Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Hormone boost lets mice live longer without fasting

Talk about having your cake and eating it. Fasting might not be the only route to a longer life ? a hormone seems to work just as well, for mice at least.

We know that some animals can extend their lifespan by consuming fewer calories. Engineered mice can get the same effect by simply pumping out high levels of a hormone normally produced during a fast, according to Steven Kliewer and David Mangelsdorf at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

Their team found that mice engineered to make higher levels of the hormone, FGF21, increased their lifespan on average by over a third.

"What we are seeing is the benefit of caloric restriction without having to diet," he says.

Humans have the hormone too, and Kliewer believes FGF21 has the potential to extend the human "health-span" ? the time we live healthy lives.

The researchers believe FGF21 may act to prolong life by affecting pathways such as the insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) pathway implicated in ageing.

"It blocks growth hormones promoting pathways which are associated with diseases, including cancers and metabolic diseases, and as a consequence these animals live longer," says Kliewer.

The results are intriguing as FGF21 is already being tried in clinical trials for treating metabolic disease, he says. "So it's potentially a pharmaceutical that will be out there and people will have access to it."

Journal reference: eLife, doi.org/jj5

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Social and Behavioral Faculty Positions - Public Health CareerMart ...
































Social and Behavioral Faculty Positions
Job Code: IN-PBHL12096
POSTED: Oct 24
Salary: Open Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Employer: Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health Type: Full Time - Experienced
Sector: Public Health Discipline: Academic / Research
Required Education: Doctorate
? ?

About Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health

Join the faculty of the new Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health at Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). The IUPUI Campus is the focal point of health professions education at Indiana University. The School of Public Health has strong linkages with the School of Medicine and other academic and research units on campus that contribute to successful collaboration in research and service activities. The IU Richard M. Fairbanks School of Publi....more info

View all our jobs


The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences and CEPH accredited public health program is recruiting two highly motivated behavioral scientists to teach public health courses, advise students, conduct research and engage in professional service.

The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences oversees the BSPH in Community Health and Social and Behavioral Concentration of the MPH program. Faculty within the Department have diverse research activities ranging from examining the role and impact of underlying determinants of health to cancer survivorship and chronic disease prevention in vulnerable populations. Our Department has well established relationships with community serving agencies; we are especially interested in candidates whose interests, prior research and training experience prepare them for this type of work. To learn more about the work done in the School and Department please visit our website at http://pbhealth.iupui.edu.

The faculty rank for these positions is open and will be determined based on the qualifications and experience of the successful candidate. Applicants should have a research track record and interests in public health or a related discipline.

NOTES: 2 openings.
Additional Salary Information: Salary will be commensurate with rank and experience.

The successful candidates will have:

  • A doctorate in public health or related social sciences (such as anthropology, human geography, psychology, sociology) with an emphasis on community engaged research, health disparities, vulnerable populations, and/or social determinants of health; preferably utilizing mixed methods in areas complementary to existing faculty interests.
  • A developing or active program of funded research with high potential for external funding.
  • Teaching experience or strong interest in teaching courses at the graduate and undergraduate levels in areas such as social and behavioral theory and methods, qualitative methods, intervention design, program planning and evaluation.
  • Clear evidence of academic scholarship in the social and behavioral sciences or a closely related field.

Applicants should submit curriculum vitae, cover letter and names/contact information of six references in the relevant areas described above. Electronic submissions should be addressed to Eric Wright, PhD and sent to Amanda Baldwin, Financial Services Coordinator for Administration and Finance, Department of Public Health at fsphsrch@iupui.edu. Inquiries about the position should be sent to Lisa Staten, PhD, Department Chair, Social and Behavioral Sciences at lkstaten@iupui.edu.

IUPUI is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Institution M/F/D.



Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health

Indianapolis IN

http://www.pbhealth.iupui.edu/ "); febox .html('') .addClass('featured-employer-box') .appendTo($('body')) .css({ "height":fWin.height() - 50, "width":980 }) .overlay({ top: 20, closeOnClick:true, load: false }); feframe = $('#featured-employer-frame'); }); $('body').delegate('.fe-popup','click',function(e) { var el = $(this); feframe.contents().find('body').html(""); feframe.attr('src',el.data('url')); febox.overlay().load(); }); })(jQuery); "); febox .html('') .addClass('network-logo-box') .appendTo($('body')) .css({ "height":700, "width":700 }) .overlay({ top: 20, expose: { color: '#ffffff', closeOnClick: true }, load: false }); feframe = $('#network-logo-frame'); }); $('body').delegate('.network-logo-popup','click',function(e) { var el = $(this); feframe.contents().find('body').html(""); feframe.attr('src',el.data('url')); febox.overlay().load(); }); })(jQuery);

Source: http://careers.apha.org/jobs/4965305/social-and-behavioral-faculty-positions

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bethpontiff - International Entertainment News: 'Art of Ink Painting ...

