Tag: "jan" at biology news

Jan Lwe awarded 2007 EMBO Gold Medal

... Awarded annually, the EMBO Gold Medal recognises outstanding contributions of young researchers in the molecular life sciences. Considered the most prestigious award of its kind in Europe, the Gold Medal highlights the achieveme...

JCI table of contents: January 25, 2006

... Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disorder that causes degeneration of the nerves in the brain and spinal cord, leading to various symptoms including muscle weakness and pain. Most individuals with MS go through cycles of disease and remission, leading to the suggestion that there are regulatory mechanisms that counter the disease-causing inflammation. Using a mouse model of...

The National Academies' Distinguished Speaker Series runs Jan. 17-March 21, 2007

... The curious will enjoy this opportunity to expand their understanding of current scientific issues from experts, including members of the National Academy of Sciences, the Nat...

Trojan horse strategy defeats drug-resistant bacteria

... Bacteria are increasingly resistant to antibiotics, and existing drugs work poorly against chronic infections like those that occur in wounds, on medical devices and in th...

Press registration -- World Congress of Nephrology, April 21-25, 2007, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

The World Congress of Nephrology (April 21-25, 2007, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) represents a unique opportunity for the global nephrology community to come together, share and exchange ideas, and collectively address current and future challenges faced by renal clinicians and scientists. ......... Updating on all aspects of basic and clinical research and care of renal patients, one of the many hig...

ACS News Service Weekly PressPac -- January 24, 2007

... ... ... ... In This Edition:... ... Toward development of...

ACS News Service Weekly PressPac -- Jan. 17, 2007

... ... ACS NEWS SERVICE -- Jan. 17, 2007... Weekly PressPac -- ALL CONTENT IS FOR IMMEDIATE USE EXCEPT ARTICLE #5 (EMBARGOED FOR 9 A.M., EASTERN TIME, JAN. 22, 2007)... ... ... In this ed...

Story tips from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, January 2007

... ORNL researchers performing basic research have discovered a carbon nanotube-based system that functions like an atom-scale switch. Their approach is to perform first-principles calculations on positioning a molecule inside a carbon nanotube to affect the electronic current flowing across it. The result is an electrical gate at the molecular level: In one position, the molecular gate is open...

JCI table of contents: Jan. 18, 2007

... ... In the s...

Other highlights in the Jan. 17 JNCI

... ... In the Calcium Polyp Prevention Study, 930 people with a recent adenoma were randomly assigned to receive 4 years of daily 1200-milligram calcium supplements or a plac...

ACS News Service Weekly PressPac -- January 10, 2007

...... ...Weekly PressPac - Jan. 10, 2007 ...ALL CONTENT IS FOR IMMEDIATE USE EXCEPT ARTICLE #5 (EMBARGOED FOR 9 A.M., EASTERN TIME, JAN. 15, 2007) ...... ... The American Chemical Society (ACS) News Service PressPac is your access p...

JCI table of contents -- January 11, 2006

... In humans, mutation of the gene encoding a protein known as WASp leads to susceptibility to infections and systemic autoimmunity. Most studies have focused on understanding the defects in T cell activation caused by the WASp deficiency, but researchers at the University of Washington in Seattle have now found that in mice and humans a population of T cells known as regulatory T cells (Treg)...

Highlights from the January 2007 Journal of the American Dietetic Association

... ... Watching television, eating family meals and the safety of the neighborhood all play a role in children's weight, according to researchers at the University of Missouri....

Other highlights in the January 3 JNCI

...Regular use of cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins is not associated with a reduced risk of colorectal cancer, according to a population-based case-control study. ... Laboratory tests of statins have found anticancer effects on colon cancer cells. One case-control study of people found that use of statins for at least 5 years reduced the risk of colorectal cancer by 50 percent. To furt...

JCI table of contents: January 2, 2007

... ... The group of drugs known as beta blockers help slow nerve impulses traveling through the heart in order to reduce the heart's workload. This effect is achieved via their action on beta-adrenergic receptors present in cardiac cells. As such, beta blockers have become a mainstay of the treatment regimen for chronic heart failure. However, doctors have remained puzzled by the variable res...

HHMI hosts international scientists at Janelia Farm Research Campus

....

