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Thursday, April 23, 2020

Joe Biden Says He Would Choose Michelle Obama As His Vice President ‘In A Heartbeat’

Michelle Obama

Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden has come under pressure to elect a person of color and a woman as his running mate. Critics have suggested that he elect a black person to be his VP pick, which he hasn’t committed to. Recently, Biden told KDKA Pittsburgh that he wished former FLOTUS Michelle Obama was interested in politics because he would choose her as his running mate “in a heartbeat.”

“I’d take her in a heartbeat. She’s brilliant. She knows the way around,” Biden told reporter Jon Delano in an online interview. “She is a really fine woman. I don’t think she has any desire to live near the White House again.”

The discussions around Obama pursuing a political career aren’t new. The former first lady experienced very high approval ratings, including Republicans who weren’t in support of her husband. Over the years, she has repeatedly denied any interest in getting involved in politics after spending eight years in the White House with her husband. Instead, she’s used her platform toward voting efforts, philanthropy, and writing. In her best-selling 2018 memoir Becoming, she wrote blatantly, “I’ll say it here directly: I have no intention of running for office, ever.”

Obama talked about her lack of political aspirations during an event in Orlando in 2017 where she spoke candidly about why she never wanted to go back into politics despite her near-universal appeal among Americans.

“It’s all well and good until you start running, and then the knives come out. Politics is tough, and it’s hard on a family … I wouldn’t ask my children to do this again because, when you run for higher office, it’s not just you, it’s your whole family,” she said during a Q&A session at the American Institute of Architects’ annual conference, according to The Orlando Sentinel. “Plus, there’s just so much more we can do outside of the office because we won’t have the burden of political baggage.”



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Tamron Hall talks to woman whose husband died of coronavirus after haircut

Like everyone else, talk show host Tamron Hall has been doing her daily talk show virtually, with guests checking in via Skype. But she may have wished she could have comforted one of her latest guests with a hug.

READ MORE: Are Black people negatively impacted by coronavirus overload?

Latresa Rice believes that her husband, Albert, contracted the coronavirus and died after getting a haircut. She told Hall during an appearance on her show Wednesday that although she’d traveled two weeks ago, she returned without symptoms and that no one she was in contact with contracted the virus.

Rice told Hall that after going out to get a haircut, her husband fell ill and days later, he was dead.

Rice, who was a newlywed, wants people to know how important it is to follow social distancing guidelines as even something as innocuous as a haircut could put you or a loved one’s life in danger.

Watch below:


While COVID-19 can cause mild symptoms for many, for others, like DJ Jazzy Jeff, it can be a significant illness. Hall talked to him recently as well.

Although the virus was first deemed to kill more people 65 and up and those with existing conditions, people younger and in good health are succumbing as well.

READ MORE: Rapper Fred The Godson dead at 35 due to COVID-19

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

 

The post Tamron Hall talks to woman whose husband died of coronavirus after haircut appeared first on TheGrio.



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Stacey Abrams: ‘I’d be concerned if Biden’s VP pick isn’t a woman of color’

Stacey Abrams doesn’t just think Joe Biden needs to pick a woman for his running mate, she believes it specifically needs to be a woman of color.

In March, the former Vice President made headlines after he vowed during the final Democratic primary debate with Sen. Bernie Sanders, that he was committed to selecting a woman to share the ticket with during the upcoming election.

READ MORE: Joe Biden announces when he expects to name VP choice

The presumptive Democratic nominee has also made indications that he might seek out a woman of color. So Wednesday, during an interview on ABC’s The View, host Sunny Hostin asked Abrams, if she would consider it “a slap in the face” to Black voters if he didn’t follow through on that pledge.

Initially, it appeared as if the former Georgia Democratic gubernatorial nominee would sidestep the question, telling Hostin that “I think Vice President Biden is going to make a smart choice, and I appreciate the fact that he has lifted up women as being a necessary partner in this.”

