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Orgenesis inks co-development agreement with Accellix to improve quality control in its cellular therapy system – Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 4:50 pm

The agreement allows the company to integrate Accellixs proprietary sampling and analysis technology into its Point-of-Care platform

Inc (), a cell and gene therapy company, has signed a co-development agreement with cell analytics company Accellix Inc.

The agreement allows Orgenesis to integrate Accellixs proprietary sampling and analysis technology its optic system, cartridges, reagents and software into the companys Point-of-Care (POCare) cellular therapy platform.

POCare works by collecting, processing and supplying cells for various therapeutic treatments. The idea is to shrink the cost of cell and gene therapy through automation. By integrating Accellixs technology, Orgenesis can greatly improve its quality control.

By partnering with Accellix and integrating its advanced optic technologies, cartridges and software, we believe that this will advance Orgenesis processing capabilities for different types of cells for our POCare services and platform, Orgenesis CEO Vered Caplan said.

We believe the Orgenesis POCare platform can deliver a transformative option to the cell and gene therapy market that will lower costs in order to potentially bring our autologous therapies to patients in a cost effective, high quality and scalable manner.

Orgenesis is a biotechnology company based in Germantown, Maryland. In addition to POCare, it also owns a subsidiary, Masthercell Global, which operates a Contract Development and Manufacturing Organization platform, which provides manufacturing and development services for biopharmaceutical companies.

Contact Andrew Kessel at [emailprotected]

Follow him on Twitter @andrew_kessel

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Orgenesis inks co-development agreement with Accellix to improve quality control in its cellular therapy system - Proactive Investors USA & Canada

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Cell Therapy Market Size Overview by Rising Demands, Trends and Huge Bussiness Opportunities 2019 to 2026 – Herald Correspondent

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 4:50 pm

Cell Therapy Market report provides the market potential for each geographical region based on the growth rate, macroeconomic parameters, consumer buying patterns, and market demand and supply scenarios. This analysis gives an examination of various segments that are relied upon to witness the quickest development amid the estimate forecast frame. This report categorizes the market based on manufacturers, regions, type and application. This study also analyzes the market status, market share, growth rate, future trends, market drivers, opportunities and challenges, risks and entry barriers, sales channels, distributors and Porters Five Forces Analysis.

Cell Therapy Market Figures is now released by Data Bridge Market Research. Cell Therapy Market report presents a complete assessment of covering future trend, Latest Trend, current growth factors, facts, and industry validated market data forecast till 2026. The report provides an in-depth analysis of the latest trends, business scenario, size and share of Major Competitors such as CELGENE CORPORATION, Bone Therapeutics, Cell Therapies, Celyad, Regen BioPharma, Cellular Therapeutics Ltd, TxCell, and others

Global cell therapy market is expected to rise from its initial estimated value of USD 5.52 billion in 2018 to an estimated value of USD 8.70 billion by 2026, registering a CAGR of 5.85% in the forecast period of 2019-2026. This rise in market value can be attributed to the increasing investments and funding from government and private institutions.

Competitive Landscape:

Global cell therapy market is highly fragmented and the major players have used various strategies such as new product launches, expansions, agreements, joint ventures, partnerships, acquisitions, and others to increase their footprints in this market. The report includes market shares of cell therapy market for global, Europe, North America, Asia Pacific, South America and Middle East & Africa.

Market Drivers and Restraints:

Few of the major competitors currently working in the cell therapy market are Vericel, Kolon TissueGene Inc., JCR Pharmaceuticals Co. Ltd., MEDIPOST, Osiris, Stemedica Cell Technologies Inc., NuVasive Inc., Fibrocell Science Inc., Cellectis, BioNTech IMFS, pluristem, Grupo Praxis, Genzyme Corporation, Advanced Tissue, Cells for Cells, PHARMICELL Co. Ltd, ANTEROGEN.CO.LTD., Novartis AG, GlaxoSmithKline plc,and others

Segmentation:

Get Detailed TOC with Tables and Figures at https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/toc/?dbmr=global-cell-therapy-market

Data collection and base year analysis is done using data collection modules with large sample sizes. The market data is analysed and forecasted using market statistical and coherent models. Also market share analysis and key trend analysis are the major success factors in the market report.

Potential Held by the Report:

About Data Bridge Market Research

An absolute way to forecast what future holds is to comprehend the trend today!

Data Bridge set forth itself as an unconventional and neoteric Market research and consulting firm with unparalleled level of resilience and integrated approaches. We are determined to unearth the best market opportunities and foster efficient information for your business to thrive in the market. Data Bridge endeavors to provide appropriate solutions to the complex business challenges and initiates an effortless decision-making process.

Data Bridge is an aftermath of sheer wisdom and experience which was formulated and framed in the year 2015 in Pune. We ponder into the heterogeneous markets in accord with our clients needs and scoop out the best possible solutions and detailed information about the market trends. Data Bridge delve into the markets across Asia, North America, South America, Africa to name few.

