Thursday, March 28, 2013

How herpesvirus invades nervous system

Mar. 27, 2013 ? Northwestern Medicine scientists have identified a component of the herpesvirus that "hijacks" machinery inside human cells, allowing the virus to rapidly and successfully invade the nervous system upon initial exposure.

Led by Gregory Smith, associate professor in immunology and microbiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, researchers found that viral protein 1-2, or VP1/2, allows the herpesvirus to interact with cellular motors, known as dynein. Once the protein has overtaken this motor, the virus can speed along intercellular highways, or microtubules, to move unobstructed from the tips of nerves in skin to the nuclei of neurons within the nervous system.

This is the first time researchers have shown a viral protein directly engaging and subverting the cellular motor; most other viruses passively hitch a ride into the nervous system.

"This protein not only grabs the wheel, it steps on the gas," says Smith. "Overtaking the cellular motor to invade the nervous system is a complicated accomplishment that most viruses are incapable of achieving. Yet the herpesvirus uses one protein, no others required, to transport its genetic information over long distances without stopping."

Herpesvirus is widespread in humans and affects more than 90 percent of adults in the United States. It is associated with several types of recurring diseases, including cold sores, genital herpes, chicken pox, and shingles. The virus can live dormant in humans for a lifetime, and most infected people do not know they are disease carriers. The virus can occasionally turn deadly, resulting in encephalitis in some.

Until now, scientists knew that herpesviruses travel quickly to reach neurons located deep inside the body, but the mechanism by which they advance remained a mystery.

Smith's team conducted a variety of experiments with VP1/2 to demonstrate its important role in transporting the virus, including artificial activation and genetic mutation of the protein. The team studied the herpesvirus in animals, and also in human and animal cells in culture under high-resolution microscopy. In one experiment, scientists mutated the virus with a slower form of the protein dyed red, and raced it against a healthy virus dyed green. They observed that the healthy virus outran the mutated version down nerves to the neuron body to insert DNA and establish infection.

"Remarkably, this viral protein can be artificially activated, and in these conditions it zips around within cells in the absence of any virus. It is striking to watch," Smith says.

He says that understanding how the viruses move within people, especially from the skin to the nervous system, can help better prevent the virus from spreading.

Additionally, Smith says, "By learning how the virus infects our nervous system, we can mimic this process to treat unrelated neurologic diseases. Even now, laboratories are working on how to use herpesviruses to deliver genes into the nervous system and kill cancer cells."

Smith's team will next work to better understand how the protein functions. He notes that many researchers use viruses to learn how neurons are connected to the brain.

"Some of our mutants will advance brain mapping studies by resolving these connections more clearly than was previously possible," he says.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Northwestern University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Sofia?V. Zaichick, Kevin?P. Bohannon, Ami Hughes, Patricia?J. Sollars, Gary?E. Pickard, Gregory?A. Smith. The Herpesvirus VP1/2 Protein Is an Effector of Dynein-Mediated Capsid Transport and Neuroinvasion. Cell Host & Microbe, 2013; 13 (2): 193 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2013.01.009

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/most_popular/~3/DpfJns9Ndl0/130328091754.htm

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Windows Blue: Screenshots, whispers, and the promise of a fresher OS

Don't confuse Windows Blue with Windows 9. Still, the OS upgrade may pack some worthwhile goodies, including Internet Explorer 11.?

By Matthew Shaer / March 25, 2013

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer shows a Surface tablet before the launch of Windows 8 operating system in New York. Windows Blue, an updated version of Windows 8, could hit computers later this year.

Reuters

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Although Microsoft has declined to talk about it, Windows Blue ? an upgrade to Windows 8 ? almost certainly exists, and will most likely be hitting computers and mobile devices sometime this year. The latest Windows Blue leaks arrived over the weekend, with a series of screenshots and videos of Windows Blue, including an in-depth, hands-on WinBeta clip.?

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It's worth noting that Windows Blue isn't Windows 9. Nor is it an overhauled version of Windows 8. Instead, it's a rejiggering, a tweaking, a refining of the original Windows 8 OS. Among the updates: More color options and the ability to better?organize, resize, and customize tiles. Multitasking will be easier with Windows Blue, says WinBeta, as will managing gads of desktop traffic.?

"The biggest changes are really in the settings part of the Start Screen," Tom Warren of The Verge recently wrote. "Users can now access new networking and apps sections that provide access to additional options not available in Windows 8. Networking lets you switch connections on and off, and there's a quick way to add VPN settings too. In the new Apps section you can view how much storage apps are taking up and also take control of when notifications are shown thanks to a new quiet mode."?

