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Platypus Venom Could Hold Key to Diabetes Treatment

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Australian researchers have discovered remarkable evolutionary changes to insulin regulation in two of the nation’s most iconic native animal species – the platypus and the echidna – which could pave the way for new treatments for type 2 diabetes in humans.

The findings, now published in the Nature journal Scientific Reports, reveal that the same hormone produced in the gut of the platypus to regulate blood glucose is also surprisingly produced in their venom.

The hormone, known as glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), is normally secreted in the gut of both humans and animals, stimulating the release of insulin to lower blood glucose.

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But GLP-1 typically degrades within minutes.

In people with type 2 diabetes, the short stimulus triggered by GLP-1 isn’t sufficient to maintain a proper blood sugar balance. As a result, medication that includes a longer lasting form of the hormone is needed to help provide an extended release of insulin.

“We’ve found that GLP-1 is degraded in monotremes by a completely different mechanism. Further analysis of the genetics of monotremes reveals that there seems to be a kind of molecular warfare going on between the function of GLP-1, which is produced in the gut but surprisingly also in their venom,” says co-lead author Professor Frank Grutzner

The platypus produces a powerful venom during breeding season, which is used in competition among males for females.

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“We’ve discovered conflicting functions of GLP-1 in the platypus: in the gut as a regulator of blood glucose, and in venom to fend off other platypus males during breeding season. This tug of war between the different functions has resulted in dramatic changes in the GLP-1 system,” says co-lead author Associate Professor Briony Forbes.

“The function in venom has most likely triggered the evolution of a stable form of GLP-1 in monotremes. Excitingly, stable GLP-1 molecules are highly desirable as potential type 2 diabetes treatments,” she says.

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GLP-1 has also been discovered in the venom of echidnas. But while the platypus has spurs on its hind limbs for delivering a large amount of venom to its opponent, there is no such spur on echidnas.

“The lack of a spur on echidnas remains an evolutionary mystery, but the fact that both platypus and echidnas have evolved the same long-lasting form of the hormone GLP-1 is in itself a very exciting finding,” Professor Grutzner says.

(Source: University of Adelaide)

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Check Out Dog’s Sweet Reaction to Seeing Real Life Santa Claus

 

Kya has always had a little plush Santa Claus chew toy by her side since last Christmas with the Montaldo family – so when she sees her buddy come to life, this Shiba Inu is all smiles.

Kya was just a 1-year-old puppy when she was given the toy, but she’s spent the entire year keeping it close.

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John Montaldo saw that Santa was doing a pet photo shoot at the mall, so he decided to bring Kya along.

The entire time they were waiting in like, Kya was reportedly fixated on her toy come to life. When it came time to finally take the photo, the pup’s happiness was totally unmatched. The picture shows a beaming Kya who looks like she was just granted the Christmas miracle of a lifetime.

Click To Share The Pawesome Story With Your FriendsPhoto by John Montaldo

Town Allows Residents to Donate Food and Toys Instead of Paying Parking Tickets

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Nobody likes arriving at their car only to find a parking ticket tucked under the wipers – but this Canadian town is offering residents a chance to give back with their parking fines instead.

The second annual Scrooge The Ticket program in Innisfil, Ontario is allowing recipients of parking tickets to donate toys, gift cards, or non-perishable food items to the needy instead of paying the fees.

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Starting tomorrow on November 30th, the donation option will extend until December 9th, offering a 3-week time period for citizens to opt out of the ticket.

“We really saw our residents get into the spirit with this last year and we are excited to hold our second ‘Scrooge the Ticket’ campaign,” said Innisfil Mayor Gord Wauchope. “No one likes to get a parking ticket, but this is a thoughtful way to have our residents give generously to a great cause leading into the holiday season.”

Any Innisfil drivers who are too scroogey to donate, just remember – Santa’s watching.

Click To Share The Jolly Story With Your FriendsPhoto by Innisfil

Stranger and Grandma Plan to Stay Friends After Accidental Thanksgiving Invitation

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Jamal Hinton and a mysterious grandma made international headlines earlier this month when the teen was accidentally included in a group chat inviting family members to a Thanksgiving feast.

