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It's alive! Artificial DNA controls life

It's alive! Artificial DNA controls life

Synthetic genome blazes trail for new drugs and biofuels

By Eric Bland

Discovery Channel

updated 5:12 p.m. ET, Thurs., May 20, 2010

 

It may not quite be "Frankenstein," but for the first time scientists have created an organism controlled by completely human-made DNA.

 

Using the tools of synthetic biology, scientists from the J. Craig Venter Institute installed a completely artificial genome inside a host cell without DNA. Like the bolt of lightning that awakened Frankenstein, the new genome invigorated the host cell, which began to grow and reproduce, albeit with a few problems.

 

The research marks a technical milestone in the synthesis and implantation of artificial DNA. Venter expects the research will lead to cheaper drugs, vaccines and biofuels in several years — and dozens of other companies and researchers are working toward the same goal.

 

"This is the first synthetic cell that's been made," said Venter. "We call it synthetic because the cell is totally derived from a synthetic chromosome, made with four bottles of chemicals on a chemical synthesizer, starting with information in a computer."

 

The research, published Thursday by the journal Science, combines two of Venter's past achievements.

 

In 2007 Venter transplanted the genome of one Mycoplasma bacterium into another. Venter and his colleagues also synthesized a trimmed down, artificial version of Mycoplasma's DNA, a project known as the Minimal Genome Project. Attempts to implant the synthetic DNA all failed, until now.

 

In the current research, Venter and his colleagues, who include Nobel laureate Hamilton Smith, first synthesized Mycoplasma's full genome. Then they added hundreds of thousands of additional base pairs to "watermark" the DNA and distinguish it from a natural one.

 

Venter and his colleagues created a special code, similar to Morse code, to "write" within the DNA itself. Instead of dots and dashes, they used the sequence of four DNA nucleotides, thymine (T), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and adenine (A), as a code for any letter, number or punctuation mark. Using the code, the team included the names of the study co-authors, a website and even several philosophical quotes, complete with punctuation.

 

The completed DNA sequence was more than 1 million base pairs long. The human genome, by comparison, is more than 3 billion base pairs long.

 

Cells build up full sequence
No machine can turn out a single piece of DNA anywhere close to that long, however. Instead, Venter and his colleagues started with many relatively small pieces of DNA. Then the scientists transferred DNA pieces back and forth between a yeast cell and E. coli bacteria, turning the many short pieces into fewer but longer DNA segments.

 

Once the synthetic DNA segment reached the desired length the scientists injected it into a Mycoplasma bacterium that had had its own DNA removed earlier. Needless to say, the process of assembling such a lengthy piece of synthetic DNA was complicated.

 

"I hope the day comes when making genomes is something everyone can do," said Pamela Silver, a systems biologist at Harvard Medical School.

 

Some genes suffered glitches
The new, synthetic DNA "booted up" the bacterium, but not without a few problems: Several of the synthesized genes didn't work properly. And the genes that did work didn't do anything particularly useful, at least by human standards.

 

The Mycoplasma bacteria grew and reproduced, but that was about all. Within several years however, Venter and his colleagues hope to create more exciting bacteria that will speed up the production and drive down the costs of biofuels, vaccines and drugs.

 

Venter has teamed up with a major oil and gas company, and a pharmaceutical company, to help realize these goals.

 

Venter's work falls into a nascent field of science known as synthetic biology. Synthetic biology builds on the decades-old field of genetic engineering. Unlike genetic engineering, where scientists introduce a handful of new genes into an organism, synthetic biology aims to reprogram entire organisms, including bacteria and viruses.

 

The creation and insertion of a synthetic genome more than 1 million base pairs is a technical landmark, said Frances Arnold, a synthetic biologist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. He said the feat showcases scientists' ability to precisely manipulate long sections of DNA.

 

But before consumers see any benefit several significant hurdles have to be solved. One of the biggest problems is that scientists are still searching for the specific genetic code to produce cheap drugs, biofuel and other products.

 

"We can write anything we want," said Arnold. "The problem is that we don't know what to write."

Entry #2,456

Braves beat Reds w/walk-off grand slam

05/20/10 4:27 PM ET

Braves rally on Conrad's walk-off grand slam

By Jon Cooper / Special to MLB.com

 

ATLANTA -- Pinch-hitter Brooks Conrad hit a one-out, walk-off grand slam as the Atlanta Braves pulled off an improbable seven-run rally in the ninth inning to beat the Reds, 10-9, on Thursday.

