ISRO’s maiden SSLV carrying earth observation & student satellite lifts off from Sriharikota

ISRO’s maiden SSLV carrying earth observation & student satellite lifts off from Sriharikota


ISRO’s maiden small satellite launch vehicle (SSLV), carrying earth observation satellite EOS-02 and co-passenger students satellite AzaadiSAT lifted off from this spaceport on Sunday. The SSLV-D1/EOS-02 mission by the Indian space agency is aimed at garnering a larger pie in the small launch vehicles market, as it can place the satellites into Low Earth Orbit.

“The SSLV can put payloads (mini, micro or nanosatellites) weighing up to 500 kg into the 500 km planar orbit,” the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said. At the end of a seven-and-a-half-hour countdown, the 34-metre-long SSLV soared majestically at 9.18 am amid cloudy skies to place the satellites into the intended orbit.

The EOS-02 is an experimental optical remote sensing satellite with a high spatial resolution. EOS-02 belongs to the microsatellite series of space crafts. The AzaadiSAT is an 8U Cubesat weighing around 8kgs. Girl students from rural regions across the country were guided to build these payloads.

The payloads are integrated by the student team of Space Kidz India. “The ground system developed by ‘Space Kidz India’ will be utilised for receiving the data from this satellite,” ISRO said.

Published on

August 07, 2022





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India to enhance lab capacities for monkeypox testing

India to enhance lab capacities for monkeypox testing


The Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare plans to convert 17 integrated disease surveillance programme laboratories across some States, as additional monkey pox testing labs. The conversion and upgrade of the labs are expected over the next seven days, senior officials told BusinessLine.

The move is expected to help in quicker testing of suspected monkeypox virus samples and hasten detection of cases.

The need to increase lab count had come up for discussion during the high-level meeting called by the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) on Sunday.

“Some minor modifications are required in these IDSP labs. So in a week or seven-days’ time, the labs should be ready for testing of monkeypox viruses. The addition of the new labs will facilitate early detection and prevention,” the official said.

At present, there are 15 ICMR trained research and diagnostic laboratories in the country.

“To help the country’s preparedness for monkeypox detection, 15 virus research and diagnostic laboratories across the country, which are geographically well distributed and strategically located have already been trained in the diagnostic test by ICMR – NIV Pune,” the ICMR said in a tweet .

India has so far reported four confirmed cases of monkeypox, while samples have been sent for testing in the case of a suspected fifth case from Telangana. “We are awaiting reports,” the Health Ministry official said adding that the condition of the four patients – three from Kerala and one from New Delhi – are stable and “they are recovering well”.

In the current global outbreak, over 16,000 cases have been reported across 70-odd countries so far, and the number of confirmed infections rose 77 per cent from late June through early July, as per WHO data.

The WHO had earlier declared it as a public health emergency of international concern.

Stepping up surveillance

According to the Ministry official, guidelines have been issued to State governments to “step up surveillance” and continue on the tracking, testing and treatment and isolation protocols of monkeypox cases. These also include monitoring the close contacts of the patients.

“ The Centre will also help and step in where necessary. We had sent teams to Kerala too,” he said.

Satish Koul, Director, Internal Medicine, Fortis Memorial Research Institute, said the virus spreads by close contact, skin-to-skin contact and droplet infection. “Being a viral disease the total duration is around three to four weeks. As of now, prevention is better than cure,” he said.

Covid cases

Meanwhile, India reported 16,866 Covid cases,on a 24-hour basis. Daily cases came down in comparison to the 20,200 infections reported a day-before (July 24). However, the country’s daily positivity rate was at 7.03 per cent, after nearly 170 days; while the weekly positivity rate was at 4.43 per cent.

Active cases decreased by 1,323, and they account for 0.34 per cent of the total infections in the country. Recovery rate was 98.46 per cent, data from the Ministry said.

Published on

July 25, 2022



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Precious superconductor

Precious superconductor


‘Superconductivity’ is the holy grail of electrical physics — current zips through superconducting wires, with no loss of energy. In conventional electricity conduction, some amount of electrical energy gets converted into heat due to the resistance offered by the conducting material.

If our power lines were made of superconducting materials, it would mean phenomenal savings. But superconducting materials work only in ultra-cold conditions.

The need is for superconducting materials that work in ambient temperatures.

The Indian Institute of Science (IISc) has achieved a breakthrough with an engineered material they call ‘Au-Ag Nanostructures’. Silver particles, a billionth of a metre in size, are embedded into lattice structures of gold atoms. It shows “superconductivity-like signatures” because it offers zero resistance to the flow of electrons, Prof Anshu Pandey of the institute’s solid state and structural chemistry department told  Quantum.

But to qualify fully as a ‘superconductor’ it would need to have a few other properties.

The biggest of these is ‘stability’. The material is “extremely unstable”, meaning it does not remain unchanged for long. The researchers struggle to produce enough even for testing. Pandey is optimistic of tackling this problem within “10-12 months”.

