Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Rams ink Long, source says

Bill ParcellsAP

The Dolphins are going to introduce a new logo, and they?re doing their best to remake their locker room in free agency.

But five years ago, they had the best chance to change the course of the franchise, and they whiffed.

With Jake Long?s departure for St. Louis, the Dolphins? entire 2008 Draft class is history.

That?s the year they used the first overall pick on Long, skipping over Boston College quarterback Matt Ryan, who they didn?t think was worthy of the top pick. He?s now 56-22 in the regular season for the Falcons, and has led his team to the playoffs four times in five seasons.

The Dolphins haven?t enjoyed that kind of success, in part because of what they didn?t get from the group of players Bill Parcells drafted in 2008.

Long was followed in the second round by defensive end Phillip Merling and quarterback Chad Henne, and the rest of the names are providing the exact same benefit to the Dolphins now (Kendall Langford, Shawn Murphy, Jalen Parmele, Donald Thomas, Lex Hilliard and Lionel Dotson).

Frankly, 2009 was nearly as bad, as their top three picks were Vontae Davis, Pat White and Sean Smith, two of whom are Chiefs and one of whom is out of the league and begging for work. They did get Brian Hartline and Chris Clemons later, and have resigned them this offseason.

Recent history has shown us, via the Packers, Giants and Ravens, that the way to build a stable franchise is by finding a quarterback, then using picks to surround him with a base of price-controlled talent.

Their evaluation in 2008 was that Ryan wasn?t going to be a franchise passer, scared by the interceptions he threw at BC. So they drafted the solid but unspectacular Henne, and took the sure thing Long with the top pick.

And now they have nothing to show for it.

It was an embarrassing waste of resources, and part of the reason the Dolphins are now in a desperate game of catch-up.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/18/jake-long-agrees-to-terms-with-rams/related/

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Kim Kardashian: Pregnancy Is Tougher Than I Thought

"Being pregnant is not as easy as my sister [Kourtney] made it look or as my mom [Kris Jenner] has made it look," the 32-year-old star told E!

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/E34EJraJVHE/

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THX sues Apple over iMac speakers

Audio firm THX have entered into a lawsuit with Apple, alleging that the Californian tech giant infringed on one of its patents by releasing certain speaker units in the new slimline iMac.

The audio company, founded by George Lucas in 1983, holds a patent granted in 2008 for "a speaker unit that can boost sound output and attach to computers or flat-screen televisions," according to the complaint details filed yesterday in San Jose, California.

Whilst the court filing specifies both iPhones and iPads to also be infringing devices, AppleInsider notes that the newly released slimline iMacs use the exact audio design as described by THX. According to the lawsuit, though, any Apple device that uses the infringing speaker units are subject to legal action, causing "monetary damage and irreparable harm" to the company.

Both companies are more likely to prefer a settlement, however, before entering into a full-scale courtroom disagreement, Engadget reports.

The lawsuit follows in a line of bodies seeking legal action against Apple, the latest being a class-action suit against the company regarding ghosting on new Retina MacBook pro screens, reported?yesterday.

Source: Bloomberg?via?Engadget |?Image via THX

Source: http://feeds.neowin.net/~r/neowin-main/~3/IpSLh6LnT_M/thx-sues-apple-over-imac-speakers

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North Dakota has funds to fight over abortion (Providence Journal)

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Live from Expand: Microsoft's Bob Heddle (video)

Live from Expand Microsoft's Bob Heddle video

From gaming peripheral to PC input device, Microsoft's Kinect is changing the way we interact with our machines. We'll be speaking to Bob Heddle, director, Kinect for Windows at Microsoft about the device's broadening functionality. We'll also be taking a look at the state of the Kinect for Windows Software Development Kit.

March 16, 2013 7:00 PM EDT

For a full list of Expand sessions, be sure to check out our event hub.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/16/live-bob-heddle/

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ShaqIsDope ? Vintage Paris (Prod. By Melrose Zee) + Dirty California (Prod. By LSMi)

To provide a quick introduction, here?s couple tracks from ?20-year-old Toronto native ShaqIsDope. The kid can definitely rap and a mixtape is currently in the works, set to be released later this year. Until then, listen to ?Vintage Paris? and ?Dirty California.?

