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Studies Reveal Aggressive Prostate Cancer Linked to Ancestral Heritage – DocWire News

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 2:00 am

Researchers have identified genetic signatures that may explain the ethnic differences in the severity of prostate cancer, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa.

In two studies published in Nature and Genome Medicine, researchers detailed how they used genetic sequencing of prostate cancer tumors from Australian, Brazilian, and South African donors to identify a new prostate cancer taxonomy and cancer drivers that not only distinguish patients by genetic ancestry, but also predict which cancers are likely to become life-threatening.

Our understanding of prostate cancer has been severely limited by a research focus on Western populations, said senior author Vanessa Hayes, genomicist and Petre Chair of Prostate Cancer Research at the University of Sydneys Charles Perkins Centre and Faculty of Medicine and Health in Australia. Being of African descent, or from Africa, more than doubles a mans risk for lethal prostate cancer. While genomics holds a critical key to unravelling contributing genetic and non-genetic factors, data for Africa has till now, been lacking.

In the Nature study, the researchers used whole-genome sequencing of treatment-nave prostate cancer samples from 183 ancestrally and globally distinct patients. They generated a large cancer genomics resource for sub-Saharan Africa, identifying around 2 million somatic variants.

We found Africans to be impacted by a greater number and spectrum of acquired (including cancer driver) genetic alterations, with significant implications for ancestral consideration when managing and treating prostate cancer, said Hayes.

Among the significant findings were elevated tumor mutational burden, increased percentage of genome alteration, a greater number of predicted damaging mutations, and a higher total of mutational signatures. Additionally, they identified driver genes NCOA2, STK19, DDX11L1, PCAT1 and SETBP1.

In the Genome Medicine study, the researchers used whole genome sequencing and best practice workflows to analyze structural variations for 180 prostate tumors derived from 115 African, 61 European, and four ancestrally admixed patients.

In African-derived tumors there was a 1.6- to 2.5-fold increase in duplication events. African-derived tumors were also twofold more likely to present with a hyper-SV subtype.

Through African inclusion, we have made the first steps not only towards globalizing precision medicine but ultimately to reducing the impact of prostate cancer mortality across rural Africa, explains University of Pretorias Professor Riana Bornman, an international expert in mens health and clinical lead for the Southern African Prostate Cancer Study in South Africa.

References

Study reveals aggressive prostate cancer linked to ancestral heritage

African-specific molecular taxonomy of prostate cancer

Genome-wide interrogation of structural variation reveals novel African-specific prostate cancer oncogenic drivers

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Lonza and Touchlight collaboration will expands customer’s access to DNA – Labiotech.eu

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 2:00 am

Manufacturing partner, Lonza, has today (September 6) announced a collaboration with Touchlight, a biotech company that works with enzymatic DNA production enabling genetic medicine.

Through this collaboration, Lonza says it will have the ability to expand it end-to-end offering for mRNA manufacturing with an additional source of DNA raw material. This material comes from Touchlights doggybone DNA (dbDNA). Touchlight says it will be able to widen the channels making it easier for customers to get to the dbDNA technology.

The company developed thesynthetic DNA vector, known as doggybone -named after its schematic structure DNA or dbDNA and enzymatic manufacturing process, which they say enables them to produce DNA at unprecedented speed, scale and purity.

Lonzas customers will be able to access the enzymatic DNA technology; a linear, covalently closed DNA vector, produced using an enzymatic manufacturing process which enables GMP production.

Access to this technology, the companies say, will expand the options for Lonzas customers beyond the traditional method of working with plasmid DNA (pDNA), while continuing to benefit from the Lonzas integrated mRNA manufacturing offering.

Andr Goerke, vice president, business unit head mRNA, Lonza, said: The strategic collaboration with Touchlight enables Lonza to further enhance its position as a global leader in mRNA manufacturing.

We can now provide our customers with a strong foundation to deliver an end-to-end offering that includes access to a novel synthetic DNA technology. Such an integrated solution can prove beneficial in speeding up time to market, which is critical in the fast-paced industry of mRNA manufacturing.

DNA serves as the starting template for the production of mRNA. Through an enzymatic in vitro transcription process, this DNA sequence is then transcribed into a single-stranded RNA molecule, which is then processed into mRNA. Current mRNA-based therapeutics in development include vaccines for infectious diseases and immuno-oncology.

Karen Fallen, CEO, Touchlight DNA services, added: We are delighted to provide Touchlight customers the benefits of an end-to-end mRNA offering through our collaboration with Lonza. Lonza is the leading CDMO in mRNA manufacturing and has an established, global mRNA manufacturing network. The alliance allows both companies to innovate and to extend their offering on a global level.

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Genetic variants in miR-145 gene are associated with the risk of asthma in Taiwan | Scientific Reports – Nature.com

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 2:00 am

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Elderly are more affected by COVID brain fog, but ‘cognitive rehab’ could be an effective treatment – Genetic Literacy Project

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 2:00 am

Eight months after falling ill with covid-19, the 73-year-old woman couldnt remember what her husband had told her a few hours before. She would forget to remove laundry from the dryer at the end of the cycle. She would turn on the tap at a sink and walk away.

Before covid, the woman had been doing bookkeeping for a local business. Now, she couldnt add single-digit numbers in her head.

Was it the earliest stage of dementia, unmasked by covid? No. When a therapist assessed the womans cognition, her scores were normal.

What was going on? Like many people whove contracted covid, this woman was having difficulty sustaining attention, organizing activities, and multitasking. She complained of brain fog. She didnt feel like herself.

But this patient was lucky. Jill Jonas, an occupational therapist associated with the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis who described her to me, has been providing cognitive rehabilitation to the patient, and she is getting better.

Cognitive rehabilitation is therapy for people whose brains have been injured by concussions, traumatic accidents, strokes, or neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinsons disease. Its a suite of interventions designed to help people recover from brain injuries, if possible, and adapt to ongoing cognitive impairment. Services are typically provided by speech and occupational therapists, neuropsychologists, and neurorehabilitation experts.

