Page 1,656«..1020..1,6551,6561,6571,658..1,6701,680..»

Unexplained abnormalities in stem cells prompt Columbia researchers to pull diabetes paper – Retraction Watch (blog)

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:40 am

Researchers at Columbia University have retracted a 2013 paper in The Journal of Clinical Investigation, after uncovering abnormalities in the stem cell lines that undermined the conclusions in the paper.

Last year, corresponding author Dieter Eglidiscoveredhe could notreproduce key data in the 2013 paper because almost all the cell lines first author Haiqing Hua used contained abnormalities, casting doubt on the overall findings. When Egli reached out to Hua foranswers, Hua could not explain the abnormalities. As a result, Hua and Egli agreed the paper should be retracted.

Since some of the details of how the paper ended up relying on abnormal cells remain unclear, the university confirmed to us that it is investigating the matter.

Heres the retraction notice for iPSC-derived cells model diabetes due to glucokinase deficiency, cited 42 times:

The corresponding authors were made aware of karyotype abnormalities through a routine quality control test of pluripotent stem cells used in the studies reported in this paper. After extensive internal review and genetic analysis, they found that the karyotypes of some of the cells used for the experiments reported were abnormal and that the normal karyotypes shown in Figure 1 and Supplemental Figure 2 were not from cell lines used in the study. They also cannot confirm the endonuclease-mediated correction of the mutant GCK G299R allele. H. Hua takes responsibility for the characterization and presentation of cell line karyotypes and the genetic manipulations. Because of these discrepancies, the authors wish to retract the article. They apologize for these errors and for any inconvenience caused to others.

In the fall of 2009, Hua joined Rudolph Leibels diabetes and nutrition lab at Columbia University, under the co-supervision ofEgli, who brought an expertise in stem cell biology. Hua told us:

The aim of my research project was to leverage the expertise of both Dr. Egli (on stem cell biology) and Dr. Leibel (on diabetes) and to demonstrate the concept that the islet cells generated in the lab from diabetic patients through stem cell technology would present comparable dysfunction as the islet cells in the patients body. Because we chose patients with genetic mutations that cause diabetes, we were hoping to demonstrate that correction of the mutations would restore the normal function of the islet cells.

But, Hua noted, he wasnt and still isnt an expert in stem cell biology, so he had to learn on the job:

When I began the project, I never worked with cells before and had no experience or understanding of cell line karyotype.

Hua started by generating several cell lines from a diabetic patient. To check that the genetic makeup of these cell lines were the same, he sent several for analysis to a contracted service, which examines 20 cells per cell line and generates a report:

I did karyotype analysis for the cell lines right after I derived them, probably in 2011, before I started to do any experiments on them. The reports came back with some cells being normal and some being abnormal. To be fair, I thought what I learned from Dr. Egli was that it is a normal phenomenon that some cells are abnormal as long as the number is not high.

Indeed, Egli, an assistant professor of stem cell biology at Columbia University Medical Center, confirmed that pluripotent stem cells are often prone to undergo abnormalities:

Karyotypic abnormalities are common, and occur in many cells upon extended cultures, so this is not in and of itself a concern. Often one can go back to earlier cultures that are normal.

Hua published the work in 2013, along with a relatedpaper in Diabetes in 2014, -Cell Dysfunction Due to Increased ER Stress in a Stem Cell Model of Wolfram Syndrome. Hua believes, at a conceptual level, both papers achieved the goal of demonstrating that the correction of the mutations would restore the normal function of the islet cells.

In 2014, Hua told usthat he moved back to China for family reasons.

Last year, other investigators asked Egli to share the cells lines from the 2013 study. To ensure he was providing high quality material, Egli sent what he believed to be normal cell lines from the study for quality control testing. Egli said thats when he learned many of the cell lines contained abnormalities.

To suss out the problem, Egli went back to the cell lines stored in the lab to look for normal cells:

Dr. Hua had already left the University at that time and so I personally started to look for karyotypically normal cells. There were no normal cells to be found.

Egli explained what the abnormalities meant for the study results:

You could best describe the abnormalities of the [cell] lines [Hua] used as mumbo-jumbo. There were multiple rearrangements in the chromosomes in the cell lines and thus you wouldnt know if the effects you saw were due to gene modifications or simply due to those rearrangements. Essentially, the abnormal cell lines question the entire paper, and its very unlikely the paper would have been accepted at the journal.

When Egli failed to reproduce the data from the 2013 paper, he contacted Hua to find out where the normal cell lines were. But Hua was not sure in fact, he told us it was a surprise to learn that most of the cell lines he had used contained abnormalities, adding:

another layer of complication is that when cells became karyotype abnormal, they could behave like cancer cells, namely they could start as minor portion in the culture but later on took over and became majority. So another mistake we made was that we didnt perform karyotype analysis at the end of the study to make sure that after all the experiments we did, the cells were still normal.

A spokesperson at Columbia University verified that the university is conducting an investigation into the issues:

I could confirm that there is an ongoing investigation.

When Hua was informed of these issues, he suggested the study be retracted:

Immediately, I proposed to Dr. Egli and Dr. Leibel that we should retract the publication because we were not certain about the conclusion any more.