Source: http://youheardthatnew.com/2013/03/shaqisdope-vintage-paris-prod-by-melrose-zee-dirty-california-prod-by-lsmi/

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Saturday, March 16, 2013

Red Bull's openness on feces threat could pay off

By Georgina Prodhan

VIENNA (Reuters) - Red Bull's unusual decision to go public on a blackmailer's threat to contaminate its energy drinks with faeces could cost the brand far less long-term than any immediate hit to sales.

Known for investing heavily in marketing its drinks and sports events, the privately owned Austrian company reveals little about itself. So its announcement on Thursday of a criminal threat to taint its drinks came as a particular surprise.

Companies hit by product tampering generally hope such threats blow over, marketing experts said.

"It's a bold brand and a bold move," said Gordon Pincott, chairman of global solutions at the Millward Brown brands specialist agency. "The good thing about what they've done with this announcement is it doesn't let the rumor mill get going."

Red Bull made the announcement in order to remove the "blackmailer's greatest lever" of disclosing it in the media, said the company. Red Bull sold 5.2 billion cans of drink last year and is ranked the third biggest soft drink brand in the world after Coca-Cola and Pepsi .

The extortionist had threatened to taint beverage cans with faecal matter if not paid off, Red Bull said. But nothing had been found at checks in stores where the blackmailer said drinks had been contaminated.

"People now know to pay close attention to their can," said Jordi Connor, head of planning at WPP's Dialogue brand marketing agency. "While it may cost Red Bull some sales in the short term, the announcement will have strengthened the bond of trust between them and their drinkers."

Investigations were focused on a specific supermarket in Vienna, Austrian prosecutors said. The Kurier newspaper printed what it called a ransom email signed by "gruponymos". It blanked out the supermarket address.

A Red Bull spokesman declined to elaborate on the company's short statement, in which it also said that it and the police believed they were close to finding the perpetrators.

In a possible indication of limited damage for Red Bull's image, tweets about Red Bull on Friday appeared to be dominated by news of its Formula 1 racing team preparing for the Australian Grand Prix rather than the blackmail attempt.

IMAGE CONTROL

The Red Bull brand, valued by Millward Brown at $10 billion, has been built not only through its drinks, but also through sports - ranging from sponsorship of Felix Baumgartner's record-breaking space dive to Formula One racing and ice hockey.

Its executives rarely give interviews and it controls its image tightly.

Even the most open companies almost never come forward to talk about any product tampering, said Gene Grabowski, an expert in food and consumer PR and vice president of U.S.-based communications firm Levick, which has worked on almost 200 product recalls.

"In this case it looks like it might be effective," he said. "If there is any contamination or there is any problem with the drink, Red Bull has already established who the villain here would be."

This paid off for Pepsi in 1993 when the company won sympathy after a spate of reports of needles and other objects found in Pepsi cans turned out to be hoaxes, he said.

While companies might prefer to keep quiet about product tampering, not saying anything can be damaging too.

The failure of baby food maker Gerber to withdraw products quickly in the United States after some were contaminated with glass in 1986 and its decision to remain tight-lipped about the affair is still used by some public relations advisors as an example of how not to handle such cases.

The most notorious case of product contamination was the 1982 Chicago Tylenol murders, in which seven people died after taking Johnson & Johnson medicine contaminated with cyanide. That case remains unsolved.

(Editing by Elaine Hardcastle and Matthew Tostevin)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/red-bulls-openness-faeces-threat-could-pay-off-203705970--f1.html

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Samsung partners with Mobeam to offer scannable bar codes on the Galaxy S 4

Samsung partners with Mobeam to offer scannable bar codes on the Galaxy S IV

For over a year, mobile commerce startup Mobeam has been looking for OEM suitors willing to embed its bar code scanning tech into phones -- and it's found an ideal partner in Samsung. The tech, which Mobeam calls light based communications (LBC), will be embedded in the manufacturer's latest flagship, the Galaxy S 4. LBC makes it possible for point-of-sale scanners to pick up digital 1D bar codes. So how does it work? Mobeam takes advantage of the phone's proximity sensor to beam pulses of light which mimic your standard black-and-white code. The option should be available for any third-party developer that wants to use it, but unfortunately the tech is only launching -- for now, at least -- on the GS 4, though we've been told that it will eventually be ready to go for more devices down the road. Head below to scan through the full press release for yourself.

