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The seventh annual Pacific Rim Summit on Industrial Biotechnology and Bioenergy is the original conference dedicated solely to the growth of the industrial biotechnology and bioenergy sectors in North America and the Asia-Pacific region. This year's event was held in Vancouver, Canada from October 10th - 12th, 2012 at the Westin Bayshore.

  

At the Life Sciences Quest, high school students from Missouri's urban, suburban, and rural communities learn about agriculture, biotechnology and life sciences. This week-long program takes place on the University of Missouri campus, and serves as a pre-college summer program for students interested in careers in those fields.

 

Photo by Hli Yang | © 2016 - Curators of the University of Missouri

15 February 2016, Rome, Italy - Veronica McGuire, Executive Director, Program, Regulatory and Trade Policy, Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Canada. FAO International Symposium on “The Role of Agricultural Biotechnologies in Sustainable Food Systems and Nutrition”. Side Event. Practical approaches to regulation and oversight of agricultural biotechnology: Experiences from developed and developing countries. FAO headquarters (Iran room).

 

Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Giorgio Cosulich de Pecine. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.

Dr Jolene Schuster's Biotechnology labs have concentrated on DNA study during April, 2021, and she explains the lesson plan as follows: "The ability to make many copies of select regions of DNA is incredibly valuable, not just in the biochemistry lab, but also in medicine, agriculture, forensic science, evolutionary biology, and many other applications. The basic process is called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR.) Biotechnology class used PCR to amplify a short non-coding region of their own 16th chromosome to create a class genetic distribution profile. Students harvested some cells from inside their cheeks, extracted a small amount of DNA, and mixed the DNA with the right components to set up the PCR reaction. The reaction involves repeated copying of a specific target DNA sequence. The PCR products are analyzed for size and relative concentrations after the reaction. This particular non-coding region, the Alu unit at the PV92 locus, has been used to establish relatedness of individuals for many purposes." Photography by Glenn Minshall.

In a series of experiments, we began to explore the world of oncofertility research that is taking place at Northwestern University, where they are working to develop a system that will allow women who are diagnosed with cancer to potentially preserve their fertility by performing experiments to help follicles (containing mature egg cells) to develop in vitro. In this program, we experimented with the very same substances they use in the lab and got a sneak peek into what a research physician does.

Dr Jolene Schuster's Biotechnology labs have concentrated on DNA study during April, 2021, and she explains the lesson plan as follows: "The ability to make many copies of select regions of DNA is incredibly valuable, not just in the biochemistry lab, but also in medicine, agriculture, forensic science, evolutionary biology, and many other applications. The basic process is called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR.) Biotechnology class used PCR to amplify a short non-coding region of their own 16th chromosome to create a class genetic distribution profile. Students harvested some cells from inside their cheeks, extracted a small amount of DNA, and mixed the DNA with the right components to set up the PCR reaction. The reaction involves repeated copying of a specific target DNA sequence. The PCR products are analyzed for size and relative concentrations after the reaction. This particular non-coding region, the Alu unit at the PV92 locus, has been used to establish relatedness of individuals for many purposes." Photography by Glenn Minshall.

Dr. B. Lal Institute of Biotechnology is extremely proud of Ms. Moomal Acharya who has been selected at Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda for the medical biotechnology examination.

 

www.blalbiotech.com/

Study of the River Lee (East London) pollution.

 

cesarharada.com/2008/biotech/

gave birth to : www.urbanspacestation.org/

conitnues here : opensailing.net/

Built between 1908 and 1910, this Prairie and Sullivanesque-style house was designed by George Grant Elmslie and Louis Sullivan for Josephine Crane Bradley, and her husband, Harold C. Bradley, a Biotechnology professor at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. The house is not only one the most significant of the many houses designed during Sullivan’s career, but is one of only a few houses designed under Sullivan of such a substantial size to be located in a suburban setting. It is the most notable large surviving residential commission of Sullivan’s career, given that the most comparable building, the Babson House in Riverside, Illinois (1907-1909), was demolished in 1960 to make way for a residential subdivision. The Bradley House is universally considered to have been very successful in connecting the exterior with the interior, with cantilevered sleeping porches at the ends of the gabled south wing on the second floor, wrapped by casement windows, making the house appear to be floating above the surrounding landscape, while bay windows on the first floor create cozy interior spaces surrounded on three sides by the outdoors. The house’s interior, however, is more controversial - it did not feature an interior layout or design befitting the Bradley family, instead, being far better suited to the needs of the fraternity that has occupied the house for the vast majority of its existence. In addition to being unsatisfactory to the client, the house was also designed at a time when Sullivan’s professional and personal lives were beginning to fall apart, making it difficult for him to get any commissions for work, or maintain interpersonal relationships. Sullivan was also descending into alcoholism, with this downward trend continuing for the rest of his life. Sullivan’s career in 1908 was a far cry from where it had been a decade and a half prior when he was one of several architects selected to design buildings for the 1893 Columbian Exposition (World’s Fair) in Chicago. Due to how turbulent Sullivan’s life was at the time, historical sources state matter-of-factly that most of the house’s design felt to George Elmslie, with Sullivan only giving occasional input. Others claim profusely that Sullivan was the main designer, and that Elmslie’s role was overstated. However, Elmslie did leave Sullivan’s firm before the house was completed, in 1909, to partner with William Gray Purcell and form the firm of Purcell and Elmslie. Elmslie’s new firm would go on to design another house for the Bradley family less than five years after this house was completed. Despite the context surrounding its creation and the controversial debate over who should receive credit for designing it, the house is a notable work of architecture and quite significant, and was done under Louis Sullivan’s leadership.

