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Scientists Discover Key to Hepatitis A Virus Replication, Show Drug Effectiveness | Newsroom – UNC Health and UNC School of Medicine

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:31 am

With no current treatments for hepatitis A, UNC School of Medicine scientists led by Stanley M. Lemon, MD, discovered how a protein and enzymes interact to allow hepatitis A virus to replicate, and they used a known drug to stop viral replication in an animal model.

CHAPEL HILL, NC The viral replication cycle is crucial for a virus to spread inside the body and cause disease. Focusing on that cycle in the hepatitis A virus (HAV), UNC School of Medicine scientists discovered that replication requires specific interactions between the human protein ZCCHC14 and a group of enzymes called TENT4 poly(A) polymerases. They also found that the oral compound RG7834 stopped replication at a key step, making it impossible for the virus to infect liver cells.

These findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, are the first to demonstrate an effective drug treatment against HAV in an animal model of the disease.

Our research demonstrates that targeting this protein complex with an orally delivered, small-molecule therapeutic halts viral replication and reverses liver inflammation in a mouse model of hepatitis A, providing proof-of-principle for antiviral therapy and the means to stop the spread of hepatitis A in outbreak settings, said senior author Stanley M. Lemon, MD, professor in the UNC Department of Medicine and UNC Department of Microbiology & Immunology, and member of the UNC Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases.

Lemon, who in the 1970s and 80s was part of a Walter Reed Army Medical Center research team that developed the first inactivated HAV vaccine administered to humans, said research on HAV tapered off after the vaccine became widely available in the mid-1990s. Cases plummeted in the 2000s as vaccination rates skyrocketed. Researchers turned their attention to hepatitis B and C viruses, both of which are very different from HAV and cause chronic disease. Its like comparing apples to turnips, Lemon said. The only similarity is that they all cause inflammation of the liver. HAV is not even part of the same virus family as hepatitis B and C viruses.

Hepatitis A outbreaks have been on the rise since 2016, even though the HAV vaccine is very effective. Not everyone gets vaccinated, Lemon pointed out, and HAV can exist for long periods of time in the environment such as on our hands and in food and water resulting in more than 44,000 cases, 27,000 hospitalizations and 400 deaths in the United States since 2016, according to the CDC.

Several outbreaks have occurred over the past several years, including in San Diego in 2017 driven largely by homelessness and illicit drug use, causing severe illness in about 600 people and killing 20. In 2022, there was a small outbreak linked to organic strawberries in multiple states, leading to about a dozen hospitalizations. Another outbreak in 2019 was linked to fresh blackberries. Globally, tens of millions of HAV infections occur each year. Symptoms include fever, abdominal pain, jaundice, nausea, and loss of appetite and sense of taste. Once sick, there is no treatment.

In 2013, Lemon and colleagues discovered that the hepatitis A virus changes dramatically inside the human liver. The virus hijacks bits of cell membrane as it leaves liver cells, cloaking itself from antibodies that would have otherwise quarantined the virus before it spread widely through the blood stream. This work was published in Nature and provided insight into how much researchers had yet to learn about this virus that was discovered 50 years ago and has likely caused disease dating back to ancient times.

A few years ago, researchers found that hepatitis B virus required TENT4A/B for its replication. Meanwhile, Lemons lab led experiments to search for human proteins that HAV needs in order to replicate, and they found ZCCHC14 a particular protein that interacts with zinc and binds to RNA.

This was the tipping point for this current study, Lemon said. We found ZCCHC14 binds very specifically to a certain part of HAVs RNA, the molecule that contains the viruss genetic information. And as a result of that binding, the virus is able to recruit TENT4 from the human cell.

In normal human biology, TENT4 is part of an RNA-modification process during cell growth. Essentially, HAV hijacks TENT4 and uses it to replicate its own genome.

This work suggested that stopping TENT4 recruitment could stop viral replication and limit disease. Lemons lab then tested the compound RG7834, which had previously been shown to actively block Hepatitis B virus by targeting TENT4. In the PNAS paper, the researchers detailed the precise effects of oral RG7834 on HAV in liver and feces and how the viruss ability to cause liver injury is dramatically diminished in mice that had been genetically modified to develop HAV infection and disease. The research suggests the compound was safe at the dose used in this research and the acute timeframe of the study.

This compound is a long way from human use, Lemon said, But it points the path to an effective way to treat a disease for which we have no treatment at all.

The pharmaceutical company Hoffmann-La Roche developed RG7834 for use against chronic hepatitis B infections and tested it in humans in a phase 1 trial, but animal studies suggested it may be too toxic for use over long periods of time.

The treatment for Hepatitis A would be short term, Lemon said, and, more importantly, our group and others are working on compounds that would hit the same target without toxic effects.

This research was a collaboration between the Lemon lab and the lab of Jason Whitmire, professor of genetics at the UNC School of Medicine. Lemon and Whitmire are members of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

First authors of the PNAS paper are You Li and Ichiro Misumi. Other authors, all at UNC, are Tomoyuki Shiota, Lu Sun, Erik Lenarcic, Hyejeong Kim, Takayoshi Shirasaki, Adriana Hertel-Wulff, Taylor Tibbs, Joseph Mitchell, Kevin McKnight, Craig Cameron, Nathaniel Moorman, David McGivern, John Cullen, Jason K. Whitmire, and Stanley M. Lemon.

