Category Archives: World Opinion

Finally, IISc team confirms breakthrough in superconductivity at room temperature

When a material is cooled below the superconducting transition temperature in a magnetic field it expels magnetic flux thereby appearing to levitate.   | Photo Credit: AFP
When a material is cooled below the superconducting transition temperature in a magnetic field it expels magnetic flux thereby appearing to levitate. | Photo Credit: AFP

Superconductivity at ambient temperature has been a holy grail in physics for about a century.

Putting to rest all doubts and criticism, a team led by Prof. Anshu Pandey from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru confirms that their material exhibits major properties of superconductivity at ambient temperature and pressure. A material is said to be a superconductor if it conducts electricity with nil resistance to the flow of electrons. Superconductors will help build very high efficient devices leading to huge energy savings. Till now, scientists have been able to make materials superconduct only at temperatures much below zero degree C and hence making practical utility very difficult.

Superconductivity at ambient temperature has been a holy grail in physics for about a century. This is where IISc’s work becomes particularly important. A revised article has been posted on May 21 in arXiv, a pre-print repository.

The material that exhibited superconductivity is in the form of nanosized films and pellets made of silver nanoparticles embedded in a gold matrix. Interestingly, silver and gold independently do not exhibit superconductivity.

The team examined 125 samples, of which 10 showed a drop in resistance signaling the onset of superconductivity. They attribute the unsuccessful results in the remaining 115 samples to oxygen exposure at the time of sample preparation and when the samples were taken for study.

“If this [result] is correct, it would be the greatest work done in India since the discovery of Raman effect,” says Prof. T.V Ramakrishnan, leading condensed matter physicist who is a distinguished Associate with the Department of Physics at IISc. “The material they have made is unbelievable — a tiny sphere of gold, placed 10-20 tinier spheres of silver inside it…This [material] they found shows a sharp drop in resistivity [reflecting superconducting state]. This is potentially amazing,” he adds.

Identical noise

The initial version posted in the repository on July 23, 2018 by a two-member team of Prof. Anshu Pandey and Dev Kumar Thapa attracted criticism, raising doubts about the data and hence the study. The reason: the presence of identical pattern of noise for two presumably independent measurements of the magnetic susceptibility. Noise, by its very virtue, will be random and so finding nearly identical noise in measurements made under different conditions is highly improbable. Dr. Brian Skinner, a physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston was the first to notice this.

In one of his tweets in August 2018 Dr. Skinner said: “…They [IISc team] are really not backing down from their claims. They emphasize that they are focused on providing validation of their data…” And that is precisely what the IISc team has now done — provide validation of their data. On May 22, 2019, Dr. Skinner tweeted “…I am gratified, to say that least, that it is a scientific story now, and not a story about social scandal.”

Interestingly, the plots of magnetic susceptibility versus temperature in the new data still show the repeated “noise” in some instances. However, the researchers have clarified that the magnitude of the noise is well above instrumental resolution. “This suggests a possible physical origin related to the sample as opposed to instrument artefacts,” they write.

Referring to the “noise”, Prof. Arindam Ghosh from the Department of Physics at IISc and a co-author of the revised article says: “This is the data that we got. Further studies have to be done to understand this.”

The proof

“Two of the most important properties of superconductivity are dimagnetism and zero resistance. These two were seen in the material we studied. They seem to suggest that the material becomes superconducting below a certain temperature (286 K or 13°C). And it can go up to 70°C,” says Prof. Ghosh.

“At 286 K we have seen clear transition from a normal state to a superconducting state. This is more than anyone has reported,” Prof. Ghosh adds.

The revised version has provided the recipe for preparing the material, which was not included in the version post in July last year. The revised version also has plenty of data on the calibration of the setup. Besides retesting superconductivity, the authors tested it on another superconducting metal — lead. “[Unlike in the case of the original material] we did not see repeated noise,” Prof. Ghosh clarifies.

