Friday, October 25, 2013

BUSM researchers identify molecule that could aid lung cancer detection, treatment

BUSM researchers identify molecule that could aid lung cancer detection, treatment


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25-Oct-2013



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Contact: Jenny Eriksen Leary
jenny.eriksen@bmc.org
617-638-6841
Boston University Medical Center





(Boston) Researchers at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have discovered a molecule that could help lead to the non-invasive detection of lung cancer as well as its treatment. Using RNA sequencing, the team looked at airway epithelial cells and identified a regulatory molecule that was less abundant in people with lung cancer and inhibits lung cancer cell growth. The findings, which are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that this molecule may aid in diagnosing lung cancer in earlier stages and could potentially, when at healthy levels, aid in treating the disease.


According to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among both men and women in the United States, and 90 percent of lung cancer deaths among men and approximately 80 percent of lung cancer deaths among women are due to smoking. The NCI also estimates that approximately 373,489 Americans are living with lung cancer and its treatment costs approximately $10.3 billion in the United States each year.


MicroRNA's are a new class of molecules classified as important regulators of the activity of other genes. In this study, the research team used a next-generation RNA sequencing technology and identified that a microRNA named miR-4423 in epithelial airway cells plays a major role in how these cells develop. In epithelial cells from the airway of smokers with lung cancer, levels of miR-4423 were decreased.


"These results suggest measuring the levels of microRNAs like miR-4423 in cells that line the airway could aid in lung cancer detection through a relatively non-invasive procedure," said Avrum Spira, MD, MSc, the Alexander Graham Bell professor of medicine and chief of the division of computational biomedicine at BUSM, one of the study's senior authors.


Using experimental models in vitro and in vivo, the research team demonstrated that miR-4423 can both promote the development of the normal airway cells and suppress lung cancer cell growth. This suggests that miR-4423 plays a major regulatory role in cell fate decisions made by airway epithelial cells during maturation and low levels of miR-4423 contributes to lung cancer development. Interestingly, throughout the body, miR-4423 seems only to be present in high levels in the airway epithelium, suggesting this could be a very specific process occurring only in the lungs.


"Our findings open up the option to study whether returning miR-4423 levels to normal in the airway could help stop cancer growth and potentially be a way to treat lung cancer," said Catalina Perdomo, PhD, a researcher in the division of computational biomedicine at BUSM who is the paper's lead author.


"Interestingly, when we examined the genomes of other species for microRNAs that might function like miR-4423, we did not find anything in non-primates," said Marc Lenburg, PhD, an associate professor in computational medicine and bioinformatics at BUSM who is one the study's senior authors. "It makes us wonder what it is different about lung development in primates and excited that this could be a very specific process to target for lung cancer treatment."


###


This study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health's National Cancer Institute Early Detection Research Network under grant award numbers R01 CA 124640 and U01 CA152751; the National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship under grant award number P50CA58184; and Merit Review grants 5I01BX000359 and R43HL088807-01.



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BUSM researchers identify molecule that could aid lung cancer detection, treatment


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

25-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail

]


Share Share

Contact: Jenny Eriksen Leary
jenny.eriksen@bmc.org
617-638-6841
Boston University Medical Center





(Boston) Researchers at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have discovered a molecule that could help lead to the non-invasive detection of lung cancer as well as its treatment. Using RNA sequencing, the team looked at airway epithelial cells and identified a regulatory molecule that was less abundant in people with lung cancer and inhibits lung cancer cell growth. The findings, which are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that this molecule may aid in diagnosing lung cancer in earlier stages and could potentially, when at healthy levels, aid in treating the disease.


According to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among both men and women in the United States, and 90 percent of lung cancer deaths among men and approximately 80 percent of lung cancer deaths among women are due to smoking. The NCI also estimates that approximately 373,489 Americans are living with lung cancer and its treatment costs approximately $10.3 billion in the United States each year.


MicroRNA's are a new class of molecules classified as important regulators of the activity of other genes. In this study, the research team used a next-generation RNA sequencing technology and identified that a microRNA named miR-4423 in epithelial airway cells plays a major role in how these cells develop. In epithelial cells from the airway of smokers with lung cancer, levels of miR-4423 were decreased.


