Page 1,477«..1020..1,4761,4771,4781,479..1,4901,500..»

Topas Therapeutics lands option deal with Eli Lilly – European Biotechnology

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:46 am

Evotec's immunology spin-out Topas Therapeutics has inked a multi-year R&D collaboration with pharma major Eli Lilly. The initial focus of research, which will be financed by Eli Lilly, is on identification of antigens that specifically induce a T regulatory cell response in inflammatory and auto-immune disorders.

Using the company's nanoparticle platform, the collaboration will initially focuson identification of inflammatory or autoimmunity-inducing antigens that trigger immune tolerance through activation of regulatory T cells responses in liver stem cells. Specifically, Topas targets peptide-loaded nanoparticles towards liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs), which are one of the body's premier sites to induce tolerance against bloodborne antigens by generating peptide-specific regulatory T cells.

Under the terms of the agreement, Topas will be responsible for conducting pre-clinical proof-of-principle studies in collaboration with Lilly to generate drug candidates. According to the contract, Lilly may licence and advance development of all candidates originating from the collaboration. Topas will receive R&D funding and participate in the future success of any compounds in-licensed by Lilly. Financial details of the collaboration have not been disclosed.

Topas Therapeutics was spun out in March from Evotec's subsidiary Bionamics GmbH. The company, which uses a groundbreaking nanoparticle technology to target autoimmune and inflammatory diseases via the induction of antigen-specific immune tolerance in the liver, has14m of venture capital fromEpidarex Capital, EMBL Ventures and Gimv in its pockets. Evotec is its largest shareholder.

Topas has several candidate peptides under preclinical development, the most advanced expected to come to the clinic in 2018 is intended to treat multiple sclerosis.

Visit link:
Topas Therapeutics lands option deal with Eli Lilly - European Biotechnology

Posted in Biotechnology | Comments Off on Topas Therapeutics lands option deal with Eli Lilly – European Biotechnology

Biotechnology researchers turn to landfill sites – Phys.Org

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:46 am

Collecting leachate from a capped landfill site. Credit: Bangor University

Far from being a load of rubbish, landfill sites should be considered one of the great untapped resources in the search for new enzymes for biotechnology, and could fuel more efficient biofuel production.

A new research paper in mSphere by biologists at Bangor and Liverpool universities has for the first time identified the enzymes which degrade natural materials such as paper and clothing in landfill sites.

James McDonald, from Bangor University's School of Biological Sciences, who led the research said:

"There is a current impetus to search for new enzymes to improve biomass conversion processes. Our hypothesis is that, due to the volume of waste materials they hold, landfill sites represent a repository of unexplored biomass-degrading diversity. There is significant potential to identify new enzymes of ecological and biological significance."

Cellulose and lignin occur naturally in plant-based materials and take longer to decompose than other waste products. As a result of this, the majority of landfill waste consists of lignin and cellulose. In their plant form, they can be used as the basis for biofuel production, and identifying more effective enzymes for this process would improve the yield from this source.

Scientists have been searching for a number of years for the most effective enzymes which break down the cellulose and lignin within the residual natural fibres. The obvious place to search has been in the rumen of sheep and cows, who eat grasses, and the guts of also other plant eaters such as elephants and termites.

Surprisingly perhaps, landfill sites share many of the same characteristics as the digestive systems of these animals: they are dark, anoxic or un-oxygenated spaces, with a high content of cellulose. It was therefore to landfill sites, which are artificially created 'systems', that this group of scientists turned to find new plant-degrading enzymes.

Within in the paper, the authors describe how they used the liquid or 'leachate' within landfill sites as a source of microbes to decompose cotton, and analysed not only the families or taxa of bacteria, but also identified which bacteria produce groups of enzymes to degrade cellulose.

Emma Ransom-Jones, a postdoctoral researcher at Bangor University, and lead author of the study said:

"Understanding exactly how the cellulose and lignin decompose, and the sources of the active enzymes in the process will enable us to determine ways to improve the degradation of waste in landfill sites, and potentially use this as a source for biofuel production."

