Sunday, October 20, 2013

Salk scientists expand the genetic code of mammals to control protein activity in neurons with light

Salk scientists expand the genetic code of mammals to control protein activity in neurons with light


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Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
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Contact: Kat Kearney
kkearney@salk.edu
619-296-8455
Salk Institute



A new technique allows researchers to activate proteins in the brain by shining an LED light on them




LA JOLLA, CA----With the flick of a light switch, researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies can change the shape of a protein in the brain of a mouse, turning on the protein at the precise moment they want. This allows the scientists to observe the exact effect of the protein's activation. The new method, described in the October 16 issue of the journal Neuron, relies on specially engineered amino acids----the molecules that make up proteins----and light from an LED. Now that it has been shown to work, the technique can be adapted to give researchers control of a wide variety of other proteins in the brain to study their functions.


"What we are now able to do is not only control neuronal activity, but control a specific protein within a neuron," says senior study author Lei Wang, an associate professor in Salk's Jack H. Skirball Center for Chemical Biology and Proteomics and holder of the Frederick B. Rentschler Developmental Chair.


If a scientist wants to know what set of neurons in the brain is responsible for a particular action or behavior, being able to turn the neurons on and off at will gives the researcher a targeted way to test the neurons' effects. Likewise, if they want to know the role of a certain protein inside the cells, the ability to activate or inactivate the protein of interest is key to studying its biology.


Over the past decade, researchers have developed a handful of ways of activating or inactivating neurons using light, as part of the burgeoning field of so-called optogenetics. In optogenetic experiments, mice are genetically engineered to have a light-sensitive channel from algae integrated into their neurons. When exposed to light, the channel opens or closes, changing the flow of molecules into the neuron and altering its ability to pass an electrochemical message through the brain. Using such optogenetic approaches, scientists can pick and choose which neurons in the brain they want turned on or off at any given time and observe the resulting change in the engineered mice.


"There's no question that this is a great way to control neuronal activity, by borrowing light-responsive channels or pumps from other organisms and putting them in neurons," says Wang. "But rather than put a stranger into neurons, we wanted to control the activity of proteins native to neurons."


To make proteins respond to light, Wang's team harnessed a photo-responsive amino acid, called Cmn, which has a large chemical structure. When a pulse of light shines on the molecule, Cmn's bulky side chain breaks off, leaving cysteine, a smaller amino acid. Wang's group realized that if a single Cmn was integrated into the right place in the structure of a protein, the drastic change in the amino acid's size could activate or inactivate the entire protein.


To test their idea, Wang and his colleagues engineered new versions of a potassium channel in neurons, adding Cmn to their sequence.


"Basically the idea was that when you put this amino acid in the pore of the channel, the bulky side chain entirely blocks the passage of ions through the channel," explains Ji-Yong Kang, a graduate student who works in Wang's group, and first author of the new paper. "Then, when the bond in the amino acid breaks in response to light, the channel is opened up."


The method worked in isolated cells: After trial and error, the scientists found the ideal spot in the channel to put Cmn, so that the channel was initially blocked, but opened when light shone on it. They were able to measure the change to the channel's properties by recording the electrical current that flowed through the cells before and after exposure to light.


But to apply the technique to living mice, Wang and his colleagues needed to change the animals' genetic code---- the built-in instructions that cells use to produce proteins based on gene sequences. The normal genetic code doesn't contain information on Cmn, so simply injecting Cmn amino acids into mice wouldn't lead to the molecules being integrated into proteins. In the past, the Wang group and others have expanded the genetic codes of isolated cells of simple organisms like bacteria, or yeast, inserting instructions for a new amino acid. But the approach had never been successful in mammals. Through a combination of techniques and new tricks, however, Wang's team was able to provide embryonic mice with the instructions for the new amino acid, Cmn. With the help from Salk Professor Dennis O'Leary and his research associate Daichi Kawaguchi, they then integrated the new Cmn-containing channel into the brains of the developing mice, and showed that by shining light on the brain tissue they could force the channel open, altering patterns of neuron activity. It was not only a first for expanding the genetic code of mammals, but also for protein control.


At the surface, the new approach has the same result as optogenetic approaches to studying the brain----neurons are silenced at a precise time in response to light. But Wang's method can now be used to study a whole cadre of different proteins in neurons. Aside from being used to open and close channels or pores that let ions flow in and out of brain cells, Cmn could be used to optically regulate protein modifications and protein-protein interactions.


"We can pinpoint exactly which protein, or even which part of a protein, is crucial for the functioning of targeted neurons," says Wang. "If you want to study something like the mechanism of memory formation, it's not always just a matter of finding what neurons are responsible, but what molecules within those neurons are critical."


Earlier this year, President Obama announced the multi-billion dollar Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative, a ten-year project to map the activity of the human brain. Creating new ways to study the molecules in the brain, such as using light-responsive amino acids to study neuronal proteins, will be key to moving forward on this initiative and similar efforts to understand the brain, says Wang. His lab is now working to develop ways to not only activate proteins, but inactive them using light-sensitive amino acids, and applying the technique to proteins other than Kir2.1.


###


Other researchers on the study were Daichi Kawaguchi, Irene Coin, Zheng Xiang, Dennis D. M. O'Leary the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, and Paul A. Slesinger of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.


The work was supported a Salk Innovation Grant, a Marie Curie Fellowship from the European Commission, and grants from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine and the U.S. National Institutes of Health.


About the Salk Institute for Biological Studies:

The Salk Institute for Biological Studies is one of the world's preeminent basic research institutions, where internationally renowned faculty probe fundamental life science questions in a unique, collaborative, and creative environment. Focused both on discovery and on mentoring future generations of researchers, Salk scientists make groundbreaking contributions to our understanding of cancer, aging, Alzheimer's, diabetes and infectious diseases by studying neuroscience, genetics, cell and plant biology, and related disciplines.


Faculty achievements have been recognized with numerous honors, including Nobel Prizes and memberships in the National Academy of Sciences. Founded in 1960 by polio vaccine pioneer Jonas Salk, M.D., the Institute is an independent nonprofit organization and architectural landmark.




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Salk scientists expand the genetic code of mammals to control protein activity in neurons with light


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
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Contact: Kat Kearney
kkearney@salk.edu
619-296-8455
Salk Institute



A new technique allows researchers to activate proteins in the brain by shining an LED light on them




LA JOLLA, CA----With the flick of a light switch, researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies can change the shape of a protein in the brain of a mouse, turning on the protein at the precise moment they want. This allows the scientists to observe the exact effect of the protein's activation. The new method, described in the October 16 issue of the journal Neuron, relies on specially engineered amino acids----the molecules that make up proteins----and light from an LED. Now that it has been shown to work, the technique can be adapted to give researchers control of a wide variety of other proteins in the brain to study their functions.


