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Madhuri Hegde, PhD is Elected to the Board of the ACMG Foundation for Genetic and Genomic Medicine – Markets Insider

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:47 am

BETHESDA, Md., Aug. 4, 2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --Madhuri Hegde, PhD, FACMG of PerkinElmer, Inc. in Waltham, MA has been elected to the ACMG Foundation for Genetic and Genomic Medicine Board of Directors, the supporting educational foundation of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. The ACMG Foundation is a national nonprofit foundation dedicated to facilitating the integration of genetics and genomics into medical practice. The board members are active participants in serving as advocates for the Foundation and for advancing its policies and programs. Dr. Hegde has been elected to a 2-year renewable term starting immediately.

Dr. Hegde joined PerkinElmer in 2016 as Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer, Global Genetics Laboratory Services. She also is an Adjunct Professor of Human Genetics in the Department of Human Genetics at Emory University. Previously, Dr. Hegde was Executive Director and Chief Scientific Officer at Emory Genetics Laboratory in Atlanta, GA and Professor of Human Genetics and Pediatrics at Emory University and Assistant Professor, Department of Human Genetics and Senior Director at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX.

Dr. Hegde has served on a number of Scientific Advisory Boards for patient advocacy groups including Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy, Congenital Muscular Dystrophy and Neuromuscular Disease Foundation. She was a Board member of the Association for Molecular Pathology and received the Outstanding Faculty Award from MD Anderson Cancer Center. She earned her PhD in Applied Biology from the University of Auckland in Auckland, New Zealand and completed her Postdoctoral Fellowship in Molecular Genetics at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX. She also holds a Master of Science in Microbiology from the University of Mumbai in India. She has authored more than 100 peer-reviewed publications and has given more than 100 keynote and invited presentations at major national and internal conferences.

"We are delighted that Dr. Hegde has been elected to the ACMG Foundation Board of Directors. She has vast experience in genetic and genomic testing and is a longtime member of the College and supporter of both the College and the Foundation," said Bruce R. Korf, MD, PhD, FACMG, president of the ACMG Foundation.

The complete list of the ACMG Foundation board of directors is at http://www.acmgfoundation.org.

About the ACMG Foundation for Genetic and Genomic Medicine

The ACMG Foundation for Genetic and Genomic Medicine, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, is a community of supporters and contributors who understand the importance of medical genetics and genomics in healthcare. Established in 1992, the ACMG Foundation for Genetic and Genomic Medicine supports the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics' mission to "translate genes into health" by raising funds to help train the next generation of medical geneticists, to sponsor the development of practice guidelines, to promote information about medical genetics, and much more.

To learn more about the important mission and projects of the ACMG Foundation for Genetic and Genomic Medicine and how you too can support the work of the Foundation, please visit http://www.acmgfoundation.org or contact us at rel="nofollow">acmgf@acmgfoundation.org or 301-718-2014.

Contact Kathy Beal, MBA ACMG Media Relations, rel="nofollow">kbeal@acmg.net

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SOURCE American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics

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Irvine-based CombiMatrix in $33 million merger deal with Bay Area genetics firm – OCRegister

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:47 am

A medical technologist at CombiMatrix examines live tissue looking for fetal cells to analyze. (File Photo)

From left, medical technologists Lilybeth Wilkens, Meg Purayil, and Catherine Marte work on live samples of tissue at CombiMatrix, a genetic testing lab in Irvine. (File Photo)

Catherine Marte works on live samples of tissue at CombiMatrix, a genetic testing lab in Irvine. (File Photo)

Chief Executive Mark McDonough stands in the lobby of his company, CombiMatrix Corp., in Irvine. The company hopes its testing method will be used to analyze cases of women whove had multiple miscarriages. (File Photo)

Irvine-based CombiMatrix Corp. has agreed to be acquired in an all-stock merger by San Francisco-based Invitae Corp. for $33 million.

The deal between two genetic biotech firms is subject to approval by CombiMatrixs stockholders and regulatory agencies.

CombiMatrix is a molecular diagnostics company that studies theremains of lost pregnancies, extracting DNA that is analyzed to uncover genetic abnormalities that can help explain why the women who gave the samples have had multiple miscarriages. It also does pre-implantation genetic diagnostics and screening, prenatal diagnosis andDNA-based testing forgenetic abnormalities.

In 2014, the companys chief executive, a former Navy navigator, told the Register the companys methods would soon become the standards for analyzing pregnancy loss and prenatal testing.

Merging with Invitae, which also specializes in genetic material and hereditary disorders, should expand the scope of CombiMatrixs reach.

By coming together with Invitae, we believe we can synergistically combine their scale, technology and expertise with the CombiMatrix product offering, human capital and sales channels to achieve even greater success in the future for the company and our shareholders, Mark McDonough, president and chief executive officer of CombiMatrix, said in a statement.

CombiMatrix will be a wholly-owned subsidiary of Invitae, according to documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The company declined to provide any information not found in SEC documents, such as potential job impacts or executive changes.

For many people, preparing to have a child is their introduction to the power of genetics to inform health decisions, Sean George, chief executive officer of Invitae, said in a statement. The combination of Invitae and CombiMatrix will expand our ability to provide actionable answers to the complex questions that can arise when starting a family.

Testing has become more common as women have babies later in life. In 2016, theaverage age when women have their first child was 28. In 1970, it was 24.6, according to the CDC.