In a recent development, some medical centers are offering cognitive rehabilitation to patients with long covid (symptoms that persist several months or longer after an infection that cant be explained by other medical conditions). According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 1 in 4 older adults who survive covid have at least one persistent symptom.

Experts are enthusiastic about cognitive rehabilitations potential. Anecdotally, were seeing a good number of people [with long covid] make significant gains with the right kinds of interventions, said Monique Tremaine, director of neuropsychology and cognitive rehabilitation at Hackensack Meridian Healths JFK Johnson Rehabilitation Institute in New Jersey.

Among the post-covid cognitive complaints being addressed are problems with attention, language, information processing, memory, and visual-spatial orientation. A recent review in JAMA Psychiatry found that up to 47% of patients hospitalized in intensive care with covid developed problems of this sort. Meanwhile, a new review in Nature Medicine found that brain fog was 37% more likely in nonhospitalized covid survivors than in comparable peers who had no known covid infections.

Also, theres emerging evidence that seniors are more likely to experience cognitive challenges post-covid than younger people a vulnerability attributed, in part, to older adults propensity to have other medical conditions. Cognitive challenges arise because of small blood clots, chronic inflammation, abnormal immune responses, brain injuries such as strokes and hemorrhages, viral persistence, and neurodegeneration triggered by covid.

Getting help starts with an assessment by a rehabilitation professional to pinpoint cognitive tasks that need attention and determine the severity of a persons difficulties. One person may need help finding words while speaking, for instance, while another may need help with planning and yet another may not be processing information efficiently. Several deficits may be present at the same time.

Next comes an effort to understand how patients cognitive issues affect their daily lives. Among the questions that therapists will ask, according to Jason Smith, a rehabilitation psychologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas: Is this [deficit] showing up at work? At home? Somewhere else? Which activities are being affected? Whats most important to you and what do you want to work on?

To try to restore brain circuits that have been damaged, patients may be prescribed a series of repetitive exercises. If attention is the issue, for instance, a therapist might tap a finger on the table once or twice and ask a patient to do the same, repeating it multiple times. This type of intervention is known as restorative cognitive rehabilitation.

It isnt easy because its so monotonous and someone can easily lose attentional focus, said Joe Giacino, a professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at Harvard Medical School. But its a kind of muscle building for the brain.

A therapist might then ask the patient to do two things at once: repeat the tapping task while answering questions about their personal background, for instance. Now the brain has to split attention a much more demanding task and youre building connections where they can be built, Giacino continued.

To address impairments that interfere with peoples daily lives, a therapist will work on practical strategies with patients. Examples include making lists, setting alarms or reminders, breaking down tasks into steps, balancing activity with rest, figuring out how to conserve energy, and learning how to slow down and assess what needs to be done before taking action.

A growing body of evidence shows that older adults can learn to use these strategies and that it does, in fact, enhance their everyday life, said Alyssa Lanzi, a research assistant professor who studies cognitive rehabilitation at the University of Delaware.

Along the way, patients and therapists discuss what worked well and what didnt, and practice useful skills, such as using calendars or notebooks as memory aids.

As patients become more aware of where difficulties occur and why, they can prepare for them and they start seeing improvement, said Lyana Kardanova Frantz, a speech therapist at Johns Hopkins University. A lot of my patients say, I had no idea this [kind of therapy] could be so helpful.

Johns Hopkins has been conducting neuropsychiatric exams on patients who come to its post-covid clinic. About 67% have mild to moderate cognitive dysfunction at least three months after being infected, said Dr. Alba Miranda Azola, co-director of Johns Hopkins Post-Acute COVID-19 Team. When cognitive rehabilitation is recommended, patients usually meet with therapists once or twice a week for two to three months.

Before this kind of therapy can be tried, other problems may need to be addressed. We want to make sure that people are sleeping enough, maintaining their nutrition and hydration, and getting physical exercise that maintains blood flow and oxygenation to the brain, Frantz said. All of those impact our cognitive function and communication.

Depression and anxiety common companions for people who are seriously ill or disabled also need attention. A lot of times when people are struggling to manage deficits, theyre focusing on what they were able to do in the past and really mourning that loss of efficiency, Tremaine said. Theres a large psychological component as well that needs to be managed.

Medicare usually covers cognitive rehabilitation (patients may need to contribute a copayment), but Medicare Advantage plans may differ in the type and length of therapy theyll approve and how much theyll reimburse providers an issue that can affect access to care.

Still, Tremaine noted, not a lot of people know about cognitive rehabilitation or understand what it does, and it remains underutilized. She and other experts dont recommend digital brain-training programs marketed to consumers as a substitute for practitioner-led cognitive rehabilitation because of the lack of individualized assessment, feedback, and coaching.

Also, experts warn, while cognitive rehabilitation can help people with mild cognitive impairment, its not appropriate for people who have advanced dementia.

If youre noticing cognitive changes of concern, ask for a referral from your primary care physician to an occupational or speech therapist, said Erin Foster, an associate professor of occupational therapy, neurology, and psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Be sure to ask therapists if they have experience addressing memory and thinking issues in daily life, she recommended.

If theres a medical center in your area with a rehabilitation department, get in touch with them and ask for a referral to cognitive rehabilitation, said Smith, of UT Southwestern Medical Center. The professional discipline that helps the most with cognitive rehabilitation is going to be rehabilitation medicine.

Judith Graham, a contributing columnist, writes the Navigating Aging column for KHN. She has covered health care for more than 30 years. Find Judith on Twitter @judith_graham

This story was produced byKHN, which publishesCalifornia Healthline, an editorially independent service of theCalifornia Health Care Foundation.

KHN(Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs atKFF(Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation. Find KHN on Twitter@KHNews

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Elderly are more affected by COVID brain fog, but 'cognitive rehab' could be an effective treatment - Genetic Literacy Project

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A therapy found to improve cognitive function in patients with Down syndrome – EurekAlert

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 2:00 am

An Inserm team at the Lille Neuroscience & Cognition laboratory (Inserm/Universit de Lille, Lille University Hospital) has joined forces with its counterparts at Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV) to test the efficacy of GnRH injection therapy in order to improve the cognitive functions of a small group of patients with Down syndrome. First the scientists revealed a dysfunction of the GnRH neurons in an animal model of Down syndrome and its impacts on the cognitive function impairment associated with the condition. Then a pilot study testing GnRH pulsatile injection therapy was conducted in seven patients. The results were promising : the therapy led to improved cognitive function and brain connectivity. This study has been published in Science.

