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Delic Partners With GT Research for Genetic Analysis of Cannabis, Psychedelic Mushrooms – GenomeWeb

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:17 am

NEW YORK Delic Labs has entered into a comarketing partnership with GT Research to provide detailed genomic analyses related to commercially interesting traits found in cannabis and psychedelic mushrooms to Canadian producers, its parent company Delic said on Tuesday.

Services provided under the agreement include sample preparation, DNA extraction, whole-genome sequencing, and computational analyses.

Delic Labs, a subsidiary of Delic, focuses on identifying scalable legal psychedelic medicine opportunities. As one of Canada's few licensed psilocybin labs, it applies chemical analytics, metabolomic identification, and process optimization to the psychedelics industry.

GTR performs gene profiling and trait optimization services related to the production of cannabis and psychedelics.

"As the cannabis and psychedelic sectors grow, interest in genomic analysis of the underlying organisms is increasing. GTR is excited to offer its cutting-edge suite of capabilities in partnership with Delic, a pioneer in this space," Sam Proctor, cofounder and CEO of GTR, said in a statement.

"Delic is committed to researching and identifying the safest, highest quality psychedelic compounds for commercial use," said Matt Stang, cofounder and CEO of Delic.

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ALS and dementia attacked by an RNA-hunting compound that recruits cell’s own virus fighter – EurekAlert

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:12 am

image:Jessica Bush, a graduate student at the Skaggs Graduate School for Chemical Biology at Scripps Research in Jupiter, Florida, goes over her experiments with Chemistry Professor Matthew Disney, PhD, and Research Associate Haruo Aikawa, PhD. The team published a study in Science Translational Medicine that describes a way of targeting inherited ALS and frontotemporal dementia. view more

Credit: Scott Wiseman for Scripps Research

JUPITER, FL One of the most commonly inherited forms of ALS and frontotemporal dementia is referred to as C9 ALS/FTD, so named for the repeated section of DNA on chromosome 9 that causes it. A collaboration led by scientists at Scripps Research in Florida has successfully treated the genetic disease in mice, with a potential drug molecule engineered in the lab of chemist Matthew Disney, PhD. The compound works in a new way, by directing the cells own immune machinery to degrade and eliminate the disease-causing RNA.

The teams study is published Wednesday in the journal Science Translational Medicine. Collaborators include Leonard Petrucelli, PhD, of the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, and Jeffrey Rothstein, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Also known as Lou Gehrigs disease, ALS causes progressive loss of motor neurons, the elongated nerve cells that connect muscles to the central nervous system. As motor neurons die, paralysis, muscle loss, swallowing and eventually, breathing difficulties develop, leading ultimately to death. Scientists are learning that ALS has multiple causes, some of them sporadic, and some inherited or familial.

Frontotemporal dementia similarly has both familial and sporadic causes. It involves progressive damage to neurons in the brains frontal and temporal lobes. Symptoms may include difficulty walking or odd behavioral and emotional states. Like ALS, there is no cure for frontotemporal dementia.

One disease, many symptoms

While people with FTD appear outwardly to have a completely different illness than people with ALS, those whose condition is caused by the C9 genetic repeat have the same disease. Manifestations differ according to cell types affected. The more times the sequence repeats, the earlier and more severe the disease symptoms.

The disease-causing mutations involve repeats of the nucleotides guanine and cytosine, specifically repeats of GGGGCC segments on chromosome 9, open reading frame 72. The number of disease-causing repeats can range from around 60 into the thousands. People who inherit the diseased gene can develop ALS, FTD or both. Studies have estimated that around 1 in 5 people diagnosed with familial ALS, and around 1 in 10 people with familial FTD carry the C9 mutations. The average age of symptom onset is 58.

This is a disease that runs in families. Based on the number of repeats, doctors can assess whether a patient would be affected with the disease. So, you know before a patient has symptoms that they have a high likelihood of developing it, and yet there is no treatment, Disney says. That makes it even more imperative to develop strategies to that could create a medicine.

A team effort

To assess the effectiveness of their compounds, the team needed both diagnostic biomarkers and patient-derived neurons displaying the C9 mutations. The Petrucelli group at Mayo Clinic has extensively studied C9 ALS/FTD and developed the diagnostic biomarkers. The Rothstein group at Johns Hopkins treats and researches ALS and provided stem cells, which the Disney Lab then brought forward into neurons that displayed the diseased array of GGGGCC repeats.