 

The house is T-shaped with two wings, the north wing being wider and featuring a double-gable roof, while the smaller south wing featuring a gabled roof. The first floor of the house and the base are clad in red brick, with several hipped roof sections that extend out past the footprint of the second floor, including one-story bay windows on the east and south facades. The house features art glass casement windows, a porch at the entrance on the north side of the building, and a porch on the first floor at the western end of the south wing, which is tucked underneath the second floor of the house. Above the brick base, the house is clad in wood board and batten siding oriented horizontally and wooden shingles, all of which is painted black. Decorative wooden panels with Sullivanesque ornament are present at the cantilevered east and west ends of the south wing, which form spandrels below the windows of the sleeping porches and long beams that terminate at vertical trim pieces, echoing the motifs found on Sullivan’s other work. The cantilevered ends of the south wing are supported by four brick piers, which contrast with the dark wooden cladding around them. The interior of the house features beautiful decorative woodwork, wooden floors, coffered ceilings with wooden beams, decorative bronze sconce and pendant light fixtures, a staircase screened by a row of wooden slats, decorative Sullivanesque wooden railings, built-in furniture, and brick fireplaces with mosaic tile inlay panels.

 

Shortly after moving into the house, the Bradleys found that it was too big and expensive to maintain, hiring the firm of Purcell and Elmslie to design a smaller house in nearby Shorewood Hills, Wisconsin, which was completed around 1915. They subsequently sold the larger house to the Sigma Phi Fraternity Chapter affiliated with the University of Wisconsin - Madison, who have owned the house ever since. The house suffered a devastating fire in 1972 that destroyed the roof and heavily damaged the second floor, but was rebuilt faithfully and carefully to its original design. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972, and was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1976. It is also a contributing structure in the University Heights Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. The house today continues to serve as a fraternity house, and has been wonderfully maintained and preserved under their generational stewardship.

The seventh annual Pacific Rim Summit on Industrial Biotechnology and Bioenergy is the original conference dedicated solely to the growth of the industrial biotechnology and bioenergy sectors in North America and the Asia-Pacific region. This year's event was held in Vancouver, Canada from October 10th - 12th, 2012 at the Westin Bayshore.

  

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

Discussions about biotechnology can be a bit like a boxing match. In one corner are its proponents, sure of the positive results that biotechnological research can have on the way we live. In the other corner, the opponents of biotechnological research, wary of the claims made by scientists, resistant to the growing number of products created through biotechnology. In the center of the ring are the middleof-

the-road folks, not quite sure what biotechnology is, hoping it can do what it says but apprehensive about the consequences.

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

Longer growth curve for startup companies in drug discovery

The seventh annual Pacific Rim Summit on Industrial Biotechnology and Bioenergy is the original conference dedicated solely to the growth of the industrial biotechnology and bioenergy sectors in North America and the Asia-Pacific region. This year's event was held in Vancouver, Canada from October 10th - 12th, 2012 at the Westin Bayshore.

  

The Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center officially opened its doors in September 2006. The $15 million, 62,000 square foot facility was funded in part by a grant from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and created and owned in a joint partnership of the Hepatitis B Foundation and Delaware Valley College. The Center is a place of discovery, education and job creation with a shared vision of sustaining the vitality and beauty of Bucks County and the region. It seeks to advance biotechnology, maximize synergies between nonprofit scientists and their commercial colleagues, and launch new ideas and discoveries that will make a difference.

 

www.furiarubel.com

Variation at a gene locus revealed by restriction endonucleases. DNA was extracted from two wheat varieties, Sportsman (S) and Highbury (H), and cleavedwith the restriction endonucleases EcoRl and Bam HI. The fragments were separated by electrophoresis through agarose and transferred to nitrocellulose (21). They were then hybridized with 32 P-labeled ribosomal DNA purified by molecular cloning. The excess labeled DNA was removed by washing and the wheat rDNA fragments were revealed by autoradiography (2). The numbers represent the length of the DNA fragments in kilobase pairs. The designation of the bands to the Nor loci on chromosomes 1B and 6B was concluded from a separate genetic analysis.

 

books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=bpmNrtcPEboC&lpg=PA...

