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Industry News: Batavia Biosciences to deploy Horizon Discovery’s CHO cell technology to develop anti-Zika biotherapeutic with Vanderbilt University…

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:46 am

Batavia Biosciences has announced that the company has signed a license agreement to utilize Horizon Discoverys GS knockout CHO K1 cell line expression system for the development of high yield antibody-expressing cell lines. Initially, Batavia will deploy the system for production of a potent Zika virus neutralizing antibody, working in collaboration with Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) and IDBiologics, a company which focuses on developing human antibodies for the prevention, treatment and cure of infectious diseases.

The Zika virus neutralizing antibody was discovered three years ago by VUMC researchers in collaboration with colleagues at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. The group reported isolation of a human monoclonal antibody that in a mouse model markedly reduced infection by the Zika virus. The VUMC antibody, dubbed ZIKV-117, binds to an epitope or part of the Zika virus in a way that no other antibody has to date.

Were excited to work with Batavia to move this promising Zika antibody therapy one step closer to the clinic, stated James Crowe Jr, M.D., Director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Center.

Developing high yield antibody producer CHO lines is difficult and expensive, added Robert Carnahan, Ph.D., Director of Vanderbilt Antibody and Protein Resource. That is why this new solution is so important to the anti-Zika antibody project.

The mosquito-borne Zika virus is believed to cause microcephaly (unusually small heads) and other congenital malformations in children born to infected women. Currently, there is no way to prevent Zika virus infection or its aftermath.

Menzo Havenga, CEO, Batavia Biosciences, explained: We are thrilled to now have access to Horizons expression system to complement our existing STEP technology for recombinant protein production and to have VUMC and IDBiologics as collaborators on the development of a much needed Zika virus medical countermeasure.

Chuck Haines, CEO, IDBiologics commented: We are looking forward with great anticipation to receiving the Zika virus antibody cell line from the VUMC-Batavia collaboration and continuing to advance this product to the clinic.

Horizon licenses its CHO expression system to pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and biosimilar companies, as well as contract manufacturing organizations. The system includes the GS knockout CHO K1 cell line, a comprehensive package of supporting documentation, and an expression vector supplied under license from DNATwoPointO, Inc. Dirk Gewert, Business Unit Director, Horizon Discovery explained: This proprietary solution has now been featured in a number of confirmed Investigational New Drug (IND) filings. This solution allows companies to move from the DNA sequence of their potential biotherapeutic to clinical manufacturing as simply and rapidly as possible. Both Horizon and Batavia are dedicated to ensure availability of key technologies that can improve affordability of medicines worldwide.

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Industry News: Batavia Biosciences to deploy Horizon Discovery's CHO cell technology to develop anti-Zika biotherapeutic with Vanderbilt University...

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Life-saving Baltimore stem cell donor meets 9-year old recipient – Patch.com

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

See video of emotional encounter, via Gift of Life Marrow Registry, HERE

(Starts at 15:37) Video credit: Gift of Life Marrow Registry

NEW YORK, Sept. 20 A life-saving Baltimore, Md., blood stem cell donor met his transplant recipient, a Philadelphia, Pa., boy, for the very first time in an emotional ceremony at Gift of Life Marrow Registry's One Huge Night Gala in New York City on September 17.

Gregory Mitchell, 30, a financial advisor, donated stem cells last year to Marcus Haggins, 9, who was battling Severe Aplastic Anemia, until receiving his transplant. Mitchell joined Gift of Life's registry during a 2012 donor recruitment drive at an Atlantic City, N.J. cultural festival.

"My life became more meaningful the day I donated," Mitchell said, calling his joining the registry a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. "By joining Gift of Life, you might get lucky enough to have the opportunity to step up to the plate for someone who needs you the most. You might be lucky enough to know how great it feels to donate to someone. You might even get lucky enough to know how great it feels to meet such a brave person."

Haggins' mother, Kim Kennedy, said that "you don't know how much this means to me to give me my son back. Thank God we didn't lose Marcus." Referring to Gift of Life and Mitchell, said added that "they saved my son's life. You are my angel. There is no greater gift than life. None."

Due to medical anonymity laws, donors and recipients must wait at least one year before meeting.

Since its start in 1991, Gift of Life Marrow Registry has grown to more than 347,000 individuals who have volunteered to donate blood stem cells or bone marrow to save a life. To date, Gift of Life has facilitated over 16,600 matches for those with leukemia, lymphoma, sickle cell, and nearly 100 other diseases, resulting in more than 3,475 transplants

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Cancer Stem Cell Therapeutics Market is Growing at a CAGR of 9.0% and the Growth is Supported by Development of Advanced Genomic Analysis Techniques…

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

Market Size - USD 8.46 Million in 2018, Market Growth - CAGR of 9%. Market Trends - Product launches and research for cancer stem cell therapeutics.NEW YORK-September 20, 2019- (Newswire.com)

Development of advanced genomic analysis techniques, introduction of effective guidelines for cell therapy manufacturing, availability of financial support from public as well as private bodies for cancer research, and improved effectiveness of stem cell transplants are some of the primary growth stimulants for the market. Certain manufacturing and pharmacological issues and regulatory hurdles are hindering the growth of the market.

According to the current analysis of Reports and Data, the global cancer stem cell therapeutics market was valued at USD 8.46 billion in 2018 and is expected to reach USD 16.84 billion by year 2026, at a CAGR of 9.0%. The study has focused on therapeutic treatment types for Cancer Stem Cells against a wide spectrum of tumor forms such as breast, blood, lung and others. Recent emergence of Off-the-shelf stem cell treatment has entered clinical trials in the U.S. to determine the extent to which the tumors respond to NK cell therapy and if the incurable cancer is treated or not.