This work was supported by grants from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (R01-AI131685), (R01-AI103083), (R01-AI150095), (R21-AI163606), (R01-AI143894), (R01-AI138337). The UNC Pathology Services Core and UNC High-Throughput Sequencing Facility were supported in part by a National Cancer Institute Center Core Support Grant (P30CA016086) to the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Media contact: Mark Derewicz, 919-923-0959

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How Erectile Dysfunction Drugs Can Help Treat Cancer and Save Thousands of Lives – SciTechDaily

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:31 am

The research showed that chemotherapy combined with the erectile dysfunction drugs known as PDE5i shrunk the tumors more than chemotherapy alone.

According to a recent study supported by Cancer Research UK and the Medical Research Council, a category of drugs often used to treat erectile dysfunction may be able to improve the effectiveness of chemotherapy in treating esophageal cancer.

The study, which was recently published in Cell Reports Medicine, discovered that PDE5 inhibitors, which are drugs that target cells called cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) in the vicinity of the tumor, may reverse chemotherapy resistance.

Even though it is still early in the research process, PDE5 inhibitors with chemotherapy may be able to shrink certain esophageal tumors more effectively than chemotherapy alone, conquering chemotherapy resistance, one of the biggest obstacles to treating esophageal cancer.

Although it is a relatively uncommon condition, the UK has one of the highest rates in the world, with 9,300 new instances of esophageal cancer diagnosed there each year. Esophageal cancer affects the food pipe that links your mouth to your stomach.

Currently, this illness has substantially worse outcomes and treatment choices than other cancers, with just around 1 in 10 patients living for 10 years or more. Part of the reason for this is that it can be resistant to chemotherapy in many circumstances, with roughly 80% of patients not responding.

Resistance to chemotherapy in esophageal cancer is influenced by the tumor microenvironment, the area that sounds the tumor. This is made up of molecules, blood vessels, and cells such as cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), which are important for tumor growth. It feeds the tumor and can act as a protective cloak, preventing treatments like chemotherapy from having an effect.

The team of researchers led by Professor Tim Underwood at the University of Southampton wanted to identify the cells in the tumor microenvironment which protect the tumor from treatment so they could target them.

The researchers found that levels of PDE5, an enzyme originally found in the wall of blood vessels are higher in esophageal adenocarcinoma compared with healthy esophageal tissue. High levels of PDE5 were found in CAFs within the tumor microenvironment. They also found that high expression of PDE5 is associated with worse overall survival, suggesting that PDE5 would be an effective target for treatment.

Following this, the researchers tested a PDE5 inhibitor, PDE5i, on CAFs from esophageal tumors. They found that PDE5i were able to suppress CAF activity and make them look more like normal fibroblasts.

Next, collaborating researchers at the University of Nottingham took samples of tumor cells from 15 tissue biopsies from eight patients and used them to create lab-grown artificial tumors. They tested a combination of PDE5i and standard chemotherapy on the tumors. Of the 12 samples from patients whose tumors developed a poor response to chemotherapy in the clinic, 9 were made sensitive to standard chemotherapy by targeting CAFs with PDE5i.

The researchers also tested the treatment on mice implanted with chemotherapy-resistant esophageal tumors and found that there were no adverse side effects to the treatment and that chemotherapy combined with PDE5i shrunk the tumors more than chemotherapy alone.

An added benefit of using PDE5 inhibitors is that they are already proven to be a safe and well-tolerated class of drug thats given to patients worldwide, even in the high doses that would be required for this treatment. The researchers also say that giving PDE5 inhibitors to people with esophageal cancer would be extremely unlikely to cause erections without the appropriate stimulation.

Professor Tim Underwood, the lead author of the study and a professor of gastrointestinal surgery at the University of Southampton, said, The chemotherapy-resistant properties of esophageal tumors mean that many patients undergo intensive chemotherapy that wont work for them. Finding a drug, which is already safely prescribed to people every day, could be a great step forward in tackling this hard-to-treat disease.

With the proven safety of these drugs and the positive results from this research, the researchers next step is a phase I/II clinical trial testing a PDE5 inhibitor in combination with chemotherapy in patients with advanced esophageal cancer.

If successful, this treatment could be helping a significant proportion of the around 9300 people a year diagnosed with esophageal cancer within the next 5 to 10 years. The study could pave the way for the use of PDE5 inhibitors in other cancer types.

Michelle Mitchell, chief executive of Cancer Research UK, said: Developing new drugs for cancer is incredibly important, but doing so from scratch is a challenging process, and many fail along the way. Weve also been keen to explore whether existing drugs, licensed for other diseases, can be effective in treating cancer. If these turn out to be successful treatments, they will also prove to be more affordable and become available to patients quicker.

Progress in treatment for esophageal cancer over the last 40 years has seen only limited improvement, which is why weve made it a research priority. Were looking forward to seeing how the combined treatment of PDE5 inhibitors with chemotherapy performs in clinical trials.

Nicola Packer, an HR manager from Basingstoke, was diagnosed with esophageal cancer at age 53. She was being monitored due to her diagnosis of a condition called Barretts esophagus, which can be a risk factor for esophageal cancer They found my tumor last February. They caught it at stage 2, which is unusual for esophageal tumors as they often go undetected for a long time and are mostly diagnosed at stage 3 or 4.