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Cell Therapy Market Size Overview by Rising Demands, Trends and Huge Bussiness Opportunities 2019 to 2026 - Herald Correspondent

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New universe of miniproteins is upending cell biology and genetics – Science Magazine

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 4:49 pm

By Mitch LeslieOct. 17, 2019 , 2:00 PM

Mice put human runners to shame. Despite taking puny strides, the rodents can log 10 kilometers or more per night on an exercise wheel. But the mice that muscle biologist Eric Olson of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas and colleagues unveiled in 2015 stood out. On a treadmill, the mice could scurry up a steep 10% grade for about 90 minutes before faltering, 31% longer than other rodents. Those iron mice differed from counterparts in just one small waythe researchers had genetically altered the animals to lack one muscle protein. That was enough to unleash superior muscle performance. "It's like you've taken the brakes off," Olson says.

Just as startling was the nature of the crucial protein. Muscles house some gargantuan proteins. Dystrophin, a structural protein whose gene can carry mutations that cause muscular dystrophy, has more than 3600 amino acids. Titin, which acts like a spring to give muscles elasticity, is the biggest known protein, with more than 34,000 amino acids. The protein disabled in the mice has a paltry 46. Although researchers have probed how muscles work for more than 150 years, they had completely missed the huge impact this tiny protein, called myoregulin, has on muscle function.

Olson and his colleagues weren't the only ones to be blindsided by Lilliputian proteins. As scientists now realize, their initial rules for analyzing genomes discriminated against identifying those pint-size molecules. Now, broader criteria and better detection methods are uncovering minuscule proteins by the thousands, not just in mice, but in many other species, including humans. "For the first time, we are about to explore this universe of new proteins," says biochemist Jonathan Weissman of the University of California, San Francisco.

Biologists are just beginning to delve into the functions of those molecules, called microproteins, micropeptides, or miniproteins. But their small size seems to allow them to jam the intricate workings of larger proteins, inhibiting some cellular processes while unleashing others. Early findings suggest microproteins bolster the immune system, control destruction of faulty RNA molecules, protect bacteria from heat and cold, dictate when plants flower, and provide the toxic punch for many types of venom. "There's probably going to be small [proteins] involved in all biological processes. We just haven't looked for them before," says biochemist Alan Saghatelian of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego, California.

The venom of this predatory water bug has more than a dozen small proteins.

Small proteins also promise to revise the current understanding of the genome. Many appear to be encoded in stretches of DNAand RNAthat were not thought to help build proteins of any sort. Some researchers speculate that the short stretches of DNA could be newborn genes, on their way to evolving into larger genes that make full-size proteins. Thanks in part to small proteins, "We need to rethink what genes are," says microbiologist and molecular biologist Gisela Storz of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Maryland.

Despite the remaining mysteries, scientists are already testing potential uses for the molecules. One company sells insecticides derived from small proteins in the poison of an Australian funnel-web spider. And a clinical trial is evaluating an imaging agent based on another minute protein in scorpion venom, designed to highlight the borders of tumors so that surgeons can remove them more precisely. Many drug companies are now searching for small proteins with medical potential, says biochemist Glenn King of the University of Queensland in St. Lucia, Australia. "It's one of the most rapidly growing areas."

Other short amino acidchains, often called peptides or polypeptides, abound in cells, but they are pared-down remnants of bigger predecessors. Myoregulin and its diminutive brethren, in contrast, are born small. How tiny they can be remains unclear. Fruit flies rely on a microprotein with 11 amino acids to grow normal legs, and some microbes may crank out proteins less than 10 amino acids long, notes microbial genomicist Ami Bhatt of Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. But even the largest small proteins don't measure up to average-size proteins such as alpha amylase, a 496amino-acid enzyme in our saliva that breaks down starch.

Few small proteins came to light until recently because of a criterion for identifying genes set about 20 years ago. When scientists analyze an organism's genome, they often scan for open reading frames (ORFs), which are DNA sequences demarcated by signals that tell the cell's ribosomes, its proteinmaking assembly lines, where to start and stop. In part to avoid a data deluge, past researchers typically excluded any ORF that would yield a protein smaller than 100 amino acids in eukaryotes or 50 amino acids in bacteria. In yeast, for example, that cutoff limited the list of ORFs to about 6000.

Relaxing that criterion reveals that cells carry vastly more ORFs. Earlier this year, Stanford postdoc Hila Sberro Livnat, Bhatt, and colleagues trawled genome fragments from the microbes that inhabit four parts of the human body, including the gut and skin. By searching for small ORFs that could encode proteins between five and 50 amino acids long, the researchers identified about 4000 families of potential microproteins. Almost half resemble no known proteins, but the sequence for one small ORF suggested that a corresponding protein resides in ribosomesa hint that it could play some fundamental role. "It's not just genes with esoteric functions that have been missed" when scientists overlooked small ORFs, Bhatt says. "It's genes with core functions."

For the first time, we are about to explore this universe of new proteins.

Other cells also house huge numbers of short ORFsyeast could make more than 260,000 molecules with between two and 99 amino acids, for example. But cells almost certainly don't use all those ORFs, and some of the amino acid strings they produce may not be functional. In 2011, after finding more than 600,000 short ORFs in the fruit fly genome, developmental geneticist Juan Pablo Couso of the University of Sussex in Brighton, U.K., and colleagues tried to whittle down the number. They reasoned that if a particular ORF had an identical or near-identical copy in a related species, it was less likely to be genomic trash. After searching another fruit fly's genome and analyzing other evidence that the sequences were being translated, the group ended up with a more manageable figure of 401 short ORFs likely to yield microproteins. That would still represent a significant fraction of the insects' protein repertoirethey harbor about 22,000 full-size proteins.