Craig Mello named winner of The Dr. Paul Janssen Award for Biomedical Research

Beerse, Belgium - September 12, 2006 - Johnson & Johnson today announced that Craig C. Mello, Ph. D., a professor of Molecular Medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, and an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, has been named the inaugural recipient of The Dr. Paul Janssen Award for Biomedical Research. Dr. Mello was selected for his role in the...

Presentation of the first The Dr. Paul Janssen Award For Biomedical Research

... On September 12, 2006, Mrs. Dora Janssen will present The Dr Paul Janssen Award f...

Alejandro Zaffaroni to receive 2006 Biotechnology Heritage Award

The Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF) and the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) will present the 8th Annual Biotechnology Heritage Award to Alejandro Zaffaroni, an outstanding pioneer of the biotechnology revolution and legendary entrepreneur with considerable scientific and business skills. The award will be presented at the plenary breakfast session from 7:30 to 9:00 a.m. on Monday, 10...

Sherry Lansing and Janet Woodcock receive AACR public service awards

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Each year at its Annual Meeting, the American Association for Cancer Research gives special recognition to distinguished individuals whose efforts and dedication have helped to increase awareness about the importance of cancer research....... The recipients of this year's Public Service Awards are Sherry Lansing, former Chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture Group Paramount Pi...

Jane Lubchenco receives the 2005 AAAS Public Understanding of Science and Technology Award

AAAS, the world's largest general scientific society, today named Jane Lubchenco, Wayne and Gladys Valley Professor of Marine Biology and Distinguished Professor of Zoology at Oregon State University, to receive the prestigious Public Understanding of Science and Technology Award for her exemplary commitment to, and leadership of, public understanding of science initiatives in public policy and p...

National Academies advisory: Jan. 31 release of biosecurity report

A new report from the National Academies calls for a coordinated global effort to reduce the growing risk that advances in the life sciences and related technologies will be used to create novel biological weapons or misused by careless groups and individuals. The report, Globalization, Biosecurity, and the Future of the Life Sciences, will be released at a one-hour public briefing on Tuesday, Ja...

Other highlights in the January 18 JNCI

... Women infected with HIV types 1 and 2 may have a higher risk of HSIL than HIV-negative women, according to a new study in Senegalese women....... Stephen E. Hawes, Ph.D., of the University of Washington in Seattle, and colleagues studied a cohort of 627 women with and without HIV types 1 and/or 2 and/or high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in Senegal, West Africa. They followed th...

JCI table of contents: January 12, 2006

......Blockade of fat hormone helps halt and heal multiple sclerosis ... ...Italian researchers have found that blockade of the hormone leptin, which is primarily produced in fats cells, has beneficial effects on the induction and progression of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in mice the animal model of human multiple sclerosis (MS). In their study appearing online on January 1...

JCI table of contents: January 4, 2006

... ... Soy diet worsens heart disease ... ...Researchers from the University of Colorado have shown that mice carrying a genetic mutation that is linked to altered heart growth and function in humans, have significantly worse heart problems if fed a soy diet, when compared to mice fed a soy-free (milk proteinbased) diet. This is the first study to provide evidence that an environmental influenc...

Other highlights in the January 4 JNCI

... A new study has found that a cancer drug and an engineered form of the herpes simplex virus may work together more effectively than either agent alone to destroy glioblastoma cells from human brain cancers....... The drug temozolomide, which stops tumor growth by preventing DNA replication in the cell, was approved in 2005 for the treatment of glioblastoma, a rapidly fatal type of brain canc...

Johnson & Johnson names selection committee for Dr. Paul Janssen Award for Biomedical Research

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J., Sept. 12, 2005 -- Johnson & Johnson today announced the appointment of a top-level scientific committee of international experts who will serve as the selection committee to nominate and select the inaugural recipient of the Dr. Paul Janssen Award for Biomedical Research. The Award was created to honor Dr. Paul Janssen, or "Dr. Paul" as he was known throughout the scientific...

