Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • Paternal nutrition affects offsprings’ mental fitness, laboratory study shows

    {Findings suggest that excessive consumption of some food supplements may have undesirable effects on subsequent generations}

    The father’s lifestyle affects the cognitive skills of his offspring — at least in mice. Scientists at the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) have now shown that if male rodents are fed a diet rich in folic acid, methionine and vitamin B12, their progeny do not perform well in memory tests. The diet influences so-called epigenetic patterns in the genome, and this reprogramming is transferred to some degree to the next generation through the sperm. This suggests that the intake of high concentrations of such methyl donors could also have side effects in humans, for example if they consume excessive amounts of energy drinks or folic acid pills. Dan Ehninger and colleagues report on these findings in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

    Evidence is accumulating, at least in animal studies, that child development is affected not only by the mother’s diet and lifestyle prior to conception, but also by environmental factors the father is exposed to. For example, if male rodents are put on a diet particularly rich in fats, they will pass on a tendency to become diabetic to their offspring. One possible cause for phenomena like this are diet-induced DNA methylation changes, i.e. alterations in tiny chemical tags attached to the DNA that can control the activity of genes. If particularly large quantities of these methyl tags are supplied in the diet, this may hamper the expression of genes affected by increased DNA methylation.

    The effects of a methyl donor-rich diet

    “For a long time, it was assumed that these paternal epigenetic marks are erased completely after the fusion of sperm and egg cell,” explains Dr. Dan Ehninger, who leads a research group at the DZNE’s Bonn site. However, we know today that part of the paternal DNA methylation survives this process. In collaboration with colleagues at the Helmholtz Zentrum München and the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices, Ehninger’s team examined whether these epigenetic changes are associated with cognitive alterations in offspring mice. Towards this end, the scientists put male mice on a diet rich in methyl donors and cofactors required for methyl group metabolism: This diet contained high concentrations of methionine, folic acid, vitamin B12, choline, betaine and zinc. A second group of male rodents was given a standard diet. After six weeks, the male mice were mated with female mice and their offspring subjected to careful analyses. The result: the offspring of the male mice fed with methyl donors performed less well in all learning and memory tests. “We were able to show that even a transient change in the paternal diet can cause impaired learning skills in offspring. This affected in particular the ability to properly learn a spatial navigation task,” says Ehninger.

    Abnormalities were found not only in the animals’ behavior, but also in their brains: Nerve connections in the hippocampus — a brain region which is important for memory — reacted quite sluggishly to electrical stimuli, indicating that their adaptiveness — the so-called neuronal plasticity — was impaired in offspring mice. In line with this, a gene called “Kcnmb2” which is involved in neuroplasticity, was downregulated in progeny of the fathers that received the methyl donor-rich diet.

    Excessive amounts of food supplements could have side effects

    All this are merely results of animal experiments. However, humans can also be exposed to high doses of methyl donors, says Ehninger. This may apply in particular to countries like the USA, where there is a widespread consumption of products fortified with folic acid. “Methyl donor deficiencies are well known to have adverse health consequences that can be prevented with dietary supplements. However, our study suggests that excessive consumption may be associated with adverse effects as well,” says the scientist. In the future, he intends to determine whether epigenetic traits can also be passed on by humans to their offspring and which environmental factors may have an influence on this. Does the father’s age alter DNA methylation patterns, thus influencing health of the next generation? Ehninger reckons: “To date, such epigenetic mechanisms and their intergenerational influences have certainly received too little attention.”

    The father's lifestyle affects the cognitive skills of his offspring .

    Source:Science Daily

  • Gatsibo motorcyclists cautioned against abetting crime

    {Motorcyclists in Gatsibo District have been called upon to actively join ongoing efforts to fighting drug trafficking.}

    They were also urged to distance themselves and report members, who connive with drug traffickers to transport their illegal commodities.

    The call was made by the mayor of Gatsibo, Richard Gasana on Monday while addressing over 500 motorcyclists.

    The meeting was also attended by the District Police Commander (DPC), Superintendent of Police Supt Eric Kabera.

    It preceded the public destruction of about 240 cartons of illicit gin seized in the last few months.

    According to the DPC, about 90 percent of the seized and destroyed illicit drugs were being trafficked on motorcycles, an act he strongly warned against.

    “You should be strong advocates of the law and a police eye against drug traffickers. Don’t let you business be used by members in such criminal activities,” Mayor Gasana said.