Explore further: Enzyme shows promise for efficiently converting plant biomass to biofuels

More information: Emma Ransom-Jones et al. Lignocellulose-Degrading Microbial Communities in Landfill Sites Represent a Repository of Unexplored Biomass-Degrading Diversity, mSphere (2017). DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00300-17

See more here:
Biotechnology researchers turn to landfill sites - Phys.Org

Posted in Biotechnology | Comments Off on Biotechnology researchers turn to landfill sites – Phys.Org

Life Science and Biotechnology communities head for Aberdeen – Conference News

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:46 am

People Also Read

In September the International Conference on Natural Product Biotechnology (ICNPB)will be held at Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre (AECC) in collaboration with the major International Conference on the Mechanism of Action of Nutraceuticals (ICMAN) and theInternational Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology (IUPHAR) Natural Products Section joint conference.

ICNPB takes place on 25-26 September, before ICMAN-IUPHAR on 27-29 September. These conferences willbring together the life science and biotechnology communities to discuss natural resources, sustainable ingredients and ways of using them to produce nutraceuticals and pharmaceutical ingredients.

Conference director Jim Brown said: We are looking forward to a fantastic week at the AECC, learning about the great science thats going on is this field.Its an area where Scotland hasgreat strengths, with some really innovative businesses drawing on our marine and agri-food resources, coupled with thereal depth of expertise and knowledge embeddedin our research networks.

The conference received a grant from VisitAberdeenshire, which helped secure the conference for the city. Jenni Fraser, business development director of VisitAberdeenshire said: For Aberdeen to have attracted three globally renowned conferences shows real confidence in the region. Hosting association congress like this generates significant income to the area, and the Natural Products Biotechnology conference alone will generate over 200,000 for the local economy through hotel bed nights, restaurants and other visitor attractions. We are looking forward to welcoming the conference and delegates to Aberdeen.

Steven Daun, associations sales manager at AECC commented: We are delighted to be hosting this event in Aberdeen; showcasing the world class research that takes place in the city and the wealth of life science knowledge that we have here in Scotland. With ICNPB being held in conjunction with ICMAN-IUPHAR, delegates can benefit from attending both events with one visit.

Excerpt from:
Life Science and Biotechnology communities head for Aberdeen - Conference News

Posted in Biotechnology | Comments Off on Life Science and Biotechnology communities head for Aberdeen – Conference News

Dutch Biotech could treat Dyslipidemia with Belgian Nanobody – Labiotech.eu (blog)

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:46 am

Argenx partner Staten Biotechnology has published results that present a drug licensed from the Belgian biotech as a promising approach to control blood lipid levels.

Staten Biotechnology is a young biotech in Breda, the Netherlands, focusing on treating dyslipidemia and reduce cardiovascular mortality and backed by BioGeneration Ventures and Forbion Capital Partners as investors. Back in 2015, it signed a deal with Belgian Argenx that resulted in the Dutch biotech exercising the option to license the nanobody ARGX-116 earlier this year.

Today, the company has published preclinical data in Nature Medicine that shows the potential of the drug candidate to treat dyslipidemia through mice experiments. ARGX-116 could bind and reduce the levels ofapoC3, a protein that stimulates the accumulation of lipids and triglycerides in the blood, which has been linked to cardiovascular mortality. The results have encouraged Staten to proceed with the development of the drug candidate, with Argenx entitled to receive royalties on the income it generates.

Image via Victor Josan / Shutterstock

Read the original here:
Dutch Biotech could treat Dyslipidemia with Belgian Nanobody - Labiotech.eu (blog)

Posted in Biotechnology | Comments Off on Dutch Biotech could treat Dyslipidemia with Belgian Nanobody – Labiotech.eu (blog)

Mayo Clinic, University of Minnesota develop ‘robocop’ stem cells to fight cancer – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:45 am

Researchers at the Mayo Clinic and the University of Minnesota say theyre on the brink of a new era in cancer care one in which doctors extract a patients white blood cells, have them genetically engineered in a lab, and put them back to become personalized cancer-fighting machines.

The so-called CAR T cellular therapies are expected to receive federal approval this fall for certain rare blood cancers B-cell forms of lymphoma and leukemia. But scientists at the Minnesota institutions hope thats just the first step that will lead to better treatment of solid tumor cancers as well.

This is really the first approval of a genetically modified product for cancer therapy, said Dr. Jeffrey Miller, deputy director of the Masonic Cancer Center at the University of Minnesota. If the proof of concept works, he said, we might be on the right track to get away from all of that toxic chemotherapy that people hate.

