Tag Archives: Progress

Global partners announce a new effort – “The Big Catch-up” – to vaccinate millions of children and restore immunization progress lost during the pandemic – World Health Organization

  1. Global partners announce a new effort – “The Big Catch-up” – to vaccinate millions of children and restore immunization progress lost during the pandemic World Health Organization
  2. WHO, Gates Foundation seek to reverse falling childhood vaccination rates Reuters.com
  3. Barbados health minister urges people of the Americas to get vaccinated Jamaica Star Online
  4. World Immunization Week 2023: The Big Catch-up World Health Organization (WHO)
  5. Powerful Partnership To Address Backslide In Childhood Vaccinations – But No Extra Funds Health Policy Watch
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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After major progress toward clearance over the course of the first quarter, Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard could consummate during the second quarter – FOSS Patents

  1. After major progress toward clearance over the course of the first quarter, Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard could consummate during the second quarter FOSS Patents
  2. Xbox VP’s goal to bring Activision Blizzard into a “culture of diversity” is easier said than done TechRadar
  3. How Miscommunication Over Microsoft Acquisition Led To Activision Blizzard-NetEase Split – Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:ATVI) Benzinga
  4. Bobby Kotick says Sony’s being a baby about Microsoft deal: ‘They would just like to prevent our merger from happening’ PC Gamer
  5. Activision Ditched Chinese Partner Over Microsoft Deal – Report Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russia Signals It Will Take More Ukrainian Children, a Crime in Progress – Yahoo News

  1. Russia Signals It Will Take More Ukrainian Children, a Crime in Progress Yahoo News
  2. ‘We had to hide them’: how Ukraine’s ‘kidnapped’ children led to Vladimir Putin’s arrest warrant The Guardian
  3. Are Russian transfers of Ukrainian children to re-education and adoption facilities a form of genocide? The Conversation
  4. Ukraine war: Mother tricked into sending daughter to Russian ‘indoctrination’ camp reveals rescue and emotional reunion Sky News
  5. ‘We hugged for a long time’: How Ukrainian father went to Moscow to reclaim his children The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russia signals it will take more Ukrainian children, a crime in progress – The Japan Times

  1. Russia signals it will take more Ukrainian children, a crime in progress The Japan Times
  2. ‘We hugged for a long time’: the Ukrainian father who rescued his children from Moscow The Guardian
  3. In Russia, an anti-war drawing can cost you your daughter POLITICO Europe
  4. Are Russian transfers of Ukrainian children to re-education and adoption facilities a form of genocide? The Conversation Indonesia
  5. ‘We had to hide them’: how Ukraine’s ‘kidnapped’ children led to Vladimir Putin’s arrest warrant The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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In a Bid to Settle Player Unrest, The Day Before Team Plans a Development Progress Video – MMORPG.com

  1. In a Bid to Settle Player Unrest, The Day Before Team Plans a Development Progress Video MMORPG.com
  2. The Day Before devs say a calendar app stole their trademark, YouTube is delisting their videos, and no doubt the dog’s eyeing up their homework PC Gamer
  3. The Day Before Gameplay Removed From YouTube Thanks To Dispute – With A Calendar App Gameranx
  4. Fntastic’s Struggles With The Day Before Continue, Company Promises Development Video MMOBomb
  5. The Day Before trademark apparently held by “calendar app” maker PCGamesN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Scientists Make Progress in Decoding Genetics of Insomnia

Summary: Researchers identify the role the Pig-Q gene plays in sleep regulation. Mutations of the Pig-Q gene increase sleep.

Source: Texas A&M

A research effort involving researchers from Texas A&M University, the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) has used human genomics to identify a new genetic pathway involved in regulating sleep from fruit flies to humans—a novel insight that could pave the way for new treatments for insomnia and other sleep-related disorders.

Texas A&M geneticist and evolutionary biologist Alex Keene collaborated with Penn’s Allan Pack and Philip Gehrman and CHOP’s Struan Grant on the groundbreaking research, which is published in Science Advances.

“There have been enormous amounts of effort to use human genomic studies to find sleep genes,” Keene said.

“Some studies have hundreds of thousands of individuals. But validation and testing in animal models is critical to understanding function. We have achieved this here, largely because we each bring a different area of expertise that allowed for this collaboration’s ultimate effectiveness.”

Keene says the most exciting thing about the team’s work is that they developed a pipeline starting not with a model organism, but with actual human genomics data.

“There is an abundance of human genome-wide association studies (GWAS) that identify genetic variants associated with sleep in humans,” Keene said.

“However, validating them has been an enormous challenge. Our team used a genomics approach called variant-to-gene mapping to predict the genes impacted by each genetic variant. Then we screened the effect of these genes in fruit flies.

“Our studies found that mutations in the gene Pig-Q, which is required for the biosynthesis of a modifier of protein function, increased sleep. We then tested this in a vertebrate model, zebrafish, and found a similar effect. Therefore, in humans, flies and zebrafish, Pig-Q is associated with sleep regulation.”