READ MORE: If Biden doesn’t pick Stacey Abrams, he can kiss Black folks goodbye

But then she continued, “I would share your concern about not picking a woman of color because women of color — particularly black women — are the strongest part of the Democratic Party, the most loyal, but that loyalty isn’t simply how we vote.

It’s how we work, and if we want to signal that that work will continue, that we’re going to reach not just to certain segments of our community, but to the entire country, then we need a ticket that reflects the diversity of America.”

In an interview on CBS’ Late Late Show with James Corden, Biden forecast that he would most likely have a shortlist of up to three potential running mates by “sometime in July.”

READ MORE: Joe Biden’s VP pick needs to be a woman of color and it should be…Kamala Harris

Abrams, a rising star in the Democratic party who met with Biden last year and has been widely speculated to be on his VP list, told Elle magazine just last week, “I would be an excellent running mate.”

Some have been taken aback by Abrams’ forthrightness over the last few months, but during her appearance on The View, she explained, “I try to be straightforward because while we hope the work speaks for itself, sometimes the work needs a hype man, and I learned early on that if I didn’t speak for myself, I couldn’t tell the story.”

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

 

The post Stacey Abrams: ‘I’d be concerned if Biden’s VP pick isn’t a woman of color’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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Joe Biden Won’t Commit to Selecting An African American Woman For Vice President

Biden

In a move that could shake the foundation of his primary victory, Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said Monday that he wouldn’t commit to selecting a woman of color as his vice presidential pick.

According to NewsOne, Biden made the statement during an interview with Pittsburgh’s KDKA, saying he would stick to the promise of a female pick, but that’s it.

“I’ll commit to that be a woman because it is very important that my administration look like the public, look like the nation,” Biden told KDKA. “And there will be, committed that there will be a woman of color on the Supreme Court, that doesn’t mean there won’t be a vice president, as well.”

Biden’s statement could hurt him with black voters, on which he largely relied on to win the Democratic primary after Bernie Sanders jumped out to an early lead. Last month, House Majority Whip James Clyburn urged Biden to select an African American female as his running mate. Clyburn went as far as listing potential candidates including Kamala Harris, Stacey Abrams, Reps. Marcia Fudge of Ohio, Val Demings of Florida, Karen Bass of California, and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms.

Abrams said last year that she would be willing to serve as the running mate for the Democratic nominee. The Grio, published an opinion piece last week titled, If Biden doesn’t pick Stacey Abrams, he can kiss black voters goodbye, almost daring Biden to try to win with anyone else.

So far this month, Biden has received endorsements from former President Barack Obama and Sen. Elizabeth Warren. Biden also tried to appeal to young voters who backed Sanders and Warren by calling for widespread student loan forgiveness. But, he has also been non-committal about marijuana legalization, another factor that could swing young and minority voters in his favor.

Biden has largely been quiet on even potential vice president candidates, but did say in the interview he would readily have Michelle Obama as his running mate “in a heartbeat.”

 

 



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Tennis Phenom Coco Gauff: ‘For About a Year I Was Really Depressed’

Coco Gauff

At just 16 years old, Cori “Coco” Gauff suffered from a bout of depression. She made an appearance at Wimbledon at the young age of 15 and then struggled to deal with the pressure of being a tennis phenom,  according to an essay she wrote for Behind The Racquet.

Gauff is the youngest tennis player currently ranked in the top 100 by the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA). Her rise to fame and prominence was achieved when she beat five-time Wimbledon singles champion, Venus Williams, in the opening round of Wimbledon and also bested her again at this year’s Australian Open in January.

“I am getting used to the idea that people view me as a role model. It does add a bit of pressure since I know people are watching every move. For the most part, it is easy because I am always just being myself, not putting up a front, which people seem to be OK with. I don’t feel like I have to flip a switch or anything. In the beginning, I thought I had to be perfect but I’ve done a lot of soul searching and moved past it. Since doing that I’ve been having much more fun practicing and playing matches,” Gauff writes in the Behind The Racquet article .