Society of Nuclear Medicine Technologist Section names Jan Winn as outstanding educator

TORONTO, Canada--Jan Winn, M.Ed., RT(N), CNMT, of Edmond, Okla., was named recipient of the Outstanding Educator Award by the Society of Nuclear Medicine Technologist Section (SNMTS) during SNM's 52nd Annual Meeting June 1822 in Toronto. SNMTS President Nanci A. Burchell, CNMT, FSNMTS, presented the award at the Technologist Section's June 21 business meeting. The Education and Research Foundatio...

Elizabeth Blackburn and Janet Rowley awarded

PHILADELPHIA -- Two scientists whose fundamental discoveries into the cause and progression of cancer opened new paths for the treatment of this disease are being honored this year with the prestigious Landon-AACR Prizes for Basic and Translational Cancer Research....... These prizes, offered by the Kirk A. and Dorothy P. Landon Foundation and the American Association for Cancer Research, are the...

Scientific heavyweights to speak at Jan. 28 Hopkins symposium

General news and science reporters, editors, broadcasters and photographers are invited to The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Friday, Jan. 28, to hear six of the nation's best-known biological scientists -- including Nobel laureates David Baltimore and Sydney Brenner -- at a symposium, "Toward the Third New Biology." ......The symposium, whose title refers to anticipated advances in...

Story tips from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, January 2005

FORENSICS The telltale tree . . . ... ...Logs confiscated by police at a Texas murder scene and the work of a scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory may help put a killer behind bars. Using a technique called laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, Madhavi Martin obtained "chemical fingerprints" from a partially burned log at the crime scene and compared them to those of logs that had been p...

Other highlights in the January 5 JNCI

...... A new study has found that blocking vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3 (VEGFR-3) prevented lymphangiogenesis in a mouse model but had no effect on blood angiogenesis or the survival or function of existing lymphatic vessels. Specifically targeting VEGFR-3 may inhibit tumor metastasis by preventing lymphatic vessel growth by the tumor, the study concludes....... VEGFR-3 plays an...

JCI table of contents, 3 January 2005

Cincinnati study of Chernobyl residents uncovers new cause of thyroid cancer ... ...Cincinnati University scientists studying papillary thyroid cancer in Chernobyl residents following the 1986 nuclear plant accident have identified a novel genetic mutation event that occurs as a result of their exposure to high levels of radioiodide.... ...Yuri E. Nukiforov led a team of researchers from bot...

Highlights of January 2005 issue of Biology of Reproduction

The January 2005 issue of Biology of Reproduction marks the start of the co-editorship of Drs. John Eppig and Mary Ann Handel. The new editors-in-chief, along with members of their board of associate editors, will provide highlights of some of the prominent papers in each issue of the journal. Following are the January highlights of groundbreaking papers dealing with genetic modification of germl...

Highlights of January Journal of the American Dietetic Association

The January 2005 issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic Association contains articles and research studies you may find of interest. Below is a summary of some of this month's articles. For more information or to receive a faxed copy of a Journal article, e-mail . ...... ...Coffee gets its perk from caffeine, and so do soft drinks and tea. According to researchers from the University of V...

Trojan-horse therapy blocks buildup of Alzheimer's plaque

A new therapeutic approach to Alzheimer's disease protects brain cells in culture by drastically reducing the neurotoxic amyloid protein aggregates that are critical to the development of the disease. The treatment involves dispatching a small molecule into the cell to enlist the aid of a larger "chaperone" protein to block the accumulation of the brain-clogging protein....... The new "Trojan hor...
(Date:5/17/2013)... study finds human-caused climate change may have little ... a host of recent studies that predict their ... The findings, which appear in the journal ... survival of a creature thought to be doomed: ... cold-blooded animals, especially forest lizards, will be hard ...
(Date:5/16/2013)... FASEB MARC (Maximizing Access to Research Careers) Program ... Society for Developmental Biology (SDB) 72nd Annual Meeting ... awards are meant to promote the entry of ... the mainstream of the basic science community and ... the SDB 2013 Annual Meeting. , Awards are ...
(Date:5/16/2013)... The endothelium, the cellular layer lining the ... a few hundred nanometers in thickness, this super-tenuous ... and tissue compression to create a unique and ... to partition tissues from the body,s circulatory system. ... the barrier must be physically breached to ...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Climate change may have little impact on tropical lizards 2Endothelium, heal thyself 2Endothelium, heal thyself 3Endothelium, heal thyself 4
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