Keep up with the latest developments at the Samsung Unpacked event!

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/14/samsung-mobeam-galaxy-s-4/

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Obama turns focus to research in first energy speech of second term (reuters)

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Evangelical Support for Immigration Reform is Biblical, Not Political

Many thanks to Matthew Soerens, who specializes on immigration issues for?World Relief, for reading the recent guest post from Mark Tooley and offering this response:

?*

Evangelical Support for Immigration Reform is Biblical, Not Political

By Matthew Soerens

Recently there appeared here at Philosophical Fragments?a guest post by Mark Tooley, president of the Institute for Religion and Democracy, critical of evangelical leaders? advocacy for what he calls ?Comprehensive Immigration Reform,? which he suggests is an example of American evangelicalism slinking toward the liberalism represented by the National Council of Churches.

It is true that many evangelical leaders?including distinctly conservative folks such as Richard Land, Mathew Staver, Jim Daly, Pat Robertson, and Ralph Reed, as well as leaders of more politically neutral institutions such as InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, The Navigators, Prison Fellowship, World Vision, LifeWay Research, and my employer, World Relief, plus scores of Christian college and seminary presidents, denominational leaders, and influential pastors?support some of the same elements of immigration reform as the National Council of Churches.? The basic principles that many such leaders have advocated, which some have referred to as Comprehensive Immigration Reform (though that term does not appear in the Evangelical Statement of Principles for Immigration Reform), and which are also supported by the U.S. Catholic Bishops and by leaders of the Mormon church, include:

  • Ensuring secure national borders (making it harder to immigration illegally);
  • Revising the U.S. ?visa system to provide both the high- and low-skilled labor necessary to sustain economic growth (making it easier to immigrate legally in the future, not without limit, but so as to approximate the needs of the U.S. labor market and to keep families united as they migrate); and
  • Establishing a process by which most of those who are currently present unlawfully could, after paying a fine for having violated the law, passing a criminal background check, and meeting certain other requirements during a probationary period of several years, eventually earn permanent legal status, providing a process by which they could ultimately become fully integrated citizens of the United States

While I would not claim to speak on behalf of all evangelical advocates of such reforms, I believe that the primary reason that most have spoken out is not, as Mr. Tooley hints, an embrace of sentimental, liberal theology, but rather an orthodox commitment to the authority of Scripture.

Mr. Tooley is correct, of course, that the Bible does not provide a specific prescription for U.S. immigration policy, but the Scriptures do speak to the topic of immigration repeatedly.? The Old Testament, in particular, is replete with God?s commands to his people to love, welcome, and ensure just treatment of immigrants.? Immigrants are mentioned repeatedly alongside the fatherless and the widow as uniquely vulnerable groups whom God commands his people to love and protect (Ps. 146:9, Zech. 7:10, Jer. 7:6).? The Israelites are commanded to allow their own history as an immigrant people to inform their treatment of those who come into their land (Ex. 23:9, Deut. 10:19). Hospitality?not having one?s friends over for a meal, but, literally, the love of strangers?is mentioned as a requirement for leadership in the Church (1 Tim. 3:2, Titus 1:8).? We are commanded to love our neighbors (Lev. 19:18)?immigrants explicitly included (Lev. 19:33-34)?and Jesus? response to the question of ?who is my neighbor?? offers no hint that our love should be conditioned upon the neighbor?s legal status, ethnicity, or sinlessness (Luke 10:25-37).

Mr. Tooley argues that Scripture never specifically addresses how to treat immigrants whose presence is unlawful: true enough (although Ruth, an immigrant from Moab, was arguably not supposed to have been lawfully allowed into the assembly of Israel, according to Deuteronomy 23:3, but Boaz still allowed her to glean in his fields, as commanded in Leviticus 23:22).? However, we also have no biblical exemption that suggests that the many commands to welcome and seek justice for immigrants should apply only to those who are particularly virtuous and upstanding.? Efforts, published by an organization with population control roots, to argue that the Hebrew ger (the word for a resident alien) specifically meant a lawfully-present immigrant require a great deal of presumption and have been thoroughly critiqued by evangelical scholars.? Given the strong statements of God?s judgment on those who disregarded his commands to protect the rights of immigrants (Mal. 3:5, Ezek.22:4-7), I prefer to err on the side of a more inclusive interpretation even if there is any ambiguity.