Weissman and colleagues found microproteins a second way, through a method they invented to broadly determine which proteins cells are making. To fashion any protein, a cell first copies a gene into messenger RNA. Then ribosomes read the mRNA and string together amino acids in the order it specifies. By sequencing mRNAs attached to ribosomes, Weissman and his team pinpoint which ones cells are actually turning into proteins and where on the RNAs a ribosome starts to read. In a 2011Cellstudy, he and his team applied that ribosome profiling method, also called Ribo-seq, to mouse embryonic stem cells and discovered the cells were making thousands of unexpected proteins, including many that would fall below the 100amino-acid cutoff. "It was quite clear that the standard understanding had ignored a large universe of proteins, many of which were short," Weissman says.

Saghatelian and his colleagues adopted a third approach to discover a trove of microproteins in our own cells. The researchers used mass spectrometry, which involves breaking up proteins into pieces that are sorted by mass to produce a distinctive spectrum for each protein. Saghatelian, his then-postdoc Sarah Slavoff, and colleagues applied the method to protein mixtures from human cells and then subtracted the signatures of known proteins. That approach revealed spectra for 86 previously undiscovered tiny proteins, the smallest just 18 amino acids long, the researchers reported in 2013 inNature Chemical Biology.

Being small limitsa protein's capabilities. Larger proteins fold into complex shapes suited for a particular function, such as catalyzing chemical reactions. Proteins smaller than about 50 to 60 amino acids probably don't fold, says chemist Julio Camarero of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. So they probably aren't suited to be enzymes or structural proteins.

However, their diminutive size also opens up opportunities. "They are tiny enough to fit into nooks and crannies of larger proteins that function as channels and receptors," Olson says. Small proteins often share short stretches of amino acids with their larger partners and can therefore bind to and alter the activity of those proteins. Bound microproteins can also shepherd bigger molecules to new locationshelping them slip into cell membranes, for instance.

A microprotein in the poison of the deathstalker scorpion has been fused to a fluorescent dye to make tumors emit near-infrared light. (1) A tumor seen in visible light (2)Same tumor in visible and near-infrared light

Because of their attraction to larger proteins, small proteins may give cells a reversible way to switch larger proteins on or off. In a 2016 study inPLOS Genetics, plant developmental biologist Stephan Wenkel of the University of Copenhagen and colleagues genetically alteredArabidopsisplants to produce extra amounts of two small proteins. The plants normally burst into flower when the days are long enough, but when they overproduced the two microproteins, their flowering was postponed. The small proteins caused that delay by blocking a hefty protein called CONSTANS that triggers flowering. They tether CONSTANS to other inhibitory proteins that shut it down. "A cell uses things that help it survive. If a short protein does the job, that's fine," Saghatelian says.

Those jobs include other key tasks. In 2016, Slavoff, Saghatelian, and colleagues revealed that human cells manufacture a 68amino-acid protein they named NoBody that may help manage destruction of faulty or unneeded mRNA molecules. NoBody's name reflects its role in preventing formation of processing bodies (P-bodies), mysterious clusters in the cytoplasm where RNA breakdown may occur. When the protein is missing, more P-bodies form, thus boosting RNA destruction and altering the cell's internal structure. "It shows that small proteins can have massive effects in the cell," Slavoff says.

Muscles appear to depend on a variety of microproteins. During embryonic development, individual muscle cells merge into fibers that power contraction. The 84amino-acid protein myomixer teams up with a larger protein to bring the cells together, Olson's team reported in 2017 inScience. Without it, embryonic mice can't form muscles and are almost transparent.

Later in life, myoregulin steps in to help regulate muscle activity. When a muscle receives a stimulus, cellular storage depots spill calcium, triggering the fibers to contract and generate force. An ion pump called SERCA then starts to return the calcium to storage, allowing the muscle fibers to relax. Myoregulin binds to and inhibits SERCA, Olson's team found. The effect limits how often a mouse's muscles can contractperhaps ensuring that the animal has muscle power in reserve for an emergency, such as escaping a predator. Another small protein, DWORF, has the opposite effect, unleashing SERCA and enabling the muscle to contract repeatedly.

Even extensively studied organisms such as the intestinal bacteriumEscherichia coliharbor unexpected small proteins that have important functions. Storz and her team reported in 2012 that a previously undiscovered 49amino-acid protein called AcrZ helps the microbe survive some antibiotics by stimulating a pump that expels the drugs.

And the venom produced by a variety of organismsincluding spiders, centipedes, scorpions, and poisonous mollusksteems with tiny proteins. Many venom components disable or kill by blocking the channels for sodium or other ions that are necessary for transmission of nerve impulses. Small proteins "hit these ion channels with amazing specificity and potency," King says. "They are the major components of venoms and are responsible for most of the pharmacological and biological effects."

Australia's giant fish-killing water bug, for instance, doesn't just rely on sharp claws and lancelike mouthparts to subdue prey. It injects its victims with a brew of more than 130 proteins, 15 of which have fewer than 100 amino acids, King and colleagues reported last year.