She goes on to explain the mindset that led her into a depressed state.

“Right before Wimbledon, going back to around 2017/18, I was struggling to figure out if this was really what I wanted. I always had the results so that wasn’t the issue, I just found myself not enjoying what I loved. I realized I needed to start playing for myself and not other people. For about a year I was really depressed. That was the toughest year for me so far. Even though I had, it felt like there weren’t many friends there for me. When you are in that dark mindset you don’t look on the bright side of things too often, which is the hardest part. I don’t think it had much to do with tennis, maybe just about juggling it all. I knew that I wanted to play tennis but didn’t know how I wanted to go about it. It went so far that I was thinking about possibly taking a year off to just focus on life.”

She also doesn’t feel it’s fair to be compared to the Williams sisters as she hasn’t accomplished much in her young career.

“I don’t like being compared to Serena or Venus. First, I am not at their level yet. I always feel like it’s not fair to the Williams sisters to be compared to someone who is just coming up. It just doesn’t feel right yet, I still look at them as my idols. With all their accolades I shouldn’t be put in the same group yet.”

Gauff has a ranking of No. 49 in the world in singles and a ranking of No. 42 in doubles. She won her first WTA singles title at the age of 15 at the 2019 Linz Open, which made her the youngest singles title-holder on the WTA Tour since 2004. She has also won two WTA doubles titles with fellow teenager Caty McNally.



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Alex Shalek wins Edgerton Faculty Award

Alex K. Shalek, the Pfizer-Laubach Career Development Associate Professor of Chemistry, core member of the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science (IMES), and extramural member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, has been named the recipient of the 2019-20 Harold E. Edgerton Faculty Achievement Award. The award’s selection committee chose to recognize Shalek for “his leadership and pioneering spirit; his vision, inventiveness, and enthusiasm for mentorship and collaboration; and his tremendous contributions to a critical area at the intersection of science and medicine.”

Shalek’s research is directed toward the creation and implementation of new technologies to understand how cells collectively perform systems-level functions in healthy and diseased states. A leader in creating and implementing new methods, both experimental and computational, Shalek studies how cells collectively drive health and disease. He and his team work to make technology available to people, simplifying and economizing approaches to facilitate global and clinical utilization, and to deepen our understanding of human malignant, infectious, and inflammatory diseases. The insights developed through his profiling methods are helping to both transform our understanding of the cellular basis of disease and inform therapeutic intervention strategies.

“When Professor Shalek first came to MIT, he helped to develop a method called Drop-Seq that revolutionized single‐cell analysis by allowing researchers to reproducibly recover the transcriptomes — the set of all the RNA transcripts (information copied from a strand of DNA) — of thousands of single cells at minimal cost,” Professor Antoinette Schoar, chair of the selection committee, said in a statement on the committee’s behalf. “Such unbiased single‐cell profiling promised transformative opportunities to understand human health and disease — for example, to identify malignant clones in cancer biopsies or the cellular targets of acute HIV infection in blood. To realize this potential, Professor Shalek and his team, in collaboration with Professor Chris Love’s lab, subsequently reengineered this method, developing Seq-Well, an ultra‐portable, low‐cost single‐cell RNA‐sequencing technology that can profile the transcriptomes of thousands of cells from multiple clinical samples at once. This technology redefines what scientists around the world can learn from precious samples, enabling both basic and clinical research on a global scale.”

In addition to his positions in the chemistry department and IMES, Shalek is an extramural member of the Koch Institute, an institute member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, an associate member of the Ragon Institute, an assistant in immunology at Massachusetts General Hospital, an instructor of health sciences and technology at Harvard Medical School, and an affiliate faculty member of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. He received three degrees in chemical physics: a BA from Columbia University, and MA and PhD degrees from Harvard University. After receiving his doctorate, he was a postdoc at Harvard, MIT, and the Broad Institute. Shalek joined the MIT faculty in 2014 as an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry and a core member of IMES. He was promoted to associate professor without tenure in 2019.