    During the same event, Police also handed over two motorcycles to the owners, after they were recovered recently from suspected thieves.

    The motorcycles went missing from February 22 and were recovered from one Salim Nzakamwita, alias Boss, who was also arrested.

    Source:Police

  • 5 best ways to keep your nails looking clean and healthy

    {When you look at your nails, what do you see? Do you see dirty and unappealing nails or are your hands blessed with healthy looking nails.}

    You too can have those wonderful nails that you’ve been dreaming of.

    {{1. Keep your nails dry and clean }}

    It’s important to keep your nails dry, as prolonged contact with water can weaken your nails and contribute to split fingernails. So make sure you wipe your hands dry with water after contact with water.

    Keeping your fingers dry and clean will also prevent the growth and spread of bacteria.

    {{2. Observe good diet }}

    Foods rich in iron, vitamin D and calcium are very important if you want healthy looking nails. Fragile nails could be caused by iron deficiencies. Eat foods like liver, egg yolks, vegetables, dairy products and beans.

    {{3. Trim your nails }}

    Practice good hygiene by trimming your nails with a nail cutter and not your teeth, to keep your nails low and give it a good shape.

    {{4. Moisturize your hands and nails }}

    Apply your hand lotion into your nails and cuticle to keep it well moisturised.

    {{5. Wash your hands}}

    Whenever you handle greasy and oily substances or any dirty substance that can soil your nails, make sure you wash your hands very well when you are done.

    Your nails are very important to your hands, so they ought to be clean and healthy.

    Source:Elcrema

  • RNP, scribes forge stronger partnership

    {Rwanda National Police (RNP) and local media practitioners have drawn a new line of partnership to enhance efforts geared towards public safety, and professional reporting.}

    This is contained in the twelve-point resolutions, which were adopted at the end of the one day ‘Police-Media’ periodic interaction session held on Monday at the RNP General Headquarters in Kacyiru.

    The two parties agreed to jointly work together in policing activities to ensure a crime-free country and encourage people in Rwanda comply with the law; accurate, fair and balanced reportage that focuses on the interest of the people; and journalists to always bear identifications for recognition while on duty.

    They also agreed to collaborate against any hate speech and negative ideology especially during the forthcoming 23rd anniversary of the Genocide against the Tutsi; elaborate offences related to genocide and criminal liability; journalists to acquire training on court and crime reporting with emphasis on appropriate legal words used; and online media agencies to evaluate comments by readers before they are approved to go online.

    The meeting which was officially opened by the Minister of Justice and the Attorney General, Johnston Busingye, was held under the theme: “Strengthening Partnership for Quality Service Delivery.”

    Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Theos Badege, the RNP spokesperson, who was among the panelists, said that the “police-media partnership is a modern Policing strategy that enhances public compliance with the law.”

    Experts deliberated on the working relations between the media and the police; ethical reporting of legal and justice matters; the safety of journalists; the rights and obligations journalists; and responsible coverage of the commemoration of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi

    It also brought together representatives from Rwanda Governance Board (RGB), Legal Aid Forum, Rwanda Utility Regulatory Authority (RURA), National Commission for the Fight against Genocide, Rwanda Public Prosecution Authority, Swedish embassy and UNESCO.

    Source:Police

  • Materials may lead to self-healing smartphones

    {Taking a cue from the Marvel Universe, researchers report that they have developed a self-healing polymeric material with an eye toward electronics and soft robotics that can repair themselves. The material is stretchable and transparent, conducts ions to generate current and could one day help your broken smartphone go back together again.}

    The researchers will present their work today at the 253rd National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS).

    “When I was young, my idol was Wolverine from the X-Men,” Chao Wang, Ph.D., says. “He could save the world, but only because he could heal himself. A self-healing material, when carved into two parts, can go back together like nothing has happened, just like our human skin. I’ve been researching making a self-healing lithium ion battery, so when you drop your cell phone, it could fix itself and last much longer.”

    The key to self-repair is in the chemical bonding. Two types of bonds exist in materials, Wang explains. There are covalent bonds, which are strong and don’t readily reform once broken; and noncovalent bonds, which are weaker and more dynamic. For example, the hydrogen bonds that connect water molecules to one another are non-covalent, breaking and reforming constantly to give rise to the fluid properties of water. “Most self-healing polymers form hydrogen bonds or metal-ligand coordination, but these aren’t suitable for ionic conductors,” Wang says.