After establishing that the anonymous texter was not his actual grandmother and it was a wrong number, 17-year-old Jamal jokingly asked “Can I still get a plate though?”

The woman now identified as Wanda Dench from Mesa, Arizona immediately responded with “Of course you can, that’s what grandmas do… feed everyone!”

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True to her word, Jamal joined the family for the holiday feast where he was embraced by Wanda and dubbed “her honorary grandson”.

The two plan on staying close friends in the future despite having just met.

“If you have an opportunity to do something kind for somebody, please, please do. It’s a good feeling to give kindness, and it’s a wonderful feeling to receive it,” Wanda told the Independent. “I just clicked when I met him and first talked to him. Oh my gosh, I want to get to know this guy.”

Click To Share The Sweet Story With Your FriendsPhoto by Jamal Hinton

Girl Finds Discarded Winning Lotto Ticket, Uses Money to Feed Homeless

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Phoebe Brown experienced a lucky financial windfall when she found a winning lotto ticket on the floor of a supermarket – but this loving little girl wasn’t about to keep the cash for herself.

The 7-year-old was shopping with her mother at a Hy-Vee store in Independence, Missouri when she found the $100 piece of paper on the floor of the store. Phoebe scooped up the ticket and exclaimed to her disbelieving mother that it was a winner.

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Instead of spending the money on herself, however, Phoebe used it to buy food for the Sycamore Hills Elementary School food drive. Thanks to Phoebe’s generous donation, the school was able to donate over 1,700 canned goods, 541 of which were contributed by the 2nd grade class.

The outpouring of groceries led the Sycamore Hills Elementary to winning the Independence School District’s 150th anniversary food drive competition. As a reward, the school’s gym teacher Herb Horseman allowed the 2nd grade class to shave his big, long bushy beard

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Scotland’s First Eco-Village for the Homeless Will Offer Education Too

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Scotland will begin construction of its first eco-village for the homeless in 2017 with its residents moving in by the summer.

The Edinburgh village will contain 10 tiny homes that can house up to 20 people for 12 months each. Since it costs the city council about $21,200 annually to provide one person with housing and food at shelters, the village is expected to save the government $250,000 a year.

Each house will cost roughly $35,000 to build, but their design offers a safe, transportable, and energy-efficient environment for its residents to break the vicious cycle of homelessness.

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The community will also offer job training, counseling, therapy, budgeting advice, and education to help the tenants get back on track before moving onto more permanent accommodation.

Social Bite, the charity responsible for the village, is already renowned for attracting the recognition of Oscar-winning actors George Clooney and Leonardo DiCaprio. The social enterprise currently trains and employs the homeless to work in their sandwich shops throughout Edinburgh. All their proceeds are donated to charity.

Once the village’s residents complete the training and year-long stay, either Social Bite or any of its partnering companies will reportedly have job opportunities waiting for the graduating tenants.

Click To Share The Big News With Your FriendsPhoto by Jonathan Avery, Tiny House Scotland

Aussie Hero in His Undies Chases Crook Until Police Arrive (WATCH)

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Daniel McDonnell didn’t let his lack of clothing keep him from chasing down a hit-and-run offender – now he’s being recognized as the national hero of down under.

The father of four awoke with a start on Thursday evening to discover that a 35-year-old man who claims to have fallen asleep at the wheel had crashed his car into Daniel’s friend’s mom’s fish and chip shop of 40 years.

When Daniel walked outside in nothing but his underwear, the shop was in shambles and the perpetrator was attempting to flee the scene of the crime.

“I’ve said ‘What are you doing, mate? You can’t be leaving the scene’.” Daniel exclaimed in an interview. The driver responded by telling him not to be a hero.

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Not to be swayed, Daniel started chasing the suspect down the street. The man turned down a side street where the Aussie dad cornered him until he could flag down approaching Brisbane police.

When questioned about his courageous motives, he simply said “You look after your mates and your mates will always look after you.”

