শনিবার, ১৩ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Epic 'Pacific Rim' borrows from 11 sci-fi classics

Movies

17 hours ago

Monsters fighting gargantuan robots, 3D, and a big budget full of special effects; what more could a comic-loving, sci-fi film fan want from a summer tentpole? In the case of the highly anticipated "Pacific Rim," the studios behind the film hope all of that is enough to send the Guillermo del Toro-directed thriller to the top of the box office.

Charlie Hunnam is Raleigh Beckett and Rinko Kikuchi is his co-pilot Mako Mori in "Pacific Rim."

Kerry Hayes / Warner Bros. Pictures

Charlie Hunnam and Rinko Kikuchi play robot pilots trying to save the world in "Pacific Rim."

And "Pacific Rim" pretty much delivers. Epic battles (best viewed on IMAX 3D ? the extra ticket cost is worth it) and incredible special effects make the audience feel like it's part of the action every step of the way.

All of that action did, however, set the filmmakers back about $180 million, even while relying on actors to carry the film who are only really well known from the small screen. Fans of "Sons of Anarchy" will recognize Charlie Hunnam, there's also Idris Elba of "The Wire," Charlie Day of "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" fame, and Rinko Kickuchi who does have some notable film experience ? she was nominated for an Oscar for "Babel." Look for a small but memorable performance by Ron Perlman that requires you to stay for the credits.

It all goes down in a post-apocalyptic world where Kaiju, moonstruck creatures (in Japanese, the word literally translates to "strange beast") that rose from the sea, are at war with humans who build massive human-powered robots called Jaegers to try to save what's left.

As great as the effects may be, there are also plenty of details, big and small, that will make you feel like you?ve been there, done that. Not that there?s anything wrong with paying homage to the classics. Here are 11 movies we recognize in "Pacific Rim":

"Godzilla"
"Pacific Rim?s" most obvious influence is the movie with the most famous Kaiju. Godzilla emerged from the sea and attacked Tokyo. "Pacific Rim" is chock full of ferocious Kaijus with cool code names like "Knifehead" and "Leatherback." They are also sea creatures and they have destroyed most of the world.

"Clash of the Titans"
According to Warner Bros. Pictures? production notes, the Kaijus were inspired by lizards, crustaceans and insects. But Perseus from ?Clash of the Titans? might disagree; they really resemble the Kraken.

"Transformers"
Giant robot aliens came to earth to protect it from other robot villains and save humanity from certain destruction. In ?Pacific Rim? bigger weaponized robots (the Jaegers) ?25 stories tall? try to save the world.

"Iron Man"
The Marvel Comics superhero is a man-powered, human-size robot. Jaegers are man-powered giant robots whose armor could be considered scaled-up redesigns of Tony Stark?s. Iron Man?s Arc Reactor keeps shards of metal from going into his heart. On ?Pacific Rim,? a similar circular chest piece serves as a turbo booster for the Gypsy Danger Jaeger, the only analog robot left to save the world.

In "Pacific Rim," hunter robots are called Jaegers.

Warner Bros. Pictures

A Jaeger robot in "Pacific Rim."

"Aliens"
Remember the walking forklift Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) used to fight the queen beast? ?Pacific Rim? takes the robotic exoskeleton of Ripley?s Power Loader to new heights through the bio-interface of the Titanic Jaegers. Another similarity: the use of acid generated by the deadly alien creatures, whether it's through the blood of the xenomorphs in the ?Aliens? triology or the venomous spitting of a Kaiju in ?Pacific Rim.?

"Star Trek"
Neural connections that lead to mental fusion between two brains called ?The Drift? are the new Vulcan mind melds. Two Jaeger pilots must meld with success, creating a "neural bridge," in order to fight off the Kaijus.

"Blade Runner"
The gritty, rainy worlds of Shatterdome and surrounding Hong Kong in ?Pacific Rim? create the same mood as set forth in the '80s cult classic, which was set in Los Angeles in 2019.