"What we are now able to do is not only control neuronal activity, but control a specific protein within a neuron," says senior study author Lei Wang, an associate professor in Salk's Jack H. Skirball Center for Chemical Biology and Proteomics and holder of the Frederick B. Rentschler Developmental Chair.


If a scientist wants to know what set of neurons in the brain is responsible for a particular action or behavior, being able to turn the neurons on and off at will gives the researcher a targeted way to test the neurons' effects. Likewise, if they want to know the role of a certain protein inside the cells, the ability to activate or inactivate the protein of interest is key to studying its biology.


Over the past decade, researchers have developed a handful of ways of activating or inactivating neurons using light, as part of the burgeoning field of so-called optogenetics. In optogenetic experiments, mice are genetically engineered to have a light-sensitive channel from algae integrated into their neurons. When exposed to light, the channel opens or closes, changing the flow of molecules into the neuron and altering its ability to pass an electrochemical message through the brain. Using such optogenetic approaches, scientists can pick and choose which neurons in the brain they want turned on or off at any given time and observe the resulting change in the engineered mice.


"There's no question that this is a great way to control neuronal activity, by borrowing light-responsive channels or pumps from other organisms and putting them in neurons," says Wang. "But rather than put a stranger into neurons, we wanted to control the activity of proteins native to neurons."


To make proteins respond to light, Wang's team harnessed a photo-responsive amino acid, called Cmn, which has a large chemical structure. When a pulse of light shines on the molecule, Cmn's bulky side chain breaks off, leaving cysteine, a smaller amino acid. Wang's group realized that if a single Cmn was integrated into the right place in the structure of a protein, the drastic change in the amino acid's size could activate or inactivate the entire protein.


To test their idea, Wang and his colleagues engineered new versions of a potassium channel in neurons, adding Cmn to their sequence.


"Basically the idea was that when you put this amino acid in the pore of the channel, the bulky side chain entirely blocks the passage of ions through the channel," explains Ji-Yong Kang, a graduate student who works in Wang's group, and first author of the new paper. "Then, when the bond in the amino acid breaks in response to light, the channel is opened up."


The method worked in isolated cells: After trial and error, the scientists found the ideal spot in the channel to put Cmn, so that the channel was initially blocked, but opened when light shone on it. They were able to measure the change to the channel's properties by recording the electrical current that flowed through the cells before and after exposure to light.


But to apply the technique to living mice, Wang and his colleagues needed to change the animals' genetic code---- the built-in instructions that cells use to produce proteins based on gene sequences. The normal genetic code doesn't contain information on Cmn, so simply injecting Cmn amino acids into mice wouldn't lead to the molecules being integrated into proteins. In the past, the Wang group and others have expanded the genetic codes of isolated cells of simple organisms like bacteria, or yeast, inserting instructions for a new amino acid. But the approach had never been successful in mammals. Through a combination of techniques and new tricks, however, Wang's team was able to provide embryonic mice with the instructions for the new amino acid, Cmn. With the help from Salk Professor Dennis O'Leary and his research associate Daichi Kawaguchi, they then integrated the new Cmn-containing channel into the brains of the developing mice, and showed that by shining light on the brain tissue they could force the channel open, altering patterns of neuron activity. It was not only a first for expanding the genetic code of mammals, but also for protein control.


At the surface, the new approach has the same result as optogenetic approaches to studying the brain----neurons are silenced at a precise time in response to light. But Wang's method can now be used to study a whole cadre of different proteins in neurons. Aside from being used to open and close channels or pores that let ions flow in and out of brain cells, Cmn could be used to optically regulate protein modifications and protein-protein interactions.


"We can pinpoint exactly which protein, or even which part of a protein, is crucial for the functioning of targeted neurons," says Wang. "If you want to study something like the mechanism of memory formation, it's not always just a matter of finding what neurons are responsible, but what molecules within those neurons are critical."


Earlier this year, President Obama announced the multi-billion dollar Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative, a ten-year project to map the activity of the human brain. Creating new ways to study the molecules in the brain, such as using light-responsive amino acids to study neuronal proteins, will be key to moving forward on this initiative and similar efforts to understand the brain, says Wang. His lab is now working to develop ways to not only activate proteins, but inactive them using light-sensitive amino acids, and applying the technique to proteins other than Kir2.1.


###


Other researchers on the study were Daichi Kawaguchi, Irene Coin, Zheng Xiang, Dennis D. M. O'Leary the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, and Paul A. Slesinger of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.


The work was supported a Salk Innovation Grant, a Marie Curie Fellowship from the European Commission, and grants from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine and the U.S. National Institutes of Health.


About the Salk Institute for Biological Studies:

The Salk Institute for Biological Studies is one of the world's preeminent basic research institutions, where internationally renowned faculty probe fundamental life science questions in a unique, collaborative, and creative environment. Focused both on discovery and on mentoring future generations of researchers, Salk scientists make groundbreaking contributions to our understanding of cancer, aging, Alzheimer's, diabetes and infectious diseases by studying neuroscience, genetics, cell and plant biology, and related disciplines.


Faculty achievements have been recognized with numerous honors, including Nobel Prizes and memberships in the National Academy of Sciences. Founded in 1960 by polio vaccine pioneer Jonas Salk, M.D., the Institute is an independent nonprofit organization and architectural landmark.




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/si-sse101613.php
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TSX extends 2-year high with broad gains; up 1.9 pct on week


By Alastair Sharp


TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index capped a stellar week with further gains on Friday, extending a two-year peak as industrial and resource stocks gained on data showing the Chinese economy, the world's second-biggest, grew at its fastest pace this year.


Adding to the rosy view for stocks, investors are betting that the U.S. Federal Reserve will delay trimming its stimulus measures due to the economic damage inflicted by the partial U.S. government shutdown that ended on Thursday.


"A lot of Canadian money managers have been sitting on their hands watching what's been happening south of the border and, that having been sorted out, at least in the short term, they are back in the market," said David Cockfield, managing director and portfolio manager at Northland Wealth Management.


"I think this trade deal is encouraging people as well," he added, referring to the signing of a multibillion-dollar trade pact between Canada and the European Union.


The deal will make Canada the only Group of 8 country to have preferential access to the world's two largest markets, the EU and the United States, home to about 800 million people.


The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index <.gsptse> closed up 99.73 points, or 0.77 percent, at 13,136.09, its highest level since July 2011. It gained 1.9 percent on the week, its best weekly performance since July.


