The drugs which are obtained from marine organisms are know as marine drugs. these marine drugs are used since ancient times. chines and japanes are very famous to use these resources. And interstingly,innumarable products derived from the marine organisms in several 'crude forms' have been widely used across the globe by the traditional practitioners for thousands of years.
Cancer is one of the fatal disease that has no known complete cure.One of approach in developing the novel drug is through unraveling the enigma of marine biodiversity.
The drugs which are obtained from marine organisms are know as marine drugs. these marine drugs are used since ancient times. chines and japanes are very famous to use these resources. And interstingly,innumarable products derived from the marine organisms in several 'crude forms' have been widely used across the globe by the traditional practitioners for thousands of years.
Cancer is one of the fatal disease that has no known complete cure.One of approach in developing the novel drug is through unraveling the enigma of marine biodiversity.
Developing data services: a tale from two Oregon universitiesAmanda Whitmire
While the generation or collection of large, complex research datasets is becoming easier and less expensive all the time, researchers often lack the knowledge and skills that are necessary to properly manage them. Having these skills is paramount in ensuring data quality, integrity, discoverability, integration, reproducibility, and reuse over time. Librarians have been preserving, managing and disseminating information for thousands of years. As scholarly research is increasingly carried out digitally, and products of research have expanded from primarily text-based manuscripts to include datasets, metadata, maps, software code etc., it is a natural expansion of scope for libraries to be involved in the stewardship of these materials as well. This kind of evolution requires that libraries bring in faculty with new skills and collaborate more intimately with researchers during the research data lifecycle, and this is exactly what is happening in academic libraries across the country. In this webinar, two researchers-turned-data-specialists, both based in academic libraries, will share their experiences and perspectives on the development of research data services at their respective institutions. Each will share their perspective on the important role that libraries can play in helping researchers manage, preserve, and share their data.
Developing data services: a tale from two Oregon universitiesAmanda Whitmire
While the generation or collection of large, complex research datasets is becoming easier and less expensive all the time, researchers often lack the knowledge and skills that are necessary to properly manage them. Having these skills is paramount in ensuring data quality, integrity, discoverability, integration, reproducibility, and reuse over time. Librarians have been preserving, managing and disseminating information for thousands of years. As scholarly research is increasingly carried out digitally, and products of research have expanded from primarily text-based manuscripts to include datasets, metadata, maps, software code etc., it is a natural expansion of scope for libraries to be involved in the stewardship of these materials as well. This kind of evolution requires that libraries bring in faculty with new skills and collaborate more intimately with researchers during the research data lifecycle, and this is exactly what is happening in academic libraries across the country. In this webinar, two researchers-turned-data-specialists, both based in academic libraries, will share their experiences and perspectives on the development of research data services at their respective institutions. Each will share their perspective on the important role that libraries can play in helping researchers manage, preserve, and share their data.
Microbial Metagenomics Drives a New CyberinfrastructureLarry Smarr
06.03.03
Invited Talk
School of Biological Sciences
University of California, Irvine
Title: Microbial Metagenomics Drives a New Cyberinfrastructure
Irvine, CA
Using Supercomputers and Supernetworks to Explore the Ocean of LifeLarry Smarr
07.06.07
Director's Colloquium
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Title: Using Supercomputers and Supernetworks to Explore the Ocean of Life
Los Alamos, NM
Here we update on fundamental systematics research and the development of new potential molecular markers to improve on current diagnostic tools. We also link these molecular tools with physical specimens, documenting the range of morphological variation so as to greatly improve on available resources used to diagnose fruit flies in the field as part of surveillance programmes or at border interceptions.
This slide lecture is for students seeking help regarding Metagenomics. Do remember me in your prayers.
Metagenomics Applications, Metagenomics working principles , Metagenomic libraries
, Metagenomic Techniques , Metagenomics limitations and other topics are elaborated in this Slideshare.
Similar to Bioactive Natural Products from Deep Sea Hydrothermal Vent Organisms (20)
Acidification Stress - Commercially Important BivalvesOregon Sea Grant
Dr. George Waldbusser's 2012-14 Oregon Sea Grant-supported project, "Developing Realisitic Metrics of Acidification Stress for Commercially Important Bivalves in Variable Habitats."
Dr. Francis Chan's 2012-2014 Oregon Sea Grant-supported project, "Understanding, Forecasting and Communicating the Linkages Between Hypoxia and Ocean Acidification in Oregon's Coastal Ocean"
Brief overview of two 2012-14 research projects:
The West Coast Sea Grant-supported project to assess direct marketing approaches for West Coast fishing communities, and Dr. Selina Heppell's "Taking Stock of Oregon's nearshore Fisheries: Development of Simple Assessment Tools for Better Management
Dr. Lorenzo Ciannelli's 2012-2014 Oregon Sea Grant-supported research project, "Predicting Habitat Quality of Juvenile English Sole and Dungeness Crab in Coastal and Estuarine Nursery Grounds"
Sami Grimes and Heather Treizenberg of the National Sea Grant Office discuss national reporting guidelines and response to network feedback. Sea Grant Week 2010
Bioactive Natural Products from Deep Sea Hydrothermal Vent Organisms
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7. Deep Ocean Microbial Diversity Deep-Sea Bacteria n = 9,992 sequences Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Bacteria n = 7,641 sequences Deep-Sea Archaea n = 1,995 sequences Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Archaea n = 1,686 sequences
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13. Table X: Activity profile for four microbial mat samples. Prioritized fractions are in bold
Editor's Notes
Aspirin, penicilin, morphine, taxol Natural products are also of great importance as research biochemicals, useful for elucidating normal cellular processes as well as those present in pathological states. many of the essential tools of pharmacologists studying drug action are natural products, and these have had important roles in identifying novel targets for treating human disease.
By expanding the base of researchers investigating deep vents, the aim is to provide added support for studying these ecosystems and while also heightening awareness about the value of these regions and the need for their protections. The aim was to provide broad overviews of the research interests of each group and identify areas where these interests could possibly be combined to form new collaborative projects that would enhance the project portfolio of each group and open up new avenues for funding Capitalizes on relationship with scientists at OSU’s Hatfield Marine Science Center associated with the NOAA/PMELVents Program linkage to work with deep sea samples
Also Gain insight into role as signaling molecules in symbiosis and chemical ecology
There were 44 sequences for the phylum Actinobacteria for hydrothermal vents (0.6%). However, I am not sure if they are all within the Actinomycetales and most were unclassified. The deep-sea background search contained 615 hits for Actinobacteria with 508 belonging to Actinomycetales (6.4%). All sequences compiled from Ribosomal Database Project: Release 10 (For citations see http://rdp.cme.msu.edu/misc/citation.jsp)