Participating in industry-funded clinical trials, the Minnesota researchers hoped to determine if patients with leukemia or lymphoma would be more likely to survive if their own stem cells were extracted to grow cancer-fighting T-cells that were then infused back into their bodies.

One analysis, involving trials by Kite Pharmaceuticals at Mayo and other institutions, found a sevenfold increase in lymphoma patients whose cancers disappeared when they received CAR T instead of traditional chemo-based treatment.

I often tell patients that T-cells are like super robocops, said Dr. Yi Lin, a Mayo hematologist in Rochester. Were now directing those cells to really target cancer.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is widely expected this fall to approve CAR T products made by Kite and Novartis, which genetically engineer T-cells to target so-called CD19 proteins found on the surface of leukemia and lymphoma cells.

The side effects can be harsh, because the T-cell infusions trigger an immune system response that can produce fever, weakness, racing heart and kidney problems. Short-term memory and cognitive problems also have occurred. Brain swelling led to five deaths of cancer patients who took part in a CAR T trial by Juno Pharmaceuticals. The trial was shut down as a result.

Lin said brain swelling appeared mostly in adults with leukemia. For now, she expects Kites CAR T therapy to be approved for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and the Novartis therapy to be approved for acute lymphoblastic leukemia in children. Federal regulations also might restrict CAR T for patients whose cancers survived traditional treatments.

Current practice to treat these cancers generally involves chemotherapy and radiation. Physicians then transplant stem cells, often from donor bone marrow, to regrow the patients immune systems, which are weakened in the process of treatment.

CAR T differs in that patients will receive infusions of their own T-cells, genetically modified, which their bodies will be less likely to reject.

Its individualized medicine, Lin said.

Im on my way

Before he tried CAR T at Mayo as part of a clinical trial, John Renze of Carroll, Iowa, had received two rounds of chemo, two rounds of radiation, and an experimental drug that did nothing to stop the spread of lymphoma.

After you fail about four times, you start to wonder if anything is going to work, the 58-year-old said.

At first, there was no room for him in the Mayo trial which has been a problem nationwide as desperate cancer patients have searched for treatment alternatives. But then he got the call one morning last summer while ordering coffee at his local cafe.

Can you get up here by one? the Mayo official asked.

Im on my way, Renze replied.

Even before federal approval comes through, researchers such as Miller are looking beyond the first-line CAR T therapies, and wondering if the approach can be used on solid tumors. Roughly 80,000 blood cancers occur each year in the U.S. that could be treated with CAR T, but the total number of cancers diagnosed each year is nearly 1.7 million.

The challenge is that solid tumors dont have the same protein targets as blood cancers. And T-cells would have to be more discriminating if infused to eliminate tumors in solid organs, Miller said. If you destroy normal lung tissue (along with lung cancer), thats not going to work, he said.

Mayo researchers are studying whether CAR T can work against multiple myeloma, a cancer of the bone marrow, while U researchers are exploring ways to better control the CAR T-cells after they are infused in cancer patients.

Researchers also are trying to understand whether CAR T produces memory in the immune system, so it knows to react if cancers resurface.

In addition, Miller is studying whether NK cells, which also play a role in the human immune system, can be genetically modified and infused instead of T-cells to target cancer. The body doesnt reject NK cells from donors as much, he said. So NK cells from donor bone marrow or umbilical cord blood could be collected and mass produced to potentially provide faster and cheaper treatments.

Like many breakthrough therapies, CAR T will be expensive, with a price likely to exceed $200,000 per patient. How insurers plan to cover it remains unclear. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota is evaluating evidence regarding CAR Ts effectiveness, and will set a coverage policy after it receives FDA approval, said Dr. Glenn Pomerantz, Blue Cross chief medical officer.

A surge for Mayo?

Mayo expects a surge of hundreds of cancer patients per year if CAR T is approved, because it will initially be provided by large medical centers that have experience with the therapy and its side effects. The Rochester hospital is planning to add staff and space dedicated to CAR T.

Miller said the U is developing advice for referring doctors and hospitals statewide, so they know what to do if CAR T patients show up with complex symptoms.