Hua takes responsibility for what happened, adding:

So this was done at very early phase of my research, and I was busy with a lot of parallel projects since I was the first post-doc of Dr. EgliBecause I wasnt understanding the problem correctly, I put up the figures with normal karyotype as first figure for the publication and continued my research with one particular cell line.

Egli also talked about the experience of retracting a paper:

Retracting a paper is not a rewarding process, and often reports stay in the literature even if they should not. Retracting the paper exposes us to the possibility of damage. I took proactive steps to investigate and retract because I wanted to correct the record. This would not have happened without my initiative involving 2-3 months of benchwork.

Hua described this as a truly unfortunate and painful chapter, which he hopes others can learn from:

The health of academic world and advance of science really depends on correction of previous mistakes and clearance of uncertainties. [A]voiding overwhelming multitasking is important. At the first year of my research, I was setting the lab together with Dr. Egli and meanwhile performed more than 100 experiments. Each of them would took more than 10 days and I was really stacking all the experiments. This particular project was about one fourth of my effort at that time. My biggest recommendation or reflection would be that it is very very very important to quality control and characterize starting materials of a project. Many people, including myself, are more focused on rushing the project forward and do not realized that if the starting materials are flawed, anything built on them has no solid foundation.

Hat tip: Rolf Degen

Like Retraction Watch? Consider making a tax-deductible contribution to support our growth. You can also follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook, add us to your RSS reader, sign up on our homepage for an email every time theres a new post, or subscribe to our daily digest. Click here to review our Comments Policy. For a sneak peek at what were working on, click here.

Read the original here:
Unexplained abnormalities in stem cells prompt Columbia researchers to pull diabetes paper - Retraction Watch (blog)

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Unexplained abnormalities in stem cells prompt Columbia researchers to pull diabetes paper – Retraction Watch (blog)

Source of Health shows how stem cells can help heal joint pain – ABC15 Arizona

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:44 pm

Come See Sonoran Living Live!

Sonoran Living is looking for LIVE studio audiences! Reservations are available for FREE via e-mail: slviewers@abc15.com.

Taping schedule:The show airs live daily. Currently we are only booking audiences for the first Friday of the month. Sign up for our audience!Please send us an email with name(s), date you would like to be in the audience, contact person, e-mail and contact phone number.

What are the age requirements?You must be 18 years or older to attend a taping of Sonoran Living Live.

Should I bring my ID to the studio?Yes, you must have a valid photo ID to enter the studio.

How many seats can I reserve?Group tickets are available.

How long will the taping last?The show will air live for one hour from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.

What time do I need to arrive for the taping?8:30 a.m. Late-comers will not be admitted.

Where is the studio?ABC15 Studios,515 N. 44th Street, Phoenix, AZ

Here is the original post:
Source of Health shows how stem cells can help heal joint pain - ABC15 Arizona

Posted in Arizona Stem Cells | Comments Off on Source of Health shows how stem cells can help heal joint pain – ABC15 Arizona

Lattice Biologics Participates in $300 Million Public-Private Initiative, the Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing … – Yahoo Finance

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:44 pm

SCOTTSDALE, AZ--(Marketwired - February 28, 2017) - Lattice Biologics Ltd. (TSX VENTURE: LBL) (LBLTF) ("Lattice Biologics" or the "Company") is pleased to announce that it is part of a new public-private initiative, the Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing Institute ("ARMI").

ARMI will receive approximately $80 million from the federal government, which will be combined with more than $200 million in non-federal cost share, to establish the Advanced Tissue Biofabrication Manufacturing USA Institute. Headquartered in Manchester, New Hampshire, this new Institute brings together a consortium of nearly 100 partner organizations from industry, government, academia and the non-profit sector to develop next-generation manufacturing processes and technologies for life-saving cells, tissues and organs.

This effort will provide support to help bridge the gap between basic/early research and product development by advancing and scaling critical biofabrication technologies, and will provide shared assets to help entities access cutting edge capabilities and equipment.

In collaboration with key individuals at ASU Biodesign in Tempe, Arizona, Lattice Biologics is developing products, which include the use of scaffolds derived from human tissue that can 1) support ingrowth of tissue progenitor cells (notably, stem cells), 2) direct and preserve the phenotypes of engrafted cells and 3) enhance healing times and improve patient outcomes. Underlying these efforts is the use of ECM (extracellular matrix) secreted by stem cells and/or harvested from various tissues including muscle, adipose and placenta, to develop game-changing technologies in the field of regenerative medicine.

As an emerging leader in the field of cellular therapies and tissue engineering, Lattice Biologics will play an important role in ARMI's mission to develop innovative manufacturing capabilities by sharing strategic research and development efforts, provide source biomaterial for testing and bring together cross-disciplinary research players in the biomedical and academic communities.

About the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University:

The ASU Biodesign Institute plays a critical role in advancing the research mission of Arizona State University; specifically, to conduct use-inspired research, fuse intellectual disciplines and value entrepreneurship. The Biodesign Institute is a hub of 21st century innovation, with the Biodesign Institute's convergent technologies and fields of research focusing on biomedicine and health outcomes, sustainability and security.