Air Canada rose 4.6 percent to $5.19. The airline, which reached a deal to expand its main hub in Toronto, has risen sharply in recent months amid a major expansion push and solid traffic growth.


Investors pushed aircraft maker Bombardier up 1.8 percent to C$5.08 after it said a Chinese company may double its total order of new jetliners.


"No question the worst is over in China. Things have stabilized and are now on the upswing and that is very important for worldwide growth," said Barry Schwartz, a portfolio manager at Baskin Financial Services.


Third-quarter growth in China, the world's second-biggest economy, was 7.8 percent from a year ago, its quickest pace for the year, thanks largely to investment.


All of Canada's ten main sectors advanced except materials, which was weighed down by retreating gold miners. Some of the biggest gains came from the heavyweight financial and energy sectors.


"If you are sitting on a bunch of cash, you probably slide back into the utilities, the big financials," Northland's Cockfield said.


The financial subgroup rose 0.7 percent, powered by Royal Bank of Canada . The bank rose 1.1 percent to C$69.53, pushing its market capitalization above C$100 billion, a first for a Canadian lender.


RBC, which along with other Canadian banks has been boosted lately by signs that Canada's housing sector is stabilizing, is currently Canada's largest publicly traded company.


Royal, Toronto-Dominion Bank

, Bank of Nova Scotia and National Bank of Canada all hit record highs.

Baskin's Schwartz said Canada's banks and real estate investment trusts (REITs) have room to rally further.


"Interest rates are now back to where they were before the taper talk, yet the REITs aren't," he said.


Riocan Real Estate Investment Trust gained 1.6 percent to C$25.75 and Dundee Real Estate Investment Trust added 1.6 percent to C$29.52.


Schwartz said that after the distraction of the U.S. debt crisis, investors should be focused on interest rates, inflation and stock valuations, and that each factor was looking prime for improvement in Canada.


"Stocks are still the shiniest gold coin in a tarnished box of treasure," he said.


The heaviest fall belonged to Athabasca Oil Corp , which plunged 12 percent to C$6.13 after a court ruled that an aboriginal group could appeal the approval of an oil sands project.


(Additional reporting by Cameron French and Solarina Ho; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tsx-may-open-higher-chinese-data-boost-124557138--sector.html
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Unbelievable ... Really (talking-points-memo)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.
Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/334247060?client_source=feed&format=rss
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'Boy Meets World's' Danielle Fishel Ties the Knot


Sorry Cory. Topanga has found another soul mate.



Boy Meets World alum Danielle Fishel  married longtime boyfriend Tim Belusko Saturday, a source close to the actress confirms to The Hollywood Reporter.


PHOTOS: ABC's 'TGIF' Comedy Block: Where Are They Now?


The ceremony took place in Los Angeles, with the bride wearing a lace Enzoani strapless gown, according to People. Her father, Rick Fishel, escorted the actress down the ale as Brian Culbertson's "Forever" played. More than 200 guests attended the ceremony.


Fishel, who played Topanga on ABC's Boy Meets World from 1993-2000, will reprise her role in Disney's follow-up series, Girl Meets World. The upcoming series will follow Topanga's daughter with Cory (Ben Savage).


Fishel also has a memoir in the works. Normally, This Would Be Cause for Concern: Tales of Calamity and Unrelenting Awkwardness will be published through Simon & Schuster imprint Gallery Books and will hit stores in fall 2014.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/okvusasJpP0/story01.htm
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Kim Kardashian and a Host of Stars Support the GLAAD Movement

Showing their support for Spirit Day, big name celebrities including Oprah Winfrey, Kim Kardashian, Macklemore, Nick Cannon and Demi Lovato all played a part in promoting the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth movement against bullying, which began in 2010.


An entire host of celebrities were in on the act, all launching reinforcing tweets for GLAAD, which “leads the conversation for LGBT equality, and changing the culture. As the LGBT movement's communications epicenter, GLAAD is the principal organization that works directly with news media, entertainment media, cultural institutions and social media."


Macklemore wrote, "Stand up against bullying for #SpiritDay today. Wear purple today and show the world you're against bullying."


Oprah Winfrey tweeted, "Stand against bullying! Wear purple and make your profile pic purple for#SpiritDay 10/17 at http://glaad.org/spiritday #LGBT"


Kim Kardashian said, "I'm going purple with @glaad to stand against bullying today for#SpiritDay. See how you can, too! http://glaad.org/spiritday."


Demi Lovato wrote, "I AM Against Bullying #SpiritDay 10.17.2013."


And Nick Cannon stated, "I'm standing against bullying on #SpiritDay today. Let's show LGBT youth we've got their backs!"


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/kim-kardashian/kim-kardashian-and-host-stars-support-glaad-movement-944931
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

House Votes to End Government Shutdown: What the Pundits Are Saying


The government shutdown is close to ending.



The House voted to end the government shutdown 284 to 144 Wednesday night. Earlier, the Senate voted to end the shutdown 81-18. The bill will now go to President Obama, who said in a televised speech that he will sign the bill if and that the government will reopen immediately after.


The bill contained none of the major changes to President Obama's budget that the Republicans had pushed for, which led pundits on the cable networks to question if the shutdown would damage the politicians who made it happen.


Anderson Cooper anchored coverage for CNN, where colleague David Gergen predicted Republicans would likely use similar tactics in the future.


"I am not at all convinced that the Tea Party learned their lesson out of this," Gergen said. He said Republicans will believe they did fight hard enough.


"Don't you imagine Democrats will come out of this feeling like they won? Their muscles are bigger, and [they] will be less willing to compromise," Gergen predicted


CNN's John King said the next round of elections will be make or break for the Tea Party candidates, and signal whether they have been hurt politically by the shutdown.


Fox News Channel's Bret Baier anchored a special report and spoke with White House correspondent Ed Henry. Henry said many people will be skeptical that a similar situation will not arise in the future. He speculated observers will think Republicans and Democrats have simply "kicked the can down the road," putting off their problems for another day.


On MSNBC, Chris Hayes speculated the Democrats learned to stand united during the shutdown by observing how the Republican party had acted in the past. Ben Domenech, from the right-leaning The Heartland Institute, looked back to the shutdown of the mid-1990s, noting Republicans had been united then because they had just won a resounding midterm election in 1994.


"In the 1990s shutdown, you had a united front because Newt Gingrich had led the Republican party out of the wilderness," Domenech said.


Hayes noted this was not the case with the current shutdown, because Republicans lost the 2012 presidential election.