While the Scriptures are abundantly clear that Christians should respond to immigrants with hospitality and kindness, sincere believers may still legitimately disagree on the policy applications of these many biblical passages.? My concern, though?and that of many of the leaders of the Evangelical Immigration Table with whom I?ve interacted?is that most American evangelicals have not even reflected on what the Bible says on this topic.? The Pew Research Center found in 2010 that just 12% of white evangelicals say that their views on immigration are primarily informed by their Christian faith; that?s very likely a function of the reality that just 16% say they have ever heard the topic of immigration discussed by their pastor or other clergy.? It sure seems as if we have been skipping over the passages of Scripture that do not fit our political or cultural narrative?a practice of which I?ve been known to accuse theological liberals on other issues.? To correct this biblical blind spot, the Evangelical Immigration Table has launched the ?I Was a Stranger? Challenge, providing a bookmark that lists 40 Scripture passages that relate in one way or another to the topic of immigration, which we are encouraging people to read, one passage per day.? The bookmark provides no commentary?we won?t even tell you which translation to use?and we are in no way insisting that every evangelical Christian come to the same conclusion on questions of public policy.? If we are to claim the authority of Scripture over all of our lives, though, we must at least be aware of what the Bible says.

Perhaps as a result of our generally myopic view of the Scriptural witness on this topic, only one in ten evangelical congregations in the U.S. has any sort of ministry or ministry partnership to reach immigrants: too many are missing what I am convinced is a divinely orchestrated missional opportunity.? Even with such a meager effort, though, immigrants already account for a significant and growing segment of American evangelicalism today: many evangelical denominational leaders have told me that their denominations would be on the decline if it were not for the arrival of immigrants?both those who arrive in the U.S. with a vibrant Christian faith and those who hear and accept the gospel for the first time in the U.S.? As churches engage in ministry, leaders encounter face to face the dysfunction of our U.S. immigration system, which in too many cases results in families living apart from one another for years or decades, sends those fleeing persecution back into harm?s way, facilitates workplace exploitation and even human trafficking, and threatens our national security, because it becomes nearly impossible to sort out the ?needles? of those few with malicious intent from the ?haystack? of the many simply seeking the dignity of a job, which was unavailable to them in their country of origin.? Our current system also mocks the biblical ideal of the rule of law (Rom. 13:1), because rather than spend billions of dollars to fully enforce a law that could devastate the U.S. economy, both Democratic and Republican administrations have looked the other way as employers and immigrants alike have skirted the law.

Mr. Tooley also suggests that evangelical leaders have not considered the consequences of reform; to the contrary, through their relationships with immigrant church leaders, in particular, many see and hear on a daily basis the dysfunction of our current system.? Many have studied very carefully?in consultation with biblical scholars as well as economists and legal experts?the effects of reform, and they have coalesced around support for policies that are also supported by both the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the major labor unions, as well as by law enforcement officials?and most Americans.

Indeed, most white evangelicals, most Republicans, most Democrats, and most Americans all say they support the same sorts of common sense reforms as evangelical leaders.? But legislators have been intimidated by carefully coordinated phone call and fax campaigns organized by population control groups, who oppose further migration because they believe too many human beings will result in environmental degradation.? The Human Life Review recently published an expos? on the extensive ties between groups such as the Federation for American Immigration Reform, the Center for Immigration Studies, and NumbersUSA to the population control movement.? The founder of all three groups, whose population control ideology drives his opposition to immigration, is also a strong advocate of abortion rights: he started a Planned Parenthood chapter in Michigan and speaks approvingly of China?s one-child forced abortion policy.? NumbersUSA is explicit in its population control goals: ?We?re very clear about what we are,? spokesperson Rosemary Jenks told WORLD Magazine recently.? Given that Mark Tooley?s Institute for Religion and Democracy?s website says it opposes ?population control (which almost always includes abortion on demand),? and his reasoning that evangelicals should not address immigration policy because it might distract us from defending pre-born life, I was startled to note that the organization?s board of directors includes a NumbersUSA Vice President.

My challenge to Mr. Tooley would be to look carefully at where he is getting his information about immigration, and then to accept the 40-day ?I Was a Stranger? Scripture-reading Challenge.? I?d further challenge him to invite an immigrant family from a local Latino church over for lunch, simply to listen and try to understand their perspective.? For many other evangelical leaders, that combination of Scripture and relationship has proven transformative, turning them into strong advocates for just, compassionate, common sense immigration reform policies.