Request a free sample of this research report at: https://www.reportsanddata.com/sample-enquiry- form/1414

Segments covered in the report:

For the purpose of the study, this Reports and Data has segmented the Global Cancer Stem Cell Therapy Market on the basis of treatment type, disease type, application, end user and the regional outlook:

Treatment Type: (Revenue, USD Million; 2016-2026)

Disease Type: (Revenue, USD Million; 2016-2026)

Application: (Revenue, USD Million; 2016-2026)

End Use: (Revenue, USD Million; 2016-2026)

Regional Outlook (Revenue, USD Million; 2016-2026)

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Further key findings from the report suggest

To identify the key trends in the industry, click on the link below:https://www.reportsanddata.com/report-detail/cancer-stem-cell-therapeutics-market

About Reports and Data

Reports and Data is a market research and consulting company that provides syndicated research reports, customized research reports and consulting services. Our solutions purely focus on thepurpose to locate, target and analyze consumer behavior shifts across demographics, across industries and help clients make a smarter business decision. We offer market intelligence studies, ensuring relevant and fact-based research across multiple industries, including Healthcare, Technology, Chemicals, Power, and Energy. We consistently update our research offerings to ensure our clients are aware of the latest trends existing in the market. Reports and Data has a strong base of experienced analysts from varied areas of expertise.

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Cancer Stem Cell Therapeutics Market is Growing at a CAGR of 9.0% and the Growth is Supported by Development of Advanced Genomic Analysis Techniques...

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When it Comes to Federal Stem Cell Regulation, Less is More – The Regulatory Review

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

FDA ought to promote stem cell therapy by easing up on regulation and its aggressive enforcement.

On International Rare Disease Day 2017, one month after being sworn in as President, Donald Trump gave his 2017 Joint Address to Congress. During his speech, he took particular note of the slow and burdensome approval process at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that keeps too many advances from reaching those in need. With a specific emphasis on the health of sick children, President Trump argued that if we slash the restraints at FDA, then we will be blessed with far more miracles.

In attendance that night was Sarah Hughes, a young woman who was forced to travel to Mexico for stem cell therapy (SCT) to treat her systemic idiopathic juvenile diabetes. In 2014, Hughes had her own cells extracted, processed and then infused back into her in a process known as adult autologous stem cell therapy. The results were life-changing.

Before the SCT, Hughes was taking 23 medications a day. After nearly two dozen stem cell infusions over a two-year period, Hughes was down to eight medications a day, and at lower doses. SCT alleviated Hughes chronic pain, allowed her to eat normally and absorb nutrients from food, and gave her choices in life she never had before. Despite her progress, she lamented the fact that that other Americans in her position could not avail themselves of SCT.

Since delivering his address to Congress, President Trump has in fact made progress in modernizing FDA, most notably by signing into law the Right to Try Act of 2017, which allows terminally ill patients increased access to experimental drugs that have completed Phase I of the clinical trial process but have not been approved by FDA.

President Trumps actions continue a broader trend in easing patients access to emerging medical treatments. In December 2016, for example, President Obama signed the 21st Century Cures Act into law, which contains special provisions for the accelerated approval for advanced regenerative therapies like SCT.

Despite the clear trend toward FDA modernization and the easing of restrictions by Presidents Obama and Trump, the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee has recently signaled that it wants to see enhanced FDA regulatory enforcement over SCT. Leaders of the committee sent a letter to Acting FDA Commissioner Ned Sharpless voicing its concern about FDAs seemingly permissive use of its discretionary regulatory enforcement authority against potentially violative clinics.

The Committee is seeking more information about FDAs long-term enforcement strategy, including: financial resources dedicated to approving legitimate SCT products; human resources dedicated to the reporting of adverse events; and the possibility of state-federal partnerships to revoke the medical licenses of SCT clinicians.

To be sure, concerns over the safety of patients receiving SCT are reasonable and necessary. But any call for increased regulatory enforcement against clinics offering SCT is premature and will likely disadvantage far more Americans than it helps. At a time when an increasing number of Americans suffer from debilitating chronic medical conditions, we need more medical choice, not less.

The unspoken truth is that despite the constant invocation of the threat of harm from SCT, the actual number of reported cases of adverse harm is remarkably few. Conversely, success stories are numerous.

These SCT successes are built upon robust scientific literature and clinical practice that demonstrate the safety and efficacy of SCT for certain medical indications. The scientific and anecdotal evidence on SCTs efficacy in treating orthopedic conditions is substantial. Research has shown that it can facilitate the healing of bone fractures, stimulate cartilage regeneration, treat meniscus repair, and decrease lower back painthe greatest contributor to global disability according to 2010 Global Burden of Disease data.

Stem cell therapy has also been shown to treat both the chronic pain caused by opioid abuse and the effects of opioid tolerance. Likewise, SCTs ability to treat the symptoms of certain autoimmune conditions is well established. Perhaps most noteworthy is the virtual absence of adverse events that can be directly ascribed to adult SCT.

Although officials such as former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb and current Commissioner Sharpless acknowledge the power and uniqueness of SCT, federal policy on stem cell research and rulemaking has a Janusian quality. On the one hand, it has expanded significantly in the past decade as a result of the relaxing of rules restricting embryonic and other types of stem cell research and the passage of federal laws aimed at expediting regenerative medicine therapies to market. On the other hand, FDA regulations that define the standards for determining which therapies can be offered without FDA approval and those that require approvallegally deemed drugstend to operate to slow down medical innovation.

