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===== Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory ===== | ===== Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory ===== | ||
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+ | June 16, 1904. The [[:Carnegie Institution]] of Washington hosts a gala dedication ceremony on the grounds of the Bio Lab to mark the formal opening of the Station for Experimental Evolution (SEE) at Cold Spring Harbor. The plans for the station had been **suggested by eugenicist** [[:Charles Davenport]], | ||
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+ | The Station was located on 9 acres of land, in Cold Spring Harbor. It was leased for 50 years upon the Station' | ||
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+ | The Station for Experimental Evolution was eventually renamed the Carnegie Building, and is currently home to the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Library & Archives (CSHL, 2015). | ||
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+ | Valuable detailed [[:Eugenics Timeline]] includes policies & laws in USA and Canada. | ||
+ | eg 1918. [[:Madison Grant]] (1865-1937, Yale law degree 1890) was a stalwart of the Nativist/ | ||
==== Great Gatsby Era History ==== | ==== Great Gatsby Era History ==== | ||
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The South Fork of LI is "The Hamptons" | The South Fork of LI is "The Hamptons" | ||
- | Between the forks is Shelter Island notorious for bootleggers, | + | Between the forks is Shelter Island notorious for bootleggers, |
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+ | There are two ferries that leave from Orient Point, one to New London for the public and separate ferry for cleared personnel to Plum Island. If we sail a little past Plum Island there is Fischer' | ||
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+ | Somewhere between Yale, Plum Island and Cold Spring Harbor Lyme disease appeared spread by ticks & deer who swim quite far. | ||
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+ | ==== Elite Society Founders Eugenics Archive History ==== | ||
+ | ((https:// | ||
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+ | The area of study named was supported by The Long Island Biological Association. Among LIBA's founders and early patrons were such notable American entrepreneurs as [[:Walter Jennings]] and [[:George Pratt]], founders of the [[:Standard Oil Company]]; [[:J.P. Morgan]], the banker; Marshall Field, III, the Chicago storekeeper; | ||
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+ | Mr. and Mrs. [[:Marshall Field, III]] (left, in the center) sponsored a gala outdoor circus party in 1932 on their Long Island estate, Caumsett, to benefit the Long Island Association. Guests, each paying $5 for dinner, included [[:George Gershwin]] and [[:Fred Astaire]] (right, second from the right). | ||
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+ | The membership applied its wealth and enthusiasm with remarkable results, raising $130,000 during LIBA's first five years. Wawepex was renovated as a research laboratory, [[: | ||
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+ | Photo - Carnegie Station for Experimental Evolution, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. | ||
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+ | Circa 1915 - The Harry H. Laughlin Papers, Truman State University, Lantern Slides ((https:// | ||
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+ | The [[:Long Island Biological Association]] | ||
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+ | [[:Reginald Harris[[ became the Biological Laboratory' | ||
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+ | Nichols Memorial Laboratory (left) was named for George Lane Nichols, the great-nephew of [[:Franklin Hooper]], president of the [[:Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences]] when the Biological Laboratory was founded. James Memorial Laboratory (right) was built of solid concrete to provide a vibration-free environment for exacting biophysics research. | ||
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+ | With construction of two winterized facilities, [[:Nichols Memorial Laboratory]] (1928) and [[:James Memorial Laboratory]] (1929), year-round research programs in experimental physiology and biophysics were begun. The Laboratory' | ||
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+ | Hugo Fricke (left) was the director of biophysics at the [[: | ||
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+ | The Long Island Biological Association | ||
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+ | Harris saw that the rapid influx of ideas from chemistry, physics and mathematics was splintering biology into a number of subdisciplines. Thus, in 1933, he organized the first Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology as a means to increase dialogue between the various scientific factions. Sequestered on the tranquil Laboratory grounds, geneticists, | ||
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+ | Participants at the first Symposium on Quantitative Biology in 1933 (above), with organizer [[:Reginald Harris]] in the foreground. In ensuing years the Symposium was the forum for the first public presentation of both [[:James Watson]]' | ||
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+ | The merit of Harris' | ||
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+ | ==== Official Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory ==== | ||
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+ | In their own words: "The First Hundred Years a History of Man and Science - The Quantification of Biology" | ||
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+ | Historically, | ||
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+ | [[:William K. Vanderbilt]] (above, left) and [[:J.P. Morgan]] (above, right) were among the wealthy local citizens who founded the [[:Long Island Biological Association]] in 1924. Vanderbilt also served as a member of the board of directors. | ||
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+ | Whereas classical evolutionary theory described macro-order changes that took place over millennia, the experimental evolutionists attempted to induce micro-scale hereditary changes over the course of several generations. Their laboratory experiments were simplified abstractions of the grand sweep of evolution. The use of model systems, where variables could be controlled and external influences minimized, was borrowed directly from the physica1l sciences. | ||
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+ | **The eugenics movement introduced biology to rigorous mathematical evaluation. In the course of analyzing hereditary data**, the influential European eugenicists [[:Francis Galton]], a cousin of [[:Charles Darwin]], and [[:Karl Pearson]] developed most of the key statistical measures, including standard deviation, regression, and correlation. Biometry, the application of statistics to biology, became especially important in the emerging field of ecology. | ||
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+ | ==== Funding Research ==== | ||
+ | The Carnegie Institution and John D. Rockefeller' | ||
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+ | ==== Charles Davenport ==== | ||
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+ | For many years Charles B. Davenport was director of all three institutions at Cold Spring Harbor: the Biological Laboratory, the [[:Carnegie Department of Experimental Evolution]], | ||