Chemo generally doesnt work that well on my kind of esophageal tumor so I knew it couldnt get rid of the tumor completely, that it could only shrink it with the hopes of making surgery more effective. The chemo was draining and each week they would tell me it was shrinking my tumor, but slowly. The anxiety you feel after going through chemotherapy and then having to wait through the weeks of recovery before you can have surgery, knowing that the chemo could only do so much is overwhelming.

Research like this that could mean people like me can have a better response to chemotherapy is incredibly important.

The study was funded by Cancer Research UK and the University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust.

Reference: Phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors enhance chemotherapy in preclinical models of esophageal adenocarcinoma by targeting cancer-associated fibroblast by Benjamin P. Sharpe, Annette Hayden, Antigoni Manousopoulou, Andrew Cowie, Robert C. Walker, Jack Harrington, Fereshteh Izadi, Stella P. Breininger, Jane Gibson, Oliver Pickering, Eleanor Jaynes, Ewan Kyle, John H. Saunders, Simon L. Parsons, Alison A. Ritchie, Philip A. Clarke, Pamela Collier, Nigel P. Mongan, David O. Bates, Kiren Yacqub-Usman, Spiros D. Garbis, Zo Walters, Matthew Rose-Zerilli, Anna M. Grabowska and Timothy J. Underwood, 21 June 2022, Cell Reports Medicine.DOI: 10.1016/j.xcrm.2022.100541

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Pune: Dr Mohan Wani appointed as director of National Centre for Cell Science – The Indian Express

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:31 am

Dr Mohan R Wani has been appointed as the director of Pune-based National Centre for Cell Science (NCCS), a premier research institute under the Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India.

The NCCS has been carrying out cutting-edge research in various domains such as cell and cancer biology, infectious diseases and immunology, stem cell and regenerative medicine, structural biology and bioinformatics, said Dr Wani.

Notably, Dr Wani has made significant research contribution in understanding the regulation of cellular and molecular pathophysiology of important skeletal and autoimmune diseases, including osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis. His group has also contributed to the field of stem cell biology and regenerative medicine.

Dr Wani said the NCCS will continue to address research questions pertaining to human health and diseases by further strengthening basic and translational research through a multidisciplinary approach, along with national and international collaborations.

Dr Wani completed his post-graduation in Veterinary Surgery from Nagpur Veterinary College. Thereafter, he obtained his PhD in Human Medicine from St Georges Hospital Medical School, University of London, England. He is also a fellow of prestigious science academies like the Indian National Science Academy (INSA), National Academy of Sciences India (NASI), National Academy of Veterinary Sciences (NAVS) and National Academy of Medical Sciences (NAMS).

His research work is published in several high impact peer-reviewed international journals and he has mentored scores of PhD, medical and veterinary students, and postdoctoral fellows. He is a recipient of several prestigious awards including the Commonwealth Fellowship, BM Birla Science Prize, and National Bioscience Award, among others.

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Stem Cells Market Competitive Insights And Global Outlook 2022 To 2027 Vcanbio, Boyalife, Beikebiotech, Thermo Fisher Scientific (Massachusetts, US),…

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:29 am

This Stem Cells Market analysis sheds light on novel methodologies used by major key players in the market. It further focuses on competitive landscape, which covers all the business-related details, company description, sales growth and revenue generation rate. Industry sectors and growth size is also discussed in this market research analysis. This Stem Cells Market study report allows key participants to go through comprehensive insights into the market developments and novel product launches. Industry owners are able to make right investment in the product or service launch

Registering a CAGR of 13.02% over the forecast period, the market value of Stem Cells is expected to reach US$ 28.2 billion in the year 2027.

Main companies in the global Stem Cells market: CCBC, Vcanbio, Boyalife, Beikebiotech, Thermo Fisher Scientific (Massachusetts, U.S), Merck KGaA, Cynata Therapeutics (Victoria, Australia), AMSBIO (Abingdon, United Kingdom)

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Umbilical Cord Blood Stem Cell

Embryonic Stem Cell

Adult Stem Cell

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For a complete understanding of the market dynamics, the global Stem Cells market is analyzed into key geographies namely: United States, China, Europe, Japan, Southeast Asia, India, and others. Each of these regions is analyzed on the basis of market findings in major countries in these regions for a macro-level understanding of the market.

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Stem Cells Market Competitive Insights And Global Outlook 2022 To 2027 Vcanbio, Boyalife, Beikebiotech, Thermo Fisher Scientific (Massachusetts, US),...

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Seven UMass Amherst Faculty Members Receive NSF CAREER Awards in 2021-22 Academic Year – UMass News and Media Relations

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:29 am

Over the course of the 2021-22 academic year, seven faculty members across the UMass Amherst campus have been named the recipients of National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER awards.

The Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program is a foundation-wide activity that offers the National Science Foundation's most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization.

Manning College of Information and Computer Sciences

Manning College of Information and Computer Sciences (CICS) professors Jie Xiong and Hamed Zamani have been awarded CAREER grants from the National Science Foundation for their work on long-range wireless sensing and the development of search engines that work on a conversational model, respectively. This brings the cumulative number of CAREER awards for CICS to 34.

