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		<title><![CDATA[io9: Gfp]]></title>
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			<title><![CDATA[What can this glow-in-the-dark kitten teach scientists about AIDS?]]></title>
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										<!--  div style="background-color: #B3B3B3; width: 190px; padding: 1px;"><a title="Click here to read What can this glow-in-the-dark kitten teach scientists about AIDS?" href="http://io9.com/genetic-engineering/" style="background-color:#888888; color:#FFFFFF; font-size:12px;text-align:right; display:block; height:14px; padding:1px 2px; text-decoration:none; text-transform:uppercase; width:156px;"><span style="color: white;" class="hash">#</span><span style="color: white;">geneticengineering</span></a></div -->					<div><a title="Click here to read What can this glow-in-the-dark kitten teach scientists about AIDS?" href="http://io9.com/5839156/what-can-this-glow+in+the+dark-kitten-teach-scientists-about-aids" class="pp_image">
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				This picture of a glowing cat has not been altered in any way. The cat, on the other hand, has been altered quite a bit. A team of researchers has genetically engineered it to express green fluorescent protein (aka "<a href="http://io9.com/5060668/nobel-prize-in-chemistry-awarded-for-transgenic-glowing-animals">GFP</a>," originally found in jellyfish), which makes the cat glow green under ultraviolet light.				<a href="http://io9.com/5839156/what-can-this-glow+in+the+dark-kitten-teach-scientists-about-aids" title="Click here to read more about What can this glow-in-the-dark kitten teach scientists about AIDS?">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a>
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			<category><![CDATA[genetic engineering]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[Aids]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[bioengineering]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[Eric poeschla]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[FIV]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[Genetics]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[GFP]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[green fluorescent protein]]></category>
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			<pubDate><![CDATA[Mon, 12 Sep 2011 17:00:00 PDT]]></pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Robert T. Gonzalez]]></dc:creator>
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			<title><![CDATA[Genetically engineered cell becomes world's first living laser]]></title>
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										<!--  div style="background-color: #B3B3B3; width: 190px; padding: 1px;"><a title="Click here to read Genetically engineered cell becomes world's first living laser" href="http://io9.com/breakthrough/" style="background-color:#888888; color:#FFFFFF; font-size:12px;text-align:right; display:block; height:14px; padding:1px 2px; text-decoration:none; text-transform:uppercase; width:156px;"><span style="color: white;" class="hash">#</span><span style="color: white;">breakthrough</span></a></div -->					<div><a title="Click here to read Genetically engineered cell becomes world's first living laser" href="http://io9.com/5811390/genetically-engineered-cell-becomes-worlds-first-living-laser" class="pp_image">
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				 It looks like we're one step closer to having laser vision (or at least, laser-based diagnostic and therapeutic techniques). Researchers at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston have genetically engineered the world's first "living laser." That's right - a living cell can shoot laser light. <!-- %JUMP:More &raquo;% -->				<a href="http://io9.com/5811390/genetically-engineered-cell-becomes-worlds-first-living-laser" title="Click here to read more about Genetically engineered cell becomes world's first living laser">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a>
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			<category><![CDATA[Breakthrough]]></category>
			<category><![CDATA[biology]]></category>
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			<category><![CDATA[jellyfish]]></category>
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			<category><![CDATA[Living lasers]]></category>
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			<pubDate><![CDATA[Mon, 13 Jun 2011 13:22:06 PDT]]></pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Robert T. Gonzalez]]></dc:creator>
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			<title><![CDATA[Nobel Prize in Chemistry Awarded for Transgenic, Glowing Animals]]></title>
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										<!--  div style="background-color: #B3B3B3; width: 190px; padding: 1px;"><a title="Click here to read Nobel Prize in Chemistry Awarded for Transgenic, Glowing Animals" href="http://io9.com/mad-science/" style="background-color:#888888; color:#FFFFFF; font-size:12px;text-align:right; display:block; height:14px; padding:1px 2px; text-decoration:none; text-transform:uppercase; width:156px;"><span style="color: white;" class="hash">#</span><span style="color: white;">madscience</span></a></div -->					<div><a title="Click here to read Nobel Prize in Chemistry Awarded for Transgenic, Glowing Animals" href="http://io9.com/5060668/nobel-prize-in-chemistry-awarded-for-transgenic-glowing-animals" class="pp_image">
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				 Today the Nobel Prize committee announced the Nobel in chemistry would go to a group of US and Japanese researchers who discovered the green fluorescent protein (GFP) in jellyfish and transformed it into one of the most powerful research tools in genomics. Although GFP can make glowing kitties (above), glowing bunnies, glowing monkeys and mice (below), it has far more important applications for medical research. The eye-catching protein is used as a visual tag, linked to other genes or cells that scientists are tinkering with. As a result, scientists can literally see the results of their experiments. Now you can too.

 The "brainbow," with its dozens of glowing colors, was created when scientists mixed a few of the primary colors available from fluorescent jellyfish proteins (green isn't the only one). They wound up with nearly 100 colors, and used them to tag neurons in the brain so that they could follow the complicated interlinking pathways of each neuron and see the neurological structures of a mouse brain.



Early experiments with GFP created mice like these, which express the glowing green gene in all their cells &mdash; not just neurons. The result is a mouse that glows just like a jellyfish.



Usually, however, scientists link GFP with another gene &mdash; if the creature they've engineered emerges glowing like these monkeys, they know the linked gene is active too. These monkeys were engineered to have the gene for Huntington's Disease, and the gene was tagged with GFP. Because they glow, researchers are certain they have the sought-after gene and can study the monkeys to figure out possible cures for this neurodegenerative disorder.

<a href="http://www.newscientist.com/gallery/dn14895-chemistry-nobel-for-green-jellyfish-protein">Chemistry Nobel for Green Jellyfish Protein</a> [New Scientist]

<a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/oct/08/nobel.chemistry">Nobel Prize for Chemistry Illuminates Disease</a> [UK Guardian]				<a href="http://io9.com/5060668/nobel-prize-in-chemistry-awarded-for-transgenic-glowing-animals" title="Click here to read more about Nobel Prize in Chemistry Awarded for Transgenic, Glowing Animals">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a>
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			<category><![CDATA[mad science]]></category>
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			<category><![CDATA[GFP]]></category>
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			<category><![CDATA[Science]]></category>
			<pubDate><![CDATA[Wed, 08 Oct 2008 11:20:00 PDT]]></pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Annalee Newitz]]></dc:creator>
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