"The Matrix"
To find out if two Jaeger pilots are ?Drift? compatible, they must duel. A martial arts training sequence between Raleigh (Charlie Hunnam) and Mako (Rinko Kikuchi) evokes the famous dojo scene between Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) and Neo (Keanu Reeves). Also, the city of Zion has the post-apocalyptic industrial futuristic feel of ?Pacific Rim?s? Shatterdome.

Pilots must test their compatibility in a martial arts duel before battling together in "Pacific Rim."

Kerry Hayes / Warner Bros. Pictures

Pilots Raleigh (Charlie Hunnam) and Mako (Rinko Kikuchi) must duel to test their compatibility in "Pacific Rim."

"Star Wars"
In the beginning of ?Pacific Rim,? Raleigh and his brother don armor that resembles Storm Trooper uniforms. Later, just like Luke Skywalker fired warheads into a shaft to destroy the Death Star from the inside, Raleigh plunges down a vortex to collapse the portal that allows the Kaiju to enter our earthly dimension.

"Innerspace"
Although the black marketeers in ?Pacific Rim? are human-size when they enter the body of an enormous Kaiju to harvest valuable organs, you will be reminded of the miniaturized Dennis Quaid traveling through Martin Short?s body in ?Innerspace.?

"Ultraman"
The super-size Japanese pop culture hero that battles super-sized monsters just like Raleigh and his Jaegers in ?Pacific Rim.? Time will tell if Raleigh can follow in this superhero?s footsteps and become a pop culture phenomenon.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/entertainment/godzilla-matrix-epic-pacific-rim-borrows-sci-fi-classics-6C10604073

crystal renn matilda cab calloway melissa gilbert deadliest catch dwts sean hannity

Napolitano departure widens DHS leadership gap (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/319086494?client_source=feed&format=rss

Medal of Honor Warfighter Richard Mourdock d t p Tropical Storm Sandy W

Memories lost and found

Drugs that help mice remember reveal role for epigenetics in recall

By Susan Gaidos

Web edition: July 11, 2013
Print edition: July 27, 2013; Vol.184 #2 (p. 24)

Enlarge

Credit: Olaf Hajek

For nearly a decade, neuro?scientist Li-Huei Tsai and her colleagues have been studying senile mice. In a lab at MIT her team has genetically fast-forwarded the mice into a condition much like dementia: They have problems making new memories and retrieving old ones. The mice forget how to navigate water mazes they had mastered; they don?t recognize signs of imminent danger they had once responded to fearfully.

Last year, Tsai?s group found a way to reverse the process. When given a drug known to strengthen nerve cell connections in the brain, the mice not only gained back the ability to learn new tasks, but also remembered many forgotten behaviors.

On the opposite coast, researchers are using a similar drug to rewire long-held memories in mice facing another kind of mental challenge: drug addiction. Neurobiologist Marcelo Wood of the University of California, Irvine coaxes cocaine-seeking mice to view the sights and sounds they?ve learned to associate with getting cocaine. He then creates a new, harmless memory around those cues. After a single treatment, mice placed near their drug den forget their cravings.

Though Tsai and Wood use different drugs in their studies, both draw on research showing that the ability to learn and remember can be influenced by subtle changes to DNA ? changes that affect how genes turn on and off without altering the underlying genetic information. Such epigenetic modifications, it turns out, might have a profound impact on long-term memory.

Exploring these methods has opened a growing field of research, called neuroepigenetics, aimed at finding ways to boost memory in humans. Results so far offer the prospect of new types of medication to improve memory and even restore long-forgotten information in disorders such as Alzheimer?s disease, Huntington?s disease or other types of dementia. Someday drugs might also treat other memory impairments, including the fogginess that plagues many people as they age, and developmental deficits such as autism. The findings also suggest potential new strategies to treat drug addiction in people.

Memory lane

Memory provides a link between the present and past, and it creates a foundation for learning throughout life. Without your memory, you couldn?t read this sentence or find your way home at night. Recall helps animals, from the lowly sea slug to mice to humans, navigate through life. But only in recent decades have scientists begun to unravel the mysteries of how memories are created and stored for the long haul.

