Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen pledges $100 million for cutting-edge life sciences research

On Wednesday, Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, who also owns the Seattle Seahawks, promised $100 million funding for cutting-edge life sciences study. As per a news release from the Allen Institute, the gift has signified his initial pledge in the direction of a decade-long plan for The Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group, a latest Seattle-based organization launched by him on Wednesday.

The initial projects of the organization include $20 million funding for eight years of research endeavors at Stanford University and Tufts University, and under the ‘research partnership’, universities will contribute $10 million each.

Rare! Thailand’s Blind Cavefish walks like Four-legged Animal

Researchers have found a blind cavefish that walks up waterfalls. In a study published in Scientific Reports, they said the fish, Cryptotora thamicola, is incredibly rare due to its walk, which seems like a four-legged animal’s saunter.

The fish is a blind cavefish, but what make it unique are its morphological features. These were previously seen in four-footed mammals and amphibians, said Brooke E. Flammang, a researcher from the Jersey Institute of Technology and an author of the study. Cryptotora thamicola’s pelvis and vertebral column allow it to support its body weight against gravity, the author added.

Bacterium with Minimal Number of Genes to be used to create Designer Life Forms

A team of scientists has claimed that they have developed a bacterium with the smallest number of genes required to have life. Now, they hope the research could be used to create designer life forms.

The newly created bacterium has 473 genes. The creators from the J. Craig Venter Institute in California have no idea what action more than 30% genes of the bacterium actually perform. However, they say these genes are important and the microbe could even die without them.

These genes act as key elements, and the team is trying to figure out what they do, and they are very close, said J. Craig Venter, founder of the institute in California.

Swedish ‘Superstar Doctor’ Kicked out of job For Lying about his achievements

“Superstar doctor” Paolo Macchiarini has been kicked out of his job by Sweden's prestigious Karolinska Institute (KI) for allegedly lying about his scientific achievements and other misconduct that is incompatible with KI's employment standards.

A trachea surgeon, Macchiarini had brought about a revolution in the field of artificial windpipe operations. But his career started seeing a downfall in June 2014 when allegations of his misconduct, including his purported exaggeration of the success of his artificial trachea surgeries in numerous scientific publications, gained prominence.

“His conduct has seriously damaged confidence in KI and for research in general”, says KI’s HR manager Mats Engelbrektson in an announcement released on Wednesday.

NASA’s Dawn Mission reveals Ceres’ mysterious bright spots in exceptional detail

American space agency NASA has released some new close-up images of Ceres, revealing the dwarf planet’s mysterious bright spots in unprecedented detail.

The images, captured by the space agency’s space probe Dawn from just 240 miles above the surface, provides a closer look at Ceres surface that shows distinctive bright spots. The images unveil a dome covered with the bright material.

For the first time, scientists could look at the dwarf planet’s Occator Crater. The crater, which measures around 2.5 miles deep and 57 miles across, contains the two bright spots that perplexed researchers for years.

However, even the new images failed solve the mystery of bright spots, but the images finally provided scientists with something to work with.

High-rising seas, killer storms are closer than previously thought

Extreme climatic calamities like high-rising seas and killer storms could be just decades and not centuries away, a new study into the potential impact of climate change warned.

The study report titled “Ice Melt, Sea Level Rise & Superstorms” warned that the global warming threshold of 2-degree Celsius or 3.6-degree Fahrenheit is too high. The 52-page report was derived from observations of ancient climate change called "paleo-climatology" and observations of current climate shifts, in addition to data from computer modeling.

Former NASA scientist James Hensen, who authored the study, cautioned that humans might have already reached in a position of potentially causing irreparable harm to their future generations.

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