IISc is inviting industry to partner in this research.

Published on

July 24, 2022



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Why the anti-ageing market is only skin-deep

Why the anti-ageing market is only skin-deep


We are living in an ageing world. The number of people older than 65 is inching towards the one-billion mark. Not everyone’s thrilled about this, of course — so we have a big and growing market for anti-ageing products (expected to grow from $60.42 billion in 2021 to $120 billion by 2030). Are they safe?

A recent paper titled ‘Nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) as an anti-ageing health product — Promises and safety concerns’, published by a group of researchers from China and New Zealand, has raised several concerns.

We age because of a process called ‘mitochondrial decay’. Mitochondria are part of our cells and responsible for producing energy, hence they are the ‘powerhouses’ of our bodies.

Over time, mitochondria are unable to produce enough energy since there is a dip in the levels of a biochemical called nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) in them; this happens because the NAD+ are consumed by enzymes such as NADase and sirtuins. Depletion of NAD+ is also associated with oxidative stress, DNA damage, and cognitive impairments.

The trick in anti-ageing is, therefore, to keep NAD+ levels steady. Now, NAD+ is derived from another chemical called nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN), which is a bioactive nucleotide formed when a nucleoside comprising nicotinamide and ribose reacts with a phosphate group.

Profit over safety

NMN can be industrially produced as a food supplement that brings several benefits in addition to anti-ageing — it helps combat obesity and associated complications, Alzheimer’s disease, cerebral and cardiac ischemia, and type-2 diabetes, note the authors of the paper.

These days, NMN products are marketed as supplements for anti-ageing and longevity in the form of capsules with dosages exceeding 500 mg. The safety of these doses cannot be assessed since there have been no clinical or toxicological studies.

“Excessive demand of consumers and high profit margin for manufacturers are the major driving force behind the release of anti-ageing health products without adequate safety testing,” the paper says. There is no regulatory authority for NMN products as they are often sold as a food product rather than heavily regulated therapeutic drug.

Published on

July 24, 2022



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Uprooting cancer

Uprooting cancer


Many cancer patients get cured and then have a relapse.

What causes this are the ‘cancer stem cells’ (CSC). Many of us are familiar with stem cells from cord blood, which, if preserved, can be used to regenerate body parts such as a damaged organ or a broken bone. CSC are similar — they help in generating cancer cells.

Drugs find it hard to eliminate CSC, because they proliferate rapidly. You would need to find out how they do that, so you can attack the root of the problem.

Two Indian medical researchers, Dr Arun Dharmaraj and Dr Shobha Warrier, have achieved this. Dharmaraj, who has held academic positions at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA, and The University of Western Australia, Perth, is currently Vice-Principal of the Faculty of Biomedical Sciences and Technology, Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education, Chennai. Dr Warrier is Dean and Professor, Manipal Institute of Regenerative Medicine, Bengaluru. Together they have discovered a ‘small molecule drug’, which they call SC501, to target CSC. ‘Small molecule drugs’ are a class of drugs that can easily enter a cell; pharma companies make them for targeted therapies.

Earlier, Dharmaraj had done research in an area called ‘wnt signalling’. In cell biochemistry, ‘signalling molecules’ convey genetic information from one cell to another.

These molecules may be simple gases or complex proteins. Some latch on to ‘receptors’ on the cell wall; others are capable of entering cells and latching on to receptors in the cytoplasm or on the wall of the nucleus. They pass on genetic information from one cell to another, much like saying, “Here, take this and make a thousand copies, and be quick.”

In a 2020 paper, ‘Biology and Enhancement of Skeletal Repair’, Dr Bruce Browner, et al, note that “wnt proteins form a family of highly conserved secreted signalling molecules that regulate cell-to-cell interactions”.

Now, CSC proliferate using the wnt pathway. Dharmaraj had earlier discovered that CSC using wnt proteins “are over-expressed”. Later, he and Dr Warrier developed the small molecule SC501, which, rather than attack CSC, guns down the wnt pathways to inhibit the growth of cancer cells. In other words, the small molecule is a ‘wnt inhibitor’; by destroying a feature specific to CSC, namely the ‘wnt pathway’, the molecule prevents the stem cells from increasing their tribe.

In addition, the SC501 starves cancer cells of blood by preventing angiogenesis or development of new blood vessels that supply to them. This it does by blocking a protein responsible for angiogenesis.

Dharmaraj and Warrier have applied for patent for SC501 and do not wish to divulge much about the compound, except to say that it is not a biomolecule. Dharmaraj calls it a “magic molecule” because it can potentially be used in the treatment of many other diseases, such as osteoporosis, diabetes and even neuro-degenerative ailments.

The researchers stress that SC501 is still in “pre-clinical stage”. It has to be produced in enough quantities for clinical trials before heading to mass production. For this, they are mulling a pilot plant, which could cost ₹1 crore.

Published on

July 24, 2022



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