Said Hayes: "That's what's so remarkable about this fool's errand. We just had an election which the Republicans demonstratively and very clearly lost." 



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/live_feed/~3/4IF6YJ814_c/story01.htm
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A&M QB Manziel Injured


COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel was injured in No. 7 Texas A&M's game against No. 24 Auburn, but has returned after sitting out one series.


Manziel was injured when he was tackled on an 8-yard run early in the fourth quarter. It was unclear what his injury was.


He got up after the tackle and then went to the ground before he reached the A&M sideline. A&M officials looked at him for a couple of minutes on the turf before he got up and walked off on his own power.


He was replaced by Matt Joeckel with A&M leading 31-24. The Aggies made a field goal two plays after he left to make it 34-24.


He came back in the game with nine minutes left and Auburn leading 38-34.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=237893873&ft=1&f=
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After Shutdown Dust Clears, Where Does Boehner Stand?


Weeks after vowing that House Republicans would not capitulate to President Obama's demands for "clean" bills reopening the government and raising the debt ceiling, Speaker John Boehner led his caucus in doing exactly that. Only about a third of Republicans voted "yes" on the bill with Boehner, but Boehner's standing among Tea Party conservatives in his caucus may have actually improved.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/18/236697001/after-shutdown-dust-clears-where-does-boehner-stand?ft=1&f=1006
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When neurons have less to say, they speak up

When neurons have less to say, they speak up


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Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
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Contact: Dr. Stefanie Merker
merker@neuro.mpg.de
49-898-578-3514
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft



Neurons strengthen their synapses in order to remain active after loss of input



This news release is available in German.


The brain is an extremely adaptable organ but it is also quite conservative. That's in short, what scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried and their colleagues from the Friedrich Miescher Institute in Basel and the Ruhr-Universitt Bochum were now able to show. The researchers found that neurons in the brain regulate their own activity in such a way that the overall activity level in the network remains as constant as possible. This remains true even in the event of major changes: After the complete loss of information from a sensory organ, for example, the almost silenced neurons re-establish levels of activity similar to their previous ones after only 48 hours. The mean activity level thus achieved is a basic prerequisite for a healthy brain and the formation of new connections between neurons an essential capacity for regeneration following injury to the brain or a sensory organ, for example.


Neurons communicate using electrical signals. They transmit these signals to neighbouring cells via special contact points known as synapses. When new information needs processing, the nerve cells can develop new synaptic contacts with their neighbouring cells or strengthen existing synapses. To be able to forget, these processes can also be reversed. The brain is consequently in a constant state of reorganisation, yet individual neurons need to be prevented from becoming either too active or too inactive. The aim is to keep the level of activity constant, as the long-term overexcitement of neurons can result in damage to the brain.


Too little activity is not good either. "The cells can only re-establish connections with their neighbours when they are 'awake', so to speak, that is when they display a minimum level of activity", explains Mark Hbener, head of the recently published study. The international team of researchers succeeded in demonstrating for the first time that the brain is able to compensate even massive changes in neuronal activity within a period of two days, and can return to an activity level similar to that before the change.


Up to now, only cell cultures gave an indication of this astonishing ability of the brain. It was also unclear as to how neurons could control their own activity in relation to the activity of the entire network. Now, the scientists have made significant progress towards finding an answer to this question. In their study, they examined the visual cortex of mice that recently went blind. As expected, but never previously demonstrated, the activity of the neurons in this area of the brain did not fall to zero but to half of the original value. "That alone was an amazing finding, as it shows the extent to which the visual cortex also processes information from other areas of the brain," explains Tobias Bonhoeffer, who investigates processes in the visual cortex with his department at the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology for many years. "However, things became really exciting when we continued to observe the area over the following hours and days."


The scientists were able to witness "live" through the microscope how the neurons in the visual cortex became active again. After just a few hours, they could clearly observe how the contact points between the affected neurons and their neighbouring cells increased in size. When synapses get bigger, they also become stronger and signals are transmitted faster and more effectively. As a result of this synaptic upscaling, the activity of the affected network returned to its starting value after a period of between 24 and 48 hours. "To put it simply, due to the absence of visual input, the cells had less to say but when they did say something, they said it with particular emphasis," explains Mark Hbener.


Due to the simultaneous strengthening of all of the synapses of the affected neurons, major reductions in the neuronal activity can be normalised again with surprising speed. The relatively stable activity level thereby achieved is an essential prerequisite for maintaining a healthy, adaptable brain.


###


Original publication:

Tara Keck, Georg B. Keller, R. Irene Jacobsen, Ulf T. Eysel, Tobias Bonhoeffer, Mark Hbener

Synaptic scaling and homeostatic plasticity in the mouse visual cortex in vivo

Neuron, 16 October 2013




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When neurons have less to say, they speak up


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
[


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Contact: Dr. Stefanie Merker
merker@neuro.mpg.de
49-898-578-3514
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft



Neurons strengthen their synapses in order to remain active after loss of input



This news release is available in German.


The brain is an extremely adaptable organ but it is also quite conservative. That's in short, what scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried and their colleagues from the Friedrich Miescher Institute in Basel and the Ruhr-Universitt Bochum were now able to show. The researchers found that neurons in the brain regulate their own activity in such a way that the overall activity level in the network remains as constant as possible. This remains true even in the event of major changes: After the complete loss of information from a sensory organ, for example, the almost silenced neurons re-establish levels of activity similar to their previous ones after only 48 hours. The mean activity level thus achieved is a basic prerequisite for a healthy brain and the formation of new connections between neurons an essential capacity for regeneration following injury to the brain or a sensory organ, for example.


Neurons communicate using electrical signals. They transmit these signals to neighbouring cells via special contact points known as synapses. When new information needs processing, the nerve cells can develop new synaptic contacts with their neighbouring cells or strengthen existing synapses. To be able to forget, these processes can also be reversed. The brain is consequently in a constant state of reorganisation, yet individual neurons need to be prevented from becoming either too active or too inactive. The aim is to keep the level of activity constant, as the long-term overexcitement of neurons can result in damage to the brain.


Too little activity is not good either. "The cells can only re-establish connections with their neighbours when they are 'awake', so to speak, that is when they display a minimum level of activity", explains Mark Hbener, head of the recently published study. The international team of researchers succeeded in demonstrating for the first time that the brain is able to compensate even massive changes in neuronal activity within a period of two days, and can return to an activity level similar to that before the change.