McDonough, in 2014, said he saw a market of up to $200 million a year for so called microarray prenatal testing and a$330 million marketfor recurrent pregnancy loss.

CombiMatrixspun off of Newport Beach-basedAcacia Research Corp. in 2007. It got its start supplyinglaboratories conducting microarray tests with biotech tools before founding a genetic testing lab.

In 2010, it moved to Irvine from Seattle.

Invitaeon Monday said it is also acquiring Cambridge, Mass.-based Good Start Genetics, another pregnancy-related molecular diagnostics company that specializes in preimplantation and carrier screening.

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First of 10 expected BJC Investigators named – Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:47 am

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Helen McNeills work in developmental biology spans birth defects to cancer

Helen McNeill, PhD, has been named a BJC Investigator at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. She is the first researcher named as part of the new BJC Investigators Program.

Helen McNeill, PhD, has been named a BJC Investigator at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. She is the first researcher named as part of the new BJC Investigators Program, which aims to recruit scientists who bring innovative approaches to major biological quandaries and whose discoveries stand to inform new ways of understanding disease and developing treatments.

McNeill, the first of 10 expected BJC Investigators, is currently a professor in the Institute of Medical Science and the Department of Molecular Genetics, both at the University of Toronto. She is also a senior investigator at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, part of the Sinai Health System in Toronto. Her appointment as a BJC Investigator and a professor of developmental biology at Washington University begins Jan. 1, 2018.

We are excited to begin the BJC Investigators Program with the appointment of Dr. Helen McNeill, an international leader in the field of developmental biology, said David H. Perlmutter, MD, executive vice chancellor for medical affairs and dean of the School of Medicine. We sought candidates who had already indelibly changed their fields, whose discoveries will result in new and fundamental shifts in scientific thinking and whose laboratories will become a nidus for additional innovative work across Washington University. Helens scientific accomplishments, her high standards of excellence and ability to collaborate across disciplines make her a perfect fit.

The program is designed to specifically focus on basic science and is inspired by the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes philosophy of investing in people with exceptional creative talent. It plans to bring 10 renowned researchers to Washington University School of Medicine and the life sciences ecosystem of St. Louis.

We are very excited about the BJC Investigators Program at Washington University School of Medicine, said Steven H. Lipstein, CEO of BJC HealthCare. This program represents another joint effort between BJC and Washington University to help keep the schools biomedical research at the forefront of discovery. Pioneering research here in St. Louis offers our best hope for finding solutions to societys greatest medical challenges.

McNeills work is focused on understanding the processes that govern how cells make contact and work together to form the broader architecture of whole tissues, both during development and adulthood. Her work spanning studies of fruit flies, mice and human genetic data has relevance for understanding birth defects, cancer and diseases of specific organs, such as the kidney and lungs.

McNeill earned a bachelors degree in biology from the Ramapo College of New Jersey in 1985, followed by a doctorate in molecular and cellular physiology from Stanford University in 1993. She continued research at Stanford with a postdoctoral fellowship in fruit fly genetics. McNeill later led the Developmental Patterning Laboratory at the London Research Institute, a part of the Imperial Cancer Research Fund of the United Kingdom. She joined the faculty of the University of Toronto in 2005, where she has directed the Collaborative Program in Developmental Biology and earned numerous recognitions for her research, including the Petro-Canada Young Innovator Award and the Lloyd S.D. Fogler, QC, Award of Excellence for her research in cancer biology. Last year, she was awarded a Canada Tier 1 Research Chair, a position in which a scientist is recognized by peers as a world leader in his or her field.

I am delighted that Dr. McNeill will be joining us at Washington University, said Lilianna Solnica-Krezel, PhD, the Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff Professor of Developmental Biology and head of the Department of Developmental Biology. She is a leader in the field and among the most original and creative investigators of pathways that are vital for the regulation of tissue structure and growth. The pathways she studies are among the least understood cellular pathways, with implications for a variety of birth defects and other diseases, including cancer.

Specifically, McNeill studies molecules that govern how cells make contact and communicate with one another. Called giant cadherins for their large size, these molecules play important roles in controlling the size of organs and in orchestrating how cells assemble themselves into complex tissues at precise times and with specific patterns and orientations. Her work also has implicated these molecules in cellular metabolism and the function of mitochondria, molecular powerhouses that manufacture a cells fuel supply. According to McNeills research, disruption of the giant cadherins can interfere with early embryonic development leading to, for example, neural tube defects that cause spina bifida or defects in the development of the kidney and urinary tract. Her work has identified cadherins as a culprit in congenital kidney diseases such as cystic kidney disease.

I am excited and honored to be joining Washington University School of Medicine as a BJC Investigator, McNeill said. Supporting research in the basic sciences is so important in making new discoveries and pushing the boundaries of what is known about human health and development. I thank the School of Medicine and BJC HealthCare for their commitment to supporting basic biomedical science in my own lab and in the labs of my fellow investigators.

Washington University School of Medicines 2,100 employed and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient-care institutions in the nation, currently ranked seventh in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

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R3 Stem Cell Achieves Certification by the Better Business Bureau – PR Web (press release)

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:46 am

Top Amniotic Stem Cell Therapy Nationwide (844) GET-STEM

Scottsdale, Arizona (PRWEB) August 07, 2017

After five years of offering top stem cell therapy treatments nationwide to thousands of patients, R3 Stem Cell has achieved Better Business Bureau accreditation. The company places immense quality assurance on patient satisfaction along with the quality of service, which has contributed to the BBB accreditation.