Shalek has obtained 18 patents since joining the MIT faculty, with another 15 pending. Over the same period, he has coauthored 66 papers, reviews, perspectives, and commentaries. Among his numerous accolades are an NIH New Innovator Award, a Sloan Research Fellowship in Chemistry, a Pew-Stewart Scholarship, a Beckman Young Investigator Award, and a Searle Scholarship. In 2019, he was selected as a voice who will guide the next 15 years of methods development by the journal Nature Methods, and as one of the 25 voices who will guide the next 25 years of immunology by the journal Immunity.

The selection committee commended Shalek’s “critically important” dedication to educating and empowering the next generation of scientists, at MIT and beyond. “At MIT, he has designed a highly successful graduate subject that covers the biophysics behind genomic measurement techniques, as well as their applications in medicine,” stated the selection committee in their report. “At the undergraduate level, he has added to the established curriculum by including examples inspired by modern research to illustrate the relevance of his lecture material and promote student engagement. He has been involved in significant curriculum development and education planning projects within Chemistry and IMES. His lab has participated in local events such as the Cambridge Science Festival, HubWeek, and Science on Saturday, as well as doing outreach to middle and high schoolers.”

Shalek’s internal and external service to his community is also to be admired. Shalek serves as an advisor to first-year MIT undergraduates, as well as students in chemistry, in the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology’s Medical Engineering and Medical Physics (MEMP) PhD program, and in the Harvard/MIT MD-PhD program. He has served on the graduate admissions committees not only for chemistry, but also for MEMP, computational and systems biology, and the Harvard Medical School Immunology Program, and the faculty search committees in not only chemistry and IMES, but also the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard. In addition, he served a term on the Institute Committee on Prehealth Advising when he joined MIT as assistant professor. Shalek frequently serves as a reviewer for NIH grant panels and is a member of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Collaborations for AIDS Vaccine Discovery and TB Vaccine Discovery. He is also involved in the Human Cell Atlas Project, serving as co-leader of its Equity Working Group.

The annual Edgerton Faculty Award was established in 1982 as a tribute to Institute Professor Emeritus Harold E. Edgerton in recognition of his active support of junior faculty members. Each year, a committee presents the award to one or more non-tenured faculty members to recognize exceptional contributions in research, teaching, and service. 

The 2019-20 Edgerton Award Selection Committee was chaired by Professor Antoinette Schoar, the Stewart C. Myers-Horn Family Professor of Finance and Entrepreneurship at the MIT Sloan School of Management. Committee members included biological engineering Professor Bevin Engelward; Camille Dreyfus Professor of Chemistry Stephen L. Buchwald; literature Professor Shankar Raman; and art, culture, and technology Professor Gediminas Urbonas.



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Black Democratic Lawmaker Resigns One Week After Endorsing Trump

Vernon Jones

Democratic state Rep. Vernon Jones made headlines when he announced he would be endorsing President Donald Trump for re-election. The politician has now announced Wednesday morning that he would not complete his term.

The controversial Georgia politician isn’t a stranger to garnering attention for his opinions. Even though he is a Democrat, he doesn’t align with the party’s interests. In 2000, he endorsed Democrat Howard Dean’s presidential bid but voted for Republican George W. Bush. In 2007, he said he backed the idea of a “fair tax,” which is a flat tax proposal that has some support in conservative and libertarian circles. During the 2008 campaign, Barack Obama called out Jones for sending out a mailer with a manipulated photo that showed the two on the same stage.

In a press statement, Jones announced his support and decided it was time for him to step down from public office. “Turn the lights off, I have left the plantation,” Jones said in a statement released to CBS 46 in Atlanta. “I intend to help the Democrat Party get rid of its bigotry against black people that are independent and conservative. Someone else can occupy that suite. Therefore, I intend not to complete my term effective April 22, 2020.” His spokesman went on to say that the Democratic politician would not be seeking re-election.