'Art of Ink Painting,' the Latest Book from Self-Taught Russian Artist Valentina Battler, Brings a Musical Sensibility to the Field of Visual Arts

Classically trained pianist applies a distinct and multi-faceted approach to ancient Chinese Ink Painting tradition

NEW YORK, Oct. 23, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Many have grown to appreciate and admire the works of concert pianist and now visual artist Valentina Battler. From her varied styles to the unique culminations they form, Battler displays her unique talent in her latest book, 'Art of Ink Painting'.

Synopsis:

This book presents the works of Valentina Battler, which span across a wide field of artistic culture: Fine Art, Poetry and Art Criticism. Her oeuvre attains high creative achievements in each of these spheres, and united together, it represents a significant and unique phenomenon.

"Battler explores the extent of human emotion through artistic representation of figure and form, combining Classical and Contemporary Chinese Ink Painting techniques. Her works on Xuan paper are rooted in the Yin Yang philosophy's principle of complementary contradiction, says Dr. Grant Pooke, Senior Lecturer at the University of Kent.

He continues, "Battler's background as a classically trained pianist, instructor and graduate of the St Petersburg State Conservatory is in evidence in various ways throughout the selection of images. Her aesthetic explores some of the nuanced and complex interactions between painting and music."

Her works on Yupo paper reflect an impressionistic style. Contrasting figure and fantasy with abstraction, she invites the viewers to experience the world re-interpreted through her own perspective as seen through the metaphorical 'looking glass.'

Forms and subjects are employed as representations of emotional expression; from contemplation, passion and aggression to expectation and disappointment. While subjects vary from dueling beasts and Samurai warriors to tranquil landscapes and delicate figures, these stylized and skillfully executed compositions radiate a dynamic energy through deliberate brush strokes and the softer abstract backgrounds into which the forms melt.

Dr. Pooke went on to add, "For Battler, these images 'lend themselves - technically and emotionally.' In these works, tempo and cultural influence are determined not just by the expressiveness of the subject matter but through the choice of material - whether Xuan or Yupo paper:

"Chinese painting is very classical 'music' for me - with its phrases,
articulation, accentuation, legato, staccato..., but painting on Yupo
looks like Jazz with theme and expression in it," she said.

"It is perhaps then, through the cadence and rhythms of a musical score; from fugue to caprice, from freeform jazz to fantasia. But while these images convey the impressionistic and the improvised, they also speak to a profound and deliberate cultural identity - and distinctness."

Overall, Valentina Battler's work represents how a concert pianist is expanding her work in music to encompass other art forms. Says Valentina, "It is really true -- I surprised myself. More over, the Chinese painting that I met at the top of my professional career, changed my destiny: I found 'silent music' in it and stopped playing piano, being changed playing piano to playing on Ink. I simply hear music as it is the image."

Photolink:

http://www.ereleases.com/pic/Art of Ink Painting_Cover.pdf

Art of Ink Painting, published by CreateSpace, is available now from Amazon.com.

Direct purchase link: http://amzn.to/QSCD5l

For more information, please visit Battler's official website: http://www.valentinabattler.com/

Her progress can also be followed on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/valentina.battler

About the Author:

Russian-born Valentina Battler is a classically trained concert pianist and graduate of the St. Petersburg Conservatory. A self-taught artist, Battler applied the same dedication and focus that her musical training afforded her to the study and practice of the Chinese Ink Painting tradition.

Internationally recognized for her skill and mastery of technique, Battler has had solo exhibitions in Paris, Moscow and Shanghai and her paintings can be found in public and private collections around the world.

fordPROJECT first presented Battler's work in 2011 as part of the gallery's inaugural exhibition. "Form and Fancy" is the first exhibition for which fordPROJECT will dedicate its bi-level penthouse space entirely to the presentation and exploration of a single artist's work.

http://www.fordproject.com/exhibitions/form-and-fancy

Contact

Valentina Battler

mail@vbattler.com

This press release was issued through eReleases? Press Release Distribution. For more information, visit http://www.ereleases.com.