    Wang’s team at the University of California, Riverside, turned instead to a different type of non-covalent bond called an ion-dipole interaction, a force between charged ions and polar molecules. “Ion-dipole interactions have never been used for designing a self-healing polymer, but it turns out that they’re particularly suitable for ionic conductors,” Wang says. The key design idea in the development of the material was to use a polar, stretchable polymer, poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene), plus a mobile, ionic salt. The polymer chains are linked to each other by ion-dipole interactions between the polar groups in the polymer and the ionic salt.

    The resulting material could stretch up to 50 times its usual size. After being torn in two, the material automatically stitched itself back together completely within one day.

    As a test, the researchers generated an “artificial muscle” by placing a non-conductive membrane between two layers of the ionic conductor. The new material responded to electrical signals, bringing motion to these artificial muscles, so named because biological muscles similarly move in response to electrical signals (though Wang’s materials are not intended for medical applications).

    For the next step, the researchers are working on altering the polymer to improve the material’s properties. For example, they are testing the material in harsh conditions, such as high humidity. “Previous self-healing polymers haven’t worked well in high humidity, Wang says. “Water gets in there and messes things up. It can change the mechanical properties. We are currently tweaking the covalent bonds within the polymer itself to get these materials ready for real-world applications.”

    A new material not only heals itself, but it also stretches up to 50 times its usual size; these properties could fix your phone's battery if it cracks or prevent it from breaking in the first place.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Future carbon dioxide, climate warming potentially unprecedented in 420 million years

    {New research led by the University of Southampton suggests that, over the next 100 to 200 years, carbon dioxide concentrations in Earth’s atmosphere will head towards values not seen since the Triassic period, 200 million years ago. Furthermore, by the 23rd century, the climate could reach a warmth not seen in 420 million years.}

    The study, published in Nature Communications, compiled over 1200 estimates of ancient atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations to produce a continuous record dating back nearly half a billion years. It concludes that if humanity burns all available fossil fuels in the future, the levels of CO2 contained in the atmosphere may have no geologically-preserved equivalent during this 420 million year period.

    The researchers examined published data on fossilised plants, the isotopic composition of carbon in soils and the oceans, and the boron isotopic composition of fossil shells. Gavin Foster, lead author and Professor of Isotope Geochemistry at the University of Southampton, explains: “We cannot directly measure CO2 concentrations from millions of years ago. Instead we rely on indirect ‘proxies’ in the rock record. In this study, we compiled all the available published data from several different types of proxy to produce a continuous record of ancient CO2 levels.”

    This wealth of data shows that CO2 concentrations have naturally fluctuated on multi-million year timescales over this period, from around 200-400 parts per million (ppm) during cold ‘icehouse’ periods to up to 3000 ppm during intervening warm ‘greenhouse’ periods. Although evidence tells us our climate has fluctuated greatly in the past (with Earth currently in a colder period), it also shows the current speed of climate change is highly unusual.

    Carbon dioxide is a potent greenhouse gas and in the last 150 years humanity’s fossil fuel use has increased its atmospheric concentration from 280 ppm in the pre-industrialisation era to nearly 405 ppm in 2016. However, it’s not just CO2 that determines the climate of our planet, ultimately it is both the strength of the greenhouse effect and the amount of incoming sunlight that is important. Changes in either parameter are able to force climate change.

    “Due to nuclear reactions in stars, like our sun, over time they become brighter,” adds co-author Dan Lunt, Professor of Climate Science at the University of Bristol. “This means that, although carbon dioxide concentrations were high hundreds of millions of years ago, the net warming effect of CO2 and sunlight was less. Our new CO2 compilation appears on average to have gradually declined over time by about 3-4 ppm per million years. This may not sound like much, but it is actually just about enough to cancel out the warming effect caused by the sun brightening through time, so in the long-term it appears the net effect of both was pretty much constant on average.”

    This interplay between carbon dioxide and the sun’s brightness has fascinating implications for the history of life on Earth. Co-author Professor Dana Royer, from Wesleyan University in the US, explains: “Up until now it’s been a bit of a puzzle as to why, despite the sun’s output having increased slowly over time, scant evidence exists for any similar long-term warming of the climate. Our finding of little change in the net climate forcing offers an explanation for why Earth’s climate has remained relatively stable, and within the bounds suitable for life for all this time.”