Jones, who represents counties outside of Atlanta, said Trump is the country’s only option. “The results speak for themselves,” he continued. “With his hand on the wheel, the stock market broke record after record, wages and job growth exploded and unemployment dropped down to record lows. Given his track record, President Trump is best prepared to lead our economy back to record highs after we beat the COVID-19 pandemic.”

“I don’t plan to leave the Democratic Party because somebody’s got to be in there to hold them accountable —hold them accountable to how they are treating black people (and) root out the bigotry,” Jones explained his departure on The Rashad Richey Morning Show shortly after announcing his resignation. After a fiery and, at times, combative discussion, Jones ended the interview early, prompting Richey to say: “Hang up on this clown, please.”



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Newly Unemployed, and Labeling Photos for Pennies

People who've lost jobs and are stuck indoors are turning to crowd work—filling out online surveys and transcribing audio for less than the minimum wage.

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A 'Russian Doll’ Co-Creator Is Working on a Star Wars Series for Disney+

Also, *Westworld* is getting a fourth season. 

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This Hungry Little Beetle Could Help Ease Seasonal Allergies

Where the leaf beetle lives with the common ragweed, pollen counts crash 80 percent. Maybe the enemy of our enemy is our allergy-fighting friend.

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Coronavirus: Kenya quarantine escapees arrested while drinking at bar

The pair were found drinking in a bar which had defied orders to close to halt the spread of Covid-19.

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Two Black Women Entrepreneurs Launch a Plant Subscription Service to Promote Self-Care

Grounded

Mignon Hemsley, digital marketer and Danuelle Doswell, graphic designer and freelance creative, are the co-creators of the virtual plant shop and subscription service, Grounded. And they are on a mission to spread joy through their newly launched business.

Grounded was created by the Washington D.C. natives to help people disconnect and decompress through the appreciation of plants in the spaces we occupy. Their selection of plants has a plethora of benefits designed to elicit a sense of tranquility and mindfulness.

Because of Them We Can (BOTWC) spoke exclusively to the founders who shared that they decided to go into business with one another because of their shared love for plants. Through Grounded, they hope to promote another form of self-care for people.

They told BOTWC, “Being great friends we bonded through being plant and garden moms. We wanted to take our bond to the next level and help others, which is an innate trait of both of ours. Our business idea naturally came to fruition from our passion and love for plants.”

Grounded

Grounded (Image: Mignon Hemsley / Grounded)

At a time where non-essential businesses are closed and people are in need of healthful ways to decompress, Hemsley and Doswell thought Grounded could add unique value to the market and people’s lives as they are sheltered in place. Especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“With all of the technological advances and worldly transitions, in order to stay grounded mentally, it’s important for us to take a step back and disconnect from our days. Through the appreciation, dedication and care of plants in our spaces this is attainable. We want to educate the black community and beyond, of the tremendous benefits of plants, not only physically but especially mentally in your spaces,” they told the publication.

Grounded sources their plants from nurseries around the DMV and New York City. Their plants range between $50-$100 and are customizable. The company also offers non-subscription options featuring three indoor plants ranging between $15 or $20 each.

In celebration of their launch, Grounded is offering free shipping nationwide for a limited time.



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The Stockbrokers Of Magic: The Gathering Play for Keeps

The market for the popular strategy game’s cards has started to resemble Wall Street, complete with speculation, arbitrage, and yes, insider trading.

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Covid-19 May Worsen the Antibiotic Resistance Crisis

The disease can't be treated with these drugs, but antibiotic use is rising anyway, in ICUs and among the worried well.

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How to Grieve and Support Others During a Pandemic

What can you do for a friend when you can't give them a hug? We talked to some experts to find out.

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Farmers Are Dumping Milk, Even as People Go Hungry. Here's Why

About half of the nation's food is typically consumed in group settings like restaurants and schools. Quickly rerouting the supply chain isn't easy.