Windows 8 sales were steady if slightly underwhelming through the holiday shopping season ? more recently, Information Week reported that Windows 8 sales seemed to be "stalled." Will Windows Blue bring attention back to the platform in the longterm? Unclear. But over at?Beta News, Joe Wilcox argues that at the very least, Blue represents a positive development for Microsoft, which is finally speeding up its OS development cycle.?

"[The] situation is this: Google cranks out new Android, Chrome and Chrome OS updates at frenetic pace, along with a plethora of supporting services," Wilcox writes. "Meanwhile, Microsoft development, by comparison, is more like IBM at the end of the mainframe era set against the PC. Microsoft really, really,?really?needs to pick up the pace."?

Interestingly, WebProNews believes Windows Blue will ship with Internet Explorer 11 ? a good reason, in of itself, to upgrade. Launch date of Windows Blue is unclear, but we'd put our money on the early fall ? more or less a full year after the initial release of Windows 8.?

For?more tech news, follow us on?Twitter @venturenaut.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/gHWHTJMHqGk/Windows-Blue-Screenshots-whispers-and-the-promise-of-a-fresher-OS

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Italian court ruling could extend Amanda Knox case for years

Italy?s highest court has ordered that Amanda Knox and her Italian former boyfriend face a retrial for their alleged roles in the murder of Meredith Kercher, potentially extending a highly emotional case that has already lasted six years for many more.

The Supreme Court in Rome overturned the 2011 acquittal of Ms. Knox and her ex-boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, for the 2007 murder of the 21-year-old British student in the historic walled town of Perugia.

Knox, who is now 25 and a student at the University of Washington in Seattle, said the decision was ?painful? and upsetting. She had ?thought the nightmare was over,? said her lawyer, Carlo Dalla Vedova.

On the opposing side, a lawyer for Kercher?s family, Francesco Maresca, said: ?This is what we wanted.?

RECOMMENDED: Amanda Knox freed: A timeline of key events

Under Italy?s painfully slow, frequently dysfunctional system, it is not unusual for cases to last years, because even after being convicted, defendants are entitled to two levels of appeal.

The retrial will be held in front of an appeals in court in Florence, in the neighboring region of Tuscany, in central Italy. It is likely to start next year.

"It was painful to receive the news," Knox said in a statement, adding that the prosecution case "has been repeatedly revealed to be completely unfounded and unfair."

She did not say whether she would return to Italy for the hearings, but the chances are considered highly unlikely.

Knox has been living in her hometown of Seattle since her acquittal, pursuing her studies and working on a book about her experiences.

FILE - In this Sept. 26, 2008 file photo, American murder suspect Amanda Knox , center, is escorted by Italian penitentiary police officers to Perugia's court at the end of a hearing, central Italy. ... more? FILE - In this Sept. 26, 2008 file photo, American murder suspect Amanda Knox , center, is escorted by Italian penitentiary police officers to Perugia's court at the end of a hearing, central Italy. On Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2009 Rudy Hermann Guede, of the Ivory Coast, appealing his conviction for murdering British student Meredith Kercher in Italy, testified Wednesday that he heard the victim arguing with American defendant, Amanda Knox, in the case minutes before she was slain. Guede's appeals process began Wednesday even as the initial trial implicating American student Amanda Knox, of Seattle, and Knox's ex-boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, continued. (AP Photo/Pier Paolo Cito, files) less? ?

The eagerly anticipated memoir, called ?Waiting to be Heard,? is due to be published on April 30 and will coincide with her first television interview on the ABC network in the US.

But she now faces the threat of a request for her extradition from the US back to Italy for the retrial.

Under an extradition treaty agreed in 1984, the two countries are obliged to extradite anyone charged with or convicted of an extraditable offense, or any offense punishable by a prison sentence of more than one year. US law, however, prevents someone from being tried more than once for the same offense.

Rome would have to provide the American authorities with documents to demonstrate they have "probable cause to believe" that Knox was involved in the murder of Kercher.

Her lawyer, Dalla Vedova, said it was very unlikely she would turn up for the retrial. "If the court orders another trial, if she is convicted at that trial and if the conviction is upheld by the highest court, then Italy could seek her extradition," he told reporters in Rome.

It would then be up to the US authorities to decide whether to accede to the request.

The Supreme Court in Rome could have upheld their acquittals, in which case the saga would have been closed for good.