"These results suggest measuring the levels of microRNAs like miR-4423 in cells that line the airway could aid in lung cancer detection through a relatively non-invasive procedure," said Avrum Spira, MD, MSc, the Alexander Graham Bell professor of medicine and chief of the division of computational biomedicine at BUSM, one of the study's senior authors.


Using experimental models in vitro and in vivo, the research team demonstrated that miR-4423 can both promote the development of the normal airway cells and suppress lung cancer cell growth. This suggests that miR-4423 plays a major regulatory role in cell fate decisions made by airway epithelial cells during maturation and low levels of miR-4423 contributes to lung cancer development. Interestingly, throughout the body, miR-4423 seems only to be present in high levels in the airway epithelium, suggesting this could be a very specific process occurring only in the lungs.


"Our findings open up the option to study whether returning miR-4423 levels to normal in the airway could help stop cancer growth and potentially be a way to treat lung cancer," said Catalina Perdomo, PhD, a researcher in the division of computational biomedicine at BUSM who is the paper's lead author.


"Interestingly, when we examined the genomes of other species for microRNAs that might function like miR-4423, we did not find anything in non-primates," said Marc Lenburg, PhD, an associate professor in computational medicine and bioinformatics at BUSM who is one the study's senior authors. "It makes us wonder what it is different about lung development in primates and excited that this could be a very specific process to target for lung cancer treatment."


###


This study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health's National Cancer Institute Early Detection Research Network under grant award numbers R01 CA 124640 and U01 CA152751; the National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship under grant award number P50CA58184; and Merit Review grants 5I01BX000359 and R43HL088807-01.



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/bumc-bri102513.php
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Grand jury in 1999 indicted Ramseys in JonBenet's death


DENVER — And we still don't know who killed her.

A grand jury investigating JonBenet Ramsey’s death found her parents did “unlawfully, knowingly, recklessly and feloniously” put their daughter into a situation that resulted in her slaying, according to documents released Friday.

Those stark words — printed on four pages of grand jury documents from 1999 released by the Boulder County District Court’s office — indicted John Ramsey and his wife, Patsy, on two counts each:

COUNT IV

On or between December 25, and December 26, 1996, in Boulder County, Colorado Patricia Paugh Ramsey did unlawfully, knowingly, recklessly and feloniously permit a child to be unreasonably placed in a situation which posed a threat of injury to the child’s life or health, which resulted in the death of JonBenet Ramsey, a child under the age of sixteen.

An identical indictment contained John Ramsey’s name.

Another document, Count VII, alleged that each parent did “render assistance to a person, with intent to hinder, delay and prevent the discovery, detention, apprehension, prosecution, conviction and punishment of such person for the commission of a crime.”

“The grand jury found probable cause to believe that both of the Ramseys were responsible for their daughter’s death,” Karen Steinhauser, a former prosecutor and current defense attorney in the Denver area, told Yahoo News.

But while the grand jury believed there was probable cause to prosecute the Ramseys, the district attorney at the time disagreed.

“Whether it ever means there’s going to be a prosecution, whether it means there’s ever going to be justice for this little girl, I don’t believe it changes anything,” Steinhauser said. But she added that, hypothetically, new evidence could drag the case back into the spotlight.

Lin Wood, John Ramsey’s attorney, was not immediately available for comment, his office said.

Earlier this year, Wood said: "I have known for years that Boulder prosecutors did not file charges against John and Patsy Ramsey because the evidence to prosecute them did not exist.”

The documents certainly aren’t cathartic for anyone — whether for casual observers or for those who obsessively pored over every scrap of evidence for 17 years. Friday’s answers only prompt more questions: Why exactly did the grand jury reach those conclusions? Counts IV and VII were released, but were there others and what did they say? To whom did the grand jury believe the Ramseys possibly rendered “assistance”?