R3 Stem Cell's regenerative procedures have been used for all types of patient conditions such as degenerative arthritis, sports injuries, wound healing, tendonitis, systemic conditions and cosmetic procedures. Patients receive benefits the vast majority of the time, and no adverse events have been reported in thousands of cases.

Said CEO David Greene, "We put immense quality assurance on our amniotic stem cell products and the patient experience. Everything revolves around patient safety, quality service, first rate outcomes and satisfaction!"

The amniotic stem cell products utilized at R3 Stem Cell Centers of Excellence have no ethical issues. The products are obtained after scheduled c-sections by consenting donors and no embryonic cells are involved. R3 is now offering on demand webinars for prospective patients on its website along with having over 35 videos for education.

For top stem cell therapy nationwide, call R3 Stem Cell at (844) GET-STEM today!

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GUEST APPEARANCE: Using modern biotechnology to manage insect pests – Finger Lakes Times

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:46 am

Advances in modern biotechnology have helped generate techniques for curing diseases and improving lives. These same advances are leading to new tools to manage insect pests in a more effective and environmentally friendly manner.

The tiny diamondback moth is one of the worlds worst agricultural pests. This destructive insect is not native to New York state and is a major problem for farmers here, ravaging plants of the brassica family such as economically important vegetables like cabbage, broccoli, kale and cauliflower. The caterpillars chew on leaves and can kill young plants or make the vegetables unmarketable. The global damages caused by the diamondback moth are estimated to cost up to $5 billion each year.

To battle these invaders, farmers typically use insecticides, which prompts concern about worker safety, environmental impact and potentially harmful effects on important pollinators, like honeybees.

As scientists, we seek more effective alternatives.

For more than 150 years, Cornells College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) has worked on behalf of the people of New York state to use purpose-driven science to tackle these challenges by developing and evaluating emerging technologies. One emerging, insecticide-free technology we are evaluating is a pest control method developed by scientists at a British company called Oxitec.

The concept behind this strategy is to leverage the natural mating instincts of male insects to reduce the pest populations. Similar strategies have been used since the 1950s and were endorsed in Rachel Carsons 1962 book Silent Spring that launched the modern environmental movement. Oxitecs current technology uses the same concept but refines it with the tools of modern biotechnology. In the case of the diamondback moth, Oxitecs genetically engineered males mate with wild females who then lay eggs on the crops, but the emerging female larvae do not survive to adulthood and therefore are unable to reproduce. Thus, the pest population declines without the use of insecticides.

More research is needed for this particular tool and others that are under development that hold promise for more sustainable and environmentally friendly pest management. Entomologists at Cornell have the level of expertise in insect biology and pest management needed to develop and independently evaluate the technology.

Research conducted in our greenhouses and outdoor cages in 2015 provided evidence for the effectiveness of this bio-based technology against the diamondback moth and justifies additional research. Outdoor cages, although providing useful information about insect behavior, do not provide the real-world environment needed to fully assess the technology.

Research is now needed in an open field setting that replicates the actual environment where farmers battle the insects. As such, the next step in the research cycle is an experimental release of the moths in a remote cabbage field at the Geneva campus this summer. Specifically, we need to know how these insects are going to move, how well they will survive, and how effectively they will mate with females, which are important measurements that demonstrate how well they will be able to reduce a pest population in future.

The moths have been genetically engineered and, based on evidence collected and a thorough evaluation by independent experts, there is no indication that these modifications pose a risk to humans or other animals, even if somehow ingested.

We have already examined the question of whether the moths will fly away from the research field. Weve created an isolated habitat for the test insects with plenty of cabbage, a food they love and do not abandon when its plentiful. Furthermore, this insect is short-lived and cannot survive Upstate New York winters.

To provide proper oversight, Cornell applied for a permit from the U.S. Department of Agriculture before proceeding with the trials a process that required an Environmental Assessment and a 30-day public comment period before the permit was finally approved. The USDA reviewed potential risks of the field trials and found that this project will have no significant impact to human health or to the environment. Approvals from Cornells Institutional Biosafety Committee and CALS leadership were also required to proceed.

This research opens new doors for the future of farming with pest control methods that are non-toxic and pesticide-free. Entomologists at Cornell and other institutions believe that this science has great potential to effectively manage invasive pest populations, even beyond the diamondback moth, in an environmentally friendly way.

We invite all members of the local community to learn more about this project at a public forum hosted by Cornell University. Join us at 7 p.m. on Wednesday at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Stations Jordan Hall Auditorium, 630 West North St., Geneva. For more information and to submit your questions or comments in advance of the public forum, please visit http://shelton.entomology.cornell.edu/.

Jan Nyrop is professor of entomology and interim director at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva. Tony Shelton is professor of entomology with expertise in the diamondback moth and insect pest management who has dedicated his 38-year career at Cornell University to finding solutions to this persistent pest, and other pests, faced by farmers in New York and around the world.

