Thursday, August 01, 2013

Scientists to create ‘designer babies’ by 2015

 •Babies could have three parents •Process involves replacing defective DNA with material from a donor egg




THE first baby with three parents could be born as early as 2015 after a landmark decision to move ahead on a controversial genetic treatment.
Britain could become the first country to sanction the creation of babies with three genetic parents, despite fears it might lead to ‘designer babies’.
The Government will publish draft regulations later this year that will bring techniques a step closer to giving women affected by devastating hereditary diseases the chance to have healthy children.
The techniques involve replacing defective DNA in the mother’s egg with material from a donor egg.
The resulting healthy child would effectively have two mothers and a father.
For the first time the ‘germ line’ of inherited DNA from the mother would be altered which, critics say, marks a turning point in the ethics of test-tube babies.
But the Government’s chief medical officer, Professor Dame Sally Davies, said the alteration did not affect fundamental DNA that determines an individual’s make-up such as facial features and eye colour.
She compared the new techniques to replacing a defective ‘battery pack’ in a cell that would virtually eliminate the chance of a severe disease in the child.
She said: ‘Scientists have developed ground-breaking new procedures which could stop these diseases being passed on, bringing hope to many families seeking to prevent their future children inheriting them.
  ‘It’s only right that we look to introduce this life-saving treatment as soon as we can.
‘What we’re going to do now is start to develop the regulations, to consult on the regulations, and then to take them into Parliament.’
If MPs approve the regulations at the end of next year, the first patients could be assessed and approved for treatment in 2015.
It is expected that between five and ten healthy babies with three parents could be born each year to couples who might otherwise face the heartbreak of seeing them severely disabled and often dying prematurely.
In these cases, a healthy child would inherit the parents’ nuclear DNA, along with mitochondrial DNA from a donor.
Dame Sally denied the UK was leading the way to designer babies. She said there was a ban on changing nuclear DNA which ‘I don’t see changing in the foreseeable future’.
She said: ‘I do think quite carefully about ethics, I always did as a clinician and I still do, perhaps because my father was a theologian.
'I am comfortable with this. I think we will save some five to ten babies from being born with ghastly disease and early death without changing what they look like, or how they behave, and it will help mothers to have their own babies.’
One in 6,500 babies is born seriously affected by a mitochondrial disorder which can lead to hearing and vision loss, heart, lung and liver problems, and bowel disorders. An estimated 12,000 people in the UK live with the diseases.
The move to consult on regulations which would legalise the technique comes after a consultation requested by the Government and run by the fertility regulator, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), which found there was ‘general support’ from the public.
 Many experts in the field support the techniques being actively developed at a new laboratory in Newcastle funded by the Wellcome Trust, as well as in the US.
Draft regulations which would permit licensed IVF clinics to offer the treatments to women with a family history of severe mitochondrial disease will be published later this year.
Josephine Quintavalle, from the group Comment on Reproductive Ethics, said the proposals were already causing worldwide concern.
She said: ‘This controversial announcement – presented simply as innovative genetic treatment when it is in effect an endorsement of highly contentious germ line modification of the human embryo – is hardly unexpected, given the enthusiasm already shown by both the Nuffield Council (on Bioethics) and the HFEA.
‘Our focus now turns to Parliament, where we hope that the proposals to create three-parent embryos will be voted down.’
Dr David King, director of Human Genetic Alert, added: ‘These techniques are unnecessary and unsafe.
Culled from Dailymail.co.uk

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UNILAG POST UTME CUT OFF MARKS (embedded)



The University of Lagos has officially release its 2013/2014 official cut off mark for admission this year for all departments in the institution. CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD or view below










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Reps Receive N146 Million Yearly Not N29 Million, Says Ex-Lawmaker


Former member of the House of Representatives Bashir Idris Nadabo has said the total yearly salaries and allowances received by each lawmaker is N146 million and not N29 million as reported by Daily Trust last week.
The Daily Trust reported, quoting official documents, that a House member is entitled to N29 million yearly, making him among the highest paid globally.
But Nadabo, who was a member of the House in 2003-2007, said the lawmakers collect much more than this amount.
He said each member receives a monthly salary of N1.2 million and quarterly allowances of N33 million, making a total of N146.4 million yearly.
"During our time 2003-2007, we were receiving about N280,000 monthly salary and N8 million quarterly allocations. It was at the last quarter of our tenure that the allocation was raised from N8 million to N14 million," Nadabo told Daily Trust in Abuja.
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Cross River Colllege of Education College Expels 20 Students




The Provost of the College of Education in Akamkpa, Cross River State, Prof. Anthony Owan-Enoh, on Wednesday said the institution had expelled 25 students for their alleged involvement in examination malpractice
Owan-Enoh, who spoke at a press briefing in Calabar, also said the school had sacked one of its lecturers (name withheld) after being voted the most corrupt lecturer by students.

The provost said the expulsion was the outcome of a panel report, which indicted 20 students out of an initial number of 200 investigated for exam fraud.

He said their expulsion was to serve as a deterrent to others who had the same intension.
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Girl, 11, Set Ablaze By Foster Mother



An 11-year old girl, Ita Bassey-Eno, is now lying critically ill at the Gbagada General Hospital, Lagos, after she was set ablaze by her foster mother, Mrs. Nkese Iroakazi.
Iroakazi, a nurse, was alleged to have poured kerosene on Bassey-Eno before lighting a match stick to set her ablaze after the girl was suspected of stealing a piece of meat from her soup pot.
It was gathered that as the flame of fire engulfed the girl, she ran out of their Number 7, Adeniran Ogunsanya Street, apartment calling for help but before help could come, most parts of her body had been burnt.
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ASUU STRIKE: FG wants more time



The Federal Government has expressed admitted worry at the distortion in school calendar as a result of the on going strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities saying that it is committed to the speedy resolution of the crisis for the sake of Nigerian students.

