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Sweeteners may be linked to increased cancer risk – new research

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medication pills
The sweetener aspartame is found is many common foods and drinks, such as diet sodas.

Sweeteners have long been suggested to be bad for our health. Studies have linked consuming too many sweeteners with conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. But links with cancer risk have been less certain.

An artificial sweetener, called cyclamate, that was sold in the US in the 1970s was shown to increase bladder cancer in rats. However, human physiology is very different from rats, and observational studies failed to find a link between the sweetener and cancer risk in humans. Despite this, the media continued to report a link between sweeteners and cancer.

But now, a study published in PLOS Medicine which looked at over 100,000 people, has shown that those who consume high levels of some sweeteners have a small increase in their risk of developing certain types of cancer.

To assess their intake of artificial sweeteners, the researchers asked the participants to keep a food diary. Around half of the participants were followed for more than eight years.

The study reported that aspartame and acesulfame K, in particular, were associated with increased cancer risk – especially breast and obesity-related cancers, such as colorectal, stomach and prostate cancers. This suggests that removing some types of sweeteners from your diet may reduce the risk of cancer.

Cancer risk

Many common foods contain sweeteners. These food additives mimic the effect of sugar on our taste receptors, providing intense sweetness with no or very few calories. Some sweeteners occur naturally (such as stevia or yacon syrup). Others, such as aspartame, are artificial.

Although they have few or no calories, sweeteners still have an effect on our health. For example, aspartame turns into formaldehyde (a known carcinogen) when the body digests it. This could potentially see it accumulate in cells and cause them to become cancerous.

Our cells are hard-wired to self-destruct when they become cancerous. But aspartame has been shown to “switch off” the genes that tell cancer cells to do this. Other sweeteners, including sucralose and saccharin, have also been shown to damage DNA, which can lead to cancer. But this has only been shown in cells in a dish rather than in a living organism.

person holding white ceramic mug
Aspartame can affect our cells and gut microbiome.

Sweeteners can also have a profound effect on the bacteria that live in our gut. Changing the bacteria in the gut can impair the immune system, which could mean they no longer identify and remove cancerous cells.

But it’s still unclear from these animal and cell-based experiments precisely how sweeteners initiate or support cancerous changes to cells. Many of these experiments would also be difficult to apply to humans because the amount of sweetener was given at much higher doses than a human would ever consume.

The results from previous research studies are limited, largely because most studies on this subject have only observed the effect of consuming sweeteners without comparing against a group that hasn’t consumed any sweeteners. A recent systematic review of almost 600,000 participants even concluded there was limited evidence to suggest heavy consumption of artificial sweeteners may increase the risk of certain cancers. A review in the BMJ came to a similar conclusion.

Although the findings of this recent study certainly warrant further research, it’s important to acknowledge the study’s limitations. First, food diaries can be unreliable because people aren’t always honest about what they eat or they may forget what they have consumed. Although this study collected food diaries every six months, there’s still a risk people weren’t always accurately recording what they were eating and drinking. Though the researchers partially mitigated this risk by having participants take photos of the food they ate, people still might not have included all the foods they ate.

Based on current evidence, it’s generally agreed that using artificial sweeteners is associated with increased body weight – though researchers aren’t quite certain whether sweeteners directly cause this to happen. Although this recent study took people’s body mass index into account, it’s possible that changes in body fat may have contributed to the development of many of these types of cancers – not necessarily the sweeteners themselves.

Finally, the risk of developing cancer in those who consumed the highest levels of artificial sweeteners compared with those who consumed the lowest amounts was modest – with only at 13% higher relative risk of developing cancer in the study period. So although people who consumed the highest amounts of sweetener had an increased risk of developing cancer, this was still only slightly higher than those with the lowest intake.

Article published in The Conversation

Polish churches receive training to ensure strong and safe communities

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Polish churches receive training to ensure strong and safe communities

The Conference of European Churches (CEC) conducted a training for Polish churches in Warsaw, focusing on crisis management and ways of ensuring security for religious communities. The training was held as part of the Safer and Stronger Communities in Europe (SASCE), a European Commission-funded project, carried out by CEC and other European faith organisations.  