Guess it’s safe to say that not all heroes have to wear capes – or any other clothes, for that matter.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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First Human HIV Vaccine Trial in 7 Years

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Scientists in South Africa are to kick off the nation’s largest and most advanced human trial for an HIV vaccine, with results expected in 2020.

With 1,000 people being infected with the virus every day, the study is expected to have greater results than the RV144 trial in Thailand 7 years ago. The trials were conducted on 16,000 people with a meager 31% success rate. They did, however, manage to prove that HIV prevention was possible.

The current vaccine study, called the HVTN 702 trials, have enrolled over 5,400 men and women infected with HIV. HVTN 702 begins just months after interim results were reported for HVTN 100, its predecessor clinical trial, which found that the new vaccine regimen was safe for the 252 study participants and induced comparable immune responses to those reported in RV144.

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“If deployed alongside our current armory of proven HIV prevention tools, a safe and effective vaccine could be the final nail in the coffin for HIV,” said Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a co-funder of the trial. “Even a moderately effective vaccine would significantly decrease the burden of HIV disease over time in countries and populations with high rates of HIV infection, such as South Africa.”

Spread The News: Click To SharePhoto by Dr. PS Sahana * Kadamtala Howrah, CC license

Suicide Rates Plummet Among Members of Apache Tribe

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Deaths by suicide among an Apache tribe in Arizona dropped by nearly 40 percent between 2006 and 2012 compared to the previous six-year period.

The substantial reduction came after White Mountain tribal leaders became proactive in passing legislation to develop a surveillance system and intensive prevention program, which tracks and triages those with suicide attempts and suicidal thoughts.

These results bolster the findings of a handful of studies to show that suicide is preventable with comprehensive, community-based efforts, and one of the only to show reduction in both attempts and deaths.

“Suicide is a public health problem that many don’t see as preventable,” says study leader Mary Cwik, PhD, a clinical psychologist and researcher at the Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health at the Bloomberg School. “In recent years, suicide is the leading cause of death globally for girls between the ages of 15 and 19. This study shows how a courageous community used legislation and community mental health workers to successfully address suicide as a public health crisis.”

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The work of the tribe also included training for adults to identify at-risk youth; two school-based programs — one enlisting elders to promote cultural engagement, and the other promoting coping and problem-solving skills — screening and interventions in the tribe’s emergency rooms to connect those who attempt suicide or experience a binge drinking or drugging episode with counseling; and a community-based media campaign to promote prevention education.

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“We are proud of our Tribal Council for passing a law in support of a community-based suicide prevention surveillance system,” says Novalene Goklish, BS, outreach team supervisor and member of the White Mountain Apache Tribe who was involved in the study. “We are determined to let our Apache people who are hurting know that there is real help for them.”

From 2001 to 2006, the suicide rate among the White Mountain Apache members between the ages of 15 and 24 was 13 times that of the general U.S. population. When the tribe realized the extent of the disparity, they reached out to their long-time partner, the Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health, to analyze surveillance data and design and implement a comprehensive prevention program.

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The study, from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, found that in the wake of the new programs, suicide deaths and attempts fell significantly among tribe members. Overall, they found, suicide rates dropped by 38.3 percent, while national rates remained stable or rose. This included a 60-percent decrease among the 25-to-34-year-old group and a 37-percent decline among those between the ages of 20 and 24.

What’s more, the downward trend in deaths during the study period appeared to be mirrored in suicide attempts. The annual number of attempts decreased from 75 in 2007 to 25 in 2012.

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To achieve these successes, the tribe developed a unique community surveillance system that tracks and triages suicide deaths, attempts, and suicidal thoughts with technical assistance from the Johns Hopkins researchers. After an incident is reported, Apache outreach workers follow up with in-person visits to verify what happened, listen to the individual’s story, provide emotional support, and connect individuals to care. These staff members also follow up to monitor the individual’s welfare over time.