Keene says the team’s next step is to study the role of a common protein modification, GPI-anchor biosynthesis, on sleep regulation. In addition, he notes that the human-to-fruit flies-to-zebrafish pipeline the team developed will allow them to functionally assess not only sleep genes but also other traits commonly studied using human GWAS, including neurodegeneration, aging and memory.

“Understanding how genes regulate sleep and the role of this pathway in sleep regulation can help unlock future findings on sleep and sleep disorders, such as insomnia,” said Gehrman, an associate professor of clinical psychology in psychiatry at Penn and a clinical psychologist with the Penn Chronobiology and Sleep Institute.

Keene says the most exciting thing about the team’s work is that they developed a pipeline starting not with a model organism, but with actual human genomics data. Image is in the public domain

“Moving forward, we will continue to use and study this system to identify more genes regulating sleep, which could point in the direction of new treatments for sleep disorders.”

Keene’s research within his Center for Biological Clocks Research-affiliated laboratory lies at the intersection of evolution and neuroscience, with primary focus on understanding the neural mechanisms and evolutionary underpinnings of sleep, memory formation and other behavioral functions in fly and fish models.

Specifically, he studies fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) and Mexican cavefish that have lost both their eyesight and ability to sleep with the goal of identifying the genetic basis of behavioral choices which factor into human disease, including obesity, diabetes and heart disease.

About this genetics and insomnia research news

Author: Shana K. Hutchins
Source: Texas A&M
Contact: Shana K. Hutchins – Texas A&M
Image: The image is in the public domain

See also

Original Research: Open access.
“Variant-to-gene-mapping followed by cross-species genetic screening identifies GPI-anchor biosynthesis as novel regulator of sleep” by Justin Palermo et al. Science Advances


Abstract

Variant-to-gene-mapping followed by cross-species genetic screening identifies GPI-anchor biosynthesis as novel regulator of sleep

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in humans have identified loci robustly associated with several heritable diseases or traits, yet little is known about the functional roles of the underlying causal variants in regulating sleep duration or quality.

We applied an ATAC-seq/promoter focused Capture C strategy in human iPSC-derived neural progenitors to carry out a “variant-to-gene” mapping campaign that identified 88 candidate sleep effector genes connected to relevant GWAS signals.

To functionally validate the role of the implicated effector genes in sleep regulation, we performed a neuron-specific RNA interference screen in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, followed by validation in zebrafish. This approach identified a number of genes that regulate sleep including a critical role for glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)–anchor biosynthesis.

These results provide the first physical variant-to-gene mapping of human sleep genes followed by a model organism–based prioritization, revealing a conserved role for GPI-anchor biosynthesis in sleep regulation.

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Damar Hamlin’s father addressed Bills, told them Damar is making progress

Getty Images

The Bills heard good news on Wednesday from the father of safety Damar Hamlin.

Mario Hamlin spoke with the entire Bills team on a Zoom call on Wednesday and told them that Damar is making progress, according to Adam Schefter of ESPN.

That good news follows the statement from the Bills yesterday, which also said Hamlin is making progress. Although Hamlin remains in critical condition since he collapsed on the field on Monday night, signs of progress come as welcome news to his family and his team.

The NFL is not ruling out postponing the Bills’ game against the Patriots on Sunday, and football has become secondary to the life-and-death situation facing Hamlin. But reassurance from Hamlin’s father may be a sign that the Bills will be able to conclude the season as scheduled on Sunday.

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Southwest Airlines Shows Progress in Push to Restore Flights

Southwest Airlines Co.

LUV 0.87%

showed progress Saturday in its push to regain credibility with regulators and travelers, especially those whose holidays were disrupted by the company’s meltdown over the past week, but cancellations increased late in the day.

The Dallas-based carrier had 30 Saturday flight cancellations as of Saturday evening, according to FlightAware. Overall, more than 250 flights among all airlines flying to, from or within the U.S. had been canceled. Southwest’s total compared with 15 for United Airlines and 11 for

Delta Air Lines.

A Southwest spokeswoman said earlier in the day that the airline was operating a normal Saturday schedule of about 3,400 flights. Meanwhile, the carrier was seeking volunteers among its employees to help the customer-service staff catch up with requests for refunds and reunite customers with missing bags.

In a video distributed to staff members Friday, Southwest executives were upbeat about the near-term outlook. “I’m just very pleased to share that things are going very, very well,” said

Bob Jordan,

the airline’s chief executive. 

Andrew Watterson,

chief operating officer, said that lines had grown shorter and that the airline expected to provide normal service during the New Year holiday period and beyond. In another update Saturday, he said Southwest had deployed “an army” of people to ship bags back to customers, in some cases using

UPS

and

FedEx

to transport lost luggage. 

Southwest has ramped up its service after a meltdown that resulted in nearly 16,000 canceled flights between Dec. 22 and Dec. 29. Those cancellations, stemming from the recent winter storm, left thousands of holiday travelers stranded, furious and in many cases separated by hundreds of miles from their luggage.

