a metal-organic framework (MOF). This structure provides lots of open space for target molecules to occupy, bringing them into close proximity with fluorescent molecules that react to their presence.

The findings were reported in the Journal of the American Chemical Society in a paper by assistant professor of chemistry Mircea Dinc?, with postdoc Natalia Shustova and undergraduate student Brian McCarthy, published online in November and to appear in a forthcoming print issue.

The work could have significant applications in sensors attuned to specific compounds whose detection could be read at a glance simply by watching for the material to glow. "A lot of known sensors work in reverse," Dinc? says, meaning they "turn off" in the presence of the target compound. "Turn-on sensors are better," he says, because "they're easier to detect, the contrast is better."

Mark Allendorf, a research scientist at Sandia National Laboratory, who was not involved in this work, agrees. "Present materials generally function via luminescence quenching," and thus "suffer from reduced detection sensitivity and selectivity," he says. "Turn-on detection would address these limitations and be a considerable advance."

For example, if the material is tuned to detect carbon dioxide, "the more gas you have, the more intensity in the response," making the device's readout more obvious. And it's not just the presence or absence of a specific type of molecule: The system can also respond to changes in the viscosity of a fluid, such as blood, which can be an important indicator in diseases such as diabetes. In such applications, the material could provide two different indications at once -- for example, changing in color depending on the presence of a specific compound, such as glucose in the blood, while changing in intensity depending on the viscosity.

MOF materials were first produced about 15 years ago, but their amazing porosity has made them a very active area of research. Although they simply look like little rocks, the sponge-like structures have so much internal surface area that one gram of the material, if unfolded, would cover a football field, Dinc? says.

The material's inner pores are about one nanometer (one billionth of a meter) across, making them "about the size of a small molecule" and well suited as molecular detectors, he says.

The new material is based on the MIT team's discovery of a way to bind a certain type of fluorescent molecules, also known as chromophores, onto the MOF's metal atoms. While these particular chromophores cannot emit light by themselves, they become fluorescent when bunched together. When in bunches or clumps, however, target molecules cannot reach them and therefore cannot be detected. Attaching the chromophores to nodes of the MOF's open framework keeps them from clumping, while also keeping them close to the empty pores so they can easily respond to the arrival of a target molecule.

Ben Zhong Tang, a professor of chemistry at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, who was not involved in this work, says the MIT researchers have taken "an elegant approach" to producing functional MOFs, and "have already demonstrated the utility of their MOFs for detection and differentiation of normally difficult-to-distinguish" molecules called volatile organic compounds.

Tang says the new system still needs further refinement to improve the efficiency of production, which he says should be easily accomplished. Once that is achieved, he says, it could find many uses. "Many more applications may be envisioned: For example, the MOFs may serve as smart vehicles and monitors for controlled drug deliveries," with the additional benefit that "the fluorescence should be gradually weakened in intensity along with progressive release of the drugs, thus enabling in situ real-time monitoring of the drug release profiles." But for now, he says, "the work is excellent in terms of proof of concept."

The work was supported by MIT's Center for Excitonics, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, and by the National Science Foundation.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The original article was written by David L. Chandler, MIT News Office.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Natalia B. Shustova, Brian D. McCarthy, Mircea Dinc?. Turn-On Fluorescence in Tetraphenylethylene-Based Metal?Organic Frameworks: An Alternative to Aggregation-Induced Emission. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2011; 133 (50): 20126 DOI: 10.1021/ja209327q

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111214102928.htm

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Dickhead Dad Forced His Daughter to Put on Armor and Fight Him in a Sword Match [Wtf]

Fremon Seay is your dickhead of the year. The 38-year-old dad punished his 16-year-old daughter by beating her with a stick while he sat his 300-pound self on her. But he didn't stop there. He made her put on armor and fought with her in a sword match for two hours. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/SGNH2t9j8yo/dickhead-dad-forced-his-daughter-to-put-on-armor-and-fight-him-in-a-sword-match

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The Era Of Attachment Is Over: SugarSync Adds ?Share By Email?