Conrad's drive to left off Reds closer Francisco Cordero was deflected over the wall at the 380 mark in left-center field by left fielder Laynce Nix. Nate McLouth hit a two-run single in the inning and another run scored on a Miguel Cairo error.

Craig Kimbrel pitched a scoreless ninth to earn his first Major League win.

The rally got Tommy Hanson off the hook. Hanson was roughed up for eight earned runs in 1 2/3 innings and the Braves managed only one earned run and five hits off unbeaten Cincinnati rookie Mike Leake.

The win gave the Braves a 5-2 record in their seven-game, three-team homestand, while the Reds dropped their second in a row for the first time since May 2.

The last team to come back from a six-run deficit to win in the ninth was the Indians on May 25, 2009. They scored seven in the ninth to beat the Rays, 11-10. For the Braves, it's their largest ninth-inning comeback in franchise history. The largest ninth-inning comeback for any team in history is the Tigers on April 25, 1901. They scored 10 in the ninth to overcome a nine-run deficit against Milwaukee for the 14-13 win.

Hanson saw his ERA rise from 2.88 to 4.17 following the shortest start of his career and he has allowed 13 earned runs over his past two starts, covering 8 2/3 innings. He shortest start prior to Thursday afternoon was two innings last year in Aug. 28 in Philadelphia, when he didn't return following an extended rain delay.

Leake appeared headed to 5-0, allowing three runs -- one earned -- on five hits, over six innings, striking out six and walking one. He also induced two double-play grounders, to get him out of jams in the fourth and fifth innings.

Troy Glaus had three hits, while Martin Prado chipped in two hits.

The Reds jumped on Hanson in the second inning, sending 12 men to the plate and scoring eight runs on seven hits, both season-highs. Eight of the runs and six of the hits came with two out.

Hanson hurt himself by allowing a single to Leake, his first of two hits on the day and a walk that loaded the bases. The Reds then broke the game open as the next seven batters reached, with six hits and a walk, including a Joey Votto grand slam and a two-run double by Laynce Nix that signaled the end of Hanson's day.

Nix added a long home run in the fifth to make it 9-1.

The Braves took advantage of four Reds errors, three resulting in their first three runs, as Leake mishanded a throw from Votto in the third and then Cabrera botched a Votto throw allowing two runs to score in the fifth. Leake avoided further trouble, striking out Chipper Jones then getting Brian McCann to ground into an inning-ending 3-6-1 double play.

The Braves head to Pittsburgh for a weekend series, followed by three in Florida, while Cincinnati begins Interleague Play with a three-game weekend set in Cleveland.

Entry #2,455

Report: Amare Stoudemire's mother arrested

Updated: May 19, 2010, 10:51 AM ET

Report: Stoudemire's mother arrested

ESPN.com news services

Phoenix Suns forward Amare Stoudemire's mother was arrested on Saturday in Scottsdale, Ariz., for failing to have an ignition interlock device on her vehicle, according to a report in the Arizona Republic.

Carrie Mae Stoudemire, 54, was stopped at 3:25 p.m. after her Lincoln Navigator was straddling two lanes and going 60 mph, according to the Scottsdale police report. Her eyes were "watery and glassy," according to the officer.

Carrie Stoudemire told the officer the Navigator was rented and she was unaware she needed to have an ignition interlock device on all of her vehicles. She added that she was on her way to an alcohol class.

An ignition interlock device prevents a vehicle from being started if the driver's blood alcohol content, which is collected by exhaling into the device, registers above a pre-set level.

Police said Carrie Stoudemire's driver's license says she must have the device on her vehicles until Oct. 30.

After Carrie Stoudemire refused to participate in a field sobriety test, the officer handcuffed her and put her in the back seat of his patrol car.

According to the report, Amare Stoudemire and another man arrived at the scene a few minutes later. Carrie Stoudemire began to yell "Amar'e!" and asked for a lawyer.

Police said Carrie Stoudemire was charged with speeding, operating a vehicle without an ignition interlock device and failure to drive in a single lane. She was booked into the Scottsdale jail and later released.

Carrie Stoudemire has been in and out of jail throughout Stoudemire's life for charges ranging from drunken driving to drug possession to prostitution. In 2006, she was sentenced to three years in prison in Arizona for aggravated DUI following an accident.

Entry #2,454

Usain Bolt wins 100 in 9.86 secs

Updated: May 19, 2010, 2:06 PM ET

Bolt wins 100 in 9.86 seconds

Associated Press

DAEGU, South Korea -- Usain Bolt won the 100 meters in 9.86 seconds Wednesday in his season debut at the Daegu meet.