Down syndrome, also known as trisomy 21, affects around one in 800 births and results in a variety of clinical manifestations, including decline in cognitive capacity. With age, 77% of people with the condition experience symptoms similar to those of Alzheimer's disease. Gradual loss of the ability to smell, typical of neurodegenerative diseases, is also commonly encountered from the prepubertal period, with potential sexual maturation deficits occurring in men.

GnRH-secreting neuron dysfunction identified in Down syndrome

Recent discoveries have suggested that the neurons expressing gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) - which is known for regulating reproduction via the hypothalamus - could also act on other brain regions with a potential role in other functions, such as cognition.

With this idea in mind, the Lille Neuroscience & Cognition laboratory team led by Inserm Research Director Vincent Prvot studied the mechanism which regulates GnRH in mouse models of Down syndrome.

The laboratory demonstrated that five strands of microRNA regulating the production of this hormone - which are found on chromosome 21 are dysfunctional. This supernumerary chromosome then leads to abnormalities in the neurons that secrete GnRH. These findings were confirmed at both genetic and cellular levels. The Inserm scientists were able to demonstrate that the progressive cognitive and olfactory deficiencies seen in the mice were closely linked to dysfunctional GnRH secretion.

Restoring GnRH production to restore cognitive function

The Inserm scientists were then able to demonstrate that restoring physiological GnRH system function restores cognitive and olfactory functions in trisomic mice.

These findings in mice were discussed with Nelly Pitteloud, professor at the Faculty of Biology and Medicine of the University of Lausanne and head of the Endocrinology, Diabetology, and Metabolism Department at CHUV. Her research focuses on congenital GnRH deficiency, a rare disease which manifests by the absence of spontaneous puberty. These patients are given pulsatile GnRH therapy in order to reproduce the natural pulsatile rhythm of this hormones secretion, in order to induce puberty.

The researchers therefore decided to test the efficacy of pulsatile GnRH therapy on cognitive and olfactory deficits in trisomic mice, following a protocol identical to that used in humans. After 15 days, the team was able to demonstrate the restoration of olfactory and cognitive functions in mice.

Pulsatile GnRH therapy improves cognitive function and neural connectivity in a small patient group

The next stage for the scientists and doctors involved a pilot clinical trial in patients to evaluate the effects of this treatment. Seven men with Down syndrome, between 20 and 50years of age, received one subcutaneous dose of GnRH every two hours for 6months via a pump placed on the arm. Cognition and olfactory tests as well as MRI exams were performed before and after the treatment.

From the clinical viewpoint, cognitive performance increased in 6 of the 7 patients with better three-dimensional representation, better understanding of instructions, improved reasoning, attention, and episodic memory. However, the treatment had no impact on the ability to smell. These measures to improve cognitive functions were confirmed by brain imaging conducted by the CHUV Department of Clinical Neurosciences, which revealed a significant increase in functional connectivity.

These data suggest that the treatment acts on the brain by strengthening the communication between certain regions of the cortex."Maintaining the GnRH system appears to play a key role in brain maturation and cognitive functions," explains Prvot. "In Down syndrome, pulsatile GnRH therapy is looking promising, especially as it is an existing treatment with no significant side effects," adds Pitteloud.

These promising findings now justify the launch of a larger study with the inclusion of women to confirm the efficacy of this treatment in people with Down syndrome, but also for other neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.

Source

GnRH replacement rescues cognition in Down Syndrome

Maria Manfredi-Lozano1,2#, Valerie Leysen1,2#, Michela Adamo3,4#, Isabel Paiva5, Renaud Rovera6, Jean-Michel Pignat7, Fatima Ezzahra Timzoura1,2, Michael Candlish8,, Sabiha Eddarkaoui1, Samuel A. Malone1,2, Mauro S. B. Silva1,2, Sara Trova1,2, Monica Imbernon1,2, Laurine Decoster1,2, Ludovica Cotellessa1,2,Manuel Tena-Sempere9, Marc Claret10, Ariane Paoloni-Giacobino11, Damien Plassard12, Emmanuelle Paccou3, Nathalie Vionnet3, James Acierno3, Aleksandra Maleska Maceski13, Antoine Lutti14, Frank Pfrieger15, S. Rasika1,2, Federico Santoni4, Ulrich Boehm8, Philippe Ciofi16, Luc Bue1, Nasser Haddjeri6, Anne-Laurence Boutillier5, Jens Kuhle13, Andrea Messina3,4, Bogdan Draganski14,17, Paolo Giacobini1,2, Nelly Pitteloud3,4*, Vincent Prevot1,2 *

