Toplam 246 içerik listeleniyor
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Parazitolojiye Giriş
Öğrencilerin Öğrenmesi Beklenilen Noktalar 1.Parazitler anlatılırken, parazitizmin özünü anlamak. 2.Parazitolojide kullanılan terimler (terminoloji) ile aşina olmak 3.Taxanomic şemaları kullanarak parazitleri sınıflandırmak 4.Hedeflenen paraziti bilimsel (genus-cins, species- tür) ve halk arasındaki adı ile tanımak, patalojisini, ekonomik etkisini ve kullanılan ilaçlara cevabını öğrenmek. 5.Her parazit için asıl konakçıyı yada konakçı gurubunu bilmek....
https://www.biyologlar.com/parazitolojiye-giris -
New American Chemical Society podcast: Genetically-engineered spider silk for gene therapy
A new episode in the American Chemical Society's (ACS) award-winning "Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions" podcast series spins a real-life tale in which spider silk shows promise for overcoming a major barrier to the use of gene therapy in everyday medicine.
https://www.biyologlar.com/new-american-chemical-society-podcast-genetically-engineered-spider-silk-for-gene-therapy-haber-8767 -
Membranların nano ölçekli yapısını kontrol etmek temiz su ihtiyacı için önelidir.
Membranlar tuzlu su için filtre görevi görür. Filtre edilmiş suyu tarım, enerji üretimi ve içme suyu için bile kullanılabiliriz. Şimdiye kadar basit bir süreç olarak görülmesine rağmen bilim insanlarını yıllardır şaşırtan karmaşıklıklar barındırıyor.
https://www.biyologlar.com/membranlarin-nano-olcekli-yapisini-kontrol-etmek-temiz-su-ihtiyaci-icin-onelidir- -
Membranların nano ölçekli yapısını kontrol etmek temiz su ihtiyacı için önelidir.
Membranlar tuzlu su için filtre görevi görür. Filtre edilmiş suyu tarım, enerji üretimi ve içme suyu için bile kullanılabiliriz. Şimdiye kadar basit bir süreç olarak görülmesine rağmen bilim insanlarını yıllardır şaşırtan karmaşıklıklar barındırıyor.
https://www.biyologlar.com/membranlarin-nano-olcekli-yapisini-kontrol-etmek-temiz-su-ihtiyaci-icin-onelidir- -
Tedavide ‘’Kök Hücre’’
Vücudumuzda yaşlanan ve ölen hücrelerin yerlerine yenileri oluşturulmaktadır. Bununla birlikte, yabancı antijenlerle savaşmak için vücut özel savunma hücreleri de üretmektedir. Gözümüzdeki hücreler görme, pankreastaki hücreler salgı, akciğerdeki hücreler solunum için farklılaşmaktadır.
https://www.biyologlar.com/tedavide-kok-hucre -
Tedavide ‘’Kök Hücre’’
Vücudumuzda yaşlanan ve ölen hücrelerin yerlerine yenileri oluşturulmaktadır. Bununla birlikte, yabancı antijenlerle savaşmak için vücut özel savunma hücreleri de üretmektedir. Gözümüzdeki hücreler görme, pankreastaki hücreler salgı, akciğerdeki hücreler solunum için farklılaşmaktadır.
https://www.biyologlar.com/tedavide-kok-hucre -
Coral reefs in Palau surprisingly resistant to naturally acidified waters
Ocean researchers working on the coral reefs of Palau in 2011 and 2012 made two unexpected discoveries that could provide insight into corals' resistance and resilience to ocean acidification, and aid in the creation of a plan to protect them. The team collected water samples at nine points along a transect that stretched from the open ocean, across the barrier reef, into the lagoon and then into the bays and inlets around the Rock Islands of Palau, in the western Pacific Ocean. With each...
https://www.biyologlar.com/coral-reefs-in-palau-surprisingly-resistant-to-naturally-acidified-waters -
Improving the delivery of chemotherapy with graphene
A new study published in IOP Publishing's journal 2D Materials has proposed using graphene as an alternative coating for catheters to improve the delivery of chemotherapy drugs. The research suggests that placing graphene - an extremely thin sheet of carbon atoms - on the internal surfaces of intravenous catheters commonly used to deliver chemotherapy drugs into a patient's body will improve the efficacy of treatments, and reduce the potential of the catheters breaking. The study indicates...