About ARMI:

Headquartered in Manchester, New Hampshire, ARMI is the 12th Manufacturing USA Institute. It brings together a consortium of nearly 100 partners from across industry, government, academia and the non-profit sector to develop next-generation manufacturing processes and technologies for cells, tissues and organs. ARMI will work to organize the current fragmented domestic capabilities in tissue biofabrication technology to better position the U.S. relative to global competition. For more information on ARMI, please visit http://www.ARMIUSA.org.

Lattice Biologics Ltd.

Guy Cook, Chief Executive Officer Telephone No: (480) 563-0800

About Lattice Biologics Ltd.:

Lattice Biologics Ltd. is an emerging precision medicine leader in the field of cellular therapies and tissue engineering, with an emphasis on bone, skin, and cartilage regeneration. As a manufacturer of the highest quality allografts, Lattice is focused on next generation products to improve surgical outcomes.

Versatile allografts for a variety of surgical applications:

The Company is currently exploring new technologies in regenerative and personalized medicine:

Lattice Biologics operates headquarters, laboratory and manufacturing facilities in Scottsdale, Arizona as well as offices in Toronto Ontario. The Company maintains all necessary licensures to process and sell its tissue engineered products within the U.S. and internationally. This includes Certificates to Foreign Governments from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and registrations for 29 countries, which allow the export of bone, tendon, meniscus, ligament, soft tissue, and cartilage products outside of the U.S.

Lattice Biologics (TSX VENTURE: LBL) (LBLTF) became a publicly traded company on January 4, 2016.

Read More

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Cautionary Statement on Forward-Looking Information:

Certain information contained in this news release constitutes "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the 'safe harbour' provisions of Canadian securities laws. All statements herein, other than statements of historical fact, are to be considered forward looking. Generally, forward-looking information can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as "potential", "future", "expected", "could", "possible", "goal", "intends", "will" or similar expressions. Forward-looking statements in this news release include, without limitation: information pertaining to the Company's strategy, plans, or future financial performance, such as statements with respect to participation in the ARMI, future revenues or products, and other statements that express management's expectations or estimates of future performance. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, level of activity, performance or achievements of Lattice to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements.

Forward-looking statements are necessarily based upon a number of factors and assumptions that, while considered reasonable by management as of the date such statements are made, are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies. The factors and assumptions that could prove to be incorrect, include, but are not limited to: that market prices will be consistent with expectations, the continued availability of capital and financing, and that general economic, market and business conditions will be consistent with expectations. The forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. We disclaim any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, except as required by law. Readers are cautioned not to put undue reliance on these forward-looking statements.

Subscribe to Lattice News UpdatesFollow us on Twitter: @LatticeBio

Go here to see the original:
Lattice Biologics Participates in $300 Million Public-Private Initiative, the Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing ... - Yahoo Finance

Posted in Arizona Stem Cells | Comments Off on Lattice Biologics Participates in $300 Million Public-Private Initiative, the Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing … – Yahoo Finance

POLL: Bill seeks to allow Arkansas doctors to refuse care over ‘conscience’ concerns – Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:44 pm

Family Council-backed legislation introduced last week would allow medical professionals and health care facilities and payers to refuse treatment for patients if doing so would interfere with their "conscience."

House Bill 1628, which is titled the Healthcare Freedom of Conscience Act, would allow health care professionals, facilities and payers to refuse to provide a treatment without facing retaliation or punishment from their employers or patients.

The bill would extend the protections to medical professionals such as doctors, pharmacists, nurses and social workers; facilities such as hospitals and clinics; and payers such as insurance companies. It establishes a route for legal remedy if they are penalized for declining treatment. However, it does not offer protection if the treatment is needed for an emergency life-saving procedure.

Supporters of the bill say it is needed to protect the religious freedoms of those opposed to specific procedures -- such as certain surgeries or blood transfusions -- but opponents say the bill is written broadly enough to allow for discrimination of patients based on sexual orientation or other personal factors.

The Family Council asked Rep. Brandt Smith, R-Jonesboro, to sponsor the bill. Its Senate sponsors are Sen. Jason Rapert, R-Bigelow, and Sen. Linda Collins-Smith, R-Pocahontas.

[EMAIL UPDATES: Get free breaking news alerts, daily newsletters with top headlines delivered to your inbox]

Asked if the bill would allow physicians to deny services to patients because they are gay, Smith said he hoped it would not, adding that he "could not support that kind of legislation that is that abusive."

The bill provides no specific protections for sexual or gender identity. It does state that its protections apply only to "individual health care services" and do not allow refusal of services to patients based on their "identity or status."

Luke McCoy, the lobbyist for the Family Council who has worked on the bill, said "identity" as included in the bill does not presently cover gay or transgender people, but it could at some point in the future.

"I don't want this to cause a problem; I want it to prevent a problem," McCoy said.

The problem, McCoy said, is that Arkansas' current conscientious objection statutes are narrowly tailored to allow doctors to opt out of performing abortions and abortion-related counseling. Those protections do not extend to insurance providers and do not cover other health care services, such as working with stem cells.

HB1628 would create "umbrella" protections throughout the health care sector, McCoy said.