    This long-term view also offers a valuable perspective on future climate change. It is well recognised that the climate today is changing at rates well above the geological norm. If humanity fails to tackle rising CO2 and burns all the readily available fossil fuel, by AD 2250 CO2 will be at around 2000 ppm — levels not seen since 200 million years ago.

    Professor Foster adds: “However, because the Sun was dimmer back then, the net climate forcing 200 million years ago was lower than we would experience in such a high CO2 future. So not only will the resultant climate change be faster than anything Earth has seen for millions of years, the climate that will exist is likely to have no natural counterpart, as far as we can tell, in at least the last 420 million years.”

    This collaborative study involves the University of Southampton (UK), University of Bristol (UK), and Wesleyan University (US) and is an output from ‘Descent into the Ice House’, one of the four research projects under the umbrella programme ‘The Long-term Co-Evolution of Life and the Planet’ funded the by the National Environment Research Council (NERC).

    Living Ginkgo leaf (left) and fossil (right). Density of stomata in such leaves is proxy of atmospheric CO2 in past.

    Source:Science Daily

  • BBOXX expands to Rwamagana district

    {BBOXX, a British company offering solar power materials has expanded activities in Rwamagana district with a target of availing off-grid solutions to more rural areas. }

    The opening of a new shop of solar energy materials in Rwamagana yesterday becomes the 26th adding to the existing outlets in 25 districts countrywide.

    In an interview with IGIHE, the newly appointed CEO of BBOXX in Rwanda,Monica Keza Katumwine has expressed delight to have lit many households and hope to cover all remote areas not accessible by the on-grid.

    “We plan to connect 58,000 households by the end of this year. Our solar equipments have been availed to citizens and affordable to the majority of Rwandans with the durability of about 10 years,” she said.

    She explained that BBOXX is upgrading its technology to enable clients use materials requiring more electricity including fridges.

    Katumwine noted that BBOXX has been committed to transforming citizens’ livelihoods. Recently BBOXX paid Mituelle de santé for 40 households and bought livestock for some families during the celebration of achievements in Rwanda.

    Katumwine assures to serve with utmost commitment given her 10 year experience in medium businesses to improve delivery of BBOXX activities among Rwandans.

    ‘I am committed to providing my contribution in transforming livelihoods of fellow Rwandans. As a female Rwandan operating inside the country, I have witnessed consequences of lacking electricity. I saw children revising using oil powered lanterns,” she said.

    BBOXX is one of the companies belonging to private investors committed to facilitating the government of Rwanda’s target of connecting electricity to 70% household by 2018 with 48% expected to use electricity on-grid while 22% will use off-grid solutions. 30% of Rwandans are connected today.

    BBOXX has offered solar energy materials to more than 25,000 Rwandans in rural areas since it opened shop in 2014. It had one shop in Musanze district at the beginning.

    The newly appointed CEO of BBOXX in Rwanda,Monica Keza Katumwine handing Mituelle de santé to Kayonza resident.
    Employees of BBOXX Rwamagana branch.
    Officials during the launch of BBOXX Rwamagana shop
  • President Kagame to visit Djibouti

    {President Paul Kagame is due to visit Djibouti in two weeks’ time following last year’s visit to Rwanda of Djibouti president, Ismaïl Omar Guelleh in March 2016. }

    In a press conference held today, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Louise Mushikiwabo explained that president Kagame will visit Djibouti to strengthen existing bilateral ties between the two countries.

    Rwanda and Djibouti signed agreements allowing Rwanda to exploit the land of 20 hectares offered by Djibouti near Port of Djibouti, PAID and Dubai World International Port in 2013.

    Djibouti is a smaller country than Rwanda located in the Horn of Africa with
    23% of its population below the poverty line .

  • ‘Toxic gas attack’ in Syria kills at least 58 people

    {Opposition says government or Russian jets pounded the town of Khan Sheikhoun in rebel-held Idlib.}

    At least 58 people, including nine children, were killed in an air raid that released “toxic gas” on the rebel-held Syrian town of Khan Sheikhoun on Tuesday, a monitor said.

    Tuesday’s attack caused many people to choke or faint, and some had foam coming out of their mouths, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, citing medical sources who described it as a sign of a gas attack.

    Damascus has repeatedly denied using such weapons and the Syrian army could not immediately be reached for comment.