1 Univ. Lille, Inserm, CHU Lille, Lille Neuroscience & Cognition, UMR-S 1172, Labex DistAlz,Lille, France2 Laboratory of Development and Plasticity of the Neuroendocrine Brain, FHU 1000 days forhealth, EGID, Lille, France3 Department of Endocrinology, Diabetology, and Metabolism, Lausanne University Hospital,1011 Lausanne, Switzerland4 Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, Lausanne 1005, Switzerland5 Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives et Adaptatives (LNCA), UMR 7364, Universit deStrasbourg-CNRS, Strasbourg, France6 Univ. Lyon, Universit Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Inserm, Stem Cell and Brain Research InstituteU1208, Bron 69500, France7Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Neurorehabilitation Unit, University Hospital CHUV,Lausanne, Switzerland8 Experimental Pharmacology, Center for Molecular Signaling (PZMS), Saarland UniversitySchool of Medicine, 66421, Homburg, Germany9 Univ. Cordoba, IMIBC/HURS, CIBER Fisiopatologa de la Obesidad y Nutricin, Instituto deSalud Carlos III, Cordoba, Spain10 Neuronal Control of Metabolism Laboratory, Institut d'Investigacions Biomdiques August Pi iSunyer (IDIBAPS), 08036 Barcelona, Spain; Centro de Investigacin Biomdica en Red(CIBER) de Diabetes y Enfermedades Metablicas Asociadas (CIBERDEM), 08036 Barcelona,Spain11Department of Genetic Medicine, University Hospitals of Geneva, 4 rue Gabrielle-Perret-Gentil,1211, Genve, Switzerland12 CNRS UMR 7104, INSERM U1258, GenomEast Platform, Institut de Gntique et de BiologieMolculaire et Cellulaire (IGBMC), Universit de Strasbourg, Illkirch, France13 Neurologic Clinic and Polyclinic, MS Centre and Research Centre for Clinical Neuroimmunologyand Neuroscience Basel; University Hospital Basel, University of Basel, Basel Switzerland14 Laboratory for Research in Neuroimaging LREN, Centre for Research in Neurosciences,Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Lausanne University Hospital and University ofLausanne, Switzerland15 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Universit de Strasbourg, Institut desNeurosciences Cellulaires et Intgratives, 67000 Strasbourg, France16 Univ. Bordeaux, Inserm, U1215, Neurocentre Magendie, Bordeaux, France17 Neurology Department, Max-Planck-Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig,Germany New address, Institute of Cell Biology and Neuroscience and Buchmann Institute for MolecularLife Sciences (BMLS), University of Frankfurt, Max-von-Laue-Str. 15, 60438, Frankfurt am

Main, Germany

# these authors contributed equally

* these authors contributed equally

Science, September 1, 2022

https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abq4515

Contact details

Vincent Prvot

Inserm Research Director

"Development and Plasticity of the Neuroendocrine Brain" team leader

Unit U1172 Lille Neuroscience & Cognition Lille, France

Email:vincent.prevot@inserm.fr

Telephone number provided upon request

Nelly Pitteloud

Professor at Universit de Lausanne

Head of Department, Endocrinology, Diabetology, and Metabolism, CHUV

Email: nelly.pitteloud@chuv.ch

Press contact

presse@inserm.fr

medias@chuv.ch

GnRH replacement rescues cognition in Down Syndrome

1-Sep-2022

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WEF agenda envisions an augmented society ruled by Internet of Bodies, digital ID – The Sociable

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 1:57 am

The unelected globalists at the World Economic Forum (WEF) are envisioning an augmented society ruled by digital identity and transhumanism via the Internet of Bodies.

Digital identity has long been on the Davos agenda and has been gaining speed ever since the official launch of the great reset in June, 2020.

On August 17, 2022, the WEF published a story by Callsign CEO Zia Hayat on its Agenda blog claiming, Digital identity is vital element of building trust both online and in our wider economies to everyones benefit.

According to Hayat, If we dont know for certain who we are interacting with online, we cannot have trust. Digital identity must therefore be the foundational element to our digital economy.

But its not just for our digital economy that the unelected globalists want to usher-in digital identity for all.

They want that digital identity be embedded into every aspect of our lives even under our skin!

This digital identity determines what products, services and information we can access or, conversely, what is closed off to us World Economic Forum, 2018

Technology will become more intertwined with the body in the form of implants Kathleen Philips, WEF Agenda, 2022

For years, the WEF and its partners have been pushing digital ID for a number of reasons including:

Digital identity is also a foundational element for building a Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-style system of social credit where access to goods and services are based on a citizens behavioral score.

When trust is broken in one area, a citizen may be locked out of participating in just about every aspect of society.

As scary as chip implants may sound, they form part of a natural evolution that wearables once underwent Kathleen Philips, WEF Agenda, 2022

Going hand-in-hand with digital identity and subsequent digital ID is the push for a transhumanist future.

The WEF published another blog post in August, this time exploring how merging humans with technology will create an augmented society and that stakeholders in society will need to agree on how to ethically make these amazing technologies a part of our lives.

Written by imec VP of R&D Kathleen Philips, the article describes augmentation as going beyond rehabilitative healthcare whereby the extension of rehabilitation where technological aids such as glasses, cochlear implants or prosthetics are designed to restore a lost or impaired function.

Philips goes on to say that when the merging of humans and technology is added to completely healthy individuals, then what you get is augmentation.

Welcome to the Internet of Bodies (IoB).

The WEF is fully behind widespread adoption of the IoB despite recognizing the enormous ethical concerns that come with having an unprecedented number of sensors attached to, implanted within, or ingested into human bodiesto monitor, analyze, and even modify human bodies and behavior.

The Internet of Bodies might trigger breakthroughs in medical knowledge []Or it might enable a surveillance state of unprecedented intrusion and consequence RAND Corporation, 2020

Increased IoB adoption might also increase global geopolitical risks, because surveillance states can use IoB data to enforce authoritarian regimes RAND Corporation, 2020

As acknowledged by Philips herself, the idea of augmenting a perfectly healthy human being with technology carries many ethical concerns.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in 2020, National Academy of Medicine presidentVictor Dzautold the Davos elites that augmenting humans beyond their natural capabilities was crossing the ethical line.

I think youre in pretty safe ground when you use these technologies for the purpose of curing disease, treating disease, or at least addressing impairment, he said.

I do think you start crossing the line when you think about enhancement and augmentation.

Fast forward two years and nine months, and the Davos Agenda blog is saying, As scary as chip implants may sound, they form part of a natural evolution that wearables once underwent.

I do think you start crossing the line when you think about enhancement and augmentation Victor Dzau, WEF Annual Meeting, 2020

Should you implant a tracking chip in your child? There are solid, rational reasons for it, like safety. Would you actually do it? Is it a bridge too far? Kathleen Philips, WEF Agenda, 2022

The unelected globalists are even seeding the idea of implanting children with tracking chips while claiming to be concerned about the ethical concerns.

The limits on implants are going to be set by ethical arguments rather than scientific capacity, Philips wrote, adding, For example, should you implant a tracking chip in your child? There are solid, rational reasons for it, like safety. Would you actually do it? Is it a bridge too far?