For years, memory research was largely confined to studies of animals and to a few people whose memory had dramatically unraveled. One of the most famous human cases was a man named Henry Molaison, known as H.M. in scientific studies. Scientists learned from H.M. that the hippocampus is an essential part of the brain for making and retaining memories.

Newer studies focus on the part of the memory process that involves strengthening links between nerve cells. For this job, cells have to make proteins.

Several mechanisms can turn protein production on and off in brain cells. One employs various enzymes that change how genes, segments of DNA, are bundled together. DNA is tightly intertwined with proteins known as histones, assembled in a complex called chromatin. Through a process called acetylation ? the attaching of a little molecule called an acetyl group ? some enzymes relax chromatin. This allows it to open so machinery can access the genetic blueprint for a protein. Other enzymes clamp down on chromatin, blocking genes from being activated when they?re not needed.

One enzyme family ? called ?histone deacetylases,? or HDACs ? helps keep DNA and histones tightly bound by keeping acetyl groups off. In the late 1990s, researchers developed HDAC inhibitors as chemotherapy agents against cancer. Working in a way that sounds like a double-negative, the chemo agents repress the DNA-inhibiting action of the HDACs, resulting in free-flowing gene activity. These anticancer agents proved helpful for treating some tumors in people.

When J. David Sweatt, a neurobiologist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, gave the agents to lab animals, he found that the drugs turned absent-minded subjects into attentive ones. Intrigued by these findings, scientists tested the idea that histone acetylation might come into play when new memories are formed.

In 2004, Sweatt?s group showed that HDAC inhibitors helped boost memory in rats learning to navigate in an unfamiliar situation. The rats? improved memory was accompanied by changes in nerve cells, or neurons, in the hippocampus. In 2007, Tsai?s group gave HDAC inhibitors to mice with memory problems and found that they were able to recall things they had forgotten ? in this case, dangers associated with certain environments.

Since then, several labs have begun studying how histone acetylation and deacetylation work to activate or shut down learning and memory. It?s now clear, Sweatt says, that the epigenetic mechanisms are key in controlling? gene activity that?s necessary for many different forms of long-term memory.

Ordinarily, the chromatin in brain cells responds to all kinds of activity and stimulation, Sweatt says. When experiencing an event ? a child?s birthday party, a lively lecture or even a good book ? some chromatin relaxes, some genes are turned on and the brain pumps out proteins that help store the memory.

But disruptions of epigenetic mechanisms can lead to gene silencing, changing a neuron?s behavior for months or even years. In some cases, genes needed for memory and learning can be permanently deactivated. Tsai says this appears to happen in the brains of people with Alzheimer?s.

Making connections

Though it?s hard to fully re-create Alzheimer?s disease in a rodent, Tsai and colleagues found a way to genetically induce similar conditions in mice. Their method causes a mouse to lose 30 to 40 percent of the brain cells in its hippocampus.

To test the effects of this loss, the researchers first trained the mice to perform various tasks with their hippocampi still intact, then waited four weeks for the memories to consolidate and become stored in various parts of the brain. The team then triggered brain cell loss and allowed several more weeks for changes in the hippocampus to unfold.

Enlarge

Memory machinery

View larger image | Within the nucleus of a brain cell, the enzyme histone deacetylase (HDAC) helps keep DNA wrapped neatly around histones for orderly storage in the form of chromatin. For a memory to form and be stored, the DNA must be unwrapped, allowing genes to be read and transcribed into mRNA molecules for making proteins involved in memory. The presence of chemical tags called acetyl groups relaxes the chromatin so DNA can be read. In a defective cell, HDAC removes acetyl groups, preventing the chromatin from relaxing. Machinery then can't access the DNA and memory proteins aren't made.

Credit: Source: J. Gr?ff and L.-H. Tsai/Nature Reviews 2013, adapted by E. Otwell

As their brains began to shrink and shrivel, the mice forgot how to do jobs they had previously mastered. In one task, mice had learned to associate a shock with moving in a certain cage and would freeze in place to avoid pain. After losing hippocampus cells, the same mice forgot to associate fear with the cage and kept walking. In another test, the mice learned to escape from a pool of murky water by finding a submerged platform. The brain-damaged mice couldn?t remember where the platform was.