Though the storm created problems for all airlines, Southwest canceled far more flights and was much slower than others to recover. Executives of the airline have said the scheduling system used to revise crew schedules after storms was overwhelmed by the volume of changes required. Airline staff members fumbled with makeshift manual methods to match up available crew and planes.

Southwest Airlines travelers waited for luggage in Minneapolis on Friday.



Photo:

Abbie Parr/Associated Press

To get back on track, the airline shrank itself for much of this week, operating roughly a third of its typical schedule on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday as it worked to get crews and planes back in place. The airline resumed operating its full schedule Friday. 

Southwest’s problems are far from over. Regulators, lawmakers and union leaders have said they are monitoring the airline’s response to the crisis. Southwest has apologized repeatedly and promised to reimburse affected travelers.

“As SWA turns the corner operationally, focus must remain on promptly compensating passengers caught in last week’s breakdown,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a tweet Saturday.

One regular Southwest customer who still needs more reassurance is Allison Whitney, a professor of film and media studies at Texas Tech University. She was due to fly home to Lubbock, Texas, from Minnesota on Wednesday, but her Southwest flight was canceled. Facing the risk of being stranded until early in the new year, she booked an American Airlines flight Friday and made it home. 

Ms. Whitney likes Southwest’s luggage and easy-rebooking policies and finds that it can be the only good choice for some of her trips. But she said that after this week, she might hesitate to rely on Southwest for longer trips until she is convinced that the airline’s computer systems are up-to-date.

Write to James R. Hagerty at bob.hagerty@wsj.com and Alison Sider at alison.sider@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8



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Sister Wives ‘ Janelle Brown Shares Fitness Progress After Kody Brown Split

Janelle Brown is ringing in the new year with a set of goals in mind.

The Sister Wives star shared glimpses of her ongoing fitness plans on Dec. 12, indicating that she is just getting started on her path toward transformation. Janelle got candid about the lifestyle change on Instagram, posting a video montage with images of her progress and a clip of her at the gym.

“At what point do you decide its time…time to put your health first,” she wrote in the video. “Because this has been a game changer. I’m coming for you 2023.”

In the post’s caption, Janelle said she will continue her plans into 2023.

“I’m ready for you 2023!” Janelle said. “This health journey I’ve been on has been incredible. The results weren’t overnight and I’m okay with that. It’s all about slow and steady that wins the race. 2023 is my year!”

Check Out the Most Surprising Celeb Transformations of the Week

Her new objectives comes as her breakup from Kody Brown was revealed in the Dec. 11 teaser trailer for the Sister Wives: One on One special, where Kody is seen giving an update about his relationship with Janelle and ex Christine Brown.

“I’m separated from Janelle,” he said in the sneak peek, “and I’m divorced from Christine.”

Instagram; Getty Images

Janelle also confirmed the split, adding, “Kody and I have separated” after 29 years of marriage.

In fact, the former couple—who share 28-year-old son Logan, 27-year-old daughter Maddie, 25-year-old son Hunter, 24-year-old son Garrison, 21-year-old son Gabriel and 18-year-old daughter Savanah—parted ways “several” months ago, Janelle noted.

As for Kody, he said that since the split, “Janelle has made it pretty clear to me that she’s enjoying her life without me.”

For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App



Read original article here

Sister Wives ‘ Janelle Brown Shares Fitness Progress After Kody Brown Split

Janelle Brown is ringing in the new year with a set of goals in mind.

The Sister Wives star shared glimpses of her ongoing fitness plans on Dec. 12, indicating that she is just getting started on her path toward transformation. Janelle got candid about the lifestyle change on Instagram, posting a video montage with images of her progress and a clip of her at the gym.

“At what point do you decide its time…time to put your health first,” she wrote in the video. “Because this has been a game changer. I’m coming for you 2023.”

In the post’s caption, Janelle said she will continue her plans into 2023.

“I’m ready for you 2023!” Janelle said. “This health journey I’ve been on has been incredible. The results weren’t overnight and I’m okay with that. It’s all about slow and steady that wins the race. 2023 is my year!”

Check Out the Most Surprising Celeb Transformations of the Week

Her new objectives comes as her breakup from Kody Brown was revealed in the Dec. 11 teaser trailer for the Sister Wives: One on One special, where Kody is seen giving an update about his relationship with Janelle and ex Christine Brown.

“I’m separated from Janelle,” he said in the sneak peek, “and I’m divorced from Christine.”

Instagram; Getty Images

Janelle also confirmed the split, adding, “Kody and I have separated” after 29 years of marriage.

In fact, the former couple—who share 28-year-old son Logan, 27-year-old daughter Maddie, 25-year-old son Hunter, 24-year-old son Garrison, 21-year-old son Gabriel and 18-year-old daughter Savanah—parted ways “several” months ago, Janelle noted.

As for Kody, he said that since the split, “Janelle has made it pretty clear to me that she’s enjoying her life without me.”

For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App



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