Friday, November 30, 2012

Sneak peek at early course of bladder infection caused by widespread, understudied parasite

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2012) ? Using standard tools of the molecular-biology trade and a new, much-improved animal model of a prevalent but poorly understood tropical parasitic disease called urogenital schistosomiasis, Stanford University School of Medicine researchers were able to obtain "snapshots" of shifting gene activity levels during the early, acute phase of what for most becomes a chronic bladder infection.

The findings, described in a study to be published online Nov. 29 in PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, could lead to new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to urogenital schistosomiasis, a chronic disease that infects about 112 million people, almost entirely in developing countries and particularly in Africa, said Michael Hsieh, MD, PhD, assistant professor of urology and the study's senior author.

"Schistosomiasis is a huge global health problem and one of the most neglected of the neglected tropical diseases," said Hsieh. "Some 150,000 people die each year from urogenital-schistosomiasis-induced kidney failure. And this doesn't include deaths from bladder cancer or as a result of increased susceptibility to other infections, such as HIV, attributable to schistosomiasis-generated genital tract damage." Estimates that take into account chronic schistosomiasis' overall impact on quality of life place it on a par with other world-class health scourges such as malaria and tuberculosis.

Schistosomiasis is caused by a parasitic worm of the genus Schistosoma. Different Schistosoma species infect different organs, said Hsieh, whose research focuses on infection-induced bladder inflammation. S. haematobium, which is responsible for infection of the urogenital tract, is acquired by exposure to contaminated water. "The parasite larvae can smell fatty acids in our skin as well as detect motion. They're like smart bombs, equipped to find us."

After invading the skin and a pass through the circulatory system, the larvae mature to adulthood, lodge in blood vessels of the bladder wall and other pelvic organs and begin to lay eggs. A single worm can extend to several millimeters, lay hundreds of sand-grain-sized eggs every day and live for years to decades, Hsieh said.

In a study published recently in the British Medical Journal, John Ioannidis, MD, DSc, a Stanford professor of medicine, deplored the dearth of treatments for neglected tropical diseases including schistosomiasis. There are no vaccines for preventing it, and only a single drug, praziquantel, is approved by the World Health Organization for treating it. While cheap and relatively effective, it doesn't cure all infections. Plus it tastes terrible, which causes a surprisingly large number of people to stop taking it. Experts believe it's just a matter of time before the parasite develops resistance to praziquantel.

Despite a pressing need to come up with good anti-S. haematobium agents, almost all the existing medical literature is on other Schistosoma species. That's because until recently there were no practical animal models for S. haematobium infection. "We know next to nothing about the earliest molecular events in the bladder after eggs enter the tissue," said Hsieh. "When you try to naturally infect mice by simply exposing them to the parasite, the mice develop an infection in their liver or intestine instead of their bladder wall."

In March of this year, Hsieh and his colleagues reported, in the journal PLoS Pathogens, that they had solved this problem by injecting S. haematobium eggs directly into the bladder wall of ordinary laboratory mice. For the new PLoS-NTD study, Hsieh and his colleagues used this mouse model to synchronize the initiation of bladder infection by the parasite, thereby synchronizing the timing of post-infection changes that take place in bladder tissue so the researchers could better observe the parasitic infection's early trajectory. They injected about 3,000 parasite eggs into each of a few dozen lab mice and used microarray technology -- a method of globally measuring the activity of virtually every gene in a tissue -- to monitor thousands of genes' activity levels in bladder-wall tissue over the ensuing weeks.

The investigators set their microarray probe's sensitivity to flag any gene whose activation level either increased or decreased by a factor of two or more. They monitored thousands of genes whose activity levels were either amped up or tamped down at one, three and five weeks post-infection. These changes peaked at merely three weeks post-infection. "This is an important result," said Hsieh. "It shows that continuous waves of egg deposition, not just the initial schistosome infection, are what's generating chronic disease. So if you can kill the worms flat-out, you should be able to halt the cycle."

It would have been impossible to see this simply by observing patients, said Hsieh. "With the natural human infection, you never know when any given person is initially infected -- unless it's that unfortunate American tourist that got infected while swimming in Lake Victoria on a weeklong Africa visit," he said.

The team also noted that these gene-activity changes fell into clusters. "Very soon after infection, we saw changes in activation levels in a cluster of cancer-associated genes. Likewise with another cluster of genes involved in fibrosis, or scarring, in the bladder. This confirms that fibrosis kicks in very quickly," said Hsieh -- a not unexpected result, as parasite eggs' burrowing causes significant bladder-wall damage.

On the other hand, within the first week there was a general suppression of genes associated with maintaining the integrity of the bladder wall. Inadequate production of this group of molecules would be expected to result in a leaky bladder wall, said Hsieh, and it probably did. "This happened at a time when the mice were shedding eggs in their urine. So it probably accounts for not only a lot of urinary symptoms but a significant aspect of the disease's transmission -- the expulsion of eggs into the urine, which eventually contaminates another body of water," he said.

Finally, as has been observed in infections produced by other Schistosomal species, the Stanford team noted signs of a shift in character of the immune response toward a state that it is oriented to tissue repair and to isolating pathogens -- effectively attempting to enclose them in cement-like jails called granulomas -- in order to prevent further tissue damage. (This mode of immune response may be best-suited to combating relatively large pathogens that would be likely to withstand an attempt by the immune system to kill them outright in a frenzy of inflammatory fury.)

Hsieh's group corroborated their microarray results at both intracellular and macroscopic levels with ultrasound, microscopic and molecular assessments. For instance, discernible evidence of scarring in bladder-wall tissue coincided with microarray readings indicating fibrosis-gene activation.

"Schistosomes have evolved with mammals for millions of years," said Hsieh. "Our shared evolutionary history makes our findings in mice likely to be relevant to humans. These observations may also have implications for fibrotic disease in general. Understanding fibrosis is very important, because it is involved in cardiovascular disease, cancer and other diseases accounting for up to half of all deaths in the developed world."

The S. haematobium mouse model may also pinpoint biomarkers that enhance the detection and monitoring of incipient bladder cancer, a poorly understood disease.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stanford University Medical Center. The original article was written by Bruce Goldman.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Debalina Ray, Tyrrell A. Nelson, Chi-Ling Fu, Shailja Patel, Diana N. Gong, Justin I. Odegaard, Michael H. Hsieh. Transcriptional Profiling of the Bladder in Urogenital Schistosomiasis Reveals Pathways of Inflammatory Fibrosis and Urothelial Compromise. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2012; 6 (11): e1912 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001912

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/top_news/~3/uRI8oRSQJfk/121129173946.htm

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U.S. Marshals say Linscott and Dow were spotted after a parade at Universal Stud...

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Travels in northeastern Brazil: Unfolding the reptile fauna of Len??is Maranhenses

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2012) ? In order to be effective, a Conservation Unit must have available a list of the species that live within it. They also should have detailed information about the distribution of species among the available habitats. It would be difficult to correctly plan the conservation actions and/or monitoring programs without some minimal knowledge about the species (who are the object of those measures).