Providing his own example, Smith said the legislation would protect a Muslim doctor from performing heart surgery with the heart valves of a pig, if he has religious objections.

However, no physicians have reached out asking for such protections, according Arkansas Medical Society Executive Vice President David Wroten, who said the statewide association would "definitely have concerns" with the legislation.

"Insurance companies do not have consciences" because they are not people, Wroten said. HB1628 could open the door to them declining to provide coverage for things such as birth control. The association will reach out to the bill's sponsors once it has completed a review of the legislation, he said.

Kendra Johnson, the Arkansas director of the Human Rights Campaign, said previous legislation, including the state's 2015 Religious Freedom Restoration Act, offers similar religious protections to Arkansans without going as far as the HB1628.

"This is a license to discriminate in the health care setting," Johnson said.

Last year, Arkansas lawmakers approved new ethics rules allowing counselors to turn away clients for reasons of conscience. Legislative approval came despite objections from the American Counseling Association, which said such a rule would violate national standards.

Smith said he does not foresee that the legislation would cause difficulty for people to find care, and that doctors would simply ask their colleagues to perform services they object to. He said the Catholic Diocese of Arkansas had expressed interest in the bill.

The diocese is reviewing the bill but had not taken a stance as of Friday, said Chancellor Dennis Lee, who added that the church does not operate any of the Catholic hospitals in the state. Patrick Gallagher, a lobbyist for the Catholic Charities of Arkansas, said his group had had talks with the sponsors.

The group's concern is with providing services such as abortion and counseling of contraception, Gallagher said, and not with the people it serves. Gallagher said he had not yet reviewed the bill, which was filed Tuesday.

According to the Family Council, similar legislation has passed in Illinois and Mississippi. Health care "conscience" legislation has also been filed in the U.S. House and Senate.

The bill has been referred to the House Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee.

SundayMonday on 02/27/2017

The calendar of public events of the 91st General Assembly for today, the 50th day of the 2017 regular session.

COMMITTEES

10 a.m. Joint Committee on Public Retirement and Social Security Programs, Room 130. 11 a.m. Arkansas Legislative Black Caucus, Room 149.

HOUSE

1:30 p.m. House convenes.

SENATE

1:30 p.m. Senate convenes.

Read the rest here:
POLL: Bill seeks to allow Arkansas doctors to refuse care over 'conscience' concerns - Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Posted in Arkansas Stem Cells | Comments Off on POLL: Bill seeks to allow Arkansas doctors to refuse care over ‘conscience’ concerns – Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Puma Biotechnology Announces Publication of Abstracts on Neratinib for the AACR Annual Meeting 2017 – Business Wire (press release)

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:42 pm

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Puma Biotechnology, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBYI), a biopharmaceutical company, announced publication of abstracts on neratinib for the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2017. The AACR Annual Meeting will be held at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C. from April 1 to April 5.

Full abstracts of the following presentations are available online at http://www.aacr.org:

Apr. 4, 2017, 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. EDT Abstract 4818 (Poster): Neratinib/fulvestrant but not fulvestrant alone maintain complete tumor responses after treatment with trastuzumab + paclitaxel of mice bearing ER+/HER2+ xenografts. L.J. Schwarz et al, Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

April 4, 2017, 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. EDT Abstract 4157 (Poster): Co-blockade of mTORC1, ERBB and estrogen receptor signaling pathways in endocrine resistant breast cancer: combating tumour plasticity. R. Ribas et al, Institute of Cancer Research.

April 4, 2017, 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. EDT Abstract 4038 (Poster): Exploring optimal targeted combination therapies with neratinib for HER2+ breast cancer. M. Zhao et al, MD Anderson Cancer Center.

April 5, 2017, 8:00 - 12:00 p.m. EDT Abstract 5167 (Poster): Stem-like colorectal cancer cell lines show response to the ERK1/2 inhibitor, SCH772984, alone and in combination with neratinib while the combination of MEK-162 and neratinib work to decrease tumor growth in inflammatory colorectal cancer subtypes. R. Pal et al, NSABP.

April 5, 2017, 8:00 - 12:00 p.m. EDT Abstract 5684 (Poster): NSABP FC-7 Correlative Study: HER2 amplification in circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) resistant to anti-EGFR therapy. S. Rim Kim et al, NSABP.

Full abstracts of the following presentations are expected to be available online March 31, 2017, after 4:00 p.m. EDT:

April 2, 2017, 12:45 - 3:00 p.m. EDT Abstract CT001 (Oral, Clinical Trials Plenary Session): Neratinib in HER2 or HER3 mutant solid tumors: SUMMIT, a global, multi-histology, open-label, phase 2 basket study. D. Hyman et al, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

April 2, 2017, 3:00 - 5:00 p.m. EDT Abstract CT011 (Oral, Minisymposium): Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) sequencing for HER2 mutation (HER2mut) screening and response monitoring to neratinib in metastatic breast cancer (MBC). C. Ma et al, Washington University School of Medicine.

April 2, 2017, 3:00 - 5:00 p.m. EDT Abstract CT013 (Oral, Minisymposium): NSABP FB-10: Phase Ib dose-escalation trial evaluating trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) with neratinib (N) in women with metastatic HER2+ breast cancer (MBC). J. Abraham et al, NSABP.

