33 deaths due to methanol poisoning in Sept alone

PUTRAJAYA, Oct 1 — Thirty three deaths due to methanol poisoning were recorded from Sept 9 to 30 this year out of 55 methanol poisoning cases reported, said Health director-general Tan Sri Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah.

From the 33 deaths, he said 18 cases or 55 per cent involved Malaysians while 15 deaths or 45 per cent involved non-citizens from Myanmar, India and Nepal.

The methanol poisoning cases were reported in seven states namely Selangor with 25 cases, Perak 13 , Pahang (five), Penang (six), Kuala Lumpur (four), as well as Johor and Negeri Sembilan one case each, he said in a statement today..

From the 55 cases reported, 15 are still getting treatment while seven had been discharged from hospitals, he said.

Methanol poisoning occurs with the consumption of alcoholic drink containing toxic dosage of methanol due to improper distillation process of the alcoholic drink or the alcoholic drink was adulterated with methanol.

According to Dr Noor Hisham, methanol poisoning is usually linked to drinking illegally processed liquor as methanol is mixed with the drink as a replacement for ethanol as methanol is relatively cheaper than ethanol.

He said the methanol poisoning symptoms are stomachache, fainting, vomiting, headache and blurred vision within five days after imbibing the toxic alcoholic drink.

Members of the public are advised to take individuals with methanol poisoning symptoms to the nearest clinic or hospital to obtain emergency treatment, he said.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Agriculture Department ready to assist coffee entrepreneurs

PUTRAJAYA, Oct 1 — The Agriculture and Food Industries Ministry (MAFI) through the Agriculture Department is ready to assist individuals who are interested in becoming coffee entrepreneurs, “from beginning to end” — starting with the preparation of the planting process, irrigation system to coffee processing.

Deputy director-general of the Department of Agriculture (Management and Regulatory), Datuk Zahimi Hassan said currently, there were only about 2,000 coffee growers in Malaysia, especially in Kedah, Johor and Sabah. The majority of coffee varieties grown are liberica and robusta.

According to data from the Department of Agriculture, the area of coffee cultivation in Malaysia in 2021 is 2,220 hectares (ha) compared to 2,114 ha in 2019.

Coffee production in 2020 was 4,241 tonnes compared to 3,559 tonnes in 2019, with the main producers being Johor and Sabah, he said.

“The coffee production figure is expected to increase yearly by taking into account the potential of coffee bean production according to the maturity of the trees,” he told reporters after the national-level 2021 World Coffee Day Celebration, here, today.

“The main problem in this industry is manpower which is needed to pick ripe coffee beans as not all beans in one stalk of coffee will ripen at the same time. Therefore, there is a need to re-pluck the ripe beans from that stalk at another time,” he said.

Zahimi said the government had approved an allocation of RM4.5 million under the 12th Malaysia Plan (12MP) for the Coffee Plantation Industry Development Project which, among others, aims to provide infrastructure and post-harvest handling facilities as well as pest control equipment.

MAFI Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ronald Kiandee, who officiated at the virtual World Coffee Day celebration, said in his message that his ministry would place special emphasis on formulating new initiatives to encourage young, local entrepreneurs to venture into the coffee-growing industry.

Oct 1 has been agreed by the International Coffee Organisation, which has 49 member countries, as the date for the celebration of World Coffee Day which is to promote and celebrate coffee as a daily drink, in addition to appreciating coffee farmers and the entire coffee value chain including processors, manufacturers to consumers.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

COVID: Only 0.5 pct new cases in Sarawak involved lung infection

KUCHING, Oct 1 — Only 0.5 per cent or 12 of the 2,413 positive COVID-19 cases in Sarawak today involved lung infection which requires oxygen and ventilator assistance.

According to Sarawak Disaster Management Committee (SDMC), the remaining 2,401 cases have no or mild symptoms, and the daily total takes the cumulative cases in the state to 212,037.

Meanwhile, a community cluster was declared today with the Sepangah Cluster involving residents of a longhouse located in Sepangah, Nanga Medamit, Limbang.

“From 178 people screened, 22 were found positive including the index case while 156 individuals were found negative,” said the statement.

In this regard, 26 deaths were recorded in Sarawak from Sept 16 to 30.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Govt to enhance support systems for senior citizens – PM Ismail Sabri

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 1 — The government will enhance support systems for senior citizens to ensure that the needs of this group are well taken care of.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob said the government had also planned to expand the service of Senior Citizen Centre to all parliamentary constituencies in line with the concept of Keluarga Malaysia (Malaysian Family).

“As of today, 140 Senior Citizen Centres have been set up nationwide,” he said in a post on Facebook today in conjunction with the National Senior Citizen’s Day celebrated with the theme Digital Equity for All Ages.

While wishing Happy Senior Citizen’s Day to all senior citizens nationwide, the Prime Minister said Malaysia would strive to create more senior citizen-friendly towns in the future.

Furthermore, the National Senior Citizen Registration System will be improved and the services the expanded.

Ismail Sabri said Malaysia is expected to become an ageing nation by 2030 with 15 per cent of the population will be age 60 and above.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

King grants audience to UK Chief of Defence staff

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 1 — Yang di-Pertuan Agong Al-Sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah granted an audience to the United Kingdom (UK) Chief of Defence Staff General Sir Nicholas Carter on Wednesday (Sept 29).

Istana Negara through a posting on its Facebook page today said during the 45-minute meeting, Al-Sultan Abdullah and Carter shared their experiences as cadet officers at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst that they both attended.