As a fan of kitten videos, I'm often embarrassed by my inability to attach said videos to emails I'm trying to send the rest of my local chapter of American Society Of Kitten Video Lovers (ASKVL). While 50MB may seem small to some (and it's a file barely big enough to hold a kitten video let alone a video of a kitten and and a baby monkey), it's enormous for some mail systems. In the end, I have to use Dropbox or SugarSync to share the video with my intended recipient, adding an unwanted step in my kitten video sharing experience. It's enough to make me cry uncontrollably into my Lemon Zinger tea mug!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7yX6OK1s7r4/

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Antibody treatment protects monkeys from Hendra virus disease

ScienceDaily (Oct. 19, 2011) ? A human antibody given to monkeys infected with the deadly Hendra virus completely protected them from disease, according to a study published by National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists and their collaborators. Hendra and the closely related Nipah virus, both rare viruses that are part of the NIH biodefense research program, target the lungs and brain and have human case fatality rates of 60 percent and more than 75 percent, respectively. These diseases in monkeys mirror what happens in humans, and the study results are cause for hope that the antibody, named m102.4, ultimately may be developed into a possible treatment for people who become infected with these viruses.

In May 2010, shortly after the NIH study in monkeys successfully concluded, Australian health officials requested m102.4 for emergency use in a woman and her 12-year-old daughter. They had been exposed to Hendra virus from an ill horse that ultimately was euthanized. Both the woman and child survived and showed no side effects from the treatment.

"This is an important research advance that illustrates how scientific discoveries emerge through a steady stepwise process, and how our investment in research on countermeasures for biodefense and emerging infectious diseases can help global preparedness efforts," said Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., director of the NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

Hendra virus emerged in 1994 in Australia and primarily affects horses, which can spread the disease to humans. No person-to-person transmission of Hendra has been reported. Nipah virus emerged in 1998 in Malaysia, and also has been found in Bangladesh and India. Nipah appears to infect humans more easily than Hendra and can be transmitted from person to person.

The NIAID-supported study, which appears online in Science Translational Medicine, involved infecting 14 African green monkeys with a lethal dose of Hendra virus. Twelve of the monkeys then received two treatments with m102.4, one either at 10, 24, or 72 hours after being infected, and another 48 hours later. All 12 monkeys treated with the antibody survived. The two untreated control monkeys died eight days after being infected.

The findings are the result of a series of studies carried out by different research laboratories. A group from NIH's National Cancer Institute and the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) discovered m102.4 in 2006 and developed the antibody for use in laboratory research. USUHS and Australian collaborators then developed an animal study model of m102.4 in ferrets infected with Nipah virus; the University of Texas Medical Branch and USUHS developed a monkey study model of Hendra and Nipah infection; and together with investigators from Boston University and NIAID's Rocky Mountain Laboratories (RML) designed and carried out the antibody trial in biosafety level-4 (BSL-4) laboratory space at RML. Because the Hendra and Nipah viruses are so deadly and there is no licensed vaccine or treatment for either of them, both viruses must be studied in maximum-containment BSL-4 laboratories.

The World Health Organization reports 475 human cases of Nipah through 2008, with 251 deaths. Through the same period, there have been seven human Hendra cases with four fatalities. There also have been many horse fatalities. In their study, the scientists cite a handful of other outbreaks of Hendra virus in horses since 2008. Since June 2011, there have been 18 outbreaks in Australia, primarily in Queensland and New South Wales, with the latest reported Oct. 10.

Both viruses are spread by fruit bats, commonly known as flying foxes, which are reservoirs for these viruses. The fruit bats, which are resistant to the diseases, are found primarily in Australia but have been found as far west as Africa, north to India and Pakistan, and east to the Philippines.

Additional studies on m102.4 as a possible treatment and as a preventive vaccine for Nipah and Hendra virus infections are being planned.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NIH/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Note: ScienceDaily reserves the right to edit materials for content and length. For original reprint permissions, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. K. N. Bossart, T. W. Geisbert, H. Feldmann, Z. Zhu, F. Feldmann, J. B. Geisbert, L. Yan, Y.-R. Feng, D. Brining, D. Scott, Y. Wang, A. S. Dimitrov, J. Callison, Y.-P. Chan, A. C. Hickey, D. S. Dimitrov, C. C. Broder, B. Rockx. A Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibody Protects African Green Monkeys from Hendra Virus Challenge. Science Translational Medicine, 2011; 3 (105): 105ra103 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3002901

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/TvEyE6ox9Ys/111019172838.htm

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Syrians rally for Assad, Libya recognizes opposition (Reuters)

AMMAN (Reuters) ? Tens of thousands of Syrians rallied in support of President Bashar al-Assad in the northern city of Aleppo Wednesday while to the south his troops carried out a sustained offensive to crush the seven-month uprising against his rule.

The state-organized gathering in Syria's commercial hub came a week after a similar demonstration in the capital Damascus, showing authorities can still rally mass support in the country's two main cities despite waves of unrest across the nation.