The time was 0.28 seconds off the world record of 9.58 he set at last year's world championships in Berlin. He shaved 0.08 seconds off Tyson Gay's 2009 meet record of 9.94.

Jamaican countryman Michael Frater was second in 10.15.

"That race was really wonderful," Bolt told South Korean television network MBC. "I really loved it, and I'm looking forward to next year because it was full of energy."

Bolt, who also holds the world record in the 200, expects to return to Daegu Stadium for the 2011 world championships.

"There is a high possibility of me setting a new world record next year," Bolt said.

He skipped the opening Diamond League meet last week in Doha, Qatar, but has entered the meet Sunday in Shanghai.

Carmelita Jeter of the United States won the women's 100 in 11.00, followed by Beijing Olympic gold medalist Veronica Campbell-Brown of Jamaica in 11.05. Sherone Simpson of Jamaica was third in 11.26.

Ryan Bailey of the United States won the 200 in 20.58, and two-time Olympic champion Angelo Taylor won the 400 with 45.21.

American Bianca Knight won the 200 in 22.92.

The meet, broadcast live in 3-D, was watched by Seoul citizens on large television screens in city center plazas.

Entry #2,453

Today's Thought

"Courage is the mastery of fear, not the absence of fear."

- Mark Twain -

Entry #2,452

Vision #'s

Wednesday 5-19-10

073, 751, 103, 123, 812, 367, 362, 179, 819

444, 549, 823, 667, 627, 058, 435, 177, 828

713, 782, 792, 716, 503, 522, 422, 052, 733

445, 209, 896, 230, 219, 000, 444, 555, 777

4801, 3948, 3918, 8093, 7945, 8769, 2129

Blue Angel

Entry #2,451

Will racism forever be a problem on this planet?

Kids' test answers on race brings mother to tears

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Mother watched daughter take test on racial attitudes and preferences
  • Daughter's test reflected study results that children express bias toward white
  • Black parents address race with young children more than white parents, research shows
  • Special Report "Black or White: Kids on race" AC360 tonight 10 p.m. ET

See parents talk about the different ways they address race with their young children as part of "AC360" special coverage "Black or White: Kids on race" tonight 10 p.m. ET

 

A 5-year-old girl in Georgia is being asked a series of questions in her school library. The girl, who is white, is looking at pictures of five cartoons of girls, all identical except for skin color ranging from light to dark.

 

When asked who the smart child is, she points to a light-skinned doll. When asked who the mean child is she points to a dark-skinned doll. She says a white child is good because "I think she looks like me", and says the black child is ugly because "she's a lot darker."

 

As she answers her mother watches, and gently weeps.

 

Her daughter is taking part in a new CNN pilot study on children's attitudes on race and her answers actually reflect one of the major findings of the study, that white children have an overwhelming bias toward white, and that black children also have a bias toward white but not nearly as strong as the bias shown by the white children.

 

Full coverage: Kids on race

 

Renowned child psychologist and University of Chicago professor Margaret Beale Spencer, a leading researcher in the field of child development, was hired as a consultant by CNN. She designed the pilot study and used a team of three psychologists to implement it: two testers to execute the study and a statistician to help analyze the results.

 

Full doll study results

 

Her team tested 133 children from schools that met very specific economic and demographic requirements. In total, eight schools participated: four in the greater New York City area and four in Georgia.

 

The mother, whose name the study prohibits from being used, says her daughter has "never asked her about color" and that the results of the test were an eye opener, and she says she and her daughter "talked a long time about it"

 

Her daughter's perception on race and the fact that the issue was not taken up at home is in many ways typical.

 

Research and discussions with parents of the children who participated in this study, indicate that white parents as a whole do not talk to their kids about race as much as black parents.

 

A 2007 study in the Journal of Marriage and Family found that 75 percent of white families with kindergartners never, or almost never, talk about race. For black parents the number is reversed with 75 percent addressing race with their children.

 

Po Bronson, author of NurtureShock and an award-winning writer on parenting issues says white parents "want to give their kids this sort of post-racial future when they're very young and they're under the wrong conclusion that their kids are colorblind. ... It's in the absence of messages of tolerance that they will naturally ... develop these skin preferences."

 

Many African-American parents CNN spoke to during the study say they begin discussing race at a very early age because they say they feel they have to prepare their children for a society where their skin color will create obstacles for them.

 

iReport: Where do we go from here?

 

The study has generated thousands of comments to CNN. After seeing the report, iReporter Omekongo Dibinga said, "My daughters are 4 and 2 years old. I didn't realize that at 2 years old I'd have to start teaching them to be proud of their skin color."