In fulfillment of its obligations under the Cures Act, FDA released a guidance document in November 2017 with a new framework that is intended to balance the agencys commitment to safety with mechanisms to drive further advances in regenerative medicine so innovators can bring new, effective therapies to patients as quickly and safely as possible. Importantly, the guidance purports to clarify the terms minimally manipulated and homologous use, key standards that determine the availability of stem cell therapies to patients. Stem cells that are minimally manipulated and used for homologous purposes do not need to undergo clinical trials. However, by all accounts, the guidance document interprets these terms quite narrowly, effectively proscribing the therapies altogether.

In an effort to facilitate compliance for clinics that offer unapproved SCT services, FDA has stated that for the first 36 months following issuance of the guidance, it will adopt a risk-based approach to enforcement of the new rules. So far, FDA has indeed exercised its enforcement authority judiciously, targeting clinics that it deems flagrant in their marketing or medical practices. Enforcement has generally taken the form of either warning letters or federal lawsuits. The combination of FDAs narrow interpretations with increasing public demand for alternative medical therapies, however, has meant that the number of clinics offering unapproved SCT products has grown.

The Energy and Commerce Committee should consider the following four factors in determining how to proceed. First, it must recognize that SCT is a unique and unprecedented medical modality that requires a unique regulatory enforcement approach that balances the interest of regulators, scientists, clinician and patients.

Second, FDAs stated three-year grace period has not yet run. Any evaluation of enhanced enforcement should be deferred until that time comes.

Third, the reporting of adverse events resulting from the use of SCT in clinics is astonishingly small. Of course, any adverse events should be meticulously documented, investigated, and taken seriously. That said, to indict an entire practice because of the negligence or recklessness of a few is a step too far, especially given how many Americans have benefitted from SCT.

Fourth, it is precisely because so many people with no viable medical alternatives have benefitted from the therapy that the Committee should re-think its aggressive posture toward enforcement. When taken together, these four factors weigh against enhanced federal enforcement at this time.

Furthermore, states have played a critical role in SCT regulation. In 2017, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed a law that makes Texas the first state to authorize the use of SCT for patients with certain severe chronic condition or terminal illnesses. Arkansas is on course to be the first state to require medical insurance companies to cover stem cell therapy.

States are also actively participating in enforcement against clinics that they believe fraudulently market SCT. New York State Attorney General Letitia James recently filed a lawsuit against a clinic offering SCT, maintaining that it misled patients with deceptive marketing practices. The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation is also investigating patient complaints. These two cases show that states are more than capable of weeding out alleged SCT bad actors without enhanced efforts by FDA.

Like Sarah Hughes, I was forced to travel abroad for SCT. In 2010, I traveled to Nanjing, China for SCT to treat a progressive neuromuscular condition. Although my time in China was wonderful, no Americans should have to travel for SCTa safe and inexpensive therapyto save or improve their lives. Stem cell therapy is a paradigm-shifting medical modality that allows persons to use cells from their own bodies to heal themselves. As such, it embodies the democratization of medicine. To unduly stifle, impair, or otherwise restrict the availability and affordability of SCT would not only injure the constituents that members of Congress fight for, but also wound our democratic ideals.

Despite disagreements over policy, all interested parties agree that SCT represents a revolution in medicine. Americans have recognized this shift, and the desire for SCT has reached a tipping point. Thoughtful, judicious, and balanced regulatory enforcement that targets the most flagrant bad actors and allows states to take the lead is the proper way forward at this point.

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Ruth Lehmann elected as director of Whitehead Institute – MIT News

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

The Whitehead Institute board of directors today announced the selection of Ruth Lehmann, a world-renowned developmental and cell biology researcher, as the institutes fifth director. Lehmann will succeed current Director David Page on July 1, 2020.

Lehmann is now the Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Professor of Cell Biology and chair of the Department of Cell Biology at New York University (NYU), where she also directs the Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine and The Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel Center for Stem Cell Biology. She is currently an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The Whitehead Institute appointment represents a homecoming: Lehmann was a Whitehead Institute member and a faculty member of MIT from 1988 to 1996, before beginning a distinguished 23-year career at NYU.

Ruth Lehmann will continue a line of prestigious and highly accomplished scientist-leaders who have served as Whitehead Institute directors, says Charles D. Ellis, chair of the Whitehead Institute board of directors. She perfectly fits our vision for the next director: an eminent scientist and experienced leader, who is passionately committed to Whitehead Institutes mission, and possesses a compelling vision for basic biomedical research in the coming decade.

I am delighted to return to Whitehead Institute and look forward to joining the illustrious faculty to recruit and mentor the next generation of Whitehead Institute faculty and fellows, Lehmann says. When I was recruited to Whitehead Institute in the late 1980s, David Baltimore took a huge risk in giving an inexperiencedyoung scientist from Germany the chance to follow her passion for science with unending encouragement and minimal restraints. Now I am thrilled to have the opportunity to help shape the future of this wonderful institute that has been at the forefront of biomedical research for decades. I am pleased to become part of the succession of Whitehead Institutes forward-thinking directors, David Baltimore, Gerald Fink, Susan Lindquist, and David Page. I look forward to working with faculty, fellows, trainees, and staff to build a future with ambitious goals that will allow us to reveal the unknown and connect the unexpected in a collaborative, diverse, and flexible environment.

Ruth Lehmann is an inspired choice to lead the institute into the future and I look forward to working with her in that capacity, Page says. Ruth is an internationally renowned and influential leader in the field of germ cell biology, and her outstanding contributions to the field are the product of her sustained brilliance, insatiable curiosity, uncompromising rigor and scholarship, and clarity of thought and expression.Across the course of the past three decades, no scientist anywhere in the world has made greater contributions to our understanding of germ cells and their remarkable biology. Im especially pleased to gain a colleague with such an impressive track record of discovery and institutional leadership.