"We love you" sang demonstrators, holding pictures of Assad and waving Syrian, Russian and Chinese flags -- a reference to Moscow and Beijing's veto of a United Nations draft resolution which could have led to U.N. sanctions against Damascus.

Huge flags were draped from seven-storey buildings around the square where demonstrators gathered to hear nationalist songs and speeches of support for Assad, who has defied U.S. and European calls to step down. Residents said Aleppo schools were closed Wednesday to boost attendance at the rally.

In the central city of Homs, where residents say gunmen and army deserters have battled government forces sweeping through several neighborhoods, activists said six people were shot dead by pro-Assad "shabbiha" gunmen in the Naziheen district.

Those deaths raised to at least 38 the death toll in a three-day army offensive in Homs, a city of one million which has seen regular anti-government protests.

Near the border with Lebanon, activists said two people were killed in the town of Nazariya. Foreign journalists are largely banned from Syria, making independent confirmation of reported events difficult.

Syrian authorities blame "armed terrorist groups" for the unrest and say 1,100 police and soldiers have been killed. The United Nations says Assad's crackdown has killed 3,000 people, including 187 children.

Syria's opposition National Council, which has pledged to seek international protection to stop civilian deaths and has called for the uprising to remain peaceful, was recognized by Libya Wednesday as the country's legitimate authority.

SUNNI DEFECTIONS

Assad has sent troops and tanks into cities and towns to put down the unrest. But protests have persisted, although in reduced numbers, with several thousand soldiers from the mainly Sunni Muslim rank-and-file army now challenging his rule.

Diplomats and military analysts say moves by Assad, of the minority Alawite sect, to crush the protest movement inspired by the Arab Spring that overthrew veteran leaders in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, have fueled army desertions.

Several officers have recently announced their desertion, although most desertions have been Sunni conscripts who usually man roadblocks and form the outer layer of military and secret police rings around restless cities and towns.

The officer corps of Syria's army is composed mainly of members of the Alawite community.

The latest desertions included 20 soldiers who left their posts near the town of Hirak, 80 km (50 miles) south of Damascus, and clashed with troops after the killing of three protesters demonstrating against the arrest of a popular cleric, activists said.

One Hirak resident said the clashes, which broke out late on Tuesday, continued Wednesday and troops sealed off the city cemetery to prevent mourners burying the dead protesters.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said four of Assad's troops were killed in the province of Idlib near the border with Turkey in northwest Syria.

"Attrition is increasing within army ranks and beginning to form a problem for Assad. The geographical area of the protests is large and the regime is being forced to use Sunni soldiers to back up core forces," a senior European diplomat in Damascus said.

"It is taking longer and longer for loyalist forces to control rebel areas. Large areas of Idlib are virtually out of control and it took them 10 days to regain a small town like Rastan," he said, referring to fighting in which opposition sources say 100 insurgents and deserters were killed and Assad's forces also suffered heavy losses.

(Additional reporting by Suleiman al-Khalidi in Amman; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111019/wl_nm/us_syria

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Eagles hold off Redskins, snap 4-game skid

Philadelphia prevails 20-13; Coleman has 3 INTs as Grossman benched

Image: Brent Celek, Jason Avant, Danny WatkinsAP

Eagles tight end Brent Celek (87) celebrates his touchdown against the Redskins on Sunday.

updated 7:15 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 2011

LANDOVER, Md. - The 50-50 plays that seemed to go wrong during the Philadelphia Eagles' four-game skid went right for a change, and that's perhaps the main reason the so-called dream team of the NFC East isn't buried yet.

The Eagles finally learned how to tackle and stop the run Sunday during a 20-13 win over the Washington Redskins. Kurt Coleman celebrated his injury-induced return to the starting lineup with three interceptions. The offense overcame a thinned offensive line and gave the ball to LeSean McCoy a career-high 28 times.

But the story of the game was also told in these snapshot moments:

  • When the ball was lying on the goal line after a wayward snap, Michael Vick got to it first.
  • When McCoy lost the ball at the end of a run, he was already down.
  • When Brent Celek tipped the ball twice with defenders around him, he still made the catch - an incredible grab - while falling on his back.
  • When a pass by Vick fluttered dangerously after being tipped behind the line of scrimmage, it landed in Jeremy Maclin's hands instead of those of a defender.

"The last four games, I think we've been having a lot of things go the other team's way," center Jason Kelce said, "batted balls going into their hands and stuff like that. I think today we're starting to get a little bit of that luck shifting over back to our side."

