Tag: InternationalNews

  • ‘First Drafts’ of Human Protein Catalogue Published

    ‘First Drafts’ of Human Protein Catalogue Published

    {{The first two attempts at a database of every single human protein – the “proteome” – have been made public.}}

    This builds on our knowledge of the genome by showing which genes actually produce proteins in which tissues.

    One team in Germany and one spanning the US and India have published their proteome maps in the journal Nature, and on searchable, public websites.

    Some of the 17-to-18,000 reported proteins arise from stretches of DNA previously thought to be “non-coding”.

    Along the vast length of DNA packed inside each of our cells, our genes are the sections which contain the instructions, or code, for making proteins.

    “While we have a good idea of what the genome looks like, we didn’t know how many of those potentially 20,000 protein-coding genes would actually make protein,” said Prof Bernhard Kuester, who led the German team at the University of Technology, Munich.

    {{Unexpected results}}

    To find out, the researchers extracted all of the protein from many different samples of human tissues, as well as a number of cell lines.

    The proteins in that purified mixture were then chopped into small pieces and a technique called mass spectrometry revealed the sequence of amino acids forming each of those pieces.

    With a lot of computing power and patience, these batches of protein fragments can be compared with the human genome to make a map, showing which genes in which tissues are “expressed” and producing protein.

    “This is the first inventory, if you like,” Prof Kuester told media, “like a dozen years ago with the first draft of the human genome.”

    And just like the results of the Human Genome Project, these data contain some surprises.

    Both groups found hundreds of unexpected proteins, produced by fragments of ancient genes (called “pseudogenes”) or by lengths of DNA that were not thought to be genes at all.

    As well as the newcomers, there were notable absences. “We have good reason to believe that there are hundreds of known, annotated genes that perhaps are redundant,” said Prof Kuester.

    The team based in the US and India, led by Prof Akhilesh Pandey of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, found evidence for only 84% of the proteins that might be predicted from looking at the genome.

    {{Beyond genetics}}

    Prof Pandey told the media it was important to study the proteins themselves, as well as the genes that encode them.

    He offered an example of how a researcher, investigating a particular gene, might use one of the new databases: “They can look at the expression and get clues about what it could be doing.

    For example if a protein is expressed in the foetal gut and not the adult gut, then they might think of some sort of developmental process.”

    The tissue-by-tissue breakdown could also help scientists trying to figure out the actions and side effects of drugs.

    By comparing the proteome of various cancer cell lines, Prof Kuester and his team have already identified certain clusters of proteins that could increase or decrease sensitivity to cancer drugs.

    Dr Kevin Mills, who uses proteomics to study rare diseases at the UCL Institute of Child Health, agrees that it is crucial to look “beyond genomics” at protein levels and how they vary.

    “Genetics can’t tell us everything,” said Dr Mills, who was not involved in either study. “This is really important. We’re not static – we’re fluid and dynamic and our proteome changes continually.”

    BBC

  • Iranian Hackers Use Facebook to Spy on U.S

    Iranian Hackers Use Facebook to Spy on U.S

    {{In an unprecedented, three-year cyber espionage campaign, Iranian hackers created false social networking accounts and a fake news website to spy on military and political leaders in the United States, Israel and other countries, a cyber intelligence firm said on Thursday.}}

    ISight Partners, which uncovered the operation, said the hackers’ targets include a four-star U.S. Navy admiral, U.S. lawmakers and ambassadors, members of the U.S.-Israeli lobby, and personnel from Britain, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan.

    The firm declined to identify the victims and said it could not say what data had been stolen by the hackers, who were seeking credentials to access government and corporate networks, as well as infect machines with malicious software.

    “If it’s been going on for so long, clearly they have had success,” iSight Executive Vice President Tiffany Jones told media. The privately held company is based in Dallas, Texas and provides intelligence on cyber threats.

    ISight dubbed the operation “Newscaster” because it said the Iranian hackers created six “personas” who appeared to work for a fake news site, NewsOnAir.org, which used content from the Associated Press, BBC, Reuters and other media outlets.

    The hackers created another eight personas who purported to work for defense contractors and other organizations, iSight said.

    The hackers set up false accounts on Facebook and other online social networks for these 14 personas, populated their profiles with fictitious personal content, and then tried to befriend target victims, according to iSight.

    The operation has been active since at least 2011, iSight said, noting that it was the most elaborate cyber espionage campaign using “social engineering” that has been uncovered to date from any nation.

    To build credibility, the hackers would approach high-value targets by first establishing ties with the victims’ friends, classmates, colleagues, relatives and other connections over social networks run by Facebook Inc, Google Inc and its YouTube, LinkedIn Corp and Twitter Inc.

    The hackers would initially send the targets content that was not malicious, such as links to news articles on NewsOnAir.org, in a bid to establish trust.

    Then they would send links that infected PCs with malicious software, or direct targets to web portals that ask for network log-in credentials, iSight said.

    The hackers used the 14 personas to make connections with more than 2,000 people, the firm said, adding that it believed the group ultimately targeted several hundred individuals.

    “This campaign is not loud. It is low and slow,” said Jones. “They want to be stealth. They want to be under the radar.”

