Monday, June 13, 2016

Karl Landsteiner Science Hero.


Karl Landsteiner scientist

Karl Landsteiner 


(June 14, 1868 - June 26, 1943)
Born in Austria
Year of Discovery: 1902



Superman of Science Makes Landmark Discovery - Over 1 Billion Lives Saved So Far!


Karl Landsteiner was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1868. He was essentially raised by a single mother, as his father died when he was only six. He finished medical school at age 23 and then began traveling to study under other famous scientists of the day. He often couldn't find research jobs (which were his passion) and he would make his living by doing autopsies at "deadhouses," which we call morgues today. But he always persevered and no matter what his circumstances, he would carve out a space to do research. Somewhat reclusive and pessimistic by nature, he felt at home in the laboratory and made it the focus of his life.


One of the topics he researched and found interesting was human blood. Doctors had tried giving people transfusions (a dose of another person's blood) but it was actually just pure luck if it worked. Sometimes the patient became much better and other times the patient had a fatal or deadly reaction. Before he discovered that people had different blood group types, people routinely bled to death from ulcers, accidents, and childbirth problems. No one knew that there were four different types of blood (A, B, AB, and O) and that if you gave a person the wrong type of blood, they could die from a reaction between their blood and the donor's blood. If a person receives the wrong type blood, a terrible reaction begins. This can start a chain reaction of other problems, in which the red blood cells will begin to react with the new blood cells, and then the cells will actually lyse, or fall apart, in the blood vessels. This releases hemoglobin that can damage the kidneys, which can lead to death.

In 1901, Landsteiner discovered that different people's blood had different characteristics that made it "incompatible" with other people's blood that didn't carry those same traits. He discovered the A, B, and O blood types. His discovery of the differences and identification of the groups that were alike made it possible for blood transfusions to become a routine procedure. This paved the way for many other medical procedures that we don't even think twice about today, such as surgery, blood banks, and transplants.

Landsteiner is known as the "melancholy genius" because he was so sad and intense, yet he was so systematic, thorough, and dedicated. He wrote 346 papers during his long career contributing to many areas of scientific knowledge. He is considered the father of Hematology (the study of blood), Immunology (the study of the immune system), Polio research, and Allergy research.

Landsteiner was known for his attention to detail and thoroughness. By the time he finished working on a problem, and proposing a solution, there was little room for doubt. When he turned his attention to the problem of blood incompatibility, he started with the most basic problem and designed a simple, elegant experiment to figure out why this happened. He repeated this experiment many times to rule out random error and to prove that the reaction was always present and was always the same. He then charted out all the reactions. After carefully studying this, he proposed that the agglutination (clumping) was caused by two variables - A and B. Some samples had one, some had the other, and some had none. He called the types A, B, and zero. Zero was later renamed "O". He proposed that this was what caused some blood to be compatible with others and some to react with others. Later, the AB group was discovered as someone who has both the A and B substance on their red blood cells. Today, we refer to these as the blood group antigens. This experiment laid the groundwork to establish the modern practice of blood banking.


Key Experiments or Research

Karl Landsteiner, blood group discovery
Karl Landsteiner on Research


The framework for Landsteiner's experiment was very logical and straightforward.