"This is why our study is so important to the park," said Dr. Miranda from Universidade Federal do Maranh?o (CCAA/UFMA), leading author of the article, published in the open access journal Zookeys.

In Len??is Maranhenses National Park 42 species of reptiles were found. Approximately 80% of them live only in restinga habitats, which comprise about 20% of the area currently protected by the park. Restingas have been strongly disturbed by the clandestine openings of paths created to transport tourists to the dunes in the park, using off-road vehicles. This problem is more severe during the rainy season when paths become muddy quickly, and new ones are continuously opening. This could be extremely harmful to those habitats because their poor soil might severely limit natural recomposition.

"We recorded endangered species in Len??is Maranhenses; particularly sea turtles located in the beach habitats. No one has any idea about the animal activity there! Are they spawning? It's very likely, but we don't have any data! It would be very important to study and monitor those species in the 70 km of beaches of the Len??is Maranhenses National Park" adds Dr. Miranda.

Another turtle species, which deserves attention in Len??is Maranhenses, is the Brazilian Slider Turtle, which has a limited geographic distribution in the coast of Maranh?o, northeastern Brazil. This turtle is used as a source of food by the extremely poor inhabitants of Len??is Maranhenses and surrounding areas.

"We believe that it would be helpful to promote awareness campaigns to help the conservation of that species, but it is equally important to provide alternatives to the people that live there. These inhabitants, for example, could be placed into the tourism business by providing training courses. They could work as tourist guides, waiters, or cooks. This would not only improve their economic capacity, but also free them of the need to use the Brazilian Slider Turtle as a food item. The efforts for conservation will only be successful with a joint effort of scientists, policymakers and society. We have to talk to one another and look for solutions together," concluded Dr. Miranda.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Pensoft Publishers, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Jivanildo Miranda, Jo?o Carlos Lopes Costa, Carlos Frederico Duarte da Rocha. Reptiles from Len??is Maranhenses National Park, Maranh?o, northeastern Brazil. ZooKeys, 2012; 246 (0): 51 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.246.2593

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/RnTtXcVr_Zs/121129103545.htm

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Great Ideas For Home Improvement! | EzinePR

You will need to periodically update your home. Although you can always pay someone to make these repairs, many can be done by yourself. Use the tips in this article to help.

Any plumbing and wiring issues should be addressed first when doing any home improvement projects. Plumbing and electrical repairs often require inner wall access, so plan these repairs first before you paint walls or do renovations. Also, if the inside of your walls are already exposed for a different renovation project, it makes sense to have plumbing and electrical repairs done at this time.

Shop around for the best estimates and compare your contractor candidates carefully. Make a list of everything that you will need the contractor to do, and make sure not to add or take anything off when getting the estimates. If you constantly alter the details, it will be very hard to find the best value for your money.

Avoid hiring an unlicensed contractor at all costs. States require certification for both contractors and sub-contractors. The requirements aren?t a guarantee of competence, but they are required. Also, contractors who do not have the necessary licenses probably also do not have sufficient insurance coverage.

Many home improvement store or websites have great ?how to? videos for you to view. Many people have the same questions as you and there are online answers available for you all. Watch the videos and learn from others who have already figured out the solution you need.

If you have a balcony, porch or deck, regular upkeep is generally needed. See how the wood is holding up and that there are no cracks. See if there is any sign of rot. Check to see if there are any nails sticking up.

If you?d like your nightstands or end tables to be a little less crowded, replace table lamps with floor lamps. Floor lamps rest on the floor, so they have more placement options. By contrast, table lamps eat up lots of space on the table surface. Choose a fixture that accents the room or your taste.

Wallpaper and art additions can make a bathroom look better. It does not cost much, and there are a lot of styles available. It can also be easier to install. By putting in simple, cheap artwork, you can completely transform the look of your bathroom.

When you are thinking about home improvements, you might want to look around. Visit the library or book store and glance through decorating magazines. Visit paint and carpet stores and pick up color samples and fabric swatches. Use a little time to determine what you like before beginning your home improvement projects.

Before beginning any home improvement project, ensure you have the necessary permits. Look up permit requirements for your city online to see whether or not your project requires you to get a permit.

Budgeting for your home improvements should be done in the beginning of the year. This is because after the holidays you will have a better assessment of your spending. Having little to work with may help you create a very frugal budget, indeed!

Determine the changes you want to do prior to starting the renovation. If you want to avoid wasting time or money, it?s vital to have an initial plan in place. If you change course midstream and add new requirements, the cost and completion time will increase accordingly. The contractors you hire will be much more satisfied if you have a plan before starting construction and you don?t deviate from that plan.

Nearly each and every home owner needs to make a few important renovations. But not all are successful at it. Lots of homeowners do a shoddy and inadequate job with their improvements. Avoid costly mistakes with proper planning and realistic expectations. Use the information here to make improvements on your home.

To read more information about handyman stop by www.saberviajar.info/stories/127099/furnace_repair_Dallas.html

Source: http://ezinepr.com/travel/great-ideas-for-home-improvement/

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Did dinosaurs roam Grand Canyon?

The awe-inspiring Grand Canyon was probably carved about 70 million years ago, much earlier than thought, a provocative new study suggests ? so early that dinosaurs might have roamed near this natural wonder.

Using a new dating tool, a team of scientists came up with a different age for the gorge's western section, challenging conventional wisdom that much of the canyon was scoured by the mighty Colorado River in the last 5 million to 6 million years.

Not everyone is convinced with the latest viewpoint published online Thursday in the journal Science. Critics contend the study ignores a mountain of evidence pointing to a geologically young landscape and they have doubts about the technique used to date it.

The notion that the Grand Canyon existed during the dinosaur era is "ludicrous," said geologist Karl Karlstrom of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.

How the Grand Canyon became grand ? with its vertical cliffs and flat plateaus ? has been debated since John Wesley Powell navigated the whitewater rapids and scouted the sheer walls during his famous 1869 expedition.

Some 5 million tourists flock to Arizona each year to marvel at the 277-mile-long chasm, which plunges a mile deep in some places. It's a geologic layer cake with the most recent rock formations near the rim stacked on top of older rocks that date back 2 billion years.

Though the exposed rocks are ancient, most scientists believe the Grand Canyon itself was forged in the recent geologic past, created when tectonic forces uplifted the land that the Colorado River later carved through.

The new work by researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder and California Institute of Technology argued that canyon-cutting occurred long before that. They focused on the western end of the Grand Canyon occupied today by the Hualapai Reservation, which owns the Skywalk attraction, a horseshoe-shaped glass bridge that extends from the canyon's edge.

To come up with the age, the team crushed rocks collected from the bottom of the canyon to analyze a rare type of mineral called apatite. The mineral contains traces of radioactive elements that release helium during decay, allowing researchers to calculate the passage of time since the canyon eroded.

Their interpretation: The western Grand Canyon is 70 million years old and was likely shaped by an ancient river that coursed in the opposite direction of the west-flowing Colorado.

Lead researcher Rebecca Flowers of the University of Colorado Boulder realizes not everyone will accept this alternative view, which minimizes the role of the Colorado River.

"Arguments will continue over the age of Grand Canyon, and I hope our study will stimulate more work to decipher the mysteries," Flowers said in an email.

