Big breakthrough in cure for blindness

Big breakthrough in cure for blindness
The breakthrough could lead to the production of artificial tissue grafts made from the variety of cells found in the human retina.
LONDON: In a major breakthrough, an inkjet printer in Britain can print eye cells which can be used to cure human blindness.

For the first time ever, researchers from UK have used inkjet printing technology to successfully print two types of cells from the retina of adult rats - ganglion cells and glial cells.

The breakthrough could lead to the production of artificial tissue grafts made from the variety of cells found in the human retina and may aid in the search to cure blindness.

In their study, the researchers used a piezoelectric inkjet printer device that ejected the cells through a sub-millimetre diameter nozzle when a specific electrical pulse was applied. They also used high speed video technology to record the printing process with high resolution and optimised their procedures accordingly.

"In order for a fluid to print well from an inkjet print head, its properties, such as viscosity and surface tension, need to conform to a fairly narrow range of values. Adding cells to the fluid complicates its properties significantly," Dr Wen-Kai Hsiao from the Inkjet Research Centre in Cambridge University said.

Professor Keith Martin and Dr Barbara Lorber from the John van Geest Centre for Brain Repair, University of Cambridge, said "The loss of nerve cells in the retina is a feature of many blinding eye diseases. The retina is an exquisitely organised structure where the precise arrangement of cells in relation to one another is critical for effective visual function".

"Our study has shown, for the first time, that cells derived from the mature central nervous system, the eye, can be printed using a piezoelectric inkjet printer. Although our results are preliminary and much more work is still required, the aim is to develop this technology for use in retinal repair in the future".

The finding could be a big boon for blind people across the world. India is home to the world's largest number of blind people. Of the 37 million people across the globe who are blind, over 15 million are from India.

Once printed, a number of tests were performed on each type of cell to see how many of the cells survived the process and how it affected their ability to survive and grow.

The cells derived from the retina of the rats were retinal ganglion cells, which transmit information from the eye to certain parts of the brain, and glial cells, which provide support and protection for neurons.

"We plan to extend this study to print other cells of the retina and to investigate if light-sensitive photoreceptors can be successfully printed using inkjet technology. In addition, we would like to further develop our printing process to be suitable for commercial, multi-nozzle print heads," Professor Martin concluded.

At the moment the results are preliminary and provide proof-of-principle that an inkjet printer can be used to print two types of cells from the retina of adult rats.

This is the first time the technology has been used successfully to print mature central nervous system cells and the results showed that printed cells remained healthy and retained their ability to survive and grow in culture.

The ability to arrange cells into highly defined patterns and structures has recently elevated the use of 3D printing in the biomedical sciences to create cell-based structures for use in regenerative medicine.

BLINDNESS IN INDIA

India is now home to the world's largest number of blind people.

Of the 37 million people across the globe who are blind, over 15 million are from India.

75% of these are cases of avoidable blindness.

India faces severe shortage of optometrists and donated eyes for the treatment of blindness.

While India needs 40,000 optometrists, it has only 8,000.

India needs 2.5 lakh donated eyes every year.

India's 109 eye banks manage to collect a maximum of just 25,000 eyes, 30% of which can't be used.

India has only 12,000 ophthalmologists.

153 million people in the country require reading glasses but do not have access to them.

India has just 20 optometry schools which produce just 1,000 optometrists annually as against the 17 million people being added to the population during the same period.

Of the 15 million blind people in India, three million, 26% of whom are children, suffer due to corneal disorders.

But only 10,000 corneal transplants are being done every year due to the shortage of donated eyes.

India's health ministry expects to reach its blindness elimination target of 0.3% by 2015, five years before the WHO deadline of 2020.

testing delivery with drones, CEO Bezos says



Amazon testing delivery with drones, CEO Bezos says
Bezos said the drones, unmanned vehicles that fly through the air, could deliver packages that weigh up to five pounds (2.3 kg).
WASHINGTON: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos revealed Sunday that his company is looking to the future with plans to use "octocopter" mini-drones to fly small packages to consumers in just 30 minutes.