They can be a bit delayed and you cant just keep people in the hospital to see if they develop these things, he said.

Renzes stem cells were taken last July, and his modified T-cells were put back a month later. He lost weight and felt sick for weeks, and had to drive three hours to Mayo for frequent checkups.

But as of last Aug. 31, the cancer had vanished.

Every three months, he returns to Mayo to make sure the cancer hasnt re-emerged. Then he returns to Carroll, where he owns farmland and car dealerships and dotes on his grandchildren.

For people like me that have already failed a bunch of times, youre happy to try anything, he said. I mean, what else would I have done?

See the article here:
Mayo Clinic, University of Minnesota develop 'robocop' stem cells to fight cancer - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Posted in Minnesota Stem Cells | Comments Off on Mayo Clinic, University of Minnesota develop ‘robocop’ stem cells to fight cancer – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Cowboy Up Ride Against Cancer – Wahpeton Daily News

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:45 am

Upon arriving in McLeod, North Dakota, Saturday morning it was evident something special was going on.

Horses waited for riders on every street in town. Cowboy hats and horse trailers were everywhere throughout the city as anticipation built for an extraordinary fundraiser to begin.

Riders and horses hit a 12-mile track Saturday, Aug. 19 that was more than a trail ride. Cowboy Up Ride Against Cancer is in its 13th year. Participants paid to join the ride to raise money for cancer research and to help patients at the Roger Maris Cancer Center in Fargo.

To cowboy up means whenthingsgettoughyou have to get back up,dustyourself off and keep trying. Anyone battling cancer knows how this slogan applies to their fight.

The color in this years ride was red, which is the representative color for multiple myeloma cancer. Patty Dick, Engelvale, North Dakota, was the guest speaker for the opening ceremony. She told her cancer story, a battle she will not win. Multiple myeloma has no cure, but each day since her diagnosis gives her children and grandchildren more time to make memories. Multiple myeloma, sometimes called bone marrow cancer, affects plasma cells elevated protein levels in her blood in April 2011 during a routine wellness check. Patty was told there are few reasons for elevated levels the most likely was cancer. More tests continued to show higher protein levels with calcium deposits also showing up. She was told the myeloma cells were crowding out bone cells. A bone marrow biopsy gave doctors a diagnosis, multiple myeloma.

The next few years were a watchful wait, she told the gathered audience at Cowboy Up. In late winter 2014 her cancer had reached a stage where her levels warranted increased care.

Its time we start treatment, her doctor said.

That summer she took four rounds of oral chemotherapy, a pill she took each day for 21 days straight with seven days off. The pill prepared her for a stem cell transplant scheduled for the winter. Doctors harvested her own stem cells and she underwent a transplant in December 2014. She and her husband, Mike, moved to Rochester, Minnesota, for a two-month stay during that time frame. Their five children took turns traveling to Rochester to be with them as she underwent the stem cell transplant. She was told there was danger of infection for those two months and she would need caregivers as she started a clinical trial of high-dose chemotherapy.

Although her story was difficult to tell, Patty shared some positive information. People with cancer are living longer and having greater quality of life during their survivor years, she said.

Im still fighting my battle, Patty said as horses along the streets talked to each other with whinnies and neighs. Higher protein levels showed up again.

In January 2017 she began immunotherapy. The treatments gives her hope, a message that people who battle cancer share. When lives are in danger hope is sometimes all there is.

A second guest speaker was a young boy from St. Joseph, Missouri. Weston Luebke explained how at Christmas he asked Santa for $200 to help breast cancer patients. Santa worked hard and gave him $200 for Christmas, but Weston wanted to do more. He and his family came up with the idea to create cancer bags. He gives these bags to people undergoing breast cancer treatments in St. Joseph, a bag that contains a blanket, peppermint, lotion, hand sanitizer and a game book. The hope is the bags will distract patients as they undergo treatments.

He and his family were increasing their donation circle to include the Roger Maris Cancer Center in Fargo. His mother is from McLeod, so attending the annual ride is part of their August vacation. This year though, Weston brought some cancer bags to give to upper Midwest patients.

At the conclusion of the ceremony, the restless horses took over and the ride officially began.

