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$10 Million European Community Water And Sanitation Project Underway In Iraq; UNICEF Relocates Country Office To Baghdad
- A $10 million project funded by the European Community to improve Iraq"s water and sanitation services is underway. Implemented by UNICEF in collaboration with the Ministry of Municipalities and Public Works and the Ministry of Municipalities in Kurdistan, the project will increase the government"s provision of services as well as strengthen their capacity to manage and develop Iraq"s water and sanitation sector.
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Double Success For Instituto Gulbenkian De Ciencia Scientists Working On Chromosome Segregation
Lars Jansen"s work on the formation of the centromere, a key cellular structure in powering and controlling chromosome segregation and accurate cell division, has just earned him a paper in Nature Cell Biology and a prestigious EMBO installation grant, of 50,000 euro per year, for a maximum of five years.
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Hospitals, White House Reach Accord On Cuts To Pay For Reform
Major hospital groups reached an agreement Monday with the White House and Senate Democrats to accept $155 billion in payment cuts over ten years, a concession that would help pay for proposed health care reforms, the Washington Post reports. Government savings would come mainly from lower Medicare and Medicaid payments to the hospitals, and smaller subsidies for providing care to the uninsured. Hospitals expect to make up some of the losses by increasing their volume as anticipated reforms bring health insurance to many of the 47 million Americans who don"t have coverage.
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International Research Team Seeks To Unravel Flatworm Regeneration

Planarian flatworms are only a few millimeters up to a few centimeters in length, live in freshwater and are the object of intense research, because they possess the extraordinary ability to regenerate lost tissue with the help of their stem cells (neoblasts) and even grow an entirely new worm out of minute amputated body parts. Now researchers from the Max DelbrÃøck Center in Berlin, Germany together with researchers in the US and Canada present the first comprehensive catalogue of small RNAs of planaria, elements that regulate gene expression. They also have identified small RNAs which may play a role in regeneration and stem cell function, Nikolaus Rajewsky from the MDC points out (PNAS, Early Edition)*. Research suggests that the regeneration of the flatworm involves hundreds of genes. But how are these genes regulated? With the latest technologies researchers search for molecules which regulate genes, such as the small RNAs and especially microRNAs (miRNAs). Of the hundreds of known planarian species the team of researchers from Germany, the US and Canada chose Schmidtea mediterranea. Full 30 percent of the cells of this species consists of stem cells, making it a unique model system to investigate the function of stem cells. Many planaria genes resemble those of humans, and also many genes specifically linked to planarian stem cell biology and regeneration are conserved in humans. Understanding planarian regeneration therefore promises to yield important insights into human regeneration and stem cell biology, the researchers are convinced. The researchers looked for small RNAs in stem cells as well as in the whole planarian organism. They discovered 60 new microRNA genes and could demonstrate that ten microRNAs are specifically linked to stem cell biology and may therefore play a role in regeneration. A few of these microRNAs also exist in humans. Furthermore, the researchers discovered millions of piRNAs. This is a group of just recently discovered small RNA molecules which are important for the stability of the genome. The researchers could demonstrate that piRNAs are highly represented in the planarian stem cells and likely function in a similar way as in mammals. Because stem cells are potentially immortal, they need to strictly control their genome integrity during transmission to future generations, and particulary to protect it against the uncontrolled propagation of mobile genetic elements, transposons. PiRNAs have been shown to selectively silence transposons in the fly and mouse genomes. Due to their analysis the researchers assume that piRNAs have a similar function in the planarian stem cells. Further studies are needed to investigate this. Notes: *High-resolution profiling and discovery of planarian small RNAs Marc R. Friedländera,1, Catherine Adamidia,1, Ting Hanb, Svetlana Lebedevaa, Thomas A. Isenbargerc, Martin Hirstd, Marco Marrad, Chad Nusbaume, William L. Leee, James C. Jenkinf, Alejandro Sánchez Alvaradof, John K. Kimb, and Nikolaus Rajewskya,2 aMax DelbrÃøck Centrum fÃør Molekulare Medizin, Robert-Rössle-Strasse 10, D-13125 Berlin-Buch, Germany; bDepartment of Human Genetics, Life Sciences Institute, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; cDepartments of Bacteriology and Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin, 1550 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706-1521; dGenome Sciences Centre, British Columbia Cancer Center, 675 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, Canada V5Z 1L3; eBroad Institute of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, 320 Charles Street, Cambridge, MA 02141; and fDepartment of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Utah School of Medicine, 401 Medical Research Education Building, 20 North 1900 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84132 Barbara Bachtler Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres


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