BioGeny

BioGeny All About Life Science It may be surprising to look at the name, BioGeny, but it has a gorgeous background. The blog name “BioGeny” is not a sudden coming out.

BioGeny is a life science blog, especially for students, teachers, researchers and interested people who are eager to know the life science more deeply. BioGeny is named according to the first scientific theory of life science, “The Theory of Biogenesis”. BioGeny will include articles from all sorts of fields refers to the life science, i.e., biotechnology, immunology, molecular biology, cell biol

ogy, microbiology, genetic engineering, environmental and interaction biology, evolutionary biology and biodiversity, breeding science, bioinformatics and nanotechnology, biochemical engineering, agricultural and plant biotechnology, nutrition and public health, neurology, genetic disorder and gene therapy and more (for details, see category). In fact, BioGeny discusses about the most recent topics of the advanced biological science, thereby unfolding the mystery of life. Besides articles publishing, you find BioGeny as a potential resource of ebooks, magazine and popular journal links related to biological science. BioGeny also try to make a fortune by providing recent job and scholarship news that can be helpful for them, who is looking for a job or higher education in abroad. In addition, we provide some basic life science tools and databases needed in bioinformatics and gene sequencing. So, take us with your hope and make your dream true.

ICGEB offers Short-term fellowships for Pre-doctoral studies in ICGEB Component laboratories to fund ongoing collaborati...
21/11/2018

ICGEB offers Short-term fellowships for Pre-doctoral studies in ICGEB Component laboratories to fund ongoing collaborative research between scientists from ICGEB Member States and research groups at ICGEB laboratories in Trieste, Italy, New Delhi, India and Cape Town, South Africa, with the aim of facilitating access to the latest research techniques and to strengthen capacity building.

Closing Dates for Applications: 31 December 2018, 31 March 2019, 30 September 2019

ICGEB offers Short-term fellowships for Pre-doctoral studies in ICGEB Component laboratories to fund ongoing collaborative research between scientists from ICGEB Member States and research groups at ICGEB laboratories in Trieste, Italy, New Delhi, India and Cape Town, South Africa, with the aim of f...

13/12/2017

A gravitational wave discovery is the year's biggest science story — again.

A dozen scientists got asked about how to read and understand scientific papers. Here's what they answered.Via Science
14/06/2017

A dozen scientists got asked about how to read and understand scientific papers. Here's what they answered.
Via Science

Reading becomes easier with experience, but it is up to each scientist to identify the techniques that work best for them.

01/03/2017

Researchers are pursuing multiple vaccine strategies for blocking Zika infection.

05/12/2016

Twenty-five percent of us will require a blood transfusion at some point in our lives, and the American Red Cross and other organizations have a few guidelines in place to make sure both donors and their sample are eligible and healthy. Here’s what you need to know.. . 1. CHECK TO SEE IF YOU’RE ELIG...

Texas Grandfather Has Burned Hand Sewn To Abdomen In Tummy Tuck Surgery!!A grandfather in Texas will soon regain functio...
06/10/2016

Texas Grandfather Has Burned Hand Sewn To Abdomen In Tummy Tuck Surgery!!

A grandfather in Texas will soon regain function of his hand after doctors cautiously sewed it to his abdomen in an unusual tummy tuck surgery. Casey Reyes, 87, of the Houston area, was rushed to Houston Methodist Hospital where doctors performed the "sci-fi" surgery after he almost lost his hand changing a tire on a trailer.

Prior to undergoing the surgery, medics resorted to conventional methods to save his hand, and even considered amputating the damaged limb. Reyes, who has hearing difficulties, was told by his granddaughter Casey Reyes about the surgery the doctors were planning. “They're gonna [sic] put your hand inside your stomach, kind of like a hoodie,” she said, according to the Associated Press. “I thought it was more or less something out of a sci-fi movie. It sounded crazy. He looked at me kind of funny, but agreed.”

He agreed to the tummy tuck and spent three weeks with his left hand tucked inside a pocket of tissue in his belly. This was meant to give the burned hand time to heal and form a new blood supply. Afterward, doctors were able to cut his hand free of his stomach, and shape some of his abdominal tissue and skin to cover it.

“It’s a funny feeling,” Reyes said in an interview while his hand was still attached to his belly. “Anything to get me well.”

Surgeries like Reyes' are not new. According to doctors at Houston Methodist Hospital, the technique used on Reyes is normally employed on the battlefield or in serious trauma situations. This radical skin graft technique made the difference for Reyes, who otherwise would have had his hand amputated.

Reyes almost lost his hand after trying to change a wheel on his trailer, which slipped off the jack and crushed his hand. He had to wait more than an hour for help to arrive, which gave the super-heated metal time to “cook” his hand, burning through his heavy glove.

Although the surgery was scary, Reyes looks forward to regaining function of his hand for several reasons. “As soon as I'm well enough to drive I want to take a little trip. The main thing I want to do is raise cattle, ride horses. I'm an outdoors person.”

The 2016   in   is awarded to Jean-Pierre Sauvage, Sir J. Fraser Stoddart and Bernard L. Feringa“for the design and synt...
05/10/2016

The 2016 in is awarded to

Jean-Pierre Sauvage, Sir J. Fraser Stoddart and Bernard L. Feringa

“for the design and synthesis of molecular machines”

They developed the world’s smallest machines
The 2016 Chemistry Laureates are awarded for their development of molecular machines that are a thousand times thinner than a hair strand. They succeeded in linking molecules together to design everything from a tiny lift to motors and miniscule muscles.

The groundbreaking steps taken by Jean-Pierre Sauvage, Fraser Stoddart and Ben Feringa in developing molecular machinery have resulted in a toolbox of chemical structures that are used by researchers around the world to build increasingly advanced creations. One of the most striking examples is a molecular robot that can grasp and connect amino acids, built in 2013.

Other researchers have connected molecular motors to long polymers, so they form an intricate web. When the molecular motors are exposed to light, they wind the polymers up into a messy bundle. In this way, light energy is stored in the molecules and, if researchers find a technique for retrieving this energy, a new kind of battery could be developed. The material also shrinks when the motors tangle the polymers, which could be used to develop sensors that react to light.

CONGRATULATE Yoshinori Ohsumi, awarded the 2016   in   or  .He has discovered and elucidated mechanisms underlying autop...
04/10/2016

CONGRATULATE Yoshinori Ohsumi, awarded the 2016 in or .
He has discovered and elucidated mechanisms underlying autophagy, a fundamental process for degrading and recycling cellular components.
Write your congratulations here on Facebook!

01/10/2016

Do you Know in / ;

1836, returned from his voyage on the HMS Beagle to the Pacific. It would be 23 years before he published .



In 1937, films of moving X-ray images on a fluorescopic screen showing the movement of organs of the human body were shown at the American Roentgen Ray Society convention. in New York City. The images were filmed with a home 16-mm movie camera at 16 frames per second (reduced to 12 or 8 fps for thicker bodies). Two seconds exposure could capture two or three beats of the heart, the act of breathing, movements of the diaphragm or motion of joints. Film clip loops could be projected to show repeating motion. The films were made by Drs William H. Stewart, William J. Hoffman and Francis H. Ghiselin from Manhattan's Lenox Hill Hospital. They reported their technique at the previous year's convention.

Like BioGeny to know more about Life Science
01/10/2016

Like BioGeny to know more about Life Science

Read more at BioGeny www.biogeny.net about Viral Evasive Strategies: dodging the immune attack
01/09/2016

Read more at BioGeny www.biogeny.net about Viral Evasive Strategies: dodging the immune attack

Evasive Strategies

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