In their research, Disneys team designed a compound that targeted the RNA involved in transcribingthe gene causing the disease. The compound causes an interaction between the RNA and pathways that a cell uses to eliminate RNAs. The compound eliminated 70 percent of the toxic protein fragments from mice bread to have the disease, and removed most hallmarks of the disease from the patient-derived nerve cells.

A single injection in the mice showed benefit through the entire length of the study period, which was six weeks, says Jessica Bush, a graduate student at Scripps Research's Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, who was the papers first author.

I think that its so exciting that we can look at a disease like ALS, and by taking a different approach or new perspective, we can open the door to a whole new world of possibilities, and start down the road toward therapies, Bush says.

Basic science behind the discovery

Disney designed the compound by applying nearly 15 years of his groups research on finding druggable structures on RNA, a notoriously changeable and transient molecule, and building a library of compounds able to bind those druggable structures.

The successful compound works by binding tightly to the disease-causing RNA in multiple places, while also attracting an enzyme that eliminates RNAs. Nature apparently created the degrading enzyme to defend cells from viral infection and provide quality control for protein production.

We co-opt a natural process to eliminate disease-causing RNA, Disney says. A full analysis of the RNAs in the cells treated with the compound showed it was very specific and selective.

Moving the technology forward to where it can be tested in humans requires a large amount of additional tests and refinements, a process that may take several years, Disney adds.

These studies, we hope, will advance new ways of targeting the RNA that causes ALS as well as other diseases, he says. There is a possibility here to eventually treat these patients before they develop symptoms, but it will be a long road before reaching the clinic.

Science Translational Medicine

Experimental study

Animals

Ribonuclease recruitment using a small molecule reduced c9ALS/FTD r(G4C2) repeat expansion in vitro and in vivo ALS models

27-Oct-2021

M.D.D. is a founder of Expansion Therapeutics. M.D.D. is a consultant for Expansion Therapeutics, and E.T.W. was a consultant for Expansion Therapeutics during the course of these studies. A patent disclosure has been filed on aspects of this work.

Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

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Brainstorm Cell, (BCLI) falls 0.65% in Active Trading on October 25 – Equities.com

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:12 am

Last Price$ Last TradeChange$ Change Percent %Open$ Prev Close$ High$ low$ 52 Week High$ 52 Week Low$ Market CapPE RatioVolumeExchange

BCLI - Market Data & News

Today, Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics, Inc. Incs (NASDAQ: BCLI) stock fell $0.02, accounting for a 0.65% decrease. Brainstorm Cell, opened at $3.05 before trading between $3.10 and $2.94 throughout Mondays session. The activity saw Brainstorm Cell,s market cap fall to $111,134,797 on 229,375 shares -above their 30-day average of 90,730.

BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics Inc. is a leading developer of innovative autologous adult stem cell therapeutics for debilitating neurodegenerative diseases. The Company holds the rights to clinical development and commercialization of the NurOwn technology platform used to produce autologous MSC-NTF cells through an exclusive, worldwide licensing agreement. Autologous MSC-NTF cells have received Orphan Drug designation status from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). BrainStorm has completed a Phase 3 pivotal trial in ALS (NCT03280056); this trial investigated the safety and efficacy of repeat-administration of autologous MSC-NTF cells and was supported by a grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM CLIN2-0989). BrainStorm is also conducting an FDA-approved Phase 2 open-label multicenter trial in progressive multiple sclerosis (MS). The Phase 2 study of autologous MSC-NTF cells in patients with progressive MS (NCT03799718) completed dosing in December 2020, and topline results are expected by the end of the first quarter 2021.

Visit Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics, Inc.'s profile for more information.

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Restaurant Brands International Misses Revenue Estimates; Cites Staffing Shortage, COVID-19

Burger King and Tim Hortons are struggling with a staffing crunch and the Delta variant keeping coffee-loving office workers at home, causing parent Restaurant Brands International Inc (NYSE: QSR), to miss estimates for quarterly revenue on Monday.

U.S.-listed shares shed 4.4% as same-store sales at its Burger King, Tim Hortons and Popeyes chains came in below expectations in the third quarter.

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Sustainable Shoe Maker Allbirds Seeks IPO Valuation North of $2 Billion

Sustainable shoe brand Allbirds Inc is eyeing a valuation exceeding $2 billion in its US initial public offering (IPO).

In its amended Form S-1 filed Monday, the company said it is offering about 19.23 million shares priced between $12 and $14 apiece. At the high end of that range, Allbirds would fetch gross proceeds of over $269 million.