The surveillance system, which they call Celebrating Life, has several key components:

  1. Outreach messages to the tribal community promote awareness about the sacredness of life and availability of a 24-hour help line, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (1-800-273-TALK [8255])
  2. Culturally tailored educational messages are shared through posters, newspaper ads, radio talk shows, door-to-door campaigns, workshops, and health fairs
  3. Outreach workers and Apache elders teach youth at risk for self-harm coping skills and resiliency through two school-based programs
  4. The Celebrating Life team provides Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) for fire fighters, teachers, EMTs, social workers, and other community members to create a network of support throughout the tribe
  5. To immediately assist those in crisis, community mental health specialists conduct in-person follow-ups and offer culturally tailored interventions to all youth and adults reported to the surveillance system as having expressed suicidal thoughts or carried out self-harming behaviors like binge drinking.

The researchers and the tribe have been approached by at least 10 other tribes in need. They believe their program will not only help American Indians, but other communities at high risk for suicide.

The study was published in the November issue of the American Journal of Public Health.

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Teen Spends $25K Bar Mitzvah Money to Buy Hundreds of Shoes for Others

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A teen in Texas could have used the thousands of dollars he got for his bar mitzvah on himself. He is crazy about expensive kicks, and could have bought a car with the money.

Instead, Drew Frank outfitted an entire elementary school in a lower income neighborhood of El Paso with new Nikes.

He also donated shoes and socks to a local orphanage and a YWCA transitional living center for women and children, with help from the Braden Aboud Foundation.

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“The smiles on their faces were amazing when I gave them out.“ he told KTRK Houston.

(WATCH the video from KRTK below)

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Abortions Hit New Low in U.S.

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According to new data released Wednesday, the number and rate of abortions in the U.S. have fallen to their lowest level in decades.

The study of data from 47 states by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the rate in 2013 was 12.5 abortions per one thousand women, ages 15 to 44— down five percent from 2012.

The last time the CDC recorded a lower abortion rate was in 1971.

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The federal report suggested several factors that may have contributed to the abortion decline. They include a sharp drop in adolescent pregnancies, expanded coverage of contraception costs by health care plans, and more use of effective, long-lasting contraceptive methods.

(WATCH the video below based on AP reporting)

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Baby Ejected From Car Found in Distant Storm Drain With Only a Scratch (WATCH)

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Rescue workers on the scene were brought nearly to tears recounting the moment that they found an infant, who was ejected during a car crash, safe in a storm drain 25-feet away.

The baby, whose family also survived the crash, was found inside the drain, surrounded by hay, reaching up to rescuers with only a scratch on her forehead.

The Arkansas family, traveling during the Thanksgiving holiday, reside in a town called Hope.

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“So many times, we go out and things aren’t OK…and just during the holidays, here, to have a positive just feels good,” Texarkana Fire Capt. Charlie Smith told KSLA.

(WATCH the video below from KSLA)

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After Dad’s Death, Granddaughters Save Family Farm in Minnesota (WATCH)

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A piece of land that was farmed for more than 50 years and passed down through generations is now being seeded by granddaughters, who gave up on earlier dreams to help their family in crisis.

Miranda and Kaycee Altermatt were just 20 and 22 when their grandfather asked them a life-altering question, after their father, a second generation farmer, died in a boating accident leaving the 1,300-acre family farm short-handed.

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“I’m sure we’re stronger than we ever thought we could be and do more than we ever thought we could,” Kaycee, an aspiring CPA who had just completed her bachelor’s degree, told KING-5 News.

(WATCH the video from King 5 News)

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‘Bag Ladies’ Turn Plastic Bags into Sleeping Mats for the Homeless

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A group of Tennessee women who call themselves “The Bag Ladies” have crocheted themselves a niche where they can help the homeless and save the environment at the same time.

They are collecting plastic bags and turning them into sleeping mats using kindness and crochet hooks.

“It’s addictive,” Janice Akin said, according to a report from WGN TV. “It gets to the point that you do two or three and you say, ‘Hey, I’m actually making a difference in someone’s life.’ and you want to do more.

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They get together every Thursday at Second Baptist Church in Union City, cut the bags into strips and crochet away the day.