The hybrid event was held on 29 March in cooperation with the Polish Ecumenical Council.

The participants discussed how the low rate of violence in Polish society throughout the pandemic has recently been impacted by the Russian aggression on Ukraine. It was shared that security risks, challenges, and threats in Poland have been triggered by the war, which is reflected in the dynamics of ideologies related to religious identities and any association with them.

The participants identified other issues such as religiously motivated threats, challenges with Islamic militants in the public spaces, far-right extremists, and their activities, which are mainly online and include hate speech, hate crime, and cybersecurity issues. It was noted that these threats translate further into fake news, mostly onset by the war in Ukraine.

The training was conducted by CEC Executive Secretary for Human Rights Dr Elizabeta Kitanovic and Dr Tomasz Bialek, a retired Polish colonel.

The SASCE project was presented by Dr Kitanovic with an emphasis on two cases, namely the vandalism of the Evangelical Lutheran Cemetery in Nowa Wieś Ełcka, which took place in June 2021 in Poland, and the Halle case study in Germany, an attack on a synagogue during Yom Kippur in 2019.

“Cooperation with all religious communities and local authorities is the best way to keep our communities safe,” emphasised Dr Bialek in his message.

“Today’s meeting was of great importance in bringing Polish churches closer and to work more on security together, especially when we are faced with the challenges posed by the war in Ukraine,” said the director of the Polish Ecumenical Council, Rev. Dr Grzegorz Giemza.

On behalf of the Polish Ecumenical Council, Ms Weronika Kluza was nominated as the SASCE ambassador for Poland.

Learn more: Safer and Stronger Communities in Europe

Roberta Metsola in Kyiv and Poland to support Ukrainian people

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Roberta METSOLA, EP President and Volodymyr ZELENSKY
Roberta METSOLA, EP President in Kyiv ( Ukraine ) - Meeting with Volodymyr ZELENSKY, President of Ukraine

The European Parliament President Roberta Metsola was in Kyiv Friday to express the European Union´s support and hope to the Ukrainian people and condemn the unjustified Russian attack. Saturday she visited the Otwock School in Warsaw region hosting Ukrainians fleeing war together with the Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki.

She extended her thanks to Poland, the Prime Minister and the government, to local and regional authorities, as well as to the numerous NGOs and volunteers who have ensured an exceptional effort in receiving and hosting Ukrainian families fleeing the war.

President Metsola stated: “We are impressed by the efforts made by Poland, its communities and citizens. You have given people in need a safe and secure space. This is heartwarming to see it – it is the best of Europe.”

“However, Poland has been carrying the largest weight of the consequences of the war outside Ukraine. Therefore, we need more support to Poland and other countries that are receiving and hosting people who are feeling the war in Ukraine”, she called.

At the Otwock school, President Metsola and Prime Minister Morawiecki exchanged with Ukrainian families. The school offers a temporary place for Ukrainians to rest, spend the night, and eat a warm meal. Children are taken care of and given the comfort that they need.

President Metsola thanked all the volunteers and local community workers who tirelessly help Ukrainians. “Polish people have shown to the world, that with solidarity, you can make a difference. The Ukrainians fleeing war, of whom 90% are women and children, know that they are received here with open arms”, she said.

In her remarks to the press, President Metsola reminded, that the humanitarian crisis in the heart of Europe calls us to do all we can to help our fellow Europeans fleeing the war. The European Union has approved a first set of extraordinary measures to provide emergency support, but it is clear that more resources need to be mobilised urgently.

Returning from Kyiv, President Metsola explained that she had passed in Ukraine a message of support and hope to brave Ukrainians defending their country: “I am proud that the European Union has already done so much by welcoming millions of Ukrainians into our countries, homes and hearts.”