When Tsai treated the mice with the HDAC inhibitors that had been designed to attack cancer, their memory improved. But there was a problem: Tsai wasn?t sure which enzymes the drugs were targeting in the brain. The HDAC family comprises 11 different enzymes, sequentially named HDAC1 through HDAC11. The cancer drugs contained a cocktail of the HDAC inhibitors targeting a mix of the enzymes.

So Tsai gave the brain-damaged mice a small molecule that targeted only one of the HDAC enzymes, HDAC2. Studies had shown that HDAC2 levels rise in the aging brain, even in healthy people. After treatment with HDAC2 inhibitors, the mice again went through their training paces.

Remarkably, brain-damaged mice given HDAC2 inhibitors performed nearly as well as healthy mice in the water experiment. When the mice were placed in the cage where they had once been shocked, their memories again kicked in: They froze just as often as healthy mice.

?That was a remarkable piece of information,? Tsai says. ?After the small-molecule treatment, we found that the seemingly lost memory somehow was recovered.?

In the mice given HDAC2 inhibitors, the scientists found an increase in the number of connections between nerve cells in the hippocampus. Tsai believes that by activating the genes used in learning and memory, the brain rewires surviving neurons, helping them reconnect to cells that may have been damaged. ?We think that the key to memory formation and memory retrieval, even in the Alzheimer?s brain, is the healthy connection between neurons,? she says.

Despite how dissimilar mice are to humans, Tsai?s data may also apply to people. ?These results suggest that perhaps even in humans, when people start to show signs of dementia, there are still memory traces left somewhere in the brain,? she says. Her group also examined HDAC2 levels in autopsied human brain tissue and found that even people in the earliest stages of Alzheimer?s disease had elevated HDAC2 levels.

Tsai says the findings, published last year in Nature, suggest that gene regulation at the epigenetic level works as a sort of master switch, coordinating a variety of genes needed for learning and memory. If this switch is turned off, memories fade.

Molecular brake pad

When it comes to creating a memorable event, it?s not just what the brain does that matters. What it doesn?t do also affects long-term memory. Studies of how the brain selectively decides what to keep are illuminating how this process works.

At UC Irvine, Wood studies a protein that causes chromatin to relax called the CREB-binding protein. In this state, genes needed for memory formation are easily accessed. But one member of the HDAC enzyme family ? HDAC3 ? counteracts this effect, clamping down on chromatin and turning genes off.

In 2011, Wood?s group deleted the HDAC3 gene in a small group of hippocampal neurons in mice. This genetic manipulation transformed ordinary events into unforgettable ones. Later, Wood?s group used a drug to selectively inhibit HDAC3 activity in the brain. The results were the same: New environments or experiences were immediately committed to the animal?s memory, and easily summoned days or weeks later.

Wood says HDAC3 and HDAC2 appear to serve as brake pads that are always engaged, working to slow down or stop the steady stream of information encoded into memory. This mechanism allows you to hold onto information if it?s important, but discard it if it?s not.

?Our long-term memory is very, very selective,? he says. ?One of the most important things your brain does with respect to memory is to actively prevent you from encoding everything that you experience.?

So inhibiting HDAC3 doesn?t just simply enhance memory, Wood says. ?This was fundamentally different. It was like you had released a molecular brake pad so that information that is being acquired enters the realm of long-term formation without any constraints.?

Wood?s group is now working on ways to harness this gating mechanism to manipulate certain kinds of memories, such as those associated with addictive drugs. Studies show that as drugs take over the brain?s reward system, they change the way neurons communicate with each other. Then the mere sight of the location where the owner of the brain indulged ? or even sounds and odors associated with drug use ? can trigger an intense desire for the drug. Such changes are long-lasting and persistent.

Wood?s group designed an experiment to try to override the changes produced by addictive drugs such as cocaine. First, mice were taught to associate a particular environment with the drug. Upon entering a chamber with checkered walls and scented bedding, the mice received a drug reward. After several visits, mice develop what?s called a cocaine-associated memory and a preference for the environment. Given a choice, the animal will spend time in the chamber. Such behavior is central to addiction and poses and obstacle to therapy for many individuals, Wood says.