The judges? decision to order a retrial is a heavy blow for Knox and Sollecito, who was meant to be celebrating his 29th birthday on Tuesday.

The Supreme Court, also known as the Court of Cassation, ruled that the grounds for their acquittal were shaky.

The exact reasons for their decision, and the points of law that they have called into question, will not be known until the judges release their full ruling, which will take up to 90 days.

The pair had served four years behind bars when their murder convictions were overturned by a court in Perugia in 2011.

The appeals court in Perugia criticised many key aspects of the original police investigation and the prosecution?s case.

In particular, they said prosecutors had failed to establish a convincing motive for the killing and that DNA evidence relating to two key bits of evidence ? a strap from Miss Kercher?s bra and the alleged murder weapon, a kitchen knife ? was inconclusive.

But the presiding judge left many questions about the murder unanswered when he refused to rule on whether the crime was committed by a lone killer or more than one person.

In a 144-page document explaining its ruling, the appeals court said that ?it is not this court?s role to suggest how the crime actually unfolded ? nor whether there was one perpetrator or more than one.?

Prosecutors alleged that Kercher was killed by Sollecito and Knox as a result of a four-way sex game that spun horribly out of control.

They said the murder was stoked by drugs, domestic friction between Knox and her British housemate, and sexual jealousy.

The other person accused of the crime, Rudy Guede, a local drifter who was born in Ivory Coast but adopted by an Italian family, is serving a 16-year sentence having undergone a separate trial.

Knox, who stayed up until 2 a.m. Seattle time waiting for the court?s decision, said in her statement: ?The prosecution responsible for the many discrepancies in their work must be made to answer for them, for Raffaele's sake, my sake, and most especially for the sake of Meredith's family. Our hearts go out to them.

"No matter what happens, my family and I will face this continuing legal battle as we always have, confident in the truth and with our heads held high in the face of wrongful accusations and unreasonable adversity."

Mr. Sollecito lives in Verona in northern Italy, where he is studying the use of robotic instruments in surgery. Neither he nor Knox were in court on Monday.

RECOMMENDED: Amanda Knox freed: A timeline of key events

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italian-court-ruling-could-extend-amanda-knox-murder-124444595.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini ? Release Date and Specs rumors

After the successful unveiling of the Samsung Galaxy S4, the company has started focusing on other important releases of the year. One such smartphone is the Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini.
It seems that Samsung is on its way to unveil the mini version of its new flagship device just the company released the Mini version of the Galaxy S3. So if the reports are true, then we might soon get to see this new smartphone, the Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini.

Galaxy S4 Mini
The Galaxy S4 Mini will be a low power version of the Galaxy S4. Not only will it be low powered, but it will also have a smaller screen and will not have many of the unique features that you get in the original Galaxy S4. To make it simple and straight forward for you, we should not expect too much from the Galaxy S4 Mini, because similar to the Galaxy S3 Mini, the Galaxy S4 will have the outer look and feel of its original version (the Galaxy S4), it will be very much different on the inside.
The Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini (model number GT-I9190) will have a 4.3-inch Super AMOLED touchscreen display with a pixel density of 256 ppi. The device will not have the Exynos 5 chipset nor will it have the quad-core processor. Instead the device will be powered by a 1.6 GHz dual-core processor, standard GPU and 1 or 2 GB of RAM. It will run on one of the latest versions of Android operating system, 4.2.2 Jelly Bean. Even though this smartphone is supposed to be the low powered version of the Galaxy S4, it might not have any of the ground breaking features present on the Galaxy S4.
We fear that Samsung might once again disappoint us with the Mini version of its flagship device as the device will nowhere be comparable with the original version. This smartphone is expected to be announced by the month of June or July this year. Let us wait and watch, eventually Samsung will make the announcement and things will be clear.

Source: http://www.captees.com/6347-samsung-galaxy-s4-mini-release-date-and-specs-rumors/

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Text Mining Uncovers U.S. Emotion and British Reserve

An analysis reveals that writers' expressions of sentiment on opposite sides of the pond have grown apart in recent decades


browser in a book store The frequency of occurrence of certain words has evolved differently in US and British books over the last few decades. Image: Homer Sykes/Getty

If you associate modern British fiction with the cool, detached tones of Martin Amis and Julian Barnes, and US fiction with Jonathan Franzen's emotional inner worlds or John Irving's sentimentality, it seems you have good reason. An analysis of the digitized texts of English-language books over the past century concludes that, since the 1980s, words that carry emotional content have become significantly more common in US books than in British ones.