https://www.biyologlar.com/improving-the-delivery-of-chemotherapy-with-graphene -
New discovery in living cell signaling
A breakthrough discovery into how living cells process and respond to chemical information could help advance the development of treatments for a large number of cancers and other cellular disorders that have been resistant to therapy. An international collaboration of researchers, led by scientists with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of California (UC) Berkeley, have unlocked the secret behind the activation of the...
https://www.biyologlar.com/new-discovery-in-living-cell-signaling -
Biyoterörizm ve Biyolojik Silahlar
Biyoterörizm kavramı, 11 Eylül 2001 tarihini takiben ABD’de posta kaynaklı şarbon vakalarının görülmesiyle günlük hayatımıza girmiştir. Biyoterörizm kişiler, gruplar veya hükümetler tarafından gerek ideolojik, gerekse politik veya finansal kazanç sağlamak amacıyla hastalık yaratıcı patojenlerin (biyolojik savaş araçlarının-BSA) sivil halk üzerinde, hayvanlarda ve bitkilerde hastalık oluşturmak ve/veya ölüme neden olmak amacıyla açık veya gizli şekilde...
https://www.biyologlar.com/biyoterorizm-ve-biyolojik-silahlar -
Blocking cells' movement to stop the spread of cancer
Insights into how cells move through the body could lead to innovative techniques to stop cancer cells from spreading and causing secondary tumours, according to new UCL research. Scientists discovered that cells can change into an invasive, liquid-like state to readily navigate the narrow channels in our body. This transformation is triggered by chemical signals, which could be blocked in order to stop cancer cells from spreading. Most cancer deaths are not due to primary tumours, but to...
https://www.biyologlar.com/blocking-cells-movement-to-stop-the-spread-of-cancer -
Kene İle Bulaşan Hastalıklar
ÖZET Parazitlerin neden olduğu hastalıklar önemli sağlık problemidir. Endoparazit ve ektoparaziter hastalıklar mevcuttur. Kenelerle bulaşan hastalıklar en sık görülen vektör kaynaklı hastalıklardır. Keneler bakteri, virüs spiroket, protozoa, nematod ve toksinler gibi patojenleri yayabilir ve böylece ektoparaziter kaynaklı hastalıklara sebep olurlar. Ülkemizde keneler için iklim koşulları, bitki örtüsü ve yüzey şekli bakımından uygun koşullar vardır. Bu...
https://www.biyologlar.com/kene-ile-bulasan-hastaliklar -
Scientists discover how 'jumping genes' help black truffles adapt to their environment
Black truffles, also known as Périgord truffles, grow in symbiosis with the roots of oak and hazelnut trees. In the world of haute cuisine, they are expensive and highly prized. In the world of epigenetics, however, the fungi (Tuber melanosporum) are of major interest for another reason: their unique pattern of DNA methylation, a biochemical process that chemically modifies nucleic acids without changing their sequence. Epigenetics is the study of changes in gene expression caused by...
https://www.biyologlar.com/scientists-discover-how-jumping-genes-help-black-truffles-adapt-to-their-environment -
Stanford researchers genetically engineer yeast to produce opioids
For thousands of years, people have used yeast to ferment wine, brew beer and leaven bread. Now researchers at Stanford have genetically engineered yeast to make painkilling medicines, a breakthrough that heralds a faster and potentially less expensive way to produce many different types of plant-based medicines. Writing today in Science, the Stanford engineers describe how they reprogrammed the genetic machinery of baker's yeast so that these fast-growing cells could convert sugar into...
https://www.biyologlar.com/stanford-researchers-genetically-engineer-yeast-to-produce-opioids -
ELISA TESTİ
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), also known as an enzyme immunoassay (EIA), is a biochemical technique used mainly in immunology to detect the presence of an antibody or an antigen in a sample. The video shown is Proteintech Group's preferred method.