Blood has several components. It can be separated into its separate parts by letting it sit for a few hours in a tube, or the process can be speeded up by centrifuging (spinning) it. After separation, there will be the red cells at the bottom, with a layer of white blood cells and platelets on top of that, and on the very top there is a clear yellowish liquid (serum). Landsteiner tested the red cells at the bottom of one sample against the serum at the top of a different sample. He had noticed that when different people's blood were mixed together there was a phenomenon known as agglutination (clumping) that sometimes occurred. So, the clumping became his test to see if one person's blood reacted with another. He collected blood from himself and five of his fellow lab workers and separated the samples into cells and serum. Then he mixed each sample's cells, diluted with 0.6% saline (salt water), with the serum from each of the other samples until he had tested all the possible combinations. If it clumped visibly (you could see it just by looking at it with your eyes - no microscope needed) he confirmed it by looking at the sample with a microscope. He called the cells that clumped "positive" and the ones that did not "negative". After thinking about his results, he decided to make sure it wasn't just normal blood clotting - that agglutination was different than clotting. So, he found a hemophiliac (a person whose blood does not clot normally) and tested their blood. As he suspected, their blood agglutinated also with some samples and did not with others. So, this proved that the phenomenon he had noticed and studied was not just clotting - it was something different. Then he thought he should prove that the clumping he observed wasn't caused by a disease. So he tested newborn babies' cells, since they were unlikely to react due to a disease as they hadn't been in the world long enough to catch one. Finally after studying and testing blood from 22 different patients he declared, "the experiments demonstrate that my data require no correction. All 22 examined sera from healthy persons gave the reaction." He charted all his results and studied them carefully. When thinking about his results mathematically he noticed that there were probably two variables that could explain his results. He called these variables A and B. In his notebook he noted, "a remarkable regularity appeared in the behavior of the 22 blood specimens examined. If one excludes the fetal placental blood, which did not produce agglutination..., in most cases the sera could be divided into three groups: In several cases (group A) the serum reacted on the corpuscles of another group (B), but not on those of group A, whereas the A corpuscles are again influenced in the same manner by serum B. In the third group (C) the serum agglutinates the corpuscles of A and B, while the C corpuscles are not affected by sera of A and B..... In ordinary speech, it can be said that in these cases at least two different kinds of agglutinins (antibodies) are present: some in A, others in B, and both together in C."
After studying his results, he proposed that agglutination was a real phenomenon and was caused by differences between the red cells of different people. We know these today as blood types. He proposed that there were three types of blood: A, B, and C, which he later called zero and was eventually renamed O. This explainded why sometimes transfusions worked wonderfully, and at other times led to disastrous, even fatal results. He detailed his results in a paper published in 1901. It was called Ueber Agglutinationserscheinungen normalen menschilchen Blutes." (Translated this means: On agglutination phenomenon of normal human blood.)

Quotes by the Scientist


In regard to his research:
"The sera of healthy individuals not only have an agglutinating effect on animal red cells but also on human red cells from different individuals. It remains to be decided whether this phenomenon is due to individual differences or to the influence of injuries or bacterial infection."

"Since no observations whatever had been made in this direction, I selected the simplest experimental arrangements available and the material which offered the best prospects. Accordingly, my experiment consisted of causing the blood serum and erythrocytes (red blood cells) of different human subjects to react with one another."


"To exclude the assumption that perhaps past disease processes are of importance, I regarded investigations on the blood of children and animals utilizable."

"Moreover, my investigations show that the different sera do not act identically with respect to agglutination. If one believes, therefore, that they owe their agglutination ability to a kind of autoimmunization through resorption of cell constituents, then one must again assume individual differences to obtain the different sera."


To a neighbor during the war:

His neighbor, a teenage boy who had befriended him, remembered his parting words, "Finish your studies and then go out into the great big world. And if you are ever in any trouble let me know, and I'll do my best to help."

About his work situation:

"If I am asked to make do with only a microscope I have to comply."

About his living conditions in New York:

"Just imagine. I can't even play the piano I managed to lay my hands on. It was my only form of relaxation, but the neighbors complained that I made such a noise they couldn't listen to the radio. So now I never touch it."

Quotes About the Scientist


"At 21 years of age he had already known that which had impressed me so much...that important discoveries will emerge when one scientific discipline merges with another."
-Phil Levine, a colleague
"The line of least resistance was to embark on efforts to discover new bacteria, now that the methods of cultivation of bacteria were laid down by the discoveries of Pasteur and Koch. Those who took the line of least resistance did discover the pneumococcus, meningococcus..., but what else did they contribute to the medical sciences?"
-Phil Levine

"Now I found myself face to face with a tall, very slim, good-looking young man with brown hair and eyes, a moustache, and a rather sensual mouth. His movements were brisk, yet graceful. We had a brief conversation, in the course of which I was impressed by his extraordinary attraction and by his burning enthusiasm for research-work, despite the unpretentious modesty with which he spoke of it."
-Constantin Levaditi, a professor at the Institute Pasteur in Paris, met Landsteiner a little after this time and provided this sensitive description of him.