 

Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)

Dr Jolene Schuster's Biotechnology labs have concentrated on DNA study during April, 2021, and she explains the lesson plan as follows: "The ability to make many copies of select regions of DNA is incredibly valuable, not just in the biochemistry lab, but also in medicine, agriculture, forensic science, evolutionary biology, and many other applications. The basic process is called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR.) Biotechnology class used PCR to amplify a short non-coding region of their own 16th chromosome to create a class genetic distribution profile. Students harvested some cells from inside their cheeks, extracted a small amount of DNA, and mixed the DNA with the right components to set up the PCR reaction. The reaction involves repeated copying of a specific target DNA sequence. The PCR products are analyzed for size and relative concentrations after the reaction. This particular non-coding region, the Alu unit at the PV92 locus, has been used to establish relatedness of individuals for many purposes." Photography by Glenn Minshall.

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

16 February 2016, Rome, Italy - FAO International Symposium on “The Role of Agricultural Biotechnologies in Sustainable Food Systems and Nutrition”, Student Interactive Session: Bringing Fresh Perspectives. FAO headquarters (Sheikh Zayed Centre).

 

Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Pier Paolo Cito. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.

ILRI Research Assistant IV – Animal Breeder/Geneticist (photo credit: ILRI).

Students in the Biotechnology and Chemistry Labs of the Lake Nona campus on September 20, 2017 in Orlando, Fla.

All sampled chickens were carefully photographed to record morphological traits in Horro, some 200 km northwest of Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa, Chicken Health 4 Development (CH4D) Project led by ILRI's Biotechnology Theme (photo credit: ILRI/Collins).

As part of the fifth annual STEM Week, Lt. Governor Karyn Polito tours the Gloucester Biotechnology Academy at the Gloucester Marine Genomics Institute (GMGI) on Oct. 18, 2022. [Joshua Qualls/Governor’s Press Office]

The Revolution will be Bio-Based

Genomics Forum and Innogen event at the 2012 ESRC Festival of Social Science

Dr Jolene Schuster's Biotechnology labs have concentrated on DNA study during April, 2021, and she explains the lesson plan as follows: "The ability to make many copies of select regions of DNA is incredibly valuable, not just in the biochemistry lab, but also in medicine, agriculture, forensic science, evolutionary biology, and many other applications. The basic process is called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR.) Biotechnology class used PCR to amplify a short non-coding region of their own 16th chromosome to create a class genetic distribution profile. Students harvested some cells from inside their cheeks, extracted a small amount of DNA, and mixed the DNA with the right components to set up the PCR reaction. The reaction involves repeated copying of a specific target DNA sequence. The PCR products are analyzed for size and relative concentrations after the reaction. This particular non-coding region, the Alu unit at the PV92 locus, has been used to establish relatedness of individuals for many purposes." Photography by Glenn Minshall.

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

Developments in biotechnology and biosafety, climate change concerns, food insecurity, the growing relevance of agri-food chains, demands for greater rural producer empowerment, and in the changes in information and communication technologies combine to provide many new opportunities for growth and renewal for national agriculture research and extension systems.

 

Photo credit: ©FAO

Copyright ©FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.

For more information, contact the FAO Photo Library: photo-library@fao.org

 

Dr Jolene Schuster's Biotechnology labs have concentrated on DNA study during April, 2021, and she explains the lesson plan as follows: "The ability to make many copies of select regions of DNA is incredibly valuable, not just in the biochemistry lab, but also in medicine, agriculture, forensic science, evolutionary biology, and many other applications. The basic process is called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR.) Biotechnology class used PCR to amplify a short non-coding region of their own 16th chromosome to create a class genetic distribution profile. Students harvested some cells from inside their cheeks, extracted a small amount of DNA, and mixed the DNA with the right components to set up the PCR reaction. The reaction involves repeated copying of a specific target DNA sequence. The PCR products are analyzed for size and relative concentrations after the reaction. This particular non-coding region, the Alu unit at the PV92 locus, has been used to establish relatedness of individuals for many purposes." Photography by Glenn Minshall.

Dr Jolene Schuster's Biotechnology labs have concentrated on DNA study during April, 2021, and she explains the lesson plan as follows: "The ability to make many copies of select regions of DNA is incredibly valuable, not just in the biochemistry lab, but also in medicine, agriculture, forensic science, evolutionary biology, and many other applications. The basic process is called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR.) Biotechnology class used PCR to amplify a short non-coding region of their own 16th chromosome to create a class genetic distribution profile. Students harvested some cells from inside their cheeks, extracted a small amount of DNA, and mixed the DNA with the right components to set up the PCR reaction. The reaction involves repeated copying of a specific target DNA sequence. The PCR products are analyzed for size and relative concentrations after the reaction. This particular non-coding region, the Alu unit at the PV92 locus, has been used to establish relatedness of individuals for many purposes." Photography by Glenn Minshall.

U.S. Senator Tom Udall (D-NM) tours The BioScience Center in Albuquerque and meets with entrepreneurs to discuss the work he is doing to support startups and the biotechnology sector in New Mexico.

Global Forum on Biotechnology - The Evolving Promise of the Life Sciences

12 November 2012

OECD Conference Centre, Paris

bit.ly/10iL28x

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

The BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology is the world’s largest industrial biotech gathering which brings together business executives, government officials, researchers and industry leaders from over 35 countries. This year's event was held in Orlando, Florida from April 29 – May 2, 2012 at the Gaylord Palms

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