Sunday, February 24, 2013

Kerry takes case on Syria to Europe, Mideast

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Secretary of State John Kerry is embarking on his first official overseas voyage, bringing new ideas to capitals in Europe and the Middle East on how to end nearly two years of brutal violence in Syria.

Kerry leaves Washington on Sunday on a grueling nine-nation, 10-day trip that will bring him to America's traditional western European allies of Britain, Germany, France and Italy along with Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar. In addition to Syria, he will focus on conflicts in Mali and Afghanistan and Iran's nuclear program.

Kerry has said he is eager to discuss new ways of convincing Syrian President Bashar Assad to step down and usher in a democratic transition in the country that has been wracked by increasing violence that has killed at least 70,000 people. He has not offered details of his ideas but officials say they revolve around increasing pressure on Assad and his inner circle.

Kerry begins his trip in London where he will see senior British officials on a range of issues, from Afghanistan to the status of the Falkland Islands, over which Britain is in a major dispute with Argentina.

He then travels to Germany to discuss trans-Atlantic issues with German youth in Berlin, where he spent time as a child as the son of an American diplomat posted to the divided Cold War city. He will also meet with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in the German capital.

In Paris, Kerry will discuss France's ongoing intervention in Mali. And in Rome, he'll attend a meeting with Syrian opposition leaders.

U.S. officials have said the trip will be primarily a "listening tour" when it comes to Syria and won't result in immediate shifts in U.S. policy that has until now stayed clear of military support for the rebels fighting Assad.

Despite the numerous Middle East stops. Kerry will not travel to Israel or the Palestinian territories. He will wait to visit them when he accompanies President Barack Obama there in March.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kerry-takes-case-syria-europe-mideast-081440189.html

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Friday, February 15, 2013

Boehner Challenges Senate to Enact Obama's SOTU Agenda

While the majority of congressional Republicans oppose most of the policies President Obama outlined during his State of the Union address Tuesday, House Speaker John Boehner deflected attention away from Republican resistance, challenging Senate Democrats to prove there is support for the president's proposals.

"The president laid out his agenda and it's one I largely disagreed with," Boehner, R-Ohio, said. "It was largely more of the same: more tax hikes, more stimulus spending and the president likes to attack Congress. But if he's serious about enacting his agenda, I think it must start with a part of this Congress that his party controls, the United States Senate."

Boehner questioned whether there is sufficient support in the Senate for the president's proposals for a national cap-and-trade energy tax, more stimulus spending or new tax increases.

"What can he get passed in the United States Senate?" Boehner asked. "This isn't the agenda that many Americans are looking for, and I think many in the president's own party won't support those ideas."

Senate Democrats are expected later today to introduce their plan to offset the looming sequester cuts for the rest of the year. That proposal is expected to replace the across-the-board cuts with a concoction of alternative savings derived from agriculture subsidies and defense spending, in addition to new tax increases.

Boehner met with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid this morning in the Capitol, but he didn't reveal much of the discussion.

"When the Senate passes a plan, we'll be happy to take a look at it," Boehner said. "Until they pass a plan, there's no reason for me to comment on what they're going to do or not do."

Boehner once again emphasized that Republicans passed legislation to replace the sequester on two occasions in the 112 th Congress, and that he personally prefers to avert the ominous cuts that will remain in place until lawmakers approve a package of savings that addresses the growing national deficit.

"The sequester will be in effect until there are cuts and reforms that put us on a path to balance the budget over the next 10 years," Boehner said. "Period."

While the president called on Congress to fix the country's crumbling infrastructure, Boehner said he is "committed to working to find a funding source so we can begin to repair America's aging infrastructure," but leaders are struggling to identify a way to pay for it.

"The problems we have are chiefly one of resources, and it's still trying to find a funding source to repair the nation's infrastructure is still a big goal of mine," he said. "The president talked about infrastructure but he didn't talk about how to pay for it, and it's easy to go out there and be Santa Clause and talk about all of the things you want to give away but at some point somebody's got to pay the bill."

Boehner also said he doubted Obama's ability to take executive action on climate control, an issue the president highlighted during his address Tuesday night.

"I don't know what actions the president thinks he can take," Boehner said. "I don't think he has the ability to impose a national energy tax on Americans without the authority of Congress. So he may attempt to do this, but I'm not sure how much he can really do."

