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  • Minimize your Risk for Identity Theft

    Identity theft is the fastest growing crime in America. According to the Federal Trade Commission, the number of identity theft incidents reached 9.9 million in 2003. These crimes are estimated to have taken the average victim $500 and 30 hours to resolve.

    From stolen credit cards to total identity kidnapping, these ugly and prevalent crimes are hard to prevent and often difficult to correct. Although it is hard to truly avoid becoming a victim of identity theft, there are a few ways you can guard against this damaging crime.

    1. Types of identity theft

    Identity theft crime ...
    Author: Jeffrey Broobin
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE



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    Today's Featured Articles:

  • The Cure For Old Age

    Did you know that aging begins at 30! And every second somewhere in the world someone turns 50! And the quality of life for the average person stops at age 51. After that, it takes medical intervention to manage their symptoms to maintain their “health”. And only 1 in 10,000 people makes it to 100 years old… and a shocking proportion of those people who reach the age of 100 are very poor! “Aging is a barbarick phenomenon that shouldn’t be tolerated in polite society,” says University of Cambridge gerentologist Aubrey de Grey. I Gerald Armstrong the owner of Gen Cells Cures agree. The stem c ...
    Author: Gerald Armstrong
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

  • Secrets of The Mathematical Symmetry of Nature and Patterns of Erosion

    As scientists and theorists study patterns, design, chaos, complexity they often turn to nature for examples and there is plenty of examples in nature too. The stripes on a zebra, patterns on a butterfly, spider webs, leafs on a tree, scales on a fish, seashells, brain waves, muscle structure, texture of granite, spider webs, Earth cycles, waves on the ocean, wind flow, clouds in the sky, Rainbows, Solar System, structure of a meteorite and even DNA itself.

    One pattern of nature we often do not discuss is the patterns of erosion, which we can see better from an airplane, satellite pho ...
    Author: Lance Winslow
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

    Want to read more of our articles?  Check out the Archive.

    Article Archive: Pages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

     

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    Genetics News:

    Site-specific biotinylation of RNA molecules by transcription using unnatural base pairs.

    Publication Date: 2005 PMID: 16113238Authors: Moriyama, K. - Kimoto, M. - Mitsui, T. - Yokoyama, S. - Hirao, I.Journal: Nucleic Acids ResDirect site-specific biotinylation of RNA molecules was achieved by specific transcription mediated by unnatural base pairs. Unnatural base pairs between 2-amino-6-(2-thienyl)purine (denoted by s) and 2-oxo(1H)pyridine (denoted by y), or 2-amino-6-(2-thiazolyl)purine (denoted as v) and y specifically function in T7 transcription. Using these unnatural base pairs, the substrate of biotinylated-y (Bio-yTP) was selectively incorporated into RNA, opposite s or v in the DNA templates, by T7 RNA polymerase. This method was applied to the immobilization of an RNA aptamer on sensor chips, and the aptamer accurately recognized its target protein. This direct site-specific biotinylation will provide a tool for RNA-based biotechnologies.


    PCR-derived ssDNA Probes for Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization to HIV-1 RNA

    Tech Notes Original Article. Marlyse C. Knuchela et al. Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, Vol. 48, 285-294, February 2000 Abstract We developed a simple and rapid technique to synthesize single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) probes for fluores ...


    Site-Specific Fluorescent and Affinity Labelling of RNA by Using a Small Engineered Twin Ribozyme.

    Publication Date: 2005 Dec 2 PMID: 16276501Authors: Vauleon, S. - Ivanov, S. A. - Gwiazda, S. - Muller, S.Journal: Chembiochem


    snRNAs as the catalysts of pre-mRNA splicing.

    Publication Date: 2005 Dec PMID: 16242989Authors: Valadkhan, S.Journal: Curr Opin Chem BiolThe spliceosome, the gigantic molecular machine that performs pre-mRNA splicing in eukaryotes, contains over 200 different proteins and five RNA molecules. The central role played by the spliceosomal RNAs in splicing has led to the hypothesis that, like the ribosome, the spliceosome is an RNA-centric enzyme and a relic from the RNA world. Recent structural studies have provided the first glimpses of the structural features of spliceosomal RNAs, and mutational analyses in vivo and in vitro have uncovered new functional roles for a catalytically essential domain. An emerging model for the active site of group II introns, a closely related class of natural ribozymes, is likely to provide a wealth of insights on structure and function of the active site of the spliceosome.


     

     
     


  • The Cure For Old Age

    Did you know that aging begins at 30! And every second somewhere in the world someone turns 50! And the quality of life for the average person stops at age 51. After that, it takes medical intervention to manage their symptoms to maintain their “health”. And only 1 in 10,000 people makes it to 100 years old… and a shocking proportion of those people who reach the age of 100 are very poor! “Aging is a barbarick phenomenon that shouldn’t be tolerated in polite society,” says University of Cambridge gerentologist Aubrey de Grey. I Gerald Armstrong the owner of Gen Cells Cures agree. The stem c ...
    Author: Gerald Armstrong
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

    Here are a few more sites I've chosen if you'd like to read more and do more research:

  • Segment 2 - Clay and the Origins of Life
    Of RNA Oligomer Formation in Aqueous Solution. A Model for the Prebiotic Formation of RNA." Journal of the American Chemical Society. 1993, 155, 12270-12275. 5 Kristen Rybij. The "RNA World.


  • Daniel Appella, Ph.D. : Faculty : NIDDK Laboratories
    Nonionic Sidechains Modulate the Affinity and Specificity of Binding between Functionalized Polyamines and RNA Journal of the American Chemical Society(126): 12762, 2004. [Full Text/Abstract] Back to.


  • Steve's BioDatabase Page
    Cambridge University Press including the journal RNA. Journal of Biological Chemistry Oxford University Press Journal of Molecular Biology Seminars in the Boston area. Biology Week. Boston area.


  • http://www.bioinf.uni-freiburg.de/publications/publist.rolf.backofen.html
    Available: Postscript, gziped (175 KB) &nbsp BibTeX Entry ( Bac:Bus:CPM2004 ) Local Sequence-Structure Motifs in RNA Rolf Backofen, Sebastian Will In: Journal of Bioinformatics and Computational.


  • Society from top100searchengine.com
    Read the last RNA Journal Issue. The RNA Society is pleased to announce the release of its first newsletter. http://www.rnasociety.org/ sources: alltheweb. World Summit on the Information Society.


  • The Tibetan and Chinese health Secret: If you read one health report a year, this should be it!

    It seems as if the health of America is failing. One million Americans will die of circulatory disease this year. Six hundred thousand lives will be cut short by cancer as well. How did we get in such a mess? I’m not sure. But there is a way out that is starting to generate a real buzz! Since CNN and the gang won’t talk about it I decided to write is article.

    Dear readers, I want to introduce you to the most nutrient dense food on the earth; wolfberries, or more specifically Lycium Barbarum.

    The western scientific community have verified what Chinese and Tibetan health practitio ...
    Author: Paul Brelin
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

     

  • The Great Awakening--Menopause
    The Great Awakening--Menopause
    By: Dr. Loretta Lanphier, ND, CN, HHP

    Menopause is a natural transition all women experience, as natural as adolescence. For your grandmother and great-grandmother, life expectancy was shorter. Reaching menopause often meant that their life was nearing an end. But this is no longer true. Today women are living longer—on average, until age 78. How you experience menopause is determined by many factors: attitude, diet, overall health, genetics, and your cultural group. Medical science views menopause as the state of your body after you had completed one f ...
    Author:
    Dr. Loretta Lanphier, ND, CCN, HHP
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

     

     

     

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