Unlike hulking proteinssuch as antibodies, microproteins delivered by pill or injection may be able to slip into cells and alter their functions. Captopril, the first of a class of drugs for high blood pressure known as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors was developed from a small protein in the venom of a Brazilian pit viper. But the drug, which the Food and Drug Administration approved for sale in the United States in 1981, was discovered by chance, before scientists recognized small proteins as a distinct group. So far, only a few microproteins have reached the market or clinical trials.

Cancer researchers are trying to capitalize on a microprotein in the poison of the deathstalker scorpion (Leiurus quinquestriatus) of Africa and the Middle East. The molecule has a mysterious attraction to tumors. By fusing it to a fluorescent dye, scientists hope to illuminate the borders of brain tumors so that surgeons can safely cut out the cancerous tissue. "It lights up the tumor. You can see the margins and if there are any metastases," King says. A clinical trial is now evaluating whether the dual molecule can help surgeons remove brain tumors in children.

How important small proteins will be for medicine is still unknown, but they have already upended several biological assumptions. Geneticist Norbert Hbner of the Max Delbrck Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin and colleagues found dozens of new microproteins in human heart cells. The group traced them to an unexpected source: short sequences within long noncoding RNAs, a variety that was thought not to produce proteins. After identifying 169 long noncoding RNAs that were probably being read by ribosomes, Hbner and his team used a type of mass spectrometry to confirm that more than half of them yielded microproteins in heart cells, a result reported earlier this year inCell.

Bacteria such as Escherichia coli also churn out many microproteins, although their functions remain unclear in many cases.

The DNA sequences for other tiny proteins also occur in unconventional locations. For example, some lie near the ORFs for bigger proteins. Researchers previously thought those sequences helped manage the production of the larger proteins, but rarely gave rise to proteins themselves. Some coding sequences for recently discovered microproteins are even nested within sequences that encode other, longer proteins.

Those genomic surprises could illuminate how new genes arise, says evolutionary systems biologist Anne-Ruxandra Carvunis of the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. Researchers had thought most new genes emerge when existing genes duplicate or fuse, or when species swap DNA. But to Carvunis, microproteins suggest protogenes can form when mutations create new start and stop signals in a noncoding portion of the genome. If the resulting ORF produces a beneficial protein, the novel sequences would remain in the genome and undergo natural selection, eventually evolving into larger genes that code for more complex proteins.

In a 2012 study, Carvunis, who was then a postdoc in the lab of Marc Vidal at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, and colleagues found that yeast translate more than 1000 short ORFs into proteins, implying that these sequences are protogenes. In a new study, Carvunis and her team tested whether young ORFs can be advantageous for cells. They genetically altered yeast to boost output of 285 recently evolved ORFs, most of which code for molecules that are smaller than the standard protein cutoff or just over it. For almost 10% of the proteins, increasing their levels enhanced cell growth in at least one environment. The results, posted on the preprint server bioRxiv, suggest these sequences could be on their way to becoming full-fledged genes, Carvunis says.

Slavoff still recalls being astonished when, during her interview for a postdoc position with Saghatelian, he asked whether she would be willing to go hunting for small proteins. "I had never thought that there could be this whole size of proteins that was dark to us until then."

But the bet paid offshe now runs her own lab that is searching for microproteins. Recently, she unleashed some of her postdocs and graduate students on one of the most studied organisms, the K12 strain ofE. coli.The team soon uncovered five new microproteins. "We are probably only scratching the surface," she says.

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Research presented by Invitae at the American Society of Human Genetics Meeting Pushes Science and Practice of Genetics Forward – PRNewswire

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 4:49 pm

HOUSTON, Oct. 17, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Researchers fromInvitae Corporation (NYSE: NVTA), a leading medical genetics company, are presenting data showing the increasing utility of genetic information at the American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) annual meeting this week, ranging from comprehensive screening for cancer patients, to appropriate clinical follow up for women using non-invasive prenatal screening, to the limitations of direct to consumer genetic screening health reports.

The company's research includes three platform presentations and multiple poster sessions, many performed in collaboration with leading academic researchers. Among the data presented is a study evaluating the utility of combined germline testing and tumor profiling (somatic testing) in cancer patients. Germline and somatic testing are increasingly used in precision treatment of people with cancer, although frequently are ordered separately in clinical practice. Data presented at the meeting shows a substantial number of patients with medically significant variants in hereditary cancer syndrome genes in their tumor profile carry the same variant in their germline, thereby establishing a previously unknown risk of hereditary cancer and suggesting the value of combined or concurrent testing to inform precision medicine approaches.

"The research we are presenting at this year's ASHG meeting provides meaningful insight into both the science and practice of genetics, helping identify how we as clinicians can better use deep genetic insights to help a wide array of patients, whether they are cancer patients, women having a child or healthy adults seeking to better understand their risk of disease," said Robert Nussbaum, M.D., chief medical officer of Invitae. "We are proud and grateful to be able to join our colleagues from across genetic medicine in meaningful conversations that push genetic medicine forward."

Following are research from the company and collaborators to be presented at the meeting:

Wednesday, October 16:

Poster presentation #819W | 2:00 3:00 pm Germline testing in colorectal cancer: Increased yield and precision therapy implications of comprehensive multigene panels. Presented by Shan Yang, PhD. Invitae.