  • Manchester United Owner Malcolm Glazer Dies at 85

    Manchester United Owner Malcolm Glazer Dies at 85

    {{Malcolm Glazer, the controversial American owner of English Premier League giants Manchester United, died Wednesday. He was 85.}}

    Glazer — the son of a Lithuanian immigrant who went on to build an diverse business empire — gained a global profile through his ownership of United, one of the world’s biggest and best supported football clubs.

    But he was deeply unpopular with hardcore United fans after loading the club with hundreds of millions of dollars in debt following a 2005 buyout.

    His death was announced on the website of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers American football team, one of his other sports franchises.

    “The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are saddened to announce the passing of Owner/President Malcolm Glazer earlier this morning at the age of 85,” the statement said.

    “A dynamic business leader, Glazer helped mold the Buccaneers into a model franchise and one respected league-wide.”

    Under Glazer’s stewardship of the Buccaneers, the NFL team enjoyed its first Super Bowl success in 2002.

    “Malcolm Glazer was the guiding force behind the building of a Super Bowl-champion organization,” NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday.

    Shares of Manchester United slipped sharply on the New York Stock Exchange after Glazer’s death was announced but finished the day unchanged in thin trade at $16.30.

    Glazer’s death is not expected to have any bearing on the ownership of the club, with his family retaining a 90 percent holding in United.

    His sons Joel and Avram Glazer continue to serve as co-chairmen of the club. Another son, Bryan, remains on the United board.

  • Apple to Get Beats,Music Mogul Lovine for $3Bn

    Apple to Get Beats,Music Mogul Lovine for $3Bn

    {{Apple Inc (AAPL.O) will buy Beats for about $3 billion and bring recording mogul Jimmy Iovine into its ranks, hoping to win points with the music industry and help it catch up in fast-growing music streaming.}}

    As expected, Beats co-founders Iovine and rapper Dr. Dre will join Apple as part of the acquisition of the music streaming and audio equipment company.

    They should prove key in forging relationships with an industry that historically viewed Apple with suspicion but in recent years has pressed the iPhone maker to do more on subscription services, a market expected to eclipse song downloads in the long run.

    Iovine’s music industry relationships could ease notoriously difficult licensing negotiations for a future streaming service, recording industry executives say.

    “The ugly truth is that there is such a Berlin Wall between Silicon Valley and LA,” Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook told the Wall Street Journal in an interview. “The two don’t respect each other, don’t understand each other.”

    While the price tag represents an iota of Apple’s roughly $150 billion cash hoard, it marks a significant departure for a company that for two decades has stuck mainly to acquisitions worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

    The deal is seen as Apple’s effort to jump-start an uneven attempt to make headway in music streaming, the fastest-growing segment of the market, as iTunes sales decline. Pandora Media Inc (P.N) and Spotify have raced ahead while Apple’s eight-month-old iTunes Radio has not made much of a dent.

    reuters

  • Author Maya Angelou Dies Aged 86

    Author Maya Angelou Dies Aged 86

    {{One of America’s leading literary voices of the last 50 years, Angelou was best-known for her 1969 memoir I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

    It was the first of seven volumes of autobiography that traced her life from a childhood of abuse and oppression in the Deep South in the 1930s.

    The news was confirmed to the BBC by the mayor’s office in her home town of Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

    Mayor Allen Joines said he was “very sad of her passing”.

    Her poetry collections included Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water ‘fore I Diiie (1971), And Still I Rise (1978), Now Sheba Sings the Song (1987), and I Shall Not Be Moved (1990).

    Her poem On the Pulse of the Morning, written for US President Bill Clinton’s first inauguration, sold more than a million copies in the US.}}

  • Ronaldo is ‘World’s Most Marketable Footballer’

    Ronaldo is ‘World’s Most Marketable Footballer’

    {{Portugal and Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo has been named the world’s most marketable footballer, according to sports marketing experts Repucom.}}

    Argentina and Barcelona’s Lionel Messi is second, with a surprise entry from fellow Barca star, Spain’s Gerard Piqué, completing the top three.

    Ronaldo won his second FIFA Ballon d’Or global player of the year, and Champions League winners medal in 2014.

    Repucom said he was the most well-known and “trend-setting” footballer today.

    Globally, 83.9% of people know of the Portuguese star and in markets such as Italy, Spain, Germany, Turkey and Argentina, this figure is above 95%.

    Four-time Ballon d’Or winner Lionel Messi – the world’s best-paid player – scored highly for his endorsement potential and likeability.

    {{‘Global appeal’}}

    “With just over two weeks to go before the 2014 FIFA World Cup kicks off, the world’s gaze is firmly on the competing teams and players,” said Paul Smith, founder and boss of Repucom.

    “The World Cup is the most-watched sporting event in the world and as such, big brands, official partners or otherwise, will, and are, using its global appeal to drive sales.

    “Ronaldo is an endorser’s dream. His value is as important to the teams he plays for as they are for the companies that endorse him.”

    He said global awareness of Ronaldo was what drove his commercial power and with more than 82 million Facebook likes and 26 million Twitter followers, “he is also one of the most liked in the business”.