View post:
Cowboy Up Ride Against Cancer - Wahpeton Daily News

Posted in Minnesota Stem Cells | Comments Off on Cowboy Up Ride Against Cancer – Wahpeton Daily News

Cargill invests in ‘clean meat’ start-up – KARE

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:45 am

Cargill, Inc., announced it has joined billionaires Bill Gates and Sir Richard Branson investing in Memphis Meats, a San Francisco-based start-up making real animal beef, chicken and duck from single cells. http://kare11.tv/2v7WbBh

Christoper Hrapsky, KARE 10:39 PM. CDT August 23, 2017

Cargill, Inc. announced it has joined billionaires Bill Gates and Sir Richard Branson investing in Memphis Meats, a San Francisco-based start-up making real animal beef, chicken and duck from single cells. (Photo: Courtesy Memphis Meats)

MINNETONKA, Minn. - The meat industry is taking a futuristic leap from pasture to Petri dish.

Cargill, Inc., announced it has joined billionaires Bill Gates and Sir Richard Branson investing in Memphis Meats, a San Francisco-based start-up making real animal beef, chicken and duck from single cells.

The new industry, dubbed clean or lab-cultured meat, uses self-reproducing muscle stem cells to make the meat without slaughtering a single animal.

It tasted like duck, said Sonya Mccolum Roberts, president of growth ventures for Cargill Protein, who recently tasted a sample of Memphis Meats' product. We are still all about our traditional proteins, but this is an opportunity for us to provide something additional to customers who want something different.

Memphis Meats has a Minnesota connection. The company was co-founded by former Mayo Clinic cardiologist Dr. Uma Valeti.

He was already growing tissue for his work, and he decided, Well, if I can do it here, why can't I do it in other avenues and specifically food? said Roberts.

Considering the environmental cost of traditional meat farming, the feed cost, the antibiotics, and the finite ability to use more land and water, Cargill sees Memphis Meats as another option for the future of a growing population that will demand more meat.

The first lab-cultured hamburger was created in 2013 by Mark Post, M.D., a Dutch professor who used 20,000 muscle strands grown in his laboratory, according to New Harvest, an industry nonprofit.

The discoveries have led multiple companies to pursue clean meat commercially.

Memphis Meats says it could go to market in four or five years, but costs will need to scale down.

Right now, according to Roberts, one pound of lab-cultured meat costs about $2,400.

2017 KARE-TV

Continued here:
Cargill invests in 'clean meat' start-up - KARE

Posted in Minnesota Stem Cells | Comments Off on Cargill invests in ‘clean meat’ start-up – KARE

CEO says Oklahoma roots strong – Pawhuska Journal Capital

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:44 am

By Nathan Thompson | Journal-Capital

Bartlesville continues to play an integral part in Phillips 66 culture and future, the companys chairman and CEO said Wednesday.

Greg Garland was the featured speaker at a Bartlesville Regional Chamber of Commerce forum held Aug. 16 at City Church in Bartlesville..

Garland has led the Houston-based company for its five years of existence, building on the legacy of Phillips Petroleum Co., founded 100 years ago in Bartlesville.

We want to be a viable, vibrant part of the communities that we live and work, and we encourage employees to give back, Garland said in an interview with the EE following the forum. We dont just want to but money into the community, but we also want to but sweat equity in.

Garland said the 2,100 Phillips 66 employees in Bartlesville are invested in helping kids read and advancing science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) skills because the company is strong believers is those endeavours.

One major contribution that Phillips 66 placed in the Bartlesville community is a 2015 $1.7 million donation to establish STEM education and innovation labs in Bartlesville Public Schools.

One of the things we do is we have corporate initiatives that we support and if you are an employee that wants to help in that initiative, we fully support that, Garland said. We even give paid time throughout the year for our employees to take time away from the office to support these initiatives. Its just incredible how our employees and retirees continue to invest themselves in the community.

Garland said that commitment underscores Phillips 66s value to give back to the community.

Merl Lindstrom, Phillips 66 vice president of technology, joined Garland in showing the support the company has to Bartlesvilles operations. Lindstrom is based at the Phillips 66 Research Center in west Bartlesville.

The company and its partner, Chevron Phillips Chemical, have made millions of dollars in infrastructure and research investments to make sure both CPChem and Phillips 66 are ready for the future.

