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Category Archives: Biology

9th Biology: Cells – Organelles: Cytoskeleton & Centrosomes – Video

Posted: Published on September 11th, 2014

9th Biology: Cells - Organelles: Cytoskeleton Centrosomes Part 2 of my cell organelle overviews for my 9th grade biology class. Covered the Cytoskeleton Centrosomes. Up next: Nucleus Ribosomes Watch Intro to cells: http://youtu.be/Ssbp7icL2dE... By: Michael Cook … Continue reading

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9th Grade Biology: Cells – Organelles: Nucleus & Ribosomes – Video

Posted: Published on September 11th, 2014

9th Grade Biology: Cells - Organelles: Nucleus Ribosomes Part 3 of my cell organelle overviews for my 9th grade biology class. Covered the Nucleus Ribosomes. Up next: Rough Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum Watch Intro to cells: http://youtu.be/Ssbp7icL2... By: Michael Cook … Continue reading

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Speaker series marks 50 years of Ecology and Environmental Biology

Posted: Published on September 11th, 2014

The Department of Ecology and Environmental Biology (EEB) will celebrate its 50th year and the universitys 150th with a Sesquicentennial Colloquium series in the fall and spring semesters. Sesquicentennial Colloquium speakers Fall speakers in the EEB Sesquicentennial Colloquium include: Sept. 15: William Schlesinger, Ph.D. 76. President Emeritus, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Sept. 22: Mark Rausher, Ph.D. 78, professor of biology, Duke University Sept. 29: Carla Caceres, Ph.D. 97, professor of animal biology, director, School of Integrative Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Oct. 6: Michelle McClure, Ph.D. 98, director of the Fishery Resource Analysis and Monitoring Division at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center Oct. 20: Betty Smocovitis, Ph.D. 88, professor of history of science and professor of biology, University of Florida, Gainesville Oct. 27: Justin Meyer 04, assistant professor, University of California, San Diego Nov. 10: Rick Harrison, Ph.D. 77, professor, ecology and evolutionary biology, Cornell Here is the original post: Speaker series marks 50 years of Ecology and Environmental Biology … Continue reading

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Instead of Poppies, Engineering Microbes to Make Morphine

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2014

This article was originally published on The Conversation. The past few decades have seen enormous progress being made in synthetic biology the idea that simple biological parts can be tweaked to do our bidding. One of the main targets has been hacking the biological machinery that nature uses to produce chemicals. The hope is once we understand enough we might be able to design processes that convert cheap feedstock, such as sugar and amino acids, into drugs or fuels. These production lines can then be installed into microbes, effectively turning living cells into factories. Taking a leap in that direction, researchers from Stanford University have created a version of bakers yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) that contains genetic material of the opium poppy (Papaver somniferum), bringing the morphine microbial factory one step closer to reality. These results published in the journal Nature Chemical Biology represent a significant scientific success, but eliminating the need to grow poppies may still be years away. If dog has been mans best friend for thousands of years or more, the humble yeast has long been mans second-best friend. The single-cell organism has been exploited by human societies to produce alcoholic beverages or bread for more than 4,000 … Continue reading

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Eastern Michigan University biology professor receives national honors

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2014

YPSILANTI -- In the nearly six years professor Anne Casper has been teaching biology at Eastern Michigan University, she has mentored 17 undergraduate students and five masters students, encouraging them as they learned to conduct scientific research. Caspers commitment to her students was recognized recently when she won an honorable mention for superior mentorship of undergraduate students in research. The Council on Undergraduate Research presented the award in the outstanding biology mentor division for young researchers. The council, founded in 1978, supports and promotes high-quality undergraduate student-faculty collaborative research and scholarship. Membership includes nearly 10,000 individuals and more than 650 colleges and universities. Only one award and two honorable mentions were awarded nationally this year in Caspers category of six or less years of experience. Caspers award was a book on mentoring undergraduate researchers. This was quite a surprise, said Casper, of Ann Arbor. Its a national award so when I applied, I put together the most competitive application I could and hoped for the best. Nomination requirements included submitting a CV (resume), a letter of support from a colleague and two letters of support from undergraduate students. Leading biologists from around the country judged the competition. Professor Casper is … Continue reading

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Light and Life: Applications from physics to chemistry and biology – Video

