Australian researchers have
developed a “revolutionary” new blood test to diagnose skin cancer much more
quickly and efficiently than conventional methods. The ‘liquid biopsy’ blood
test promises to speed up the diagnosis of melanoma, ensuring patients get the personalized
treatment they need sooner. The life saving test will be administered by the
Olivia Newton John Cancer Research Institute (ONJCRI) in Melbourne, Victoria’s
minister for health Jill Hennessy announced on 18 November. Diagnosis of
melanoma often requires a complex and invasive surgical biopsy that can take
weeks before answers are available. This breakthrough new technology has the
potential to provide the same information but much faster, from a simple blood
test.
Thursday, 24 November 2016
Now, Drugs To Battle Antibiotic Resistance
Scientists have used large scale
super-computer simulations to discover a new class of drugs that may combat
antibiotic resistance on disease causing bacteria. Laboratory experiments were
combined with super-computing modeling to identify molecules that boost the
effect of antibiotics on bacteria. Researchers, including those from University
of Oklahoma (OU) in the US, identified four new chemicals that seek out and disrupt
bacterial proteins called “efflux pumps”, a major cause of antibiotic
resistance in bacteria. The supercomputing power of Oak Ridge National
Laboratory’s Titan supercomputer allowed us to perform large scale simulations
of the drug targets and to screen many potential compounds quickly. The information
researchers received was combined with their experiments to select molecules
that were found to work well, and this should drastically reduce the time
needed to move from the experimental phase to clinical trials.
Genetic Tinkering Of Plants Is The Solution To World Hunger
A decade ago, agricultural
scientists at the University of Illinois, US, suggested a bold approach to
improve the food supply: tinker with photosynthesis, the chemical reaction
powering nearly all life on Earth. The idea was greeted skeptically in
scientific circles and ignored by funding agencies. But one outfit with deep
pockets, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, eventually paid attention,
hoping the research might help alleviate global poverty. Now, after several
years of work, the scientists are reporting a remarkable result. Using genetic
engineering techniques to alter photosynthesis, they increased the productivity
of a test plant -tobacco - by as much as 20%, they said on 17 November in a
study published by the journal ‘Science’. That is huge, given that plant
breeders struggle to eke out gains of 1 or 2% with more conventional
approaches. The scientists have no interest in increasing the production of
tobacco; their plan is to try the same alterations in food crops, and one of
the leaders of the work believes production gains of 50% or more may ultimately
be achievable. If that prediction is borne out in further research – it could
take a decade, if not longer – the result might be nothing less than a
transformation of global agriculture. One of the leaders of the research emphasized
in an interview that a long road lay ahead before any results might reach
farmers’ fields. But he is also convinced that genetic engineering could
ultimately lead to what he called a “Second Green Revolution”. The research
involves photosynthesis, in which plants use carbon dioxide from the sir and
energy from sunlight to form new, energy-rich carbohydrates. Long thought crop
yields might be improved by certain genetic changes. In the initial work, the
researchers transferred genes from a common laboratory plant, known as thale
cress, into strains of tobacco. The effect was to increase the level of certain
proteins that already existed in tobacco. When plants receive direct sunlight,
they are often getting more energy than they can use, and they activate a
mechanism that helps them shed it as heat – while slowing carbohydrate production.
The genetic changes help the plant turn that mechanism off faster once the
excessive sunlight ends, so that the machinery of photosynthesis can get back
more quickly to maximal production of carbohydrates.
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