The new director will have an impressive line of predecessors: Whitehead Institutes founding director was Nobel laureate and former Caltech president David Baltimore; he was succeeded by internationally honored geneticist and science enterprise leader Gerald Fink, and then by National Medal of Science recipient Susan Lindquist, followed by the current director, leading human geneticist David Page, who became director in 2004.

Ruth Lehmann is a brilliant choice as the next director of Whitehead Institute, Baltimore says. She is a world-class scientist and a seasoned leader. Most importantly, she understands the unique nature of Whitehead Institute and will maintain it as a key element of the biomedical complex that has grown up in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Ruth Lehmann is an extraordinary scientist, who began her distinguished career here at Whitehead, Fink says.Her innovative work on germ cells, which give rise to eggs and sperm, has paved the path for the entire field. She is an inspiring leader who is an outspoken advocate for fundamental research.We are all delighted to welcome her back as our new director and scientific colleague.

Lehmann has made seminal discoveries in the field of developmental and cell biology. Germ cells, the cells that give rise to the sperm and egg, carry a precious cargo of genetic information from the parent that they ultimately contribute to the embryo, transmitting the currency of heredity to a new generation. Work in Lehmanns lab using Drosophila (fruit flies) has shed light on how these important cells know to become germ cells, and how they are able to make their way from where they originate to the gonad during early embryonic development. Her discoveries uncovering the mechanisms needed for proper specification and migration of germ cells have not only informed our understanding of processes essential for the perpetuation of life itself, but have also made important contributions to related fields including stem cell biology, lipid biology, and DNA repair.

I'm so pleased to be welcoming Ruth back to the community, MIT Provost Martin A. Schmidt says. Her dedication to, and expertise in, basic research will underscore Whitehead Institute's reputation as a leader in this arena.

Susan Hockfield, MIT president emerita and professor of neuroscience, chaired the committee that recommended Lehmann to the Whitehead Institute board. Our committee considered eminent candidates from across the globe, Hockfield says, and found in Ruth Lehmann a person uniquely qualified to guide this pioneering research institution forward.

Lehmann earned an undergraduate degree and a PhD in biology from the University of Tubingen in Germany, in the laboratory of future Nobel laureate Christiane Nsslein-Volhard. Between those programs, she conducted research at the University of Washington and earned a diploma degree equivalent to a master's degree in biology from the University of Freiburg in Germany. She then conducted postdoctoral research at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, England. Then, Lehmann moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to become a Whitehead Institute member and MIT faculty member. In 1996, she accepted a professorship at NYU Langone School of Medicine and was subsequently named director of the Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine and The Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel Center for Stem Cell Biology, NYU Stem Cell Biology Graduate Program director, and chair of the NYU Department of Cell Biology in 2014 (all roles that she continues to hold).

She has served as president of the Society for Developmental Biology, the Drosophila Board, and the Harvey Society; is currently editor-in-chief of the Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology; and will serve as president of the American Society for Cell Biology starting in 2021. Additionally, she has been a council member of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

Among her many awards, Lehmann has received the Society for Developmental Biologys Conklin Medal, the Porter Award from the American Society for Cell Biology, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the German Society for Developmental Biology. She is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a member of the European Molecular Biology Organization.

Lehmann has also been a committed mentor, having fostered the education and professional development of scores of undergraduate and graduate students and postdoctoral researchers. Many of her mentees have gone on to become leaders in the biomedical industry or at academic institutions in the United States and around the world, including Johns Hopkins University, Princeton University, MIT, the University of Cambridge (UK), European Molecular Biology Laboratory (Heidelberg, Germany), and University of Toronto (Canada).

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MicroRNA-based Therapy May be New Weapon to Combat Cancer – Newswise

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

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Newswise STONY BROOK, NY, September 18, 2019 A technology that manipulates microRNAs (miRNAs) developed by Jingfang Ju, PhD, a biochemist and Professor in the Department of Pathology at the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, and colleagues has shown promise when used as anti-cancer therapeutic. The method may prove to be particularly effective against chemotherapy resistant cancers such as colorectal cancer. To advance the science of this method and develop miRNA-based drugs, the technology has been licensed to Curamir Therapeutics Inc., a biotechnology company, through an agreement with the Research Foundation of the State University of New York.

Dr. Ju and colleagues have studied the relationship between miRNAs and cancer at Stony Brook for more than 10 years. The role of miRNAs is to regulate protein synthesis and allows cells to rapidly adopt to their environment, such as the introduction of cancer chemotherapy agents. As a whole, miRNAs promote, or hinder, cellular processes that fight cancer. Certain miRNAs function as tumor suppressors. Dr. Ju and his team have identified multiple miRNAs that function as tumor suppressors in cancer. When cancer occurs, these miRNAs cease to function properly due to abnormal expression, thus promoting cancer and chemotherapy resistance.

Our laboratory has modified these tumor suppressive miRNAs to make them more stable and effective as potential novel therapeutic molecules, says Dr. Ju, who has been studying chemotherapy resistance and miRNAs for 25 years. From that we have created a miRNA drug development platform technology that is designed to treat chemotherapy-resistant colorectal cancer, and potentially for other forms of cancer such as pancreatic, gastric, lung and breast.

Most chemotherapy compounds are effective in eliminating the rapidly proliferating cancer cells. A key aspect to the miRNA drug platform is that it is also designed to eliminate cancer stem cells that are resistant to therapy. This strategy theoretically will be more effective to eliminate all tumor cells to prevent resistance.

One example of the drug platform is Dr. Jus work with a specific modified tumor suppressor miRNA, miR-129 mimic.