"He formulated precisely the relationships between cause and effect, and did not complicate what was still unknown by hypotheses. When he did introduce hypotheses, they were supported scientifically by experiments. He never claimed more than he was able to prove scientifically or could verify by his own experiments."
-Dr. Paul Speiser, his Austrian biographer

"Landsteiner had a mind that was by nature sharp-edged and rigorous, delighting in the exact. He read the higher mathematics for diversion, amused himself with problems in advanced algebra and calculus, and followed with zest each forward step in the new mathematical physics."
-Rous, a colleague

"Landsteiner's work dispelled any notion that might have once been held that there is absolute specificity in immune relations. Indeed, the structures of the many cross-reacting molecules uncovered in work from his laboratory were used to great advantage to illuminate how a ligand's [any molecule that binds to another] shape, size, and charge distribution affects the extent to which it is recognized by antibodies."
-Herman Eisen of MIT

"For many years I had had no news of Landsteiner at all; but during a study-tour of America in 1929 I ran him to earth in his laboratory. I found him rather depressed and full of complaints about his work, especially about the regulations that apart from restricting his activities in certain fields bore no relation at all to the virtually unlimited scope of his own scientific ambitions."
-Long-time associate Constantin Levaditi, related after a visit to Landsteiner in New York

Anecdotes


A Classic Work-a-holic
Adriano Sturli, one of the doctors who donated blood for Landsteiner's blood group experiment, told an amusing story about Landsteiner: "Towards the end of 1901 I was asked by Landsteiner, with whom I had up to then only done some histological and bacteriological studies, whether I would like to join him in some serological studies and experiments (these would lead to the discovery of the fourth blood group AB). I agreed with alacrity, and thus had an opportunity of repeating all his experiments to his explicit satisfaction. I should add that the final studies started on the afternoon of 31 December 1901 and went on without a break until 8:30 PM. The two of us were quite alone in the Pathological Institute, now silent and deserted. These hours were a sort of tragicomedy for me, because I had naturally been itching for hours to join my friends and see the New Year in in style. However, Landsteiner was gently but firmly insistent, and kept me washing blood-corpuscles, mixing sera, centrifuging, saturating charcoal-powder with dyes, etc. under his supervision, with results that seemed to me amazing but to Landsteiner were self-evident. Eventually we took leave of one another, tired but still good friends, with a cordial ‘Happy New Year'."

But Not All Work and No Play

He would bring his beloved dog, Waldi, to work and let him sit under his desk. Around lunch time every day Waldi would start barking and Landsteiner would playfully reprimand him, "Waldi, you've not an atom of respect for science."

Patience is a Virtue

Not that Landsteiner was always dire. He still relished his lab, never losing his wit while there. The young scientists in his charge often rushed to conclusions. One day he said, "Is it not strange that I, who have so little time left, should be teaching patience to you, who have your life before you?"

Humble to the End.

One evening in 1930 Philip Levine went to Landsteiner's apartment. He found the family placidly reading as usual. Levine was quite surprised, considering the news of the day. "What news?" Landsteiner's wife and son asked. Their looks told the story. Karl had told neither Helene nor Ernst what he had learned earlier that day, that he had been awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine. Beginning in 1923, fourteen different nominators had put him up for the award for three different discoveries - his polio research, his immune system work, and his discovery of the blood groups. After 29 years, the committee finally granted him the award for his blood group work.

source: www.scienceheroes.com

Saturday, June 4, 2016

Muhammad Ali


Muhammad Ali, Athlete, Boxer, Philanthropist (1942–2016)

Arguably boxing's most celebrated athlete, heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali was also known for his public stance against the Vietnam War and his longtime battle with Parkinson's disease.

Sugar Ray Leonard - Mini Biography (TV-14; 3:39) By the age of 20, Sugar Ray Leonard had won three golden gloves, a gold medal at the Pan American games, and an Olympic gold medal In 1976, Leonard considered retiring and going to college, but continued to fight, becoming a boxing legend.

