Bitter is sweet for asthma sufferers

Researchers at the University of Maryland have discovered that the lung has similar bitter taste receptors to the tongue — and that this knowledge could help treat conditions such as asthma.

Dr Stephen Liggett says his team found the taste receptors by accident during a previous study into muscle receptors. Unlike those in the tongue, the receptors aren’t in clusters and don’t send taste signals to the brain. (Now that really would have been an aftertaste…)

The team’s original theory was that the taste buds were designed to alert the body when it had mistakenly ingested a bitter poison from a plant, the idea being that this would cause the person to get a tight chest and cough, prompting them to get away from the source of the poison.

However, testing on humans and mice showed the opposite was true: once stimulated the receptors force the airways to the lungs to open up. Indeed, the effect was greater than with existing drugs designed to treat asthma and related diseases.

Among the substances which successfully stimulated the process were quinine, chloroquine and even saccharin (the bitterness being the aftertaste in that case.) But Dr Ligget warns treatment wouldn’t be as simple as sucking on a lemon. Instead he believes the best way to take advantage of the process would be through an aerosol-based inhaler using chemical modifications of bitter compounds.

E Albert Reece, dean of the School of Medicine at which Ligget’s team works, said “These researchers were willing to take chances and ask questions about an unlikely concept. Why are taste receptors in the lungs? What do they do? Can we take advantage of them to devise a new therapy? In the end, their discoveries are in the best tradition of scientific research.”





Twitter Re-enactment of Back To The Future

We're Going Back!

In conjunction with the release of the Back to the Future trilogy on blu-ray, a re-enactment of the trilogy is happening on Twitter!  Organized, written, & adapted for Twitter by Brian Harnish for the “We’re Going Back” project, this is the Back to the Future trilogy as you have never seen it before!  Be sure to follow the cast of characters as the Twitter re-enactment of one of the best trilogies of all time started TODAY at 2:00 p.m. (PST). Parts II and III will continue throughout the rest of this week, so stay tuned!

Daft Punk – Derezzed Music Video / Tron: Legacy Trailer Combo

By Vectron’s kindly claws, you guys need to watch this right now! This has to be the most awesome music video I’ve seen in a long, long time. What else can I say? Daft Punk rocks the geek nation!

Coffee and eggs the recipe for robot technique

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has funded some strange projects in its work to develop new technology for the United States military. But perhaps none quite so strange as using coffee grains to pick up an egg.

DARPA provided some of the money for a newly published study involving researchers at universities in Chicago and New York and the iRobot corporation (who produces the Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner). They’ve produced a robotic arm which, rather than having a claw-like device at the end, has a balloon filled with coffee grounds.

The device works because the surface of coffee grains changes under pressure. As Hod Lipson, one of the researchers explained, ” When they are not pressed together they can roll over each other and flow. When they are pressed together just a little bit, the teeth interlock, and they become solid.” Rice and sand have similar qualities but are heavier.

That’s the reason why vacuum-packed coffee feels much more solid than when the grains are loose. That effect is recreated in the robot by air being sucked out of the balloon. This effectively “solidifies” the balloon, holding its shape and allowing it to hold on to any object it was surrounding.

There are some practical benefits to the device, beyond simply being awesome. It works well even with objects that human aren’t able to handle such as coins (which are fiddly, particularly when laid down) or eggs (which need a relatively precise and controlled degree of grip to avoid messy results.) While the robot might seem an over-engineered solution when you think of the “hassle” for a human to pick up one such object, it could make a major difference in assembly lines such as egg packing or coin sorting.

The researchers also say the technique could be used for handling sensitive objects as part of a bomb disposal team’s work. Though I must admit I’d be tempted to drop the bomb just to smell that freshly roasted coffee goodness (albeit with a rubbery aroma.)

The results of the study have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. The researchers say there’s no reason why the device couldn’t be manufactured commercially right away.

C-3PO and R2-D2 break in an electronics store [Video]

Watch what unfolds as C-3PO and R2-D2 land on earth and decide to break in an electronics store.