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Aug 24, 2023

Genotyping of HIV-1 to Detect Drug Resistance

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

To address the HIV surveillance needs of the global community, the Applied Biosystems HIV-1 Genotyping Kit with Integrase offers broad genotyping coverage of HIV-1 Group M subtypes from extracted viral RNA from plasma and dried blood spot (DBS) samples to detect resistance to protease inhibitors, nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors, non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors, and integrase inhibitors.

This HIV-1 resistance kit harnesses gold-standard Sanger sequencing technology to amplify and reliably sequence the diverse and rapidly evolving HIV-1 virus.

This product employs assays for HIV-1 genotyping licensed from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Aug 24, 2023

10 AI Platforms to Build Your Modern Application

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Are you looking for an AI platform that can help you build modern applications? Look no further than our selection of top performing platforms!

Aug 24, 2023

Novel Therapeutic Model Created to Study Eye Diseases

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension, neuroscience

“Microglia exhibit both maladaptive and adaptive roles in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases and have emerged as a therapeutic target for central nervous system (CNS) disorders, including those affecting the retina,” wrote the researchers. “Replacing maladaptive microglia, such as those impacted by aging or over-activation, with exogenous microglia that enable adaptive functions has been proposed as a potential therapeutic strategy for neurodegenerative diseases. To investigate the potential of microglial cell replacement as a strategy for retinal diseases, we first employed an efficient protocol to generate a significant quantity of human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC)-derived microglia.”

“Our understanding of microglia function comes predominantly from rodent studies due to the difficulty of sourcing human tissue and isolating the microglia from these tissues. But there are genetic and functional differences between microglia in mice and humans, so these studies may not accurately represent many human conditions,” explained lead author Wenxin Ma, a PhD, biologist at the Retinal Neurophysiology Section, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health.

“To address this concern, researchers have been growing human microglia from human stem cells. We wanted to take this a step further and see if we could transplant human microglia into the mouse retina, to serve as a platform for screening therapeutic drugs as well as explore the potential of microglia transplantation as a therapy itself,” added senior author Wai Wong, vice president of retinal disease, Janssen Research and Development.

Aug 24, 2023

Paralyzed Patients Speak Again Thanks to AI-Powered Brain Implants

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Efforts to restore speech to people silenced by brain injuries and diseases have taken a significant step forward with the publication of two new papers in the journal Nature.

Aug 24, 2023

New pocket-sized device for clinicians could spot infected wounds faster

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, mobile phones

It’s notoriously difficult for doctors to identify a wound that is becoming infected. Clinical signs and symptoms are imprecise and methods of identifying bacteria can be time-consuming and inaccessible, so a diagnosis can be subjective and dependent on clinician experience. But infection can stall healing or spread into the body if it isn’t treated quickly, putting a patient’s health in grave danger. An international team of scientists and clinicians thinks they have the solution: a device run from a smartphone or tablet app, which allows advanced imaging of a wound to identify infection.

“Wound care is one of today’s most expensive and overlooked threats to patients and our overall health care system,” said Robert Fraser of Western University and Swift Medical Inc., corresponding author of the study published in Frontiers in Medicine. “Clinicians need better tools and data to best serve their patients who are unnecessarily suffering.”

The scientists developed a device called the Swift Ray 1, which can be attached to a smartphone and connected to the Swift Skin and Wound software. This can take medical-grade photographs, infrared thermography images (which measure body heat), and bacterial fluorescence images (which reveal bacteria using violet light).

Aug 24, 2023

The superconducting diode effect in a device based on coupled Josephson junctions

Posted by in categories: computing, engineering, physics

The so-called superconducting (SC) diode effect is an interesting nonreciprocal phenomenon, occurring when a material is SC in one direction and resistive in the other. This effect has been the focus of numerous physics studies, as its observation and reliable control in different materials could enable the future development of new integrated circuits.

Researchers at RIKEN and other institutes in Japan and the United States recently observed the SC diode effect in a newly developed device comprised of two coherently coupled Josephson junctions. Their paper, published in Nature Physics, could guide the engineering of promising technologies based on coupled Josephson junctions.

“We experimentally studied nonlocal Josephson effect, which is a characteristic SC transport in the coherently coupled Josephson junctions (JJs), inspired by a previous theoretical paper published in NanoLetters,” Sadashige Matsuo, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told Phys.org.

Aug 24, 2023

See 1st photos of the moon’s south pole by India’s Chandrayaan-3 lunar lander

Posted by in category: space

The first images from India’s Chandrayaan-3 mission taken after the probe’s historic moon touchdown reveal a pockmarked surface near the lunar south pole.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) shared the images on X, formerly Twitter, on Wednesday (Aug. 23), about four hours after the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft completed its smooth descent.

Aug 24, 2023

For the First Time, Scientists Have Tunneled Sound Through a Vacuum

Posted by in category: futurism

Wait… how is that possible?

Aug 24, 2023

Nvidia Dispels Fears About Running Out of Chips During AI Boom

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Aug 24, 2023

CNBC Daily Open: Nvidia underpromises and wildly overdelivers

Posted by in category: futurism

Nvidia’s second-quarter revenue beat not only its own expectations but also that of analysts. And the numbers are just incredible.