Born Cassius Clay in Louisville, Kentucky, in 1942, Muhammad Ali became an Olympic gold medalist in 1960 and the world heavyweight boxing champion in 1964. Following his suspension for refusing military service, Ali reclaimed the heavyweight title two more times during the 1970s, winning famed bouts against Joe Frazier and George Foreman along the way. Diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1984, Ali devoted much of his time to philanthropy, earning the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005. He died on June 3, 2016, in Phoenix, Arizona.

Early Life


Boxer, philanthropist and social activist Muhammad Ali was born Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr. on January 17, 1942, in Louisville, Kentucky. Ali showed at an early age that he wasn't afraid of any bout—inside or outside of the ring. Growing up in the segregated South, he experienced racial prejudice and discrimination firsthand.

At the age of 12, Ali discovered his talent for boxing through an odd twist of fate. His bike was stolen, and Ali told a police officer, Joe Martin, that he wanted to beat up the thief. "Well, you better learn how to fight before you start challenging people," Martin reportedly told him at the time. In addition to being a police officer, Martin also trained young boxers at a local gym.

Ali started working with Martin to learn how to spar, and soon began his boxing career. In his first amateur bout in 1954, he won the fight by split decision. Ali went on to win the 1956 Golden Gloves tournament for novices in the light heavyweight class. Three years later, he won the National Golden Gloves Tournament of Champions, as well as the Amateur Athletic Union's national title for the light heavyweight division.

Olympic Gold


In 1960, Ali won a spot on the U.S. Olympic boxing team, and traveled to Rome, Italy, to compete. At 6' 3", Ali was an imposing figure in the ring, but he also became known for his lightning speed and fancy footwork. After winning his first three bouts, Ali defeated Zbigniew Pietrzkowski from Poland to win the light heavyweight gold medal.

After his Olympic victory, Ali was heralded as an American hero. He soon turned professional with the backing of the Louisville Sponsoring Group, and continued overwhelming all opponents in the ring. Ali took out British heavyweight champion Henry Cooper in 1963, and then knocked out Sonny Liston in 1964 to become the heavyweight champion of the world.

Often referring to himself as "the greatest," Ali was not afraid to sing his own praises. He was known for boasting about his skills before a fight and for his colorful descriptions and phrases. In one of his more famously quoted descriptions, Ali told reporters that he could "float like a butterfly, sting like a bee" in the boxing ring.

Conversion to Islam and Suspension


This bold public persona belied what was happening in Ali's personal life, however. He was doing some spiritual searching and decided to join the black Muslim group the Nation of Islam in 1964. At first he called himself "Cassius X" before settling on the name Muhammad Ali. (The boxer eventually converted to orthodox Islam during the 1970s.)

Ali later started a different kind of fight with his outspoken views against the Vietnam War. Drafted into the military in April 1967, he refused to serve on the grounds that he was a practicing Muslim minister with religious beliefs that prevented him from fighting. He was arrested for committing a felony and almost immediately stripped of his world title and boxing license.

The U.S. Department of Justice pursued a legal case against Ali, denying his claim for conscientious objector status. He was found guilty of violating Selective Service laws and sentenced to five years in prison in June 1967, but remained free while appealing his conviction. Unable to compete professionally in the meantime, Ali missed more than three prime years of his athletic career. The U.S. Supreme Court eventually overturned the conviction in June 1971.

Boxing Comeback


Prior to the Supreme Court's decision, Ali returned to the ring in 1970 with a win over Jerry Quarry. The following year, Ali took on Joe Frazier in what has been called the "Fight of the Century." Frazier and Ali went toe-to-toe for 14 rounds before Frazier dropped Ali with a vicious left hook in the 15th. Ali recovered quickly, but the judges awarded the decision to Frazier, handing Ali his first professional loss after 31 wins. Ali soon suffered a second loss, to Ken Norton, but he beat Frazier in a 1974 rematch.