It's not the first time that Flowers has dug up evidence for an older Grand Canyon. In 2008, she authored a study that suggested part of the eastern Grand Canyon, where most tourists go, formed 55 million years ago. Another study published that same year by a different group of researchers put the age of the western section at 17 million years old.

If the Grand Canyon truly existed before dinosaurs became extinct, it would have looked vastly different because the climate back then was more tropical. Dinosaurs that patrolled the American West then included smaller tyrannosaurs, horned and dome-headed dinosaurs and duckbills.

If they peered over the rim, it would not look like "the starkly beautiful desert of today, but an environment with more lush vegetation," said University of Maryland paleontologist Thomas Holtz.

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Many scientists find it hard to imagine an ancient Grand Canyon since the oldest gravel and sediment that washed downstream date to about 6 million years ago and there are no signs of older deposits. And while they welcome advanced dating methods to decipher the canyon's age, Karlstrom of the University of New Mexico does not think the latest effort is very accurate.

Karlstrom said it also defies logic that a fully formed canyon would sit unchanged for tens of millions of years without undergoing further erosion.

Geologist Richard Young of the State University of New York at Geneseo said his own work suggests there was a cliff in the place of the ancient Grand Canyon.

Flowers "wants to have a canyon there. I want to have a cliff there. Obviously, one of us can't be right," he said.

Whatever the age, there may be a middle ground, said Utah State University geologist Joel Pederson.

Researchers have long known about older canyons in the region cut by rivers that flow in a different direction than the Colorado River. It's possible that a good portion of the Grand Canyon was chiseled long ago by these smaller rivers and then the Colorado came along and finished the job, he said.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50014196/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Bill OK'd requiring search warrant for email

12 hrs.

The Senate Judiciary Committee Thursday approved legislation that would require police to obtain a search warrant from a judge, and not just a subpoena from a prosecutor,?before accessing the content of all emails and other private information from Google, Yahoo and other Internet providers. Under the current law, the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act, a warrant is needed only for emails less than 6 months old.

The full Senate is expected to vote on the legislation next year.

"This is an important gain for privacy," said Chris Calabrese, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, in a statement. "We are very happy that the committee voted that all electronic content like emails, photos and other communications held by companies like Google and Facebook should be protected with a search warrant.?We believe law enforcement should use the same standard to search your inbox that they do to search your home."

Still, the bill won't keep federal agents from combing through your inbox if they believe a crime has been committed, legal experts say. Federal and state authorities still will have a robust set of tools to track down lawbreakers even as these officials oppose changes supported by a broad coalition of technology companies and public interest groups.

Supporters of the bill, sponsored by Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., say the changes are necessary to overhaul a law that is outdated in an era of cloud computing, cheaper electronic storage, social networking and wireless phones. Such advances in technology have dramatically increased the amount of stored communications in ways no one anticipated a quarter of a century ago.

The approval is "a major step forward in efforts to reform the Electronic Communications Privacy Act The current law must be updated to address the tremendous technological advances that have taken place in the last 25 years. Congress must ensure that information Americans store in the cloud receives the same level of protection as the information stored in their homes," said?David LeDuc, senior director of public policy for the Software & Information Industry Association trade group.

The Justice Department has resisted the changes. The associate deputy attorney general, James Baker, urged the committee last year to consider the adverse impact on criminal and national security investigations if a warrant were the only means for law enforcement officials to obtain emails and other digital files.

But setting the bar higher doesn't prevent law enforcement agencies from doing their jobs, according to current and former prosecutors, judges and attorneys who specialize in privacy issues. Federal law enforcement authorities in four Midwestern and Southern states have been working with the more demanding warrant requirement since 2010 after an appeals court ruled warrantless access to emails was unconstitutional. To get a warrant, a judge must have proof of probable cause that a crime is being committed.

"I don't see anything (in the Senate bill) that's going to seriously concern law enforcement in terms of our ability to request warrants and to get the contents of the material that we need," said Joseph Cassilly, the state's attorney in Harford County, Md., and a former president of the National District Attorneys Association. "Since you've already got to get warrants for the stuff that's less than 180 days, it's obviously not an insurmountable standard."

Nor does the legislation weaken other methods used by law enforcement for collecting electronic information. A subpoena signed by a federal prosecutor ? not a judge ? will continue to be sufficient for obtaining routing data from third-party Internet providers that can identify the sender of an email and the location where the message was sent.

Police also can use what is known as a "D order" to get the "to" and "from" addresses of an email, but not the contents. These orders must be issued by a judge, but the agency seeking one need only show there is reasonable suspicion of a crime ? a lower legal standard than probable cause.

In a Nov. 21 letter to Leahy, 30 former federal and state prosecutors and judges said the bill would provide "a much needed judicial check on when the government can access our private digital information." Concerns that the bill would keep law enforcement from acting quickly during emergencies are unfounded, they added, because the Senate bill does not change a provision in the existing law that compels third-party providers to give the government information in situations where lives are at risk or children are being exploited or abused.

Digital Due Process, a wide-ranging coalition that includes Google, Microsoft and Twitter, as well as the American Civil Liberties Union and Grover Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform, has mounted a public relations campaign supporting the Senate bill. The coalition says updating the law will clear the "murky legal landscape" for companies and consumers alike and provide the proper safeguards for the vast amounts of information stored in server farms.

There's money at stake, too. The global market for cloud computing via the Internet is estimated to be $240 billion by 2020. But the Business Software Alliance, a coalition member that represents Apple, Intel and Microsoft, said U.S. cloud providers are at a disadvantage unless online privacy and security laws are changed. If consumers aren't sure their information is being properly protected on the remote, networked computer servers that make up the cloud, they'll take their business elsewhere.

Use of the law has been interpreted inconsistently by the courts, further fuel for those pushing for an overhaul. In a 2010 decision, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati ruled that an Ohio businessman's constitutional rights were violated when federal investigators obtained thousands of his emails without warrants. Now investigators in states covered by the 6th Circuit ? Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky and Tennessee ? must obtain warrants for all emails. But that's not the law in other federal circuits.

In the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers California, Washington, Oregon and six other Western states, judges ruled that a search warrant was required for both opened and unopened email, but only if left on a server for less than 180 days. The Justice Department has argued that a search warrant is required for unopened email left on a server for less than 180 days, but not for opened email less than 180 days old.

The decisions mean different rules apply depending where an investigation begins. How should emails be treated if a case starts in Pennsylvania and the messages are stored on a server in California, the hub for Google, Yahoo and other major Internet businesses?

"It's very confusing," said Hanni Fakhoury, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San Francisco. "Law enforcement will never admit this, but a uniform search warrant standard is easier for them."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

NBC?News also contributed to this report.

This?story was updated at?1:36 pm ET.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/senate-committee-oks-bill-requiring-warrant-email-cloud-search-1C7316741

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Goodnight Mister Tom, Phoenix, London

Published Wednesday 28 November 2012 at 10:31 by Susan Elkin

Originally staged at Chichester Festival Theatre last year and then toured, this show has matured and developed. A 1940s wartime reworking of the Silas Marner story in which a battered, abused evacuee and a curmudgeonly old man, who has been shut away by grief for 40 years, are thrown together. Love, based on kindness, gradually develops between Tom Oakley (Oliver Ford Davies) and Willie Beech (Ewan Harris at the press performance) and they heal each other.