Researchers critically evaluating the revised version have raised some concerns. Prof. Pratap Raychaudhuri from the Superconductivity Lab at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) Mumbai has raised concerns that while the drop in mutual inductance is fairly sharp, it is at a lower temperature compared with resistance. “In superconductivity when the resistance goes to zero the diamagnetic drop should coincide with resistance drop. Here the resistance drops to zero at 175 K but the diamagnetic drop is at 165 K. This kind of difference [between resistance and diamagnetic drop] is unusual,” say Prof. Raychaudhuri.

Responding to Prof. Raychaudhuri’s observation on the sharpness of fall in mutual inductance Ghosh says: “We think there is long penetration depth (the depth to which the magnetic field penetrates inside the material) and so the change in mutual inductance can be very small.”

And about different temperature at which diamagnetic drops and resistance goes to zero, Prof. Ghosh explains: “We don’t have full clarity on this but there have organic superconductors where such discrepancies have been seen before.”

Soon after Dr. Skinner raised a red flag, there was criticism that authors were not sharing the samples with their peers for evaluation. “Our samples are extremely sensitive to environment. Samples degrade very rapidly and so measurements have to be made immediately after sample preparation,” Prof. Ghosh says, explaining why samples could not be shared with others. “We have now found a way of protecting the samples for a long time, which allowed us to do measurements over the last few months. Once we develop a protocol for better protection then we will be engaging and collaborating with other groups in India and abroad.”

Prof. G. Baskaran, a SERB Distinguished Fellow at The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, who works on the theory of superconductivity, was quick to provide a theory soon after the preprint was posted in 2018. In his theory, monovalent character of silver and gold and repulsion among electrons could produce room temperature superconductivity under certain restrictive conditions. Prof. Baskaran is excited that the Thapa-Pandey system precisely provides such conditions. “This looks like a case where granular superconductors play a role. I am excited that the key first step in this challenging field has been brought about by a systematic and detailed effort.”

The manuscript has been sent to a journal for publication and the first level of reviewing by editors has been completed. It is currently undergoing technical review by peer-reviewers. “We hope it will be published soon,” Prof. Ghosh says.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sci-Tech> Science / by R. Prasad & Shubashree Desikan / May 25th, 2019

These ‘angels’ help many reunite with relatives in India’

When she was growing up in Downingtown, Leslie Bernand (name changed)wondered whether she might someday locate a blood relative in India, from where she was adopted as a baby.

Bengaluru :

When she was growing up in Downingtown, Leslie Bernand (name changed) wondered whether she might someday locate a blood relative in India, from where she was adopted as a baby.

But she never expected that her journey towards finding would confront her to hundreds of ‘DNA search angels’ on social media who would work like ‘detectives’ to reunite her with her family which is supposedly in India.

“These are volunteers on Facebook who are helping people from many countries including the USA, The Netherlands, China, France etc to find their roots in India through genetic genealogy. Though I am yet to trace my family in India I have found many ‘angels’ who are helping me towards this,” Leslie explained.

Speaking to TNIE, the administrator of one such group ‘DNA India Adoptees’ Mirjam Bina said, “In our site on Facebook we are for and by Indian adoptees who are forever connected with India because of their DNA. Here we share our stories and then it is taken forward by the ‘angels’ who are part of this group and many such groups and work towards finding clues to hunt for
the families.”

In Bina’s case she was found alone at Chatrapathi Shivaji terminus in Mumbai and was later moved to the Netherlands. Recently she found one such DNA ‘angel’ from Mangaluru, based in UAE who told her that
her ancestral family was from a Mangaluru Catholic community.

Her search for her family still continues but through her DNA detective on Facebook she was connected to Dr Niraj Rai, Scientist and group head, Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP) in Lucknow.

He explained to The New Indian Express that he has collected more than one lakh DNA samples and he also has ancestry data of more than 100 ethnic groups. He has helped several ‘angels’ from various social media groups who work as DNA detectives to help people across the world to trace their families.