April 3, 2017, 10:30 a.m. 12:45 p.m. EDT Abstract LB103 (Oral, Major Symposium): Landscape of Somatic ERBB2 Mutations - Findings from AACR GENIE and Comparison to Ongoing ERBB2 Mutant Basket Study. A. Schram et al, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

April 4, 2017, 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. EDT Abstract CT128 (Poster): Effects of adding budesonide or colestipol to loperamide prophylaxis on neratinib-associated diarrhea in patients (pts) with HER2+ early-stage breast cancer (eBC): the CONTROL trial. E. Ibrahim et al, Beaver Medical Group LP.

About Puma Biotechnology:

Puma Biotechnology, Inc. is a biopharmaceutical company with a focus on the development and commercialization of innovative products to enhance cancer care. The Company in-licenses the global development and commercialization rights to three drug candidatesPB272 (neratinib (oral)), PB272 (neratinib (intravenous)) and PB357. Neratinib is a potent irreversible tyrosine kinase inhibitor that blocks signal transduction through the epidermal growth factor receptors, HER1, HER2 and HER4. Currently, the Company is primarily focused on the development of the oral version of neratinib, and its most advanced drug candidates are directed at the treatment of HER2-positive breast cancer. The Company believes that neratinib has clinical application in the treatment of several other cancers as well, including non-small cell lung cancer and other tumor types that over-express or have a mutation in HER2.

Further information about Puma Biotechnology may be found atwww.pumabiotechnology.com.

Forward-Looking Statements:

This press release contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause the Company's actual results to differ materially from the anticipated results and expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations, forecasts and assumptions, and actual outcomes and results could differ materially from these statements due to a number of factors, which include, but are not limited to, the risk factors disclosed in the periodic reports filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. The Company assumes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements, except as required by law.

More here:
Puma Biotechnology Announces Publication of Abstracts on Neratinib for the AACR Annual Meeting 2017 - Business Wire (press release)

Posted in Biotechnology | Comments Off on Puma Biotechnology Announces Publication of Abstracts on Neratinib for the AACR Annual Meeting 2017 – Business Wire (press release)

BRIEF-Puma Biotechnology provides update on review of marketing authorisation application for PB272 – Reuters

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:42 pm

March 1 Puma Biotechnology Inc:

* Puma Biotechnology provides update on review of marketing authorisation application for PB272

* Puma Biotechnology Inc - company plans to modify summary of product characteristics in its marketing authorisation application

* Puma Biotechnology-plans to modify summary of product characteristics based on meeting with rapporteur, co-rapporteur, review team members, EMA

* Puma Biotechnology - proposed summary of product characteristics will continue to include both hormone receptor positive, hormone receptor negative patients

* Puma-Will be revising proposed smpc for neratinib to restrict intended population to patients within a year after completion of Adjuvant Trastuzumab Therapy

* Puma-Committee for medicinal products for human use continuing to review co's maa and has not yet made a final decision to recommend approval of drug Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage:

TOKYO, March 2 The dollar hovered near a seven-week high on Thursday on increasing signs given by Federal Reserve officials that the U.S. central bank is seriously considering raising interest rates this month.

* Trump rhetoric deters cenbank from forex intervention -source

RIO DE JANEIRO, March 1 Rio's premier Portela samba school was crowned champion samba school on Wednesday, winning its first Carnival parade in 33 years with a spectacular performance that highlighted the environmental importance of rivers.

Go here to see the original:
BRIEF-Puma Biotechnology provides update on review of marketing authorisation application for PB272 - Reuters

Posted in Biotechnology | Comments Off on BRIEF-Puma Biotechnology provides update on review of marketing authorisation application for PB272 – Reuters

Pfizer commits $4M to NC Biotechnology Center gene therapy … – WRAL Tech Wire

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:42 pm

Posted Feb. 28, 2017 at 3:39 p.m.

Published: 2017-02-28 15:39:55 Updated: 2017-02-28 15:39:55

By JIM SHAMP, NCBiotech Writer

Raleigh, N.C. The North Carolina Biotechnology Center has announced that Pfizer has committed to providing funding in the amount of $4 million which will enable the Center to establish and administer a multi-year academic fellowship program to help advance North Carolinas fast-growing expertise in gene therapy.

The new program, to be managed by NCBiotech, will support distinguished postdoctoral fellowships in North Carolina university research laboratories providing advanced scientific training in gene therapy-related research.

Absent or faulty proteins linked to genetic mutations cause numerous devastating diseases, making gene therapy an increasingly important treatment strategy.

Pfizers portfolio in North Carolina has grown in recent years. The company already operates a pharmaceutical manufacturing facility in the Lee County community of Sanford, and in August 2016, it acquired leading-edge gene therapy company Bamboo Therapeutics, Inc. in Chapel Hill.

With that acquisition, Pfizer gained the expertise of Bamboos world-renowned co-founder, R. Jude Samulski, Ph.D., director of the Gene Therapy Centerat the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The deal also included an 11,000-square-foot facility for the highly specialized manufacturing of recombinant adeno-associated viral vectors.

