Saturday, October 31, 2015

JAK inhibitor drugs could restore hair growth after loss from male pattern baldness

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In experiments with mouse and human hair follicles, Angela M. Christiano, PhD, and colleagues found that drugs that inhibit the Janus kinase (JAK) family of enzymes promote rapid and robust hair growth when applied to the skin.

Inhibiting a family of enzymes inside hair follicles that are suspended in a resting state restores hair growth, a new study from researchers at Columbia University Medical Center has found.

The study raises the possibility that JAK inhibitors could be used to restore hair growth in forms of hair loss induced by male pattern baldness, and other types of hair loss that occur when hair follicles are trapped in a resting state. Two JAK inhibitors have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. One is approved for treatment of blood diseases (ruxolitinib) and the other for rheumatoid arthritis (tofacitinib). Both are being tested in clinical trials for the treatment of plaque psoriasis and alopecia areata, an autoimmune disease that causes hair loss.

“What we’ve found is promising, though we haven’t yet shown it’s a cure for pattern baldness,” said Dr. Christiano. “More work needs to be done to test if JAK inhibitors can induce hair growth in humans using formulations specially made for the scalp.”


Within 3 weeks, mice that received topical ruxolitinib or tofacitinib had regrown nearly all their hair (center and right photos; drug was applied only to the right side of the mouse). Little to no hair growth occurred in control mice during the same timeframe (left photo).
Image credit: From S. Harel et al., Sci. Adv. 1, e1500973 (2015). Distributed under a Creative
Commons Attribution Non Commercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC). 10.1126/sciadv.1500973


Science Advances - Pharmacologic inhibition of JAK-STAT signaling promotes hair growth

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Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Stair House by David Coleman Architecture

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The Stair House is located on a steeply sloped lot overlooking Lake Washington and the Cascade Mountains in Seattle’s Leshi neighborhood. An existing building was removed to make way for[...]
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Earthquake-resistant school in Thailand raised up on stilts by Vin Varavarn Architects

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Built in the wake of an earthquake, this secondary school in northern Thailand by Vin Varavarn Architects is raised above the ground on metal stilts (+ slideshow). (more…)


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Tuesday, October 27, 2015

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China has large solar powered helium spy airship and satellites for tracking aircraft carriers

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Earlier this month, China tested a new helium-filled airship that will soar to great height to offer the government new and broad surveillance capabilities. Called Yuanmeng​, ​the ship is expected to be able to stay aloft for up to 48 hours.

The airship works via a combination of lighter-than-air gases and electricity. Helium lifts the ship to the near-space region (65,000 to 328,000 feet). Once Yuanmeng​ is at altitude, solar panels mounted on the surface provide electrical power to propellers that guide the airship into position. Solar power is ideal for high-altitude drones and airships because it reduces the need for an internal fuel supply, reducing the overall size of the aircraft and freeing it from the task of carrying its own fuel.

Yuanmeng measures an enormous 18,000 cubic meters (635,664 cubic feet) in volume. The airship is equipped with communications and surveillance gear, including wide-band communications, digital data links, high-definition "observation" (HD cameras), and spatial imaging technologies.

The Gaofen-4 geostationary earth observation satellite will be launched by the end of this year with the express purpose of hunting US aircraft carriers. The satellite is equipped with a visible light imager at 50 meters and infrared staring optical imager at 400 meters.

China has created the means of holding at risk US aircraft carriers with two new anti-ship ballistic missiles, the DF-21D and the new DF-26. However, locating US aircraft carriers is not easy, and China has developed a variety of airborne and space-based sensors to ease the search



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Fanego House / Sergio Fanego + Gabinete de Arquitectura

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The project and construction of the house is presented as very personal challenge, its hedonistic goal almost forces the architectural piece to constitute the thought and knowledge of the architect. The long friendship, early from the formative years with Solano Benitez, Alberto Marinoni and the boys from Gabinete de Arquitectura marked my production in a way that I consider this project as the opportunity to conceive a group experience, share ideas, experiment a scenario of reciprocity to which we are accustomed.This entire situation was reinforced by my father, Guillermo, who made it easy for the ideas to come together, providing his experience in the constructive branch and his opening to vanguard (maybe because of his work relationship with Pindu in other times), that turn him into the enlightening link between thought and production. Having mentioned the protagonists, the explanation for the thing-house-machine can be told through the story of how it is located and built.  I quote these two last aspects, because the work always had some ratio and sensibility.