The Bag Ladies aren’t the only ones using this clever idea. Honor Students in Michigan are weaving “Miles of Mats” for the homeless, while keeping pesky plastic out of the landfills and rivers.

(WATCH the video below)

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Tributes to One of TV’s Greatest Moms: Florence Henderson, aka ‘Carol Brady’ (1934–2016) VIDEO

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Tributes are pouring in from the co-stars of a beloved American performer, Florence Henderson, who died suddenly from heart failure at age 82.

The wholesome actress and singer with a career spanning six decades was best remembered for her starring role as the ever-cheerful mom, Carol Brady, on the television sitcom “The Brady Bunch”, about a blended family, from 1969 to 1974.

Henderson also appeared in film as well as on stage and hosted several long-running cooking and variety shows over the years. She appeared as a guest on many talk and variety shows and on numerous game shows, and in 2010 was a contestant on Dancing with the Stars.

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Most recently, Henderson hosted her own talk show, The Florence Henderson Show, and cooking show, Who’s Cooking with Florence Henderson, on the Retirement Living TV channel. She is also the author of a cookbook and a memoir entitled, Life Is Not a Stage: From Broadway Baby to a Lovely Lady and Beyond.

Fellow actors who played the eldest son and daughter, Greg and Marcia Brady on the CBS sitcom which is forever in reruns, tweeted their admiration for her, with Barry Williams, who always had a crush on his TV mom, calling her “one of the most gracious people” he’d ever worked with.

(WATCH an NBC tribute in the video below)

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Toxin-Absorbing Grass Could Clean Up Millions of Polluted Acres

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On military training ranges, troops practice firing artillery shells, dropping bombs on old tanks, and testing the capacity of new weapons. These explosives and munitions leave behind toxic compounds that have contaminated many acres of U.S. military bases — with an estimated cleanup bill ranging between $16 billion and $165 billion. Soon, there may be a plant that does the work for them.

In a paper published online this month in the Plant Biotechnology Journal, researchers from the University of Washington and University of York describe a new transgenic grass species that can neutralize and eradicate RDX – a toxic compound that has been widely used in explosives since World War II.

UW engineers introduced two genes from bacteria that learned to eat RDX and break it down into the components of two perennial grass species: switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) and creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera). The best-performing strains removed all the RDX from a simulated soil where they were planted as seedlings two weeks earlier, and they retained none of the toxic chemical in their leaves or stems.

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It is the first reported demonstration of genetically transforming grasses to supercharge their ability to remove contamination from the environment. Grasses are hearty, fast-growing, low-maintenance plants that offer practical advantages over other species in real-world cleanup situations.

“This is a sustainable and affordable way to remove and destroy pollutants on these training ranges,” said senior author and UW professor of civil and environmental engineering Stuart Strand, whose lab focuses on taking genes from microorganisms and animals that are able to degrade toxic compounds and engineering them into useful plants.

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“The grasses could be planted on the training ranges, grow on their own and require little to no maintenance. When a toxic particle from the munitions lands in a target area, their roots would take up the RDX and degrade it before it can reach groundwater,” Strand said.

RDX is an organic compound that forms the base for many common military explosives, which can linger in the environment in unexploded or partially exploded munitions. In large enough doses, it has been shown to cause seizures and organ damage, and it’s currently listed by the Agency for Toxic Substances & Disease Registry as a potential human carcinogen.

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Unlike other toxic explosives constituents such as TNT — which binds to soils and tends to stay put — RDX dissolves easily in water and is more prone to spread contamination beyond the limits of a military range, manufacturing facility or battleground.

“Particles get scattered around and then it rains,” Strand said. “Then RDX dissolves in the rainwater as it moves down through the soil and winds up in groundwater. And, in some cases, it flows off base and winds up in drinking water wells.”

Wild grass species do remove RDX contamination from the soil when they suck water up through their roots, but they don’t significantly degrade it. So when the grasses die, the toxic chemical is re-introduced into the landscape.