Ford Davies plays Tom as a man with dignified common sense and it?s a treat to hear him working in an r-rolling Dorset accent instead of the voice he normally uses for archbishops and other figured of educated authority. Ewan Harris gives a moving, thoughtful account of the initially terrified, later more relaxed Willie especially in the scenes when he is summoned back to London by his deeply troubled, double-thinking, cruel, irrational mother, nicely played by Aoife McMahon. William Price (one of three boys in the role) is a delight as the ebullient, irrepressible Zach. Sammy the full size dog, who snuffles, whines, paws and woofs, is engagingly puppeted by Elisa de Grey.

There are some pretty weepy episodes in this well-paced show but it stops short of sentimentality, confronting as it does death, both natural and otherwise, child abuse and religious intolerance without being didactic and including lots of witty bits and fine ensemble work. Few people will forget the moment when Ford Davies is in a London air raid shelter en route to find Willy. The shelter is full but there is complete stillness and no sound except the rumble of bombs overhead and Sammy?s puzzled, distressed whimpering. Dramatic magic.

Production information

Phoenix, London, November 27-January 26

Author:
Michelle Magorian, adapted by David Wood
Director:
Angus Jackson
Producers:
Fiery Angel, Ambassador Theatre Group, Fiery Dragons, The Children's Touring Partnership
Cast includes:
Oliver Ford Davies, Louise Collins, Elisa de Grey, Emma Drysdale, Bradley Hall, Joanne Howarth, Aoife McMahon, Freya Parker. Georgina Sutton, Alan Vicary, Jonathan Warde, Osmund Bullock
Running time:
2hrs

Production information can change over the run of the show.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheStageReviews/~3/DhXk7OQt7W0/goodnight-mister-tom

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HBT: Yanks close to signing Pettitte? |? and Rivera

Andy Pettitte is almost back:

Multiple sources are saying the deal will be announced in the next couple of days. Not that most folks expected him to retire.?Pettitte should expect a nice raise over the $2.5 million he made in 2012, when he posted a 2.87 ERA and 69/21 K/BB ratio over 75 and a third innings. Joel Sherman of the New York Post says it will be in the $10-11 million range.

With Hiroki Kuroda re-signing last week and now Pettitte back in the fold, the Yankees? rotation looks set with?CC Sabathia?at the tops, followed by?Kuroda and Pettitte,?Phil Hughes,?Ivan Nova?and?David Phelps?for depth.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/11/27/andy-pettitte-and-the-yankees-close-to-a-deal/related/

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From Cancer-Scare Admission to ?Therapy? with David Letterman ...

It?s been a revelatory 48 hours for Oprah Winfrey fans, followers, and skeptics. On Monday, The New York Times published a sprawling profile on the media empress, revealing that Winfrey had undergone a breast-cancer scare so secret that she hadn?t even told her B.F.F., Gayle King. The same piece also reports that the former talk-show host continues to struggle with her cable network, OWN?now ?emerging from low ratings and management shake-ups??and has considered shutting down her print magazine, O, should it prove unprofitable. (To prevent the latter from happening, the media titan explained that she wants to target twentysomething readers rather than her current 49-year-old median reader . . . which might be difficult considering the tea-sandwich recipes and Suze Orman advice columns on retirement funds.) All in all, a humanizing piece?save for the detail about how she drinks sparkling water from a silver straw?that shows that the self-made billionaire is indeed fallible and even prone to under-eye circles.

The same day as the Times piece was published, the noticeably fatigued Winfrey traveled to David Letterman?s alma mater, Ball State University, in Indiana, for a oddly intimate discussion considering the forum (an auditorium), the host (Winfrey?s formerly estranged acquaintance, Letterman), and the audience (hundreds of college students who had camped out the night before). The conversation, which Winfrey later likened to therapy, began when Letterman, not known for his armchair analysis, asked her to tell him about Kosciusko, Mississippi, where she grew up. The chat took a turn for the serious when Winfrey began to describe the beatings she received as a child, her experiences being raped, and the child that she had at the age of 14. The candid discussion became so engrossing that when a Ball State professor appeared onstage to wrap things up, both Letterman and Winfrey waved her off and continued talking for a full 45 minutes.

Ironically, these same admissions may have been the kind of fodder that would have earned Oprah ratings gold on her former talk show. Alas, neither conversation was taped for television, only written about in another struggling media format?papers.

Related: Can Oprah Regain Her Perch as Television Titan After OWN Stumbling Blocks?

Source: http://www.vanityfair.com/online/oscars/2012/11/oprah-winfrey-cancer-scare-o-magazine-david-letterman-ball-state-university

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U.S. declines to name China currency manipulator

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration said on Tuesday that China's currency remained "significantly undervalued," but stopped short of labeling the world's second-biggest economy a currency manipulator.

Although Beijing controls the pace at which the yuan can rise, the U.S. Treasury said in a congressionally mandated semi-annual report that China did not meet the legal requirements to be deemed a currency manipulator.

The label is largely symbolic, but would require Washington to open discussions with Beijing on adjusting the yuan's value.

It has been 18 years since the U.S. Treasury has designated any country a manipulator. China was labeled a manipulator between 1992 and 1994.

The latest report reflected both the administration's desire to maintain good relations with its top creditor and an attempt to keep up pressure for changes in China that could benefit the U.S. economy and mollify domestic critics.

The report noted that the yuan, also known as the renminbi, had risen 12.6 percent against the U.S. dollar in inflation-adjusted terms since June 2010. An official said it was up 9.7 percent on a nominal basis through Tuesday, when it closed at a record high.

The Treasury also said China had "substantially" reduced its intervention in foreign exchange markets since the third quarter of 2011 and had loosened capital controls.

"In light of these developments, Treasury has concluded that the standards ... have not been met with respect to China," it said. "Nonetheless, the available evidence suggests the renminbi remains significantly undervalued," the report added, echoing the Treasury's last assessment in May.

Ted Truman, a Treasury official under former President Bill Clinton, said it was important to keep a watchful eye on China's currency policy.

"We have the aftermath of 10 years of misbehavior," said Truman, who is now with the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "It would probably be unwise and too soon to declare victory."

During the U.S. presidential campaign, Republican candidate Mitt Romney pledged to label China a manipulator on his first day in office to show he would be tougher on the chief U.S. economic competitor than President Barack Obama.

Many U.S. businesses and lawmakers complain that Beijing keeps the value of its currency artificially low to gain an advantage in trade at the expense of American jobs.

But an international consensus is growing that the yuan is closing in on its fair value after about a decade at an artificially weak level. The International Monetary Fund softened its language on the yuan in July.

YUAN AT RECORD HIGH

Signs of a recovery in the Chinese economy and a new round of quantitative easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve have led traders to push the yuan higher.

But China's central bank has kept a lid on the move. The central bank allows the yuan to rise or fall by only 1 percent from whatever rate it sets each day.