Up to now, only cell cultures gave an indication of this astonishing ability of the brain. It was also unclear as to how neurons could control their own activity in relation to the activity of the entire network. Now, the scientists have made significant progress towards finding an answer to this question. In their study, they examined the visual cortex of mice that recently went blind. As expected, but never previously demonstrated, the activity of the neurons in this area of the brain did not fall to zero but to half of the original value. "That alone was an amazing finding, as it shows the extent to which the visual cortex also processes information from other areas of the brain," explains Tobias Bonhoeffer, who investigates processes in the visual cortex with his department at the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology for many years. "However, things became really exciting when we continued to observe the area over the following hours and days."


The scientists were able to witness "live" through the microscope how the neurons in the visual cortex became active again. After just a few hours, they could clearly observe how the contact points between the affected neurons and their neighbouring cells increased in size. When synapses get bigger, they also become stronger and signals are transmitted faster and more effectively. As a result of this synaptic upscaling, the activity of the affected network returned to its starting value after a period of between 24 and 48 hours. "To put it simply, due to the absence of visual input, the cells had less to say but when they did say something, they said it with particular emphasis," explains Mark Hbener.


Due to the simultaneous strengthening of all of the synapses of the affected neurons, major reductions in the neuronal activity can be normalised again with surprising speed. The relatively stable activity level thereby achieved is an essential prerequisite for maintaining a healthy, adaptable brain.


###


Original publication:

Tara Keck, Georg B. Keller, R. Irene Jacobsen, Ulf T. Eysel, Tobias Bonhoeffer, Mark Hbener

Synaptic scaling and homeostatic plasticity in the mouse visual cortex in vivo

Neuron, 16 October 2013




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/m-wn101613.php
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US courts convict terrorists; Gitmo trials drag on

WASHINGTON (AP) — Four years after his failed effort to bring the 9/11 mastermind to New York for trial, President Barack Obama has reinstated the federal courthouse as America's preferred venue for prosecuting suspected terrorists.


His administration has done so by quietly securing conviction after conviction in the civilian judicial system. Meanwhile at Guantanamo Bay, admitted 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's case moves at a snail's pace.


Tuesday's expected arraignment of suspected al-Qaida member Abu Anas al-Libi is the latest example of Obama's de facto policy. Al-Libi was captured in a military raid in Libya earlier this month and had been under interrogation aboard a U.S. warship.


The Obama administration says it considers all options for prosecuting terrorists, weighing military and civilian trials on a case-by-case basis.


But Guantanamo Bay, the U.S. military base that embodied America's post-9/11 methods of interrogating and prosecuting suspected terrorists, has turned into a legal morass. The military commission's poor case record has become less about winning and more about completion.


While the Justice Department says more than 125 people have been convicted of terrorism charges in federal courts since 2009, not a single military commission has come to a close during that period.


Of the few military commissions completed under President George W. Bush, most resulted in short sentences or have been overturned.


"There's really no comparison in terms of the success rate," said David Raskin, the former top national security prosecutor at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Manhattan. "Not really between wins or losses, just finishing the cases. There's no comparison at this point."


The politics are breaking Obama's way too.


When Attorney General Eric Holder announced in 2009 that Mohammed would be tried in New York City, the outcry from both political parties was great.


Some feared a high-profile terrorism trial would put the city at risk. Others said a civilian courthouse, with all the rights afforded defendants there, was no place for a terrorist.


Obama, who came into office promising to close Guantanamo Bay and prosecute terrorists in federal courts, buckled under the pressure and pulled the case back to Guantanamo.


Since then, not much has changed at the naval base in Cuba. Mohammed is one of 164 men held there and one of six facing trial. Those trials have stalled largely because of legal challenges to the commission system itself.


In federal courts, however, the Obama administration is quietly churning through terror cases and putting many terrorists away for life.


One of the first key cases was against Ahmed Ghailani, a former Guantanamo detainee who was transferred to New York during the Bush administration. He was convicted in 2010 and is serving a life sentence in prison.


Last year, Mohanad Shareef Hammadi, an Iraqi man, pleaded guilty to terrorism charges in Kentucky and was sentenced to life in prison without parole. Hammadi's co-defendant got a 40-year sentence for his role in a plot to ship weapons and cash to insurgents in Iraq.


Ahmed Abdulkadir Warsame, a Somali citizen accused of helping support and train al-Qaida-linked militants, pleaded guilty earlier this year. Like al-Libi, he was questioned aboard a U.S. warship before being turned over to the civilian justice system.


Each new trial brought fresh criticism from Republicans, but that criticism diminished each time.


Some Republican lawmakers criticized Monday's announcement that al-Libi would face trial in court. They questioned whether interrogators questioned him long enough.


"It certainly begs the question whether rushing foreign terrorists into U.S. courts is a strategy that is in the best interests of the United States," said Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.


But in the midst of a major budget debate in Washington, the matter got little attention.


The White House, which once fought back against such criticism, now shows little interest in renewing a debate that proved to be a political distraction.


So the administration said nothing when al-Libi arrived in the United States on Saturday. Preet Bharara, the U.S. attorney for the southern district of New York, issued a two-sentence statement Monday, saying only that al-Libi was due in court to answer charges dating back more than a decade.


Al-Libi, whose full name is Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, is accused of helping plan and conduct surveillance for the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa.


"A federal civilian criminal trial is by far the safest and the one that would raise the least complex set of legal problems for the administration," said Steve Vladick, a professor at American University law school.


That's because al-Libi was indicted more than a decade ago, which meant the government did not need any evidence it gathered against him during his interrogation.


Intelligence officials questioned him for a week aboard the USS San Antonio. Interrogations at sea have replaced CIA "black sites" as the U.S. government's preferred method for holding suspected terrorists and questioning them without access to lawyers.


Al-Libi's al-Qaida ties date back to the terrorist group's early years, according to court documents. That would make him a valuable source of information about the group's history.


In an interview last week on the PBS program "NewsHour," Lisa Monaco, the president's homeland security adviser, said the first priority in capturing al-Libi was to get intelligence.


"I think what it shows is a very clear strategy by the U.S. government to use all the tools, frankly, in our toolbox to disrupt threats, to go after — consistent with the rule of law — individuals who pose a threat, to get intelligence and then ultimately to make a decision about what the best disposition is," Monaco said.


So far, in every instance that the Obama administration has had a terrorist suspect in custody, it has found the best disposition was the federal court system.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-courts-convict-terrorists-gitmo-trials-drag-073047379--politics.html
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Growing Up Geek: Julie Uhrman

Welcome to Growing Up Geek, a feature where we take a look back at our youth, and tell stories of growing up to be the nerds that we are. Today, we have the founder of OUYA, Julie Uhrman!



Growing up, I was your typical tomboy. My twin sister and I were incredibly competitive and wanted to do ...