The mice then go through a process called extinction learning where they no longer receive any drug in the chamber. After many trials, the animals replace drug-related memories with associations that have no drug reward. ?In a sense they are re-writing their original cocaine-associated memory,? Wood says.

But mice given an HDAC3 inhibitor shortly after their first drug-free visit to the chamber re-write their memory much faster. After a single treatment with the HDAC3 inhibitors, the mice forgot the urge to indulge. This new memory is persistent. Days and weeks later, the scientists tried to initiate relapse-like behavior, but the mice continued to show no preference for the drug den, the researchers reported in the Feb. 12 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The study suggests that boosting the activity of memory-related genes during a trial with no reward helps wipe out any drug associations with the cues, Wood says.

Though scientists have yet to figure out how manipulations of HDAC3 produce the long-lasting change, Wood says timing is the key. Giving mice HDAC3 inhibitors immediately after a drug-free visit to the chamber resulted in a long-lasting effect. But treatment delayed by several hours elicited no long-term change in drug-seeking behavior. The timely treatment came during a critical period in memory processing, called the consolidation phase, when certain genes must be coordinated and turned on to strengthen communication between neurons, Woods says.

Down the road

Scientists might be able to help addicts create new memories around cues associated with drugs. But there are many hurdles to overcome before HDAC inhibitors of any type make it to human trials. Tsai says drugs currently used in animal studies are too destructive for use in the human brain. And histone acetylation has many roles in the body; a viable drug would somehow have to target specific processes in the brain.

And not all HDAC inhibitors work in the brain to enhance memory. Scientists are still unraveling the effects that various HDAC enzymes have. Andr? Fischer of the University of G?ttingen in Germany says that inhibiting certain histone deacetylase enzymes, such as HDAC5, can make memory problems worse.

Some labs are now turning their attention to finding other targets, such as the genes that the HDACs regulate. So far, Wood?s group has identified at least one key gene, NR4a2, that must be turned on. This gene probably sets off another wave of genes, some of which may be involved directly in the brain?s reward system, he says.

Identifying molecules and targets that act ?downstream? of memory genes could boost efforts to develop effective therapies. It might also help physicians tailor treatments to the memory deficits that occur in a long list of disorders, including Alzheimer?s, Parkinson?s, addiction, depression and neurodevelopmental disorders such as fragile X syndrome and Rett syndrome.

Tsai says additional targets will probably be discovered in the next few years. In the meantime, results from her lab mice suggest that even in cases where memories seem to be lost, there may be ways to regain the power of recall.

?It?s like a telephone line that gets broken so you lose communication,? she says. ?But if that line can be repaired, there?s hope that long-term memory can be recovered.?



Making memories and getting them back

Billions of neurons create and retrieve memories by storing and then tapping into patterns of connections in the brain.

1. Input
A memory begins when information from the senses, such as a whiff of blueberry muffins or the sound of an ice cream truck?s jingle, arrives in the brain?s sensory cortex.

2. Processing
The frontal cortex can tap into the sensory information immediately for use as a short-term, or working, memory.

3. Encoding
The hippocampus and areas of the medial temporal lobes begin to encode this new information into a long-term memory by growing new neural connections and strengthening the brain?s existing circuitry.

4. Storing
Time and sleep help these new memories move to long-term storage regions throughout the brain. Facts, events, emotions and motor skills (such as riding a bike) take up permanent residence in brain regions involved in processing the original scent, sound or other sensory information.

5. Retrieving
When a memory is needed, or triggered by sensory information or emotions, the hippocampus and cortical brain regions help pull it out of long-term storage and relay it to the frontal cortex as working memory.

Sources: Lila Davachi/NYU, Carolee Winstein/USC


Amazing brain


Henry Molaison, age 60 in 1986, prepares for tests at the MIT Clinical Research Center. At this time he had been participating in brain studies for more than half his life. Credit: Jenni Ogden

Studies of how human memory works often focus on individuals whose memories have crumbled. Perhaps the most famous of all such people was Henry Molaison, known by researchers as H.M., an amnesiac who collaborated on hundreds of studies of memory for more than half a century until his death in 2008 at age 82.