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Hertz Orders 100,000 Tesla Model 3 Vehicles; First Step Toward Electrifying Fleet

Hertz Global Holdings Inc (OTC: HTZZ) has placed an order for 100,000 Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) electric cars, the first step in the rental car companys plan to electrify its fleet of a half million cars.

Starting in early November, the Florida-based company will offer Tesla Model 3 compact cars for rent at its airport and neighborhood locations in major US markets and certain European cities, Hertz announced Monday.

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The Nasdaq Stock Market is a global leader in trading data and services, and equities and options listing. Nasdaq is the world's leading exchange for options volume and is home to the five largest US companies - Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet and Facebook.

To get more information on Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics, Inc. and to follow the company's latest updates, you can visit the company's profile page here: Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics, Inc.'s Profile. For more news on the financial markets be sure to visit Equities News. Also, don't forget to sign-up for the Daily Fix to receive the best stories to your inbox 5 days a week.

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Global Mesenchymal Stem Cells Market Prospects, Upcoming Trends and Competitive Outlook till 2028 | Lonza, Thermo Fisher, Bio-Techne, ATCC,…

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:12 am

The latest study on TheGlobal Mesenchymal Stem Cells Market 2021helps companies increase a competitive advantage in the industry by examining serious factors for market expansion. It explains the main global developments, dominant strategies, and perspectives in order to design effective business plans. The Mesenchymal Stem Cells Market research provides detailed market development prospects, an overview of market size and value, and current business trends. This research examined several elements of the demand for Mesenchymal Stem Cells. This study report goes into detail about the many factors that have contributed to the growth of the Mesenchymal Stem Cells market. In order to forecast and determine the global market size, bottom-up and top-down techniques are used.

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Bacterial Infections Linked with Unapproved Stem Cell Treatments – Contagionlive.com

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:11 am

Unproven products marketed as stem cell therapies could be risky, according to a new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which analyzed bacterial infections from unapproved products derived from umbilical cord blood.

The case series study, published in JAMA Network Open, examined 20 bacterial infections in eight states. It involved reviewing medical records, sterility testing of products and whole-genome sequences of patient and product isolates for participants who developed bacterial infections after receiving stem cell treatments between August 2017 and September 2018.

The findings of this investigation show that stem cell therapies that are not FDA-approved or that are not used for the approved medical conditions can pose serious health risks to patients with no benefit, Kiran Mayi Perkins, MD, lead investigator with the CDCs Outbreak and Response Team, told Contagion. Currently, the only stem cell products derived from umbilical cord blood that are FDA-approved for use in the United States are approved for use in patients with disorders that affect the production of blood, but they are not approved for other uses. However, these products are often illegally marketed by clinics as being safe and effective for treating a wide range of diseases or conditions. Therefore, patients should be aware of the unproven benefits and the potential risks to their health when using unapproved and unproven stem cell products for conditions that they have not been shown to effectively treat.

All but one of the patients in the study required hospitalization after receiving stem cell treatment for conditions including osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and injury. The CDC performed sterility testing on vials of product and compared bacterial isolates with those from the patients.

We were surprised by the magnitude of bacterial contamination found in the vials that we tested; over half of the vials of the stem cell product that we tested were contaminated with bacteria, and many of these vials had very high bacterial counts, Perkins said.

Unapproved stem cell products have been marketed for conditions such as joint diseases, sports injuries and chronic pain and have become more prevalent as people seek products to prevent and treat COVID-19, the study noted. However, these uses are not approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

ReGen Series products processed by Genetech and distributed by Liveyon were recalled after bacterial infections were reported in Texas and Florida in 2018, and a national investigation was launched. Information was gathered about patients, product administration, infection control practices and product manufacturing and distribution.

The bottom line is that many stem cell clinics are offering unproven products that have the potential to be dangerous, Perkins said. There is good research that is being done on stem cell therapies, but there are also a lot of clinics that are selling stem cells for unproven uses. To date, the only stem cell treatments approved by the FDA are products made from a donors umbilical cord blood that are used to treat certain cancers and disorders of the blood and immune system. If the cells are being used to treat other conditions such as pain, orthopedic conditions, autism, anti-aging, or COVID-19, they are not approved and may not be safe. We urge all patients and health care practitioners considering stem cell therapies to ensure that the stem cell product is being used for the approved indication or under an Investigational New Drug Application (IND) and is on FDAs list of approved products.