Recalling the promise of Europe to Ukraine to take care of all the Ukrainians fleeing the war, until they can return safely and rebuild their lives and livelihoods, she said: “We need to do more, and we will make sure that everyone is taken care of.”

In a private meeting with Prime Minister Morawiecki, President Metsola thanked the Prime Minister for Poland’s efforts in receiving and hosting the largest number of Ukrainians. She also conveyed to the Prime Minister a message of President Zelenskyy to Europe.

David Peace: ‘Publishers should be less risk-averse’

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David Peace: ‘Publishers should be less risk-averse’

David Peace, 55, is the author of 11 novels, including The Damned Utd, made into a film with Michael Sheen in the lead role as Brian Clough, and the Red Riding Quartet, set amid the Ripper murders in West Yorkshire, where Peace grew up. One of Granta’s best young British novelists in 2003, he won the James Tait Black prize a year later for GB84. Tokyo Redux, out in paperback this month, concludes a true-crime trilogy about US-occupied Japan, and concerns the death (still unexplained) of Sadanori Shimoyama, the first president of Japanese National Railways. Peace spoke from Tokyo, his home since 1994.

What led you to write about postwar Japan?
I really wanted to write about Tokyo after I finished GB84, around 2003. My children were young and I wanted to know the city’s modern history to be able to tell them about the area we live in, the east end, which was one of the areas bombed flat in March 1945. I wanted to try to understand the experience of survival and how the city rebuilt itself into the Lost in Translation Tokyo people are familiar with. Because I’d tried to understand the time and place in which I grew up by examining the effect of crime on its society, I decided to try to write about three crimes in the occupation period.

What drew you to Shimoyama’s case in particular?
It’s generated so many conspiracies and theories; it was the beginnings of the cold war and we’re still living in its legacy. America came to Japan promising democracy, but by 1949, with the Japanese Communist party doing well and the iron curtain going up in Europe, it changed policy – the Reverse Course – and Shimoyama was very much a big part of that. He’s appointed the head of the national railways and gets given a list by America of 100,000 people whose jobs should be cut, mainly leftwing agitators. Posters go up all over Tokyo against him. Then his body turns up on the railroad tracks, decapitated. People asked: was it suicide or murder? And if it was murder, was it the left? The Japanese right? The Americans? The Soviets?

Do you see
Tokyo Year Zero, Occupied City and Tokyo Redux as crime novels?
When I wrote Nineteen Seventy-Four [his debut], I wanted to write the best crime novel ever; I don’t think I did, but that was my intention. Now I don’t think about that any more. It’s odd: in Europe I’m a crime writer but in the UK I’m not. In Germany I’ve won a Deutscher Krimipreis three times – Redux won it – and El País made Redux their crime novel of the year, but I’ve never been invited to the Harrogate crime-writing festival or anything like that. My publishers have a hard time because fundamentally my books are too literary for a crime audience and too crimey for a literary audience. Yet The Damned Utd sold loads of copies, and half that book is told in the second person in a voice I took from Company by Samuel Beckett. Publishers should be less risk-averse. Look at Hawthorn and Child by Keith Ridgway, or The Treatment by Michael Nath; if novels are going to survive, novelists have a responsibility to push the boundaries.

I can’t overstate the education you got from reading the NME between 1979 and 1985

Tokyo Reduxtook10 years, during which time you also wrote a novel about Bill Shankly,the Goldsmiths prize-shortlistedRed or Dead, 700 intensely repetitive pages that don’t exactly seem a relaxing side project…
But it was! I wasn’t getting Redux right; I wrote probably 300,000 words that didn’t go in, because I was obsessed with keeping the novel in 1949, when the great importance of the Shimoyama case is how [views of it] change over time. So those two joyful years writing Red or Dead were a breath of fresh air. I got this huge box of tapes from Shankly’s ghostwriter and all I had to do was sit in my little room in Tokyo and listen to Shankly, a hero of mine, and read football reports and results. It was a real pleasure to write, even though to a lot of people it’s not a pleasure to read; it is quite obsessional, I realise that. Part of my process is that I take notes from what I’m reading and work them into a text to read aloud, trying to attain a kind of poetry; a great deal of it is reconstructing other people’s sentences. I was lucky to be exposed young to TS Eliot, Beckett and Dos Passos, and I’ve always been attracted to that kind of technique.