Another legendary Ali fight, against undefeated heavyweight champion George Foreman, took place in 1974. Billed as the "Rumble in the Jungle," the bout was organized by promoter Don King and held in Kinshasa, Zaire. For once, Ali was seen as the underdog to the younger, massive Foreman, but he silenced his critics with a masterful performance. He baited Foreman into throwing wild punches with his "rope-a-dope" technique, before stunning his opponent with an eighth-round knockout to reclaim the heavyweight title.

Ali and Frazier locked horns for their grudge match in Quezon City, Philippines, in 1975. Dubbed the "Thrilla in Manila," the bout nearly went the distance, with both men delivering and absorbing tremendous punishment. However, Frazier's trainer threw in the towel after the 14th round, giving the hard-fought victory to Ali.

After losing his title to Leon Spinks in February 1978, Ali defeated him in a September rematch, becoming the first boxer to win the heavyweight championship three times. Following a brief retirement, he returned to the ring to face Larry Holmes in 1980, but was overmatched against the younger champion. Following one final loss in 1981, to Trevor Berbick, the boxing great retired from the sport.

Philanthropy and Diagnosis of Parkinson's


In his retirement, Ali devoted much of his time to philanthropy. He announced that he had Parkinson's disease in 1984, a degenerative neurological condition, and was involved in raising funds for the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center in Phoenix, Arizona. Over the years, Ali also supported the Special Olympics and the Make-A-Wish Foundation, among other organizations. In 1996, he lit the Olympic cauldron at the Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, an emotional moment in sports history.
Ali traveled to numerous countries, including Mexico and Morocco, to help out those in need. In 1998, he was chosen to be a United Nations Messenger of Peace because of his work in developing nations.

In 2005, Ali received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush. He also opened the Muhammad Ali Center in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, that same year. "I am an ordinary man who worked hard to develop the talent I was given," he said. "Many fans wanted to build a museum to acknowledge my achievements. I wanted more than a building to house my memorabilia. I wanted a place that would inspire people to be the best that they could be at whatever they chose to do, and to encourage them to be respectful of one another."

Despite the progression of Parkinson's and the onset of spinal stenosis, Ali remained active in public life. He was on hand to celebrate the inauguration of the first African-American president in January 2009, when Barack Obama was sworn into office. Soon after the inauguration, Ali received the President's Award from the NAACP for his public service efforts.

Death and Legacy


Things began taking a turn for the worse within a few years. In early 2015, Ali was hospitalized for a severe urinary tract infection after having battled pneumonia. He was hospitalized again in early June 2016 for what was reportedly a respiratory issue. The revered athlete passed away on the evening of June 3, 2016, at a Phoenix, Arizona facility.

Ali was survived by his fourth wife, Yolanda, whom he had been married to since 1986. The couple had one son, Asaad, and Ali had several children from previous relationships, including daughter Laila Ali, who followed in his footsteps by becoming a champion boxer.

Universally regarded as one of the greatest boxers in history, Ali's stature as a legend continued to grow even as his physical state diminished. He continues to be celebrated not only for his remarkable athletic skills but for his willingness to speak his mind and his courage to challenge the status quo.

Muhammad Ali Quotes:


  • “The man who views the world at 50 the same as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life.”


  • It isn't the mountains ahead to climb that wear you out; it's the pebble in your shoe.

  •  I'm gonna float like a butterfly, sting like a bee

  • I am an ordinary man who worked hard to develop the talent I was given.”

  •  I'm the champion of the world. I'm the greatest thing that ever lived. I'm so great I don't have a mark on my face. I shook up the world! I shook up the world!”

  • If Clay says a mosquito can pull a plow, don't ask how—Hitch him up!”

  • You get the impression while watching him fight that he plays cat and mouse, then turns out the light.”

  •  The real enemy of my people is here. I will not disgrace my religion, my people or myself by becoming a tool to enslave those who are fighting for their own justice, freedom and equality.”

  •  Religions all have different names, but they all contain the same truths. I think the people of our religion should be tolerant and understand people believe different things.”

  •  It's just a job. Grass grows, birds fly, waves pound the sand. I beat people up.”

  •  I set out on a journey of love, seeking truth, peace and understanding. l am still learning.”

  • Truly great people in history never wanted to be great for themselves.”