Charles Schumer, the No. 3 Democrat in the U.S. Senate and a longtime critic of China's yuan policy, said the Treasury passed up an opportunity to level the trade playing field.

"It's time for the Obama administration to rip off the band-aid, and force China to play by the same rules as all other countries," the New York senator said in a statement.

But the U.S.-China Business Council, which represents U.S. companies that do business with China, applauded the decision.

"The exchange rate has little to do with the U.S. trade balance or employment," council President John Frisbie said. "We need to move on to more important issues with China, such as removing market access barriers and improving intellectual property protection."

The Treasury said further appreciation of the yuan would help China balance its economy toward consumption by giving households greater purchasing power.

It called on China to reduce its "exceptionally high" foreign exchange reserves and publish data about its intervention in currency markets.

The Obama administration also used the currency report to keep pressure on South Korea to limit its foreign exchange intervention.

South Korea says it intervenes to smooth the volatility of its won currency, but it has gone into the market throughout 2012, the Treasury report said. In July, the IMF said the won was undervalued by up to 10 percent.

"We will continue to press the Korean authorities to limit their foreign exchange interventions to the exceptional circumstances of disorderly market conditions," the report said.

(Reporting by Anna Yukhananov, additional reporting by Doug Palmer and Lesley Wroughton; Editing by James Dalgleish, Dan Grebler and Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-declines-name-china-currency-manipulator-003153427--business.html

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Home prices rise slightly in September

S&P/Case-Shiller home price indices rose by 0.28 percent in September, signaling the beginning of a flattening of home prices.

By SoldAtTheTop,?Guest blogger / November 27, 2012

This graph shows S&P/Case-Shiller Composite-10 price index since 2000. The 10-city composite index increased 2.13 percent in September 2012 as compared to September 2011.

SoldAtTheTop

Enlarge

The latest release of the?S&P/Case-Shiller (CSI) home price indices?for September reported that the non-seasonally adjusted Composite-10 price index increased a slight 0.28% since August while the Composite-20 index increased 0.29% over the same period.?

Skip to next paragraph SoldAtTheTop

Writer, The PaperEconomy Blog

'SoldAtTheTop' is not a pessimist by nature but a true skeptic and realist who prefers solid and sustained evidence of fundamental economic recovery to 'Goldilocks,' 'Green Shoots,' 'Mustard Seeds,' and wholesale speculation.

Recent posts

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The latest CSI data clearly indicates that the price trends, while continuing to experience a slight lift through the typically more active late-summer season, are beginning to see a flattening of sorts and?as I recently pointed out, the more timely and less distorted Radar Logic RPX data is starting to see the leveling off of prices yield to the typical seasonal downtrend into the fall.?

The 10-city composite index increased 2.13% as compared to September 2011 while the 20-city composite increased 3.00% over the same period.?

Both of the broad composite indices show significant peak declines slumping -29.77% for the 10-city national index and -29.20% for the 20-city national index on a peak comparison basis.?

To better visualize today?s results use?Blytic.com to view the full release.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on paper-money.blogspot.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/xV0mti7JpQg/Home-prices-rise-slightly-in-September

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EO Member Talks Marriage and Business Management in Inc ...

blog phot

EO Dallas member Adrienne Cornelsen was recently interviewed in the November issue of Inc. Magazine. In an article titled, ?Two Spouses, Two Companies,? Adrienne talked about her marriage to a fellow entrepreneur and the importance of celebrating wins.? Adrienne landed the interview by leveraging EO PressPass, an EO benefit that connects members with reporters and leading publications around the world. Check out the abridged article below:

Two Spouses, Two Companies

By: Meg Cadoux Hirshberg, an editor for Inc.

Hollywood loves power couples. Over the years, we?ve seen movies about married lawyers (Adam?s Rib), married scientists (Outbreak), and married professional killers (Mr. & Mrs. Smith). But I can?t think of any movies about married entrepreneurs. That?s a missed opportunity, because the potential for both drama and comedy is legion.

In real life, entrepreneurs do end up together, for a variety of reasons. Some meet after they?ve already started their companies?at trade shows or chamber of commerce events or CEO networking groups. Others agree to take turns starting businesses after they marry, the way some spouses take turns attending graduate school. Occasionally, a nonentrepreneur marries an entrepreneur and then wants to try what his spouse is doing, because, man, that looks like fun. But however they get there, two spouses running two companies doubles the chaos. Or more than doubles it: The absence of one adult able to maintain a semblance of normalcy introduces a multiplier effect.

The chief sources of stress are (of course) money and time. Entrepreneurship requires households to put up cash before they start earning it. It?s an investment that works best?sometimes only?if one family member shores up the dam with a regular paycheck and health benefits. The schedules of conventionally employed spouses are usually more predictable than those of entrepreneurs, which is critical when there are children in the mix. Employed spouses also get paid vacations. That means one adult is not working a full-court press 52 weeks a year, so a little pressure is being released somewhere.

When one spouse owns a company, that business competes with the family for resources. When both spouses own companies, his business may compete with her business, and both businesses compete with the family. If both spouses? companies go through difficult stretches at the same time, they are like twins in the womb: One may be fed at the expense of the other. With win-win not an option, the couple must negotiate who loses more. Which spouse will skip a paycheck? Which will dip into savings? Who will have to lay off an employee?

Because most marriages are founded on an ideal of parity, spouses may be tempted to share the sacrifice, as they vowed to share pretty much everything in that innocent moment standing before the altar. Or the entrepreneur who is in less dire straits may want to help her flailing spouse, even if she can?t really afford to do so. But the mathematics of family survival don?t work that way.

So, for practical reasons, many two-entrepreneur families choose which company to favor based on the relative contribution of each to the family?s income. That?s the understanding in the Flynn household. Lisa Flynn is founder of ChildLight Yoga and Yoga 4 Classrooms, New Hampshire-based companies that teach yoga and mindfulness to children. Her husband, John Flynn, runs Great Works Properties, a property and golf-course management company. John?s business brings in most of the cash, so ?if push came to shove,? said Lisa, ?his business would take precedence. But that?s tough for me to admit out loud.?

The problem with such arrangements is they tend to perpetuate inequities. How likely is it that two businesses, even with comparable ambitions and resources, will progress along exactly the same trajectories? If a couple?s two companies have lopsided revenue, that can force uncomfortable?and sometimes premature?discussions about their respective viability. Such discussions get ugly when one spouse calls into question the other?s seriousness, even if it?s only in comparison to his own. The leap from ?which company is healthier? to ?which company is worthier? is both dangerous and easy to make. Suddenly, it?s my growth company versus your lifestyle company. Or worse, my business versus your hobby.

The same calculus comes into play with schedules. It?s easier to decide which spouse forgoes a sales trip or works the weekend when there is a primary family business and a secondary family business. But when spouses don?t agree which is which, bad feelings are inevitable. If there are kids, then the prospect of running two start-ups while raising a family becomes like riding a unicycle on a high wire while juggling lit torches. I know people do it. But if I had to watch them, I?d keep my hands over my eyes and peek through my fingers.