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Inauguration of National Agri-Food Biotechnology Institute Center of Innovative and Applied Bioprocessing (NABI-CIAB … – Business Standard

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:46 am

Dr. Harsh Vardhan, Union Minister for Science & Technology & Earth Sciences, Environment, Forest & Climate Change inaugurated the new Administrative and Research Buildings of two national institutes under the administrative control of Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India namely National Agri-Food Biotechnology Institute (NABI) and Center of Innovative and Applied Bioprocessing (CIAB) in Sector 81, Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar (Mohali), Punjab today. Dr. K. Vijay Raghavan, Secretary, DBT, Prof. Arun Kumar Grover, Vice Chancellor, Panjab University, Chandigarh, Dr. T.R. Sharma, Executive Director, NABI, Dr. Rajender Singh Sangwan, Chief Executive Officer, CIAB and other dignitaries were also present on the occasion.

Dr. Harsh Vardhan, Union Minister expressed his pleasure in dedicating both the institutes to the nation, and emphasized the need for quality research work and output with optimal utilization of state-of-art equipment and infrastructure that can reach common man in a form that can be easily perceived in proper perspective. He encouraged scientists/students to exploit the biotechnological tools to address the problems related to quality of food and malnutrition with full enthusiasm and zeal getting inspiration from the legacy and contributions of champions in the field of science and technology. He urged both the institutes to address the problems of hunger & malnutrition and to bring nutritional revolution in the country through biotechnology research and innovation for Food and Nutrition Security. Dr. Harsh Vardhan also said that young researchers and students should aim big and work hard to achieve their goals with sustained efforts.

Interacting with the faculty, Dr. Harsh Vardhan emphasized the need for doing new innovations that have an immediate societal impact with the common man as the target. He counseled researchers to shift from routine to out of the box thinking and to dream big to translate their efforts to greater innovations. He also said there should be a method for scientists to work to set timeframes to achieve their targets.

NABI is the first Agri-Food and Nutritional based Biotechnology Institute, which has been set up by the Dept. of Biotechnology in the Knowledge City, Sector 81, Mohali. CIAB has been set up adjacent to NABI and is the first institute dedicated to generation of secondary agriculture bioproducts through value addition to unutilized and underutilized biomass. Both the institutes area part of agri-food cluster in the Knowledge City, Mohali along with its neighboring institutes, like; IISER, ISB, INST and Biotech Park. The campus comprises of laboratory buildings, 15 acres of land for field experiments, a large glass house, transgenic net houses, office area, housing, guest house, research scholar hostel, utilities and other requisite services. Total entire area of the campus is 50 acres. The building complex of CIAB has a total floor space of 77000 square feet built at a cost of Rs Forty three crores whereas NABI has a total floor space of 3,17,500 square feet built at a cost of Rs one hundred and thirty five crores.

The institutes apart from providing quality research in the field of agricultural biotechnology and bio processing also provide innovative technologies in the field of food processing.. Under reach to community program NABI is playing an important role in conducting motivational course to the students of local schools to increase their awareness in life sciences. Their products of nutritionally rich crops and processing of crop residues in useful products will be provided to the local farming communities to increase their income.The industry ready specialized products like high anthocyanin have already been taken by local industries under specific MOU. They are acting as nodal agencies for local organization in the areas Agri food and nutritional biotechnolgy.

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Rare leukemia targeted by modifying patients’ immune cells – New Haven Register

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:45 am

Photo: Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticut Media

Dr. Steven Gore at the Advanced Cell Therapy Lab at Smilow Cancer Hospital in New Haven, where cells are manufactured that fight a rare form of leukemia.

Dr. Steven Gore at the Advanced Cell Therapy Lab at Smilow Cancer Hospital in New Haven, where cells are manufactured that fight a rare form of leukemia.

Rare leukemia targeted by modifying patients immune cells

NEW HAVEN >> Young patients with a particular type of leukemia who have relapsed after going into remission may find new hope through a treatment that involves modifying a patients own T cells, an important part of the immune system, to destroy cancer cells.

While the therapy, in which genes are inserted into a patients T cells, is expected to receive Food and Drug Administration approval soon for pediatric patients, researchers hope that it will be effective for adult patients as well and for more types of cancers, according to Dr. Steven Gore, director of hematologic malignancies at the Yale Cancer Center.

The cancer thats the focus of this T cell therapy is B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia, which is the most common leukemia in kids and its commonly cured in the 2- to 10-year-old age group, Gore said. He said about 70 percent of children with the cancer are cured.

However, the rest suffer a recurrence of the disease even after treatment with chemotherapy and stem cell transplants.

Its getting to be a difficult situation, Gore said.

There are 3,100 cases of children with B-lineage ALL each year, he said.

B cells, also known as B lymphocytes, are white blood cells that produce antibodies, which fight infection. A characteristic of B cells is that they have a protein on their surface called CD19, which is the key to the new treatment.

The new process, marketed by Novartis and first developed at the University of Pennsylvania, involves harvesting T cells from the patient. Novartis then introduces DNA into these T cells, introducing new genes into the T cells, [which] include a receptor that will recognize CD19, Gore said. The genes that are fused into the T cells are manufactured in the lab but are copies of normal human genes, Gore said. The new cell is called a chimeric antigen receptor T cell, or CAR-T cell.

Normal T cells fight disease, and we know that T cells can attack cancer cells as well, but getting them to do so in the host where the cancer has developed is tricky, Gore said. Cancer cells are very similar [to] normal cells from which they derive.

Turning the T cells into CAR-T cells helps by targeting the CD19 marker on the B cells. CD19 happens to be a pretty good target for cancer technology because its only on B cells, Gore said. These new CAR-T cells latch onto the leukemia cells.