Pfizer is one of several biopharmaceutical companies that have added high-profile gene therapy acquisitions, and several partnerships with biotechnology companies and leading academic institutions, to its R&D portfolio. Numerous other North Carolina scientists and companies are also making significant inroads into gene therapy, gene editing and related applications, many with NCBiotech support. For example, Samulski was recruited to UNC in 1993 as part of a $430,000 NCBiotech grant. Additionally, Bamboos former parent company received more than $700,000 in Biotech Center grants and loans.

Gene therapy advances require specific skills in addition to deep scientific knowledge. The fellowship program being established with Pfizers funding aims to boost that talent pipeline, with talent that has already proven to be exceptional in North Carolina. Such funding will enable NCBiotech to provide two-year fellowship support to postdoctoral scientists. The funding will afford the Center the ability to cover salaries, benefits, materials, professional development and travel for such postdoctoral scientists. The Center will encourage competitive applications from scientists interested in establishing research careers in gene therapy and related research activities.

The Biotech Center will also create and manage a related gene therapy Exchange Group. It will join some 25 other exchange groups designed to unite North Carolina-based academic and industry scientists with shared professional interests. The Gene Therapy EG will include these new postdoctoral fellows, their mentors, and others interested in the burgeoning gene therapy sector.

The field of gene therapy research has made tremendous strides in recent years, and we are pleased to be able to further enhance our leadership position in this area through this unique fellowship program, said Mikael Dolsten, M.D., Ph.D., president of worldwide research and development at Pfizer. We believe that gene therapy may hold the promise of bringing true disease modification for patients suffering from devastating diseases, and North Carolina is uniquely positioned to help us take advantage of collaborative opportunities that can develop the specialized talent well need.

Doug Edgeton, president and CEO of the Biotech Center, said he was deeply honored that Pfizer targeted North Carolina, and the Center, for the groundbreaking fellowship program.

Pfizer embraced the opportunity to work with us given weve proven for more than 30 years that we have the expertise and success metrics to maximize impact, said Edgeton. We not only have outstanding research institutions across our state, but we also have a well-respected culture of partnering and collaboration that allows us to be nimble and responsive. This is a wonderful example.

(C) N.C. Biotechnology Center

WRAL TechWire any time: Twitter, Facebook

Read this article:
Pfizer commits $4M to NC Biotechnology Center gene therapy ... - WRAL Tech Wire

Posted in Biotechnology | Comments Off on Pfizer commits $4M to NC Biotechnology Center gene therapy … – WRAL Tech Wire

Cell Death in Gut Implicated in IBD | Newsroom | Weill Cornell … – Cornell Chronicle

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:41 pm

The natural lifecycle of cells that line the intestine is critical to preserving stable conditions in the gut, according to new research led by a Weill Cornell Medicine investigator. The findings may lead to the development of new therapies to alleviate inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and other chronic inflammatory illnesses.

In the study, published Nov. 9 in Nature, the scientists investigated the healthy turnover of epithelial cells, which are born and die every four to five days, to better understand how the gut maintains a healthy equilibrium. Because cells, called phagocytes, can clear dying cells so quickly in the body, it had been difficult to study this process in tissues. The inability to clear dying cells has been linked to inflammation and autoimmunity. Dying epithelial cells are shed into the gut lumen, so their active clearance is not necessary and they were thought to have no role in intestinal inflammation.

The investigators sought to understand whether phagocytes can take up dying epithelial cells in the gut and, if so, how these phagocytes respond. Specifically, the study tried to ascertain which genes are expressed by phagocytes after the uptake of dead cells. To answer these questions, the scientists engineered a mouse model where they could turn on apoptosis and catch phagocytes in the act of sampling dying cells. Through a series of experiments, they found that several of the genes modulated up or down in phagocytes bearing dead cells overlapped with the same genes that have been associated with susceptibility to IBD.

The mouse model used in the study enables the visualization of a dying red cell within the green fluorescently-labeled small intestinal epithelial cells. The green outline of villi shown delineates the single cell layer of the intestinal epithelium. Cell nuclei are shown in blue. Weill Cornell Medicine investigators tracked dying intestinal epithelial cells into the underlying phagocytes (not visible), and asked how their uptake modulates gene expression in those phagocytes.

The fact that there was an overlap shows that apoptosis must play a role in maintaining equilibrium in the gut, said Dr. Julie Magarian Blander, a senior faculty member in the Jill Roberts Institute for Research in Inflammatory Bowel Disease at Weill Cornell Medicine who was recently recruited as a professor of immunology from Mount Sinai. This study identified cell death within the epithelium as an important factor to consider when thinking about therapeutic strategies for patients with IBD.

In their experiments, the scientists expressed a green fluorescent protein fused to the diphtheria toxin receptor within intestinal epithelial cells of mice, which made them visible under a microscope and sensitive to diphtheria toxin. They injected into these mice a carefully titrated dose of toxin into the intestinal walls of mice to induce cell death. Then the team examined the phagocytes that turned green after they internalized dead cells. Macrophages, one kind of phagocyte, expressed genes that help process the increased lipid and cholesterol load they acquired from dying cells. Dendritic cells, another type of phagocyte, activated genes responsible for instructing the development of regulatory CD4 T cells, a class of suppressive white blood cells. Notably, both phagocytes expressed a common suppression of inflammation gene signature.