In the ideal dual-company marriage, relative size and success are unimpor?tant. Adrienne Cornelsen runs Insite Interactive, a Dallas-based company that designs websites and mobile applications. Adrienne?s business is much larger than Evolving Texas, the civil-engineering firm owned by her husband, John Cornelsen. But that may change: The Cornelsens expect that at some point, Evolving will surpass Insite in sales. Whichever business is bigger, the spouses respect each other?s contributions equally. ?We have a ?times-four? rule in our household,? Adrienne said. ?My company?s revenues are four times his, so when he gets a contract for $25,000, we are as thrilled as if I got awarded a $100,000 contract. Entrepreneurs have to celebrate every win.?

I was surprised by how many two-company couples I spoke to are as content as the Cornelsens. I had expected to hear more tales of overwhelming stress and exhaustion, compounded by a lack of emotional succor. In my experience, entrepreneurs need someone who is less stressed?or at least differently stressed?to whom they can confide their troubles. I had assumed entrepreneur spouses would be like two overflowing vessels futilely trying to pour their excess anxiety into each other.

What I failed to account for was the deep satisfaction bred by affinity. Simply put, married entrepreneurs get each other. As my husband, Gary, built his business, I often felt as if I were watching a foreign film without subtitles. I had no idea why he did what he did; his thinking was so different from mine, it seemed incomprehensible. By contrast, when a company-owning husband fumes over losing a sale, his company-owning wife understands why he finds the experience so galling. Resentments that can build in families that shelter only one entrepreneur tend to fizzle in dual-entrepreneur families.

In many cases, married entrepreneurs share advice and strategize as equals. They form a CEO networking group of two. But even those who keep each other?s companies at arm?s length respect their spouses? grit and resilience. Yes, two risk-loving, overworking, superambitious adults in one marriage are a lot. But two optimistic, never-say-die adults are propitious for a happy future. ?Our attitude toward our personal lives is the same one we have in business: Don?t give in to the challenges,? said Adrienne Cornelsen. ?We just find the solution?whether our goal is to take an exotic trip or buy a house that right now seems unattainable. Our way of thinking lets us choose an exceptional life.?

Source: http://blog.eonetwork.org/2012/11/eo-member-talks-marriage-and-business-management-in-inc-magazine/

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How Rome Didn't Decline and Fall (Yet) The Vatican Occupation of America

?

Nov-26-2012 14:17printcomments

A Tragi-Comedy In Three Acts II - SEX AND THE SINGLE CHURCH

Courtesy: anneofcarversville.com


(DAYTONA BEACH, FL) - That the Church nurses a preoccupation with sex, intentional, inferred or by default, is so self-evident, given our almost daily saturation in news stories about child abuse, that damage control and cover-up are necessary. It's apparent also in the wide range of responses within the Roman Catholic world, ranging from the almost total denial displayed by organizations such as the American Catholic League, headed up by the aggressive William Donohue, to the opposite extreme occupied by the publication U.S. Catholic, which adopts an editorial stance often surprisingly critical of Catholic practice.

Another glaring example of this wide disparity is in the recent political controversy that has revisited birth control and contraception, topics that most of us had thought to have been resolved 50 years ago. Most recently, the 19th Century morality of contraception as evil has been exhumed and dusted off by a seemingly tunnel-visioned presidential candidate, indicating that for a huge tranche of our population and electorate, the world may still be flat.

From the top down, the Vatican's sexual fixation seems to have evolved into three distinct sources of power, manifested in control. They are, in sequence, (1) the control of the clergy, priests and nuns; (2) the direct control of lay persons; and (3) the political and social control of nations, and by implication their populations.

The latter, historically has been a simple quantitative issue of numbers. In order to dominate, the Roman Catholic Church has quite simply bent all its efforts to out-producing its competitors in the universe of religions. Ergo, if human reproduction is the means of conquering the world, sex becomes the center-piece, the ultimate solution to the problem.

During the early centuries of it's existence, the Church had a semblance of being basically a democratic institution, but evolved into an absolute monarchy with the demands for growth and power, with the imperative of central control of priest and peasant alike. The simplest solution lay in tweaking human sexuality. This was brought about by simply re-engineering morality.

Virginity, even in primitive society, has always been a winner. The Catholic Church adopted it as a central virtue, and made celibacy in clerical leadership the evidence of superiority and therefore control. The leadership extended downward, but it also was inherently subservient: exercising devotion, loyalty and obedience upward in the hierarchy, at all levels.

The result is summed up by Hilaire Belloc, the British Catholic writer of the last century: ?The religion of the Catholic is... essentially an acceptance of the religion of others... and all the proceeds from the authoritative voice of the Church. For the Catholic, it is not he himself, it is the Church which can alone discover, decide, and affirm.?

Given this attitude, the parish priest, says Belloc, becomes primarily the voice of authority, ?a member of a special caste,? military in its severity, he is known as ?Father,? to underline his paternal authority. And, he pays off through his ability to forgive sin and grant absolution.

In such a hierarchy and system of control, where democracy or the needs of the people conflict with the needs of the hierarchy, guess which is given short shrift?

In turn, control of the laity is manifested by the need to exploit sexuality for the single purpose of out-producing the Church's competitors and the non-Christian world. As a result, anything running counter to flat-out reproductive output has been declared to be immoral.

(By the way, in a world seemingly turning away from man-made religion, the Catholic formula still seems to be working, if only marginally. In a recent report by the National Council of Churches, while all other major denominations in North America seem to be declining in numbers, ranging in severity from Southern Baptist (down 1%) to Evangelical Lutheran (down 5.9%) in the latest year, the Roman Catholic Church alone showed a growth rate, albeit something less than 1%.)

The anvil chorus of sexual imperatives goes about like this:

1. Since reproduction is the only acceptable purpose for sex, sex among the unmarried is obviously immoral. (In the event, the single exception to the caveat appears to be the activity of clergy and altar boys.)

2. Homosexuality is also a no-no, again with the noted clerical exception and special dispensation.

3. Contraception is out in contemporary Catholicism, although of course it's been around since the cave man, and mysteriously and visibly it seems to be illegally practised by 98% of all Catholics (because families with 15 children, apart from rural Quebec and vast stretches of Latin America, are quite rare).

4. Abortion is frowned upon, in fact among the more violent opposition to it, it is the justification for detonating abortion clinics and assassinating practising physicians. In 21st Century America, incredibly, it has even been dressed up and presented as a presidential election issue.

5. Divorce is considered immoral although grudgingly allowed with special dispensation (especially to wealthy Catholics) because it was seen historically as a detriment to reproduction. More lenience may be allowed after menopause.

6. Sex education has traditionally been considered bad because it results in common sense control by the participants. A modern broadminded Vatican allows limited sex education as long as it doesn't mention contraception.

7. Prostitution is bad, of course, being anathema to sex and child-bearing among married couples. (Child porn, child abuse and trafficking as suitable substitutes are permitted, albeit only in the upper echelons of the Church and lay society.)