H.M.?s memory largely disappeared in one day in 1953, when as a 27-year-old with epilepsy he underwent experimental brain surgery meant to relieve his debilitating seizures. During the operation, surgeons extracted two slivers of tissue, one from each side of the brain: the front half of the hippocampus along with nearby entorhinal, perirhinal, and parahippocampal cortices. Surgeons also removed most of H.M.?s amygdala, an almond-shaped structure that supports emotion. Together, these brain structures make up a region known as the medial temporal lobe.

The operation did curtail H.M.?s seizures. But he could no longer remember new words or experiences. He could, however, remember some of what he had learned before the operation. He recognized his parents and could recall childhood experiences or facts he had learned in school.

At the time of H.M.?s surgery, scientists were debating the nature of memory creation. Some thought it occurred as a single process in which information started off in the brain as a short-term trace and then, over time, consolidated and moved into a long-term memory bank. But studies of H.M. showed that by losing most of his hippocampus and the surrounding structures, he had no way to turn newly learned information into long-term memories. Researchers now realize that there are differences between short-term and long-term memory creation and that they involve separate processes.?

Studies of H.M. also showed that the brain processes different types of memories through different circuits. Notably, H.M. could learn new motor skills ? such as drawing techniques ? even without the parts of his brain that had been removed. And he could repeat his performance months or years later. This led scientists to make a distinction between declarative memory ? recalling what you had for breakfast or dredging up historical facts ? and non?declarative memory, which includes motor-skill learning, classical conditioning and perceptual learning.

When H.M. died, scientists took detailed MRI scans of his brain and preserved it for future study. Today, studies of his brain continue at the University of California, San Diego through a project at the Brain Observatory. ?Susan Gaidos

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/351539/title/Memories_lost_and_found

emmylou harris disco inferno b.i.g 1000 words ron white ron white buckyballs

বৃহস্পতিবার, ১১ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Sea urchin's secret to surviving ocean acidification

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Stanford scientists have discovered that some purple sea urchins living along the coast of California and Oregon have the surprising ability to rapidly evolve in acidic ocean water ? a capacity that may come in handy as climate change increases ocean acidity. This capacity depends on high levels of genetic variation that allow urchins' healthy growth in water with high carbon dioxide levels.

The study, co-authored by Stephen Palumbi, a Professor in marine sciences and the director of Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station, reveals previously unknown adaptive variations that could help some marine species survive in future acidified seas.

"It's like bet hedging," said Palumbi, a senior fellow at the Stanford Woods Institute of the Environment. "Betting on multiple teams in the NCAA playoffs gives you a better chance of winning. A parent with genetic variation for survival in different conditions makes offspring that can thrive in different environments. In an uncertain world, it's a way to have a stake in the Final Four."

Increasing acidification is a worrisome question for the billion people who depend on the ocean for their sustenance and livelihoods. Which sea creatures will survive in waters that have had their chemistry altered by global carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels?

The authors, including collaborators at the University of California Davis' Bodega Marine Lab, speculate in a research paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that other marine species that have long dealt with environmental stresses may have a similar adaptive capacity.

If true, these capabilities could provide important clues about how to maintain robust marine populations amid the effects of acidification, climate change, overfishing and other human impacts.

Scientists have known for decades that high carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels are increasing the levels of carbonic acid in the world's oceans, leading to increased acidity. Hundreds of undreddhof studies have shown that acidification at levels expected by the year 2100 can harm ocean life.

But little is known about marine species' capacity to adapt evolutionarily to this condition. The delicate embryos of marine species are especially susceptible. The West Coast oyster farm industry nearly collapsed in 2007 because of oyster larvae sensitivity to increased acidification of coastal waters.

The study examined how purple sea urchins ? creatures with the most well-studied genome of any marine species ? react to the acidification levels predicted for 2100.

