Showing posts with label clues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clues. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Mouse body clock study offers clues to possible jet lag cure

LONDON | Thu Aug 29, 2013 12:22pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists have found a genetic mechanism in mice that hampers their body clock's ability to adjust to changes in patterns of light and dark, and say their results could someday lead to the development of drugs to combat jet lag.

Researchers from Britain's Oxford University and from the Swiss drug firm Roche used mice to analyze patterns of genes in an area of the brain called the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) - which in mammals pulls every cell in the body into the same biological rhythm.

They found that one molecule, called SIK1, is key to how the mice responded to changes in light cycles.

When the scientists blocked the activity of SIK1, the mice recovered faster from disturbances in their daily light and dark cycle that had been designed to induce a form of mouse jet lag.

If the corresponding mechanism can be found and similarly blocked in humans, jet lag may become a thing of the past, the researchers said in their study, published online in the journal Cell on Thursday.

"We're still several years away from a cure for jet lag, but understanding the mechanisms that generate and regulate our circadian clock gives us targets to develop drugs to help bring our bodies in tune with the solar cycle," said Russell Foster, director of Oxford's sleep and circadian neuroscience institute.

He said such drugs could also have broader potential value, including for people with mental illnesses where sleep disturbances are common.

(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)


View the original article here

Saturday, April 27, 2013

NASA Satellite Images Provide Clues to Understanding Fire across the Globe [Slide Show]

For two weeks in April the world was ablaze. NASA satellites documented these infernos, both wild and controlled, as they burned from the U.S. to Australia

By Erin Brodwin


$(document).ready(function () {if ($(window).width() $(function() { var offset = $("#shareFloat").offset(); var topPadding = 60; $(window).scroll(function() { if ($(window).scrollTop() > (offset.top - '30')) { $('#shareFloat').css('top', $(window).scrollTop() - offset.top + topPadding); } else { $('#shareFloat').css('top','20px').css('left','-88px'); }; }); });reddit_url='http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=nasa-satellite-images-fire-across-globe'submit to reddit

The smoke from shifting cultivation, as seen in this image, is extensive. Four days before this photograph was taken, a local newspaper in Laos announced flight delays due to farm-generated smoke that had originated in neighboring Burma.

Image: NASA Jeff Schmaltz, LANCE/EOSDIS MODIS Rapid Response Team, GSFC


Wildfires can start spontaneously; vegetation can become so dry that sunlight can ignite it. Farmers also set deliberate, controlled fires, usually to clear crop residue in preparation for a new planting season. All of those fires play a role in the planet’s carbon cycle, which is why in October 2011 the newly formed NASA Fire and Smoke initiative began using NASA’s MODIS (Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) to track them. The MODIS project consists of two electromagnetic measuring instruments observing Earth’s surface from the satellites Terra and Aqua, which are in polar orbits but travelling in opposite directions; together, they monitor wildfires and agricultural burns across the planet. This month was the first time ever that MODIS captured fires raging almost simultaneously around the globe.


View the Global Fire slide show.


View the original article here