Asked whether the House will wait for the Senate to act on immigration overhaul before the House considers legislation, Boehner said no decision has been made and there are still "a lot of issues that we have to deal with" that are preventing negotiators from striking an agreement.

"I've done everything I can to try to encourage those bipartisan conversations to continue," he said. "Our border is not secure [and] the ability of our government to enforce the law has its share of problems as well.

"I want my colleagues to continue to work together to see if they can't come to a solution that's acceptable here in the House," he added.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boehner-challenges-senate-enact-obamas-sotu-agenda-175823651--abc-news-politics.html

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Cell circuits remember their history: Engineers design new synthetic biology circuits that combine memory and logic

Feb. 11, 2013 ? MIT engineers have created genetic circuits in bacterial cells that not only perform logic functions, but also remember the results, which are encoded in the cell's DNA and passed on for dozens of generations.

The circuits, described in the Feb. 10 online edition of Nature Biotechnology, could be used as long-term environmental sensors, efficient controls for biomanufacturing, or to program stem cells to differentiate into other cell types.

"Almost all of the previous work in synthetic biology that we're aware of has either focused on logic components or on memory modules that just encode memory. We think complex computation will involve combining both logic and memory, and that's why we built this particular framework to do so," says Timothy Lu, an MIT assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science and biological engineering and senior author of the Nature Biotechnology paper.

Lead author of the paper is MIT postdoc Piro Siuti. Undergraduate John Yazbek is also an author.

More than logic

Synthetic biologists use interchangeable genetic parts to design circuits that perform a specific function, such as detecting a chemical in the environment. In that type of circuit, the target chemical would generate a specific response, such as production of green fluorescent protein (GFP).

Circuits can also be designed for any type of Boolean logic function, such as AND gates and OR gates. Using those kinds of gates, circuits can detect multiple inputs. In most of the previously engineered cellular logic circuits, the end product is generated only as long as the original stimuli are present: Once they disappear, the circuit shuts off until another stimulus comes along.

Lu and his colleagues set out to design a circuit that would be irreversibly altered by the original stimulus, creating a permanent memory of the event. To do this, they drew on memory circuits that Lu and colleagues designed in 2009. Those circuits depend on enzymes known as recombinases, which can cut out stretches of DNA, flip them, or insert them. Sequential activation of those enzymes allows the circuits to count events happening inside a cell.

Lu designed the new circuits so that the memory function is built into the logic gate itself. With a typical cellular AND gate, the two necessary inputs activate proteins that together turn on expression of an output gene. However, in the new circuits, the inputs stably alter regions of DNA that control GFP production. These regions, known as promoters, recruit the cellular proteins responsible for transcribing the GFP gene into messenger RNA, which then directs protein assembly.

For example, in one circuit described in the paper, two DNA sequences called terminators are interposed between the promoter and the output gene (GFP, in this case). Each of these terminators inhibits the transcription of the output gene and can be flipped by a different recombinase enzyme, making the terminator inactive.

Each of the circuit's two inputs turns on production of one of the recombinase enzymes needed to flip a terminator. In the absence of either input, GFP production is blocked. If both are present, both terminators are flipped, resulting in their inactivation and subsequent production of GFP.

Once the DNA terminator sequences are flipped, they can't return to their original state -- the memory of the logic gate activation is permanently stored in the DNA sequence. The sequence also gets passed on for at least 90 generations. Scientists wanting to read the cell's history can either measure its GFP output, which will stay on continuously, or if the cell has died, they can retrieve the memory by sequencing its DNA.

Using this design strategy, the researchers can create all two-input logic gates and implement sequential logic systems. "It's really easy to swap things in and out," says Lu, who is also a member of MIT's Synthetic Biology Center. "If you start off with a standard parts library, you can use a one-step reaction to assemble any kind of function that you want."

Long-term memory

Such circuits could also be used to create a type of circuit known as a digital-to-analog converter. This kind of circuit takes digital inputs -- for example, the presence or absence of single chemicals -- and converts them to an analog output, which can be a range of values, such as continuous levels of gene expression.

For example, if the cell has two circuits, each of which expresses GFP at different levels when they are activated by their specific input, those inputs can produce four different analog output levels. Moreover, by measuring how much GFP is produced, the researchers can figure out which of the inputs were present.