The US retail giant's ambitious project still requires additional safety testing and federal approval, butBezos estimated that Amazon "Prime Air" would be up and running within four to five years.

A demo video posted on the company's website showed the tiny robotic devices picking up packages in small yellow buckets from Amazon's fulfillment centers and then whizzing through the air to deliver the items to customers just 30 minutes after they made their purchase on Amazon.com.

"I know this looks like science fiction. It's not," Bezos told CBS television's "60 Minutes" program.

"We can do half-hour delivery... and we can carry objects, we think, up to five pounds (2.3 kilograms), which covers 86 percent of the items that we deliver."

The mini-drones are powered by electric motors and could cover areas within a 10-mile (16-kilometer) radius of fulfillment centers, thus covering a significant portion of the population in urban areas.

They operate autonomously and drop the items at the target locations thanks to GPS coordinates transmitted to them.

"It's very green, it's better than driving trucks around," said Bezos. Amazon said the octocopters would be "ready to enter commercial operations as soon as the necessary regulations are in place," noting that the Federal Aviation Administration was actively working on rules for unmanned aerial vehicles.

It projected a more optimistic timeline than Bezos himself for the project to be activated, saying the FAA's rules could be in place as early as 2015 and that Amazon Prime Air would be ready at that time.

Bezos hinted that part of the motivation behind the mini-drones was to make sure Amazon remains on the cutting edge of the retail industry.

"Companies have short life spans... And Amazon will be disrupted one day," he said.

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Brain gain: Secret of crows' intelligence decoded

Brain gain: Secret of crows' intelligence decoded
Behavioural biologists have even called crows "feathered primates" because the birds make and use tools, are able to remember large numbers of feeding sites, and plan their social behaviour according to what other members of their group do.
BERLIN: Crows are no bird-brains! Scientists have for the first time demonstrated how the brains of crows produce intelligent behaviour when the birds have to make strategic decisions.

Researchers have long suspected that corvids - the family of birds including ravens, crows and magpies - are highly intelligent.

Behavioural biologists have even called crows "feathered primates" because the birds make and use tools, are able to remember large numbers of feeding sites, and plan their social behaviour according to what other members of their group do.

This high level of intelligence might seem surprising because birds' brains are constructed in a fundamentally different way from those of mammals, including primates - which are usually used to investigate these behaviours.

Neurobiologists Lena Veit and Professor Andreas Nieder from Eberhard Karls University of Tubingen in Germany investigated the brain physiology of crows' intelligent behaviour.

They trained crows to carry out memory tests on a computer. The crows were shown an image and had to remember it. Shortly afterwards, they had to select one of two test images on a touchscreen with their beaks based on a switching behavioural rules.

One of the test images was identical to the first image, the other different. Sometimes the rule of the game was to select the same image, and sometimes it was to select the different one.

The crows were able to carry out both tasks and to switch between them as appropriate. That demonstrates a high level of concentration and mental flexibility which few animal species can manage - and which is an effort even for humans.

The crows were quickly able to carry out these tasks even when given new sets of images. The researchers observed neuronal activity in the nidopallium caudolaterale, a brain region associated with the highest levels of cognition in birds.

One group of nerve cells responded exclusively when the crows had to choose the same image - while another group of cells always responded when they were operating on the "different image" rule.

By observing this cell activity, the researchers were often able to predict which rule the crow was following even before it made its choice.

The study published in Nature Communications provides valuable insights into the parallel evolution of intelligent behaviour.

"Many functions are realised differently in birds because a long evolutionary history separates us from these direct descendants of the dinosaurs," said Lena Veit.

"This means that bird brains can show us an alternative solution out of how intelligent behaviour is produced with a different anatomy," Veit said.