organization:washington state university

  • Our Twisted DNA | by Tim Flannery | The New York Review of Books
    https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2019/03/07/carl-zimmer-twisted-dna

    As long as chimeras and mosaics were detected on the basis of physical manifestations or blood type, they were considered to be phenomenally rare—indeed freakish. By 1983, only seventy-five cases of human chimeras, as detected from blood type, were known, while mosaicism was mostly known from medical cases. Joseph Merrick, the “Elephant Man,” suffered from a form of mosaicism known as Proteus syndrome, which left parts of his body deformed by monstrous growths, while other parts remained completely normal. For decades, his sad example defined the condition for many.

    Recent advances in genetic analysis have revealed that chimerism is common. In fact, chimeric individuals may be the rule, rather than the exception, among mammals. One Danish study of the blood of 154 girls aged ten to fifteen discovered that around 13 percent of them had blood cells with Y-chromosomes. These cells probably originated from an older brother and had crossed into the mother, where they survived before crossing into, and taking root in, the daughter. A Seattle study of fifty-nine women who died, on average, in their seventies found that 63 percent had cells with Y-chromosomes in their brains.

    As bizarre as chimeras might seem, they represent only the surface waters of Zimmer’s deep dive into the nature of inheritance. Epigenetics, a fast-expanding area of science that explains how things experienced by individuals can influence the traits that are inherited by their offspring, seems to contradict our conventional understanding of genetics. The epigenome, “that collection of molecules that envelops our genes and controls what they do,” as Zimmer puts it, operates through methylation—the process whereby methyl-group molecules are added to the molecular envelope surrounding the DNA, and so inhibit certain genes from operating (and, in some cases, from operating in descendants as well).

    We owe one of the most penetrating insights into epigenetics to a laboratory accident. Michael Skinner of Washington State University was examining the impact of the anti-fungal agent vinclozolin on laboratory rats. He discovered that the offspring of rats exposed to the chemical produced deformed sperm. When a laboratory assistant accidentally used these offspring to breed a new generation of lab rats, researchers discovered that the grandsons of the poisoned rats also produced deformed sperm.

    Skinner’s rats sparked a flurry of new experiments that showed how methylation could lead to the inheritance of acquired traits. As some researchers commented, it was as if the work of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (who famously posited that the necks of giraffes had lengthened over generations because they were stretched as the animals reached up to feed) had become reestablished. Science is rarely so simple—still, epigenetics has Zimmer wondering whether “poverty, abuse, and other assaults on parents also impress themselves epigenetically on their children.” The study of epigenetics is still in its infancy, so it may be years before we know the answer. With some recent studies showing that epigenetic effects fade over time, many researchers are unsure whether epigenetics is anything but an interesting codicil to the conventional genetic theory of inheritance.

    #adn #génétique #épigénétique

  • Hydroelectric dams emit a billion tonnes of greenhouse gases a year, study finds | Global development | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2016/nov/14/hydroelectric-dams-emit-billion-tonnes-greenhouse-gas-methane-study-cli

    Hydroelectric dams contribute more to global warming than previously estimated, according to a study published in BioScience.

    It appears that the current and planned boom of hydroelectric projects would double the current cover of dams in the world and will aggravate the problem.

    Researchers found that rotting vegetation in the water means that the dams emit about a billion tonnes of greenhouse gases every year. This represents 1.3% of total annual anthropogenic (human-caused) global emissions.

    When considered over a 100-year timescale, dams produce more methane than rice plantations and biomass burning, the study showed.

    “We estimate that dams emit around 25% more methane by unit of surface than previously estimated,” said Bridget Deemer, from the School of Environment at the Washington State University in Vancouver, and lead author of the study.

    #eau #barrages #énergie #émissions_CO2

  • Review Article
    Organic agriculture in the twenty-first century
    John P. Reganold & Jonathan M. Wachter
    http://www.nature.com/articles/nplants2015221

    #Agriculture: le tout #bio, c’est possible
    http://www.journaldelenvironnement.net/article/agriculture-le-tout-bio-c-est-possible,66750

    C’est l’un des arguments favoris des tenants de l’agriculture conventionnelle : celle-ci obtient de meilleurs rendements que l’agriculture bio, et sera la seule à pouvoir nourrir les 9 milliards de personnes que portera la Terre en 2050. Fermez le ban ? Pas si vite, leur répondent John Reganold et Jonathan Wachter, agronomes à la Washington State University à Pullman (Etat de Washington), dans la revue Nature Plants.

    Analysant 40 ans de littérature scientifique comparant les deux types de production, les chercheurs montrent que cette idée a vécu. Certes, la plupart des études révèlent des rendements inférieurs en bio, allant de 8% à 25% selon le type de culture. Avec la polyculture bio, il peut ainsi être réduit à 9%, et avec une rotation accrue des cultures, à seulement 8%.

    Selon les chercheurs, il est encore possible de faire mieux. Par exemple en cas de #sécheresse sévère, situation qui devrait devenir plus fréquente avec le réchauffement : dans ce cas, plusieurs études ont montré que l’agriculture bio, qui préserve mieux ses #sols et leur capacité à retenir l’#eau, fait mieux que la conventionnelle. Et rien n’empêche de chercher des #semences plus adaptées au bio, qui réduiront encore l’écart.

  • L’angoisse de la bibliothèque
    http://t.co/hG0vtn1KTv

    Plusieurs bibliothèques travaillent activement sur le sujet et n’hésitent pas à accompagner les étudiants qui pourraient en être vicitme. Ainsi la bibliothèque de la Washington State University, propose-t-elle un libguide spécifique donnant des pistes pour mieux appréhender les lieux ou jouant sur les stéréotypes du bibliothécaire. En fait, nous faisons de même et travaillons également via la médiation numérique documentaire à améliorer l’expérience usager, partant, à réduire cette angoisse inhérente de la bibliothèque. Cela va sans dire. Mais cela va mieux en le disant.

    #c

  • Quand les robots apprennent aux robots
    http://alireailleurs.tumblr.com/post/82463780774

    Une équipe de la Washington State University a développé une technique permettant à un agent artificiel (robot ou logiciel), d’enseigner certaines techniques à un autre système, nous apprend KurzweilAI. Pour l’instant il s’agit d’un robot virtuel apprenant à un de ses pairs comment jouer à Pacman et Starcraft. Mais cette technique pourrait bien être un jour appliquée à de vrais robots.

    #robotique #ia