The researchers raised larvae in ocean water with either low or high carbon dioxide content. They sampled the larvae at early and later stages in life and then used new DNA-sequencing and analytical tools to determine which elements of the urchins' genetic makeup changed through time in these conditions. By looking at the function of each gene that changed, researchers were able to pinpoint which types of genes were critical for survival under future conditions.

"The high CO2 larvae showed almost no negative effects, and that was a surprise," said Melissa Pespeni, the study's lead author and a former Stanford postdoctoral fellow. "They didn't suffer because among them were some individuals with the right genes to be able to grow well in those harsh conditions."

Purple sea urchins, like other West Coast marine species, normally live in cold water that wells up along the coast, bringing seasonally higher CO2 levels. The study's results suggest that this long-term environmental mosaic has led to the evolution of genetic variations enabling purple sea urchins to regulate their internal pH level in the face of elevated carbon dioxide.

"There are hundreds of West Coast species that similarly evolved in these conditions. Maybe some of these have the genetic tools to resist acidification, too," Palumbi said. "We need to learn why some species are more sensitive than others."

###

Stanford University: http://news.stanford.edu

Thanks to Stanford University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 30 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127656/Sea_urchin_s_secret_to_surviving_ocean_acidification

giada de laurentiis howard hughes nationwide race wanderlust gone tyler perry good deeds pretty in pink

Was McConnell's Staff Dirt-Digging on Ashley Judd? (ABC News)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/297877575?client_source=feed&format=rss

green eggs and ham wiz khalifa and amber rose oh the places you ll go blunt amendment justin bieber birthday read across america vikings stadium

White House asst. chef says he will be furloughed (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/297849461?client_source=feed&format=rss

lil boosie bobbi kristina brown new edition austerity rihanna and chris brown back together pebble beach cause of whitney houston death

Man kills 13 people in Serbian shooting spree

Radmilo Bogdanovic, brother of Ljubisa Bogdanovic cries in village of Velika Ivanca, Serbia, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. Ljubisa Bogdanovic a 60-year-old man gunned down 13 people, including a baby, in a house-to-house rampage in a quiet village on Tuesday before trying to kill himself and his wife, police and hospital officials said. Belgrade emergency hospital spokeswoman Nada Macura said the man, identified as Ljubisa Bogdanovic, used a handgun in the shooting spree at five houses. The dead included six women. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Radmilo Bogdanovic, brother of Ljubisa Bogdanovic cries in village of Velika Ivanca, Serbia, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. Ljubisa Bogdanovic a 60-year-old man gunned down 13 people, including a baby, in a house-to-house rampage in a quiet village on Tuesday before trying to kill himself and his wife, police and hospital officials said. Belgrade emergency hospital spokeswoman Nada Macura said the man, identified as Ljubisa Bogdanovic, used a handgun in the shooting spree at five houses. The dead included six women. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Police officers carry a body in village of Velika Ivanca, Serbia, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A 60-year-old man gunned down 13 people, including a baby, in a house-to-house rampage in the quiet village on Tuesday before trying to kill himself and his wife, police and hospital officials said. Belgrade emergency hospital spokeswoman Nada Macura said the man, identified as Ljubisa Bogdanovic, used a handgun in the shooting spree at five houses. The dead included six women. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Serbian police officers guard houses in the village of Velika Ivanca, Serbia, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A 60-year-old man gunned down 13 people, including a baby, in a house-to-house rampage in the quiet village on Tuesday before trying to kill himself and his wife, police and hospital officials said. Belgrade emergency hospital spokeswoman Nada Macura said the man, identified only as Ljubisa B., used a handgun in the shooting spree at five houses. The dead included six women. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

A police tape is seen on the road near a house in village of Velika Ivanca, Serbia, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A 60-year-old man gunned down 13 people, including a baby, in a house-to-house rampage in a quiet village on Tuesday before trying to kill himself and his wife, police and hospital officials said. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Police officers guard a house in village of Velika Ivanca, Serbia, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A 60-year-old man gunned down 13 people, including a baby, in a house-to-house rampage in a quiet village on Tuesday before trying to kill himself and his wife, police and hospital officials said. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

(AP) ? He went from house to house in the village at dawn, cold-bloodedly gunning down his mother, his son, a 2-year-old cousin and 10 other neighbors. Terrified residents said if a police patrol car hadn't shown up, they all would have been dead.