“I have helped many. Confidentiality of the ‘detective’, as well as the samples, is maintained. I have collected DNA samples for my research. We work with many other genetic genalogists too,” he added.

Meanwhile, the group ‘DNA Detectives’ on Facebook which is a closed group, helps people with advice about how to use DNA to track down biological family. Also, a non-profit organisation ‘Searchangels.org’ also claims to have many volunteers from India who work towards finding birth families. “In our group the volunteers are skilled at finding the adoptee’s birth family through both traditional search and genetic genealogy.

However, no legal documents for the same will be provided. Ours is one of the largest social media resources for people interested in conducting their own searches,” said their website. Many volunteers on different such groups have made many Indian contacts who now work towards helping people who they have never met to discover the most intimate details about their origins.

AncestryDNA, the ancestry testing service, 23andMe, Living DNA, Family Tree DNA, MyHeritage, National Geographics’s Geno 2.0 and several others have many customer bases connected to India.”

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Chetana Belagere  / Express News Service / May 17th, 2019

Bengalurean pursues soccer dreams in Spain

The footballer from Bengaluru has a foot in the door - an opportunity to play for the reserve side of Madrid Club de Futbol Femenino, a La Liga Division 1 side. She feels that’s all she needs to kick open that metaphorical door to be a full-time professional
The footballer from Bengaluru has a foot in the door – an opportunity to play for the reserve side of Madrid Club de Futbol Femenino, a La Liga Division 1 side. She feels that’s all she needs to kick open that metaphorical door to be a full-time professional

Brishti Bagchi has a dream. One that sees her kicking a football on the sun-soaked pitches of Spain. And unlike many, she even has a chance to realise it.

The footballer from Bengaluru has a foot in the door – an opportunity to play for the reserve side of Madrid Club de Futbol Femenino, a La Liga Division 1 side. She feels that’s all she needs to kick open that metaphorical door to be a full-time professional.

But the stumbling block remains finances, forcing her to turn to crowd-funding.

“I made the reserve team in Madrid and I want to return there in August,” she puts it matter-of-factly. “So I have to go back and train for four to six months with the reserve team before I can play for the first team.”

“Yes, because I have a visa based on that. The visa would be a student visa and I have the license to compete for the reserve team. Only once I make the main team and get a contract can I get a work permit and be paid. But until I do, I have to take  care of my expenses.”

Brishti, playing for Bangalore United FC in the ongoing Indian Women’s League in Ludhiana, had a trial towards the end of 2018 with the Spanish club. After being scouted during her time with Dallas City FC B in the Women’s Premier Soccer League in the United States, she was picked for the reserve team at the end of her trial.

Having played in the National Association for Intercollegiate Athletics league for the Oklahoma City University side before moving to North Texas University Club while pursuing a degree and research in Kinesiology, the attacker knows the level needed to make it as a professional.

“I had a trial for Houston Dash (in the US). I made it to the second round and they said international players have only four spots in the team and they were taken,” she opens up about her path.

The 25-year-old, coached by BUFC coach Chitra Gangadharan during her early years for SAI, was in the state and national circles before moving to the US. has knocked on many a door to help pursue her passion. The midfielder started a fundraising campaign on Milaap where she has detailed her ambitions and struggles. So far she has raised Rs 3,55,400. There is still a long way to go.

“This is a short-term investment so I’m hoping for a corporate sponsor.”

While her future remains in the balance, Brishti is keen to help in raising the popularity of women’s football and don the national colours. “Women’s football in India definitely has gone up. I think there is more hope but there needs to be more support. I know they are working on it and hopefully it will happen in the future,” she says.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Sports> Football / by Sandeep Menon / DH News Service / Bengaluru – May 15th, 2019

NGO’s temple restoration effort set to reach a milestone

A 14th century temple in Holenarsipur taluk of Hassan district taken up for restoration under the project. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
A 14th century temple in Holenarsipur taluk of Hassan district taken up for restoration under the project. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

In what is reckoned to be unique in the annals of conservation and restoration in the country, a non-governmental organisation is set to complete the restoration of 250 ancient temples of architectural and cultural significance that had been languishing in neglect.