Answers may never see light because while the court was expected to issue 18 total pages from the grand jury’s report, it only released four after a judge ruled Wednesday that signed pages in the jury’s report would be made public. Judge J. Robert Lowenbach ordered that pages signed by the jury foreman — also called “true bills” — are the only official documents. The Daily Camera, a local Boulder newspaper, sued for their release.

The slaying of the 6-year-old beauty queen drew intense international media coverage and snared the imagination of several authors, made-for-TV film producers and amateur sleuths largely because of the horrific way in which she died. But the case also fanned passions because of home-video footage of her dancing — dolled up in adult outfits and pancake makeup — at beauty pageants, the family’s affluence and a bizarre, possibly red-herring ransom note.

In January, the Daily Camera reported that the grand jury had voted in the fall of 1999 to indict the Ramseys on charges of child abuse resulting in death, but Alex Hunter, the district attorney at the time, refused to prosecute. Hunter said he believed he did not have “sufficient evidence to warrant a filing of charges” against the Ramseys.

Friday’s revelations complicate a public exoneration of the Ramseys from more than five years ago.

On July 8, 2008, former District Attorney Mary Lacy wrote John Ramsey a letter that essentially cleared the family, at least in the eyes of her office. She told him that new DNA evidence shifted suspicion from the couple and their son, Burke, who was 9 when his sister was killed. A lab, Lacy said, recovered an unknown male’s DNA from JonBenet’s clothing.

“The match of male DNA […] makes it clear to us that an unknown male handled these items,” Lacy wrote.

Because the grand jury’s investigation occurred years before the new DNA evidence, it’s impossible to say what effect those findings would have had on the jury’s conclusions.

In that letter, Lacy added in a much more personal tone: “To the extent that we may have contributed in any way to the public perception that you might have been involved in this crime, I am deeply sorry. We intend in the future to treat you as the victims of this crime.” A pre-recorded message at her law office in Boulder on Friday said she was not taking calls.

Patsy Ramsey died on June 24, 2006, from ovarian cancer. John Ramsey, now 69, remarried in 2011.

The morning after Christmas in 1996, JonBenet’s father found her dead with her wrists tied and mouth duct-taped in the basement of the family’s sprawling Tudor home in Boulder’s moneyed western edge.

Earlier that morning, Patsy Ramsey called 911 to report JonBenet missing after discovering a ransom note addressed to her husband. The note’s authors said they were “a group of individuals that represent a small foreign faction” and tried to exhort $118,000 in exchange for JonBenet’s safe return.

Is this the end of the JonBenet saga, at least for a while?

“I would hate to say that because I think way back after the grand jury, we thought that was the last word.” Steinhauser said. “And I’m not sure there is any such thing in this type of case. It’s a very, very sad case because we’re talking about the death of a little girl, and probably no one is going to be held responsible for that death.”

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jonbenet-ramsey-grand-jury-documents-findings-212302504.html
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Negotiators looking for only a small budget deal

(AP) — Forget a grand bargain. Reaching even a small budget deal will be a challenge.

That's the early assessment from lawmakers and others as budget talks gear up in hopes of salvaging some agreement after this month's shutdown debacle and debt limit crisis.

Longstanding differences over taxes make a large-scale deal virtually impossible. Republicans say they won't agree to further taxes atop the 10-year, $600 billion-plus increase on upper-income earners that President Barack Obama and Democrats won in January. Without higher taxes, Democrats say they're unwilling to cut benefit programs like Medicare.

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan told The Associated Press on Thursday he's still hopeful the talks will produce a smaller deal, perhaps one that eases immediate automatic spending cuts in exchange for trimming the growth of benefit programs.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-24-US-Budget-Battle/id-d0d71ab5820b42918d7762b7ea158325
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Both sides agree: No major budget deal foreseen

FILE - In this Oct. 11, 2013, photo, House Budget Committee chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., laughs as he walks to his office on Capitol Hill in Washington. Forget a grand bargain. Reaching even a small budget deal will be a challenge when negotiators start meeting in an effort to salvage any kind of agreement in the aftermath of this month’s shutdown debacle and debt limit crisis. "If we focus on some big, grand bargain then we’re going to focus on our differences and both sides are going to require that the other side compromises some core principle and then we’ll get nothing done," Ryan, said in an interview on Oct. 24. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, File)