Poster presentation #2427W | 2:00 3:00 pm Harmonizing tumor sequencing with germline genetic testing: identification of at-risk individuals for hereditary cancer disorders. Presented by Daniel Pineda-Alvarez, MD, FACMG, Invitae.

Poster presentation #606W | 3:00 4:00 pm A comprehensive evaluation of the importance of prenatal diagnostic testing in the era of increased utilization of non-invasive prenatal screening. Presented by Jenna Guiltinan, MS, LCGC, Invitae.

Thursday, October 17:

Platform presentation #235 | 5:00 pm, Room 370A, Level 3 Limitations of direct-to-consumer genetic screening for hereditary breast, ovarian and colorectal cancer risk. Presented by: Edward Esplin, MD, PhD, FACMG, FACP, Invitae.

Poster presentation #763T | 2:00 3:00 pm In-depth dissection of APC pathogenic variants: Spectrum of more than 400 pathogenic variants, challenges of variant interpretation, and new observations in a large clinical laboratory testing cohort. Presented by: Hio Chung Kang, PhD, Invitae.

Poster presentation #1399T | 2:00 3:00 pm Prediction of lethality and severity of osteogenesis imperfecta variants in the triple-helix regions of COL1A1 and COL1A2. Presented by: Vikas Pejaver, PhD, University of Washington.

Friday, October 18:

Platform presentation #264 | 9:00 am, Room 361D, Level 3 Million Veteran Program Return Of Actionable Results - Familial Hypercholesterolemia (MVP-ROAR-FH) Study: Considerations for variant return to mega-biobank participants. Presented by Jason Vassy, MD, MPH, VA, Boston Healthcare System.

Platform presentation #265 | 9:15 am, Room 361D, Level 3 Comprehensive secondary findings analysis of parental samples submitted for exome evaluation yields a high positive rate. Presented by Eden Haverfield, DPhil, FACMG, Invitae.

Poster presentation #698F | 2:00 3:00 pm Reporting of variants in genes with limited, disputed, or no evidence for a Mendelian condition among GenomeConnect participants. Presented by: Juliann Savatt, MS, LGC, Geisinger.

About InvitaeInvitae Corporation(NYSE: NVTA)is a leading medical genetics company, whose mission is to bring comprehensive genetic information into mainstream medicine to improve healthcare for billions of people. Invitae's goal is to aggregate the world's genetic tests into a single service with higher quality, faster turnaround time, and lower prices. For more information, visit the company's website atinvitae.com.

Safe Harbor StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements relating to the increasing utility of genetic information; the utility of combined germline and somatic testing; and the benefits of the company's research. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially, and reported results should not be considered as an indication of future performance. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to: the applicability of clinical results to actual outcomes; the company's history of losses; the company's ability to compete; the company's failure to manage growth effectively; the company's need to scale its infrastructure in advance of demand for its tests and to increase demand for its tests; the company's ability to use rapidly changing genetic data to interpret test results accurately and consistently; security breaches, loss of data and other disruptions; laws and regulations applicable to the company's business; and the other risks set forth in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the risks set forth in the company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2019. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date hereof, and Invitae Corporation disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

Contact:Laura D'Angelopr@invitae.com(628) 213-3283

SOURCE Invitae Corporation

http://invitae.com

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Research presented by Invitae at the American Society of Human Genetics Meeting Pushes Science and Practice of Genetics Forward - PRNewswire

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Alphabet-backed Verily partners with Color to bring genetic insights to its research – Business Insider Nordic

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 4:49 pm

Verily Life Sciences, Alphabet's health research arm and sister company to Google Health, announced it'spartnering with genetics and health technology firm Color to supply participants of Verily's Project Baseline research platform with genetic information. Business Insider Intelligence

Project Baseline began in 2017 with goals of making clinical research more accessible to participants and arriving at a quantifiable "baseline" for good health. The research project has since launched several clinical research projects in partnership with some of the largest names in healthcare, including: Pfizer, Mayo Clinic, Novartis, the American Heart Association, and Stanford Medicine.

The partnership could enable Verily to incorporate data on genetic risk factors into its various clinical studies, leading to a more in-depth and holistic understanding of health.It's unclear exactly how information gleaned from Color's genetic tests will be leveraged in Project Baseline studies, but it's possible that future research initiatives may choose to examine how genetic risk factors affect health outcomes alongside patients' behavior and medical history.

And allowing Project Baseline members access to genetic testing and personalized health advice may improve participant engagement with the particular research program they're involved in and with the Project Baseline platform overall, which is critical given that86%of clinical trials fail to hit their participation goals.

We caught up with Color CEO Othman Laraki to discuss how a Verily-Color tie up furthers Color's goals for a genetic future of healthcare below are some key takeaways from our conversation:

We think Color will benefit from the exposure that comes when partnering with a Google-affiliated business, and more users should facilitate stronger population health insights.In the last two months, Color has scored massive partnerships with NIH and its All of Us program and now Verily: two major names in healthcare. And each new project raises not just Color's profile, but that of the genetic testing field as a whole, according to Laraki.

Laraki pointed out that the idea of every home having a personal computer was once considered crazy and that one day it may be the case that genetic data is as commonplace in healthcare as computers are in the home. But this might only be possible if far-reaching research programs like All of Us and Project Baseline can successfully attract participants and deliver actionable results.