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Judge Dredd Foreshadowed Our Covid Reality

It’s not the first time the comic serial has proven prophetic.

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Those Damn Denominators: The Messy Mathematics of Covid-19

Math used to be a comfort zone for me in times of confusion. Not anymore.

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Sensors woven into a shirt can monitor vital signs

MIT researchers have developed a way to incorporate electronic sensors into stretchy fabrics, allowing them to create shirts or other garments that could be used to monitor vital signs such as temperature, respiration, and heart rate.

The sensor-embedded garments, which are machine washable, can be customized to fit close to the body of the person wearing them. The researchers envision that this type of sensing could be used for monitoring people who are ill, either at home or in the hospital, as well as athletes or astronauts.

“We can have any commercially available electronic parts or custom lab-made electronics embedded within the textiles that we wear every day, creating conformable garments,” says Canan Dagdeviren, the LG Electronics Career Development Assistant Professor of Media Arts and Sciences at MIT. “These are customizable, so we can make garments for anyone who needs to have some physical data from their body like temperature, respiration rate, and so forth.”

Dagdeviren is the senior author of a paper describing the new material today in the journal npg Flexible Electronics. MIT graduate student Irmandy Wicaksono is the lead author of the study. Several MIT undergraduates also contributed to the study through the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program.

Embedded sensors

Other research groups have developed thin, skin-like patches that can measure temperature and other vital signs, but these are delicate and must be taped to the skin. Dagdeviren’s lab set out to create garments more similar to the clothes we normally wear, using a stretchy fabric that has removable electronic sensors incorporated into it.

“In our case, the textile is not electrically functional. It’s just a passive element of our garment so that you can wear the devices comfortably and conformably during your daily activities,” Dagdeviren says. “Our main goal was to measure the physical activity of the body in terms of temperature, respiration, acceleration, all from the same body part, without requiring any fixture or any tape.”

The electronic sensors consist of long, flexible strips that are encased in epoxy and then woven into narrow channels in the fabric. These channels have small openings that allow the sensors to be exposed to the skin. For this study, the researchers designed a prototype shirt with 30 temperature sensors and an accelerometer that can measure the wearer’s movement, heart rate, and breathing rate. The garment can then transmit this data wirelessly to a smartphone.

The researchers chose their fabric — a polyester blend — for its moisture-wicking properties and its ability to conform to the skin, similar to compression shirts worn during exercise. Last summer, several of the researchers spent time at a factory in Shenzhen, China, to experiment with mass-producing the material used for the garments. 

“From the outside it looks like a normal T-shirt, but from the inside, you can see the electronic parts which are touching your skin,” Dagdeviren says. “It compresses on your body, and the active parts of the sensors are exposed to the skin.”

The garments can be washed with the sensors embedded in them, and the sensors can also be removed and transferred to a different garment.

Remote monitoring

The researchers tested their prototype shirts as wearers exercised at the gym, allowing them to monitor changes in temperature, heart rate, and breathing rate. Because the sensors cover a large surface area of the body, the researchers can observe temperature changes in different parts of the body, and how those changes correlate with each other.

The shirts can be easily manufactured in different sizes to fit an array of ages and body types, Dagdeviren says. She plans to begin developing other types of garments, such as pants, and is working on incorporating additional sensors for monitoring blood oxygen levels and other indicators of health.

This kind of sensing could be useful for personalized telemedicine, allowing doctors to remotely monitor patients while patients remain at home, Dagdeviren says, or to monitor astronauts’ health while they’re in space.

“You don’t need to go to the doctor or do a video call,” Dagdeviren says. “Through this kind of data collection, I think doctors can make better assessments and help their patients in a better way.”

The research was funded by the MIT Media Lab Consortium and a NASA Translational Research Institute for Space Health Seed Grant from the MIT Media Lab Space Exploration Initiative.