In colorectal cancer, resistance to 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU), a standard drug to treat the disease, occurs frequently and often results in metastatic and deadly outcomes. When Dr. Ju and colleagues modified this miRNA and developed a mimic miR-129, treatment of advanced disease radically improved and chemotherapy resistance of the colorectal cancer stem cells reduced or was eliminated.

In a narrow sense, we are developing new drugs to combat 5-FU resistance in colorectal cancer. While this is important, in the wider sense the miRNA-based drug platform is shown to eliminate cancer stem cells which are intrinsically resistant to all chemotherapeutic agents so the application to chemotherapy resistance is potentially broad, says Dr. Ju.

One other aspect to the potential advantages of this therapeutic approach, adds Dr. Ju, is that no toxicity was shown by delivering the miRNA-based drugs in laboratory models. Most nucleic acid based drugs rely on various delivery vehicles which often time associated with toxicity. He explains that these particular miRNA mimic compounds do not require delivery vehicles to enter cancer cells and therefore reduce toxicity.

Curamir will take the proprietary miRNA engineering platform to develop anticancer drugs based on the tumor suppressive miRNA mimics identified by Dr. Ju and colleagues. An incubated company financed by Delos Capital, Curamir will begin developing these drugs for testing with an initial $10 million in financing from Delos Capital.

The company is co-founded by veteran scientists in the field of gene regulation, including Dr. Ju; Dr. James Watson, co-discoverer of the DNA structure and a 1962 Nobel Laureate; and Dr. Lan Bo Chen, Professor Emeritus of Pathology at Harvard Medical School and Academician of the Academia Sinica of Taiwan.

Research leading to the development of the miRNA drug platform was funded in part by grants from the Long Island Bioscience Hub, led by the Center for Biotechnology at Stony Brook University, under the National Institutes of HealthREACH program, as well as the National Cancer Institute.

###

About Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University:

Established in 1971, Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University includes 25 academic departments. The three missions of the School are to advance the understanding of the origins of human health and disease; train the next generation of committed, curious and highly capable physicians; and deliver world-class compassionate healthcare. As a member of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) and a Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) accredited medical school, Stony Brook is one of the foremost institutes of higher medical education in the country. Each year the School trains nearly 500 medical students and more than 600 medical residents and fellows. Faculty research includes National Institutes of Health-sponsored programs in neurological diseases, cancer, cardiovascular disorders, biomedical imaging, regenerative medicine, infectious diseases, and many other topics. Physicians on the School of Medicine faculty deliver world-class medical care through more than 31,000 inpatient, 108,000 emergency room, and 940,000 outpatient visits annually at Stony Brook University Hospital and affiliated clinical programs, making its clinical services one of the largest and highest quality medical schools on Long Island, New York. To learn more, visit http://www.medicine.stonybrookmedicine.edu.

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Meet the Accrington schoolboy fighting back against rare genetic condition – LancsLive

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

When five-year-old Charlie Fletcher was diagnosed with a rare genetic condition and told he would die without a bone marrow transplant, his parents world fell apart.

It was a huge shock and Im not sure I took much in at all that night, said mother Lucy Hamlin. I just lay in on the bed looking at my little boy, wondering how this could be happening.

Charlie, from Accrington, had been suffering with severe nosebleeds in January 2013 and one Sunday night was taken by his dad to hospital where doctors decided to keep him in overnight.

A few hours later, Charlies parents were told that he had suspected leukaemia - however after further tests he was found to have aplastic anaemia, or bone marrow failure.

The rare, life-limiting genetic disorder causes bone marrow failure in children and a predisposition to gynaecological, head and neck cancers, together with other complications both in childhood and in later life.

Lucy, who works as director of a community interest company, said: I was obviously hugely relieved [that he didnt have leukaemia] but then they said what he did have was AA which was in itself a serious condition.

They couldnt find a reason for the AA so began to prepare him for a treatment called ATG, which resets immunity so the bone marrow can start to heal and make blood cells again.

But it was during another bone marrow aspiration that a doctor happened to notice something about Charlie.

His thumbs had been an odd shape since birth almost as though he had two left thumbs but Id never given it much thought, said Lucy.

However, it turned out to be a major clue, with doctors suspecting Fanconi Anaemia (FA) and explained the ATG wouldnt work and Charlie would need a bone marrow transplant urgently.

Devastated Lucy said: There were no suitable donors. One consultant actually suggested that me and Charlies dad have another baby, although we had split up a few years earlier, but then another told us that even if this was a possibility, we wouldnt qualify for IVF.

And in any case, Charlie didnt have nine months to wait. In fact, said the doctor, without a bone marrow transplant he would die.

I thought, How can you just sit there and tell me my son only has a few months to live?

But in May 2013, Charlies parents learned he could have a bone marrow transplant with donated stem cells from umbilical cord blood from a woman in New York.

To prepare his body for new stem cells, Charlie had radiotherapy and chemotherapy to completely wipe out his immune system, so his body would be more likely to accept the new cells. But the transplant failed.

So there he was, with no immune system and no new bone marrow, said Lucy. This was one of the hardest periods in my life, and the uncertainty made it tougher.

We were only meant to be in hospital for a few weeks, but it was another two months, in July 2013, before Charlie could have a second transplant with donated stem cells from New York. This came from a woman whod donated her umbilical cord after birth.

At first, it seemed the second transplant was also failing. But then it started showing signs of working and Charlies blood counts began to rise.

He ended up staying in hospital for four-and-a-half months and during this time, as he had no immune system, he was in isolation, only allowed four visitors, along with hospital staff.

Lucy said: Even so, he still contracted meningitis, listeria and MRSA and was so ill. He had to stay off school for six months after coming home and basically ended up being off for over a year in total. So that meant I couldnt go back to work either the community interest company had only just been set up so I had to put all our plans on hold.