The project, of Sri Dharmasthala Manjunatheshwara Dharmothana Trust (SDMDT), is set to hit the 250-temple mark this financial year. Of these, 175 projects have been executed with the support of the State government under a public-private partnership (PPP) model of conservation launched in 2001-02.

As of date, the Trust has completed the restoration and conservation of 237 ancient temples across the State. Work on 13 temples is in progress. “We will complete the 250th restoration in the current financial year. Work on the 13 temples is in various stages of completion,” said A.H. Hariram Shetty, director of SDMDT. He said the total amount spent on restoration works over the years is ₹28.53 crore.

Besides this, the SDMDT has identified for restoration an additional 15 monuments spread across nine districts in the State. A ₹4-crore proposal has been submitted to the State government for approval, said Mr. Shetty.

Of the 15 temples identified, three each are in Chikkamagaluru, Mysuru and Tumakuru, while there is one each in Belagavi, Chamarajanagar, Dakshina Kannada, Hassan, Shivamogga and Uttara Kannada.

In the initial few years, the Trust was taking up the exercise entirely on its own. But the restoration projects received a fillip when the State government introduced the PPP model. “This was a great help and the government has continuously funded the project over the years without break,” Mr. Shetty said.

Under the PPP model, the government contributes 40% of the costs while any voluntary organisation engaged in restoration contributes a matching amount. The local community has to contribute the remaining 20% so as to get a sense of ownership of the restored monuments. The community also has to take care of the monument after restoration.

For Karnataka, which has over 30,000 unprotected monuments, in addition to 780 protected ones under the control of the Archaeology Department, the PPP model is reckoned to be the way forward to overcome cash crunch in protecting monuments. But there have not been many other such collaborative initiatives so far.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by R. Krishna Kumar / Mysuru – May 12th, 2019

Bengaluru women fly to US to attend Warren Buffett’s AGM

Shalini Manglani (third from right) was among the 28 members to attend the general meeting
Shalini Manglani (third from right) was among the 28 members to attend the general meeting

Bengaluru :

Lately, Meghna Wadhwa, Nameeta Mohanka, Rachna Prasad, Shalini Manglani and Vandana Agarwal have been sporting wide grins. The Bengaluru women attended Berkshire Hathaway’s annual general meeting (AGM) by Warren Buffett, over the weekend in Omaha, USA.

The women were part of a 28-member team from Millennium Mams’, a non-profit organisation that helps women be more financially literate. Mentored by investor Bhishnu Dhanuka, the group planned the trip for six months to meet the person whose principles have played an active role in their investing decisions.
“Buffett is like our guru, so it’s like a blessing to watch him speak live. We’ve been watching his webcasts but listening to him live was another experience altogether. The experience has motivated us to take good care of our financial portfolio,” said Prasad.

Of the 28 members, five belong to the Bengaluru chapter of the organisation. According to Manglani, a nutrition advisor and the honorary secretary of the city chapter, the vibe was “electric” at Omaha. “We came across others who have been attending this for 10 years. Someone from Buffett’s own company came to listen to him so we weren’t the only ones buzzing with excitement,” the 47-year-old said.
For investor Agarwal, 64, although this was the second time she was attending the AGM, it was just as memorable as her first experience in 2012. “Nothing can describe the feeling of being in the presence of such a stalwart,” she said.

While a personal interaction with Buffett wasn’t available, the women did have a fan moment when they drove past the American investor’s house. “We paused to take photographs outside his house. He’s known to be simple and never flaunts his wealth,” said Wadhwa, 33, who has been a part of the organisation since her 20s and now handles her own stock portfolio.