While children were used as a use case for digitally tagging, tracking, and tracing people like cattle, the same concept can be applied to the rest of humanity for our safety of course!

This is what the so-called fourth industrial revolution (4IR) is really all about in the words of WEF founder and executive chair Klaus Schwab, What the Fourth Industrial Revolution will lead to is a fusion of our physical, our digital, and our biological identities.

Another way of looking at the 4IR is the merger of humans beings with technology while simultaneously creating a control grid to monitor and enforce compliance.

What the Fourth Industrial Revolution will lead to is a fusion of our physical, our digital, and our biological identities Klaus Schwab, WEF, 2019

Brain implants take us one step further and allow us to tap straight into the bodys operating system Kathleen Philips, WEF Agenda, 2022

Going back to Philipss blog post on an augmented society, she acknowledges that the brain is part of our human operating system, stating, Brain implants take us one step further and allow us to tap straight into the bodys operating system.'

But what does it mean to tap into someones operating system?

Historian Yuval Noah Harari has already answered this question on several occasions.

When you tap into a persons operating system, what you get is the ability to hack human beings.

This means governments and corporations would know more about you than you know about yourself.

When humans become hackable, they risk losing all their free will. They will be able to be manipulated in seemingly unconceivable ways.

We are no longer mysterious souls; we are now hackable animals Yuval Noah Harari, WEF, 2020

Ethics will advise us Kathleen Philips, WEF Agenda, 2022

In her WEF blog post, Philips asks, When do we enter the grey zone?

The answer is simple. Weve already entered that grey zone.

To give one recent example, a Pentagon-sponsoredRAND report publishedin November, 2021 outlined the technological potentials of this controversial transhumanist research, which includes potentially adding reptilian genes that provide the ability to see in infrared, and making humans stronger, more intelligent, or more adapted to extreme environments.

This means that governments are already fundamentally altering what it means to be human, funding research into creating super humans that are smarter, faster, and stronger through human performance enhancement.

Its happening now, but not to worry!

Philips assures, Ethics will advise us.

Authoritarianism is easier in a world of total visibility and traceability, while democracy may turn out to be more difficult World Economic Forum, 2019

It all starts with digital identity, and the agenda continues to move toward an augmented society.

Those who control the data and the technology are poised to rule the world, but the future doesnt have to be this way.

We all have choices.

You can choose to trust that your digital overlords are doing whats best for society, or you may use common sense and reason to see through their agendas and therefore feel compelled to speak out to friends, family, co-workers, neighbors, or anyone else who will listen.

Of course, there are many people whose minds are already made up, choose not to see, or are too busy just trying to get by that they dont have the time to look into these things.

Knowledge is power.

What will you do with the knowledge youve acquired?

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Prebunking Disinformation | prebunking disinformation – Patheos

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 1:57 am

Prebunking DisinformationThe SST AlliancePrebunking Disinformation

I propose fighting truth decay by prebunking disinformation. I propose that scientists, skeptics, and theologians ally with one another to prescribe evidence-based reason for the health of our common good. Lets call it the SST Alliance.

Recently I found myself writing an editorial for the forthcoming final 2022 issue of Theology and Science. I ended up saying that theologians and scientists along with skeptics should form an alliance on behalf of evidence-based reasoning. This alliance could defend us against the intellectual plague now infecting the globe through digital social media. The symptoms of our infodemic include too much information, misinformation, disinformation, conspiracy theories, pseudoscience, just plain lies, and profiteering off untruth such as perception management (PM) firms.

The forces of disinformation have become a threat to social cohesion, world peace, and even the fecundity of Planet Earth. More than one million Americans have died of a pandemic disease that deniers have variously claimed to be a deliberate pandemic or a nonexistent media hoax, wails skeptic Daniel Loxton(Loxton 9-10/2022, 15). The very course of national, international, and planetary events is now being influenced by disinformation. The climate crisis burns out of control, with necessary action having been delayed for decades by denialist pseudoscience(Loxton 9-10/2022, 15).

Post-truth, as the societal manifestation of a prolonged subclinical collective trauma response, is a reflection that society is profoundly wounded, is the diagnosis of theologian Jennifer Baldwin(Baldwin 2018, 104).

Conspiracy theories and pseudoscience are no longer merely weird, crazy, or looney. Theyre dangerous. Our defense against truth decay and promotion of the common good must include prebunking disinformation.

Prebunking is basically debunking as the avante-garde.

What is prebunking disinformation? Well, lets call to mind debunking. It was the summer of 1952 when flying saucers buzzed the White House in Washington DC. The unknown aircraft were tracked by multiple radar screens. Scrambled pilots chased them, radioing their exploits to the control tower. The nation was in a state of alarm.

The Pentagon was in a pickle. Top military brass had determined that the Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) were not hostile or dangerous. But, the Soviet Union was. How could U.S. national defense officials discriminate between the non-hostile flying saucers and the lethal missiles that Russia might send to destroy North American cities?

The problem: too much information. How could the new U.S. Air Force filter through the whelming flood of UFO reports to find hostile Soviet threats? The solution: debunking. The U.S. Air Force set a policy of debunking citizen reports of unidentified aerial phenomena. By debunkingproviding alternative natural explanations as well as discrediting the reputations of those who reported sightingsthe military could reduce the net number of cases requiring thorough examination. The now famous astronomer, J. Allen Hynek, then at Ohio State, became the chief information debunker. The rest makes for quite a textured history down to the present time.

Its time now for critical thinking to expand with the speed of a California wildfire. To change our metaphor, lets hone our critical thinking into a sharp sword to cut through the blur between truth and untruth.

So, just what does it mean to be a critical thinker? Ive long contended that critical consciousness begins with holding two different accounts of the same subject in your mind at one time. These two differing accounts could be ones own plus that of someone else. Only after weighing the merits of each account does the critical thinker then render a sound judgment.