    The AFP news agency later reported, citing one if its journalists on the scene, that a rocket had slammed into a hospital where the victims were being treated, bringing rubble down on top of medics as they struggled to deal with victims.

    The Observatory monitoring group, which tracks the war through a network of contacts on the ground, was unable to confirm the nature of the substance used.

    Al Jazeera’s Alan Fisher, reporting from Beirut, said locals on ground expected the number of dead would increase.

    “The national opposition in Syria is calling for the United Nations to launch an immediate inquiry for the security council to meet and to condemn behind this attack,” he said.

    Syrian government or Russian jets pounded the town of Khan Sheikhoun in rebel-held Idib in the morning, the monitoring group said.

    On Sunday, suspected Russian fighter jets bombed a hospital in a city in the northern province of Idlib, wounding several people, a rescue group said.

    At least ten people were wounded when three strikes targeted the main hospital in Maaret al-Numan, destroying the building, a White Helmets group official told Al Jazeera.

    The White Helmets, also know as the Syrian Civil Defence, is are volunteer rescuers that operate in rebel-held territory.

    “For the past week, Idlib has been targeted by ongoing air strikes, and after yesterday’s attack, one of its main hospitals has been mostly destroyed and can no longer function,” Majid, another member of the White Helmets, said.

    Over the past year, Doctors Without Borders has received reports of at least 71 attacks on at least 32 different health facilities, which it runs or supports in Syria.

    The attack caused many people to choke or faint, and some to foam at the mouth

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Bodies decomposing in Mocoa morgue after landslides

    {Death toll, currently at 273, could rise as rescuers search for more victims and survivors after flooding and mudslides.}

    Colombians are preparing to bury scores of decomposing bodies as rescuers continue to search for victims of weekend flooding and landslides that devastated a city in the southern part of the country, killing at least 273 people.

    Desperate families queued for blocks in the heat to search a morgue for loved ones who died when several rivers burst their banks in the early hours of Saturday, sending water, mud and debris crashing down streets and into houses as people slept.

    Bodies wrapped in white sheets lay on the concrete floor of the morgue in Mocoa on Monday as officials sought to bury them as soon as possible to avoid the spread of disease.

    “Please speed up delivery of the bodies because they are decomposing,” said Yadira Andrea Munoz, a 45-year-old housewife who expected to receive the remains of two relatives who died in the tragedy.

    But officials asked for families to be patient.

    “We don’t want bodies to be delivered wrongly,” said Carlos Eduardo Valdes, head of the forensic science institute.

    The death toll has ticked up as rescuers searched with dogs and machinery in the mud-choked rubble.

    Many families in Mocoa have spent days and nights digging through the debris with their hands despite lack of food, clean water and electricity.

    “We spent two days here already, our family members were identified yesterday and their bodies still haven’t been delivered,” Andres Lopez, a survivor, told Al Jazeera.

    “There are serious logistical issues. There are only two officials doing the paperwork.”

    Three days after floodwaters rushed through the city of Mocoa, the authorities said they will check any report of movement that could be a sign of life and are not yet ready to concede that it is too late find anyone alive from the list of the more than 200 people missing.

    “We do not like to create false expectations but where there is a possibility of life we will do everything possible,” said Carlos Ivan Marquez, director of Colombia’s National Unit of Disaster and Risk Management.

    President Juan Manuel Santos, who made a third visit to the area on Monday, blamed climate change for the disaster, saying Mocoa had received one-third of its usual monthly rain in just one night, causing the rivers to burst their banks.

    Others said deforestation in surrounding mountains meant there were few trees to prevent water washing down bare slopes.

    More than 500 people were staying in emergency housing and social services had helped 10 lost children find their parents. As many as 43 children were killed.

    Al Jazeera’s Alessandro Rampietti, reporting from Mocoa, said the government has declared an economic, social, and ecological emergency in the area to make it easier to transfer public funds for aid and reconstruction.

    Families of the dead will receive about $6,400 in aid and the government will cover hospital and funeral costs.

    Even in a country where heavy rains, a mountainous landscape and informal construction combined make landslides a common occurrence, the scale of the Mocoa disaster was daunting compared with recent landslides, including one in 2015 that killed nearly 100 people.

    Colombia’s deadliest landslide, the 1985 Armero disaster, killed more than 20,000 people.

    Rescue workers urged family members to bury the bodies quickly to avoid spread of disease

    Source:Al Jazeera