Thursday, December 27, 2012

Long-lived bats offer clues on diseases, aging


NewsDaily (2012-12-27) -- The bat, a reservoir for viruses like Ebola, SARS and Nipah, has for decades stumped scientists trying to figure out how it is immune to many deadly bugs but a recent study into its genes may finally shed some light, scientists said on Friday.



Long-lived bats offer clues on diseases, aging


By Tan Ee LynPosted 2012/12/21 at 5:17 am EST
HONG KONG, Dec. 21, 2012 (Reuters) — The bat, a reservoir for viruses like Ebola, SARS and Nipah, has for decades stumped scientists trying to figure out how it is immune to many deadly bugs but a recent study into its genes may finally shed some light, scientists said on Friday.











Studying the DNA of two distant bat species, the scientists discovered how genes dealing with the bats' immune system had undergone the most rapid change.
This may explain why they are relatively free of disease and live exceptionally long lives compared with other mammals of similar size, such as the rat, said Professor Lin-Fa Wang, an infectious disease expert at the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School in Singapore who led the multi-centre study.
"We are not saying bats never get sick or never get infections. What we are saying is they handle infections a lot better," Wang said in a telephone interview.
What was missing from both species of bats was a gene segment known to trigger extreme, and potentially fatal, immune reactions to infections, called the cytokine storm.
Cytokine storms end up killing not only offending viruses in the body, but the host's own cells and tissues too.
"Viruses rarely kill the host. The killing comes from the host's immune response. So it looks like what bats are doing is depress the inflammation (cytokine storm). If we can learn that, we can design drugs to minimize the inflammation damage and control viral infection," Wang said.
The study, which saw the participation of researchers from China, Denmark, Australia and the United States, was published on Friday in the journal Science.
Compared with other mammals of similar size, bats live a long time, with lifespans of between 20 and 40 years. Rats live between 2 and 3 years, on average.
IMMUNE GENES LINKED TO FLIGHT
Interestingly, Wang and his colleagues found that the highly evolved genes that give bats their superior immune system also enable them to fly.
Out of more than 5,000 types of mammals on the planet, bats are the only one capable of sustained flight and some species can fly more than 1,000 km in a single night.
Such intense physical exertion is known to produce toxic "free radicals" that cause tissue damage and it is these same genes that give the bat the ability to repair itself, Wang said.
"What we found was the genes that evolved fastest were genes involved in repairing DNA damage. That makes sense ... because when you fly, metabolism goes up and it generates free radicals that are toxic to cells," Wang said.
"Because bats fly, they (would have had) to evolve and adapt ... to get genes that can repair DNA damage."
Wang said we have much to learn from the bat, which has evolved to avoid disease and live exceptionally long lives.
"Cancer, ageing and infectious disease, these are the three major areas of concern for people," he said.
"We have studied rats for 150 years to understand how to do better in these three areas. Now we have a system, the bat, that has done very well in evolution. We can learn from the bat. With modern techniques, we can design new drugs to slow down the ageing process, treat cancer, fight infections."
(Editing by Robert Birsel)


http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/bre8bk0bv-us-bats-immunity-flight/

Monday, April 30, 2012

Wednesday, April 11, 2012


Bleach, Nip, Tuck: The White Beauty Myth

A Euro Vision of Beauty?