Xiong, whose award totaled $621,984 is focusing on the improvement of a ubiquitous technology in daily lifesensors, which are embedded in a diverse range of systems such as smartphones, wearables, gaming devices, medical equipment and automobiles. Wireless sensing, an emerging alternative to conventional sensors, uses wireless signals to sense human beings and the surrounding environment using contact-free and sensor-free methods, which can be especially beneficial for pandemic and disaster response. The technology also promises to benefit a large spectrum of disciplines including elderly care, human-computer interaction and environment monitoring.

Xiong's project aims to develop fundamental theories to help people understand the underlying mechanism of long-range wireless sensing, and to apply those theories to overcome the limitations of the field, moving wide-area wireless sensing close to widespread adoption.

I am aiming to revolutionize wireless sensing and enable many new sensing applications, explains Xiong. These applications could range from soil moisture sensing for water conservation to the detection of disaster survivorseven if they are in a comathrough long-range, through-wall respiration sensing."

Zamani, who is an expert in information retrieval, search engines and machine learning, was awarded $570,863 to develop a next-generation, conversational search engine. While current search engines work on a query-response paradigm, where, for example you search best pizza in Amherst, Massachusetts and then wade through more than six-million results, a conversational search engine might ask a series of clarifying questions to arrive at a curated selection of results.

In particular, Zamani will work on developing new theories and models that can help advance the field of conversational information retrieval.

College of Natural Sciences

The College of Natural Science (CNS) has been awarded three CAREER grants during this cycle, bringing the total number to 60.

Owen Gwilliam, in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, has been awarded $546,061 for his research into various theories of higher algebra that occupy a point of intersection between math and physics. In particular, higher algebra has enlarged quantum field theory, which plays an active role in everything from particle theory to condensed matter physics.

Recently, the exchange between physics and math has yielded a new tool, called factorization algebras.

Mathematics and physics have engaged in a long dialogue for centuries, says Gwilliam, starting with Newton's invention of calculus and its applications to gravity. The rise of quantum field theory in the twentieth century has added a new topic for avid conversation. My research involves exploring how recent mathematical innovations from higher algebra clarify aspects of quantum field theory, with a special focus on the Kapustin-Witten theories (from physics) and their connection to the geometric Langlands program (in math).

However, one difficulty in pursuing interdisciplinary is communicating across disciplinary boundaries. A key component of Gwilliams project is to create chances for researchers at all levels to become fluent in speaking to both disciplines and, moreover, to build direct personal bridges. At the graduate and postdoctoral level, the project will run annual summer schools for both mathematicians and theoretical physicists, focused on topics of mutual interest. In addition, each academic year, it will produce high-quality, online masterclasses by experts about such topics, with lecture notes and exercises. Finally, the project will support summer research for undergraduates, tackling problems between mathematics and physics, from the University of Massachusetts and nearby Five Colleges.

Soil scientist Marco Keiluweit, of the Stockbridge School of Agriculture, has been awarded $468,283 to better understand how the complex science of how soils store carbon. Soils store more than twice as much carbon as the atmosphere and biosphere combined, and more than 90% of this soil carbon is stored in organic compounds intimately associated with reactive minerals. Such mineral-organic associations (MOAs) can protect carbon compounds against microbial or enzymatic attack for centuries to millennia. However, plant roots and associated microbes in the rhizosphere have a well-known ability to transform minerals through dissolution and exchange reactions. Yet, the effect that roots and microbes have on the MOAs remains poorly understood.

Keiluweits overall objective is to develop a mechanistic understanding of the dynamics and vulnerability of MOAs in the rhizosphere and to train diverse, creative and technically skilled environmental scientists. Keiluweits team will launch a collaboration with Holyoke Community College to increase representation of low-income and minority students in UMass's environmental science degree program and create a new course incorporating Design Thinking approaches in order to provide graduate students and postdocs with the creative problem-solving and collaborative skills urgently needed to solve the complex environmental challenges facing society today.

Lillian Fritz-Laylin, an evolutionary cell biologist, has been awarded $1,050,000 to investigate a fungus, known as B. dendrobatidis, that is decimating hundreds of amphibian species around the world. It seems that the fungus interacts with the mucus membrane that coats many amphibians, but how, exactly, is unknown.

The ultimate goal of this project, says Fritz-Laylin, is to determine how B. dendrobatidis responds to exposure to molecules found in amphibian mucus. Establishing the molecular mechanism by which mucus induces changes in B. dendrobatidis may be used to develop remediation strategies to reverse the decline in amphibians caused by B. dendrobatidis infection.

Part of Fritz-Laylins work will involve creating a hands-on laboratory course will be developed for approximately 24 students per year for the duration of the project. These students will gain practical experience in designing, executing and interpreting the results of their own experiments, preparing them to participate in the STEM workforce. The development, evaluation and dissemination of a modular laboratory course framework will allow additional University of Massachusetts Amherst faculty, as well as extra-mural faculty, to develop new courses and/or quickly revise existing courses to improve scientific reasoning in undergraduate students. Finally, the adaptation of these materials into a workshop for middle school girls will broaden participation in STEM fields.