https://www.biyologlar.com/elisa-testi -
3. Uluslararası Biyosidal Kongresi
Kongre Tarihi : 22-25 Kasım 2016 Kongre Merkezi : Antalya Maritim Pine Beach Hotel
https://www.biyologlar.com/3-uluslararasi-biyosidal-kongresi -
Firefly protein enables visualization of roots in soil
Plants form a vast network of below-ground roots that search soil for needed resources. The structure and function of this root network can be highly adapted to particular environments such as desert soils where plants like Mesquite develop tap roots capable of digging 50 meters deep to capture precious water resources. Excavation of root systems reveals these kinds of adaptations but is laborious, time consuming, and does not provide information on how growing roots behave. A new imaging tool...
https://www.biyologlar.com/firefly-protein-enables-visualization-of-roots-in-soil -
Using DNA origami to build nanodevices of the future
Scientists have been studying ways to use synthetic DNA as a building block for smaller and faster devices. DNA has the advantage of being inherently "coded". Each DNA strand is formed of one of four "codes" that can link to only one complementary code each, thus binding two DNA strands together. Scientists are using this inherent coding to manipulate and "fold" DNA to form "origami nanostructures": extremely small two- and three-dimensional shapes that can then be used as construction material...
https://www.biyologlar.com/using-dna-origami-to-build-nanodevices-of-the-future -
Using DNA origami to build nanodevices of the future
Scientists have been studying ways to use synthetic DNA as a building block for smaller and faster devices. DNA has the advantage of being inherently "coded". Each DNA strand is formed of one of four "codes" that can link to only one complementary code each, thus binding two DNA strands together. Scientists are using this inherent coding to manipulate and "fold" DNA to form "origami nanostructures": extremely small two- and three-dimensional shapes that can then be used as construction material...
https://www.biyologlar.com/using-dna-origami-to-build-nanodevices-of-the-future -
Researchers use human stem cells to create light-sensitive retina in a dish
Using a type of human stem cell, Johns Hopkins researchers say they have created a three-dimensional complement of human retinal tissue in the laboratory, which notably includes functioning photoreceptor cells capable of responding to light, the first step in the process of converting it into visual images.
https://www.biyologlar.com/researchers-use-human-stem-cells-to-create-light-sensitive-retina-in-a-dish -
ARITMA TESİSLERİ VE PROTOZOA
Çalışma metodları birbirinden farklı olsa da arıtma tesislerinin tamamı çeşitli protozoon gruplarını barındırır (Çizelge 1). Biyolojik unsurlar organik madde üzerinden beslenerek organik maddenin topaklaşmasını ve çökmesini sağlarlar. Bakteri bu maddelerin sıvı fazdan uzaklaştırılmasında rol alan en etkin organizma grubunu oluştur. Protozoonlar, atık su arıtma sistemlerinde biyolojik parçalanmadan sorumlu bakteriler üzerinden beslendiklerinden dolayı, önceleri...
https://www.biyologlar.com/aritma-tesisleri-ve-protozoa -
Detecting HIV diagnostic antibodies with DNA nanomachines
New research may revolutionize the slow, cumbersome and expensive process of detecting the antibodies that can help with the diagnosis of infectious and auto-immune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and HIV. An international team of researchers have designed and synthetized a nanometer-scale DNA "machine" whose customized modifications enable it to recognize a specific target antibody. Their new approach, which they described this month in Angewandte Chemie, promises to support the...
https://www.biyologlar.com/detecting-hiv-diagnostic-antibodies-with-dna-nanomachines -
Damaged DNA may stall patrolling molecule to initiate repair
Sites where DNA is damaged may cause a molecule that slides along the DNA strand to scan for damage to slow on its patrol, delaying it long enough to recognize and initiate repair. The finding suggests that the delay itself may be the key that allows the protein molecule to find its target, according to researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Usually, the repair protein zips along quickly, says Anjum Ansari, UIC professor of physics and co-principal investigator on the study,...
https://www.biyologlar.com/damaged-dna-may-stall-patrolling-molecule-to-initiate-repair -
Snake venom helps hydrogels stop the bleeding
A nanofiber hydrogel infused with snake venom may be the best material to stop bleeding quickly, according to Rice University scientists. The hydrogel called SB50 incorporates batroxobin, a venom produced by two species of South American pit viper. It can be injected as a liquid and quickly turns into a gel that conforms to the site of a wound, keeping it closed, and promotes clotting within seconds. Rice chemist Jeffrey Hartgerink, lead author Vivek Kumar and their colleagues reported their...
https://www.biyologlar.com/snake-venom-helps-hydrogels-stop-the-bleeding -
In a role reversal, RNAs proofread themselves
Cold Spring Harbor, NY - Building a protein is a lot like a game of telephone: information is passed along from one messenger to another, creating the potential for errors every step of the way. There are separate, specialized enzymatic machines that proofread at each step, ensuring that the instructions encoded in our DNA are faithfully translated into proteins. Scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) have uncovered a new quality control mechanism along this path, but in a...
https://www.biyologlar.com/in-a-role-reversal-rnas-proofread-themselves -
EMBO Conference Series Chemical Biology 2012
Latest News•Registration is open! •Event poster is now available for download Why You Should Attend•SummaryChemical Biology is a quickly growing highly interdisciplinary field, which investigates biological questions by using chemical strategies and tools. It has emerged to become an important and central discipline by itself complementing areas such as medicinal chemistry, pharmacology, cell biology, structural biology and biochemistry. Researchers in Chemical Biology find...
https://www.biyologlar.com/embo-conference-series-chemical-biology-2012 -
Functional human liver cells grown in the lab
In new research appearing in the prestigious journal Nature Biotechnology, an international research team led by The Hebrew University of Jerusalem describes a new technique for growing human hepatocytes in the laboratory. This groundbreaking development could help advance a variety of liver-related research and applications, from studying drug toxicity to creating bio-artificial liver support for patients awaiting transplantations. The liver is the largest internal organ in the human body,...
https://www.biyologlar.com/functional-human-liver-cells-grown-in-the-lab -
Neurons constantly rewrite their DNA
Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered that neurons are risk takers: They use minor "DNA surgeries" to toggle their activity levels all day, every day. Since these activity levels are important in learning, memory and brain disorders, the researchers think their finding will shed light on a range of important questions. A summary of the study will be published online in the journal Nature Neuroscience on April 27. "We used to think that once a cell reaches full maturation, its DNA is totally...
https://www.biyologlar.com/neurons-constantly-rewrite-their-dna -
Nano-walkers take speedy leap forward with first rolling DNA-based motor
Physical chemists have devised a rolling DNA-based motor that's 1,000 times faster than any other synthetic DNA motor, giving it potential for real-world applications, such as disease diagnostics. Nature Nanotechnology is publishing the finding. "Unlike other synthetic DNA-based motors, which use legs to 'walk' like tiny robots, ours is the first rolling DNA motor, making it far faster and more robust," says Khalid Salaita, the Emory University chemist who led the research. "It's like the...
https://www.biyologlar.com/nano-walkers-take-speedy-leap-forward-with-first-rolling-dna-based-motor -
Lab experiments question popular measure of ancient ocean temperatures
Understanding the planet's history is crucial if we are to predict its future. While some records are preserved in ice cores or tree rings, other records of the climate's ancient past are buried deep in the seafloor. An increasingly popular method to deduce historic sea surface temperatures uses sediment-entombed bodies of marine archaea, one of Earth's most ancient and resilient creatures, as a 150-million-year record of ocean temperatures. While other measures have gaps, this one is...
https://www.biyologlar.com/lab-experiments-question-popular-measure-of-ancient-ocean-temperatures -
Odd histone helps suppress jumping genes in stem cells, study says
A family of proteins known as histones provides support and structure to DNA, but for years, scientists have been puzzling over occasional outliers among these histones, which appear to exist for specific, but often mysterious reasons. Now, researchers have uncovered a new purpose for one such histone variant: preventing genetic mutations by keeping certain so-called "jumping genes" in place. This research, which began at Rockefeller University and was published May 4 in Nature, reveals a...
https://www.biyologlar.com/odd-histone-helps-suppress-jumping-genes-in-stem-cells-study-says -
Hacking the programs of cancer stem cells
All tumor cells are the offspring of a single, aberrant cell, but they are not all alike. Only a few retain the capacity of the original cell to create an entire tumor.
https://www.biyologlar.com/hacking-the-programs-of-cancer-stem-cells -
Oncogene controls stem cells in early embryonic development
After a gestation period of around ten months, fawns are born in early summer - when the weather is warm and food is plentiful for the mother. Six months would actually be enough for the embryo's development, but then offspring from mating in the later portion of summer would be born in winter. Therefore, nature prolongs the gestation period by a hormone-regulated pause in the development of the early embryos. Many animal species use this process, called diapause, to adjust their reproduction...
https://www.biyologlar.com/oncogene-controls-stem-cells-in-early-embryonic-development -
Spider and centipede venom evolved from insulin-like hormone
Funnel-web spider venom contains powerful neurotoxins that instantly paralyze prey (usually insects). Millions of years ago, however, this potent poison was just a hormone that helped ancestors of these spiders regulate sugar metabolism, similar to the role of insulin in humans. Surprisingly, this hormone's weaponization--described on June 11 in the journal Structure--occurred in arachnids as well as centipedes, but in different ways. Researchers at the University of Queensland in Australia...
https://www.biyologlar.com/spider-and-centipede-venom-evolved-from-insulin-like-hormone -
Penn bioengineers show why lab-made stem cells might fail: Errors in DNA folding
Induced pluripotent stem cells hold promise for regenerative medicine because they can, in theory, turn into any type of tissue and because they are made from a patient's own adult cells, guaranteeing compatibility. However, the technique that turns adult cells into these iPS cells is not foolproof; after reverting to their pluripotent state, these cells don't always correctly differentiate back into adult cells. Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania have now discovered one of the...
https://www.biyologlar.com/penn-bioengineers-show-why-lab-made-stem-cells-might-fail-errors-in-dna-folding -
Scientists discover oldest plant root stem cells
Scientists at Oxford University have discovered the oldest known population of plant root stem cells in a 320 million-year-old fossil.
https://www.biyologlar.com/scientists-discover-oldest-plant-root-stem-cells -
Tiny genetic tweak unlocked corn kernels during domestication
If not for a single genetic mutation, each kernel on a juicy corn cob would be trapped inside a inedible casing as tough as a walnut shell. The mutation switches one amino acid for another at a specific position in a protein regulating formation of these shells in modern corn's wild ancestor, according to a study published in the July 2015 issue of GENETICS, a publication of the Genetics Society of America. "Humans completely reshaped the ancestor of corn, effectively turning the cob inside...
https://www.biyologlar.com/tiny-genetic-tweak-unlocked-corn-kernels-during-domestication -
Embryonic gene Nanog reverses aging in adult stem cells
The images above show, from left to right, functioning stem cells, stem cells no longer functioning due to Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria syndrome (HGPS), and stem cells previously not functioning
https://www.biyologlar.com/embryonic-gene-nanog-reverses-aging-in-adult-stem-cells -
Embryonic gene Nanog reverses aging in adult stem cells
The images above show, from left to right, functioning stem cells, stem cells no longer functioning due to Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria syndrome (HGPS), and stem cells previously not functioning
https://www.biyologlar.com/embryonic-gene-nanog-reverses-aging-in-adult-stem-cells -
Thousands on one chip: New method to study proteins
Protein microarrays like this allow the investigation of thousands of proteins in a single experiment. Microarrays are only a few centimeters in size and host thousands of individual test spots...
https://www.biyologlar.com/thousands-on-one-chip-new-method-to-study-proteins -
Thousands on one chip: New method to study proteins
Protein microarrays like this allow the investigation of thousands of proteins in a single experiment. Microarrays are only a few centimeters in size and host thousands of individual test spots...
https://www.biyologlar.com/thousands-on-one-chip-new-method-to-study-proteins -
Quantum dots with impermeable shell: A powerful tool for nanoengineering
Images of ZnO quantum dots prepared by the Institute of Physical Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw, taken by transmission electron microscopy. False colors.
https://www.biyologlar.com/quantum-dots-with-impermeable-shell-a-powerful-tool-for-nanoengineering -
Quantum dots with impermeable shell: A powerful tool for nanoengineering
Images of ZnO quantum dots prepared by the Institute of Physical Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw, taken by transmission electron microscopy. False colors.
https://www.biyologlar.com/quantum-dots-with-impermeable-shell-a-powerful-tool-for-nanoengineering -
On the trail of the clever snail
Animals, like humans, excel at some tasks but not others according to a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports. Researchers from the Universities of Exeter and Aberystwyth used pond snails to investigate learning and memory. They found that if an individual is good at forming memories about food they are poor at forming memories related to predator threat and vice versa. Dr Sasha Dall from the Centre for Ecology and Conservation at the University of Exeter's Penryn Campus in...
https://www.biyologlar.com/on-the-trail-of-the-clever-snail -
XXIV.Ulusal Biyokimya Kongresi
Değerli Meslektaşlarım, Sizleri 25 - 28 Eylül 2012 tarihlerinde, tarih öncesi dönemden beri pek çok Anadolu Medeniyetine beşik olmuş, kucak açmış Konya’da, Hazreti Mevlana’nın kentinde yapılacak olan XXIV.Ulusal Biyokimya Kongresi ve Kongre öncesinde ve sonrasında gerçekleştirilecek olan çalıştaylara katılmaya davet etmekten onur duyuyorum. Açılış Konferansı, kongremizin de ana konusunu oluşturan Tıbbi Laboratuvarlarda İzlenebilirlik – Standardizasyon...
https://www.biyologlar.com/xxiv-ulusal-biyokimya-kongresi -
Alert to biologists: Ribosomes can translate the 'untranslated region' of messenger RNA
In what appears to be an unexpected challenge to a long-accepted fact of biology, Johns Hopkins researchers say they have found that ribosomes -- the molecular machines in all cells that build proteins -- can sometimes do so even within the so-called untranslated regions of the ribbons of genetic material known as messenger RNA (mRNA). "This is an exciting find that generates a whole new set of questions for researchers," says Rachel Green, Ph.D., a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator...
https://www.biyologlar.com/alert-to-biologists-ribosomes-can-translate-the-untranslated-region-of-messenger-rna -
Eukaryotes: A new timetable of evolution
Contaminated samples have evidently created some confusion in the timetable of life. On the basis of ultra-clean analyses, an international team, including scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, has disproved supposed evidence that eukaryotes originated 2.5 to 2.8 billion years ago. In contrast to prokaryotes such as bacteria, eukaryotes have a nucleus. Some researchers thought they had discovered molecular remnants of living organisms in rock samples up to 2.8 billion...
https://www.biyologlar.com/eukaryotes-a-new-timetable-of-evolution -
Deciphering the olfactory receptor code
In animals, numerous behaviors are governed by the olfactory perception of their surrounding world. Whether originating in the nose of a mammal or the antennas of an insect, perception results from the combined activation of multiple receptors located in these organs. Identifying the full repertoire of receptors stimulated by a given odorant would represent a key step in deciphering the code that mediates these behaviors. To this end, a tool that provides a complete olfactory receptor signature...
https://www.biyologlar.com/deciphering-the-olfactory-receptor-code -
Researchers discover how petunias know when to smell good
Good timing is a matter of skill. You would certainly dress up for an afternoon business meeting, but not an evening session of binge-watching Netflix. If you were just a few hours off in your wardrobe timing, your spouse might wonder why you slipped into a stiff business suit to watch "House of Cards." While humans are alone in their struggle to balance work and Netflix, all creatures wrestle with proper timing. With limited resources, organisms are pressed to use time wisely in all aspects...
https://www.biyologlar.com/researchers-discover-how-petunias-know-when-to-smell-good -
Scientists solve mystery behind earthworm digestion
Scientists have discovered how earthworms can digest plant material, such as fallen leaves, that would defeat most other herbivores. Earthworms are responsible for returning the carbon locked inside dead plant material back into the ground. They drag fallen leaves and other plant material down from the surface and eat them, enriching the soil, and they do this in spite of toxic chemicals produced by plants to deter herbivores. The scientists, led by Dr Jake Bundy and Dr Manuel Liebeke from...
https://www.biyologlar.com/scientists-solve-mystery-behind-earthworm-digestion