The obvious disparity between the official list of immoralities and common practice provides the church with one of its principal sources of cash flow (which in church corporation finance is synonymous with net earnings, because of course it is tax-exempt). Since everybody is guilty of some or all of the seven deadly sins listed above, the interplay of sin and forgiveness and their adjudication by sales-minded priests constitutes an enormous profit center at both the local and international levels.

Catholic education, as well as being a contradiction in terms, is the Peter Principle, (?on this rock will I build my Church") the base on which the Church continues to perch. The Peter Principle simply means that Catholic students aren't permitted to complete their thought process in assimilating knowledge, wherever and whenever the Church itself might be threatened. Instead, they are taught and conditioned through kindergarten to Catholic university, always to cite some dogma or other. This is noticeable to a thinking non-Catholic observer even among the most liberal-minded and seemingly rational Catholics, noticeable in the mainstream among the Catholic talking heads, celebrities, commentators, politicians and civic leaders in contemporary America.

In most public schools, however effectively or otherwise, the intended emphasis is on encouraging children to think for themselves. Given empirical knowledge, for example, they are taught the meaning and value of the U.S. Constitution. In Catholic schools, children are taught that they owe ?complete submission and obedience of will to the Church and to the Roman Pontiff, as to God Himself.? The Catholic Church is a sovereign power.

According to Dr. Stephen Mumford:

?As far as the hierarchy is concerned, the acceptability of a form of government depends upon its attitude toward the Church. As Leo XIII said in his encyclical on Human Liberty, 'It is not of itself wrong to prefer a democratic form of government, if only the Catholic doctrine be maintained as to the origin and exercise of power.'"

If a democracy favors the Church, then the hierarchy tolerates it; if it opposes the Church, then that proves that the government is godless and lacks the necessary divine authority. If a democracy in Spain expels the Jesuits and seizes Church property, then it is a murderous outlaw. If a democracy in The Netherlands supports all the Catholic schools with taxpayers? money and pays the salaries of the priests, its divine right to govern is recognized as authentic.

?The American Catholic bishops," Mumford again, " who praise democracy always utter their praises with an import?ant mental reservation, that the real source of the authority of the American government and of all governments is God and not the people. And when the bishops use the name of God in this con?nection, they do not mean a genial or nondenominational deity of all the people; they mean the particular Catholic Deity who established Roman primacy through St. Peter, whose vicar on earth is the pope.?

The assumption of Catholic education is that the government has no primary right to educate and that such a right has been given by God, the source of all governmental power, to the Roman Catholic Church. ?Religious freedom,? that ubiquitous watchword, is threatened by any opposition to the dogma of the Church, and it is available to men only through the Roman Catholic hierarchy.

We should all, it's assumed, be so lucky.

________

Next issue: we conclude this three-part series with ?The Vatican and The Numbers Game?

______________________________________________________

Bill Annett grew up a writing brat; his father, Ross Annett, at a time when Scott Fitzgerald and P.G. Wodehouse were regular contributors, wrote the longest series of short stories in the Saturday Evening Post's history, with the sole exception of the unsinkable Tugboat Annie.

At 18, Bill's first short story was included in the anthology ?Canadian Short Stories.? Alarmed, his father enrolled Bill in law school in Manitoba to ensure his going straight. For a time, it worked, although Bill did an arabesque into an English major, followed, logically, by corporation finance, investment banking and business administration at NYU and the Wharton School. He added G.I. education in the Army's CID at Fort Dix, New Jersey during the Korean altercation.

He also contributed to The American Banker and Venture in New York, INC. in Boston, the International Mining Journal in London, Hong Kong Business, Financial Times and Financial Post in Toronto.

Bill has written six books, including a page-turner on mutual funds, a send-up on the securities industry, three corporate histories and a novel, the latter no doubt inspired by his current occupation in Daytona Beach as a law-abiding beach comber.

You can write to Bill Annett at this address: bilko23@gmail.com

________________________________________

_________________________________________



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B.C.'s AIDS strategy credited for decline in cases | Health X Pert ...

Offering free treatment for HIV may help reduce the rate of new diagnoses, say B.C. researchers who are calling for the strategy to be used across Canada.

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Man's best friend: Common canine virus may lead to new vaccines for deadly human diseases

Man's best friend: Common canine virus may lead to new vaccines for deadly human diseases [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Biao He
bhe@uga.edu
706-542-2855
University of Georgia

Athens, Ga. Researchers at the University of Georgia have discovered that a virus commonly found in dogs may serve as the foundation for the next great breakthrough in human vaccine development.

Although harmless in humans, parainfluenza virus 5, or PIV5, is thought to contribute to upper respiratory infections in dogs, and it is a common target for canine vaccines designed to prevent kennel cough. In a paper published recently in PLOS ONE, researchers describe how this virus could be used in humans to protect against diseases that have eluded vaccine efforts for decades.

"We can use this virus as a vector for all kinds of pathogens that are difficult to vaccinate against," said Biao He, the study's principal investigator and professor of infectious diseases in UGA's College of Veterinary Medicine. "We have developed a very strong H5N1 flu vaccine with this technique, but we are also working on vaccines for HIV, tuberculosis and malaria."

PIV5 does not cause disease in humans, as our immune system is able to recognize and destroy it. By placing antigens from other viruses or parasites inside PIV5, it effectively becomes a delivery vehicle that exposes the human immune system to important pathogens and allows it to create the antibodies that will protect against future infection.

This approach not only ensures full exposure to the vaccine but also is much safer because it does not require the use of attenuated, or weakened, pathogens. For example, an HIV vaccine delivered by PIV5 would contain only those parts of the HIV virus necessary to create immunity, making it impossible to contract the disease from the vaccine.

"Safety is always our number one concern," said He, who is also a Georgia Research Alliance distinguished investigator and member of the Faculty of Infectious Diseases. "PIV5 makes it much easier to vaccinate without having to use live pathogens."

Using viruses as a delivery mechanism for vaccines is not a new technique, but previous efforts have been fraught with difficulty. If humans or animals already possess a strong immunity to the virus used for delivery, the vaccine is unlikely to work, as it will be destroyed by the immune system too quickly.

"Pre-existing immunity to viruses is the main reason most of these vaccines fail," He said.

But in this latest study, He and his colleagues demonstrate that immunity to PIV5 does not limit its effectiveness as a vaccine delivery mechanism, even though many animalsincluding humans already carry antibodies against it.

In their experiments, the researchers found that a single dose inoculation using PIV5 protected mice from the influenza strain that causes seasonal flu. Another single dose experimental vaccine also protected mice from the highly pathogenic and deadly H5N1 virus commonly known as bird flu.

This recent work is a culmination of more than fifteen years of research and experimentation with the PIV5 virus, and He has confidence that it will serve as an excellent foundation for vaccines to treat diseases in both animals and humans.

"I believe we have the best H5N1 vaccine candidate in existence," He said. "But we have also opened up a big field for a host of new vaccines."

###

UGA Faculty of Infectious Diseases

The University of Georgia Faculty of Infectious Diseases was created in 2007 to address existing and emerging infectious disease threats more effectively by integrating multidisciplinary research in animal, human and ecosystem health. Researchers from across the university focus on epidemiology, host-pathogen interactions, the evolution of infectious diseases, disease surveillance and predictors and the development of countermeasures such as vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics. For more information about the Faculty of Infectious Diseases, see fid.ovpr.uga.edu.