Because the same genes that confer susceptibility to IBD were modulated in response to apoptotic cell sampling, the research indicates that a disruption of the phagocytes immunosuppressive response would have consequences for homeostasis or stable conditions in the gut.

We know there is excessive cell death, inflammation and microbial imbalance in IBD, so the prediction is that the immunosuppressive program in phagocytes, associated with natural cell death in the gut epithelium, would be disrupted, Dr. Blander said. The goal in the treatment of IBD is to enhance healing in the gut, but now we know that this also helps phagocytes restore their immunosuppressive and homeostatic functions. We think this would translate into helping patients stay in remission. Theres a lot to learn from phagocytes and we may be able to target the same pathways they use to suppress inflammation in patients with IBD.

The study validates the importance of healing in the mucosa, or lining, of the intestine as a therapy and enhances the understanding of that process. The next phase of Dr. Blanders research will be to investigate how the inflammatory conditions of IBD alter cell death and the homeostatic immunosuppressive functions of intestinal phagocytes, and to do so in both mouse models and different groups of IBD patients undergoing anti-TNF therapy at the Jill Roberts Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease at New York-Presbyterian and Weill Cornell Medicine.

Follow this link:
Cell Death in Gut Implicated in IBD | Newsroom | Weill Cornell ... - Cornell Chronicle

Posted in Cell Medicine | Comments Off on Cell Death in Gut Implicated in IBD | Newsroom | Weill Cornell … – Cornell Chronicle

Gene therapy lets a French teen dodge sickle cell disease – Medical Xpress

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:41 pm

March 1, 2017 by Marilynn Marchione This 2009 colorized microscope image made available by the Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia via the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a sickle cell, left, and normal red blood cells of a patient with sickle cell anemia. Researchers say a French teen who was given gene therapy for sickle cell disease more than two years ago now has enough properly working red blood cells to dodge the effects of the disorder. The case is detailed in the March 2, 2017 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. (Janice Haney Carr/CDC/Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia via AP)

A French teen who was given gene therapy for sickle cell disease more than two years ago now has enough properly working red blood cells to dodge the effects of the disorder, researchers report.

The first-in-the-world case is detailed in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

About 90,000 people in the U.S., mostly blacks, have sickle cell, the first disease for which a molecular cause was found. Worldwide, about 275,000 babies are born with it each year.

"Vexing questions of race and stigma have shadowed the history of its medical treatment," including a time when blacks who carry the bad gene were urged not to have children, spurring accusations of genocide, Keith Wailoo of Princeton University wrote in a separate article in the journal.

The disease is caused by a single typo in the DNA alphabet of the gene for hemoglobin, the stuff in red blood cells that carries oxygen. When it's defective, the cells sickle into a crescent shape, clogging tiny blood vessels and causing bouts of extreme pain and sometimes more serious problems such as strokes and organ damage. It keeps many people from playing sports and enjoying other activities of normal life.

A stem cell transplant from a blood-matched sibling is a potential cure, but in the U.S., fewer than one in five people have a donor like that. Pain crises are treated with blood transfusions and drugs, but they're a temporary fix. Gene therapy offers hope of a lasting one.

The boy, now 15, was treated at Necker Children's Hospital in Paris in October 2014. Researchers gave him a gene, taken up by his blood stem cells, to help prevent the sickling. Now, about half of his red blood cells have normal hemoglobin; he has not needed a transfusion since three months after his treatment and is off all medicines.

"It's not a cure but it doesn't matter," because the disease is effectively dodged, said Philippe Leboulch, who helped invent the therapy and helped found Bluebird Bio in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the company that treated the boy. The work was supported by a grant from the French government's research agency.

Bluebird has treated at least six others in the U.S. and France. Full results have not been reported, but the gene therapy has not taken hold as well in some of them as it did in the French teen. Researchers think they know why and are adjusting methods to try to do better.

Two other gene therapy studies for sickle cell are underway in the U.S.at the University of California, Los Angeles and Cincinnati Children's Hospitaland another is about to start at Harvard and Boston Children's Hospital using a little different approach.

"This work gives considerable promise" for a solution to a very common problem, said Dr. Stuart Orkin, a Boston Children's Hospital doctor who is an inventor on a patent related to gene editing.

"The results are quite good in this patient," he said of the French teen. "It shows gene therapy is on the right track."

Explore further: BCL11A-based gene therapy for sickle cell disease passes key preclinical test

More information: Gene therapy: ghr.nlm.nih.gov/primer/therapy/availability

2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

A precision-engineered gene therapy virus, inserted into blood stem cells that are then transplanted, markedly reduced sickle-induced red-cell damage in mice with sickle cell disease, researchers from Dana-Farber/Boston Children's ...

Sickle cell disease and the blood disorder beta thalassemia affect more than 180,000 Americans and millions more worldwide. Both diseases can be made milder or even cured by increasing fetal hemoglobin (HbF) levels, but current ...