SOURCE Valentina Battler

Valentina Battler

CONTACT: Valentina Battler, mail@vbattler.com, +1-646-808-9563

Web Site: http://www.valentinabattler.com

-------
Profile: intent

Source: http://internationalentertainmentnews.blogspot.com/2012/10/art-of-ink-painting-latest-book-from.html

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Source: http://bethpontiff.livejournal.com/190594.html

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Did bacteria spark evolution of multicellular life?

ScienceDaily (Oct. 23, 2012) ? Bacteria have a bad rap as agents of disease, but scientists are increasingly discovering their many benefits, such as maintaining a healthy gut.

A new study now suggests that bacteria may also have helped kick off one of the key events in evolution: the leap from one-celled organisms to many-celled organisms, a development that eventually led to all animals, including humans.

Published this month in the inaugural edition of the new online journal eLife, the study by University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard Medical School scientists involves choanoflagellates (aka "choanos"), the closest living relatives of animals. These microscopic, one-celled organisms sport a long tail or flagellum, tentacles for grabbing food and are members of the ocean's plankton community. As our closest living relative, choanos offer critical insights into the biology of their last common ancestor with animals, a unicellular or colonial organism that lived and died over 650 million years ago.

"Choanoflagellates evolved not long before the origin of animals and may help reveal how animals first evolved," said senior author Nicole King, UC Berkeley associate professor of molecular and cell biology.

Since first starting to study choanoflagellates as a post-doc, King has been trying to figure out why some choanoflagellates live their lives as single cells, while others form colonies. After years of dead ends, King and undergraduate researcher Richard Zuzow discovered accidentally that a previously unknown species of bacteria stimulates one choanoflagellate, Salpingoeca rosetta, to form colonies. Because bacteria were abundant in the oceans when animals first evolved, the finding that bacteria influence choano colony formation means it is plausible that bacteria also helped to stimulate multicellularity in the ancestors of animals.

"I would be surprised if bacteria did not influence animal origins, since most animals rely on signals from bacteria for some part of their biology," King said. "The interaction between bacteria and choanos that we discovered is interesting for evolutionary reasons, for understanding how bacteria interact with other organisms in the oceans, and potentially for discovering mechanisms by which our commensal bacteria are signaling to us."

No one is sure why choanoflagellates form colonies, said one of the study's lead authors, UC Berkeley post-doctoral fellow Rosanna Alegado. It may be an effective way of exploiting an abundant food source: instead of individual choanoflagellates rocketing around in search of bacteria to eat, they can form an efficient bacteria-eating "Death Star" that sits in the middle of its food source and chows down.

Whatever the reasons, colonies of unicellular organisms may have led the way to more permanent multicellular conglomerations, and eventually organisms composed of different cell types specialized for specific functions.

Sequencing the choanoflagellate genome

King's 12-year search for the trigger of choanoflagellate colony development was reignited in 2005 when she started to prime cultures of the choanoflagellate S. rosetta for a genome sequencing project. The sequencing of another choanoflagellate, the one-celled Monosiga brevicollis, gave some clues into animal origins, but she needed to compare its genome to that of a colony-forming choanoflagellate.

Surprisingly, when Zuzow tried to isolate the colony-forming choanoflagellate by adding antibiotics to the culture dish to kill off residual bacteria, strange things happened, said King.

"When he treated the culture with one cocktail of antibiotics, he saw a bloom of rosette colony formation," she said, referring to the rose petal-shaped colonies that were floating in the culture media. "When he treated with a different cocktail of antibiotics, that got rid of colony formation altogether."

That "rather mundane but serendipitous observation" led Zuzow and Alegado to investigate further and discover that only one specific bacterial species in the culture was stimulating colony formation. When other bacteria outnumbered it, or when antibiotics wiped it out, colony formation stopped. Alegado identified the colony-inducing bacteria as the new species, Algoriphagus machipongonensis. While she found that other bacteria in the Algoriphagus genus can also stimulate colony formation, other bacteria like E. coli, common in the human gut, cannot.

Working with Jon Clardy of Harvard Medical School, a natural products chemist, the two labs identified a molecule -- a fatty acid combined with a lipid that they called RIF-1 -- that sits on the surface of bacteria and is the colony development cue produced by the bacteria.

