Using Bacteria to Power Microscopic Machines
Posted on March 31, 2010 Comments (0)
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory and Northwestern University have discovered that common bacteria can turn microgears when suspended in a solution, providing insights for designs of bio-inspired dynamically adaptive materials for energy.
“The ability to harness and control the power of bacterial motion is an important requirement for further development of hybrid biomechanical systems driven by microorganisms,” said Argonne physicist and principal investigator Igor Aronson. “In this system, the gears are a million times more massive than the bacteria.”
A few hundred bacteria work together in order to turn the gear. When multiple gears are placed in the solution with the spokes connected as in a clock, the bacteria will turn both gears in opposite directions, causing the gears to rotate in synchrony—even for long stretches of time.
“There exists a wide gap between man-made hard materials and living tissues; biological materials, unlike steel or plastics, are ‘alive,’” Aronson said. “Our discovery demonstrates how microscopic swimming agents, such as bacteria or man-made nanorobots, in combination with hard materials, can constitute a ‘smart material’ which can dynamically alter its microstructures, repair damage, or power microdevices.”
Related: Tiny Machine Commands a Swarm of Bacteria – Using Bacteria to Carry Nanoparticles Into Cells – Moving Closer to Robots Swimming Through Bloodsteam – Bacteria Power Tiny Motor – Micro-robots to ‘swim’ Through Veins
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Tags: bacteria,innovation,Life Science,Princeton,Research,Robots,Science,university research
Surprise Shrimp Under Antarctic Ice
Posted on March 27, 2010 Comments (0)
A three-inch long Lyssianasid amphipod found 600 feet beneath the Ross Ice Shelf stars in a recent popular webcast (see below). NASA scientists were using a borehole camera to look back up towards the ice surface when they spotted this pinkish-orange creature swimming beneath the ice.
Stacy Kim of Moss Landing Marine Laboratory was the first biologist to see the video and immediately recognized it as a Lyssianasid amphipod. It was about 3 inches long and Stacy concluded that this meant there was quite an extensive biological community under the ice here – even 20 miles from open water.
Related: Iron-breathing Species Isolated in Antarctic for Millions of Years – Pine Island Glacier (PIG) Ice Shelf – The Brine Lake Beneath the Sea – Lake Under 2 Miles of Ice
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Next steps for Google’s Experimental Fiber Network
Posted on March 26, 2010 Comments (2)
Think big with a gig: Google’s experimental fiber
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We’re planning to build and test ultra high-speed broadband networks in a small number of trial locations across the United States. We’ll deliver Internet speeds more than 100 times faster than what most Americans have access to today with 1 gigabit per second, fiber-to-the-home connections. We plan to offer service at a competitive price to at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people.
Next steps for our experimental fiber network
Of course, we’re not going to be able to build in every interested community — our plan is to reach a total of at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people with this experiment. Wherever we decide to build, we hope to learn lessons that will help improve Internet access everywhere.
This is another great idea from Google. Not only to push forward the much poorer internet connectivity those in the USA have than other countries but it will hopefully lead to some real engineering breakthroughs. And it is a smart move to increase Google’s potential income – a better internet experience (for users) will likely help Google quite a bit.
Related: Google’s Underwater Cables – Google Server Hardware Design – China’s Next Generation Internet – Net Neutrality: This is serious
Tags: Engineering,experiment,Google,internet,investing in science,Technology
Researchers Find High-Fructose Corn Syrup Results in More Weight Gain
Posted on March 23, 2010 Comments (4)
A Princeton University research team has demonstrated that rats with access to high-fructose corn syrup gained significantly more weight than those with access to table sugar, even when their overall caloric intake was the same. In addition to causing significant weight gain in lab animals, long-term consumption of high-fructose corn syrup also led to abnormal increases in body fat, especially in the abdomen, and a rise in circulating blood fats called triglycerides

Photo of Princeton University research team, including (from left) undergraduate Elyse Powell, psychology professor Bart Hoebel, visiting research associate Nicole Avena and graduate student Miriam Bocarsly, by Denise Applewhite
The first study showed that male rats given water sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup in addition to a standard diet of rat chow gained much more weight than male rats that received water sweetened with table sugar, or sucrose, in conjunction with the standard diet. The concentration of sugar in the sucrose solution was the same as is found in some commercial soft drinks, while the high-fructose corn syrup solution was half as concentrated as most sodas.
