Diabetes is a chronic disease characterized by a deficit in cell mass and a failure of glucose homeostasis. Both circumstances result in a variety of severe complications and an overall shortened life expectancy.
The current treatment of insulin does not represent a cure because insulin dosage is difficult to adjust. Exogenous insulin frequently fails [...]
Posts Tagged ‘cell’
Stem cells hold great promise for regenerating insulin-secreting tissues
Chaos in court

By Jonathan Beale
BBC News, Guantanamo Bay
The new high security US military courtroom at Guantanamo has had its share of problems: microphones not working, mistranslations by court interpreters and a few failed video links to the outside world.
But it is nothing compared to the chaos that surrounded what was supposed to be the latest appearance of the five men accused of plotting the attacks on 11 September 2001.
None of them showed up – at least for the start. The US military judge was informed that they were boycotting the proceedings.
A row then followed between members of the prosecution, who argued that at least some should be brought to the court by "all necessary means", and members of the defence team, who argued that their clients were being harassed and should not be subjected to a "forced cell extraction".
In the end three of them did appear, though it soon became two. Mustafa al-Hawsawi asked to leave as soon as he was told that he would not be allowed to speak.
He casually waved goodbye to his co-accused while being escorted to the exit surrounded by uniformed guards. His defence lawyer – Major Jon Jackson – argued that his client had been tricked into coming with promises that he would be permitted to talk.
"The fact that two of the five did not even leave their cell showed the defendants’ contempt for the court"
The no-show by the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks – Khalid Sheikh Mohammed – was perhaps the biggest surprise.
In the past he has appeared to be the ringleader from whom the others take their cue. But even locked in his cell perhaps he was still orchestrating proceedings and trying to make a mockery of US military justice.
Only Ramzi Binalshibh – sometimes described as the 20th hijacker (one of a number who claim that title) – followed his example by staying away.
‘Gag order’
The hearing was supposed to focus on questions about the mental capacity of two of the accused – Ramzi Binalshibh and Mustafa al-Hawsawi.
Neither so far has been allowed to represent themselves in court – and much to their obvious annoyance they are having to rely on the defence of US military lawyers.
Those lawyers tried to make their arguments. But whenever they went into any detail their microphones were cut off.

Mr Binalshibh’s defence lawyer, Commander Suzanne Lachelier, explained how her client suffered from a "delusional disorder". The court heard how he believed that camp guards were trying to pump noxious fumes into his cell.
Cdr Lachelier started to explain how sleep deprivation had affected his health – but that is about all we heard before her microphone went dead. She was discussing "classified" information and reluctantly agreed to comply with what she called the "gagging" order.
Later in the afternoon a whole session was held behind closed doors without a journalist in sight to discuss more "classified" information.
The fact that two of the five did not even leave their cell showed the defendants’ contempt for the court. But that was underlined by the actions of the few who bothered to attend.
Walid Bin Attash summed it up when he playfully threw a paper plane (presumably made out of court documents) at his co-accused when the proceedings were drawing to a close.
Relatives’ grief
It was in stark contrast to the response of the family members of the victims of the 9/11 attacks.
Nine – chosen by lottery – had been flown by the Pentagon to witness the latest appearance of the five accused of planning the murder of their loved ones.
While we may have seen chaos, they were witnessing the slow wheels of justice moving.
There was praise for the US military who had to guard the detainees and for the controversial legal proceedings introduced by President George W Bush.
There was also universal condemnation of President Barack Obama’s decision to close down Guantanamo and to halt the trials.
Judith Reiss – who lost her son Joshua in New York’s twin towers – had campaigned for Barack Obama. She described herself as an "Obama Mama".
But when it came to Guantanamo she said he had got it wrong.
And as the president’s deadline for closing Guantanamo fast approaches, those voices will only get louder.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Beth Kohl: Only the Freshest Stem Cells Will Do
Frozen embryos, like waffles or fish or my old Dell, are only good for so long. You can’t just keep them in the freezer forever with the assumption that, once you need them, you can scrape them off and use them.
Fuel-cell legacy
Richard Hollingham reports from California on how technology that took man to the Moon could soon take shoppers regularly to the mall.
It looks like an ordinary SUV (Sports Utility Vehicle), the sort of chunky 4X4 you’ll find jamming American roads.
It’s only when you take a drive that you realise that this is something very different.
I’m no motoring correspondent but, as we pull out of the parking lot, it’s difficult not to be impressed by this car’s smooth acceleration.
What’s even more disconcerting is that the vehicle is almost totally silent – the only noise comes from the wind buffeting the windows and the squeal of the tyres as we bomb down the freeway.
"The car drives with electricity but – unlike a battery-electric car that you need to plug in to charge – the fuel cell vehicle makes electricity on-board from the hydrogen stored in a tank," explained Catherine Dunwoody, executive director of the California Fuel Cell Partnership.
"The fuel cell is a fuel conversion device that converts hydrogen to electricity," she told the BBC World Service’s One Planet programme.
The only byproduct is water – the ultimate ‘zero-emission’ vehicle.
Drinking by-product
The partnership, based in the Californian state capital Sacramento, was set-up 10 years ago to promote fuel cell vehicles and involves carmakers, energy companies and government agencies.
And although "fuel conversion device" sounds terribly futuristic, the basic technology of the fuel cell has been around for more than 150 years.