Our mantra says we will provide energy and improve lives, and that allows us at the Research Center to do a lot of things we havent done in the past, Lindstrom said. We are looking at solar energy, fuel cells and improving lives to allow us to do research on water. Water is one of our biggest research areas. Our work continues in hydrocarbons as well, but we are diversifying to make sure we are looking at things holistically instead of just a very narrow region.

Aug. 1, Phillips 66 reported consolidated second-quarter earnings of $550 million or $1.06 per share, compared to $535 million in the first quarter this year and $496 million in the second quarter of 2016.

Adjusted earnings were $569 million or $1.09 per share this year, compared to $499 million or 94 cents per share in 2016.

Second quarter earnings increased 11 percent year over year, beating analysts expectations.

Even with the financial success of Phillips 66 in refining, transportation and marketing, the company is dealing with energy downturns on the exploration and production side of oil business.

These are margin businesses and it is continually volatile, Garland said. Were not completely immune to the downturn on the exploration and production side of the business. These are great times for us as a midstream and downstream company to think about how we do our work, how we meet the needs of our customers in a more efficient way. We are doing that by using technology and exploring options on how we work. At the end of the day, we are competing in a global marketplace, and Phillips 66 is well-positioned to continue competing in this industry.

Read the rest here:
CEO says Oklahoma roots strong - Pawhuska Journal Capital

Posted in Oklahoma Stem Cells | Comments Off on CEO says Oklahoma roots strong – Pawhuska Journal Capital

Stem Cell Center Of NJ – New Jersey Stem Cell Therapy

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:44 am

Shoulder Pain

Shoulder pain from injuries can either be acute or chronic. Regenerative medicine is an emerging field, which offers a non-surgical option that commonly uses the patients own stem cells, exosomes, and other sources of growth factors to regenerate healthy tissue.

Your back pain has finally caught up with you and youre struggling to reverse the damage. However, regenerative medicine is an emerging field, which offers a non-surgical option that commonly uses the patients own stem cells, exosomes, and other sources of growth factors to regenerate healthy tissue.

If knee pain is derailing your active lifestyle or even your daily activities, then youre not alone. Regenerative medicine is an emerging field, which offers a non-surgical option that commonly uses the patients own stem cells, exosomes, and other sources of growth factors to regenerate healthy tissue.

Pain can strike in a few locations around the hip. Regenerative medicine is an emerging field, which offers a non-surgical option that commonly uses the patients own stem cells, exosomes, and other sources of growth factors to regenerate healthy tissue.

NERVE INJURIES pain doesnt fade, your health care provider may recommend surgery to reverse the damage. However, regenerative medicine is an emerging field, which offers a non-surgical option that commonly uses the patients own stem cells, exosomes, and other sources of growth factors to regenerate healthy tissue.

To understand neuropathy, it helps to understand how the nervous system works. Regenerative medicine is an emerging field, which offers a non-surgical option that commonly uses the patients own stem cells, exosomes, and other sources of growth factors to regenerate healthy tissue.

Erectile Dysfunction (ED) is the inability to achieve or maintain an erection sufficient for satisfactory sexual intercourse. Regenerative medicine is an emerging field, which offers a non-surgical option that commonly uses the patients own stem cells, exosomes, and other sources of growth factors to regenerate healthy tissue.

Original post:
Stem Cell Center Of NJ - New Jersey Stem Cell Therapy

Posted in New Jersey Stem Cells | Comments Off on Stem Cell Center Of NJ – New Jersey Stem Cell Therapy

Celularity, Inc., Accelerates Breakthrough Placental Discovery & Therapeutic Platform – TASS

Posted: August 24, 2017 at 5:44 am

Celularity has been created through the contributions of extensive intellectual property, clinical-stage assets, basic and clinical research, and development expertise including:

Founded on the pioneering work of Robert Hariri, MD, PhD, in human placenta-derived cellular therapeutics and biomaterials, Celularity's ability to procure placental stem cells, engineer potential therapies, and deploy potential treatments, positions it to harness the potential of the human placenta and operate along the entire value chain.