 

You once described your routine as getting up at 6am, writing 9am-4pm and 10pm-2am, then four hours’ sleep…
It’s worse now because I don’t have the kids. Now I can be up by 5am and really begin. I try to do 6am-noon and afterwards try to have a walk. In the evenings I try to read, not only research, but other novels, to keep a freshness. Trying to make books that do justice to tragedy is the thing that takes its toll, but I’m wary of writers overplaying the toiling; we do this through choice.

What have you been reading lately?
Vladimir Sharov, who won the Russian Booker and passed away in 2018, has been a big revelation for me this past year. His novel Before and During, published by Dedalus and translated by Oliver Ready, is narrative within narrative within narrative; it’s very stimulating in structure, voice, and in how it engages with memory, and Soviet and post-Soviet history. Finding a writer like this is what I live for, to be honest.

What did you read growing up?
I was fortunate to be brought up in a house with a lot of books. My dad read David Storey and Stan Barstow, who came from where I came from, but also Chandler, Maigret, Camus, and more sports books than you’ve ever seen. There was Dewsbury market for comic books and secondhand books, and I can’t overstate the education you got from reading the NME between 1979 and 1985. A review of the Birthday Party would be talking about Dostoevsky; Mark E Smith, Nick Cave, Coil and Morrissey all talked about books, painting, other forms of music, and I just absorbed it all. You could be reading Beckett and Philip K Dick, watching the football and The Singing Detective, going to see a band and a Francis Bacon exhibition; almost every week you were hearing or reading something you’d never seen the like of before. I’m not sure that’s the case these days.

Tokyo Redux is published in paperback on 7 April by Faber (£8.99). To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

Do Cell Phones Cause Cancer? Latest Study Finds No Increase in Risk of Brain Tumors

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Do Cell Phones Cause Cancer? Latest Study Finds No Increase in Risk of Brain Tumors

Longstanding fears that using mobile phones may increase the risk of developing a brain tumor have been reignited recently by the launch of 5G (fifth generation) mobile wireless technologies. Mobile phones emit radiofrequency waves which, if absorbed by tissues, can cause heating and damage.

Since mobile phones are held close to the head, the radiofrequency waves they emit penetrate several centimeters into the brain, with the temporal and parietal lobes being most exposed. This has led to concern that mobile phone users may be at an increased risk of developing brain tumors, with the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifying radiofrequency waves as ‘possibly carcinogenic.’ However, most of the studies that have investigated this question to date have been retrospective studies in which individuals report mobile phone use after a diagnosis of cancer, meaning that the results may be biased.

Today, researchers from Oxford Population Health and IARC have reported the results of a large UK prospective study (a study in which participants are enrolled before they develop the disease(s) in question) to investigate the association between mobile phone use and brain tumor risk. The results are published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

The researchers used data from the UK Million Women Study: an ongoing study which recruited one in four of all UK women born between 1935 and 1950. Around 776,000 participants completed questionnaires about their mobile phone usage in 2001; around half of these were surveyed again in 2011. The participants were then followed up for an average of 14 years through linkage to their NHS records.

Mobile phone use was examined in relation to the risk of various specific types of brain tumor: glioma (a tumor of the nervous system); acoustic neuroma (a tumor of the nerve connecting the brain and inner ear); meningioma (a tumor of the membrane surrounding the brain); and pituitary gland tumors. The researchers also investigated whether mobile phone use was associated with the risk of eye tumors.