Color has become a standout player in genetic testing by focusing on large-scale population health projects which I (Zach) think is a smart business model in the face of apotential slowdownin the direct-to-consumer genetic testing market."In some ways, using a doctor's time to measure your height and have them listen to your heartbeat is almost more expensive now than getting a complete genomic profile," says Laraki.

And the fact that genetic testing is becoming cheaper for consumers could be part of why we're seeing so much interest from providers and research firms in population-level genetic health research: MIT Technology Review now estimates that over100 millionpeople globally will have taken an at-home genetic test by 2021, up from the 26 million consumers at the beginning of 2019, for example.

With industry leaders like Illumina expressing concerns around a potential slowdown for the direct-to-consumer genetic testing market, a model that's given rise to 23andMe and Ancestry the two biggest names in genetic testing today I think that Color's model will conversely gain traction as providers are increasingly becominginterestedin moving beyond individual patient results and searching for the root cause of conditions affecting their communities.

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Alphabet-backed Verily partners with Color to bring genetic insights to its research - Business Insider Nordic

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StemSpine to Launch in the United States Following Successful Treatments Overseas with 12+ Months Data Showing Safety and Efficacy – PRNewswire

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 4:47 pm

PHOENIX, Oct. 17, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Creative Medical Technology Holdings, Inc. (OTC: CELZ), a leading commercial stage biotechnology company focused on Urology, Neurology and Orthopedics using stem cell treatments, today announced the successful clinical commercialization of StemSpine.

StemSpine, a patented procedure for the treatment of chronic lower back pain (CLBP) utilizing a patient's own stem cells, has successfully been implemented with the treatment of the first patients with over 12+ months of data showing safety and efficacy. The company plans to submit the results for publication in a peer reviewed journal imminently.

The company will begin commercializing StemSpine in the US with the launch of a new website and physician recruitment in the weeks ahead. "As we've previously announced it was our goal to commercialize StemSpine in 2019, so we're pleased with the progress of this technology and the value it brings to our company as domestic commercialization begins," said Timothy Warbington, President and CEO of Creative Medical Technology Holdings, Inc.

"StemSpine will surely be welcomed by the over 50 million Americans suffering from CLBP in the United States as a drug free alternative. Currently, there are minimal treatment options for patients that suffer from this debilitating pain, with roughly 50% of patients progressing to opioids and surgery,1" said Thomas Ichim PhD, Chief Scientific Officer of Creative Medical Technology Holdings, Inc. and patent inventor.

About Chronic Lower Back Pain:

Chronic lower back pain represents a leading cause of disability worldwide and is the most common non-cancer reason for opioid prescription in the U.S. It affects up to 30% of U.S. adults and is estimated to cost the U.S. healthcare system over $100 billion each year.

Forward-Looking Statements

OTC Markets has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. This news release may contain forward-looking statements including but not limited to comments regarding the timing and content of upcoming clinical trials and laboratory results, marketing efforts, funding, etc. Forward-looking statements address future events and conditions and, therefore, involve inherent risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those currently anticipated in such statements. See the periodic and other reports filed by Creative Medical Technology Holdings, Inc. with the Securities and Exchange Commission and available on the Commission's website at http://www.sec.gov.

1 https://healthcare.utah.edu/publicaffairs/news/2019/10/heal-initiative.php

SOURCE Creative Medical Technology Holdings, Inc.

https://creativemedicaltechnology.com/

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StemSpine to Launch in the United States Following Successful Treatments Overseas with 12+ Months Data Showing Safety and Efficacy - PRNewswire

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Selma Blair on undergoing ‘aggressive’ chemotherapy to treat MS: I was ‘out of options’ – USA TODAY

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 4:47 pm

Selma Blair shares details on new treatment for MS.(Photo: Craig Barritt, Getty Images for TIME 100 Health)

Selma Blairis giving fans a health update, revealing she's undergoing a risky new treatment to help with her multiple sclerosis.

The 47-year-old actress told reporters during a panel at the Time100 Health Summit that she's undergoing "aggressive" chemotherapy and stem cell transplant to help alleviate some of the pain and ailments from her diagnosis.

Blair revealed her MS diagnosis a year ago and said the treatments up until now haven't been working.

"The disease modifiers did not work for me at the time, and I was really declining more rapidly than I found acceptable," the "Cruel Intentions" star said during a panel discussion at the summit.

When the opportunity to try stem cell transplants and chemotherapy came up, Blair said she was hesitant because she didn't want to ruin what was left of her body.

"Why would I put this horrible drug, chemotherapy, in me? I dont have cancer," she said. "But I was kind of out of options and I was looking."

More: Selma Blair growing 'seemingly sicker' from multiple sclerosis, dreams of horseback riding

When she tried a small dose of chemotherapy and felt some relief, it encouraged her to go through with the treatment.

"I was warned," said Blair, who is also a mother to 8-year-old son, Arthur Saint Bleick. You kind of make your plans for death. I told my son I was doing this and he said he wanted me cremated.I had more chemo than they usually do for cancer patients, because they almost kill you. And its the stem cell that allows you to live with that amount of chemo. The chemo is the MS cure, if it does in fact happen.

The actress hasn't been shy about sharing parts of her journey in battling MS and even sharing bold photos sporting her shaved head.