The Eagles (2-4) raced to a 20-0 second-quarter lead and picked off Rex Grossman four times, prompting Washington coach Mike Shanahan to answer the fans' chants of "We want Beck!" by giving John Beck his first regular-season appearance since 2007.

Beck got the Redskins back into the game with a 2-yard quarterback draw to cap an 80-yard drive that pulled the Redskins within seven points with 2:44 remaining, but the Eagles ran out the clock with the tail end of a 126-yard day from McCoy, who headed to the sideline and punched coach Andy Reid in the chest in his excitement.

"He knocked the wind out of me. He got me, got a good one," Reid said. "But I don't really care. He can do anything he wants today."

Said McCoy of his stout coach: "Andy, we're like his kids. We're still young. I kind of punched him. ... A lot of cushion there."

The Redskins (3-2) were the division's surprise leaders, in front by themselves this late in the season for the first time since 1999, but now their momentum has ground to a halt - and they have a quarterback quandary to boot. Shanahan said he went with Beck because the team "needed a spark." The coach wouldn't say who will start next week's game at Carolina.

"I believe in myself, no matter if the whole stadium doesn't, the coaching staff doesn't," Grossman said. "Whatever the situation is, I believe in myself."

The Redskins also lost left guard Kory Lichtensteiger with a right knee injury that "doesn't look good," according to Shanahan. Left tackle Trent Williams has a severely sprained right ankle. Tight end Chris Cooley broke his left index finger and will need surgery.

The Eagles had already shuffled their offensive line. King Dunlap's back spasms and Jason Peters' hamstring injury left them with two healthy tackles: Winston Justice, who hadn't played a snap on offense this season, and Todd Herremans, the usual right tackle who started on the left side for the first time since he was a rookie in 2005.

Coleman got the call because safety Jarrad Page was out with a stinger. Coleman started the first three games before getting benched; now he's the first Eagles player with three interceptions in a game since Joe Scarpati in 1966.

"I wasn't getting it done, and that was apparent," Coleman said. "It was a humbling experience. God taught me a lesson, and I just worked my butt off the last couple weeks."

Vick completed 18 of 31 passes for 237 yards with one touchdown and one interception. He also ran for 54 yards on seven carries, including a 31-yard scamper on a third-and-10 after which he kicked a stray ball that nearly hit a Redskins cheerleader. He paused, holding his hand to his heart to display his remorse.

"It was very inappropriate to kick the ball. Sorry about that. I apologize to the cheerleaders," Vick said. "That was a very bad gesture, and I came out and let my emotions get the best of me."

Vick also left for two plays in the third quarter. He said he had dirt in his eyes after getting tackled at the end of a run. Vince Young filled in, making his Eagles debut, and threw an interception that gave the Redskins the ball at the 18.

Two plays later, Coleman picked off Grossman, giving Philadelphia the type of momentum swing it had been missing much of the year - as part of a win that helps take some of the heat off Reid.

"We love our coach to death, and we'll go to bat for him each and every week," Vick said. "We can be 1-13, and everything he tells us, we're going to go out and do."

Vick's interception was tipped by a lineman in the third quarter. The Eagles led the league with 15 giveaways entering the game, but Grossman's errant ways tilted the balance the other way.

"We know we have a long road to go," Coleman said. "But if we continue to play like we did today, then I think we're on way."

Notes: Philadelphia has won 10 of 12 at Washington, including a 59-28 laugher a year ago. ... McCoy is the first Eagles player score a TD in six consecutive games since Ricky Watters in 1995. McCoy is also the first in franchise history to do it in six straight at the start of a season. ... The Eagles, 30th in run defense entering the game, allowed just 42 yards rushing. ... Washington's inactives include CB Phillip Buchanon (neck) and WR Anthony Armstrong (hamstring).

? 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Just walk away, Jim

??In breaking down the Jim Schwartz-Jim Harbaugh confrontation following the 49ers' victory over the Lions on Sunday, Tony Dungy advises the Detroit coach to just walk away next time.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/44921771/ns/sports-nfl/

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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

20 Creative Business Cards For Designers Inspiration | Mystrious

I am a 24 year old Web/Graphic/Flash Designer and Blogger from Calcutta ("Kolkata"), India. I am the founder and Chief Editor of?DJDesignerLab (a blog for designers) and Mystrious (News Magazine). You can follow me onTwitter ??@djdesignerlab and join me on?Facebook.

Source: http://mystrious.com/20-creative-business-cards-for-designers-inspiration/

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