Key findings:

  • By 2011, almost 75% of women aged between 60 and 64 years used a mobile phone, and just below 50% of those aged between 75 and 79 years
  • Over the 14 year follow-up period, 3,268 (0.42%) of the women developed a brain tumor
  • There was no significant difference in the risk of developing a brain tumor between those who had never used a mobile phone, and mobile phone users. These included tumors in the temporal and parietal lobes, which are the most exposed parts of the brain
  • There was also no difference in the risk of developing glioma, acoustic neuroma, meningioma, pituitary tumors, or eye tumors
  • There was no increase in the risk of developing any of these types of tumors for those who used a mobile phone daily, spoke for at least 20 minutes a week and/or had used a mobile phone for over 10 years
  • The incidence of right-sided and left-sided tumors was similar in mobile phone users, even though mobile phone use tends to be considerably greater on the right than the left side

Co-investigator Kirstin Pirie from Oxford Population Health’s Cancer Epidemiology Unit said: ‘These results support the accumulating evidence that mobile phone use under usual conditions does not increase brain tumor risk.’

Although the findings are reassuring, it remains unclear whether the risks associated with mobile phone use are different in those who use mobile phones considerably more than was typical of women in this cohort. In this study, only 18% of phone-users reported talking on a mobile phone for 30 minutes or more each week. Those who use mobile phones for long durations can reduce their exposure to radiofrequency waves by using hands-free kits or loudspeakers.

The study did not include children or adolescents, but researchers elsewhere have investigated the association between mobile phone use and brain tumor risk in these groups, not finding any association.

Lead investigator Joachim Schüz from IARC said: ‘Mobile technologies are improving all the time, so that the more recent generations emit substantially lower output power. Nevertheless, given the lack of evidence for heavy users, advising mobile phone users to reduce unnecessary exposures remains a good precautionary approach.’

The study is published in Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

Reference: “Cellular Telephone Use and the Risk of Brain Tumors: Update of the UK Million Women Study” by Joachim Schüz, PhD, Kirstin Pirie, MSc, Gillian K Reeves, PhD, Sarah Floud, PhD, Valerie Beral, FRS, for the Million Women Study Collaborators, 29 March 2022, JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djac042

The study was funded by the UK Medical Research Council and Cancer Research UK.

The EU must act and step up its support to Moldova following the Ukraine war

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EU and Moldova flag
EUBAM (European Union Integrated Border Management Assistance Mission) signatory ceremony with Republic of Moldova and Ukraine
A European Parliament delegation, which travelled to the Republic of Moldova against the backdrop of a worsening security situation in Europe, finalised its visit on Saturday.

In Chișinău, seven members from the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee and Subcommittee on Security and Defence, led by Urmas Paet (Renew Europe, Estonia) and Nathalie Loiseau (Renew Europe, France), met with Moldova’s top political leadership, including President Maia Sandu, Speaker of the Parliament Igor Grosu, Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilița, and Defence Minister Anatolie Nosatîi.

During their visit, which took place from 31 March to 2 April, MEPs praised the generosity of the Moldovan people for hosting large numbers of Ukrainian refugees. They called on the EU to continue scaling up its efforts to support Moldova in providing shelter and help for the large number of refugees fleeing from the Russian aggression.

The delegation expressed the European Parliament’s solidarity with the people and authorities in Moldova amid a worsening security situation in eastern Europe. The European Parliament is visibly active in the region through its parliamentary diplomacy, which included the visit by Parliament’s President Roberta Metsola to the Ukrainian capital Kyiv.

Stronger cooperation to combat cyber threats and fight disinformation

In their exchanges, MEPs addressed several possible repercussions of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on neighbouring countries like Moldova. They also discussed a variety of other related risks currently facing the country, especially in the energy and cyber security spheres, and underlined the need for the EU to assist Moldova in increasing its energy security arrangements and resilience to hybrid threats, in particular cyber attacks and disinformation.

With regard to Moldova’s recent formal application to join the European Union, Members voiced support for the pro-European government and its chosen reform-path to bring the country closer to the EU.

MEPs discussed with the Moldovan Parliament the follow-up to the Memorandum of Understanding between the two institutions and announced that the European Parliament’s Democracy Support Group would visit. The objective will be to assess possible enhanced parliamentary democracy support measures, including in the areas of information security, tackling cyber attacks and disinformation and strengthening overall capacities and resilience of the Moldovan Parliament.