Lessons learned

Besides the AGM with Buffett, the team had an interactive session with Ajit Jain, vice chairman of Insurance Operations at Berkshire Hathaway. “He gave us some much-needed advice. Every investor is familiar with the panic that settles in when a market is going crazy. But Jain told us the importance of trusting our gut. He told us to trust our evaluation of a stock and to stick to our conviction, which just made us feel much better,” Nameeta Mohanka, 44, said.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Simran Ahuja / Express News Service / May 09th, 2019

Wipro acquires Filipino firm Splash

Wipro Consumer Care has acquired a Filipino personal care company, Splash, for an undisclosed sum, marking its entry into the east Asian market.

This is Wipro’s 11th acquisition in the consumer care space. Among the brands Splash owns are SkinWhite, Maxi-peel and Vitress. Wipro Consumer Care’s international portfolio formed 51% of its total revenues in fiscal 2019, and with this acquisition it is expected to grow to 54%.

The deal is expected to close by June this year. Splash clocked in a revenue of 4.1 billion pesos ($80 million) in calendar year 2018.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Special Correspondent / Bengaluru – April 30th, 2019

Work of art: NIFT students pay tribute to women techies

Around 20 students painted two walls at Whitefield Railway Station; they chose to paint a mural of Ada Lovelace, since this area is the IT hub of the city.

While one wall was dedicated to both Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage, the other displayed just the first IT programmer  Nagaraja Gadekal
While one wall was dedicated to both Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage, the other displayed just the first IT programmer  Nagaraja Gadekal

Bengaluru :

Around mid-April, Susan Thomas, campus director at National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), received an unexpected call from an engineer from an IT firm in the city. The engineer had just come back from a six-day trip to Tamil Nadu and returned to find something amiss at Whitefield Railway Station. The usual apricot-toned walls now displayed paintings of two figures, some gears and mechanical parts and some flowers. A closer look at the wall told her the figures were Ada Lovelace, the first IT programmer, and Charles Babbage, the father of computers. While one wall is dedicated to both, the other displays just Lovelace.

“The engineer was so happy to see women in the IT space get recognition and was thrilled to see Lovelace and women programmers being acknowledged in a public space like this,” says Thomas. This, in turn, thrilled Thomas and her team of 25 students who had worked on the murals earlier last month.

The idea, she says, came from the strong mural culture at the institute’s campus, where many artworks created by students adorn its walls. But this time, the institute wanted to use their students’ talent to beautify a public space and dispel the notion that government buildings are always dull and monochrome. “But we didn’t want to produce art just for art’s sake. We wanted to present a larger political context and message,” explains Thomas.

Finding a muse

After a consultation with railway officials, the institute was given a choice between KR Puram, Banaswadi and Whitefield stations. Once the IT hub was decided upon, Thomas and her students knew technology would be the central theme of their mural. “While brainstorming, students came up with names of Sundar, Zuckerberg and Gates. But no one mentioned any woman’s name.  I asked them about Ada Lovelace and none had heard about her. That’s when I elaborated the story of how Babbage and Lovelace collaborated, but history was unkind to not give any credit to her,” said Thomas. While the paints and scaffolding were provided by the railway ministry, the rest of the mural was done pro-bono by the institute.

The idea was approved by April 6 and over the next week, 25 students worked in shifts to bring the idea to life on their 20-something feet high canvas. Though fun, the work wasn’t entirely easy all the time, says Rayna Arora, a second-year student who worked on the murals. Being approached by inebriated men was always a threat and since the team involved many girls, either a police officer or the railway caretaker were always around. “It was too hot in the afternoon so we would work from 4pm onwards and some nights, this went on till 3am. Scaling up an idea on a wall has its own challenges, you think you’re painting an eye but when you step back, it might just look different. And it’s never easy to get straight lines when you project an idea onto a wall,” says Arora.