Reproducing cells

Then, once they see that theyre needed, the CAR-T cells are going to make more of themselves. Theyre going to make a whole army-full beside what we gave the patient, Gore said. Other genes in the introduced DNA give the immune system the go-ahead to kill these leukemia cells.

The CAR-T cells target both healthy and malignant B cells, but people live all the time without B cells, Gore said, by relying on drugs such as rituximab.

The treatment is not easy on the patient, however. When this massive influx of these new T cells attack all these leukemia cells, youre basically setting up a jihad in your body, Gore said. People can get very critically ill after this therapy, even needing to be treated in the intensive care unit.

Despite the hardship, the FDAs Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee voted 10-0 on July 12 to recommend approval of CAR-T therapy, and it is very rare that an ODAC approval does not end up in an FDA approval, Gore said.

In one trial, 41 of 50 patients with relapsed or refractory B-lineage ALL each achieved complete remission after three months, Gore said, and 60 percent of those patients were still in remission six months later.

It will be rapidly opened up to adults as well, theres no question about it, he said. Some people think this therapy may replace stem cell therapy and doctors hope it can be given before a patient relapses, avoiding stem cell transplants.

We dont have long-term follow-up to know if these patients are cured, Gore said. Theyve certainly been rescued from otherwise-certain death.

Gore said the Yale School of Medicine has been approached by Novartis to be one of the rollout sites for this therapy.

While the new treatment targets a relatively rare cancer, its likely to be effective in other cancers involving B cells, including other types of leukemia and lymphoma, Gore said. (Not all lymphomas and leukemias are B cell cancers, however.) This rare leukemia has been the subject of all this investigation because CD19 is such a low-hanging fruit, because we can live without B cells, he said.

But the technology can theoretically be adapted to any kind of tumor, he said. Theoretically, you could make a CAR-T to target any particular kind of cancer provided that that cancer expresses certain proteins that are predominantly limited to the cancer and not important vital organs.

Call Ed Stannard at 203-680-9382.

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Campus achievement – Sunbury Daily Item

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:45 am

n BELMONT UNIVERSITY

TRAVELS ABROAD

Hannah Koss, ofLewisburg, traveled to Spain this summer as part of Belmont Universitys largest group of student travelers in university history. With more than 650 students participating in 34 programs, including Maymester trips, students will spend time in Greece, Brazil, England, France, Switzerland and Haiti, among many other locations.

n GETTYSBURG COLLEGE

SPRING DEANS LIST

Logan Aikey, ofLewisburg;Caitlin Apple, ofLewisburg;Nicole Bhangdia, of Lewisburg;Daniella Snyder,ofNorthumberland

GRADUATE

Caitlin Apple, of Lewisburg, earned a degree in health sciences.

n INDIANA UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

SPRING DEANS LIST

Brandon Michael Cox, of Elysburg; Aaron J. Crawford, of Elysburg; Abby Nicole Menefee,of Elysburg;Frank Austin Manzano, of Milton; Nicole Elizabeth Shoop,of Milton;Marisa Ann Montgomery, of Mount Carmel;Leah M. Gardner, of Northumberland;Erin L. Moser, of Paxinos; Brett William Rebuck,of Paxinos;Bridgette Anne Hine, of Shamokin; Maggie Florence Kushner,of Shamokin;Alexandria Paige Seidel,of Turbotville;Elaina Katherine Bower, of Watsontown;Makayla Lyn Finan, of Watsontown; Christopher Hayes Schaeffer, of Watsontown

n ITHACA COLLEGE

SPRING DEANS LIST

Kelly Csernica, of Lewisburg;Abigail Wolfe, of Selinsgrove

n PENNSYLVANIA COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY

MEDICAL TEAM

A large group of Pennsylvania College of Technology students is set to join the medical team at the 2017 Little League Baseball World Series in South Williamsport this August.

The students are pursuing careers as physician assistants and paramedics. During the 11-day tournament, they will serve both participants and spectators of the series, which draws 16 teams from around the world, and tens of thousands of fans each day.

Areaphysician assistant student volunteers: Michelle D. Detwiler, of Milton; Catherine A. Fisher, of Elysburg; Montanah R. James, of Danville; James T. Kane II, of Danville; Danielle M. Klock, of Sunbury; Kaitlyn R. McCaffery, of New Columbia; Jonathan E. Mitchell, of Middleburg; Kurstyn T. Pfleegor, of Northumberland; Angela R. Vought, of Elysburg

Area emergency medical services and paramedic technician student volunteers: Matthew S. Walter, of Mifflinburg; Sarah A. Zimmerman, of Turbotville

n SUSQUEHANNA UNIVERSITY

INTERN

Marissa Heddings, of Selinsgrove,recently served an internship at Heddings Insurance.

Heddingss responsibilities included using the agencys software anddatabase to calculate data and information for clients. Through the courseof the internship, she gained experience learning insurance policies andgaining experience interacting with customers.

Heddings is a finance major. A 2014 graduate ofSelinsgrove Area High School, she is the daughter of Clair and LoriHeddings.

Nicole Krebs, of Selinsgrove, is serving an internship this summer at Evangelical Community Hospital.

Krebss responsibilities include job shadowing nine different departments at the hospital. Through the course of the internship, she will gain experience gaining learning experience from being exposed to work in the medical field close-up.