The study, by anthropologist Alberto Acerbi of the University of Bristol, UK, and his colleagues, takes advantage of Google?s database of more than 5 million digitally scanned books from the past several centuries. This resource has previously been used to examine the evolution of literary styles and trends in literary expressions of individualism.

Such mining of the cultural information made available by new technologies has been called ?culturomics?. Its advocates think that these approaches can unearth trends in social opinions and norms that are otherwise concealed within vast swathes of data.

?Language use in books reflects what people are talking about and thinking about during a particular time, so Google Books provides a fascinating window into the past,? says psychologist Jean Twenge of San Diego State University in California.

The latest results certainly seem to show that familiar narratives about social mood are reflected in the literature (both fiction and non-fiction) of the twentieth century. Acerbi and his colleagues find that, whereas words connoting happy emotions show peaks of usage in the ?roaring twenties? and the ?swinging sixties?, sad words come to the fore during the years of the Second World War.

But there are surprises too: the First World War doesn?t seem to register on this happy?sad index, for example. By the same measure, happiness seems to be rising since the 1990s, although it is too early to see whether the global recession will reverse that because the database extends only to 2008.

Historical trends
?The relationship between historical events and collective mood is complicated,? Acerbi admits, ?but just by doing a somewhat crude analysis of emotion words it is possible to find trends that resonate with what we know about history.? He hopes that further analysis might reveal, for example, whether literature is ahead of its time or only slowly reflects other changes.

?This is a fascinating look at how two cultures have changed over time, especially how world events influence the expression of emotion in media,? says Twenge.

Overall, the use of emotion-related words in English-language books declined over the twentieth century. But distinguishing between books written using American or British English (about 1 million and 230,000, respectively) told another story.

The authors found that, despite the overall decline, emotion words have become relatively more frequent in US texts than in British books since about 1980. Conversely, before then, any differences between books from the two sides of the Atlantic had been minor. Such changes were not seen for general words selected at random. ?Our results ? support the popular notion that American authors express more emotion than the British,? they write.

Shifting styles
A similar change is seen in the usage of ?content-free? words, such as pronouns and prepositions (such as you, us, about, within). Acerbi and his colleagues interpret this as indicating that the shift in emotionality is coupled to a general shift in literary style. US texts, they say, are becoming increasingly prolix.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=0f58c5c9b9fd15db001b5375ad2b6314

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Build Your Career Master Plan with a Mind Map

Build Your Career Master Plan with a Mind MapA career plan is a map that guides you to where you really want to go professionally. While there are several approaches to career planning and mapping your way to your next job, a mind map is an excellent tool for brainstorming and organizing your career ideas?especially if you're not sure yet what you want to do.

As Farnoosh writes on the Prolific Living blog, mind maps help you visually and textually organize your thoughts in a way that gives you a structure, linking related concepts. You can use a mind map to brainstorm and discover your career purpose.

This example includes what Farnoosh calls the "foundational pillars" of your career plan?things you need to explore and answer to find your ideal career and plan where you want to go. They include:

  • Current job or role
  • Career goals and dreams (short and long term)
  • Your big why: Why you want to do the work
  • Core values: Values you're not willing to compromise on, such as flexibility or integrity
  • Limits and boundaries: What you're not willing to do or whom you wouldn't want to work with
  • Top strengths
  • Desired strengths
  • Education investment in yourself: What you're willing to invest for yourself and career
  • Execution strategies: What you might do (e.g., change jobs) to accomplish your plan
  • Role models
  • Ideal client or company
  • Ideal professional self: Describe how you want to see yourself and been seen as professionally

As you fill out the answers to these, no doubt other branches and levels will surface, creating a wide web of ideas to help you get a clearer picture of not only where you want to go but also, perhaps, how to get there.

The Power of Mind Maps to Build Your Career Master Plan | Prolific Living

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/eaiA0g3YOaQ/build-your-career-master-plan-with-a-mind-map

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Giant squid family secrets revealed

Giant squid around the world are "basically identical" despite looking very different, scientists say.

The super-sized cephalopods live deep in the oceans and are little-known by the scientific community.

An international team of researchers investigated rare samples of the elusive animals' DNA to reveal their family secrets.

They discovered that there is just a single species of squid with no population structure.

The findings are published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

The giant squid has been a source of fascination both before and beyond its formal description in 1857 by Danish biologist Japetus Steenstrup.