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Our Favorite iOS, Android, and Windows Phone Apps of the Week

Our Favorite iOS, Android, and Windows Phone Apps of the Week

Now that the slow, languid summer months are far behind us, we're finally starting to see some major advancement in the app world. Whether it's a brand new payment system from the ubiquitous Square or something beautiful simply for beauty's sake, there's a whole lot of goodness just up ahead. And it starts right here.

Read more...


    






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Friday, October 18, 2013

All Is Lost

All Is Lost, starring Robert Redford
All Is Lost, starring Robert Redford.

Photo courtesy Daniel Daza/Roadside Attractions








After Margin Call, J.C. Chandor’s smart, talky, somewhat theatrical 2011 debut feature about the frantic last hours at a Lehman Brothers–like bank on the brink of financial meltdown, there couldn’t have been a more unexpected second project for this promising new director than All Is Lost, a stripped-down, nearly wordless tale of survival at sea. Robert Redford plays the film’s sole, unnamed character—the credits identify him as “Our Man”—a veteran sailor piloting his small sailboat through the Indian Ocean. We have no clue how long Our Man has been at sea or plans to remain there, where he comes from, or what his life on shore was like. Except for a brief opening voiceover in which we hear his poignant message-in-a-bottle apology to an unknown party or parties (his family, we assume), this is a man who exists only in the moment. As well he should, given that, after a floating shipping container rams a hole in the side of his craft, Our Man’s life is quickly reduced to a minute-to-minute struggle for survival.














Initially, Redford’s character remarks with almost deadpan equanimity to the apparent direness of his situation—without a word of complaint (or a word, period), he patches up the breach, bails out the boat as best he can, and enjoys a glass of bourbon with his nightly can of pork and beans. But a huge storm at sea soon worsens the damage, knocks him out with a nasty head wound, and worst of all, cuts off all means of communication with the shore. Over the course of eight days, Our Man will eventually be forced to leave his sinking sailboat for a rubber life raft that’s well stocked with survival equipment—a sextant, a stash of emergency flares—but even more subject than the boat was to the fickle whims of the sea. You know that saying about how the toast always falls with the buttered side down? That happens to Our Man on an existential plane for the entirety of this movie, as each of his resourceful, carefully crafted plans for finding food, potable water, and a means of rescue is thwarted by the tragic indifference of nature. Manage to catch a fish after days choking down horrible dry rations, did you, sir? Well, here comes a shark to swipe it off your line at the last second. And the scent of the blood has attracted some more. And they’re circling the raft.










It’s man vs. nature at its Hemingway-esque purest, which sounds like it would make for very heavy symbolic going. But All Is Lost goes light-to-nonexistent on the macho bluster, and also (happily) eschews the soaring spiritual allegories of Life of Pi. At heart, this is a process movie about open-water survival. The story, such as it is, lies in the practical day-to-day choices that Redford’s character makes: Should he hang on to that book of instructions for reading the stars with a sextant, or burn it as fuel? Use up the last flare in an attempt to flag a passing ship, or save it for the next ship that comes along? Hovering over all these small questions is one unimaginably huge one, which comes to dominate the film: When is it time to give up?












The way that Redford’s character—who for all his namelessness and near-wordlessness emerges as a distinct character, a calm, pragmatic, curious man with a dry sense of humor—struggles with that ultimate question is the beating heart of All is Lost, which somewhere in its second hour goes from being a good movie to being a great one. A huge part of the credit for that goes to Redford, who’s the only living actor I can imagine in this role. Our long history of watching him get into scrapes big and small—jumping off the cliff with Butch, breaking the story with Bernstein—can’t help but figure into our deep identification with his stranded character here. (If you think you wanted to see Tom Hanks try to get through his ordeal at sea, just imagine something bad happening to Robert Redford!) And the way time has changed Redford’s legendary, leonine face—turning it into a kind of Easter Island statue of petrified movie-star handsomeness—only makes us love him more. The now 77-year-old star demonstrates unbelievable physical and psychological endurance in this role without giving a performance that’s in the least showy or self-congratulatory. In essence, Redford is simply behaving before our eyes, working out his character’s problems in real time under extreme conditions—and with the exception of that opening voiceover and one well-placed and very loud curse word, in total silence.










J.C. Chandor knows what a jewel he has in Redford, and he creates an appropriately simple, transparent setting. There’s minimal digital trickery here, and no flashbacks, cutaway scenes, or dream sequences to break up the action. The musical theme—a simple, haunting melody by Alex Ebert—is used sparingly and effectively, with natural sound providing most of the sonic backdrop. Very late in the film, as Our Man’s hope of rescue decreases, the images start to take on an ethereal, almost abstract quality: We see the floor of the bobbing raft from far below the surface of the water, the sun streaming through it in a halo-like shape. I won’t describe the magnificent final two or three shots, except to say that All Is Lost’s title—which is also a phrase in that opening voiceover—expresses a sense of despair that its resilient hero is never, God bless him, able to fully embrace.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/movies/2013/10/all_is_lost_reviewed_robert_redford_is_unbelievable_in_j_c_chandor_s_great.html
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Obama Must Keep Leading From the Front


Let us hear no more about President Obama leading from behind.



 


Since a White House adviser uttered that phrase to the New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza in 2011 to describe Obama’s leadership in Libya, “leading from behind” has become a favorite refrain of Republicans trying to portray Obama as weak.





Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/10/18/obama_must_keep_leading_from_the_front_318145.html
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Kate Middleton -- Post Baby Bump, Set ... SMOKING HOT


Kate Middleton
Post-Baby Bump, Set ...
SMOKING HOT


1018-kate-middleton-rexusaKate Middleton allegedly had a baby 3 months ago -- but there is zero proof of that in these pics of the Duchess of Cambridge flashing her royal midriff all over a volleyball court.

Prince William's wife showed up for a public appearance in London yesterday, sporting wedge heels, and a banging bod that made everyone forget she was ever pregnant.

Kate gave birth on July 22 to Prince George ... and obviously hit the gym on July 23. 

Women ... begin hating. Guys ... continue wishing you were Prince William.

1018_kate_middleton_volleyball_footer




Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/10/18/kate-middleton-volleyball-post-baby-hot-photos/
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PayPal Expands “Real World” Presence Via Partnership With iPad Point-of-Sale Maker Revel Systems


PayPal has today scored another partnership bringing its technology to more point-of-sale platforms via a tie-up with iPad POS solution provider, Revel Systems, a company whose business has grown by 400% year-over year and now includes big-name clients like Dairy Queen, Goodwill, Popeye’s, and others. While PayPal is currently focused on building up its point-of-sale presence involving its own proprietary hardware and software with its newly launched Beacon device, the company is not attempting to take on quickly growing Square and other competitors with in-house technology alone.