College of Engineering

Chemical engineering assistant professors Peng Bai and Ashish Kulkarni have each been awarded prestigious five-year grants through the National Science Foundation Early Career Development (CAREER) Program. Bai and Kulkarni's CAREER awards are for $551,035 and $637,359, respectively.

Kulkarnis research combines nanotechnology, engineering and immunobiology to create nanoscale technologies that stimulate the immune system in specific ways to treat diseases and improve human health. He will use the CAREER grant to focus his research on the relationship between nanomaterials and inflammasome activation.

One of the biggest questions in the field of immunoengineering today is how do these nanomaterials interact with immune cells, and what kind of interactions do they create, whether positive or unwanted? Kulkarni says. This project is about understanding and mapping these interactions to develop guidelines for future generations of nanomaterials that are more effective and beneficial.

The proposed study will enhance our fundamental understanding of nanomaterial-immune cell interactions and enable us to develop novel approaches that can effectively target inflammasomes to treat chronic diseases, substantially contributing to improving human health and quality of life, Kulkarni says.

Bais research focuses on developing molecular simulation and first-principles methods to study separation, energy conversion and storage in complex materials systems.

Millions of tons of alcohols and carboxylic acids, used to create polymers, food additives, solvents, and pharmaceuticals, are produced industrially via catalytic carbonylation every year, Bai says. Because this process makes use of expensive rare-metal catalysts and requires corrosive chemical agents to promote the desired reactions, the result is stringent and costly reactor designs, complex catalyst recycling schemes, and environmentally unfriendly waste streams.

With the CAREER grant, Bai will develop computer models to discover effective porous solid-acid catalysts as a technologically and environmentally appealing alternative.

Faculty in the College of Engineering have been awarded 38 NSF CAREER awards since the award's inception in 1995. With Bai and Kulkarni's awards, all five current chemical engineering assistant professors in the College of Engineering have now received an NSF CAREER award.

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Married Couple are ‘Heart and Soul’ of Willed Body Program – University of Arizona

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:28 am

Medical students around the country start their journey to become physicians by studying the human body in gross anatomy labs, where they are reminded that real people volunteered their bodies to serve as educational tools to train them to help others.

Its no different at the University of Arizona Colleges of Medicine Tucson and Phoenix. The Tucson-based Willed Body Program annually accepts 150-200 whole body donations, which are embalmed and put in cold storage for use by both colleges for up to two years. Afterward, the remains are cremated and ashes returned to the families or spread in nearby mountains.

The people of Arizona are incredibly generous in this respect, because I know some willed body programs do have issues with not enough donors. And we never do, said Jean Wilson, PhD, program director, anatomy instructor, professor of cellular and molecular medicine, and BIO5 Institute member. We always have enough every year to supply the needs of the college and beyond.

The Willed Body Program serves more than just the Colleges of Medicine Tucson and Phoenix. It also supplies bodies for the A.T. Still University School of Osteopathic Medicine in Phoenix and nursing programs at the UArizona College of Nursing, Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University.

Currently, about 9,000 Arizonans have been issued willed body donor cards through the program that was founded in 1967.

Dr. Wilson credits the programs success in large part to the respectful, professional tone set by its funeral directors, Jared and Kat Alvarado. The husband-and-wife team work with donors, the families, faculty, physicians, nurses, students and others who benefit from the program.

Theyre unbelievable, Dr. Wilson said of the Alvarados. In the 32 years Ive been affiliated with the program, weve had people who are fine. But between the two of them, Kat and Jared are exceptional. Theyre so good with the donor families and the donors. They know exactly the right things to say. Theyre very gentle and empathetic. We are super lucky to have them.

Jared has been with the program 12 years, and Kat for seven. Both hold associates degrees in mortuary science and served three-year apprenticeships before being licensed as morticians.

Ive worked at places without an in-house willed body program, where you deal with a third party, said James Proffitt, PhD, College of Medicine Tucson lead instructor for the gross anatomy lab and cellular and molecular medicine assistant professor. Having two trained funeral directors and morticians people who really understand the process of grief and dying makes this so much more community oriented, humanistic, engaging and empathetic with what donors and students need.

I take the same approach as if I were at a funeral home, but feelings surrounding death are slightly less intense. The donors who participate in the Willed Body Program want to be here and most express their excitement at being able to contribute to medical education.Kat Alvarado, UArizona Willed Body Program funeral director, embalmer and coordinator

The donor families are very used to working with Kat and Jared, Dr. Proffitt said. They understand their best interests are looked out for by those two. It creates this kind of community, this family of donors. And this is something I try to impress on our students. These donors arent people from somewhere else. Theyre Arizonans. Theyre our neighbors.

Kat said her interest in the field was piqued in college, when she worked as a funeral home service attendant. She later served as an embalmer, cremationist and funeral director for a funeral home.

At UArizona, she said, I take the same approach as if I were at a funeral home, but feelings surrounding death are slightly less intense. The donors who participate in the Willed Body Program want to be here and most express their excitement at being able to contribute to medical education.

Unlike his wife, Jared said he sort of fell into his career as a funeral director.

After he graduated from high school, he took a job answering the phone at a funeral home. He started working with decedents his second day on the job. He went to mortuary school in Dallas, apprenticed in Texas and Arizona, and served as a crematory operator and embalmer before joining the Willed Body Program.