Besides Chișinău, the delegation visited Palanca, a village on the border with Ukraine and host centre for Ukrainians fleeing Russian aggression. At the border, Members were briefed by Moldovan border authorities on the humanitarian situation for refugees in the area and border management practices, and exchanged views with representatives of the European Union Border Assistance Mission to Moldova and Ukraine (EUBAM) and the UN refugee agency UNHCR.

Quotes

“The consequences of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine are strongly felt in Moldova, and the country is a very important recipient of Ukrainian war refugees. As such, Moldova has the full support of the European Union, both politically and economically,” said Urmas Paet.

“The EU should stand in solidarity with Moldova in these difficult times. Both when it comes to providing help to refugees in the country and strengthening its resilience against Russian cyber and disinformation attacks, the EU must support Moldova”, said Nathalie Loiseau.

Audiovisual material

All the audio and video materials from the delegation visit will be made available here.

Background

In addition to the co-Chairs, the delegation will consist of the following MEPs: Siegfried Mureșan (EPP, Romania), Evin Incir (S&D, Sweden), Dragoș Tudorache (Renew Europe, Romania), Susanna Ceccardi (ID, Italy) and Anna Fotyga (ECR, Poland).

On Thursday 24 March, Parliament agreed to provide Moldova with €150 million in macro-financial aid to cover a part of its external financing needs. During the same plenary session, MEPs also gave consent for Frontex to provide operational support for the country, including at its borders with Ukraine.

Cryo-EM Reveals How “911” Molecule Helps Repair DNA Damage

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Cryo-EM Reveals How “911” Molecule Helps Repair DNA Damage

When something goes wrong during DNA replication, cells call their own version of 911 to pause the process and fix the problem — a failsafe that is critical to maintaining health and staving off disease.

Now, scientists at Van Andel Institute and The Rockefeller University have for the first time revealed how a key piece of this repair process — appropriately called the 911 DNA checkpoint clamp — is recruited to the site of DNA damage. The findings, published today in Nature Structural and Molecular Biology, illuminate new insights into the way cells ensure genetic instructions are properly passed from one generation of cells to the next. The project was led by the study’s co-corresponding authors Huilin Li, Ph.D., of VAI, and Michael E. O’Donnell, Ph.D., of The Rockefeller University and Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

“DNA damage can have severe consequences, including cancer and other diseases. Because of this, our cells have a host of checks and balances to ensure DNA integrity,” Li said. “Our high-resolution structure of the 911 DNA checkpoint clamp as it interacts with the molecule that loads it onto the DNA strand gives us a detailed look at the essential process of DNA repair. We hope these insights can be leveraged toward the development of new therapeutic strategies for diseases linked to DNA damage.”

Each day, billions of cells in the human body are replaced through cell division, a process by which one cell splits into two. This fundamental function drives growth and facilitates maintenance of tissues such as skin and muscle. A central part of this system is DNA replication, in which our genetic instruction manual is carefully replicated to ensure each cell has an accurate copy.

DNA damage can result from mistakes in this process or through other factors that directly harm DNA, such as exposure to UV light from the sun or carcinogens such as tobacco smoke. When damage occurs, cells have emergency response systems to either stop replication until the problem can be repaired or to kill the cell, thus preventing the incorrect information from being passed on.

This is where the 911 DNA checkpoint clamp comes in. When DNA damage is detected, the ring-shaped clamp is loaded on the DNA and transported to the site of the error. Once there, it sends a signal to halt cell division while also flagging other repair molecules to remove the damaged DNA and replace it with a corrected sequence.

The structure was determined through use of VAI’s cryo-electron microscopes (cryo-EM), which allow scientists to visualize molecular structures at the atomic level. In the case of the 911 DNA checkpoint clamp, cryo-EM also revealed a surprise: rather than loading onto DNA from the 3’ (or “three prime”) end like all other known DNA clamps, the 911 clamp is loaded onto DNA from the opposite end, called the 5’ (“five prime”) end. This novel and unexpected finding reshapes what we know about DNA replication and sets the stage for further studies in this area.