In recent months, PayPal has also partnered with a number of point-of-sale hardware makers to bring its payments technology into the “real world” via deals with the makers of existing systems. One of the larger partnerships was with NCR, announced at the beginning of the year, which allowed PayPal to begin integrations with several products in the longtime hardware maker, as well as expand PayPal from online and mobile into new places, like restaurants, gas stations and convenience stores.


It has also partnered with others like Gilbarco (gas stations POS tech), and a number of other POS system providers both large and small, including Booker, Leaf, Erply, Leapset, ShopKeep POS, and Vend, for example.


With Revel Systems, however, the company has found its way onto to another growing startup’s POS platform. For background, Revel raised $10.1 million in Series B funding earlier this summer, with new investments from Tim Tighe, former CEO of Hungry Jack’s and SVP of McDonald’s Southeast Asia, and Sean Tomlinson. The round was focused specifically on increasing the pace of Revel’s expansion, the company explained.


Revel has been profitable as of December 2012, the team told TechCrunch at the time of the announcement, but says this will allow them to grow even more quickly – as well as internationally – than had they just continued to reinvest revenues.


paypal-revel-order-ahead-ipadpos-hires


Founded in 2010, the San Francisco-based startup currently has traction with a number of businesses, primarily in restaurants, retail and grocery, with its iPad-based platform which offers more than just support for transactions, but also tools for managing other aspects to the business like payroll, inventory tracking, CRM, and more. Just last month, it also scored a deal with Alabama State University, allowing it to outfit the entire football stadium with Revel-powered iPads found at some 30 concession stands throughout the facility.


The new PayPal partnership is good for Revel as it offers another way for its customers to pay – they will be able to use the PayPal app on iOS and Android at any Revel Systems’s POS shop. But it also means that restaurants can offer an “order ahead” option where payment takes place via mobile, instead of at checkout upon pickup. And Revel’s customer base will gain added exposure through inclusion in the PayPal app’s discovery feature, which highlights nearby retailers accepting PayPal.


But more importantly, perhaps, it gives PayPal another foothold at POS in the real world, which is key to its ongoing growth strategy. The company already has established relationships with a number of large brand-name chains, giving itself an in at thousands of well-known locations across the U.S., and it recently launched Payment Code to allow for better integrations with merchants’ existing systems. Through Revel, PayPal gains access to those merchants who are already ditching dated POS systems for more modern technology – a good base to kickstart PayPal’s mobile payments adoption, too.


Revel today has over 2,000 enterprise clients that do over $300,000 or more in revenue, and is now hiring over 100 people in San Jose, San Francisco and elsewhere. Around half the clients have already upgraded their systems to include the PayPal support, while the remaining customers will need to run a 2 minute update procedure. Revel also offers other third-party integrations via its Marketplace, including LevelUp, First Data, Heartland and more.












September 15, 2010


$13.8M




Revel Systems provides an iPad point of sale solution that is mobile, cloud-based, and secure. This state of the art system offers an open API with third party integration, detailed and extensive real-time reporting, and is the only POS solution to offer True Offline Mode. Revel Systems exceeds standards set for PCI compliance, and offers the security of the cloud to allow an owner to conduct his or her business from anywhere. Revel also presents a scalable solution ,...





→ Learn more





PayPal is an online payments and money transfer service that allows you to send money via email, phone, text message or Skype. They offer products to both individuals and businesses alike, including online vendors, auction sites and corporate users. PayPal connects effortlessly to bank accounts and credit cards. PayPal Mobile is one of PayPal’s newest products. It allows you to send payments by text message or by using PayPal’s mobile browser. PayPal created the Gausebeck-Levchin test, which is an implementation...





→ Learn more






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Kerry Hopes Syria's Chemical Weapons Are Shipped Out Of The Region





Secretary of State John Kerry flies over Afghanistan on Oct. 11. He met with President Hamid Karzai to work out an agreement on U.S. presence in the country.



Jacquelyn Martin/AFP/Getty Images


Secretary of State John Kerry flies over Afghanistan on Oct. 11. He met with President Hamid Karzai to work out an agreement on U.S. presence in the country.


Jacquelyn Martin/AFP/Getty Images


Syria's chemical weapons could be consolidated and moved out of the country, Secretary of State John Kerry suggested in an interview with NPR.


Weapons inspectors are still in Syria assessing the country's stockpile and how to destroy it, in accordance with a United Nations Security Council resolution approved in September.


Asked by Morning Edition host Renee Montagne whether the agreement ensures that Syria's President Bashar Assad will remain in power, perhaps for many more months, Kerry replied:




"The fact is that these weapons can be removed whether Assad is there or not there because we know the locations, the locations have been declared, the locations are being secured. And my hope is that much of this material will be moved as rapidly [as] possibly into one location, and hopefully on a ship, and removed from the region."





Where such a ship would go is unclear, NPR's Michele Kelemen reports, and even the logistics of dealing with the weapons inside Syria are complicated.


"The Chemical Weapons Convention bars countries from moving their stockpiles — but in Syria's case, a U.N. resolution allows it and urges member states to help," Kelemen says.


Ralf Trapp, a consultant in chemical weapons disarmament, tells Kelemen that the idea of moving the material has been under discussion. However, he adds:




"It's a big, big logistical operation, and just doing this under peacetime conditions is not an easy job, so doing this under the conditions of Syria today is a challenge."




In an interview airing Thursday on Morning Edition, Kerry emphasized that the way forward in Syria would have to be diplomatic and that maintaining state institutions is key to future progress.


"There is no military solution. Absolutely not. There is only a continued rate of destruction and a creation of a humanitarian catastrophe for everybody in the region if the fighting continues," he said.


His remarks follow a two-week trip abroad, including two days in Kabul, where Kerry met with Afghan President Hamid Karzai. The leaders reached a deal on the terms of U.S. presence in Afghanistan after its combat mission ends.


"Everything that will be necessary to a successful agreement is in the agreement. We succeeded in defining exactly what the limits would be for American participation in the future," Kerry said.


But a council of public and tribal leaders, known as the Loya Jirga, still has to sign off on the issue of jurisdiction over Americans who would be working in Afghanistan.