Like a battery, a fuel cell uses a chemical process to generate electricity. Inside the fuel cell, a catalyst strips hydrogen into positively charged hydrogen ions and electrons. The positive ions pass across a special membrane and react with oxygen (from the air) to form water. The electrons have to take the long way round and flow through a circuit to generate electricity.
But with a world powered by coal and oil, no-one knew what to use these things for, until Nasa needed a way to power its spacecraft.
The agency turned to British engineer Francis Bacon.
During the Apollo 8 mission of 1968, Bacon told a BBC reporter how excited he was to see "a real genuine use for a fuel cell".
When it came to powering Apollo (and the previous Gemini missions), fuel cells were perfect. Less bulky than batteries and more efficient than 1960s solar panels, they even produced a useful by-product: water, which the astronauts could drink.
So, great if you want to go to the Moon but it’s still been a struggle to apply the technology back on Earth.
Various US government initiatives have come and gone, fuel cell cars have remained as prototypes. There are hydrogen fuel cells around but they’ve proved to be a niche market. That could, finally, be about to change.
Just how clean
A quick scout through a list of California’s hi-tech start-up companies and you’ll find many of them devoted to the technology.
"There are a lot of people working on fuel cells in California," Fritz Prinz, the chair of mechanical engineering at Stanford University, said.
"They are trying to create new ideas, making fuel cells more cost effective, more efficient, for a variety of different applications from personal power to mobile applications such as cars."
The first hydrogen fuel cell cars are due to go on sale in the next five years and with governments keen to wean their nations off oil, they would seem to be a viable alternative.

But a number of issues remain. Hydrogen fuel cell cars need hydrogen and, even in California, there are only around 25 filling stations in the whole of the state. The other problem is even more fundamental: where does the hydrogen come from
"Most hydrogen today is made from natural gas," admits Ms Dunwoody.
So although the cars are technically zero emission, the process of making the hydrogen produces carbon dioxide.
Nevertheless, she says, it’s still greener than burning it.
"When you make hydrogen from natural gas and use it in a fuel cell vehicle, you immediately cut your carbon emissions by 50%. But there’s a lot of work going on in California on creating renewable hydrogen," and that includes using hydrogen produced from wastewater biogas.
The ultimate goal is to produce an efficient way of extracting hydrogen from water. Imagine that Cars powered by water.
What’s certain is that without the effort that went into getting a spacecraft to the Moon, the development of efficient, useful hydrogen fuel cells would be nowhere near as advanced as it is today.
Said Dunwoody: "This is our future, this technology is tremendously efficient and clean and, most importantly, it’s going to give customers the performance they expect from their vehicle." </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Senate Panel to Consider Cell Jamming in the Slammer
Contraband cell phones are creating problems in the U.S. prison system, but legislation to allow jamming of the signals is being fought by public interest groups and consumer organizations.
– One of the first bills introduced
in the 111th Congress was the Safe Prisons Communications Act of 2009. The
legislation would allow correctional institutions to permit the installation of
jamming devices within a prison to prevent prison inmates from using smuggled
cellular phones.
quot;Thi…
How To Spam-Proof Your Cell Phone, Inbox
Spam is the bane of computer users everywhere, accounting for more than 90 percent of e-mail. And, now, cell phones are getting spam.
On Inauguration Day, will my cell phone work?
I am one of the 240,000 people with free tickets attending President-elect Barack Obama’s swearing-in ceremony on the steps of the U.S. Capitol next week. And like the other 2 million or so people descending upon Washington, D.C., this weekend for the festivities, I am counting on my cell phone to not only keep me [...]