Its deep-dwelling lifestyle is largely unknown but specimens have been found globally, with the exception of Arctic and Antarctic waters.

Inspiring tales of sea monsters such as the ship-destroying Kraken, giant squid are rumoured to reach 50m in length but scientists say an 18m estimate is more appropriate according to studies.

A further debate about the mysterious animals relates to how many species there are, with researchers suggesting there could be as many as eight based on differences in appearance and where they have been found.

"Your general [giant] squid is a long, scrawny beast: it's got a long thin body and long thin arms," said Professor M. Thomas P. Gilbert, from the Natural History Museum of Denmark.

"But off [the coast of] Japan for example, they're much shorter and stubbier. Their arms are fatter and much shorter."

Prof Gilbert worked with colleagues from the University of Copenhagen and researchers from Australia, Japan, France, Ireland and Portugal to understand how the seemingly diverse squid are related.

The team took 43 tissue samples from a variety of sources: stranded animals, remains found in the stomachs of beached sperm whales and accidental by-catch. They then used DNA sequencing techniques to understand the genetic makeup of the squid.

'Very weird'

Results revealed that the squid are all one species.

Genetic diversity was also found to be very low, meaning that the squid are genetically very similar despite being found all over the world and varying greatly in appearance.

"There's normally local distinction between [animals] genetically," Prof Gilbert told BBC Nature.

"Things that live in one area eventually become different from things in other areas but [giant squid] are basically identical everywhere."

Prof Gilbert described the findings as "very weird" but suggested that migration could be the key reason specimens from as far apart as Japan and Florida, US are genetically so similar.

"We speculate the larval stage must drift globally in the currents then dive to the nearest dark, deep spot when they are large enough, thus stopping any [population] structure appearing," he explained.

"Instead of the adults and their young living in the same place, the young distribute to a completely new place on the Earth every time."

Judging by their size and remarkable adaptations for the environment, scientists believe the giant squid have a substantial population. Another theory to explain the large numbers of identical animals is the possibility of a rapid and recent population boom.

According to Prof Gilbert, this expansion could have been caused by either a decrease in predators or an increase in prey numbers of the giant squid.

"This year is the 200th anniversary of Steenstrup... So on his 200th birthday we can say we know more about it!" he told BBC Nature.

The evolutionary biologist commented that although the team had succeeded in answering one question about the mysterious squid, they have uncovered many more.

Join BBC Nature on Facebook and Twitter @BBCNature.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/21829711

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Friday, March 8, 2013

'Iron Man 3' Director Peels Off Mandarin's Real-Life 'Cloak'

Shane Black goes deep into the villain's origins and sheds the comic's Chinese stereotypes along the way.
By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Kara Warner


Ben Kingsley as Mandarin in "Iron Man 3"
Photo: Walt Disney Pictures

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1703155/iron-man-3-mandarin-origin.jhtml

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Thursday's College Basketball

EAST

Butler 73, UMass 62

SOUTH

Coppin St. 69, Bethune-Cookman 61

Florida St. 53, Virginia 51

Georgia 72, Kentucky 62

Morgan St. 78, Florida A&M 67

NC Central 68, Hampton 64

Nicholls St. 90, Lamar 63

Norfolk St. 55, NC A&T 48

SC State 62, Delaware St. 60

SE Louisiana 79, McNeese St. 68

Savannah St. 71, Md.-Eastern Shore 54

MIDWEST

Bellevue 64, Rochester (Mich.) 50

Cardinal Stritch 74, Jamestown 56

Indiana Wesleyan 62, Lourdes 60, OT

McMurry 94, Crowley's Ridge 52

Penn St. 66, Northwestern 59

SOUTHWEST

No scores reported from the SOUTHWEST.

FAR WEST

No scores reported from the FAR WEST.

TOURNAMENT

Atlantic Sun Conference

First Round

SC-Upstate 76, Jacksonville 62

Stetson 67, ETSU 46

Big South Conference

Quarterfinals

Charleston Southern 54, Winthrop 47

Gardner-Webb 71, Campbell 57

Liberty 61, High Point 60

VMI 90, Longwood 86

Lone Star Conference

First Round

Tarleton St. 72, E. New Mexico 59

Missouri Valley Conference

First Round

Drake 81, Bradley 66

Ohio Valley Conference

Second Round

Tennessee St. 88, Morehead St. 75

EXHIBITION

Dordt 79, Northwest U. 59

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/03/07/3273243/thursdays-college-basketball.html

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