Krebs is a neuroscience major. A 2015 graduate of Selinsgrove Area High School, she is the daughter of Mark Krebs and Yvonne Krebs.

INDUCTED

Local residents were among the 20 studentswho were recently inducted into the Kappa Delta Pi honor society atSusquehanna University.

Kappa Delta Pi is an honor society for educators and future educators. Thepurpose of the society is to promote excellence in and recognize outstandingcontributions to education.

Kelsey Kline, of Selinsgrove, is an early childhood education major. A 2012 graduate of Selinsgrove Area HighSchool, she is the daughter of Mark and Melissa Kline.

Brynn Musser, of Selinsgrove, is an early childhood education and psychologymajor. A 2012 graduate of SelinsgroveArea High School, she is the daughter of Todd and Pam Musser.

Jessica Portzline, of Mount Pleasant Mills, is a music education major. A 2014 graduate of Midd-West High School, sheis the daughter of Melissa Portzline.

Jenna Yarger, of Middleburg, is a biochemistry major. A 2014 graduate of Midd-West High School, she is the daughterof Rodney Yarger and Paula Schick.

Thirty-seven students were inducted into theOmicron Delta Kappa leadership honor society at Susquehanna University.

Omicron Delta Kappa, a national leadership honorary organization, recognizesjuniors and seniors who have achieved in and out of the classroom.

Brandy Shrawder, of Mifflinburg, is a biology and French major. A 2014 graduate of Mifflinburg Area High School, she is thedaughter of Ralph and Vickie Shrawder.

Julie Lentz, of Lewisburg, is a communications-digitalmultimedia-broadcasting major. A 2014 graduate ofLewisburg Area High School, she is the daughter of Ronald Lentz Jr. and LoriMoyer.

Ryan Keller, of Turbotville, was inducted into Kappa Mu Epsilon mathematics honor society at Susquehanna University

Kappa Mu Epsilon chapters are located in colleges and universities of recognized standing which offer a strong mathematics major. Members are selected from students of mathematics and other closely related fields who have maintained standards of scholarship, have professional merit and have attained academic distinction. The Susquehanna chapter was chartered in 1969.

Keller is a computer science major. A 2015 graduate of Warrior Run High School, he is the son of Mark and Jode Keller.

Vanessa Lloyd, of Lewisburg, was inducted into Sigma Alpha Iota music fraternity at Susquehanna University.

Sigma Alpha Iota (SAI) is a music fraternity for women that strives to promote the development and growth of music across campus and even across the world. The sisters of SAI serve as volunteer ushers for various events sponsored by Susquehanna Universitys Department of Music. The organizations projects and events are all music-oriented and have included fundraisers for VH1s Save the Music organization. Chapter membership is open to students of all majors.

Lloyd is a music education-instrumental major. A 2016 graduate of Mifflinburg Area High School, she is the daughter of Shawn and Susan Lloyd.

RESEARCH

Several local students are spending thesummer conducting research with faculty at Susquehanna University.Susquehannas distinctive Summer Research Partners program is a uniqueopportunity for students to actively participate in a research project on afull-time basis. Faculty members serve as mentors to the students, workingone-on-one or in small groups, creating a lively, engaged community oflearners at the university. Since the program began in 1996, more than 100students have taken part in such projects as identifying bacteria at thesite of the Centralia mine fire; studying the behavior of wolf spiders; andmonitoring local waterways, including the nearby Susquehanna River.

Andrew Steely, of Catawissa, is conducting research under the supervision ofAssistant Professor of Physics Carl Faust, concerning atomic molecular andoptical (AMO) physics. Steely is a physics and chemistry major. A 2014 graduate of Southern Columbia Area High School, he is theson of Jay and Anita Steely.

Hannah Sage, of Catawissa, is conducting research under the supervision ofAssistant Professor of Physics Massooma Pirbhai, concerning nanotubes. Sageis a mathematics and physics major. A 2016 graduate ofSouthern Columbia Area High School, she is the daughter of Leigh Geary andTom Sage.

Julia Spear, of Milton, is conducting research under the supervision ofAssistant Professor of Biology Pavithra Vivekanand, concerning thedifferentiation of midline somatic follicle cells and follicle stem cellrenewal. Spear is a biology- secondary education major.A 2014 graduate of Milton Area High School, she is the daughter of James andDonna Spear.

Brandy Shrawder, of Mifflinburg, is conducting research under thesupervision of Assistant Professor of Biology Pavithra Vivekanand,concerning the differentiation of midline somatic follicle cells andfollicle stem cell renewal. Shrawder is a biology and French major. A 2014 graduate of Mifflinburg Area High School, she is thedaughter of Ralph and Vickie Shrawder.

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Campus achievement - Sunbury Daily Item

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Scientists edit disease-causing gene mutation in human embryos – NBC Montana

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:45 am

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(CNN) - Scientists are getting one step closer to snipping inherited genetic diseases out of human offspring using a gene-editing technique called CRISPR.

For the first time, scientists said, they corrected a gene mutation linked to inherited heart conditions in human embryos using the approach. A study demonstrating the technique was published in the journal Nature on Wednesday (PDF).

Last week, the MIT Technology Review released the first news of this scientific feat, describing the research as the first-known attempt at creating genetically modified human embryos in the United States.

However, Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, a co-author of the study, described it as the first in the world to demonstrate gene-editing to be safe, accurate and efficient in correcting a pathogenic gene mutation in human embryos. Previous attempts by Chinese researchers were unsuccessful at achieving this without safety concerns.

"This is the first that has been demonstrated as safe and working," said Belmonte, a professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies' gene expression laboratory in La Jolla, California.

"All cells of the embryo were corrected," he said. "It seems to be working from these samples that we have chosen, but we need to do much more basic research with many other genes."

The study was a collaboration between the Salk Institute, the Oregon Health & Science University in Portland and Korea's Institute for Basic Science.

Scientists estimate that more than 10,000 human diseases may result from mutations to a single gene occurring in all cells of the body, according to the World Health Organization.

The study used 75 human zygotes in which the father carried a mutation on the MYBPC3 gene, Belmonte said. The eggs used to produce the zygotes did not carry that gene mutation. The researchers noted that they received informed consent from the donors of the eggs, sperm and embryos used in the study.

The goal was to correct a type of inherited heart condition. A mutation called MYBPC3 is associated with inherited heart conditions, including left ventricular noncompaction, familial dilated cardiomyopathy and familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, which affects an estimated one in 500 people worldwide.

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy also is thought to be the most common inherited or genetic heart disease in the US, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In a lab dish, the researchers used CRISPR, a gene-editing technique, to remove the harmful MYBPC3 mutation from the human zygotes. Then, the zygotes' own DNA-repair mechanism replaced what was cut out with a copy of a MYBPC3 gene from the mother, which did not carry a mutation, Belmonte said.

"A male research subject known to be heterozygous for this gene mutation was recruited for the study, as were several healthy young egg donors," Dr. Paula Amato, an obstetrician-gynecologist at Oregon Health & Science University, said Tuesday. She was a co-author of the study.

"CRISPR was introduced at the time of sperm injection," she said. "Then, DNA repair of the embryos was assessed."

The researchers found that about 72% of zygotes were properly and safely corrected on the MYBPC3 gene, Belmonte said.

This method significantly differed from studies in which scientists used the CRISPR tool to manually replace what was cut out with whatever the scientists desired.

Researchers in China were the first to reveal attempts to modify genes in human embryos using CRISPR. Three separate studies were published in scientific journals describing Chinese experiments on gene editing in human embryos.

"The previous human studies done in China had very small numbers, and one of them used abnormal embryos," Amato said. "So we think this is the first, largest study from which you could draw some reasonable conclusions."

Some gene-editing attempts in human embryos have been problematic, resulting in an issue called mosaicism, in which the corrections made in one gene failed to replicate once that cell divided into two cells, those two cells divided into four cells and so on.

"So when the baby is born, all the cells do not have the mutation anymore. ... This study, it shows that we can correct the embryo and then, after the division, all the cells are corrected, so there's not what we call mosaicism," said Belmonte, who is also a member of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine's committee on human gene editing.

This year, the academies published a report on human genome editing that addressed potential applications of the technology, including the possible prevention or treatment of inherited diseases or conditions.

Though the researchers have expressed enthusiasm around their new study, they also noted that the findings must be replicated in followup research before this gene-editing approach can move forward to clinical trials.

"The fact that it is, apparently, a new and poorly understood mechanism and it is not the now standard CRISPR 'cut and replace' method adds to the time needed for research into its safety and effectiveness," said Hank Greely, professor of law and genetics at Stanford University, who was not involved in the new study.

Yet future research can come with some political challenges, Amato said.

"First of all, there are regulations regarding use of federal funds for embryo research, so the (US National Institutes of Health) does not currently support embryo research, so that's one barrier. The other barrier is, the (US Food and Drug Administration) is prohibited from considering any clinical trials related to germline genetic modification," she said.

In this new study the embryos were only allowed to mature to day three after fertilization before they were disaggregated, or isolated into various components, for further analysis.

In the far-off future, a clinical trial could include transplanting corrected embryos into a uterus with the goal of establishing pregnancy and then monitoring the embryos as they develop into children.

Still, "it is way too early to contemplate implanting the edited embryos for the purpose of actually establishing a pregnancy," said Dana Carroll, a professor of biochemistry at the University of Utah who was not involved in the new study but has used CRISPR in his own research.

"The genome editing tools are currently not sufficiently efficient and specific to be reliable, and regulatory and oversight processes have not been established," Carroll said, adding that the work on the new study was "well-done" and "well-presented."

"The authors have made an important discovery regarding the repair of CRISPR-induced DNA breaks in human eggs just at the time of fertilization," he said.

"This information will help to guide ongoing research, and it demonstrates that research on early-stage human embryos will be necessary to establish safe and effective procedures in the long run," he said. "There is still a lot of work to do to understand repair processes in very early embryos and to optimize the use of the CRISPR reagents, but this study makes a valuable contribution."

Some CRISPR critics have argued that gene editing may give way to eugenics and to allowing embryos to be edited with certain features in order to develop so-called designer babies.

However, the researchers wrote in their study that they hope CRISPR could be considered as an alternative option to preimplantation genetic diagnosis, also known as PGD, for couples at risk of passing on an inherited disease.

PGD, developed about a quarter-century ago, is a genetic testing procedure typically conducted after in vitro fertilization to diagnose a genetic disease or condition in an embryo before it is implanted.

Since the human genome contains two copies of each gene -- paternal and maternal alleles, or variant forms of genes -- a mutation affecting only one allele is called heterozygous.