    {wirestory}

  • Leaders To Review EU Policies

    Leaders To Review EU Policies

    {{EU leaders have agreed to re-evaluate the bloc’s agenda after voters “sent a strong message”, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy has said.}}

    He said the 28 member state leaders had asked him to launch consultations over who would run the European Commission.

    He was speaking after a meeting in Brussels to discuss big election gains by populist and far-right parties.

    The results of the European Parliament election led to calls for an EU rethink by those leaders who suffered defeats.

    But despite gains by anti-EU groups, pro-European parties still won most votes overall.

    Tuesday’s summit was the first opportunity for leaders of all member states to discuss the way forward after last week’s polls.

    Media says reforms could include less regulation and less focus on economic austerity policies, while measures to boost growth and create jobs could address voter discontent.

    Mr Van Rompuy said the results of the European elections had shown “a mix of continuity and change” and that the Eurosceptic message from voters was “at the heart” of discussions between leaders.

    BBC

  • Pakistan Taliban Reportedly Split

    Pakistan Taliban Reportedly Split

    A split has emerged in the Pakistani Taliban after the major Mehsud faction walked out, saying the group leaders’ tactics were “un-Islamic”.

    It is the first major rift in Pakistani Taliban ranks since 2007 when the umbrella group was first formed.

    Analysts say the split may help advance peace talks with the government.

    Tens of thousands of people have died in militant attacks in Pakistan in the last seven years, most of them claimed by the Taliban.

    The rift comes after over a month of infighting in which dozens of fighters from the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) were killed.

    The powerful faction comprising militants from the Mehsud tribe – the core around which regional militant groups initially gravitated to form the TTP – said it was forming its own separate group called Tehrik Taliban South Waziristan.

    A spokesman for the new group, Azam Tariq Mehsud, told reporters the decision to part ways with the TTP was made when efforts to persuade the TTP leadership to give up practices which were “contrary to Islam” failed.

    “We consider the bombing of public places, extortion and kidnappings un-Islamic, and since the TTP leaders continued with these practices, we decided we should not share the responsibility,” he said.

    wirestory

  • Snowden Says He Was Trained ‘As a Spy’

    Snowden Says He Was Trained ‘As a Spy’

    {{Former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, who leaked details of massive U.S. intelligence-gathering programs, said in a U.S. TV interview he “was trained as a spy” and had worked undercover overseas for U.S. government agencies.}}

    In an advance excerpt of his interview in Moscow with “NBC Nightly News” that aired on Tuesday, Snowden rejected comments by critics that he was a low-level analyst.

    “Well, it’s no secret that the U.S. tends to get more and better intelligence out of computers nowadays than they do out of people,” Snowden told NBC news anchor Brian Williams.

    “I was trained as a spy in sort of the traditional sense of the word in that I lived and worked undercover overseas – pretending to work in a job that I’m not – and even being assigned a name that was not mine.”

    Describing himself as a “technical expert,” Snowden said: “I don’t work with people. I don’t recruit agents. What I do is I put systems to work for the United States. And I’ve done that at all levels from – from the bottom on the ground all the way to the top.”

    He said he worked undercover overseas for both the CIA and NSA and lectured at the Joint Counterintelligence Training Academy “where I developed sources and methods for keeping our information and people secure in the most hostile and dangerous environments around the world.”

    “So when they (critics) say I’m a low-level systems administrator, that I don’t know what I’m talking about, I’d say it’s somewhat misleading,” Snowden added.

    Snowden, who fled to Hong Kong and then Moscow last year, is believed to have taken 1.7 million computerized documents. The leaked documents revealed massive programs run by the NSA that gathered information on emails, phone calls and Internet use by hundreds of millions of Americans.

    He was charged last year in the United States with theft of government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information and willful communication of classified intelligence to an unauthorized person.

    agencies

  • Deadly Pig Virus re-Infects U.S. Farm

    Deadly Pig Virus re-Infects U.S. Farm

    {{An Indiana farm has become the first to confirm publicly it suffered a second outbreak of a deadly pig virus, fueling concerns that a disease that has wiped out 10 percent of the U.S. hog population will be harder to contain than producers and veterinarians expected.}}

    The farm, through its veterinarian, publicly acknowledged on Tuesday a repeat incident of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus (PEDv), which has killed up to 7 million pigs and pushed pork prices to record highs since it was first identified in the United States a year ago.

    Matt Ackerman, whose veterinary practice is in southeastern Indiana, told Reuters the farm’s operators did not want to be identified but authorized him to speak on their behalf.

    The state and federal effort to stamp out PEDv has operated on an assumption that a pig, once infected, develops immunity and will not be afflicted by the disease again for at least several years. Likewise, farms that had endured the disease were not known to suffer secondary outbreaks.

    But a year after the virus was identified, repeat outbreaks have occurred at farms but not been publicly confirmed before now. These so-called secondary outbreaks are a challenge to efforts to stem the disease, which is almost always fatal to baby piglets.

    Nationwide, PEDv outbreaks seem to recur in about 30 percent of infected farms, the American Association of Swine Veterinarians told Reuters, confirming for the first time the likelihood of repeated outbreaks.