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Co-authors Neil Bruce and Liz Rylott, biotechnology professor and research scientist, respectively, at the University of York and colleagues had previously isolated enzymes found in bacteria that evolved to use the nitrogen found in RDX as a food source. That digestion process has the added benefit of degrading the toxic RDX compound into harmless constituents.

The bacteria themselves aren’t an ideal cleanup tool because they require other food sources that aren’t always present on military training ranges. So Bruce and Rylott tried inserting the bacterial genes into plant species commonly used in laboratory settings. Those experiments proved that the new plant strains were able to remove RDX contamination much more successfully than their wild counterparts.

“Considering the worldwide scale of explosives contamination, plants are the only low cost, sustainable solution to cleaning up these polluted sites,” said Bruce.

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The UW team of civil and environmental engineers spent eight years working to express the same genes in plant species that could stand up to real-world use. They needed a hearty perennial species that grows back year after year and that has strong root systems that can bounce back after fires.

Grasses fit that bill, but they are more difficult to manipulate genetically. In particular, the UW engineers had to build into their gene constructs robust monocot “promoters” — or regions of DNA that cause a particular gene to be expressed — for the process to work in grass species.

“For cleaning up contaminated soils, grasses work best, but they’re definitely not as easy to transform, especially since flexible systems to express multiple genes in grasses have not been used before,” said first author and acting UW instructor Long Zhang.

The research team also found another unexpected side benefit: because the genetically modified grasses use RDX as a nitrogen source, they actually grow faster than wild grass species.

Next steps for the UW research team include limited field trials on a military training range to test how the strains perform under different conditions. Wider use would require USDA approval to ensure that the genetic modifications pose no threat to wild grass species.

“I think it would be ecologically acceptable because the genes we’ve introduced degrade real pollutants in the environment and cause no harm,” Strand said. “From my perspective, this is a useful technology that’s beneficial to the environment and has the potential to remove dangerous legacy contamination from decades of military activity.”

Grow Some Positivity: Click To SharePhoto by Dennis Wise, UW (Source: University of Washington)

This Video of Service Puppies in Training Will Melt Your Heart

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These puppers are on their way to being star service dogs – but they have to put in the work first.

The nonprofit Puppy Prodigies Neo-Natal and Early Learning Program trains little hounds to become service dogs. By the time the pups are 12 weeks old, they already know how to open the fridge, unzip a jacket, turn on a light switch, and fetch the mail.

Even if the canines don’t go on to become service dogs, the training has been shown to have long-term advantages in preventing future behavioral issues.

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“Working with puppies at this neo-natal and early age instills a deep rooted bond to humans, gives them a solid foundation for all future endeavors, builds confidence, fosters enthusiasm for training, instills a willingness to be of service (in the case of a working dog future), reduces the possibility of a mature dog ending up in a shelter because of behavioral issues, and so much more,” says the organization.

Ricochet the surf dog – famous for assisting kids with disabilities and veterans with PTSD – is just one of many pups who has completed the program.

Not only is it good for the dogs, but it’s also adorable for us humans to watch as well.

(WATCH the video below)

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Decline in Rate of US Adults Affected by Dementia, New Study Reports

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According to an exciting new study released this week, more and more American seniors are resisting the debilitating effects of dementia.

Researchers reported a drop in the prevalence of dementia from 2000 to 2012 in the United States, but the factors contributing to the decline remain uncertain.

Dementia affects an estimated 4 to 5 million older adults in the U.S. every year. Some recent studies have suggested the age-specific risk of dementia may have declined in some high-income countries over the past few decades. Rising levels of education may have contributed to decreased dementia risk through multiple pathways, including a direct effect on brain development and function, as well as health behaviors. The intensity of treatment for cardiovascular risk factors, such as diabetes, hypertension and high cholesterol, also may have had an impact on decreased dementia risk.

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Kenneth M. Langa, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and his coauthors of an article published online by JAMA Internal Medicine, used data from the Health and Retirement Study, a large nationally representative group of U.S. adults, to compare the prevalence of dementia in 2000 and 2012. The study included more than 21,000 adults 65 or older (10,546 adults in 2000 and 10,511 in 2012).