Posted: Published on September 9th, 2014

Light and Life: Applications from physics to chemistry and biology Presented by Professor Siva Umapathy, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India. By: National Physical Laboratory … Continue reading

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Synthetic biology on the cusp

Posted: Published on September 9th, 2014

Whither thou goest, synthetic biology? First, lets put aside the dystopian scenarios of nasty modified viruses escaping from the fermentor Junior has jury-rigged in his bedroom lab. Designing virulent microbes is well beyond the expertise and budgets of homegrown biocoders. Moreover, its extremely difficult to improve on the lethality of nature, says Oliver Medvedik, a visiting assistant professor at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art and the assistant director of the Maurice Kanbar Center for Biomedical Engineering. The pathogens that already exist are more legitimate cause for worry. On the other hand, its probably too much to expect kitchen counter fermenting vessels stocked with customized microorganisms exuding insulin, biodiesel, and cant-believe-it-tastes-like-butter spreadable lipids. But I can see that kind of technology scaled up to the municipal level, says Medvedik. Large fermenter arrays could provide fuels, medicines, fiber anything carbon-based. Not every city can afford or would want a petroleum refinery to supply its fuel and chemical needs. Theyre expensive and dirty. But fermenting vessels are quiet, clean, versatile, and ultimately, cheaper. Medvedik is more associated with DIYbio than such industrial-scale applications. But his work at Cooper Union and Genspace, a nonprofit organization he founded to teach … Continue reading

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James Collins to receive the 2015 HFSP Nakasone Award

Posted: Published on September 9th, 2014

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 8-Sep-2014 Contact: Guntram Bauer gbauer@hfsp.org 33-388-215-124 Human Frontier Science Program http://www.twitter.com/hfsp The Human Frontier Science Program Organization (HFSPO) has announced that the 2015 HFSP Nakasone Award has been conferred upon James Collins of Boston University and Harvard's Wyss Institute for his innovative work on synthetic gene networks and programmable cells which launched the exciting field of synthetic biology. The HFSP Nakasone Award was established to honour scientists who have made key breakthroughs in fields at the forefront of the life sciences. It recognizes the vision of former Prime Minister Nakasone of Japan in the creation of the Human Frontier Science Program. James Collins will present the HFSP Nakasone Lecture at the 15th annual meeting of HFSP awardees to be held in La Jolla, California, in July 2015. James Collins was one of the first to show that one can engineer biological circuits out of proteins, genes and other bits of DNA. He designed and constructed a genetic toggle switch - a bistable gene circuit with broad implications for biomedicine and biotechnology. This work represents a landmark in the beginnings of synthetic biology. He showed that synthetic gene networks can be used as regulatory modules and interfaced with … Continue reading

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Eastern Michigan University bioligist receives national honors

Posted: Published on September 9th, 2014

YPSILANTI -- In the nearly six years professor Anne Casper has been teaching biology at Eastern Michigan University, she has mentored 17 undergraduate students and five masters students, encouraging them as they learned to conduct scientific research. Caspers commitment to her students was recognized recently when she won an honorable mention for superior mentorship of undergraduate students in research. The Council on Undergraduate Research presented the award in the outstanding biology mentor division for young researchers. The council, founded in 1978, supports and promotes high-quality undergraduate student-faculty collaborative research and scholarship. Membership includes nearly 10,000 individuals and more than 650 colleges and universities. Only one award and two honorable mentions were awarded nationally this year in Caspers category of six or less years of experience. Caspers award was a book on mentoring undergraduate researchers. This was quite a surprise, said Casper, of Ann Arbor. Its a national award so when I applied, I put together the most competitive application I could and hoped for the best. Nomination requirements included submitting a CV (resume), a letter of support from a colleague and two letters of support from undergraduate students. Leading biologists from around the country judged the competition. Professor Casper is … Continue reading

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9th Grade Biology: Intro to Cells (Cytology) – Video

Posted: Published on September 7th, 2014

9th Grade Biology: Intro to Cells (Cytology) Introduction to cells and cell theory for my 9th grade biology class. Next we will introduce ourselves to 13 of the main organelles. Title gif from The Flow, by MRK http://vimeo.com/49542226... By: Michael Cook … Continue reading

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