Features

White paste
Monday 02 November 2009
Dr Amina Mire
Since women of colour began using skin whitening products in response to racial oppression in eighteenth century America, unlike legal slavery, the trade has grown not died. Worse still is that what was once used to mask women of African origin desperate to pass in a white society that often deemed their natural skin ugly and unacceptable, it now provides a Venetian mask for all women of colour. A recent Middle Eastern advertisement for Fair and Lovely Skin Cream features a young woman who is trying to gain work as a television presenter. When things weren't going to plan she had a revelation, '...the obstacle to obtaining my dream job was my skin'. The ad ends with the words, ‘Fair and Lovely... For total fairness'.
Click here to dowload a PDF of this article
The quest for white skin continues to Japan through Mikiko Ashikari's 2005 article in Vol 10 of the Journal of Material Culture titled, Cultivating Japanese Whiteness. Here she details the language commonly found in Japanese adverts:
The sensation of whiteness (shiro) on your skin (Helena Rubinstein)
The best shortcut to whiteness (Givenchy)
Let's cultivate whiteness, every day (Clinique)
What I have touched is a drop of white science (Yves Saint-Laurent)
Double action, for the skin of the future which goes beyond whiteness (Dior)
Clarins has discovered the white skin (Clarins)
A new experience of whiteness (Carita)
In Pacific Asia alone, where the skin-whitening market outside of Europe and North America is anchored, 2009 estimates rated its value at €13bn. Whether the thought originated in slavery, class, or elsewhere, some consider that a war on skin colour is being fought on the faces of women of all hues, from golden brown to black, Asia to Africa and South America.
As with all wars, not everyone plays fair. On the one hand there is the perfectly made up world of commercial cosmeceutical purity, yet this can be contrasted with some illegal products available on the black market which can contain banned chemicals such as mercury, hydroquinone and corticosteroids.
In London in 2007 shop owners Yinka and Michael Oluyemi were fined £100,000 for selling 'banned' skin-bleaching products that contained the regulated substance hydroquinone and other illegal steroids.
With the reported illegal trade of products containing regulated substances such as hydroquinone, EU law enforcement and customs are fighting a losing battle against under-the-counter sales and the systematic use of the internet as the main medium for reaching customers. Just Google 'hydroquinone', 'skin whitening' or 'skin bleaching' and see how many opportunities to buy arise.
Unsurprisingly, not everyone is happy with what some perceive to be the mass marketing of whiteness. In India, where skin colour and class has been inexorably linked for centuries, a 2008 article in The Independent detailed a row that followed the broadcast of mini series of adverts promoting 'White Beauty', a skin whitening cream produced by Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL).
Some observers consider that there are two distinct sectors to the contemporary marketing of skin-whitening cosmetics:
1. High-end but relatively expensive skin-whitening products which have been developed for, and simultaneously marketed to affluent women of colour to 'fade discolouration', and to white middle aged women for removing the corporeal signs of the aging and achieving a youthful-looking, flawless white skin.
2. Cheap, low-end and often highly toxic products aimed mainly at poor non-white consumers.
From Hydroquinone to the Future
Molecular formula: C6H4(OH)2
Hydroquinone is a pigment control/ melanin inhibiting product designed for cosmetic use that is banned in European Union member states, Pacific Asia and in some African countries. In the USA over the counter sales of skin-whitening products must contain less than 2% hydroquinone.
A 1996 World Health organisation report on Hydroquinone references cases suggesting that skin lightening creams containing 2% hydroquinone have produced leukoderma, as well as ochronosis. Leukoderma is a loss of skin pigment that effectively turns skin white and its opposite ochronosis, increases pigmentation,effectively turning patches of skin brown.
On 9 September 2009, Reuters reported on the FDA's (Food and Drug Administration – USA) continuing investigation into whether or not to continue with their 2006 proposal to ban the use of hydroquinone in pigment control products due to fears that it may act as a carcinogen. The cosmetics industry have responded to this increasing global demand for skin whitening products by addressing the associated health risks that might limit their ability to take advantage of huge potential markets in East Asia, Africa and beyond through the development and production of new, safer skin-whitening agents.
In a 2007 press release for Actiwhite LS 9808 the manufactures Cognis acknowledged that 'The skin whitening market is no longer limited to Asian countries, but has become an essential part of the global face and body care market' and that they were offering a product with 'a high capacity to decrease melanogenesis – the process which is responsible for the creation of melanin, which in turn is responsible for the coloration of the human skin.' By 2010 the worldwide anti-aging product market is estimated to reach U.S.$ 115.5 billion (Global Industry Analysts 2008).
When considering the desire to alter our image and the money involved, the question that remains in 2009 is this: are women of colour still actively seeking a Euro vision of beauty or is the desire to achieve skin a few shades lighter now inherent in our make up?
Click here to download a PDF of this article
Dr Amina Mire
Assistant Professor
Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada