Posts Tagged ‘2012’ (9 articles found)
Women in Science Forum
07/05/2012
Brain Prize Winners 2012 Karen Steel and Christine Petit

The Grete Lundbeck European Brain Research Foundation has announced that The Brain Prize 2012 is jointly awarded to Christine Petit and Karen Steel: ‘for their unique, world-leading contributions to our understanding of the genetic regulation of the development and functioning of the ear, and for elucidating the causes of many of the hundreds of inherited forms of deafness’.
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L’Oréal-Unesco AWARDS
30/03/2012
Who is Susana Lopez?
Since 1986, Susana López, a professor at the National University of Mexico, has been spearheading the scientific assault on a universal problem, a rotavirus that attacks nearly every child on earth under the age of five causing severe intestinal diseases. It is responsible for the death of some 600,000 children a year in developing countries and makes 2 million more seriously ill every year. With her colleagues, she has examined the workings of the rotavirus from a wide variety of angles, including the way it spreads in human populations, the immune response to it and its replication cycle. Along the way they have developed new diagnostic tests, isolated several new rotavirus strains and contributed to efforts to find a vaccine. - No Comments
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L’Oréal-Unesco AWARDS
29/03/2012
Who is Jill Farrant?

Jill Farrant, professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of Cape Town, South Africa, is the world’s leading expert on resurrection plants, which ‘come back to life’ from a desiccated, seemingly dead state when they are rehydrated. Professor Farrant is investigating the ability of many species of these plants to survive without water for long periods of time from a number of angles, from the molecular, biochemical and ultrastructural to the whole-plant ecophysiological, using a unique comparative approach and working with many different species of resurrection plants and a variety of tissues. The ultimate goal is to find applications that will lead to the development of drought-tolerant crops to nourish populations in arid, drought-prone climates, notably in Africa, and her research may have medicinal applications as well.
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L’Oréal-Unesco AWARDS
28/03/2012
Who is Frances Ashcroft?
In 1984, Frances Ashcroft discovered a protein (a tiny pore called an ion channel) that acted as the link between blood-glucose levels and insulin secretion. As a result, people with a rare inherited form of diabetes can now relieve their symptoms simply by taking an existing drug in pill form, rather than by daily insulin injections. The drug has improved their blood glucose control and so reduced the risk of diabetic complications, such as blindness and kidney disease. She is now studying why 25% of patients with this disease also have neurological problems, and continues to explore what goes wrong with insulin secretion in type 2 diabetes, which affects 336 million people worldwide. - No Comments
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L’Oréal-Unesco AWARDS
27/03/2012
Who is Ingrid Scheffer?

Ingrid Scheffer, a paediatric neurologist and professor at the University of Melbourne, is helping to transform the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy, a brain disorder characterized by seizures and other symptoms that can be extremely disruptive to the lives of the 50 million people affected by it. She has described several new forms of epilepsy and her research group was the first to uncover a gene for epilepsy and subsequently, many of the genes now known to be implicated. These revolutionary findings, which have already improved diagnosis and treatments for many patients and may lead to the development of new therapies, can also be used for genetic counselling. Professor Scheffer’s goal is to ‘make a major difference to patients and families through science’.
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Science for a better future
27/03/2012
Bacteria can talk. Yes. Talk.
Bacteria can talk. Yes. Talk. These unicellular, primitive creatures have their own language. They secret chemical words to their environment, where their neighbors can listen, comprehend and react to those messages.
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Science for a better future
01/03/2012
3D Molecular Models, Humanitarian Role Models

Adding to the effects of poverty and limited access to medical care, civil unrest and movement of large populations exacerbate public health problems in the developing world. The parasitic disease leishmaniasis has decimated refugee populations in Africa more than once. Although neglected, for the most part, by drug developers, researchers are seeking more effective treatments, using computer simulations to reveal the structure of individual proteins that they hope to make the parasite’s Achilles heel.
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Science for a better future
23/01/2012
H5N1 Research: Greater risk in publishing or withholding data?

In an unprecedented move, a U.S. biosecurity review board has asked the authors of two studies creating dangerous airborne strains of the H5N1 avian flu virus—possibly transmissible among humans—not to publish the details of their experiments. Even among scientists, the decision has sparked a great deal of disagreement over the best action to take, now and going forward.
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L’Oréal-Unesco AWARDS
08/11/2011
Five Fantastic Women
In 2001, I was among the five scientists who were awarded the L´Oréal-Unesco Award For Women in Science. From Brazil, I was the laureate for Latin America. I confess that I was not aware of this award before but now it is well known all over the world. The Award represents a very important honor and recognition of scientific achievements. In fact, two former L´Oréal-Unesco laureates were afterwards awarded the Nobel Prize, both in 2009: Dr. Elizabeth Blackburn in Medicine for her research on telomeres and telomerase, and Dr. Ada Yonath in Chemistry, for her studies of the ribosome. I am positive that others will follow. - No Comments
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