Scientists at the Center for Regenerative Medicine (CReM) at Boston Medical Center (BMC) and Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) are creating an induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-based research library that opens ...

UCLA stem cell researchers have shown that a novel stem cell gene therapy method could lead to a one-time, lasting treatment for sickle cell diseasethe nation's most common inherited blood disorder.

A team of researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine has used a gene-editing tool known as CRISPR to repair the gene that causes sickle cell disease in human stem cells, which they say is a key step toward ...

Scientists have developed a new approach to repair a defective gene in blood-forming stem cells from patients with a rare genetic immunodeficiency disorder called X-linked chronic granulomatous disease (X-CGD). After transplant ...

A French teen who was given gene therapy for sickle cell disease more than two years ago now has enough properly working red blood cells to dodge the effects of the disorder, researchers report.

A research team, led by the University of Minnesota, has discovered a groundbreaking process to successfully rewarm large-scale animal heart valves and blood vessels preserved at very low temperatures. The discovery is a ...

Working with yeast and human cells, researchers at Johns Hopkins say they have discovered an unexpected route for cells to eliminate protein clumps that may sometimes be the molecular equivalent of throwing too much or the ...

By changing one small portion of a stimulus that influences part of one molecule's function, engineers and researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have opened the door for more insight into how the molecule is associated ...

A minimally invasive, fiber-optic technique that accurately measures the passive stretch and twitch contraction of living muscle tissue could someday be an alternative to the painful muscle biopsies used to diagnose and treat ...

An in-depth computational analysis of genetic variants implicated in both schizophrenia and rheumatoid arthritis by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh points to eight genes that may explain why susceptibility to ...

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

Read more:
Gene therapy lets a French teen dodge sickle cell disease - Medical Xpress

Posted in Cell Medicine | Comments Off on Gene therapy lets a French teen dodge sickle cell disease – Medical Xpress

Regenestem, LLC to Host 2nd Annual Inter American Regenerative and Cellular Medicine Conference in Cuba – Benzinga

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:41 pm

Regenestem, LLC (http://www.regenestem.com), a U.S.-based medical practice company that focuses on adult stem cell treatments for patients around the world as well as physician training on the latest technologies, is pleased to announce that for the second straight year it will be hosting a conference on regenerative medicine on the island of Cuba. The 2017 Inter American Regenerative and Cellular Medicine Conference (http://www.regenestemconference.com) will be held October 25-27, in Havana.

Miami, Florida (PRWEB) March 01, 2017

Coming off the success of its inaugural conference on regenerative medicine held in Cuba last October, the American company Regenestem (http://www.regenestem.com) has announced that it will host the second such event later this year. The company looks to continue the scientific collaboration that took place at last year's conference between medical professionals from the U.S., Cuba and around the world.

Regenestem, an international medical practice firm based in South Florida and focused on adult stem cell therapies and physician training, will present the Second Inter American Regenerative and Cellular Medicine Conference, October 25-27, at the Palacio de Convenciones, in Havana. The event is held in association with the Cuban Institute of Hematology.

"Our first regenerative medicine conference in Cuba was such a tremendous success that as it was winding down, we knew we had to continue the momentum and hold the second conference in 2017," said Ricardo De Cubas, conference organizer and CEO of Regenestem. "International research initiatives must start with face-to-face interactions between physicians from various countries. This event successfully brings together clinician-researchers worldwide who all have a focus in regenerative medicine, while at the same time enhancing the scientific collaboration specifically between the U.S. and Cuba."

In October 2016, more than 180 physicians and other medical professionals from 14 countries attended the first annual conference on regenerative medicine.

The three-day event explores adult stem cell therapies as a standard form of medical treatment. The program also addresses specific issues involving the process of replacing, reengineering or regenerating human cells, tissues and organs to restore or establish a body's normal function.

Along with the presentations and discussions, the conference also provides a series of hands-on training workshops that focus on the procedures for conducting many of the more popular adult stem cell therapies.

Those physicians already confirmed as conference speakers for the second year are:

For more information or to register for the conference, go to http://www.regenestemconference.com or call (305) 224-1858.

About Regenestem, LLC

Regenestem (http://www.regenestem.com) is an international medical practice company focused on providing comprehensive solutions involving adult stem cell treatments and research. The company has assembled a talented staff of medical specialists - professionals trained in the latest cutting-edge procedures and protocols in cellular medicine. Regenestem is certified for the medical tourism market, and staff physicians are board-certified or board-eligible, providing services in more than 10 specialties. Regenestem investigates, shares, utilizes and integrates the latest protocols in the adult stem cell arena to deliver the best medical solutions to its patients. The brand includes a membership association of regenerative medicine clinics, a training and education division, and an online store.

Recently, Regenestem received approval for an information page at Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia, at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regenestem.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/03/prweb14113450.htm

See the original post here:
Regenestem, LLC to Host 2nd Annual Inter American Regenerative and Cellular Medicine Conference in Cuba - Benzinga

Posted in Cell Medicine | Comments Off on Regenestem, LLC to Host 2nd Annual Inter American Regenerative and Cellular Medicine Conference in Cuba – Benzinga

Page 1,656«..1020..1,6551,6561,6571,658..1,6701,680..»