UGA College of Veterinary Medicine

The UGA College of Veterinary Medicine, founded in 1946, is dedicated to training future veterinarians, to conducting research related to animal and human diseases, and to providing veterinary services for animals and their owners. Research efforts are aimed at enhancing the quality of life for animals and people, improving the productivity of poultry and livestock, and preserving a healthy interface between wildlife and people in the environment they share. The college enrolls 102 students each fall out of more than 800 who apply.

Writer: James Hataway, 706/542-5222, jhataway@uga.edu

Contact: Biao He, 706/542-2855, bhe@uga.edu


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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.


Man's best friend: Common canine virus may lead to new vaccines for deadly human diseases [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Biao He
bhe@uga.edu
706-542-2855
University of Georgia

Athens, Ga. Researchers at the University of Georgia have discovered that a virus commonly found in dogs may serve as the foundation for the next great breakthrough in human vaccine development.

Although harmless in humans, parainfluenza virus 5, or PIV5, is thought to contribute to upper respiratory infections in dogs, and it is a common target for canine vaccines designed to prevent kennel cough. In a paper published recently in PLOS ONE, researchers describe how this virus could be used in humans to protect against diseases that have eluded vaccine efforts for decades.

"We can use this virus as a vector for all kinds of pathogens that are difficult to vaccinate against," said Biao He, the study's principal investigator and professor of infectious diseases in UGA's College of Veterinary Medicine. "We have developed a very strong H5N1 flu vaccine with this technique, but we are also working on vaccines for HIV, tuberculosis and malaria."

PIV5 does not cause disease in humans, as our immune system is able to recognize and destroy it. By placing antigens from other viruses or parasites inside PIV5, it effectively becomes a delivery vehicle that exposes the human immune system to important pathogens and allows it to create the antibodies that will protect against future infection.

This approach not only ensures full exposure to the vaccine but also is much safer because it does not require the use of attenuated, or weakened, pathogens. For example, an HIV vaccine delivered by PIV5 would contain only those parts of the HIV virus necessary to create immunity, making it impossible to contract the disease from the vaccine.

"Safety is always our number one concern," said He, who is also a Georgia Research Alliance distinguished investigator and member of the Faculty of Infectious Diseases. "PIV5 makes it much easier to vaccinate without having to use live pathogens."

Using viruses as a delivery mechanism for vaccines is not a new technique, but previous efforts have been fraught with difficulty. If humans or animals already possess a strong immunity to the virus used for delivery, the vaccine is unlikely to work, as it will be destroyed by the immune system too quickly.

"Pre-existing immunity to viruses is the main reason most of these vaccines fail," He said.

But in this latest study, He and his colleagues demonstrate that immunity to PIV5 does not limit its effectiveness as a vaccine delivery mechanism, even though many animalsincluding humans already carry antibodies against it.

In their experiments, the researchers found that a single dose inoculation using PIV5 protected mice from the influenza strain that causes seasonal flu. Another single dose experimental vaccine also protected mice from the highly pathogenic and deadly H5N1 virus commonly known as bird flu.

This recent work is a culmination of more than fifteen years of research and experimentation with the PIV5 virus, and He has confidence that it will serve as an excellent foundation for vaccines to treat diseases in both animals and humans.

"I believe we have the best H5N1 vaccine candidate in existence," He said. "But we have also opened up a big field for a host of new vaccines."

###

UGA Faculty of Infectious Diseases

The University of Georgia Faculty of Infectious Diseases was created in 2007 to address existing and emerging infectious disease threats more effectively by integrating multidisciplinary research in animal, human and ecosystem health. Researchers from across the university focus on epidemiology, host-pathogen interactions, the evolution of infectious diseases, disease surveillance and predictors and the development of countermeasures such as vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics. For more information about the Faculty of Infectious Diseases, see fid.ovpr.uga.edu.

UGA College of Veterinary Medicine

The UGA College of Veterinary Medicine, founded in 1946, is dedicated to training future veterinarians, to conducting research related to animal and human diseases, and to providing veterinary services for animals and their owners. Research efforts are aimed at enhancing the quality of life for animals and people, improving the productivity of poultry and livestock, and preserving a healthy interface between wildlife and people in the environment they share. The college enrolls 102 students each fall out of more than 800 who apply.

Writer: James Hataway, 706/542-5222, jhataway@uga.edu

Contact: Biao He, 706/542-2855, bhe@uga.edu


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Social Media Marketing And You: How To Expand Your Business.

Many people make use of social media each day. They will use their accounts to share information with all their family and friends. Due to this, information can be spread quickly throughout the Internet, as information is exchanged from one friend to another. This is good news for businesses; if you advertise properly, your business marketing materials will quickly reach all of your potential customers. The article below contains tips to help you navigate the world of social media marketing with ease.

Look for opportunities to combine print ads with social media. You can do things like include your different profile addresses or post some of your poster as well as flyers in one of your photo albums. Generate more interest from your customers by giving them a preview of your campaign online, or by having a photo contest related to your posters.

Retweet updates from other influential Twitter users which you believe your followers would benefit from reading. These people will receive a notification when you make such mentions, which means they may retweet your content or respond to what you?ve said.

People like having the option to comment on your blog. This is crucial, especially if you prefer to keep your more direct contact information private, including your email address. Monitor your posts closely, but do allow them! Delete any nonconstructive negative comments, spam, or other offensive commentary.

When posting videos to YouTube make sure there is a link to click on that takes the viewer to your site. Set the link up where it describes your video, and also have a Twitter and Facebook button near your videos on your channel. When you have YouTube users following you on Twitter or Facebook, they will probably share your videos with all their friends.

Use giveaways to get more followers. To entice them to enter the contest, get them to sign up on your Facebook page or become a Twitter follower as an added incentive. Give out a prize, no matter how small, to whoever gets the most people to subscribe to you and that will drive people to you.

Limit the amount of posting you do on behalf of your company at Facebook and other social media sites. Three posts in a day is plenty. Posting too many times in a day can leave your customers feeling overwhelmed and make it more likely that they will stop following you. Post the three items or issues you want to apprise your customers of for the day, then wait until tomorrow to post anything else.

If you have a social media presence, always respond to people when they ask a question or post a comment. Look for comments every time you log on.

Keep in mind the techniques that worked for you and your colleagues previously. Knowing what has worked and what hasn?t will allow you to embrace strategies that work and avoid those that don?t. By doing that, you can keep in mind what will and won?t work when you try again.

Hold an online contest for a free product or service, and broadcast it through all of your social media channels. People love getting things that are free, and they will gladly fill out any forms or follow your business on any social media site if they could possibly win. Don?t forget to publicize who won the contest, as some people don?t believe that these contests are real. It is also, of course, another opportunity to advertise.

As has been said, millions of people subscribe to social media. Content is being both created and shared at a rapid pace. Companies can use this to their advantage by spreading info about things they offer. Using the tips from this article, you can use social media marketing to get the word out about your company.

Social Media Marketing, SEO


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