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+ | Cold Spring Harbor became a summer camp for science. Courses on zoology, bacteriology, | ||
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+ | In 1898, Charles Davenport, a professor of the evolutionary biology at [[:Harvard University]], | ||
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+ | Between 1890 and 1910, more than 2,000 high school and college teachers came to Cold Spring Harbor to learn what could not be learned from textbooks alone. | ||
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+ | === CSH War on Cancer === | ||
+ | On December 23, 1971, President Richard M. Nixon signed the [[:National Cancer Act]], authorizing the most massively-funded civilian war in history. It was the culmination of the growth of federal sponsorship of medical research that began with the wartime OSRD. Over the ensuing 10 years, $7.5 billion in support, funneled through the [[:National Cancer Institute]], | ||
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+ | By the late 1960s, the confluence of [[: | ||
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+ | A Cold Spring Harbor course taught each summer since 1958 was instrumental in introducing researchers to the new techniques for culturing animal cells and their viruses. The potential power of the tumor virus model system prompted a migration of former phage biologists into the field of basic cancer research. Bacteriophages had provided a means to probe the genetics of bacterial cells; now the tumor viruses made possible a similar approach to mammalian cells. | ||
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+ | ==== Experimental Evolution and Genetics Research ==== | ||
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+ | Although the staff of the Carnegie Institution’s Station for Experimental Evolution was small at first, important early work was performed both in and around the Main Building. Immediately after receiving his Ph.D. from the [[: | ||
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+ | By 1908 he was reporting in the Carnegie Institution of Washington Yearbook experiments that became world-famous. Shull showed that when two different but carefully inbred strains of [[:corn]] were crossed, the yield was 20% higher than if each strain were allowed to self-pollinate. This phenomenon of “hybrid vigor” that he demonstrated experimentally was later employed in commercial seed production to create high-yielding strains that today make corn the most important agricultural crop in the United States. | ||
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+ | Also in 1908, in the basement of the Main Building, Charles Banta conducted cave experiments aimed at inducing color mutations in tadpoles of the tiger salamander. | ||
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+ | In 1914, the Animal House (now McClintock Laboratory) was completed and the animal breeding experiments at Cold Spring Harbor were moved from the Main Building to this new facility. | ||
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+ | In 1923, [[: | ||
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+ | His work was done on the second floor of the Main Building. In the late 1930s Demerec and Calvin Bridges, who was at the [[: | ||
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+ | [[:Barbara McClintock]] was a member of the Carnegie staff and the cornfields where she found **evidence of movable genetic switches—“jumping genes”—that can turn genes on and off** were next to the Main Building. | ||
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+ | As early as 1946 it had become apparent that a major new building would be required if the genetics program at Cold Spring Harbor were to have a future in a scientific world in which molecules as well as chromosomes were investigated. The 1905 Main Building and the 1914 Animal House were inadequate for the kinds of research they now wished to do. | ||
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+ | In 1953 the Demerec Laboratory was completed and the Main Building officially became the Carnegie Library. In addition to housing laboratories, | ||
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+ | ==== Viral Eugenics ==== | ||
+ | {{ :: | ||
+ | Role of spike in the pathogenic and antigenic behavior of SARS-CoV-2 BA.1 Omicron | ||
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+ | Da-Yuan Chen, Devin Kenney, Chue-Vin Chin, Alexander H Tavares, Nazimuddin Khan, Hasahn L Conway, GuanQun Liu, Manish C Choudhary, Hans P Gertje, Aoife K OConnell, Darrell N Kotton, Alexandra Herrmann, View ORCID ProfileArmin Ensser, John H Connor, Markus Bosmann, Jonathan Z Li, Michaela U Gack, Susan C Baker, Robert N Kirchdoerfer, | ||
+ | doi: https:// | ||
+ | This article is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review | ||
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+ | Abstract | ||
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+ | The recently identified, globally predominant SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant (BA.1) is highly transmissible, | ||
+ | Competing Interest Statement | ||
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+ | The authors have declared no competing interest. ((https:// | ||
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+ | ==== Virus Promoters, DNA Clones and GMO Rice ==== | ||
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+ | Discovery of a novel merbecovirus DNA clone contaminating agricultural rice sequencing datasets from Wuhan, China | ||
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+ | Abstract {{ :: | ||
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+ | HKU4-related coronaviruses are a group of betacoronaviruses belonging to the same merbecovirus subgenus as Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), which causes severe respiratory illness in humans with a mortality rate of over 30%. | ||
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+ | The high **genetic similarity** between HKU4-related coronaviruses and MERS-CoV makes them an attractive subject of research for modeling potential zoonotic spillover scenarios. In this study, we identify a novel [[: | ||
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+ | The datasets were generated by the [[:Huazhong Agricultural University]] in early 2020. We were able to assemble the complete viral genome sequence, which revealed that it is a novel HKU4-related merbecovirus. | ||
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+ | The **assembled genome is 98.38% identical to the closest known full genome** sequence, Tylonycteris pachypus bat isolate BtTp-GX2012. Using in silico modeling, we identified that the novel HKU4-related coronavirus spike protein likely binds to human dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP4), the receptor used by MERS-CoV. We further identified that the novel HKU4-related coronavirus genome has been inserted into a bacterial artificial chromosome in a format consistent with previously published coronavirus [[: | ||
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+ | Additionally, | ||
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+ | Our findings contribute to the knowledge of HKU4-related [[: | ||
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+ | Competing Interest Statement | ||
- | There are twoferries that leave from Orient Point to New Haven for the public and separate ferry for cleared personnel to Plumb Island. If we sail a little past Plumb Island there is Fischer' | + | The authors have declared no competing interest. |
- | Somewhere between Yale, Plumb Island | + | Paper in collection COVID-19 SARS-CoV-2 preprints from medRxiv |