Police said they knew of no motive yet in the carnage Tuesday that left six men, six women and a child dead in Velika Ivanca, a Serbian village 50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of Belgrade.

After the rampage, police said suspect Ljubisa Bogdanovic, a 60-year-old who saw action in one of the bloodiest sieges of the Balkan wars, turned his gun on himself and his wife as authorities closed in. Both were in grave condition at a hospital in the Serbian capital.

In the small lush village surrounded by fruit trees, the suspect's older brother Radmilo broke down in tears, unable to explain why the massacre had happened.

"Why did he do it? ... I still can't believe it," he said sobbing, covering his face with his hands. "He was a model of honesty."

"As a child, he was a frightened little boy. I used to defend him from other children. He couldn't even slaughter a chicken," he said.

But he said his brother had changed after serving in the army during a brutal Serb-led offensive against the eastern Croatian town of Vukovar in 1992 ? the worst bloodshed during Croatia's 1991-95 war for independence.

"The war had burdened him," Radmilo told The Associated Press in an interview. "He used to tell me: God forbid you live through what I went through ... Something must have clicked in his head for him to do this."

Twelve people in the village were killed immediately between 5 a.m. and 5:30 a.m. and one person died later in a Belgrade hospital, Serbian police chief Milorad Veljovic said.

"Most of the victims were shot while they were asleep," Veljovic told reporters. "The most harrowing scene discovered by police was the dead bodies of a young mother and her 2-year-old son."

The suspect had lost his job last year at a wood-processing factory, the police chief said.

Although such mass shootings are relatively rare in Serbia, weapons are readily available, mostly from the 1990s wars in the Balkans. Media reports said the suspect had a license for the handgun.

Residents said Bogdanovic first killed his son and his mother before leaving his house and then began shooting his neighbors. They expressed deep shock, describing the suspect as a nice, quiet man.

"He knocked on the doors and as they were opened he just fired a shot," said villager Radovan Radosavljevic. "He was a good neighbor and anyone would open their doors to him. I don't know what happened."

"I never saw him angry, ever," said Milovan Kostadinovic, another resident. "He was helping everybody, he had a car and drove us everywhere."

Still, neighbors said an entire five-member family was shot dead in one house, including the small boy who was the suspected killer's cousin.

Kostadinovic said the suspect was confronted by police while en route to his house.

"If they didn't stop him, he would have wiped us all out," Kostadinovic said, standing in front of his two-story, red tile- roofed house. "He shot himself when police stopped him."

His wife Stanica said their small white-and-brown dog Rocky had gotten very nervous early in the morning and was barking and jumping up and down. She said when her husband opened their door, a policewoman shouted: "Get back in!"

"He was shooting everybody. Police saved us," she said.

The suspected killer owned a gun but neighbors and his brother said he never hunted or shot weapons, even at weddings or celebrations as is traditional in the Balkans.

"He was quiet as a bug," Stanica Kostadinovic said.

Nada Macura, a Belgrade hospital spokeswoman, said the suspect had no known history of mental illness. Stanica Kostadinovic, the neighbor, said the man's father had hanged himself when he was a young boy and his uncle had a history of mental illness.

Police blocked off the village while forensic teams and investigators in white protective robes took evidence from homes where the shootings took place.

Doctors said later the suspect's condition was critical but his wife was able to communicate with the hospital staff.

Serbian Prime Minister Ivica Dacic said the killings showed that the government must pay more attention to gun control and other social problems facing the Balkan nation, which is still reeling from the 1990s wars. His government held an emergency session and was expected to proclaim a national day of mourning.

Serbia's last big shooting spree occurred in 2007, when a 39-year-old man gunned down nine people and injured two others in the eastern village of Jabukovac.

__

Sabina Niksic contributed from Bosnia.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-04-09-Serbia-Shooting%20Spree/id-5b23a3406be743bf963e35c38106fd0a

augusta national blake griffin pau gasol marlins park marbury v. madison 2013 lincoln mkz burger king mary j blige