  •  At night when I go to bed, I ask myself, 'If I don't wake up tomorrow, would I be proud of how I lived today.'”

  •  This is the story about a man with iron fists and a beautiful tan.”

source:Biography 

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Facebook Live — from Space!


Facebook Live — from Space! Astronauts Chat with Mark Zuckerberg


Astronauts Jeff Williams, Tim Kopra and Tim Peake talked with Mark Zuckerberg over Facebook Live on June 1. Credit: NASA via Facebook


Three space station astronauts chatted live today (June 1) with Facebook's founder about experiments and fun in space, the things that training can't prepare you for, and the true astronaut ice cream. 

The live-streamed video marked the first use of Facebook Live in space, and the discussion among Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, NASA astronauts Jeff Williams and Tim Kopra, and British astronaut Tim Peake garnered hundreds of thousands of views as it was happening and 2.6 million views as of press time.

Zuckerberg read off questions asked by Facebook users, throwing in a few of his own as well, delving into how the astronauts spend their time in space. [Amazing Space Photos by British Astronaut Tim Peake]

 Besides running experiments that take advantage of the lack of gravity — "physical science experiments that range from combustion to fluid flow to microbiology," Kopra said — the astronauts discussed how their existence itself is an experiment to measure microgravity's effect on the human body. So they're constantly exercising and measuring the changes in their physical attributes, like eyesight. 

 All three astronauts trained to prepare for those effects and the tasks they'd have to complete on orbit. But some aspects of life in space were impossible to convey through training, said astronaut Tim Peake, who's nearly six months into his first space mission. (Peake is the first British astronaut to stay on the International Space Station.)

 "As a rookie astronaut on my first flight, there were so many new experiences," Peake said. "The training is phenomenal, and we have a wonderful training team all around the world, in all our international sites. [But] it's the real experience of launching in a Soyuz rocket, seeing that first orbit of planet Earth going through a sunset, seeing a moonrise, seeing a sunrise — you can't put into words how beautiful a planet is from up here.

"And also having the privilege of seeing it change over the nearly six months that we've been up here now already, and seeing the Northern Hemisphere going from winter to summer, seeing thunderstorms at nighttime, the aurora — it's just absolutely incredible," he continued. "It's all of those kinds of elements that the training just can't prepare you for."

The trio also discussed communicating with the other astronauts, using English, Russian or a mix of the two; the internet service in space, which is relatively new and incredibly useful for keeping in touch, albeit much slower than on Earth; and the cool new virtual reality tech they've been testing out in the space station's halls.

The astronauts also delved into what they do for fun. Williams, who is on his third long-duration stay on the station, mentioned he also particularly enjoys viewing the Earth: "All the different seasons and stuff that goes by, the different lighting conditions and weather patterns, and all the geography and geology and the ocean currents, and thunderstorms, seeing lightning ripple across a weather system — that's a lot of fun," he said. "So we spend a lot of time in the window," he said.

Another pastime, often done during meals, is playing around in microgravity. "We all, from time to time, especially around the dinner table, play with our food in unique ways," Williams added. "We all get to be kids again."

The astronauts discussed how food tastes very slightly differentin microgravity, probably because an increase of fluid in the head makes the astronauts feel slightly "stuffed up." They particularly enjoy spicy foods for that reason, Williams said.

And Zuckerberg asked another food-based question, getting the information that really matters: Is astronaut ice cream a real thing?

"We know that the astronaut ice cream that you buy in the gift store, that powdery stuff — yeah, that's not real," Kopra said. "But we've had ice cream on board. When SpaceX came up, they delivered a bunch of ice cream and a freezer, so that's been quite the treat. I think we're down to our last few bars. We're trying to ration it."

The three astronauts won't have much longer to save it, though; Kopra and Peake return to Earth June 18, along with Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko, and Jeff Williams will head down in September with cosmonauts Alexey Ovchinin and Oleg Skripochka.

June 24, three new team members will join the orbiting lab: American astronaut Kate Rubins, Russian cosmonaut Anatoly Ivanishin and Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi. But they probably shouldn't count on any leftover ice cream.

Source: Space