*

Matthew Soerens is author of Welcoming the Stranger.

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/philosophicalfragments/2013/03/13/evangelical-support-immigration-reform-biblical-not-political-soerens/

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From 401k to Retirement Gold | Miguel Perez-Santalla | Safehaven ...


From 401k to Retirement Gold - by Miguel Perez-Santalla - Wednesday, 13 March 2013

Just how do you go about putting physical precious metals into your retirement account...?

So I have just left a company where I had accumulated a nice amount of retirement funds in my 401K plan.

Like most people, for me a nice amount is any money that somehow hasn't gone to pay for college tuition. So I found myself for the first time in a long time needing to consider what to do with a small chunk of change.

A 401K plan is an employee-sponsored plan, where your employer often matches part of the monies you invest into your retirement savings. The money is commonly invested with a fund manager, which will offer you the ability to diversify through a choice of different types of funds they manage. This basically means you don't have to know much, and you trust the fund managers to know what they are doing. The plan of course is held in your former employer's name.

Though I do trust my former employers, I'm not so sure about the Dollar, or government bonds, or the stock market. So I decided that I would like to diversify a certain percentage of my retirement funds into physical gold. But there were no funds available to me under the 401k that directly invested in bullion. When I inquired with the fund manager, they informed me that they had another group within the company that offered self-directed IRAs. These Individual Retirement Accounts would give me more flexibility, and IRAs can also hold physical gold or silver. I would simply need to transfer the money.

That sounded good to me, as the path of least resistance. But upon further inquiry I was informed that the only gold product that my existing fund managers offered wasn't physical bullion itself, but exchange-traded trust funds backed by gold. ETFs trade on the stock market, and are a derivative product meant to follow the price of gold. They are not a direct investment into physical gold which you own outright. Instead, you buy shares in the trust, and that trust then owns gold.

This is an important point. Because putting gold into your IRA already moves it one step away from your outright ownership. To get the tax advantages which IRAs enjoy, it's your retirement fund, not you, which legally owns the assets it holds. So I really don't see the point in having someone else manage my IRA account's physical gold, and own it as well. I want my retirement fund to own it directly and have the title. Clearly, I had to do some more homework. And that of course meant asking Google.

Searching for "Self Directed IRAs", the first items I found were law firms offering to help set up a trust to create my own self-directed IRA account. This meant that I would have had to handle annual filings and reports. The cost to do this was significant as well. If I had the kind of assets where I could sit home all day and focus on where to put my money next, it may have made sense. Like most people, however, I'm too busy working at making a living to have that much time and energy to divert to managing what would in the end be like running a small business.

So I went back to the drawing board (well, Bing this time). My searches now came up with firms that offer the ability to open a self-directed IRA which they administer. Of course, no one in business will do this kind of thing for free. They do charge a fee for the service they provide. More digging and I learned there are two types of firms:

  • A trust company (also called a custodian or a fiduciary agency) is licensed and regulated by government and does pretty much everything to set up and manage your IRA;

  • On the other hand is an administrator, who works with a trust company to provide essentially the same service, but is not regulated in any way. Note that if you use an administrator, the actual title - the ownership - of your account would reside with them. All their accounts are held in an omnibus account with a trust.

The difference didn't matter too much to me. I'm confident that government isn't very good at regulating anything. But it is good at increasing the cost of doing business, without really providing a service. So when it came down to it I considered references and reputation.

As I searched on the web I noticed there were quite a few of what I would call newcomers. Of course, because a company is new does not mean they are not worth considering. But they should have references about the persons behind it in the least so you can verify the business's legitimacy. If there are no names of individuals with their background, I personally would write them off. If they are looking for me to trust them with my money they should be able to equally take the risk of offering their background to me.

Once I nailed down a few different business I wanted to work with it came down to cost and services. Cost is always important and should be considered seriously. However, the services offered are going to be something you have to live with. Be sure that they provide statements and reports. Recently, the growth of this business has pushed them to offer valuation of your investment as well. This makes life easier for those of us who are running around trying to make a living.