Now, let me introduce Helen Lee Bouygues, founder of the Paris-based Reboot Foundation that promotes reflective forms of thought in schools. She was recently interviewed for Skeptical Inquirer. Bouygues describes critical consciousness as I understand it. Being a good critical thinker means questioning your assumptions, walking through problems logically, and then reflecting on your thinking to better understand it(Bouygues 9-10/2022, 18).

What about the sharp sword of critical thinking? Note Bouygues motto: SHARP. What does this stand for? SHARP stands for: Stop, Hone, Accumulate, Reason, and Perspectivize(Bouygues 9-10/2022, 18). By accumulate, she refers to accumulating evidence. Where Bouygues puts perspectivize, I would put something like, render judgment.

Bouygues employs the word, prebunk. I like that word. According to Bouygues, prebunking takes the form of educating ourselves about various disinformation techniques. Knowing the enemy is the best way to arm oneself in the battle for truth.

Now, I must admit, that Ive not yet fully prebunked myself. Im still a tad nave. Im still more gullible to misinformation and disinformation than I wish to be. Even so, I like that word, prebunk. I wonder if we might expand its meaning to include an aggressive skepticism regarding pseudoscientific claims and acerbic political rhetoric?

Truth matters, says the theologian. The danger of modern political lying is not merely that we will believe lies, but that we will lose the capacity to distinguish what is real from what we merely wish was real, and will stop thinking this difference even matters, avers theologian Lisa Stenmark. This kind of lying undermines the very foundation of public life and judgment, destroying the world itself, and this worldlessness undermines our sense of reality and of community(Stenmark 2018, 5).

Truth matters, says the scientist. Misinformation has reached crisis proportions, say Jevin D. West and Carl T. Bergstrom, writing for the National Academy of Sciences. It poses a risk to international peace, interferes with democratic decision making, endangers the well-being of the planet, and threatens public health(West 4/2021).

Truth matters, says the skeptic. To combat truth decay, we need to prebunk disinformation by taking two doses of critical thinking. At least according to skeptic Daniel Loxton. First, we all must accept that misinformation matters(Loxton 9-10/2022, 16). The days when we could chuckle and dismiss conspiracy theories as looney are over. Truth is now a matter of life and death.

The second dose, again according to Loxton, is study the intricacies that go into manufacturing denial, misinformation, disinformation, conspiracy theories, deceit, and lies. Disinformation Studies is the discipline (Loxton 9-10/2022, 17). I recommend starting with websites such as Tools that Fight Disinformation Online along with Catalogue of all projects working to solve Misinformation and Disinformation, even though some links are not connecting.

The third dose of critical thinking in our fight against truth decay is this: create a spirited alliance between Scientists, Skeptics, and Theologians. Im prescribing an SST Alliance defending and promoting evidence-based reasoning as a chief ingredient in public policy formulation.[1]

Now, we must acknowledge that scientific reason and theological reason, though overlapping, are not exhaustively identical. Systems biologist and philosopher of science Stuart A. Kauffman confesses that Science is not the only pathway to truth (Kauffman, 2008, p. xii). Reason can take us beyond the physical reality described by science. Or, perhaps more precisely, the theologian finds its meaning within a more comprehensive horizon that includes revelatory truth. Philosopher of science Kelly Smith shows how one can build on the other.

Science is a very powerful heuristic for exploring the natural world, but it is not an ultimate arbiter of truth. If we are clear about that, then we are free to go beyond scientific evidence as long as we acknowledge what we are doing and take care not to damage science in the process. So, if one chooses to overlay the fact of increasing complexity with a faith claim that supports a sense of purpose and meaning, science should have nothing to say about this one way or another(Smith 2020, 5).

In sum, theologians can just like the scientist in the lab next door hold up evidence-based reason regarding the world we live in as our cultures desideratum.

We should expect, nevertheless, that a few scientists and nearly all skeptics might be suspicious that theologians should be their allies in defending and promoting evidence-based reasoning.[2] Theologians are frequently dismissed for being superstitious, ideological, or just plain ignorant.[3] Therefore, a responsibility falls on the shoulders of the theologians to demonstrate their age-old commitment to the partnership of faith and reason (fides et ratio).

It is clear from history, then, that Christian thinkers were critical in adopting philosophical thought(Pope 1998, 39). These are the words of His Holiness, Pope and Saint John Paul II, issued Fides et Ratio in 1998. This special activity of human reason, the pontiff continued, yields indispensable and celebrated results in the different fields of knowledge and fostering the development of culture and history(Pope 1998, 5). Through reason the critical theologian becomes a public theologian, contributing positively to the development of culture and history.

Will the scientist let alone the skeptic welcome the theologian into a partnership for prebunking disinformation? Perhaps the theologian should be on his or her or their best behavior.

We cannot take for granted that theologians or other religious leaders should be trusted when it comes to evidence-based reason. A quick surf of the internet uncovers many religious figures looking like the west end of a horse facing eastward.

Much to my chagrin, too many alliances have already been formed. Unhealthy alliances. There are soul-selling political alliances between evangelicals and the Republican Party. Correspondingly, the theology of liberal Protestants has become the Democratic Partys platform with just a little prayer added. The Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus, Kirill, marches in Vladimir Putins war against Ukraine. One can only wonder: where did Jesus go? Where did reason go? It seems that our worlds Christian leaders are practicing soul abuse.

Churches need to teach their members about discernment, now more than ever, says progressive Patheos columnist, Jayson Bradley. I believe that evangelical Christians are particularly susceptible to believing dangerous conspiracy theories, and they need to learn how to become more discerning. Susceptible? Or responsible for our post-truth society?

Bradley is a progressive who blames evangelicals. Which is more difficult? An alliance binding theologian with scientist and skeptic? Or, an alliance binding evangelicals with progressives?

Perhaps todays public theologian needs to convert the churches to evidence-based reasoning right along with converting the internet. This is a pretty tall order. Perhaps the theologian should seek allies. How about our scientists and our skeptics?[4]

Patheos columnist James McGrath aches when watching Christians contribute to the post-truth culture. The problem of spreading rumorshas the potential to be deeply evil. We must prescribe fighting truth decay within the church while, simultaneously, debunking disinformation in the digital media.