When only one parent carries a heterozygous mutation on a gene, about half of the embryos from that parent should be mutation-free while the others would have the mutation. Selectively, the parents' doctor would chose the healthy embryos to be implanted and discard the embryos with the mutations, Belmonte said.

Sometimes, "a couple that wants to have a baby and they have a mutation, they may not have enough embryos to choose from," he said. This is when CRISPR can come in.

"This technology, independent of the embryos that are there, it would go on and correct all of them. ... This opens up the possibility for those embryos," he said. "That's important because after the first implantation, if it doesn't work, you can do it again."

The researchers wrote in their study, "PGD may be a viable option for heterozygous couples at risk of producing affected offspring. In cases when only one parent carries a heterozygous mutation, 50% of embryos should be mutant. In contrast, targeted gene correction can potentially rescue a substantial portion of mutant human embryos, thus increasing the number of embryos available for transfer."

Nonetheless, using CRISPR in that way remains a long way off.

Shoukhrat Mitalipov, director of the Oregon Health & Science University's Center for Embryonic Cell and Gene Therapy, helped lead the new study. In 2013, Mitalipov and his colleagues reported the first success in cloning human stem cells, reprogramming human skin cells back to their embryonic state. In 2007, a research team led by Mitalipov announced that they created the first cloned monkey embryo and extracted stem cells from it.

Now, when it comes to using CRISPR to correct gene mutations in embryos, Mitalipov said Tuesday, "We've done some ground work. ... There is still a long road ahead, and it's unclear at this point when we will be allowed to move on."

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How New York Post readers helped save a toddler’s life – New York Post

Posted: August 7, 2017 at 6:45 am

Amelia-Grace Harpham is a 16-year-old with wild, wavy hair and a love of reading. She prefers sci-fi shows like Dr. Who and Star Trek to the usual teen fare. And the rising junior at Hastings HS in Hastings-on-Hudson always says yes to a competitive game of capture the flag.

Its hard to believe that little more than a decade ago, this vibrant teen (who then went by Gracie) was fighting for her life against a rare blood disease that left doctors baffled. In 2004 and 2005, The Post ran several stories about the then-toddlers mysterious disease and generous readers helped raise $85,000 for a bone marrow transplant that saved her life.

Today, the only telltale signs of Amelias fragile past are the scars on her chest from various treatments.

A couple of friends have seen them, she told The Post. People are interested, but they dont know the scope of it.

Hers was a harrowing experience riddled with frightening prognoses and statistics. One doctor predicted she had only a 50 percent chance of living past the age of 29. Her mother, Heather Harpham, has chronicled it all in a memoir, Happiness: The Crooked Little Road to Semi-Ever After (Henry Holt, out now).

When Amelia was born on March 30, 2001, she looked perfectly healthy; but hours after her birth, doctors realized something was malfunctioning in her blood. She had her first transfusion within the first week of her life, and it would be the start of a scary routine that spanned her next three years. Unable to produce sufficient red blood cells, the baby needed transfusions about every three weeks.

After each transfusion, Amelia would look pink and healthy. But that energy would drain like a battery, and she would turn wan and listless until the next one. The family was told that becoming reliant on transfusions could eventually prove lethal.

Doctors never landed on a specific diagnosis or cause, but they were certain of one thing: Amelia would be cured by a bone marrow transplant.

But the procedure on a toddler doesnt come without risks. The ideal situation would involve using stem cells harvested from a newborns umbilical cord rather than an adults bone marrow. A doctor suggested that Heather and her partner (now husband), Brian Morton, have another baby, because a sibling would have a one in four chance of being a match. Afraid of having two tragically ill children, the couple resisted the idea.

But shortly thereafter, Heather discovered she was unexpectedly pregnant. After baby boy Gabriel was born, blood from his umbilical cord was saved and indeed, he was an exact match for his then-2-year-old sisters bone marrow.

Doctors again stressed, however, that such a transplant process, which also involved chemotherapy, could be grueling for the toddler and possibly overwhelm her fragile body. Heather and Brian who lived in Park Slope at the time made the agonizing decision to go ahead with the risky procedure at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, NC. But there was still more bad news: They would need to pay $85,000 not covered by insurance.

Thats when neighbor Kathy Sears jumped in. As covered by The Post at the time, she organized a block party and a raffle with all of the proceeds going toward Amelias medical treatments, Perfect strangers from all over the city turned up.

People came out of the woodwork, asking how they could help, Sears recalled. Little old ladies walking up to me shoving $25 checks into my hand. It was so beautiful.

Heather remembered a man showing up to the block party with an envelope of money collected from his colleagues at the Department of Motor Vehicles.

All told, more than $85,000 was raised, which helped when the tab came to more than first anticipated. According to Heather, money given by Post readers made up the bulk of the donations.

I cannot overestimate what Post readers did. It gave us the sense that all of New York was in our corner. In this odd way, I would wish for anyone to have the experience of being in need, being fragile and being frightened and [then to] be utterly embraced, supported and carried by a community, she said.

Amelia now has no physical restrictions. She visits Duke every other year for checkups, but is more focused on her studies.

I enjoy all of my subjects, but I love English, she said. I would like to be a writer. I keep journals of important stuff thats happened.

She also has a typical sibling relationship with Gabriel, now 14. As their mom explains: Its like, You can give me the remote, I gave you my stem cells.

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