Death is hard on the families. But, at the same time, its great to hear how proud they are of their loved one donating their body to students for education, Jared said of what families say when he and Kat pick up a donated body. They hear similar comments at an annual willed body ceremony that offers donor families a chance to honor their loved ones.

Nearly 400 people attended the Willed Body Memorial Service in March. Among the speakers were the Alvarados, Dr. Wilson and medical students who expressed their gratitude for the donors beautiful and lasting gift to help them better learn their craft.

Jared does outreach to local high schools, talking to students about his experiences while encouraging others to follow in his footsteps.

My outreach to youth is important to me, he said. I wish I had someone who came to my high school to speak about these types of professions. Its my way of helping out as best I can.

The Alvarados are more than morticians. They also help fulfill continuing education needs for faculty physicians and nurses. In 2015, Jared Alvarado won the College of Medicine Tucsons Appointed Personnel Lura Hanekamp Award of Excellence for the part he plays in education for students, physicians and health professionals.

In 2019, Kat won a UArizona Individual Award for Excellence for her dedication to handling the programs administrative needs as Willed Body Program coordinator.

Jared also helps write academic papers related to the program, including a 2019 article on donor bodies used for students teaching students as a novel solution to time demands on doctors.

The program also hosts training opportunities for other medical professionals where staff need to understand human anatomy, including paramedics, emergency medical technicians and military health personnel. Jared assists in some training, including non-UArizona instruction for Davis-Monthan Air Force Base staff.

It usually is just myself and their instructors, so Im able to show them techniques and things Ive learned as part of the College of Medicine, he said.

Both are on call 24/7 to ensure the Willed Body Programs ongoing success, whether that involves working with instructors to help design specific training or traveling across the state to pick up donor bodies from a family or funeral home.

Thats important, Dr. Proffitt said, because donors bodies are the canvas upon which students and trainees learn to practice their art as healers. Without them, there is no healers art.

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Epic, Caris Life Sciences working together on molecular testing integration – Healthcare IT News

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:28 am

Caris Life Sciences announced this week that it will be broadening its partnership with Epic, integrating its molecular testing portfolio with Epic's Orders and Results Anywhere network.

WHY IT MATTERSCaris offers whole exome and whole transcriptome sequencing, and by applying AI modeling to its clinico-genomic database, it can help researchers gain better insights into the molecular complexity of disease.

The new project builds on the existing integration of Caris' Genomics Module within Epicand will expand capabilities by offering easier ordering and receipt of molecular profiling results directly in patients' electronic health records.

Officials say Caris' whole suite of molecular profile services for tissue and blood samples will be available within the Orders and Results Anywhere network.

ORA network integration, expected to be available later this year, will help drive data-driven decision-making for Epic customers which represent 60% of oncologists nationwide, the companies note. By putting ordering and results directly into the network, Caris says it aims to offer more streamlined access to structured genomic data within the Epic environment.

THE LARGER TRENDThis is just the most recent in a string of announcements involving Epic and precision medicine technology developers. In June, Myriad Genetics announced it was working to integrate its genetic testing services within Epic's EHR workflows offering providers genetic insights for more personalized care and giving patients easier access to test results within MyChart.

In April, Guardant Health, which develops precision oncology tools,announced its own collaboration with Epic to streamline clinicians' ability to order Guardant blood tests, liquid biopsies and more within the EHR.

And this past August, Foundation Medicine announced a deal with Epic toadd its genomic profiling and testing services to the EHR workflow.

In other Epic news, the vendor announced this past month that it would join the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement and apply to connect to TEFCA as an inaugural Qualified Health Information Network.

ON THE RECORD"Caris Life Sciences is committed to fulfilling our organizational promise of making personalized precision medicine accessible to as many physicians and patients as possible," David Spetzler, president and CEO of Caris, said in a statement. "Building on the success of our Epic Genomics Module integration, ORA will further enhance patient access to critical molecular results they need to fight, and hopefully beat, cancer."

Alan Hutchison, VP of population health at Epic, said, "We are excited for this enhanced partnership with Caris to further increase health access and care, and the opportunity to help deliver precision medicine to a greater number of communities."

Twitter:@MikeMiliardHITNEmail the writer:mike.miliard@himssmedia.comHealthcare IT News is a HIMSS publication.

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$30 Million Funding Empowers All-in-One Vaccine Candidate to Tackle Future Coronaviruses – Precision Vaccinations

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:28 am

(Precision Vaccinations)

As of early July 2022, uncertainty persists as SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus mutations continue emerging. According to the World Health Organization, the Omicron BA.x variants are now dominant worldwide.

There is a clear need for strategies to tackle emerging variants and protect populations against potential future threats to human health, says vaccine researchers from the University of Oxford and Caltech.

A new consortium announced on June 5, 2022, aims to address these issues by establishing the first-in-human clinical proof of concept for a new vaccine design.

The consortium brings together researchers from the University of Oxford and Caltech to collaborate with deep tech innovation organization CPI and industrial biotechnology company Ingenza Ltd (Caltech-CPI-Oxford-Ingenza).

The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) will partner with the consortium and has announced up to US $30 million to fund pre-clinical studies, GMP manufacturing, and Phase 1 trial based on this technology.

