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York Rover Team celebrates their send-off

The York University Rover Team (YURT) will be having their 2012 Rover Send-off presentation in Vanier College this week. The event, held on May 16, will give supporters, and the greater York community, a sneak-peek at YURT's 2012 Model, two weeks before they head off to their first competition of the year.

YURT is a fully student-run project, that has created a platform of success beyond that of any other club or organization at York. During the school year, the team dedicates countless time outside of the classroom, researching, building, and programming the rover. The team also does a significant ammount of fundraising and educational work inside and outside University walls. In the past, the Rover Team has made appearances with their Rover prototype for the Mars Society, Discovery Channel, CBC, Canada AM, Global News, CityTV's Breakfast Television, Popular Science, Scientific American, The Toronto Star, and The Space Review Information Week.

The rover has also participated in public outreach events such as Science Rendezvous, the Life on Mars Conference, and Go ENG Girl. The YURT-made celebrity has also been spotted at the Ontario Science Centre and Summer Engineering Camps for kids and is often called to unveiling ceremonies at York such as Engineering the Future in 2011 when the the Computer Science and Engineering Building was renamed in favour of the School of Engineering's largest private donor to date.

York's 2011 Rover

A celebrated fixture in York University's Faculty of Science and Engineering since YURT's inception in 2007, the York Rover has competed in the University Rover Challenge, remaining in the top three every year. The annual event, held by the Mars Society, requires each team to make a new rover prototype with the capacity for space exploration alongside humans. In the 2011 challenge, York University placed second overall and everyone present for the event, held in the deserts of Utah, are hoping to bring home a championship title for 2012. The winners of the challenge get the bragging rights for the year, in addition to a cash prize and a trip to present their protoype at the International Mars Society Convention.

This year's rover has much larger shoes to fill because it will be participating in three competitions, instead of one. Their fundraising goal this year has doubled to $50,000 because of this. In addition to Mars Society's University Rover Challenge (URC) begining on May 31, YURT's Rover will also be compteting in NASA's Lunabotics Mining Competition begining on May 21 and CSii's Robotics Competition begining on July 9.

Surrounded by friends and sponsors alike, YURT will also be launching their campaign to begin raising travelling funds so that arangements can be made for team members who will be attending each competition. To date, the team has raised $44,000 including services and in-kind donations. All funds raised in this campaign will go directly to YURT. If you wish to support York University's Rover Team in this year's competitions, please visit their fundraising website here.

 
39th Annual AGSBS Symposium: Diversity Matters - Variation in Science

Mar 9, 2012, 9am-9:30pm

The theme this year is "Diversity matters: Variation in Science" where our aim is to identify the plethora of research that is taking place at York and the many disciplines that are encompassed by it.

Our goals this year are to incorporate as much student participation as possible while highlighting the importance of differences. The day itself is progressing in scale from the origin of life up to whole population dynamics to applications of science in general society.

The itinerary is as follows:

  • 9:15am – Opening address with Dr. Ken Davey (York University)
  • 9:30am – "On the origins of life" with Dr. Eugene Koonin (National Institutes of Health)
  • 10:45am – "The future of RNA/DNA research" with Dr. Mark Bayfield (York University)
  • 11:15am – "Protein structure and function" with Dr. Frank Sicheri (U of T, Mount Sinai Hospital)
  • 1pm – "Understanding cancer" with Dr. Brenda Gallie (Ontario Cancer Institute)
  • 1:40pm – "Exercise, aging and muscle health" with Dr. David Hood (York University)
  • 2:20pm – Student poster presentations
  • 3pm – "Evolution of altruistic behaviour in social insects" with Dr. Miriam Richards (Brock University)
  • 3:40pm – "Predicting the effects of climate change on animal population dynamics" with Dr. Dennis Murray (Trent University)


There is a final keynote address by Dr. David Schindler (University of Alberta) that is occurring at 7:30pm.

Tickets are $35 and include dinner and the talk. Please e-mail Steve Duerksen for tickets.


Location: Founder's Assembly Hall
Sponsor: Association for Graduate Students in Biological Sciences
Email: swd@yorku.ca
 
Congratulations go out to Rory Lucyshyn-Wright

Rory CT2011 300x234

Professor Walter Tholen's PhD student, Rory Lucyshyn-Wright, received notification of the acceptance, without revision, of a single-authored paper of substantial length in one of the world's very top-league math journals, "Advances in Mathematics".