In the most recent issue of Skeptical Inquirer, editor Kendrick Frazier warns us to repent like the prophets warned ancient Israel to repent. Suddenly, says Frazier, the things we skeptics have been warning about for decadesthe dangers of a population unable or unwilling to discern truth from nontruthhave become a mainstream concern(Frazier 9-10/2022).

If this were the 1960s, theologians might call this the secular work of the Holy Spirit. If skeptics live up to their commitment to defend and promote evidence-based reason, then theologians as well as scientists might find them to be good allies. Would an SST Alliance be possible?

Ted Peters pursues Public Theology at the intersection of science, religion, ethics, and public policy. Peters is an emeritus professor at the Graduate Theological Union, where he co-edits the journal, Theology and Science, on behalf of the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences, in Berkeley, California, USA. His book, God in Cosmic History, traces the rise of the Axial religions 2500 years ago. He previously authored Playing God? Genetic Determinism and Human Freedom? (Routledge, 2nd ed., 2002) as well as Science, Theology, and Ethics (Ashgate 2003). He is editor of AI and IA: Utopia or Extinction? (ATF 2019). Along with Arvin Gouw and Brian Patrick Green, he co-edited the new book, Religious Transhumanism and Its Critics hot off the press (Roman and Littlefield/Lexington, 2022). Soon he will publish The Voice of Christian Public Theology (ATF 2022). See his website: TedsTimelyTake.com.

This fictional spy thriller, Cyrus Twelve, follows the twists and turns of a transhumanist plot.

Baldwin, Jennifer. 2018. Knowledge, Power, and Fear: The Role of Religion and Science in Populism and Our Shared Public Life. In Navigating Post-Truth and Alternaive Facts, by ed Jennifer Baldwin, 97-112. Lanham MA: Lexington.

Bouygues, Helen Lee. 9-10/2022. Rebooting Critical Thinking by Julia Lavarnway. Skeptical Inquirer 46:5 18-19.

Frazier, Kendrick. 9-10/2022. Skepticisms Newly Recognized Relevance. Skeptical Inquirer 46:5 4.

Kauffman, Stuart A. 2008. Reinventing the Sacred: A New View of Science, Reason, and Religion. New York: Basic Books.

Loxton, Daniel. 9-10/2022. Critical Study of Nonsense Finally a Mainstream Concern. Skeptical Inquirer 46:5 14-17.

Peters, Ted. 2018. Public Theology: Its Pastoral, Apologetic, Scientific, Politial, and Prophetic Tasks. International Journal of Public Theology 12:2 153-177; https://brill.com/abstract/journals/ijpt/12/1/ijpt.12.issue-1.xml.

Pope, John Paul II. 1998. Fides et Ratio. Vatican: http://web.archive.org/web/20131001225220/http://www.vatican.va/edocs/ESL0036/_INDEX.HTM.

Smith, Kelly C. 2020. Cosmogenesis, Complexity, and Neo-Natural Faith in the Context of Astrobiology. Religions 11 (12): 1-10.

Stenmark, Lisa. 2018. Modern Political Lying: Science and Religion Critical Discourse in a Post-Truth World. In Navigating Post-Truth and Alternative Facts, by ed Jennifer Baldwin, 3-18. Lanham MA: Lexington.

West, Jevin, and Carl Bergstrom. 4/2021. Misinformation in and about science. PNAS 115:15 https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.1912444117.

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Stem Cells Used to Grow Mouse Embryo – BioTechniques

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 1:56 am

Do synthetic mice dream of electric sheep? Were on the way to finding out thanks to a breakthrough in stem cell research.

Its not going to overthrow mankind from a lab anytime soon, but a stell cell-grown mouse has got the brain. Stem cells are the cornerstone of the body and can differentiate into almost any other type of cell therein. In the week post-fertilization, three types of stem cells develop: one to form the tissues of the body, while one of the extraembryonic stem cell types becomes the placenta, and the other becomes the yolk sac.

By carefully guiding these three types of stem cell, researchers at the University of Cambridge (UK) grew a synthetic mouse embryo with a brain and beating heart, and the beginnings of a full set of organs, without the use of sperm or eggs.

For an embryo to develop, the proto-embryonic tissue and the tissue that will connect the embryo to the mother need to establish contact. The researchers established specific environments and induced particular sets of gene expressions to encourage the stem cells to communicate.

They observed that extraembryonic cells use both chemical signaling and touch to guide their embryonic counterparts to develop into the embryo. Researchers guided this process by assembling cultured stem cells, representing the three sorts of tissue, in specific proportions and environments to coax them into communication. From there, the stem cells self-organized and developed into the formational stages of organs, in addition to the yolk sac in which an embryo gains nutrients during its first weeks.

Novel hydrogel bioink improves 3D-printed biomaterials

Researchers have overcome the limitations of current bioinks by incorporating microgels, taking us one step closer to bioprinting functioning organs and tissues.

The model even developed a beating heart and the initial stages of an entire brain with evidence of anterior development: a developmental milestone never before achieved in previously created synthetic embryos.

Lead researcher Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, understandably excited about this breakthrough, enthused: This opens new possibilities to study the mechanisms of neurodevelopment in an experimental model. In fact, we demonstrate the proof of this principle in the paper by knocking out a gene already known to be essential for formation of the neural tube, precursor of the nervous system, and for brain and eye development. In the absence of this gene, the synthetic embryos show exactly the known defects in brain development as in an animal carrying this mutation. This means we can begin to apply this kind of approach to the many genes with unknown function in brain development.

A decade-in-the-making, there are multiple implications for this success. For a start, it could help to elucidate the reasons behind the success or failure of a pregnancy, as many pregnancies fail at the stage when the three initial stem cell types interact and communicate with each other to program embryonic development. The results could also guide future medical developments in trauma repair and synthetic organs for transplants. In addition, the development of the anterior part of the brain marks a major milestone for synthetic embryo research.

Though current research is performed using mouse models, the development of human models could signal the potential for organ generation that is otherwise impossible to study in natural embryos. In the UK, a human embryo can only be studied for up to 14 days of development.