"Celularity was formed as a new biotechnology model designed to apply the necessary expertise to harness our placenta discovery platform across a range of unmet medical needs," said Celularity Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Robert J. Hariri, MD, PhD. "With the support of our investors, we are assembling proven regenerative medicine technology and expertise with the goal of developing transformative therapies for fatal and intractable diseases." Dr. Hariri was previously chairman, chief scientific officer and chief executive officer of Celgene Cellular Therapeutics and founder of Anthrogenesis Corporation, which Celgene acquired in 2002. Dr. Hariri is also the co-founder of Human Longevity, Inc.

The formation of Celularity leverages seminal work in the discovery of novel biologically active cell populations in the human placenta with broad therapeutic potential. Celularity will draw upon these proprietary and scalable discoveries that derive from the post-partum human placenta an ethical and renewable source of usable biomaterials. Celularity's development program is focused on an allogeneic platform, leveraging clinically accessible, immune-tolerant cells and biomaterials from a diverse population of informed-consent donors.

Andrew von Eschenbach, MD, among the founding members of the Celularity Board of Directors and former United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner and Director of the National Cancer Institute said, "The pioneering work of Celularity founder Bob Hariri has unleashed the unique properties of placental derived stem cells which have renewed hope for creating safe and effective therapies for the most challenging degenerative diseases." Dr. von Eschenbach added "Celularity with its focus on accelerating innovation in regenerative medicine can become the leading catalyst for cell therapy to address many of the world's unmet medical needs."

Dr. Henry Ji, President and CEO of Sorrento Therapeutics, said, "We are very excited to participate in the creation of Celularity together with Dr. Hariri and his scientific team as well as global leading biopharmaceutical companies, such as Celgene, Human Longevity Inc., and United Therapeutics. The potential for regenerative therapies in treating a wide array of chronic degenerative conditions is well known. We see important synergies for the oncology field and the potential to enhance our fight against malignant cancers. Celularity's technologies, assets, and resources will help advance selected Sorrento cellular therapy programs and potentially transform autologous cellular therapies into affordable and accessible allogeneic cell therapies."

*Interfyl is a registered trademark of Alliqua BioMedical, Inc.

About Celularity, Inc.Celularity, headquartered in Warren, New Jersey, is a biotechnology company with proprietary, leading-edge technology and Intellectual Property to harness the power of the placenta. Their medicine asset portfolio consists of more than 200 issued or pending patents as well as pre-clinical and clinical assets including CAR constructs for allogeneic CAR-T/NK products, licenses of 100+ immunotherapy assets, and commercial stage biosourcing and functional regeneration businesses. For more information, please visitwww.celularity.com. Follow Celularity on Social Media:@Celularity.

About United TherapeuticsUnited Therapeutics Corporationis a biotechnology company focused on the development and commercialization of innovative products to address the unmet medical needs of patients with chronic and life-threatening conditions.

About Sorrento TherapeuticsSorrento is an antibody-centric, clinical stage biopharmaceutical company developing new treatments for immuno-oncology, inflammation and autoimmune diseases. Sorrento's lead product candidates include immunotherapies focused on the treatment of both solid tumors and hematological malignancies, as well as late stage pain products. For more information, please visithttp://sorrentotherapeutics.com

About Human Longevity, Inc.Human Longevity, Inc. (HLI) is the genomics-based, health intelligence company creating the world's largest and most comprehensive database of whole genome, phenotype and clinical data. HLI is developing and applying large scale computing and machine learning to make novel discoveries to revolutionize health. In addition to the HLIQ Whole Genome and HLIQ Oncology, HLI's business also includes the HLI Health Nucleus, a genomic powered clinical research center which uses whole genome sequence analysis, advanced clinical imaging and innovative machine learning, along with curated personal health information, to deliver the most complete picture of individual health. For more information, please visithttp://www.humanlongevity.comorhttp://www.healthnucleus.com

Media Contacts:CelularityOlivia GoodmanPhone: 212 715-1597olivia.goodman@finnpartners.com

Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.Alexis Nahama, DVMPhone: 858 203-4120anahama@sorrentotherapeutics.com

Read this article:
Celularity, Inc., Accelerates Breakthrough Placental Discovery & Therapeutic Platform - TASS

Posted in New Jersey Stem Cells | Comments Off on Celularity, Inc., Accelerates Breakthrough Placental Discovery & Therapeutic Platform – TASS

Page 1,477«..1020..1,4761,4771,4781,479..1,4901,500..»