Five and a half years on, Charlie, now age 11, has stayed well, although he will be on antibiotics for the rest of his life to prevent him picking up bugs.

He also has a new half-sister after Lucy had a daughter four years ago.

She said: Charlie has caught up at school and was head boy in his final year of St Andrews primary school in Oswaldtwistle a job he took seriously and wore his badge with pride.

He started guitar lessons but found that his thumbs wont quite work properly to strum a guitar and thats uncomfortable for him, so he took up keyboard instead.

He is an orange belt at jujitsu and is a member of our local scout group in fact he went away for the first time without family while he was a cub, about two years after coming out of hospital.

That was an experience for me, having to trust other people to ensure he takes his medication!

The family dont know what the future might hold as, despite his bone marrow transplant, FA can mean Charlie, who has now started Year 7 at Accrington Academy, is at higher risk of cancers.

The family are supporting Jeans for Genes Day and fundraising for Fanconi Hope, a national charitable trust set up by parents of FA affected children and clinicians with an interest in FA.

Lucy added: Im so grateful for the support of his consultant and the team at Royal Manchester Childrens Hospital, and also for Fanconi Hope, for providing information and linking us with other families in the UK.

Its such a comfort to know there are other people who understand, and we can connect online easily.

Charlie enjoyed the Family Day in 2017 for him, it was a night away and a fun day. But I think as he gets older, these events will really help him to understand FA and hell have a ready-made support network.

Jeans for Genes Day is running until September 20. To sign up for a free fundraising pack visit jeansforgenesday.org

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A Horse Births a Zebra – Louisville.com

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

Doctor Scott Bennett filled a test tube with about seven milliliters of a nutrient-rich solution, dropped in the embryo and carefully taped the test tube near his armpit. It was a zebra embryo, a two-millimeter speck of life. Ideally, itd be in the uterus of a horse thats right, a horse within an hour. Body heat, that was second best.

It was a spring day, 1983. Who knew Bennett, an equine veterinarian, and Bill Foster, a veterinarian at the Louisville Zoo, would use a filter and a microscope to successfully extract an embryo from a sedated zebra mare on their first go? They sure didnt. Theyd had their big idea over cocktails one evening after working together on a birth at an Arabian horse farm in Oldham County: transplant an embryo from an exotic equine (a zebra) and into a domestic equine (a horse) to test whether such a surrogacy could result in a healthy birth. If it worked, it would be a first. And it could allow future zebra mares to produce as many as nine to 12 embryos in one year, unburdened by that whole yearlong pregnancy marathon. If surrogates carried all those embryos, Foster thought, they could produce a small herd of siblings. What a way to punch back at population decline. The mom and pop zebras (named Gimpy and Cajan) involved in Foster and Bennetts experiment were Grants zebras, from the plains of Africa. Theyre not endangered, but Foster and Bennett knew that if this worked, a more threatened species, like mountain zebras or wild equines from Asia, could take advantage of their discovery.

So here was Bennett with an embryo taped to him, in need of a uterus, stat.

He started making calls, to this farm and that friend. Got a mare thats fertile? In heat this past week? Seven hours and several phone calls later, Bennett found Kelly, an older buckskin quarter horse he was familiar with, who was about 26 years old at the time. (If) she just smelled semen, she got pregnant, Bennett says to me with a laugh.

Kellys owner told him the mare was in heat recently. Bennetts response: Ill take her.

What is this for? the woman wondered.

Dont ask, he replied.

The zebra named E.Q. (short for Equueles, a constellation that in Latin means little horse) couldve been just another zebra born to zebra parents at the zoo. But this was the 80s, a time of growing environmental concern. Scientists were striving to find ways to increase populations of threatened and endangered animals. Many zoos stepped up to the cause. Steve Taylor, the Louisville Zoos assistant director of conservation, education and collection, says that, in the 80s, zoos saw their role as an Ark.

The concept of embryo transfer wasnt new at the time, even between species. In the early 80s, the embryo of an Asian guar (a bison-type animal) that was placed in a domestic cow grew into a guar calf at the Bronx Zoo. In 1975, the embryo of a Welsh mountain pony was produced in England, transported to Poland in a rabbit (repeat: rabbit) and then transferred to a recipient mare of the same species. But a full-blooded wild equine birthed from a domestic one? That had never happend before.

At a kitchen island in the home of Kellys owner, Bennett and Foster set up a lab: microscope, incubator, pipette to, essentially, turkey-baste Kelly. As Bennett recalls it, they backed her up to open French doors, wrapped her tail, cleaned her up and implanted the zebra embryo. About three weeks later, Bennett returned to perform an ultrasound. There it was: a glob of fluid, no heartbeat or definition yet. He turned to Kellys owner to share the news.

Its a zebra, he said.

Kellys owner, an Irish woman who has since died, hadnt yet been told about the species swap. Bennett remembers her murmuring, Well, bloody hell.

On May 17, 1984, the day of E.Q.s delivery, photographers and reporters huddled in a barn at Bennetts Equine Services clinic located in Shelby County. (The exact location wasnt shared with the public due to death threats from individuals who disapproved of meddling with nature.) Zebra mares usually give birth after about 340 days, but Kelly was at day 366 and her amniotic fluid was becoming toxic with E.Q.s urine and waste. Foster and Bennett decided to induce labor. Bennetts gloved hand reached elbow deep into the birth canal to help E.Q., whod gotten twisted. Bennett toyed with his audience. Is this the giraffe or the zebra? he said, rattling reporters slow to catch the joke. A couple of Bennetts friends remember him being knotted up a hog on ice, according to one nervous that a stallion may have actually impregnated Kelly, an unplanned pre-zebra-embryo rendezvous that would lead to a horse being birthed before a waiting press.

