Longombas - Queen (Official video)



i know the video sucks! haha. but i love the song. and i'll dedicate the song to my queen ;p










i will always love you

Happy Anniversary baby.

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Staying up again..


seems to be my habit to work on my coursework during the last minute. banar pulang inda bagus cemani ani. been trying to get rid of it,really.. am and still trying. I wanted to start earlir this afternoon, tapi since alum ada 'feel' kan membuat keraja atu so.. tangguh lagi.. haiya. hahaha. but luckily this time is inda berapa banyak kan di buat, so dapat di manage jua lah..


im gonna do em' after this..

yeah.. thats what i am going to do...

i think..



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CAMBRIDGE – A huge discovery made by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, under the Cancer Genome Project. It disputed the textbook definition of cancer; a multi-stage cell development process, through a progression from a pre-cancerous lesion to malignant tumors.

Stephens and co-workers proved that cancer is the result of a single event called Chromothripsis, or “chromosome explosion”. Following this process, hundreds of genomic rearrangement occurs involving one or more chromosomes.

Chromosomes are shattered apart as it “explodes” into fragments of gene. Some are joined together by the DNA repair mechanism at random. This genetic “mix up” may lead to mutations in which, some, can trigger the development of cancer. In some cases, one or more cancer-causing lesions may appear.

Researchers also found that this catastrophe is present in 2-3% of cancer of many subtypes. It is more common to occur in bone cancers, in roughly, 25% of the cases.

Studies were made on the ‘stamp’ of Chromothripsis seen in cell samples which were collected from a 62-year-old patient with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia. It was taken when the she was first diagnosed. Another sample was taken 31 months later, following her subsequent clinical course which showed rapid deterioration.

Analysis showed that all rearrangements present in the pre-treatment sample were also present in the later sample. There were no new genomic rearrangements, suggesting that the process causing these complex rearrangements had resolved before the patient was first diagnosed.

Hence, this supported Stephens and his colleagues’ finding that the process occurs in a one-off cellular crisis. It has important implications in understanding genomic reorganization and temporary emergence of cancer.

When asked whether this breakthrough may lead to a cure for cancer, Dr Neil Graham, a lecturer at The University of Nottingham, agreed that we may now be one step closer to find that cure!

Source: Cell 144, 27-40, January 7, 2011

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CAMBRIDGE – A huge discovery made by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, under the Cancer Genome Project. It disputed the textbook definition of cancer; a multi-stage cell development process, through a progression from a pre-cancerous lesion to malignant tumors.

Stephens and co-workers proved that cancer is the result of a single event called Chromothripsis, or “chromosome explosion”. Following this process, hundreds of genomic rearrangement occurs involving one or more chromosomes.

Chromosomes are shattered apart as it “explodes” into fragments of gene. Some are joined together by the DNA repair mechanism at random. This genetic “mix up” may lead to mutations in which, some, can trigger the development of cancer. In some cases, one or more cancer-causing lesions may appear.

Researchers also found that this catastrophe is present in 2-3% of cancer of many subtypes. It is more common to occur in bone cancers, in roughly, 25% of the cases.

Studies were made on the ‘stamp’ of Chromothripsis seen in cell samples which were collected from a 62-year-old patient with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia. It was taken when the she was first diagnosed. Another sample was taken 31 months later, following her subsequent clinical course which showed rapid deterioration.

Analysis showed that all rearrangements present in the pre-treatment sample were also present in the later sample. There were no new genomic rearrangements, suggesting that the process causing these complex rearrangements had resolved before the patient was first diagnosed.

Hence, this supported Stephens and his colleagues’ finding that the process occurs in a one-off cellular crisis. It has important implications in understanding genomic reorganization and temporary emergence of cancer.

When asked whether this breakthrough may lead to a cure for cancer, Dr Neil Graham, a lecturer at The University of Nottingham, agreed that we may now be one step closer to find that cure!

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Far East Movement *salutes



Fly like a G6~

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Thesaurus