I finally did open an account with one of these firms. The process itself was relatively simple. The people I worked with were very accommodative and helpful in every way. In fact I had more problems moving my money out from the fund which held the original 401k than with the new company opening my self-directed IRA.

In the end, if you have decided to invest in gold or silver with your retirement money, as I have, it is not too difficult. There are many good firms that make it easy. Here at BullionVault we recently started to provide a list of both custodians and administrators that are well recognized for self-directed IRAs and work with us on a regular basis.

We cannot guarantee or recommend any one company but we offer this list of gold IRA custodians and administrators as a starting point for your own personal research. It should save you a lot of the legwork.

?


?

Miguel Perez-Santalla
Vice-president of Business Development
BullionVault.com

BullionVault is the secure, low-cost gold and silver exchange for private investors. It enables you to buy and sell professional-grade bullion at live prices online, storing your physical property in market-accredited, non-bank vaults in London, New York and Zurich.

By February 2011, less than six years after launch, more than 21,000 people from 97 countries used BullionVault, owning well over 21 tonnes of physical gold (US$940m) and 140 tonnes of physical silver (US$129m) as their outright property. There is no minimum investment and users can deal as little as one gram at a time. Each user's unique holding is proven, each day, by the public reconciliation of client property with formal bullion-market bar lists.

BullionVault is a full member of professional trade body the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA). Its innovative online platform was recognized in 2009 by the UK's prestigious Queen's Awards for Enterprise. In June 2010, the gold industry's key market-development body the World Gold Council (www.gold.org) joined with the internet and technology fund Augmentum Capital, which is backed by the London listed Rothschild Investment Trust (RIT Capital Partners), in making an $18.8 million (?12.5m) investment in the business.

For more information, visit http://www.bullionvault.com

? BullionVault 2006-2013

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events - and must be verified elsewhere - should you choose to act on it.

All Images, XHTML Renderings, and Source Code Copyright ? Safehaven.com

Source: http://www.safehaven.com/article/29145/from-401k-to-retirement-gold

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Friday, March 1, 2013

U.S. to Give Aid to Syria Fighters (WSJ)

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Wolf in sheep's clothing: Uncovering how deadly bacteria trick the immune system

Feb. 28, 2013 ? An outbreak of tuberculosis in the skid row area of downtown Los Angeles may have exposed up to 4,500 individuals to the bacterium that causes the deadly disease and has left federal officials scrambling to intervene.

The outbreak is occurring during winter, when homeless individuals are driven to crowded shelters, when influenza is peaking and when people's vitamin D levels, typically boosted by sunlight exposure, are low. A new UCLA study offers critical insight into how various bacteria may manipulate such factors to their advantage.

In a study published online Feb. 28 in the journal Science, UCLA researchers demonstrate that certain cunning bacteria -- including the type that causes tuberculosis -- can pretend to be viruses when infecting humans, allowing them to hijack the body's immune response so that they can hide out, unhindered, inside our cells. The findings may also help explain how viral infections like the flu make us more susceptible to subsequent bacterial infections such as pneumonia.

The study is particularly relevant to tuberculosis, which kills 1.4 million people worldwide each year. In the case of the recent Los Angeles outbreak, the findings could provide clues as to how the flu and a lack of vitamin D may have given the tuberculosis bacterium an edge.

"With 8.7 million in the world falling ill with tuberculosis each year, a better understanding of how these bacteria avoid our immune system could lead to new ways to fight them and to better, more targeted treatments," said senior author Dr. Robert L. Modlin, chief of dermatology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and a professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics in the UCLA Division of Life Sciences.

The protection our immune system provides against bacteria-based diseases and infections depends on the critical response of T cells -- white blood cells that play a central role in fighting infections -- and in particular on the release of a protein called interferon-gamma. Interferon-gamma utilizes the vitamin D hormone to alert and activate cells to destroy invading bacteria.

The research team found that bacteria can pretend to be viruses, triggering the immune system to launch an attack with a different protein, called interferon-beta, which is designed to fight viruses, not bacteria. Not only is interferon-beta ineffective against bacteria, but it can also block the action of interferon-gamma, to the advantage of bacteria. Further, if a real virus were to infect the body, triggering interferon-beta, it would divert the attention of the immune response, preventing an attack on the bacterial invader. The researchers say this may explain why the flu can lead to a more serious bacteria-based infection like pneumonia.