FILE - In this Oct. 11, 2013, photo, House Budget Committee chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., laughs as he walks to his office on Capitol Hill in Washington. Forget a grand bargain. Reaching even a small budget deal will be a challenge when negotiators start meeting in an effort to salvage any kind of agreement in the aftermath of this month’s shutdown debacle and debt limit crisis. "If we focus on some big, grand bargain then we’re going to focus on our differences and both sides are going to require that the other side compromises some core principle and then we’ll get nothing done," Ryan, said in an interview on Oct. 24. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, File)







(AP) — On this, Republican budget guru Rep. Paul Ryan and the Senate's top Democrat, Harry Reid, can agree: There won't be a "grand bargain" on the budget.

Instead, the Wisconsin Republican and the Nevada Democrat both say the best Washington can do in this bitterly partisan era of divided government is a small-ball bargain that tries to take the edge off of automatic budget cuts known as sequestration.

Official Capitol Hill negotiations start next week, but Ryan and Reid both weighed in Thursday to tamp down any expectations that the talks might forge a large-scale agreement after several previous high-level talks have failed.

According to lawmakers, their aides and observers who will be monitoring the talks, long-standing, entrenched differences over taxes make a large-scale budget pact virtually impossible.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-25-Budget%20Battle/id-72362e11ada840c2b7e67bca895fc1dd
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HTC One gets bonus Google Drive storage as Sense 5.5 update rolls out abroad


DNP Select HTC Ones getting free extra storage on Google Drive, Android 43 updates rolling out abroad


Google is taking a page out of Dropbox's book and offering free extra storage for certain HTC One handsets. The HTC One Max got 50GB of storage space out of the box, but we've been tipped that those with the handset's smaller sibling will net an additional 25GB of room in the cloud,all thanks to the international Sense 5.5 (and Android 4.3) update that readers have already started receiving in Europe. These expansions are in addition to the complimentary 15GB of Drive space available to all Google users, bringing the allotted storage totals to 65GB and 40GB for the One Max and One, respectively. There are a few caveats, though. According to Mountain View, the HTC One Developer Edition isn't eligible for this due to its unlocked bootloader. Furthermore, you can only activate this promo once per Google account, which rules out gaming the offer to get even more space. Got all that? Good -- there's a quiz later.


[Thanks, Jakub]


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/25/htc-one-sense-55-google-drive-bonanza/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Hailee Steinfeld: Sirius XM Cutie

Heading out for more promotional duties for her highly anticipated film "Ender's Game," Hailee Steinfeld stopped by Sirius XM studios in New York City on Wednesday (October 23).


The 16-year-old actress donned a leopard shirt with black leather pants as she enjoyed a cold beverage on the busy street.


Recently, Miss Steinfeld discussed how excited she was when she first heard about her role based on the bestseller by Orson Scott Card sci-fi flick.


"Reading the script, I thought, 'How much fun is this going to be to film?" Hailee stated. "When you go back through [the book], it has some really serious elements that really came into perspective when we were thrown into this boot camp. Thankfully, we were able to have some fun but it was intense."


Also discussing her co-star Harrison Ford, the "True Grit" star joked, "Lots of people will ask if I even known who Harrison Ford is. His work was definitely carried across my generation. Working with him was just the coolest experience."


In regards to her role as Petra, Miss Steinfeld said, "Somewhere in their story, every character I have played really comes through as a young woman, learns to stick up for themselves, creates their own voice and becomes comfortable in their own skin - I really love that."


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/hailee-steinfeld/hailee-steinfeld-sirius-xm-cutie-949094
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The Fascinating Science Behind Why a Tapped Beer Foams Over

Scientists have figured out how flying insects fly. They've created real-life lightsabers. But they're at their best when they're tackling the mysteries of beer. Now, thanks to a research team studying fluid mechanics, we finally know why bottled beer foams over after a tap on the mouth — with slow-mo footage and everything.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/TV5-XEqsbCI/the-fascinating-science-behind-why-a-tapped-beer-foams-1451022759
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