Professor Tholen doesn't recall ever having seen this kind of pre-PhD achievement before, either at York or elsewhere.

Congratulations Rory!

 
CSE Building Renamed

Lassonde name graces current CSE Building

As of Jan 3, 2012, the Computer Science & Engineering Building on York's Keele campus is officially being referred to as the Lassonde Building.

The building has been renamed to honour Pierre Lassonde, who provided a $25-million dollar transformative donation for an expanded School of Engineering at York. (See YFile, Nov. 2) 

All University signage and documentation should reflect this change

 
Biologists zero in on protein that may help treat obesity and diabetes

A newly identified protein may hold the key to keeping appetite and blood sugar in check, according to a study by York researchers.

Suraj Unniappan, a biology professor specializing in neuroendocrinology, is delving into the metabolic effects of a protein called nesfatin-1, abundantly present in the brain. His studies found that rats administered with nesfatin-1 ate less, used more stored fat and became more active. In addition, the protein stimulated insulin secretion from the pancreatic beta cells of both rats and mice.

Left: Suraj Unniappan in his lab

“[The rats] actually ate more frequently, but in lesser amounts,” says Unniappan, a member of York’s neuroscience graduate diploma program, and a recipient of a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) New Investigator Award. “In addition, they were more active and we found that their fatty acid oxidization was increased. In other words, the energy reserve being preferably used during nesfatin-1 treatment was fat. This suggests more fat loss, which could eventually result in body weight loss,” he says.

The findings were reported in two recent research articles from Unniappan’s laboratory: one published today in Endocrinology and another in March 2011 in the Journal of Endocrinology. Discovered by a research team from Japan in 2006, nesfatin-1 was earlier found to regulate appetite and the production of body fat when injected into the brain of mice and rats.

Unniappan’s findings indicate that the protein stimulates insulin secretion from the pancreas, a glandular organ, which contains clusters of cells called the islets of Langerhans. These islets produce several important hormones, including the primary glucose-lowering hormone, insulin.

Previously, Unniappan’s team studied mice and found similar results; not only was insulin secretion stimulated, but nesfatin-1 was observed to be lowered in the pancreatic islets of mice with Type 1 diabetes and increased in those with Type 2 diabetes. In Type 1 diabetes, the body no longer produces insulin due to the destruction of cells within the pancreas. In Type 2 diabetes, the body becomes insulin resistant, and obesity often results.

Unniappan’s research, conducted in the Laboratory of Integrative Neuroendocrinology in the Biology Department at York, focuses on identifying and examining the biological effects of gut- and brain-derived appetite-regulatory and metabolic hormones in fish and mammals.

“We call this the ‘gut-brain axis,’” says Unniappan. “While the brain is involved in many factors that regulate our energy balance, the gut is also responsible for many neural and endocrine signals responsible for regulating hunger, satiety and blood sugar levels. A major question we’re trying to address is how these peptides act and interact with other peptides in the endocrine network – which is so complex – in order to maintain steady blood glucose levels and body weight,” he says.

A better understanding of this gut-brain axis could contribute to developing potential pharmacological interventions for diabetes and obesity.

“New hormone-based treatments that would suppress body weight and blood sugar would be very desirable. However, we are far from developing nesfatin-1 as a candidate molecule. Our current research focuses on further exploring the therapeutic potential of nesfatin-1 in metabolic diseases with debilitating complications,” Unniappan says.

The lead author of both publications is Ronald Gonzalez, a recently graduated PhD student from Unniappan’s lab. The research was conducted in close collaboration with co-authors and York professors Robert Tsushima and Rolando Ceddia. Unniappan’s research is supported by grants from CIHR, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, (NSERC), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), the Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation, and the James H. Cummings Foundation.

 
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Copyright © 2010 Faculty of Science and Engineering - York University --- © 2009 York University
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Copyright © 2012 Faculty of Science and Engineering - York University --- © 2009 York University
355 Lumbers Bldg. - 4700 Keele Street - Toronto - Ontario - Canada - M3J 1P3