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Better keep it under wraps.  The plants' rights activists will be hitting
the streets.

-----Original Message-----
From: Parkinson's Information Exchange Network
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of mschild
Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2009 1:32 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Plants now suffering on behalf of Parkinson's disease research

Healthcare News
29/04/2009
The quest for improving the quality of life for Parkinson's disease
sufferers 
is taking a new approach, with a Nordic project using plants to study how 
proteins are affected by the condition. 
The quest for improving the quality of life for Parkinson's disease
sufferers 
is taking a new approach, with a Nordic project using plants to study how 
proteins are affected by the condition.

Researchers at the University of Stavanger and Stavanger University Hospital

in Norway have been looking into the notable relationship between the
disease 
and the gradual loss of nerve cells.

Professor Simon G Moller, the head of the Centre for Organelle Research at
the 
university, stated that the study represents a unique and important way of 
analysing and understanding the mechanisms which lie behind
neurodegenerative 
diseases akin to Parkinson's disease.

He explained: "We can transfer these findings from plants to humans, because

plants have many of the proteins that humans have."

Last week, it was revealed by UCLA scientists that prolonged use of
pesticides 
in certain areas is raising the risk of Parkinson's disease in citizens
living 
close to them.

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