The King attended the academy from 1978 to 1979.

It said His Majesty and Carter also discussed bilateral defence relations between Malaysia and the UK as well as the continuous improvement of cooperation between the two countries in the aspects of training and defence.

“Among other current matters also discussed were the COVID-19 pandemic, humanitarian issues, the defence industry, regional security and the latest developments in Afghanistan,” read the posting.

Al-Sultan Abdullah also expressed Malaysia’s intention to confer the Knight Grand Commander of the Order of Military Service award on Carter, which will be managed by the Ministry of Defence soon, as an appreciation of his roles in increasing bilateral relations between Malaysia and the UK in the field of defence.

Carter is scheduled to retire in December.

Also present at the meeting were Malaysian High Commissioner to the UK Zakri Jaafar, British High Commissioner to Malaysia Charles Hay, Istana Negara’s Comptroller of the Royal Household Datuk Ahmad Fadil Shamsuddin, Defence Attaché Brigadier General Safwan @ Asri Ismail and UK Armed Forces’ Principal Staff Officer to the Chief of the Defence Staff Admiral Anthony Rimington.

Al-Sultan Abdullah also attended a reunion with his former classmates at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in London, yesterday.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Looking Beyond DNA to See Cancer with New Clarity

Mapping How Mutated Proteins Interact Reveals Previously Unseen Cancer Targets

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 30, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Researchers at UC San Francisco and UC San Diego have mapped out how hundreds of mutations involved in two types of cancer affect the activity of proteins that are the ultimate actors behind the disease. The work points the way to identifying new precision treatments that may skirt side effects common with much current chemotherapy.

The effort, dubbed Cancer Cell Mapping Initiative (CCMI), is led by Nevan Krogan, PhD, director of UCSF’s Quantitative Biosciences Institute and Trey Ideker, PhD, professor at University of California San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center, who are also co-senior authors on a set of three related studies that describe the map. The papers appear September 30 in Science.

“This is an entirely new way to do cancer research,” said Nevan Krogan. Krogan noted that targeted treatments based simply on DNA sequencing of tumors haven’t been as effective as hoped. “We realized we need another way to look at cancer that takes it a step beyond DNA.”

“The bottom line is that we’re elevating the conversation about cancer from individual genes to whole protein complexes,” Ideker said. “For years different groups have been discovering more and more gene mutations that are involved in cancers. But now we’re able to explain these mutations at the next level — by looking at how the different gene mutations in different patients actually have the same downstream effects on the same protein machines. This is the first map of cancer from the protein complex lens.”

Looking Beyond Gene Mutations to the Protein Disruptions They Cause

The team looked at proteins, which carry out the vast majority of functions in the body—and which take on a collection of forms that far outnumber our genes, providing a much more expansive view of the activity underlying cancer.

DNA contains the instructions for building proteins, which then interact with other proteins, almost always in large groups called complexes. These protein complexes regulate an activity or turn a function on or off. If the underlying DNA has a mutation, the resulting protein complexes will as well.

These gene mutations can affect how well the resulting protein complexes do their jobs. For example, a particular interaction between two proteins might be crucial to repairing damaged DNA. If the mutated version of one of those proteins is shaped differently than normal, it may not interact correctly with the other protein, and the DNA might not get repaired, leading to cancer.

Mapping Protein Mutations

There is a subset of genes that are commonly mutated in cancer, Krogan said, and each of these genes can be mutated in hundreds of different ways. In addition, the function of a particular protein may be different in different types of cells, so a mutation in a breast cancer cell might have different effects on protein complexes than that same mutation’s effect in a cell in the throat.

CCMI’s goal was to map the constellation of protein complexes formed by approximately 60 proteins commonly involved in either breast cancer and cancers of the head and neck, and to see what each looked like in healthy cells. Alongside that effort, they created maps of how protein complexes are affected by hundreds of different gene mutations in two cancerous cell lines.

Doing so presented a formidable computational challenge. But the CCMI collaboration allowed the team to use advanced and novel data analyses to reveal not only whether the mutation affected interactions between proteins, but to what extent.

“That kind of detail shows us how well an existing drug might work, or explains why it doesn’t,” Ideker said.

The most powerful aspect of these extensive protein interaction maps is that they can shed the same light on many other conditions, Krogan said. For example, the team is also at work on similar studies of protein interactions in psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders, as well as infectious disease.

Collaboration is Key

Krogan and Ideker see the CCMI collaboration as the real source of strength behind the approach.

“We’re not only making connections between different genes and proteins but between different people and different disciplines,” Krogan said. “Those collaborations have built up an infrastructure that allows them to integrate an array of types of information and push the boundaries of what’s possible in applying data science to complex diseases.”

“We’re in the perfect position to take advantage of this revolution on every level. I couldn’t be more excited than I am right now. We can do such damage to cancer.”

Funding: This research was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute (U54 CA209891, U54 CA209988, 5F30CA236404-02) and the National institutes of Health (F32 CA239336, R50 CA243885, S10 OD026929) as well as other public and philanthropic sources.

About QBI: The Quantitative Biosciences Institute (QBI) fosters collaborations across the biomedical and the physical sciences, seeking quantitative methods to address pressing problems in biology and biomedicine. Motivated by problems of human disease, QBI is committed to investigating fundamental biological mechanisms, because ultimately solutions to many diseases have been revealed by unexpected discoveries in the basic sciences.

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Videos accompanying this announcement are available at:

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https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/20119a6f-0bbc-42aa-aa8f-adc435b88697