The second experiment — the first long-term study of the effects of high-fructose corn syrup consumption on obesity in lab animals — monitored weight gain, body fat and triglyceride levels in rats with access to high-fructose corn syrup over a period of six months. Compared to animals eating only rat chow, rats on a diet rich in high-fructose corn syrup showed characteristic signs of a dangerous condition known in humans as the metabolic syndrome, including abnormal weight gain, significant increases in circulating triglycerides and augmented fat deposition, especially visceral fat around the belly. Male rats in particular ballooned in size: Animals with access to high-fructose corn syrup gained 48 percent more weight than those eating a normal diet. In humans, this would be equivalent to a 200-pound man gaining 96 pounds.
“These rats aren’t just getting fat; they’re demonstrating characteristics of obesity, including substantial increases in abdominal fat and circulating triglycerides,” said Princeton graduate student Miriam Bocarsly. “In humans, these same characteristics are known risk factors for high blood pressure, coronary artery disease, cancer and diabetes.” In addition to Hoebel and Bocarsly, the research team included Princeton undergraduate Elyse Powell and visiting research associate Nicole Avena, who was affiliated with Rockefeller University during the study and is now on the faculty at the University of Florida. The Princeton researchers note that they do not know yet why high-fructose corn syrup fed to rats in their study generated more triglycerides, and more body fat that resulted in obesity.
Related: High Fructose Corn Syrup is Not Natural Food says the FDA – Waste from Gut Bacteria Helps Host Control Weight – Another Strike Against Cola – The Calorie Delusion
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Tags: food,human health,medical research,Princeton,university research
Basketball Padding
Posted on March 22, 2010 Comments (2)
Basketball used to be considered a non-contact sport. Now more and more college and pro players are wearing padding. March Madness, this year with more padding
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“Some of the things you’ll see like these products, a lot of them tend to be more fads that come and go,” he said. “But anything that comes down over the edge of a bony prominence, or on the knee, makes sense. For the ribs — there’s cartilage that is a natural shock absorber so I don’t know how truly affective that piece might be.”
Purchase: McDavid knee and elbow pads – McDavid Hex Power Shooter Arm Sleeve – Hexpad Thudd with Extended Thigh
Related: Teen Goalie Designs Camouflage Pads – Engineering Basketball Flop – Engineering A Golf Swing – The Glove, Engineering Coolness
Taste Cells in the Stomach and Intestine
Posted on March 21, 2010 Comments (2)
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Newly discovered taste cells in the gut appear to send a “prepare for fuel” message to the body, a finding that may explain a link between diet soda and diabetes risk.
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The gut’s taste cells appear to be built from the same machinery as the taste cells of the tongue, the structures of which scientists have only recently nailed down. Taste cells interact with what are called “tastants” via receptors, specialized proteins that protrude from cell walls and bind to specific molecules drifting by. When a tastant binds to a receptor, it signals other molecules that, in the mouth, immediately send an “accept” or “reject” message to the brain.
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Gut taste cells appear to regulate, in part, secretion of insulin, a hormone crucial for telling body tissues whether they should tap newly arrived glucose or valuable stored fat for energy.