Reference: “DNA is loaded through the 9-1-1 DNA checkpoint clamp in the opposite direction of the PCNA clamp” by Fengwei Zheng, Roxana E. Georgescu, Nina Y. Yao, Michael E. O’Donnell and Huilin Li, 21 March 2022, Nature Structural & Molecular Biology.
DOI: 10.1038/s41594-022-00742-6

Other study authors are Fengwei Zheng, Ph.D., of VAI; and Roxana E. Georgescu, Ph.D., and Nina Y. Yao, Ph.D., of The Rockefeller University. Cryo-EM data were collected in collaboration with VAI’s Cryo-EM Core and the David Van Andel Advanced Cryo-Electron Microscopy Suite.

Research reported in this publication was supported by Van Andel Institute (Li), The Rockefeller University (O’Donnell) and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under award nos. R01GM115809 (O’Donnell) and R35GM131754 (Li); the Breast Cancer Research Foundation under award no. 20-068 (O’Donnell); and Howard Hughes Medical Institute (O’Donnell). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health or other granting organizations.

About Van Andel Institute

Van Andel Institute (VAI) is committed to improving the health and enhancing the lives of current and future generations through cutting edge biomedical research and innovative educational offerings. Established in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1996 by the Van Andel family, VAI is now home to almost 500 scientists, educators and support staff, who work with a growing number of national and international collaborators to foster discovery. The Institute’s scientists study the origins of cancer, Parkinson’s and other diseases and translate their findings into breakthrough prevention and treatment strategies. Our educators develop inquiry-based approaches for K-12 education to help students and teachers prepare the next generation of problem-solvers, while our Graduate School offers a rigorous, research-intensive Ph.D. program in molecular and cellular biology.

How Arab brands in London are responding to women empowerment by raising the awareness on mental health issues ?

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How Arab brands in London are responding to women empowerment by raising the awareness on mental health issues ?
In honor of women’s month, the Jasmeen media agency in collaboration with the Arab British Chamber in Mayfair has launched its campaign ” Passion Into Action” in a special event that aims to empower and educate women about mental health. Jasmeen Media Agency has attracted top Arab businesses in London such as Atyab Almarshoud and Floward co to identify, understand and respond to signs of mental health challenges by Arab women who are living currently in the UK. The campaign provided the opportunity to train the attendees about top tips and skills needed to overcome the most challenging mental health issues, presented by famous Arab females doctors.

The participation of the Kuwait embassy in London and the Arab Brands in London to support this campaign was even more significant, as the pandemic exacerbated mental health issues globally with high rates of anxiety and depression in particular among all women around the world. Grace the head manager of Atyab AlMarshoud Knightsbridge branch said “it’s our pleasure to support Arab women in London, as part of social responsibility, the brand has been always a great supporter of women’s initiatives. The brand has one of the oldest perfume manufacturers in Kuwait. 

The floward co as part of their social responsibility have joined the Jasmeen media campaign, showing great support and understanding of the global mental health challenges that are facing women’s daily life. Diego has represented the floward company and said: ” We are thankful for this opportunity and look forward to expanding our business through the UK, at the same time our aim is to engage the brand name with the values that we believe in to serve our community”. 

Jasmeen media agency believes in the important role of women in all industries and has dedicated most of their creative work to empowering women with different brands & agencies. The aim is to create dialogues between cultures, especially East and West, and connect women from different backgrounds to come closer together, that’s through exclusive events and workshops. This event has come to connect and engage Arab women with the Arab brands in London, providing new visibility and enhancing a deep relationship with the brand’s values.

To discuss collaboration with the Jasmeen media Agency 

contact: emmajounal.uk@gmail.com

jasmeen.kw@gmail.com
www.jasmeen.co

Press release distributed by Pressat on behalf of Jasmeen Media Agency, on Saturday 2 April, 2022. For more information subscribe and follow https://pressat.co.uk/

Congo: Church authorities and the Government meet to start preparing for Pope Francis’ visit.

