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A Gemini adaptive optics image of the
star 1RSX J160929.1-210524 and its likely ~8 Jupiter-mass companion
(within red circle) in this handout released Sept. 15, 2008. Scientists
have snapped the first images of a planet outside our solar system that is
orbiting a star very much like the sun. In findings announced on Sept. 15,
2008, University of Toronto scientists said they used the Gemini North
telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii to take direct pictures of the planet,
which is about the size of Jupiter but with eight times the mass. This
planet and the star it seems to orbit are located in our Milky Way galaxy
about 500 light years from Earth, the scientists said.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 (Xinhua) -- In its annual list of
the year's top 10 scientific breakthroughs, the prestige scientific journal
Science has given top honors to research that produced "made-to-order" cell
lines by reprogramming cells from ill patients.
"These cell lines, and the techniques for producing
them, offer long-sought tools for understanding -- and hopefully someday curing
-- difficult-to-study diseases such as Parkinson's disease and type 1 diabetes,"
Science said Thursday in a statement.
Two years ago, in experiments with mice, researchers
showed that they could wipe out a cell's developmental "memory" by inserting
just four genes. Once returned to its pristine, embryonic state, the cell could
then be coaxed to become an altogether different type of cell.
This year, scientists built on this work with
spectacular results. Two research teams took cells from patients suffering from
a variety of diseases and reprogrammed them into stem cells. A third research
team skipped the embryonic state altogether and, working with mouse cells,
turned one type of mature pancreas cells, called exocrine cells, directly into
another type, called beta cells.
The new cell lines will be major tools for
understanding how diseases arise and develop, and they may also prove useful in
screens for potential drugs. Eventually, if scientists can master cellular
reprogramming so that it's more finely controlled, efficient and safe, patients
may someday be treated with healthy versions of their own cells.
The other nine scientific achievements of 2008
selected by Science are:
-- Exoplanets: For the first time this year,
astronomers directly observed planets orbiting other stars, using special
telescope techniques to distinguish the planets' faint light from the stars'
bright glare.
-- Expanding the catalog of cancer genes: By
sequencing genes from various cancer cells, including pancreatic cancer and
glioblastoma, two of the deadliest cancers, researchers turned up dozens of
mutations that remove the brakes on cell division and send the cell down the
path to cancer.
-- New mystery materials: High-temperature
superconductors are materials that carry electricity without resistance at
inexplicably high temperatures. In 2008, researchers created a stir by
discovering a whole second family of high-temperature superconductors,
consisting of iron compounds instead of copper-and-oxygen-compounds.
-- Watching proteins at work: Biochemists encountered
major surprises this year as they watched proteins bind to their targets, switch
a cell's metabolic state and contribute to a tissue's properties.
-- Toward renewable energy on demand: This year,
researchers found a promising new tool for storing excess electricity generated
from part-time sources like wind and solar power, on industrial scale. A
cobalt-phosphorus catalyst that's relatively easy to come by can use electricity
to split water to free its hydrogen, which can in turn be fed into fuel cells to
produce electricity again.
-- The video embryo: In 2008, researchers observed in
unprecedented detail the dance of cells in a developing embryo, recording and
analyzing movies that trace the movements of the roughly 16,000 cells that make
up the zebrafish embryo by the end of its first day of development.
-- "Good" fat: In a study that may offer new
approaches to treating obesity, scientists discovered that they could morph
"good" brown fat, which burns "bad" white fat to generate heat for the body,
into muscle and vice versa.
-- Calculating the weight of the world: Physicists
now have the calculations in hand to show that the standard model -- which
describes most of the visible universe's particles and their interactions --
accurately predicts how much mass protons and neutrons have.
-- Faster, cheaper genome sequencing: Researchers
reported a flurry of genome sequences this year -- from woolly mammoths to human
cancer patients -- aided by a variety of sequencing technologies that are much
speedier and cheaper than the ones used to sequence the first human genome.