"Needless to say, we are adamant it has to be the United States of America. That's the way it is everywhere else in the world," Kerry said. "And they have a choice: Either that's the way it is or there won't be any forces there of any kind."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/17/235664114/kerry-hopes-syrias-chemical-weapons-are-shipped-out-of-the-region?ft=1&f=1004
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Miley Cyrus' 'Bangerz' Debuts At No. 1 On Billboard 200


As forecast last week, Miley Cyrus debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with her new release Bangerz, selling 270,000 copies in its first week, according to Nielsen SoundScan.



Counting her soundtrack albums as the Disney character Hannah Montana, this is her fifth No. 1 album. She topped the list with the Disney Channel TV series' first soundtrack in 2006, as well as its big-screen film adaptation soundtrack in 2009. Cyrus herself notched No. 1s with the half-soundtrack/half-studio album Hannah Montana 2/Meet Miley Cyrus set in 2007, and then her own Breakout studio effort in 2008. Cyrus' last studio album, 2010's Can't Be Tamed, debuted and peaked at No. 3 from a 102,000 start.


Bangerz is one of seven debuts in the top 10 this week. Arriving at No. 2 is Panic! at the Disco's Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die with 84,000. That's up quite a bit from the starting week of its last album, 2011's Vices & Virtues. It debuted and peaked at No. 7 with 56,000. Panic's new album matches its highest-charting set, Pretty. Odd., which debuted and peaked at No. 2 in 2008.


Rapper Pusha T is up next on the Billboard 200, as his new album My Name Is My Name, bows at No. 4 with 75,000. It's his first top 10 set as a solo artist. He previously visited the region as one-half of the hip-hop duo Clipse, which hit No. 4 with 2002's Lord Willin'.


After nearly two years away from the top 10, the Glee cast returns to the region, with the soundtrack to the Fox TV show's Oct. 10 episode titled "The Quarterback." The EP enters at No. 7 with 47,000. The episode dealt with the death of the character Finn Hudson and doubled as a tribute to the late actor who played him, Cory Monteith. Proceeds from the sales of the six-song EP and its tracks benefit the charity Project Limelight.


A Glee album was last in the top 10 on the Dec. 24, 2011, chart, when Glee: The Music, Season 3—Volume 7 debuted and peaked at No. 9. In total, Glee: The Quarterback is the 14th top 10 album for the Fox TV franchise.


Rock band Korn claims its 12th top 10 album this week as The Paradigm Shift starts at No. 8 with 46,000. All but one of the Korn's 13 charting albums released since 1996 have reached the top 10. Only 2006's Live & Rare missed the region, debuting and peaking at No. 51.


The third-season winner of the NBC's The VoiceCassadee Pope, starts at No. 9 with her first major-label album, Frame by Frame (43,000). On the Top Country Albums chart, the set enters at No. 1.


Pope easily surpasses the peak position of the only other Voice winner to have released an album thus far: first-season champ Javier Colon. His first post-Voice release, Come Through For You, debuted and peaked at No. 134 with a 10,000 start. The respective second- and fourth-season winners, Jermaine Paul and Danielle Bradbery, have yet to release their post-win efforts.


Rock band Mayday Parade lands its first top 10 album, Monsters in the Closet, debuting at No. 10 with 30,000. It's the best sales week yet for the act, which had previously sold no more than 27,000 in a week, when 2011's self-titled album debuted and peaked at No. 12.


The band is on Fearless Records, and in turn, the label nets its second top 10 album ever—and first since 2007. Its other previous top 10 visit was when Plain White T's Every Second Counts also debuted (and peaked) at No. 10 on Aug. 11, 2007.


Meanwhile, last week's No. 1 album, Justin Timberlake's The 20/20 Experience (2 of 2) drops by 80% in its second week and falls to No. 5 with 70,000 sold. That's the largest second-week percentage decline for a No. 1-debuting album since Kanye West's Yeezus fell by nearly 81% back in late June.


Falling a spot to No. 3 this week is Drake's Nothing Was the Same, slipping by 44% in its third week to 83,000. Lorde's Pure Heroine falls by a moderate 51% in its sophomore frame, dropping to No. 6 with 63,000.
 
Over on the Digital Songs chart, Lorde continues to reign with "Royals," selling another 294,000 downloads (down 5%). Katy Perry's "Roar" is steady at No. 2 with 195,000 (down 10%), and Avicii's "Wake Me Up!" rises 4-3 with 160,000 (down 4%).


Cyrus' "Wrecking Ball" slips 3-4 with 128,000 and a decline of 40%. Its sales erosion is owed to iTunes' consumers who opted to complete their Bangerz album by upgrading their earlier "Wrecking Ball" sale to an album purchase. Effectively, customers who completed their album were returning a song, thus amplifying the sales decline for "Ball" this week.


Justin Bieber's "Heartbreaker" zooms from No. 22 to No. 5 after a full week's worth of sales. It jumps from 55,000 to 127,000. (The song was released Sunday, Oct. 6, about an hour before the end of the previous week's tracking period. That's why it debuted a week early.) The song is the first offering in Bieber's Music Mondays series, which is scheduled for 10 consecutive weeks of new song releases every Monday.


Drake's "Hold On, We're Going Home" falls one rung to No. 6 with 121,000 (down 7%), and Eminem's "Survival" bows at No. 7 with 112,000, marking the second top 10 debut from the hip-hop icon's forthcoming album. It follows "Berzerk," which started at No. 2 with 362,000 in September. Both cuts are from The Marshall Mathers LP 2 album, due Nov. 5. Next week we will see the presumed lofty arrival of another pre-release cut from the album, Rap God.


Ylvis' viral video turned hit single, "The Fox," rises 12-8 on Digital Songs with 108,000 (up 25%) while Lady Gaga's "Applause" is stationary at No. 9 with 100,000 (down 9%). Jay Z's "Holy Grail," featuring Timberlake, descends four slots to No. 10 with 98,000 (down 17%).


Overall album sales in this past chart week (ending Oct. 13) totaled 4.80 million units, up less than 1% compared with the sum last week (4.79 million) and down 6% compared with the comparable sales week of 2012 (5.1 million). Year-to-date album sales stand at 214.8 million, down 6% compared with the same total at this point last year (228.9 million).
    
Digital track sales this past week totaled 19.78 million downloads, down less than 1% compared with last week (19.81 million) and down 10% stacked next to the comparable week of 2012 (22.1 million). Year-to-date track sales are at 1.01 million, down 4% compared with the same total at this point last year (1.05 million).


Next week's Billboard 200 competes with the same week in 2012 when: Jason Alden's Night Train rolled in at No. 1 with 409,000 while Brandy's Two Eleven started at No. 3 with 65,000. The previous week's No. 1, Mumford & Sons' Babel, fell to No. 2 with 74,000 (down 23%).


This story first appeared on Billboard.com


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