Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 24, 2014


Sometimes, in order to understand what's happening in the immune system, you just have to watch it. By imaging the immune response, researchers have observed how two types of immune cells, T and B cells, interact with one another during a critical period following infection in order to prepare the best antibodies and establish long-lasting protection. Their surprising finding: T cells and B cells form numerous short-term contacts, each lasting no more than a few minutes, in a dynamic process that is very different from how T cells interact with other cell types. The results were recently published in Science.


The action takes place in so-called germinal centers, tiny structures within the body's lymphatic system where B cells learn to make antibodies against specific microbes. Within these sites B cells undergo a process known as diversification in which they experience rapid mutations in the genes that encode antibodies. Only the best B cells—those with the highest "affinities"—are selected to leave the germinal centers and become antibody-secreting cells.
"In the germinal centers, T cells discern between B cells that are making effective antibodies and those that are not—it is because of their scrutiny that the immune system learns to take the correct action to fight off infection," says study author Ziv Shulman, a postdoc in Michel C. Nussenzweig's Laboratory of Molecular Immunology. "But nobody had ever observed directly and described the dynamics of this process and little is known about how T cells make their determination."
Nussenzweig, who is Zanvil A. Cohn and Ralph M. Steinman Professor, along with Shulman, and their colleagues, developed a system in which they could observe the germinal centers directly in live mice under physiological conditions, tagging T cells and B cells with separate fluorescent proteins that allowed them to track the movements of the cells in real time. They also developed an algorithm that could process the resulting videos and keep precise track of the quantity of contacts between the two cell types as well as the duration of each contact.
They found that the amount of antigen being picked up by B cells with high affinity antibodies and presented to T cells dictates the duration of interaction between the cells. In these contacts, the B cells are instructed either to differentiate into antibody secreting cells or to undergo further mutation.

To test whether the cells were indeed communicating with one another, the researchers also visualized the amount of free calcium within the cells. They found an increase in intracellular calcium, an indicator of signaling events triggered during the T and B cells interactions. Furthermore, the dynamics of the calcium signaling they observed suggests that not only are T cells telling B cells what to do, but that the flow of information is bi-directional: T cells are also learning from B cells.
"The transient interactional dynamics allow T cells to continuously seek and find B cells that are presenting high levels of antigen and provide them with preferential help, while still permitting competing B cells to mutate and develop," Shulman says. "It's an interactive process, with B cells being directed by T cells and T cells learning from their interactions with B cells."
The research team says that a better understanding of the processes that take place in germinal centers could lead to new ways to manipulate them in order to more effectively harness the body's immune system to develop vaccines and fight a variety of diseases.

Imaging studies open a window on how effective antibodies are formed

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Tuesday, September 23, 2014




Lonesome George is back. The rarest animal in the world, and by far the most famous tortoise, died in 2012. Now experts have preserved him for display – right down to the missing toenail on his left front foot.

George was one of 14 subspecies of giant tortoise (Chelonoidis nigra) that once lived on the Galapagos Islands. George lived on Pinta island, but the introduction of goats wiped out all his fellows, and when he was found in 1972, he was the last of his kind.

Another Subspecies vanished :Lonesome George (Chelonoidis nigra) , the latest victim of extinction

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Monday, September 22, 2014


Can't log off? Surprisingly, 5-10% of internet users are actually unable to control how much time they spend online. Brain scans of these people actually show a similar impairment of regions that those with drug dependence have. Specifically, there is a clear degradation of white matter in the regions that control emotional processing, attention and decision making. Social media provides immediate rewards with very little effort required, your brain begins to rewire itself, making you desire these stimulation. And you begin to crave more of this neurological excitement after each interaction, like a drug.


Also the ones who do multi tasking in social media fails to perform well in production levels compares to other normal people. Increased multi-tasking online reduces your brains ability to filter out interference, and can even make it harder for your brain to commit information to memory.

Social media use increase the dopamine levels which is the chemical substance for feeling good. When we talk about ourself, dopamine level production are increased. About 80% of our social media communications are about ourselfs. Also there is an increasing cases of relationships formed from online. 

5 Crazy Ways Social Media Is Changing Your Brain

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Behind every successful inventions, there should be a series of failures. Some  inventions occur due to accidents occur during these tests.  Some test could be fatal. On present day, we have better security techniques and computerized analysis and strength test previews which ensures our safety. But years before, these inventions were death taking ones.  Lets see few brilliant persons who unfortunately died because of their creations.

20   Thomas Midgley Jr          -                       Petrol          


19  Henry Smolinski                -                       Flying car

18   William Bullock-               -                Rotating printing press


17  Horace Lawson Hunley      -                     Submarine


16  Franz Reichelt,                    -                     Parachute Suit


15  Michael Dacre                     -                     Flying taxi


14  Marie Curie                         -               Thorium , Polonium


13  Otto Lilienthal                    -                      Handglyder


12  J.G Parry-Thomas              -                      Racing car


11  Karel Soucek                      -               Shockabsorber barrel


10  Sylvester H. Roper             -                       Motorcycle


9    Wan Hu                                -                      Rocket


8    Perillos of Athens                -                     Burningbull


7    Cowper Phipps Coles          -                      Ship


6    Valerian Abakovsky            -                     Aerowagon


5    Alexander Bogdanov           -               Blood transfusion 


4    Jean-Francois  de Rozier     -                     Air balloon 


3    Henry Winstanley               -                     Lighthouse


2    Max Valier                          -                Rocket poweredcar


1   Aurel Vlaicu                          -                      Aircraft

20 Inventions That Killed their Creator

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