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Global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market (2022 to 2027) – Growth, Trends, Covid-19 Impact and Forecasts – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 1:56 am

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market - Growth, Trends, Covid-19 Impact, and Forecasts (2022 - 2027)" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market is projected to register a CAGR of 8.4% during the forecast period (2022 to 2027).

Companies Mentioned

Key Market Trends

The Drug Development Segment is Expected to Hold a Major Market Share in the Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market.

By application, the drug development segment holds the major segment in the induced pluripotent stem cell market. Various research studies focusing on drug development studies with induced pluripotent stem cells have been on the rise in recent years.

For instance, an article titled "Drug Development and the Use of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Cardiomyocytes for Disease Modeling and Drug Toxicity Screening" published in the International Journal of Molecular Science in October 2020 discussed the broad use of iPSC derived cardiomyocytes for drug development in terms of adverse drug reactions, mechanisms of cardiotoxicity, and the need for efficient drug screening protocols.

Another article published in the Journal of Cells in December 2021 titled "Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell as a Disease Modeling and Drug Development Platform-A Cardiac Perspective" focused on methods to reprogram somatic cells into human induced pluripotent stem cells and the solutions to overcome the immaturity of the human induced pluripotent stem cells derived cardiomyocytes to mimic the structure and physiological properties of adult human cardiomyocytes to accurately model disease and test drug safety. Thus, this increase in the research of induced pluripotent stem cells for drug development and drug modeling is likely to propel the segment's growth over the study period.

Furthermore, as per an article titled "Advancements in Disease Modeling and Drug Discovery Using iPSC-Derived Hepatocyte-like Cells" published in the Multi-Disciplinary Publishing Institute journal of Cells in March 2022, preserved differentiation and physiological function, amenability to genetic manipulation via tools such as CRISPR/Cas9, and availability for high-throughput screening, make induced pluripotent stem cell systems increasingly attractive for both mechanistic studies of disease and the identification of novel therapeutics.

North America is Expected to Hold a Significant Share in the Market and Expected to do Same in the Forecast Period

The rise in the adoption of highly advanced technologies and systems in drug development, toxicity testing, and disease modeling coupled with the growing acceptance of stem cell therapies in the region are some of the major factors driving the market growth in North America.

The United States Food and Drug Administration in March 2022 discussed the development of strategies to improve cell therapy product characterization. The agency focused on the development of improved methods for testing stem cell products to ensure the safety and efficacy of such treatments when used as therapies.

Likewise, in March 2020, the Food and Drug Administration announced that ImStem drug IMS001, which uses AgeX's pluripotent stem cell technology, would be available for the treatment of multiple sclerosis. Similarly, REPROCELL introduced a customized iPSC generation service in December 2020, as well as a new B2C website to promote the "Personal iPS" service. This service prepares and stores an individual's iPSCs for future injury or disease regeneration treatment.

Thus, the increasing necessity for induced pluripotent stem cells coupled with increasing investment in the health care department is known to propel the growth of the market in this region.

Key Topics Covered:

1 INTRODUCTION

2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

4 MARKET DYNAMICS

4.1 Market Overview

4.2 Market Drivers

4.2.1 Increase in Research and Development Activities in Stem Cells Therapies

4.2.2 Surge in Adoption of Personalized Medicine

4.3 Market Restraints

4.3.1 Lack of Awareness Regarding Stem Cell Therapies

4.3.2 High Cost of Treatment

4.4 Porter's Five Force Analysis

5 MARKET SEGMENTATION

5.1 By Derived Cell Type

5.2 Application

5.3 End User

5.4 Geography

6 COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE

6.1 Company Profiles

7 MARKET OPPORTUNITIES AND FUTURE TRENDS

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

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Largest Gift in UCSD History to Fund Stem Cell Research on Space Station – Times of San Diego

Posted: September 8, 2022 at 1:56 am

Scanning electron micrograph of cultured human neuron from induced pluripotent stem cell. Photo via Mark Ellisman and Thomas Deerinck, National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research, UC San Diego

UC San Diego will use the largest single gift in its history to fund an institute tasked with expanding stem cell research and regenerative medicine, it was announced Tuesday.

The $150 million gift from businessman and philanthropist T. Denny Sanford follows up on his $100 million gift in 2013, which established UCSD as a leader in developing and delivering the therapeutic promise of human stem cells.

The special cells have the ability to develop into many different cell types which, when modified and repurposed, have the potential to treat, remedy or cure a vast array of conditions and diseases.

Dennys previous generosity spurred discoveries in stem cell research and medicine at UC San Diego that are already benefiting countless patients around the world, Chancellor Pradeep Khosla said. His most recent gift adds to our portfolio of stem cell research conducted in Earths orbit that will help us better understand the progression of cancer cells and aging.

New programs to be established at the UCSD Sanford Stem Cell Institute aboard the International Space Station include:

We are thrilled to announce the establishment of the UC San Diego Sanford Stem Cell Institute with Denny Sanfords generous support, said Dr. Catriona Jamieson, who will direct the institute. This will allow us to keep pace with the growing need for regenerative and stem-cell based therapies and accelerate translational stem cell research and discoveries that will transform human health for years to come.

According to the university, exposure to radiation and microgravity in low-Earth orbit can simulate and speed up aging in stem cells, as well as their transformation into cancer cells. Space-related research may have applications that create better treatments for various cancers and diseases on Earth, including blood cancers, as well as neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons.

This investment enables the team to dream beyond what is possible, Sanford said. The sky is no longer the limit.

In addition to his investment to create the Sanford Stem Cell Clinical Center at UCSD Health in 2013, Sanfords gifts established the T. Denny Sanford Institute for Empathy and Compassion in 2019, which focuses on research into the neurological basis of compassion, with application toward developing compassion and empathy-focused training for future generations of medical professionals, the university said.

He also recently made a $5 million gift to support the Epstein Family Alzheimers Research Collaboration, a partnership between UCSD and the University of Southern California to spark collaborative efforts to discover effective therapies for Alzheimers disease.

City News Service

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