"My hair is still not growing in I never minded hair loss or any of those things that would be ego-involved,"Blairsaid. "My dream was just to lie next to my son at night andbe there as long as he needs me and hopefully do something for people. I've heard so much from people with chronic diseases or MS, and they're scared and they don't know when it's going to get worse."

Selma Blairrocks no hair, no pants photo. With her usual sass, actress defends the pic

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Selma Blair on undergoing 'aggressive' chemotherapy to treat MS: I was 'out of options' - USA TODAY

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Infanticide: Live Organ Harvesting Commonplace in US Abortion Mills – Church Militant

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 12:49 am

SAN FRANCISCO (ChurchMilitant.com) - Bombshell testimony from the trial of Center for Medical Progress undercover journalists David Daleiden and Sandra Merritt has revealed that infanticide is commonplace insideU.S. abortion mills.

Earlier this month, attorneys for Daleiden submitted a closing argument brief detailing that live births are occurring inside the facilitiesand that these newborns are routinely killed their organs harvested while still alive.

Describing Daleiden's research into the practice, the brief recounts that hediscovered "a mainstream media expos produced and aired in 2000 by Chris Wallace for the program '20/20.'"

From Wallace's report, Daleiden learned of Dean Alberty, who worked as a fetal tissue procurement technician inside a Planned Parenthood facilityin suburban Kansas City.

According to the brief:

From the "20/20" video he learned that Alberty had been handed whole fetuses from Planned Parenthood doctors and had harvested beating hearts. Alberty had also testified before Congress and described a live birth of twins who were actually cuddling each other. He would not harvest from them and the abortion doctor drowned them in a pan of water.

The practice was not isolated to Kansas City, Daleiden discovered.

In the course of his research, he came across the bookBeyond Abortion: A Chronicle of Fetal Experimentation, which documents experiments performed on unborn babies, as well as the removal of organs from infant abortion survivors.

In Beyond Abortion, Daleiden found an article titled "Artificial Placenta," which described "obtaining live fetuses as old as 24 weeks from unnamed abortionists and keeping them alive in a machine for study but letting them drown in the machine after obtaining data."

In the summer of 2011, he learned of a company named StemExpress, which specializes in providing "biospecimens" to researchers across the country; adeeper look at the firm revealed the scaleof tissue harvestingoccurring inside American abortion mills.

Daleiden discovered that StemExpress required "tissue procurers to service 48 universities and 8 private entities with fetal organs and tissues."

He later uncovered"a StemExpress order form with a list of organs and tissues for sale, including whole hearts, hearts with veins and arteries attached, as well as brains, livers and other organs."

He then found"aStanford study using whole human fetal hearts obtained from StemExpress which they put on a Langendorff perfusion machine."

According to the brief:

Mr. Daleiden learned through his own research and by consulting experts, including Dr. Theresa Deisher, that in order to use the Langendorff machine the heart had to either still be beating when it was placed on the machine or a beating heart had to be arrested in a relaxed state in a potassium solution and then quickly transported to the machine. ... Dr. Deisher testified that she told Mr. Daleiden that the "most horrifying aspect of the use of the remains of aborted fetuses was that some of the babies had to be alive, have beating hearts when they were harvested."

Deisher, a stem cell research scientist,testified that based on her experience with stem cell research on hearts, this was a frequent occurrence. Thebabies' hearts haveto be harvested while still beating, she explained, as otherwise the organ would have no research value because once in "contracture," the heart's cells would no longer be capable of regenerative growth.

The brief detailedadditional evidence of infanticide including testimony by a former StemExpress employee:

Mr. Daleiden continued to gather evidence for his investigation. He met Holly O'Donnell who had worked for StemExpress and told him she left after seeing a late gestated fetus. She was directed to dissect its brain. She did so. She also told him that her superior Jessica tapped the fetuses'heart and it started beating. She also told him of seeing a message stating that an intact fetus was being sent to the StemExpress facility.

Daleiden later learned that "StemExpresstechnicians had to work very closely with the abortion doctors at [Planned Parenthood] MarMonte who increased dilation on thepatients in order to obtain intact fetuses with beating hearts."

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra a self-identified Catholic is prosecuting Daleiden and Merritt for their undercover work. In his preliminary hearing closing argument, he made no effort to rebut testimony about the harvesting of infant abortion survivors' organs.

Instead, Becerra suggested that harvesting organs from newly born infants is protected by the state's abortion statutes.

The "defendants willfully misrepresent the law on homicide in California," he argued. "California law is clear that therapeutic abortion is not homicide."

Pro-life advocates counter that there is nothing "therapeutic" about harvesting beating hearts from live infants.

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The global T-cell therapy market size is expected to reach USD 7.51 billion, expanding at a CAGR of 15.4% by 2026 – Yahoo Finance

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 12:45 am

The landmark approvals of Yescarta and Kymriah have spurred unprecedented advancements in the market. The launch of these breakthrough therapies has bolstered cash inflow for innovation, thereby driving the growth.

New York, Oct. 16, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "T-Cell Therapy Market Size, Share & Trends Analysis Report By Modality, By Therapy, By Indication And Segment Forecasts, 2019 - 2026" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05822974/?utm_source=GNW

Expansion of the market for T-cell therapy significantly relies on shifting preference from first-line stem cell transplants and chemotherapy to third-line CAR T-cell therapy.Moreover, the ever-expanding plethora of medical conditions for which the T cell therapies is projected to bode well for the market growth.