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The incredible collaboration behind the International Space Station #makereducation

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Informative video from TedEd! The International Space Station is roughly the size of a six-bedroom house and weighs more than 320 cars — it’s so large that no single rocket could have lifted it into orbit. Instead, it was assembled piece by piece while hurtling through space at 28,000 kilometers per hour, lapping the Earth […]
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Verdant "cloud forests" and waterfalls proposed for new Singapore high-rise

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Landscape firm Gustafson Porter has unveiled plans to create tiered gardens and waterfalls with a towering development proposed for Singapore's Marina Bay. (more…)


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School teachers' lounge transformed into contemporary loft apartment by Standard Studio

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Standard Studio has converted the rooms of an early-20th-century school in Amsterdam into a series of apartments, including this home for a family of four that occupies a former teachers' lounge (+ slideshow). (more…)


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frolicingintheforest: I cant think of a better place to wait...

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frolicingintheforest:

I cant think of a better place to wait out a down pour. life is good. <3 


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Monday, October 26, 2015

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AD Classics: Azadi Tower / Hossein Amanat

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Commissioned to celebrate the 2500th anniversary of the Persian Empire, the Azadi Tower has been a site of celebration, unrest, and revolution. Despite its association with the deposed Shah, the tower has been embraced as a national symbol of Iran, playing host to both pro- and anti-government demonstrations, following the controversial 2009 Presidential elections.


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Saturday, October 24, 2015

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Pedestrian Bridge in Aranzadi Park / Peralta Ayesa Arquitectos + Opera ingeniería

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This project consists of, on the one hand, the construction of a pedestrian bridge to improve access between the park and the city and, on the other hand, the construction of some sheds, in the park’s fruit and vegetable garden area, to serve as storage spaces for the garden concessionaires.


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Soviet Atomic Powered Ground-effect Light Carrier 19701 "SMELOST" by Alex Brady

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Apartment Conversion / Standard Studio

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Ons Dorp is a school building that got converted into different apartments. This particular one was designed for a family of four. The teacher’s lounge got remodelled into the bedrooms and the classroom into the living space.


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Friday, October 23, 2015

Dallas' design panel says Midtown plans for Valley View site need to be less 'confusing'

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This is how the developers envision Dallas Midtown’s promenade. Last we heard Valley View Center was scheduled to come down in ’round December to begin making way for the so-called Dallas Midtown development Beck Ventures has been pitching since the … Continue reading
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Anti-aging rapamycin is being tested in 20 dogs

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Scientists who study aging are currently riveted by a group of 20 dogs in Seattle. The dogs, all house pets older than six years old, are early test subjects in a trial of a drug called rapamycin. The way the drug works is not completely understood, but it’s been used for years to prevent rejection of transplanted organs, and in laboratory studies, it’s lengthened the life spans of diverse species: worms, fruit flies, and mice. If it works in dogs, healthy human volunteers will be the next guinea pigs.

Rapamycin extended mouse life spans between 9 percent and 14 percent, and it worked whether mice began getting the drug during middle age or very late in their short lives. Moreover, it prevented cardiovascular damage and memory loss. That suggests that it might lengthen the period in which people are healthy and functional rather than drawing out a period of decline.



The only other substance that has recently generated as much excitement among aging researchers is the diabetes drug metformin. It’s had only modest effects in mice but has already shown promise in humans. According to a 2014 study that followed 7,800 diabetics, those on the drug not only lived longer than other people with diabetes, they lived slightly longer than nondiabetic control subjects. Researchers believe that it’s less likely than rapamycin to have problematic side effects but also less likely to show dramatic results.



In fact, rapamycin is one of several anti-aging drugs that may end up in human trials in the coming years as researchers improve their understanding of the mechanisms of aging.

There are already some known side effects: at high doses, rapamycin can raise blood sugar and thereby increase the risk of diabetes. It causes mouth lesions known as canker sores. Researchers originally worried that because it works as part of an immune-suppressive cocktail for organ transplants, it would raise the risk of infection. But then a study last year in Science Translational Medicine showed that a derivative of the rapamycin drug seemed to enhance human immunity following a flu shot.

Scientists aren’t sure why rapamycin suppresses the immune system in some contexts and boosts it in others. But they are starting to grasp how it might slow the aging process.

Science Translational - mTOR inhibition improves immune function in the elderly

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