More than that, the moment felt massive, like the outcome was not simply about the fate of wild equines. If it worked, it would be a cushion to fall upon, an ambitious offering to the planet let us help create what we destroy.

After a few minutes, at about eight in the morning, Kellys water broke and a tiny hoof announcing a black-and-white leg popped out. It has stripes! Bennett cheered. Using a thin, flexible chain and a tool that looks like a wire loop, Bennett gently tugged the 60-pound zebra foal into the spotlight. A reporter for an international wire agency filed a story that newspapers in Canada, Los Angeles, Chicago and even China picked up. (Horse of a different color, read the headline of a short piece in the New York Daily News.) Kelly licked and nuzzled the gangly creature as if it were her own, unaware or unburdened by their absence of shared genes. (At least one witness to the birth swore Kelly gave a momentary puzzled look at her offspring.) Kelly nursed him and stayed by his side for roughly six months, first at Bennetts clinic, then on exhibit at theLouisville Zoo.

Some 35 years later, Bennett and Foster both describe E.Q. as a highlight of their careers. Foster recently retired from the Birmingham Zoo and Bennett remains busy with his practice.E.Q., who ultimately wound up at the Houston Zoo and died there in 1999, will always be the first wild equine born to a domestic mare and remains, for now, the only. The same experiment in England a few months later in 1984 ended in a stillbirth.

Science has progressed. Cloning animals. Frozen embryos and stem cells. The greater priority is the salvation of ecosystems, not individual species. Still, Duane Kramer, a scientist who has run the Reproductive Sciences Laboratory at Texas A&M University for decades, applauds Foster and Bennetts achievement. For years Kramer used E.Q. in lectures on conservation, even hung a poster of the zebra and Kelly in his office. And E.Q. is occasionally referenced in journals related to veterinary medicine and reproductive science. It was very important at that time, Kramer says. I dont know of anybody trying to conserve zebras at the current time, but its comforting to know (surrogacy) is there if needed.

This originally appeared in the September2019 issue of Louisville Magazine under the headline A Horse Births a Zebra. To subscribe to Louisville Magazine,click here.To find us on newsstands,click here.

Cover photo: E.Q. and Kelly, courtesy of the Louisville Zoo

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In Mice and Men, Prostate Drug Reportedly Treats Parkinson’s Disease? – Alzforum

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 2:44 am

20 Sep 2019

A drug commonly prescribed to keep enlarged prostates in check may hold promise for Parkinsons disease. According to a study published September 16 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, terazosin (TZ), an 1-adrenergic receptor antagonist that moonlights as a glycolysis booster, raised ATP, upped mitochondrial numbers, and ultimately saved dopaminergic neurons from degeneration in multiple models of PD. Led by Michael Welsh at the University of Iowa in Iowa City and Lei Liu of Beijing University, the researchers claim that among men who took terazosin or related drugs to quell prostate hyperplasia, the incidence of PD was low, and symptoms of diagnosed disease were mild.

The researchers uncovered TZs energy-boosting prowess serendipitously, Welsh explained. In Beijing, TZ popped up as a top hit in Lius screen for cell death inhibitors in fruit flies. Flies lack 1-adrenergic receptors so, probing further, Liu found that the drug activates phosphoglycerate kinase 1 (PGK1), one of two enzymes that generate ATP in the glycolysis pathway (Chen et al., 2015). Since mitochondrial malfunction and impaired bioenergetics are features of withering neurons in PD, the researchers decided to test this ATP-boosting drug in models of the disease.

First author Rong Cai and colleagues began with the MPTP injection mouse model of parkinsonism. Given daily at the time of injection of this mitochondrial toxin, TZ attenuated all core pathologies, including the drop in ATP, loss of mitochondria in the striatum, loss of dopaminergic neurons, and loss of balance. When the researchers delayed TZ treatment until seven days after MPTP injection, the drug still had beneficial effects on dopaminergic function and motor performance by day 14.

TZ similarly protected other toxin models of parkinsonism, including 6-OHDA in rats, and rotenone in flies. In the insects, knocking out PGK1 erased the benefits of TZ, bolstering the idea that the drug fends off a PD-like syndrome via this enzyme.

Shrinking Both Prostate and Synuclein? In iPSC-derived neurons from Parkinsons patients, -synuclein (green) accumulates in dopaminergic neurons (red). TZ treatment reduced accumulation to control neuron levels. [Courtesy of Cai et al., JCI, 2019.]

In genetic models of Parkinsons, the researchers saw TZ treatment assuage motor deficits, for example in flies carrying PD mutations in PINK1 or LRRK2. In transgenic mice overexpressing wild-type -synucleinthe primary component of the Lewy body inclusions that define the diseasetreatment with TZ between three and 15 months of age partially protected against loss of balance. Finally, in induced pluripotent stem-cell-derived neurons from two PD patients who carried the G2019S mutation in the LRRK2 gene, TZ increased ATP levels and lessened accumulation of-synuclein aggregates (see image above).

Could TZ really work for people with PD? Because the drug is commonly prescribed for benign enlargement of the prostate in men over the age of 60an age group at risk for PDWelsh reasoned that database sleuthing could begin to answer this question. The researchers first turned to the Parkinsons Progression Markers Initiative database, which tracks symptom progression in people with PD. They identified seven men with PD who took TZ and 269 who did not. Men on TZ had a slower rate of motor decline. Still in the PPMI database, the researchers expanded their query to include related drugsdoxazosin (DZ) and alfuzosin (AZ)which are also used to treat prostate enlargement and contain the same quinazoline motif shown to enhance PGK1 function. The 13 men taking TZ, DZ, or AZ had slower progression of motor decline than those not on the drugs. Crucially, 24 men with PD who took tamsulosin, another prostate drug that antagonizes 1-adrenergic receptors but does not activate PGK1, did not have this relative protection. I just about fell off my chair when I saw those results, Welsh said.