The vaccine will target both SARS-CoV-2 and several related bat viruses which have the potential to spread to humans. It builds on technologies developed by the Molecular Immunology Group at the University of Oxford and by the Bjorkman Group based at Caltech led by Professor Alain Townsend at the MRC Human Immunology Unit and Professor Pamela Bjorkman, respectively.

In contrast to many existing vaccine designs that use mRNA or a viral vector to present sections of the spike protein of a single type of virus to the immune system, this new vaccine will use protein nanoparticles containing a protein glue to attach related antigenic sections of the spike proteins from eight different viruses. By incorporating a mosaic-8 vaccine design created at Caltech, these nanoparticles would favor immune responses to the shared parts of each type of coronaviruses within a single vaccine.

Evidence published today in Science by the researchers demonstrates that this vaccine technology elicits protective immune responses against SARS-like viruses but also against some coronaviruses not presented in the trial vaccine. This suggests that the technology could protect against future novel SARS-CoV-2 variants and as-yet-undiscovered coronaviruses with the potential to spill over from animal populations.

Alain Townsend, Oxford Lead of the consortium, Professor of Molecular Immunology at the MRC Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford, said:

The evolution of this consortium is an example of collaborative science at its best. We had been deeply impressed by the power of the glue for sticking proteins together developed by Mark Howarth (Biochemistry Oxford) and derived from his beautiful basic science investigations of the Streptococcus pyogenes bacterium.'

Together, we used this technology to make a prototype nanoparticle SARS-CoV-2 vaccine that induced highly potent responses in preclinical studies.'

Through connections made by Ian Wilkinson (Absolute Antibody), we joined with colleagues at Ingenza and CPI who succeeded in making a fully functional version of the vaccine produced in microbes, thus reducing the cost of production. In addition, we have been collaborating with Prof. Pamela Bjorkman and the Caltech team, who had independently developed the brilliant concept of the mosaic version of the vaccine and are excited to continue working with this world-class consortium.

The consortium partners are committed to equitable access to the project's outputs.

Dr. Jack Tan, Project Manager (Oxford) of the consortium, Senior Postdoctoral Scientist at the MRC Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, said:

We are delighted to work with CEPI to further this nanoparticle technology to produce efficacious, low-cost, infrastructure-independent vaccine that will be accessible to low- and middle-income countries.

Dr. Richard Hatchett, CEO of CEPI, commented in a press release issued on July 6, 2022, There have already been three serious coronavirus epidemics or pandemics in the 21st century and COVID-19 continues to have a devastating impact on the worlds health, society, and economy. Creating vaccines that could provide broad protection against emerging COVID-19 variants and future coronavirus threats would not only help mitigate the damaging effects of another COVID-19-like pandemic, but it could also help reduce the time taken and funding spent continually updating vaccine formulations.

Thats why we are delighted to partner with this CPI-led research consortium to build on Wellcome Leaps initial investment to further advance this pioneering mosaic nanoparticle vaccine technology that, if successful, could work towards consigning the threat posed by coronaviruses to the history books.

The consortium aims to commence a Phase 1 trial in 2024, led by the Oxford Vaccine Group.

PrecisionVaccinationspublishes fact-checked, research-based news curated for mobile readership.

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One Health Approach Is Necessary to Address Rising Environmental Causes of Childhood Cancers – Newswise

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:28 am

Newswise A multi-disciplinary, One Health approach to cancer research is necessary to guide society in reduction of toxic substances, as well as regulation of chemical impacts on the environment and public health, according to an editorial published recently in Issue II of Annals of Research in Oncology.

This medical-scientific journal is published by Editor in Chief Professor Antonio Giordano, M.D., Ph.D., Director and Founder of Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, and the Sbarro Health Research Organization (SHRO), at Temple University. The editorial by Prof. Philip Landrigan, Director of the Global Public Health Programme, highlights the relationship between environmental issues and childhood cancer cases, which have been growing rapidly over the past 50 years.

Landrigan's editorial moves towards the new scientific paradigm known as One Health, by which is meant the indissoluble intertwining of three factors: human health, animal health and environmental health as interconnected and dependent on each other.

In particular, Landrigan emphasises the link between environment and cancer in paediatric subjects, underlining the lack of scientific models that consider the use of chemicals with undesirable effects on human health, which are not carefully studied, and the consequent increase in oncological cases in paediatrics. In fact, there is evidence that environmental exposure, in particular to manufactured chemicals, are a major cause of childhood cancer. The National Cancer Institute currently directs about 1% of its funding towards research into environmental causes of paediatric cancers.

Landrigan's hope is to identify new scientific models based on epidemiological and toxicological studies to address the rising incidence of childhood cancer, a major challenge for society and the cancer and public health communities.

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Promising topline results for intralymphatic Diamyd in patients with LADA – PR Newswire

Posted: July 11, 2022 at 2:28 am

STOCKHOLM, July 7, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --The primary endpoints of safety and tolerability were met in the open-label investigator-initiated Phase II clinical trial GADinLADA, in which the diabetes vaccine Diamydwas administered directly into the lymph node of 14 patients aged 30 to 70 years with the autoimmune form of diabetes called LADA (Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults). Analyses also showed a positive immunological response to the treatment and the clinical course appears promising with all individuals remaining insulin-independent 12 months after treatment.