Dementia prevalence decreased from 11.6 percent in 2000 to 8.8 percent in 2012, which corresponds to an absolute decrease of 2.8 percentage points, which translates into 200 000 fewer cases of dementia, and a “relative decrease of about 24%,” according to the results.

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Older adults in the 2012 group had, on average, about one year more education compared with those adults in the 2000 group. Improvements in treating cardiovascular risk factors also may have played some role in the decrease, the study concludes. The study also notes several limitations.

“The full set of social, behavioral and medical factors contributing to the decline in dementia prevalence is still uncertain. Continued monitoring of trends in dementia incidence and prevalence will be important for better gauging the full future societal impact of dementia as the number of older adults increases in the decades ahead, as well as clarifying potential protective and risk factors for cognitive decline,” the study concludes.

(Source: The JAMA Network Journals)

Stay Healthy And Stay Positive: Click To SharePhoto by Henpower

This Backpack Could Guarantee Your Survival in Case of Any Emergency

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Emergency situations are usually resolved in the first 72 hours, but anything can happen in those three days.

That’s why these engineers created the SEVENTY2 — a backpack system that has been certified as the smartest survival kit in the world.

Everything in the package has been designed and curated to withstand any survival situation: the contents contain over 30 tools that are waterproof, reflective, and most importantly, easy to understand. The small backpack, itself, has been engineered to distribute weight efficiently and to be used as a floatation device. The tools include everything from a magnesium fire starter, to a safety whistle, survival knife, reflective duct tape, thermal blanket, and convertible snow shovel and pick-ax.

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Though the creators of the system are based in Los Angeles—where earthquakes, fires, and mudslides are a real possibility—the young team behind the Uncharted Supply Company has collectively visited over 100 countries, gathering tons of hands-on experience with sandstorms, hiking, camping, and adventure.

“In our world today, emergencies can strike at any moment and calling 911 and waiting for help may not be enough,” says Dr. Eric Meyer, a mountain climber and survival expert recruited for the backpack’s design team.. “You must be prepared, and being prepared means having ready access to the right gear. With that in mind, we developed the SEVENTY2.”

The company’s Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign originally sought a minimum of $25,000 to start production and ensure sales in time for the holiday, but 669 dedicated backers ended up pre-ordering the item for $275-$300, or supporting their goal through smaller donations, to raise a whopping of $248,000.

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“What can we say, but thank you! For all of your support in our first few days,” exclaimed founder and CEO, Christian Schauf. “We believed this was a product that was needed in the marketplace and our backers reinforced that belief! It’s been amazing watching our goal get funded and beyond and we are grateful!”

(WATCH their cool video below –or can check out their Indiegogo page, here)

Stay Safe And Stay Positive: Click To Share – Photo by Uncharted Supply Co.

Watch the Tears as Community Pays For Beloved Crossing Guard’s Prosthetic Repairs

Fetene Yezengaw is a crossing guard who has brought smiles and laughter to the same intersection for the last decade – so now, the community is repaying him for all the kindness.

When Fetene was a 15-year-old child soldier in Ethiopia, he stepped on a land mine that blew his leg off. After healing in a refugee camp, he was eventually granted political asylum in the United States.

The now 42-year-old has used a prosthetic limb ever since, but it currently requires repairs that he can’t afford. He also recently lost his second job and medical insurance, but the kids and parents of Harvard Elementary School in Houston, Texas decided to raise the money themselves, to care for the beloved school official.

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A school club, Girls on the Run, hosted a bake sale, while one of the moms, Karen Johnson, created a GoFundMe page. Together, they have raised over $10,00 for his medical needs.

Yezengaw was so overwhelmed by the community’s generosity, he came to tears.

“When I told Fetene about the money being raised for his medical needs he began to cry and is beyond grateful for each and every one of you. He said, ‘I am so blessed and Harvard is my family.’” says Karen Johnson. “He wishes he could write each and everyone of you a personal letter thanking you for making his life easier.”

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The Sweet Story With Your Friends