Minister of Information, Labaran Maku told state House correspondents at the end of Wednesday’s Federal Executive Council meeting that government was committed to “serious negotiations” with the university lecturers.

The Minister appealed to the students and parents to bear with government and show more understanding as efforts are being made to resolve the contending issues VERY SOON.

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Gunmen Kill 16 Villagers in Nasarawa

About 16 persons are feared killed by gunmen in Kuduku community in Keana Local Government Area of Nasarawa State in the early hours of yesterday.
The gunmen, who were said to be heavily armed with sophisticated weapons, invaded the community at about 11am and shot indiscriminately.
LEADERSHIP learnt that apart from the number of casualties recorded in the incident, several houses and other valuable materials worth millions of naira belonging to the residents of the local communities of Kuduku, Obasidoma and environs were also destroyed in the raid.
Although what prompted the attack could not be immediately ascertained, our correspondent was told that the incident might not be unconnected with alleged attack on some Fulani herdsmen by unknown persons in Kuduku community.
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FAAN boss visits Oshiomhole, apologises over airport closure


Managing Director of Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria, FAAN, Mr. George Uriesi, yesterday,  apologised to the Edo State Government and air travellers over the incident that led to the closure of the Benin Airport on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Chairman of Edo State Board of Internal Revenue, Chief Useni Elamah, who was detained by the police Tuesday over the sealing up of the premises of FAAN, Benin Airport, yesterday, described his detention as absurd, noting that federal agencies in the state were indebted to the state government to the tune of over N2.5billion.
Elamah, was detained but released at 9:30pm Tuesday, following the intervention of Governor Adams Oshiomhole, who demanded his release, describing his arrest as unjust.
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Nigeria: Lagos Threatens to Seal Buildings With Clothes Hanging On Them

Henceforth, buildings where clothes and wares are indiscriminately hanged, will be blacklisted and sealed by the Lagos State Government.
The State Commissioner for the Environment, Mr Tunji Bello who described the practice as an environmental nuisance, gave the warning after monitoring last month's environmental sanitation exercise in Egbe_Idimu Local Council Development Area, LCDA.
He directed all the law enforcement agencies in the state to clamp down on such buildings, adding that such clothes would be regarded as refuse and would accordingly be removed.
His words: "Our men have started; we have told LAWMA and other agencies to remove all clothes spread in front of buildings or anywhere on the highway and dispose them like refuse henceforth. Why must you spread clothes on the highway and sometimes on the roads where people pass? We can't tolerate that again".
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2013 Uses and Abuses of Biology International Essay Contest



TYPE OF CONTEST: Essay Contest

BRIEF DESCRIPTION: The aim of the essay competition is to stimulate writing and thinking among students and recent graduates on the theme of the overall Uses and Abuses of Biology programme, and to encourage engagement with the science and religion field. 
We will facilitate the publication of prize-winning essays, which will be posted on this website.

ELIGIBILITY: The Uses and Abuses of Biology Essay Competition is open to any applicant, of any nationality, up to the age of 30.

RULES AND REGULATIONS: The 2013 essay title is 'How is contemporary biology used for ideological purposes?'. Essays with alternative titles will not be considered.

Given the broad range of the title, essays should focus on one of the following topics: either politics OR sociology OR theology OR philosophy OR media. Please address only one topic in your essay.
Some example topics and questions include, but are not restricted to:
  • the use or misuse of biological ideas in political rhetoric
  • is genetics used more to support racist or egalitarian ideas in the public domain?
  • is government policy on early years' education influenced by neurobiology?
  • the relationship between biology and atheism
  • how neurology and genetics influence Moral theory
  • biology and the materialism / dualism debate in the theory of mind
  • does the media use biology to propagate the idea of human determinism?
  • is the communication of the theory of evolution in education and the media value-free?
Essays should not discuss practical or ethical issues in biology such as pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), assisted reproductive techniques, genome sequencing or induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Examples must also be contemporary - essays should not use historical examples (such as Social Darwinism), unless it is an example with on-going relevance to contemporary society, nor should futuristic examples be used.

Instructions

  • Please ensure you have read the above Guidelines before beginning your essay. The chosen topic (Politics, Sociology, Theology, Philosophy, Media) should be stated at the top of the essay.
  • Applicants should be aged 30 or younger on the day the competition closes.
  • There are no restrictions on applicant nationality.
  • Essays should be typed, in English, on A4 pages with double spacing.
  • Essays should be between 4000 and 6000 words in length, not including citations or bibliography, which can be added as an Appendix.
  • All submissions are final and only one submission per person is permitted.                                           
PRIZE: An independent panel of judges will select the competition winners. Up to three prizes for first, second and third place, worth £1000, £500, and £250 respectively, will be awarded. The decision of the judges is final and no correspondence will be entered into regarding the outcome of the competition.
  
HOW TO APPLY: Your submission should include your name, address, date of birth and contact details, together with the names and contact details of two referees who could, if required, confirm your age at the time of submission.
Submissions will be accepted by email at
faraday.essay@st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk
DEADLINE: November 30, 2013

MORE INFORMATION: For more information click here

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