That type of circuit could offer better control over the production of cells that generate biofuels, drugs or other useful compounds. Instead of creating circuits that are always on, or using promoters that need continuous inputs to control their output levels, scientists could transiently program the circuit to produce at a certain level. The cells and their progeny would always remember that level, without needing any more information.

Used as environmental sensors, such circuits could also provide very precise long-term memory. "You could have different digital signals you wanted to sense, and just have one analog output that summarizes everything that was happening inside," Lu says.

This platform could also allow scientists to more accurately control the fate of stem cells as they develop into other cell types. Lu is now working on engineering cells to follow sequential development steps, depending on what kinds of inputs they receive from the environment.

Michael Jewett, an assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering at Northwestern University, says the new design represents a "huge advancement in DNA-encoded memory storage."

"I anticipate that the innovations reported here will help to inspire larger synthetic biology efforts that push the limits of engineered biological systems," says Jewett, who was not involved in the research.

The research was funded by the Office of Naval Research and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

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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 Anne Trafton.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Piro Siuti, John Yazbek, Timothy K Lu. Synthetic circuits integrating logic and memory in living cells. Nature Biotechnology, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nbt.2510

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://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/biochemistry/~3/scKba2x8aKQ/130211104047.htm

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

6.9 deep quake hits Colombia, no injuries reported

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) ? A powerful but deep earthquake shook a broad swath of Colombia and Ecuador on Saturday, sending frightened people fleeing into the streets, but no serious injuries or major damage were reported.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the 9:16 a.m. (14:16 GMT) quake had a magnitude of 6.9.It was centered about 7 miles (12 kilometers) from the Colombian town of Pasto and 92 miles (154 kilometers) below the surface.

The quake was felt in the Colombian capital of Bogota, some 340 miles (545 kilometers) to the northeast, and across much of neighboring Ecuador.

In the province of Narino, where the quake hit, secretary of government Jaime Rodriguez said officials had reports of three people hurt when roof tiles fell in the town of El Charco along the Pacific Coast. Officials in Ecuador also reported no significant damage.

Colombian television showed people fleeing into the streets of southwestern cities such as Cali, and small cracks in the walls of some buildings.

Mayor Paulo Cesar Rodriguez of the town of Tuquerres near the epicenter said the quake was "very strong and felt for a long time" but that there were no reports of injuries in the town of 42,300.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/6-9-deep-quake-hits-colombia-no-injuries-180242205.html

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Friday, February 8, 2013

What happens if you don't have a will? | Financialuae's Blog

If you don?t have a will when you die, your money, property and possessions will be shared out according to the law, instead of how you want them to be. This can mean they pass to someone you hadn?t intended, or that someone you want to pass things on to ends up with nothing. Being married does not automatically mean that your husband or wife is your sole, or even main, beneficiary.

Why you should have a will

If you die without leaving a will, the law decides who gets what and how much. You have no say in the matter and your hard-earned assets could end up with people who you think are undeserving.

By leaving a will that clearly states who should get your property and money when you die, you can prevent unnecessary distress at an already difficult time for your family or friends.

What is intestacy?

Dying without a will is called intestacy or dying intestate.? will 2

The law about exactly who gets what is different in depending on where you live and where assets are held, but a will is the best way of ensuring that your wishes prevail.

Common rules if you don?t make a will

If you?are married, your husband or wife may inherit most or all of your estate and your children may not get anything. This could be the case even if you are separated.

If you are not married and not in a civil partnership, your partner is not legally entitled to anything when you die, no matter how long you have been together.

If you have children or grandchildren, how much they are legally entitled to will depend on where you live and where your assets are held, but if you make a will you can decide this yourself.

Any Inheritance Tax that your estate has to pay may be higher than it would be if you had made a will.

If you die with no living close relatives, your whole estate could be passed to the government.

Considerations if you have children

If you have children under the age of majority, a will allows you to specify who should be their legal guardian(s) should both parents die. You therefore get to choose who will bring up your children, not any government representatives who could select a family member who is not your preferred choice.

If the chosen guardian is in a different country, which is often the case for expatriates, you can also?organise a simple legal document that allows you to select an interim guardian, who can look after them until your legally specified guardian takes over.

How to write a will

My advice is to see a lawyer, experienced in this area. Whilst it is possible to write a will yourself or use a will writing service, it is generally agreed that lawyers make as much money sorting out poorly written wills than arranging them in the first place. For people who have assets in more than one country, there are additional legal complications, so for something this important it is worth paying for proper advice.