"These results are very encouraging and the next step is together with collaborators and authorities evaluate the regulatory requirements to get the diabetes vaccine Diamyd approved as a disease-modifying therapy in individuals diagnosed with LADA", says Ulf Hannelius, CEO of Diamyd Medical.

All patients in the trial were followed for twelve months after their first injection. The topline results showed that the safety was good with no treatment-related severe adverse events. The treatment was well tolerated by the trial participants, all of whom completed the study with no drop-outs. The immunological analyses showed a similar response to the treatment as has been shown in previous trials in individuals with recent-onset type 1 diabetes, with a clear GAD-specific immune response evident in both circulating antibodies and cell-based reactions.

The clinical course appears positive with all 14 individuals remaining insulin-independent after 12 months of follow-up. The endogenous insulin production, measured as mixed-meal stimulated C-peptide, declined on average only 10% over 12 months.

"The GADinLADA trial has been successful, and treatment with three intralymphatic injections of Diamyd has been well received by the LADA patients," says PhD Ingrid K Hals, Sponsor's representative of the trial. "We will present the results from this trial at the upcoming international Europen Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) conference in Stockholm in September and we look forward to evaluating together with Diamyd Medical the next steps to make this important treatment available for individuals diagnosed with LADA."

Of the 14 LADA patients included in the trial, half carry the HLA haplotype DR3-DQ2 that is associated with a positive clinical response to Diamyd treatment in individuals recently diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. For the 7 individuals carrying HLA DR3-DQ2, endogenous insulin production (stimulated C-peptide) decreased on average by 8 % over the 12 month study period, while in the 7 individuals not carrying HLA DR3-DQ2, it declined by 13 %. GAD-stimulated cell proliferation showed a decrease in proliferation between 5 and 12 months for the HLA-DR3-DQ2 group while a comparable decrease was not observed for the group negative for HLA DR3-DQ2, reflecting the patterns seen in recent-onset type 1 diabetes.

The results will be presented at the upcoming EASD conference to be held in Stockholm on September 19-23, 2022. The accepted abstract is entitled "Early effects of treatment with intralymphatic administration of rhGAD65 in LADA appear similar to those observed in type 1 diabetes", and will be presented as an oral abstract on September 20, 2022, as part of the session "OP 10 Beta cells: protecting what is precious".

About the GADinLADA trialThe main aim of the trial was to evaluate the safety of three intralymphatic injections of Diamyd in patients with LADA (Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults). The patients were recruited in Norway at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Dept. of Clinical and Molecular Medicine, in Trondheim, in collaboration with St. Olavs Hospital, University Hospital in Trondheim, and in Sweden at the Center for Diabetes, Akademiskt specialistcentrum, an academic specialist unit run in collaboration between Stockholm County's healthcare area, Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital. The patients included in the trial were between 30 and 70 years old, diagnosed with LADA within the last 18 months and were not yet on insulin therapy. The Sponsor of the trial has been the Norwegian University of Science and Technology with Ingrid K Hals, PhD, as Sponsor's representative. Diamyd Medical has contributed with study drugs, expertise and some financial support for immunological analyses and determination of HLA haplotypes.

About LADALatent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults represents close to 10% of patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. LADA is characterized by an ongoing autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells, a process similar to that of type 1 diabetes, but slower. Although research categorizes LADA as autoimmune diabetes, the disease is still in most cases treated according to the guidelines for type 2 diabetes. LADA patients are usually not insulin dependent at diagnosis, but for most patients, insulin therapy is required within a few years of diagnosis.

About Diamyd MedicalDiamyd Medical develops precision medicine therapies for Type 1 Diabetes. The diabetes vaccine Diamyd is an antigen-specific immunotherapy for the preservation of endogenous insulin production. Significant results have been shown in a large genetically predefined patient group in a large-scale meta-analysis as well as in the Company's European Phase IIb trial DIAGNODE-2, where the diabetes vaccine was administered directly into a lymph node in children and young adults with recently diagnosed type 1 diabetes. DIAGNODE-3, a confirmatory Phase III trial is on-going. A vaccine manufacturing facility is being set up in Ume for the manufacture of recombinant GAD65, the active ingredient in the therapeutic diabetes vaccine Diamyd. Diamyd Medical also develops the GABA-based investigational drug Remygen as a therapy for regeneration of endogenous insulin production and to improve hormonal response to hypoglycaemia. An investigator-initiated Remygen trial in individuals living with type 1 diabetes for more than five years is ongoing at Uppsala University Hospital. Diamyd Medical is one of the major shareholders in the stem cell company NextCell Pharma AB as well as in the artificial intelligence company MainlyAI AB.

Diamyd Medical's B-share is traded on Nasdaq First North Growth Market under the ticker DMYD B. FNCA Sweden AB is the Company's Certified Adviser; phone: +46 8-528 00 399, e-mail: [emailprotected]

For further information, please contact:Ulf Hannelius, President and CEOPhone: +46 736 35 42 41E-mail: [emailprotected]

This information was brought to you by Cision http://news.cision.com

https://news.cision.com/diamyd-medical-ab/r/promising-topline-results-for-intralymphatic-diamyd--in-patients-with-lada,c3598517

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