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DRC: Church authorities and the Government meet to start preparing for Pope Francis’ visit. - Vatican News

Cisa – Kinshasa, DRC.

The meeting brought together DRC’s Prime Minister Jean-Michel Sama Lukonde, Archbishop Ettore Balestrero, the Apostolic Nuncio to DRC, representatives of CENCO and senior government officials. The focus of the meeting held Thursday was to begin preparations for the papal visit.

Government and Church working together

According to the Minister of Communications and Media, who doubles up as the spokesperson of the Government, the meeting involved among other matters, the setting up of various preparatory committees.

“You remember that recently the Prime Minister, together with the Apostolic Nuncio and the entire hierarchy of CENCO, announced this great event, namely the arrival of the Pope. Since then, several activities have taken place both at the level of the Church and that of the Government,” said Mr Patrick Muyaya, the spokesperson.

He added, “Today, we have agreed to work more closely to see how we can organise a worthy visit that the Pope deserves,” he said.

The Prime Minister has instructed the various sectors of communication, logistics, finances and others to immediately outline guidelines for committees to start working.

“At the level of communication, at the level of logistics, of stewardship, at the level of finances … the committees will present reports regularly. There will be meetings like this until the Pope arrives. This is to make sure that things are done as they should be done,” emphasised Mr Muyaya.

The Pope is coming for everyone

The Apostolic Nuncio said the visit is not only for Catholic Christians alone but is meant for all Congolese, regardless of their beliefs. The Pope’s visit is intended to promote the reconciliation of all.

“The Pope comes not only for Catholics. He comes for everyone. He wants to see everyone. This is why we are committed to preparing the event well. The Church must do the more specific preparatory work concerning the essential aspects of the Pope’s visit … The Pope comes to lead us to Jesus and to invite everyone to reconciliation,” said Archbishop Balestrero.

Exoplanets: Weird, Wondrous Worlds [Video]

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Exoplanets: Weird, Wondrous Worlds [Video]

There’s a huge amount of variety among exoplanets – planets outside our solar system. There are water worlds, lava planets, egg-shaped worlds, planets with multiple suns, and even planets with no sun at all! What can we learn from all this weird, wondrous variety? What does it tell us about both the exoplanets themselves and our own home planet?

https://youtube.com/watch?v=nzA_SszYsL8%3Ffeature%3Doembed

Video transcript:

[Narrator] Earth is awesome.

What would be even more awesome, if we found another earth, or a bunch of earths.

That’s one of the things we’re looking for at NASA as we study exoplanets, planets outside our solar system.

But maybe searching for a planet similar to our own, where conditions might have led to an entirely unique origin of life, finally telling us that we’re not alone in the universe, maybe that’s not your thing.

That’s cool.

Maybe you’re more interested in just how weird exoplanets can be.

We think there are entire worlds covered by deep oceans, water worlds.

Not weird enough for you?

Okay. How about planets covered entirely in oceans of lava?

There are egg-shaped planets, worlds that orbit so close to their stars that they’re pulled by gravity into a lopsided shape.

And there are planets where conditions might be just right for it to rain things like glass, or even rubies and sapphires.

There are planets that orbit pairs and even groups of stars. Imagine having three or four suns in the sky!

On the opposite end of the spectrum, there are the loners, rogue planets wandering out in space with no star to call their own.

There are even planets that orbit dead stars, stars that exploded long ago and left behind a rapidly spinning core called a pulsar. Some of these pulsar planets could be among the oldest in our galaxy, pushing 13 billion years.

Such planets would have witnessed most of the history of the universe. Sadly, nearly all of it without tacos.

Now, we think that we haven’t found one yet, that there probably are exoplanets pretty similar to earth out there.

But in the meantime, there are absolutely tons of weird, wondrous worlds in our galaxy.

(jaunty music)