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Researchers explore ocean microbes’ role in climate effects

A new study shows that “hotspots” of nutrients surrounding phytoplankton — which are tiny marine algae producing approximately half of the oxygen we breathe every day — play an outsized role in the release of a gas involved in cloud formation and climate regulation.

The new research quantifies the way specific marine bacteria process a key chemical called dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), which is produced in enormous amounts by phytoplankton. This chemical plays a pivotal role in the way sulfur and carbon get consumed by microorganisms in the ocean and released into the atmosphere.

The work is reported today in the journal Nature Communications, in a paper by MIT graduate student Cherry Gao, former MIT professor of civil and environmental engineering Roman Stocker (now a professor at ETH Zurich, in Switzerland), in collaboration with Jean-Baptiste Raina and Professor Justin Seymour of University of Technology Sydney in Australia, and four others.

More than a billion tons of DMSP is produced annually by microorganisms in the oceans, accounting for 10 percent of the carbon that gets taken up by phytoplankton — a major “sink” for carbon dioxide, without which the greenhouse gas would be building up even faster in the atmosphere. But exactly how this compound gets processed and how its different chemical pathways figure into global carbon and sulfur cycles had not been well-understood until now, Gao says.

“DMSP is a major nutrient source for bacteria,” she says. “It satisfies up to 95 percent of bacterial sulfur demand and up to 15 percent of bacterial carbon demand in the ocean. So given the ubiquity and the abundance of DMSP, we expect that these microbial processes would have a significant role in the global sulfur cycle.”

Gao and her co-workers genetically modified a marine bacterium called Ruegeria pomeroyi, causing it to fluoresce when one of two different pathways for processing DMSP was activated, allowing the relative expression of the processes to be analyzed under a variety of conditions.

One of the two pathways, called demethylation, produces carbon and sulfur based nutrients that the microbes can use to sustain their growth. The other pathway, called cleavage, produces a gas called dimethylsulfide (DMS), which Gao explains “is the compound that’s responsible for the smell of the sea. I actually smelled the ocean a lot in the lab when I was experimenting.”

DMS is the gas responsible for most of the biologically derived sulfur that enters the atmosphere from the oceans. Once in the atmosphere, sulfur compounds are a key source of condensation for water molecules, so their concentration in the air affects both rainfall patterns and the overall reflectivity of the atmosphere through cloud generation. Understanding the process responsible for much of that production could be important in multiple ways for refining climate models.

Those climate implications are “why we're interested in knowing when bacteria decide to use the cleavage pathway versus the demethylation pathway,” in order to better understand how much of the important DMS gets produced under what conditions, Gao says. “This has been an open question for at least two decades.”

The new study found that the concentration of DMSP in the vicinity regulates which pathway the bacteria use. Below a certain concentration, demethylation was dominant, but above a level of about 10 micromoles, the cleavage process dominated.

“What was really surprising to us was, upon experimentation with the engineered bacteria, we found that the concentrations of DMSP in which the cleavage pathway dominates is higher than expected — orders of magnitude higher than the average concentration in the ocean,” she says.

That suggests that this process hardly takes place under typical ocean conditions, the researchers concluded. Rather, microscale “hotspots” of elevated DMSP concentration are probably responsible for a highly disproportionate amount of global DMS production. These microscale “hotspots” are areas surrounding certain phytoplankton cells where extremely high amounts of DMSP are present at about a thousand times greater than average oceanic concentration.

“We actually did a co-incubation experiment between the engineered bacteria and a DMSP-producing phytoplankton,” Gao says. The experiment showed “that indeed, bacteria increased their expression of the DMS-producing pathway, closer to the phytoplankton.”

The new analysis should help researchers understand key details of how these microscopic marine organisms, through their collective behavior, are affecting global-scale biogeochemical and climatic processes, the researchers say.

The research team included MIT and ETH Zurich postdocs Vicente Fernandez and Kang Soo Lee, graduate student Simona Fenizia, and Professor Georg Pohnert at Friedrich Schiller University in Germany. The work was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Simons Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and the Australian Research Council.



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