The work was finally unveiled mid-April and though ecstatic that their work is on display in public, the students do harbour one concern: People dirtying the wall again.  An official from the Railway Ministry CE spoke to, however, said that since the walls had been beautified, this would deter people from littering or spitting around the premises.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Simran Ahuja / Express News Service / May 06th, 2019

Bengaluru golfer girls dream of swinging high

Not long ago, a Bengaluru teenage girl went on to impress the best of the golfers. The girl, Aditi Ashok, is now an established player on the Ladies PGA Tour.

Bengaluru :

Not long ago, a Bengaluru teenage girl went on to impress the best of the golfers. The girl, Aditi Ashok, is now an established player on the Ladies PGA Tour.

Two other Bengaluru girls – Rishika Muralidhar and Avani Prashanth –  are also dreaming to reach the same heights as Ashok in the coming years.

Muralidhar, 13, has consistently performed in the junior circuit – in India and at the US Kids golf. Recently, she topped the Category B (13-15 years) in the Indian Golf Union Southern India Ladies and Junior Girls Golf Championship at the Clover Greens Golf Club. Muralidhar played a fine game of 3-over, 1-under and 2-under over three rounds to complete the tournament with level par. She also had a bogey-free round on Day 3 to emerge on top. In the combined Category A and B standings, Muralidhar was placed third.

“This was my first competition in the ‘B’ category and I felt I did well. The target is to now improve. As the distance of the golf course is going bigger in the ‘B’ category, it will be a challenge to master the strokes but with hard work, I will get better,” says Muralidhar, who trains under Ashok’s coach Steven Giulian. “I will be playing mostly in India for now besides two international competitions and get better.”

Avani Prashanth
Avani Prashanth

The other Bengaluru girl set to impress is Prashanth, a grade seven student of Greenwood High International School, with two wins in two weeks. She won the Category C (11-13 years) at the same tournament. Prashanth played rounds of 3-over, 2-under and level-par to finish with a score of 211 – nine strokes ahead of her nearest competitor. She led the tournament field on all three days and played the only under par round of the tournament in the age category, in a tournament field comprising of 21 players at the start of the tournament.

On Friday, she continued her good run, winning the Category C in the IGU Rotary Karnataka Ladies and Junior Girls Golf Championship at the Eagleton Golf Resort. She played rounds of 6-over, 2-over and 4-over to finish with a score of 228, two strokes ahead of her nearest competitor Ananya Garg.

Prashanth, who has been playing golf since the age of three, has been among top five at the US Kids Golf World Championship at Pinehurst North Carolina in 2014, 2015 and 2016 in U-7, U-8 and U-9 age groups, respectively. She has also been among the top five in US Kids Golf European Championship in 2016, 2017 and 2018. She also won the Order of Merit in 2015 and 2017 by winning all the tournaments conducted by South Zone Junior Golf under the auspices of the Indian Golf Union.

Now, Prashanth aims to better her skills. “I want to represent India at the 2024 Olympics and win a gold medal. I want to become a golfer of repute in women’s golf,” she says.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Express News Service / May 04th, 2019

In a first, IISc team directly delivers protein into cells

Higher uptake: Iodine forms a stronger halogen bond with the receptor, say Surendar Jakka (sitting) and Govindasamy Mugesh.
Higher uptake: Iodine forms a stronger halogen bond with the receptor, say Surendar Jakka (sitting) and Govindasamy Mugesh.

The team achieved nearly sixfold increase in protein uptake by cells

In a breakthrough that might have huge medical implications, researchers at Bengaluru’s Indian Institute of Science (IISc) have used a novel strategy to directly deliver proteins into mammalian cells. Proteins are big molecules and so cannot enter the cells on their own. So a team led by Govindasamy Mugesh from the institute’s Department of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry substituted a hydrogen atom of the protein with an iodine atom to achieve a nearly sixfold increase in protein uptake by cells.

The increased protein uptake was seen even when the molecular weight of the protein was 28,000 dalton, meaning the protein was much bigger in size than most of the therapeutic small molecules.

The researchers also tried replacing a hydrogen atom with an atom of bromine and chlorine but the uptake was way lower than when iodine was used.