Rise in oncological disorders is projected to drive interest as well as investments in the T-cell therapy market in near future.

In contrast with the small-molecule landscape, engineered T cells market landscape is distinguished by an extensive network that encompasses several entities marked by connections academically, financially, and via technology licensing. Research bodies, and manufacturers, and regulators engage in assessing the long-term efficacy and safety of therapies to ensure safe access to patients.

By far, the antigen challenge and linked toxicity concerns have impeded the development of CAR T therapies in non-hematological malignancies. Market players are applying a data-driven approach of exploring this space to mitigate the challenge and expand the usage of T-cell therapy in indication type such as brain cancer and melanoma.

Further key findings from the report suggest: In the coming years, the number of hospitals implementing CAR T therapies is expected to increase, thereby driving the commercialized business model Research-based business modality accounted for the highest revenue generation over the past years, attributed to the presence of several research programs CAR-T cell therapy market share accounted for the larger revenue share of the overall T-cell therapy market in 2018 owing to the highest investment by sponsors in this therapy type Presence of approved products for B cell lymphoma and acute lymphocytic leukemia has resulted in the dominance of hematological malignancies in the market Therapy for solid tumors is expected to emerge as the lucrative source of revenue generation in the forthcoming years Rising research activities in CAR T-cell therapy for solid tumors, particularly, for brain & central nervous system and melanoma, is expected to benefit the key players North America led the global market in 2018 owing to the presence of a large number of cancer centers engaging in research activities. Moreover, U.S.-based pharma companies like Pfizer Inc. and Celgene Corporation have shifted their focus from conventional drug development to T-cell therapy space Asia Pacific is estimated to witness the fastest growth with China at the forefront. China has surpassed the number of CAR T clinical trials conducted in U.S. Moreover, Novartis is strategizing to secure approval for Kymriah by China regulatory authorities in the forthcoming years Gilead Sciences, Novartis AG, TCR2 Therapeutics Inc., Celgene Corporation, Sorrento Therapeutics, bluebird bio, and Fate Therapeutics are some key players operating in the market. They engage in mergers and acquisitions with therapy developers. Acquisition of Juno Therapeutics by Celgene in January 2018 and Kite Pharma by Gilead in August 2017 are some notable examples of acquisitions in this marketRead the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05822974/?utm_source=GNW

About ReportlinkerReportLinker is an award-winning market research solution. Reportlinker finds and organizes the latest industry data so you get all the market research you need - instantly, in one place.

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Global Longevity & Anti-Senescence Therapy Market Review 2017-2018 and Forecast to 2023 – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

Posted: October 17, 2019 at 12:45 am

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Global Longevity and Anti-Senescence Therapy Market" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

Global longevity and anti-senescence market will witness rapid growth over the forecast period (2018-2023) owing to an increasing emphasis on Stem Cell Research and increasing demand for cell-based assays in research and development.

An increasing geriatric population across the globe and rising awareness of antiaging products among generation Y and later generations are the major factors expected to promote the growth of global longevity and anti-senescence market. Factors such as a surging level of disposable income and increasing advancements in anti-senescence technologies are also providing traction to the global longevity and anti-senescence market growth over the forecast period (2018-2023).

Senolytics, placenta stem cells and blood transfusions are some of the hot technologies picking up pace in the longevity and anti-anti-senescence market. Companies and start-ups across the globe such as Unity Biotechnology, Human Longevity Inc., Calico Life Sciences, Acorda Therapeutics, etc. are working extensively in this field for the extension of human longevity by focusing on the study of genomics, microbiome, bioinformatics, and stem cell therapies, etc. These factors are poised to drive market growth over the forecast period.

The report provides analysis based on each market segment including therapies and application. The therapies segment is further sub-segmented into Senolytic drug therapy, Gene therapy, Immunotherapy, and Others. Senolytic drug therapy held the largest market revenue share in 2017. The fastest growth of the gene therapy segment is due to the Large investments in genomics.

Report Scope

The scope of this report is broad and covers various therapies currently under trials in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market. The market estimation has been performed with consideration for revenue generation in the forecast years 2018-2023 after the expected availability of products in the market by 2023.

The global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market has been segmented by the following therapies: Senolytic drug therapy, Gene therapy, Immunotherapy and Other therapies which includes stem cell-based therapies, etc.

Revenue forecasts from 2028 to 2023 are given for each therapy and application, with estimated values derived from the expected revenue generation in the first year of launch.

The report also includes a discussion of the major players performing research or the potential players across each regional longevity and anti-senescence therapy market. Further, it explains the major drivers and regional dynamics of the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market and current trends within the industry.

The report concludes with a special focus on the vendor landscape and includes detailed profiles of the major vendors and potential entrants in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market.

The report includes:

Key Topics Covered

Chapter 1 Introduction

Chapter 2 Summary and Highlights

Chapter 3 Market Overview

Chapter 4 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Market by Therapy

Chapter 5 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Market by Application

Chapter 6 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Market by Region

Chapter 7 Industry Structure in Longevity and Anti-senescence Market

Chapter 8 Company Profiles

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/zy7jt

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