"This molecule may be betraying the presence of bacteria," Alegado said. "Bacteria just sit around blebbing off little membrane bubbles, and if one of them has this molecule, the choanoflagellates all of a sudden say, 'Aha, there are some bacteria around here.'"

The signal sets off a predetermined program in the choanoflagellate that leads to cell division and the development of rosettes, she said. The molecule RIF-1 is remarkably potent; choanos detect and respond to it at densities that are about one billionth that of the lowest concentration of sugar that humans can taste in water.

"We are investigating this molecule from many sides. How and why do bacteria make it? How do choanoflagellates respond to it, and why?" King said. She and her team also are analyzing the genome of the colony-forming choanoflagellate and the colony-inducing bacteria for clues to their interaction.

King hopes that this unexpected signaling between choanoflagellates and bacteria can yield insights into other ways in which bacteria influence biology, particularly the biology of the gut.

Coauthors with King, Alegado and Clardy are Zuzow, now a graduate student at Stanford University; Laura Brown, now a faculty member at Indiana University; Shugeng Cao and Renee Dermenjian of Harvard Medical School; and Stephen Fairclough of UC Berkeley. Dermenjian is now at Merck.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Berkeley. The original article was written by Robert Sanders.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Rosanna A Alegado, Laura W Brown, Shugeng Cao, Renee K Dermenjian, Richard Zuzow, Stephen R Fairclough, Jon Clardy, Nicole King. A bacterial sulfonolipid triggers multicellular development in the closest living relatives of animals. eLife, 2012; 1 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.00013

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/most_popular/~3/jc083uSCCwo/121024101758.htm

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Willoughby Heating Question: What is Blower Door Testing? | Apple ...

It is frustrating to pay money to operate your Willoughby heating and cooling system only to receive an underwhelming performance. The problem, though, may not lie with your heating and air conditioning systems. Your home itself may not be well sealed, allowing the air that?you?ve?paid to heat or cool to escape through cracks in your home?s envelope or window and door frames. Air stripping doors and shrink wrapping windows can help reduce the amount of energy wasted in your home, but for harder to find leaks a blower door test may be the best identification option. It can help you pinpoint leaks in your home envelope and see exactly where repairs are needed to boost efficiency and reduce energy costs.

To perform this test, a your Willoughby?heating?contractor will install the blower door, which is a powerful fan, in the frame of an external door in your home. This fan pulls air out of your house, which in turn lowers indoor air pressure. This means that the air pressure outside is higher, and that air will naturally try to force its way into your home. The points at which it is able to do this are leaky spots that can allow energy to escape your home. This test gauges the air infiltration rate of your home.

There are calibrated and uncalibrated blower doors that can be used when testing your home. While an uncalibrated blower door can detect leaks in your home, it will not be able to provide the data you need to know just how much air is escaping or how tightly sealed your home really is. The gauges on a calibrated blower door allow this data to be determined and considered when air-sealing your home.

Before you have a blower door test performed you must do a few things to prepare your home. All interior doors should be opened, and windows must be closed. Your thermostats for heaters and water heaters should be lowered, and fireplace dampers, doors and any air intakes should be closed. Because air pressure in your home is going to be adjusted during the test you may want to cover any ashes in your fireplace or wood stove with damp newspapers or towels to avoid a mess.

Once you have the information from your blower door test you?ll know everything you need to in order to heat your home more efficiently. If you?re interested in scheduling a blower door test or have any further questions about its performance or operation, call the energy efficiency experts at Apple Heating & Cooling. We have the answers you need to make the best decision for your home and energy efficiency.

Tags: Blower Door Testing, Energy Savings, Go Green, Heating, Willoughby

Source: http://www.appleheating.com/blog/go-green/willoughby-heating-question-what-is-blower-door-testing/

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The Ohio State University Marching Band Goes ?Out of This World?

Laughing Squid is an online resource for interesting art, culture & technology.

Laughing Squid is also an independently owned and operated web hosting company. For more info visit Laughing Squid Web Hosting.

Laughing Squid was founded in 1995 by primary tentacle Scott Beale (@ScottBeale). As Editor-in-Chief of the blog he is joined by Managing Editor Rusty Blazenhoff, writers EDW Lynch and Justin Page, as well as the occasional guest blogger. Check out our FAQ for more info.

Source: http://laughingsquid.com/the-ohio-state-university-marching-band-goes-out-of-this-world/

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