Related: Waste from Gut Bacteria Helps Host Control Weight – Surprising New Diabetes Data – Reducing Risk of Diabetes Through Exercise – Drinking Soda and Obesity
Tags: food,human health,Life Science,Science,science explained,science facts
Engineering Mosquitoes to be Flying Vaccinators
Posted on March 20, 2010 Comments (1)
Mosquitoes Engineered Into Flying Vaccinators by Emily Singer
“Following bites, protective immune responses are induced, just like a conventional vaccination but with no pain and no cost,” said lead researcher Shigeto Yoshida, from the Jichi Medical University in JapanYoshida, in a press release from the journal. “What’s more continuous exposure to bites will maintain high levels of protective immunity, through natural boosting, for a life time. So the insect shifts from being a pest to being beneficial.”
Researchers consider the project more of a proof of principle experiment than a viable public health option, at least for now.
Very cool.
Related: New and Old Ways to Make Flu Vaccines – Treated Mosquito Nets Prevent Malaria – re-engineering mosquito so they cannot carry disease
Tags: cool,Engineering,human health,insects,Life Science,medical research,vaccine
Invisible Worlds: Fastest Thing on the Planet
Posted on March 18, 2010 Comments (1)
Fun with Fungi.
Related: Secret Life of Microbes – Plants, Unikonts, Excavates and SARs – Smallest Known Living Organisms Found – 200 nanometers
Tags: BBC,Fungi,Life Science,microbes,physics,Science,science webcasts,UK
Praying Mantis Attacks Hummingbird
Posted on March 16, 2010 Comments (0)
The hummingbird did survive.
Related: Cat and Crow Friends – Darwin’s Jellyfishes – Bird Using Bait to Fish
Statistical Errors in Medical Studies
Posted on March 14, 2010 Comments (3)
I have written about statistics, and various traps people often fall into when examining data before (Statistics Insights for Scientists and Engineers, Data Can’t Lie – But People Can be Fooled, Correlation is Not Causation, Simpson’s Paradox). And also have posted about reasons for systemic reasons for medical studies presenting misleading results (Why Most Published Research Findings Are False, How to Deal with False Research Findings, Medical Study Integrity (or Lack Thereof), Surprising New Diabetes Data). This post collects some discussion on the topic from several blogs and studies.
HIV Vaccines, p values, and Proof by David Rind
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So, the modestly positive result found in the trial must be weighed against our prior belief that such a vaccine would fail. Had the vaccine been dramatically protective, giving us much stronger evidence of efficacy, our prior doubts would be more likely to give way in the face of high quality evidence of benefit.
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While the actual analysis the investigators decided to make primary would be completely appropriate had it been specified up front, it now suffers under the concern of showing marginal significance after three bites at the statistical apple; these three bites have to adversely affect our belief in the importance of that p value. And, it’s not so obvious why they would have reported this result rather than excluding those 7 patients from the per protocol analysis and making that the primary analysis; there might have been yet a fourth analysis that could have been reported had it shown that all important p value below 0.05.
How to Avoid Commonly Encountered Limitations of Published Clinical Trials by Sanjay Kaul, MD and and George A. Diamond, MD
Why Most Published Research Findings Are False by John P. A. Ioannidis
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Tags: human health,medical research,medical studies,quote,Research,Science,scientific inquiry,statistics
Autonomous Underwater Robot Decides on Experiment Options
Posted on March 12, 2010 Comments (0)
One main difference between the two pieces of software is that for the Mars rovers, the software ran in the control centre on Earth. With this marine vehicle, it runs onboard the robotic vehicle.
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“We tell it, ‘here’s the range of tasks that we want you to perform’, and it goes off and assesses what is happening in the ocean, making decisions about how much of the range it will cover to get back the data we want.”
Researchers at MBARI used the Gulper AUV to monitor potentially harmful algal blooms.
Kim Fulton-Bennett from MBARI explained: “We used to send out a ship for a full day every few weeks to manually take these measurements. Now we just take the AUV outside the harbour and send it on its way.
“About 24 hours later, it comes back, we hoist it on board, and download the data.”
Related: Underwater robots work together without human input – Unmanned Water Vehicles – US Navy Sponsored Technology Summer Camp
Tags: California,cool,experiment,ocean,Research,Robots,Science,scientific inquiry

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