 

Watch his reaction

 

The father of a black girl who took part in the CNN study says, "You can not get away from the fact that race is a factor but hopefully what we instill in them at home will help them to put that in its right place and move on"

Entry #2,450

Charlotte waitress fired after poor tip, Facebook gripe

Charlotte waitress fired after poor tip, Facebook gripe

Posted: 11:36 a.m. yesterday
Updated: 7:38 a.m. today

CHARLOTTE, N.C. & mdash - A North Carolina waitress is out of a job after griping on her Facebook page about the bad tip she got from a lingering table of customers.

The Charlotte Observer reported Monday that Ashley Johnson, 22, felt slighted after spending three hours waiting on a couple at Brixx Pizza who left only a $5 tip.

So she blasted the couple on her Facebook page while also mentioning the restaurant.

Brixx officials told Johnson a couple of days later that she was being fired because she violated a company policy banning workers from speaking disparagingly about customers and casting the restaurant in a bad light on a social network.

Johnson says she has apologized to Brixx and is looking for a new job.

Entry #2,449

Vision #'s

Tuesday 5-18-10

756, 724, 728, 658, 456, 406, 605, 812

892, 813, 178, 079, 073, 071, 219, 319

176, 398, 621, 047, 792, 702, 801, 896

106, 052, 522, 422, 082, 444, 555, 777

Lurking

Entry #2,448

Today's Thought

"Whatever we plant in our subconscious mind and nourish with repetition and emotion will one day become a reality."

- Earl Nightingale -

Entry #2,447

TIW For NC

TIW 5-17-10 NC Evening

Winning Numbers: 423 & 2077

 

736, 843, 087, 039, 064, 698, 125, 479
4852, 3480, 5693, 0268, 0173, 2347, 2057
1645, 1940, 1932, 1358, 6497, 8957, 7681

 

843, 954, 065, 176, 287, 398, 409, 510, 621, 732

064, 175, 286, 397, 408, 519, 620, 731, 842, 953

698, 709, 810, 921, 032, 143, 254, 365, 476, 587

 

3480, 3481, 3482, 3483, 3484, 3485, 3486, 3487, 3488, 3489

0480, 1480, 2480, 3480, 4480, 5480, 6480, 7480, 8480, 9480

6490, 6491, 6492, 6493, 6494, 6495, 6496, 6497, 6498, 6499

8950, 8951, 8952, 8953, 8954, 8955, 8956, 8957, 8958, 8959

0957, 1957, 2957, 3957, 4957, 5957, 6957, 7957, 8957, 9957

 

98, 19, 43, and/or 46 pairs

Entry #2,445

TIW For SC

TIW 5-17-10 SC Evening

Winning Numbers: 501 & 6555

 

716, 801, 487, 413, 460, 638, 592, 073
0628, 1069, 2741, 9876, 9351, 8105, 8925
3702, 3409, 3418, 3126, 7045, 6425, 5763

 

801, 912, 023, 134, 245, 356, 467, 578, 689, 790

413, 524, 635, 746, 857, 968, 079, 180, 291, 302

1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069

0069, 1069, 2069, 3069, 4069, 5069, 6069, 7069, 8069, 9069

3120, 3121, 3122, 3123, 3124, 3125, 3126, 3127, 3128, 3129

0126, 1126, 2126, 3126, 4126, 5126, 6126, 7126, 8126, 9126

 

56, 68, 01 and/or 31 pairs

Entry #2,444

Nice looking couple

It looks like having an 'open marriage' or being legally separated for 10 years now, suits Vladimir Doronin because it appears he can't get enough of him some Naomi Campbell. I can see why she would be attracted to him.............he is super, something, fine, to me!! He looks better than James Bond and she definitely looks like a bond girl in that wig. No matter what you might think of their relationship, they are a very, very nice looking couple, in my opinion.

Entry #2,443

TIW For GA

TIW 5-17-10 GA Midday

Winning Numbers: 778 & 2919 

 

170, 287, 421, 473, 408, 032, 569, 813
5143, 6517, 4296, 7321, 7806, 3650, 3740
8254, 8957, 8963, 8641, 2590, 1940, 0218

473, 584, 695, 706, 817, 928, 039, 140, 251, 362

7320, 7321, 7322, 7323, 7324, 7325, 7326, 7327, 7328, 7329

0321, 1321, 2321, 3321, 4321, 5321, 6321, 7321, 8321, 9321

 

28 and/or 73 pairs

Entry #2,442