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Oct 26, 2017
Scientists working toward reversible kind of gene editing
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
Scientists are altering a powerful gene-editing technology in hopes of one day fighting diseases without making permanent changes to people’s DNA.
The trick: Edit RNA instead, the messenger that carries a gene’s instructions.
“If you edit RNA, you can have a reversible therapy,” important in case of side effects, said Feng Zhang of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, a gene-editing pioneer whose team reported the new twist Wednesday in the journal Science.
Oct 25, 2017
Tesla Following Through On Puerto Rico Promise
Posted by Brett Gallie II in category: sustainability
Oct 25, 2017
Billionaire CEO of SoftBank: Robots will have an IQ of 10,000 in 30 years
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: robotics/AI, singularity
I guess it makes sense if they will hit about 100 level in 2029, and then goes up from there.
Masayoshi Son says singularity, the moment when artificial intelligence surpasses the human brain, will happen in “in this century, for sure.”
Continue reading “Billionaire CEO of SoftBank: Robots will have an IQ of 10,000 in 30 years” »
Oct 25, 2017
Toshiba lithium-ion battery could offer EVs 200-mile range after 6-minute recharge
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: sustainability, transportation
Toshiba’s next-generation SCiB lithium-ion battery could give electric cars a 200-mile range after recharging for just six minutes.
Oct 25, 2017
A sneak peak at radical future user interfaces for phones, computers, and VR
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: computing, mobile phones, virtual reality, wearables
Elena Milova shares her #IAmTheLifespan story for Longevity Month. Tell us your story too!
https://www.leafscience.org/longevity-month-2017-tell-us-your-story/
Oct 25, 2017
New Algorithm Could Let Us Reprogram Any Cell Into Any Other Cell Type
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, information science
One of the most defining scientific discoveries in recent decades is the development of induced pluripotent stem cells, which lets scientists revert adult cells back into an embryonic-like blank state and then manipulating them to become a particular kind of tissue.
But now a new model could do away with this time-consuming process, taking out the middle step and directly programming cells to become whatever we want them to be.
“Cells in our body always self-specialise,” explains bioinformatics researcher Indika Rajapakse from the University of Michigan.
Continue reading “New Algorithm Could Let Us Reprogram Any Cell Into Any Other Cell Type” »
Oct 25, 2017
Stem Cell Clincial Trials Show Remarkable Results Against Age-related Frailty
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
The first results of two human clinical trials using stem cell therapy for age-related frailty have been published, and the results are very impressive indeed. The studies show that the approach used is effective in tackling multiple key age-related factors.
Aging research has made significant progress in the last few years, with senescent cell clearing therapies entering human trials this year, DNA repair in human trials, and a number of other exciting therapies nearing human testing. We are reaching the point where therapies that target aging processes are no longer a matter of speculation; they are now an undeniable matter of fact.
Oct 25, 2017
Prototype Moon Base May Be Built in Hawaii
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: government, space
Human settlement of the moon may go through Hawaii.
Earlier this month, an International MoonBase Summit (IMS) brought together representatives from academia, government and the private sector to help lay the groundwork for a base on the lunar surface.
“Because of its geography, geology and culture, Hawaii is the perfect place to build a MoonBase prototype,” said Henk Rogers, an entrepreneur based in Hawaii and the organizer of the IMS. [Lunar Colony: How to Build a Moonbase in Images].