Drugs Help Pee and PD? Men with PD who took TZ, DZ, or AZ had a lower relative risk of 69 of 79 PD-related diagnoses in their charts compared with men who took tamsulosin. Yellow dots represent a statistically significant difference. Diagnoses are grouped into categories. [Courtesy of Cai et al., JCI, 2019.]

To expand their search to more people, the researchers accessed the IBM Watson/Truven Health Analytics MarketScan Database for insurance claims relating to PD. They identified 2,880 men with PD who took TZ, DZ, or AZ, and 15,409 men with PD who took tamsulosin. They next selected 79 diagnostic codes related to PD, such as falls, tremor, walking problems, and sleep disorders. They found that compared with men with PD who took tamsulosin, those taking TZ, DZ, or AZ had a 22 percent lower relative risk of having any of these diagnostic codes in their files, suggesting they had milder disease. They also had fewer hospital visits for motor and non-motor symptoms, as well as PD complications.

To see if the ATP-boosting drugs might delay or prevent PD, the researchers identified more than 78,000 men in the Truven database without PD who took TZ, DZ, or AZ, then tracked their files for 284 days. During that time, 118 of them were diagnosed with PD, compared with 190 age-matched men who took tamsulosin instead. This yielded a hazards ratio of 0.62, suggesting that TZ, DZ, and AZ reduce the incidence of PD.

All of this is very encouraging, and indicates that TZ is a strong candidate for clinical trials to see if it can be repurposed for Parkinsons, wrote Chris Elliott of the University of York, U.K. In this TZ joins other drugs (including UDCA and Exenatide) that affect energy metabolism. Howeve, Elliott noted that the mechanism of TZs effects on neurons remains to be ironed out, and cautioned that the drug has risks. It reduces blood pressure, which may already be low in people with Parkinsons, and so careful evaluation of its safety is needed."

Clemens Scherzer of Brigham and Womens Hospital in Boston noted that defective bioenergetics is a key pathway in Parkinson's, and that the study points at potential tool compounds to correct these defects. The quinazoline 1 adrenoreceptor blockers, which are used for benign prostatic hyperplastia, could be repurposed for clinical trials in PD or chemically tweaked to develop brain-optimized, new bioenergetics drugs for PD, Scherzer told Alzforum. He added that rigorous population-wide cohort studies and clinical studies will be needed.

Welsh told Alzforum that it is unclear exactly how TZ and related drugs might counteract PD. He noted that recent studies indicate that ATP itself interferes with -synuclein aggregation and liquid phase separation (Patel et al., 2017;Hayes et al., 2018). ATP could also reduce protein aggregation by bolstering the activity of myriad enzymes, including heat-shock proteins, he added. Of course, ATP might enhance all manner of neuronal functions by supplying cells with more energy. Welsh is investigating whether the drugs affect progression or incidence of other neurodegenerative proteinopathies, including AD.

Welsh has initiated a small trial to test TZ in PD patients at Iowa University, and has applied for funding to get multicenter trials up and running. He is starting by dosing patients with 5 mgas prescribed for prostate enlargementbut said dose-finding studies are needed. Complicating matters, the drug had a biphasic dose response on its PGK1 target in cultured cells and in mice, meaning that at higher concentrations, it no longer elevates ATP. Welsh also noted that though the primary use of the drug is for prostate enlargement, it was also briefly used to treat hypertension, and was tested in women as well as men for that indication. He plans to include both men and women with PD in trials.Jessica Shugart

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Fujifilm licenses Cynata stem cell option – The West Australian

Posted: September 20, 2019 at 11:50 am

Japanese multinational Fujifilm has exercised its option to license a stem cell-based treatment being developed by a small Melbourne biotech company.

Fujifilm is licensing CYP-001, Cynata Therapeutics's treatment for graft-versus-host disease, a rare but potentially lethal complication from bone marrow transplants including for leukemia.

"Our product represents an extraordinary breakthrough in the treatment of this disease," Cynata chief executive Ross McDonald told AAP.

Graft-versus-host disease occurs when immune cells from a transplant (the graft) see the recipient's cells (the host) as foreign and attack them, causing inflammation throughout the body.

Serious cases can be treated with high-dose steroids and immunosuppressants, but in about half of cases the patient fails to respond to treatment and the consequences are generally deadly.

Dr McDonald said Cynata's CYP-001 treatment, an infusion of millions of stem cells, work to control and mediate the immune response.

A phase I clinical trial in 2018 showed that 14 out of the 15 graft-versus-host disease treated with CYP-001 showed improvement.

Fujifilm said it would start a company-sponsored clinical trial in Japan before the end of 2020.

Dr McDonald said the validation from a major pharmaceutical company was a very important step for Cynata as a small biotech company.

While famous for its photographic film business, Fujifilm had the foresight to diversify into health care at the start of the century as cameras transitioned to digital.

Cynata will receive $US3 million ($A4.4m) from Fujifilm as an up-front fee and stands to get up to $US43 million ($A62.7m) more in future milestone payments, as well as 10 per cent royalties if the drug is successfully commercialised.

Cynata shares were up 16.6 per cent to $1.655 at 1108 AEST.

Dr McDonald said the Cynata board was also continuing to consider a non-binding $2-per-share, $200 million takeover proposal by Japan's Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma made in July and would update the market about it in a few weeks to a month.

Cynata is also working to develop stem treatments for osteoarthritis and critical limb ischemia, a reduction of blood flow to the extremities that can lead to amputation and death.

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