In the case of bromine, the uptake of proteins increased by only about two times, while the uptake increased only marginally when chlorine was used. The results were published in the journal Angewandte Chemie.

Other researchers have tried tagging the protein with cell-penetrating peptides, supercharged proteins and even used virus-like particles to ferry the proteins into cells. But these approaches have severe limitations including altering the protein function inside the cell. For this reason, most of the applications involving proteins are directed to extracellular targets. Proteins inside the cells get impaired during diseased conditions such as neurodegenerative and cardiovascular disease. Supplementing the cellular protein in such cases becomes important and this is where the method used by the IISc team will come in handy.

The team had to first synthesise a green fluorescent protein with one hydrogen atom being replaced with an iodine atom. “To introduce iodine at a specific site on the protein, we had to use an iodinated amino acid. Since the iodinated amino acid used is unnatural (not genetically coded), protein synthesis machinery does not accept it. So we had to expand the genetic code of the organism to accept and incorporate the iodinated amino acid into the proteins during the biosynthesis in the cells,” says Prof. Mugesh.

Since the iodinated amino acid is introduced on the surface of the protein, the secondary structure is not altered and so the protein remains functionally intact.

Strong bond

Iodine forms a halogen bond with a specific receptor (caveolin) that transports the protein from the cell membrane surface to inside the cells. “Compared with bromine and chlorine, iodine is heavier and so it forms a stronger halogen bond with the receptor. This might be responsible for more proteins getting into the cells when we substitute a hydrogen with an iodine atom,” says Surendar R. Jakka from IISc’s Department of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry and first author of the paper.

To be functionally useful, the proteins must enter the cytoplasm of the cell. However, the moment proteins are ferried into the cell by the receptor they are trapped inside the endosomes and transported to lysosomes, where the proteins are degraded. Significant decrease in protein concentration as measured by the fluorescence intensity was seen by the researchers after 24 hours.

To overcome the problem of protein degradation, the team treated the cells with a peptide (ppTG21). “The peptide also gets into the endosomes along with the protein and changes the pH of the endosomes. The endosome gets ruptured due to pH change leading to release of the proteins into the cytoplasm. In this case, there was no decrease in the protein concentration even after 24 hours,” says Prof. Mugesh.

No toxicity

“We are substituting only one hydrogen atom with an iodine atom in the entire protein. So the toxicity is similar to native protein,” says Prof. Mugesh. “We tested the cell viability by treating the cells with different concentrations of the proteins for 90 minutes. The cells were healthy after taking up the protein. The morphology of the cells that had taken up the proteins did not change even at the end of 24 hours,” says Jakka.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sci-Tech> Science / by R. Prasad / April 20th, 2019

Indian Joint Registry of hip, knee surgeries launched

Placing India among an elite league of countries with a comprehensive and sophisticated knowledge bank, the Indian Society of Hip and Knee Surgeons on Saturday launched the Indian Joint Registry (IJR) in Bengaluru.

The registry was launched by Corin Wilson, Acting British Deputy High Commissioner, in the presence of 400 orthopaedic surgeons from across the globe at the 13th edition of the National Congress of Indian Society of Hip and Knee Surgeons (ISHKS) that began on Friday.

The registry has been put together by ISHKS along with Northgate Public Services – who also set up the National Joint Registry for the U.K. government. The IJR will serve as a highly secure platform to store data on hip and knee surgeries across India and will churn out focused reports for surgeons and patients to access, thereby helping them make more informed choices and better implant selection as well as post-surgery monitoring, said H.P.C. Khincha, organising chairman of the congress.

“The Indian Joint Registry is an initiative run by ISHKS in the interest of patients. Thousands of hip and knee replacement procedures are undertaken in India every year, bringing great benefit to many patients. The success of these procedures has resulted in greater numbers being undertaken each year,” he said. “IJR collects information on patients undergoing hip and knee replacement in India, to monitor the performance of implants,” he added.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Bengaluru – April 13th, 2019