Matters to consider

You need to draw up a list of your assets and who you want to receive them in the event if your death. As well as properties, investments and bank accounts, you may also want to leave specific personal possessions such as jewellery or works of art to certain people. If you own a business, you?ll need to consider what would happen to that.

When writing a will you?ll need to name at least one executor. This is the person who will ensure that your will is dealt with on your death and your wishes followed or ?executed?. Ideally this person needs to be someone who comfortable dealing with paperwork, although a lawyer can assist them.

The next step

At Holborn Assets we offer a comprehensive will writing service headed by a lawyer with many years of experience in family law. We offer a face to face service and comprehensive advice on the best way in structuring a will to meet your needs. We also offer advice on suitable trusts, inheritance tax planning and arranging an Enduring Power of Attorney, as well as how Sharia law could affect you.

Contact me at keren@holbornassets.com for further information.

You may also want to check out a previous article on the topic of wills: http://financialuae.me/2011/05/11/where-theres-a-will/

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A qualified and experienced Independent Financial Adviser based in Dubai, UAE. Professional and ethical. Freelance writer on personal financial issues & the On Your Side column in The National. Regular radio guest.

Source: http://financialuae.me/2013/02/06/what-happens-if-you-dont-have-a-will/

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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Paired genes in stem cells shed new light on gene organization and regulation

Feb. 4, 2013 ? Whitehead Institute researchers have determined that DNA transcription, the process that produces messenger RNA (mRNA) templates used in protein production, also runs in the opposite direction along the DNA to create corresponding long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs). Moreover, the mRNAs and lncRNAs are transcribed coordinately as stem cells differentiate into other cell types. This surprising finding could redefine our understanding of gene organization and its regulation.

"It's a surprise to me that genes come in pairs," says Whitehead Member Richard Young, who is also a professor of biology at MIT. "At any one of the 20,000 protein-coding genes that are active in human stem cells, a lncRNA gene located upstream is also transcribed. So much effort has gone into studying protein-coding genes, and yet we have missed this concept that all protein-coding genes come in mRNA/lncRNA pairs. If you activate the mRNA gene, you're going to activate the lncRNA gene."

Young and his lab report their findings this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Until now, scientists thought transcription machinery attaches to DNA at certain points called promoters and moves just in one direction along the DNA to create mRNAs from protein-coding genes. Other RNAs that are not protein templates, including lncRNAs, are also created by transcription, but despite their important roles in in regulation of gene expression, development and disease, scientists knew little about how lncRNA transcription is initiated or where most lncRNA genes reside in the genome.

By looking at human and mouse embryonic stem cells, researchers in the Young lab found something astonishing -- most lncRNA genes are located adjacent mRNA genes, and the transcription of about 65% of lncRNAs originates at active promoters associated with these mRNAs' genes and runs "upstream" and in the opposite direction from the promoter.

When the transcription machinery attaches to a promoter, it seems that it is just as likely to move in one direction and transcribe the mRNA as it is to move in opposite direction and transcribe the neighboring lncRNA.

The researchers also noticed that as embryonic stem cells begin differentiating into other cell types, the mRNA/lncRNA pairs are regulated in the same way -- the transcription of paired mRNAs and lncRNAs is upregulated or downregulated together. This further confirms the relationship between the transcription of mRNAs and lncRNAs.

"I think it's quite a breakthrough," says Alla Sigova, who is a postdoctoral researcher in the Young lab and a co-author of the paper in PNAS. "This provides a unifying principle for production of mRNAs and lncRNAs, and may lead to new insights into lncRNA misregulation in disease. For example, some mRNAs are up- or downregulated in cancer, so their lncRNA partners could potentially contribute to cancer."

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants HG002668, GM34277, and DK090122, the American Gastroenterological Association, the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation, and National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support (Core) Grant P30-CA14051.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research. The original article was written by Nicole Giese Rura.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Alla A. Sigova, Alan C. Mullen, Benoit Molinie, Sumeet Gupta, David A. Orlando, Matthew G. Guenther, Albert E. Almada, Charles Lin, Phillip A. Sharp, Cosmas C. Giallourakis, and Richard A. Young. Divergent transcription of long noncoding RNA/mRNA gene pairs in embryonic stem cells. PNAS, 2013 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1221904110

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/health_medicine/genes/~3/irPDBbKPfaI/130204153608.htm

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