"Like a wolf in sheep's clothing, the bacteria can fool the immune system into launching an attack against the wrong type of infection, thus weakening the response against the bacteria," said first author Rosane M. B. Teles, a researcher in the dermatology division at the Geffen School of Medicine.

For the study, the team examined the mechanisms by which the virus-fighting interferon-beta protein suppresses the interferon-gamma defense response to bacterial infections, tricking the immune system into make the wrong defense choices.

The researchers studied leprosy as a model and then applied what they learned to understand tuberculosis, given that leprosy and tuberculosis are caused by related bacteria. Modlin noted that leprosy is an outstanding model for studying immune mechanisms in host defense since it presents as a clinical spectrum that correlates with the level and type of immune response of the pathogen.

The scientists first compared the genetic expression of the virus-fighting interferon-beta protein and the bacteria-fighting interferon-gamma protein in skin lesions from leprosy patients. They found that interferon-gamma was expressed in patients with the milder form of the disease and that interferon-beta was significantly increased in those with the more serious, progressive form of leprosy.

The researchers then compared the genes triggered by interferon-beta in these leprosy skin lesions with those found by two other groups of investigators in the blood of tuberculosis patients. Remarkably, there was a significant overlap. The interferon-beta genes were more frequent in both the skin lesions of leprosy patients with extensive disease and the blood of tuberculosis patients with more severe disease.

"We found this common interferon-beta gene pattern correlated with the greater extent of disease in both leprosy and tuberculosis, which are two very distinct diseases," Teles said.

Previous work by the UCLA team demonstrated that the interferon-gamma defense pathway relies on a specific mechanism involving vitamin D, a natural hormone that plays an essential role in the body's fight against infections. The current study found that interferon-beta suppressed elements involved in the interferon-gamma-triggered vitamin D pathway, preventing the immune system from killing the bacteria.

"The study raises the possibility that a decrease or increase of one of these two interferon proteins could shift the balance from mild to more serious disease," Modlin said. "We may find that therapeutic interventions to block or enhance specific interferon responses may be an effective strategy to alter the balance in favor of protection against bacterial diseases."

The new findings may indicate why, in winter, Los Angeles skid row residents are at an added disadvantage in dealing with tuberculosis -- for at least three reasons. First, because of colder weather at night, indigent homeless people tend to stay in shelters, where they live in close proximity with others, facilitating the spread of the infection. Second, due to the seasonal rise in influenza, the body's immune system could be diverted by the flu virus to produce interferon-beta, blocking an effective immune response to the tuberculosis bacteria. And finally, the drop in vitamin D levels associated with a decrease in exposure to sunlight during the winter months could diminish the ability of individuals' immune systems to kill the tuberculosis bacteria.

"With TB on the rise, this scenario could play out not only in cities in the United States but all over the world," Modlin said. "We hope that our findings may provide insight into harnessing new methods to combat TB and other bacterial infections as well."

Modlin noted that 8.7 million people become ill with tuberculosis each year and 1.4 million die from the disease. He said that an increase or decrease in one of the two interferon proteins could help explain why some people may be more resilient against, or susceptible to, the infection or have a more serious course of the disease.

The next step, according to Teles, is to further understand the mechanisms that bacterial pathogens use to activate interferon-beta and how bacteria can manipulate the immune system to block the potent interferon-gamma host antimicrobial responses in human infections.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Skin Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH P50; ARO63020; RO1s AI022553, AR040312 and AI047868; and CTSA Grant UL1TR000124).

Additional authors are listed in the manuscript.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences. The original article was written by Rachel Champeau.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Rosane M. B. Teles, Thomas G. Graeber, Stephan R. Krutzik, Dennis Montoya, Mirjam Schenk, Delphine J. Lee, Evangelia Komisopoulou, Kindra Kelly-Scumpia, Rene Chun, Shankar S. Iyer, Euzenir N. Sarno, Thomas H. Rea, Martin Hewison, John S. Adams, Stephen J. Popper, David A. Relman, Steffen Stenger, Barry R. Bloom, Genhong Cheng, and Robert L. Modlin. Type I Interferon Suppresses Type II Interferon?Triggered Human Anti-Mycobacterial Responses. Science, 2013; DOI: 10.1126/science.1233665

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/J-rp2dbYRaM/130228155440.htm

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