The states in which confirmed bacterial infections were identified as of March 2021 are Texas, Florida, California, Arizona, Kansas, Maine, Colorado and Massachusetts.

The treatments were injected into the patients knees, shoulders, spine or digits or administered through intravenous infusion or as a nasal spray. Infections included 10 at the injection site, five bloodstream infections and five with both injection site and bloodstream infections. Most common bacteria were Escherichia coli and Enterobacter cloacae.

CDC will continue to investigate any reports that it receives that are concerning for infectious risks to patients associated with the receipt of stem cell products and will report these to FDA, the agency that has regulatory oversight for these types of therapies, Perkins said.

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GABAeron Presents Promising Preclinical Data on Stem Cell-Based Therapy for Alzheimer’s Disease – KFYR-TV

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:05 am

Human interneuron progenitors derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) can be successfully transplanted and integrate into mouse brains, mature, and reverse signs of hippocampal network dysfunction associated with Alzheimer's disease, GABAeron scientists reported at ISSCR/JSRM.

Published: Oct. 27, 2021 at 7:00 AM CDT|Updated: 18 hours ago

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- GABAeron, Inc. today presented promising preclinical data on their first-in-class, iPSC-based cell therapy product for Alzheimer's disease at the International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR) and Japanese Society for Regenerative Medicine (JSRM) international meeting "Stem Cells: From Basic Science to Clinical Translation". The data, the first to be publicly shared since the company was founded in 2017, highlight the potential of transplanted, human iPSC-derived interneuron progenitors in treating Alzheimer's disease as well as other neurological disorders with interneuron deficit or loss.

GABAeron scientists successfully differentiated GABAergic interneuron progenitors from human iPSCs, and showed that when transplanted into the brains of an Alzheimer's disease mouse model carrying the major genetic risk factor apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) the cells could mature, integrate into the hippocampus, and reverse signs of the hippocampal network dysfunction associated with Alzheimer's disease.

"We are incredibly excited by these data, which show the safety and efficacy of our novel iPSC-based approach in an Alzheimer's disease mouse model," said Robert W. Mahley, MD, PhD, chief executive officer and chief scientific officer of GABAeron. "Based on these results, we plan to continue our work to develop a cell replacement therapy to treat patients with APOE4-positive Alzheimer's disease."

Over the course of his career, Mahley president emeritus of the Gladstone Institutes and professor of pathology and medicine at the University of California, San Francisco has illuminated the importance and molecular details of the protein APOE. The gene for APOE comes in several versions and we now know that people with the APOE4 version of the gene have an increased risk of Alzheimer's disease and an earlier age of disease onset compared to people with the more common APOE3 version. Strikingly, APOE4 is associated with 6075% of all Alzheimer's disease cases.

GABAeron scientific co-founder Yadong Huang, MD, PhD, director of the Center for Translational Advancement at the Gladstone Institutes, San Francisco, discovered one important reason for the association between APOE4 and Alzheimer's disease. APOE4, his lab demonstrated, leads to the impairment and loss of hippocampal GABAergic interneurons cells critical for maintaining normal hippocampal activity, required for normal learning and memory, and damaged or lost in Alzheimer's disease brains.

"GABAeron was founded on the premise that if we can replace those interneurons via cell-based therapy, we can restore normal hippocampal activity and thus slow or reverse many of the memory and cognitive impairments associated with Alzheimer's disease," said Huang. "If this approach works, it will be a single treatment with long-lasting impact for Alzheimer'spatients."

In the new study, researchers led by Wen-Chin (Danny) Huang, PhD, and Iris Avellano, developed a novel effective method of coaxing human iPSCs carrying the APOE3 gene to differentiate into GABAergic interneuron progenitors. The resulting cells showed high viability, purity, and robust functionality with more than 90% committed to the correct developmental lineage.

A team led by Wan-Ying Hsieh, PhD, transplanted these interneuron progenitors into the hippocampus of 10-month-old mice carrying the human APOE4 gene; the interneuron progenitors showed robust survival and matured into functional GABAergic interneurons. At 7 months post-transplantation, more than half of the surviving cells had migrated out of the local area, populated the hippocampal subregions, and established connections with other existing neurons throughout the hippocampus.

"These exciting data reveal the high quality of human iPSC-derived interneuron progenitors generated at GABAeron and highlight the feasibility of their long-term survival and integration into mouse brains," said Hsieh. "Importantly, there was no tumor formation from the transplanted cells in over a hundred mice."

They next carried out electrophysiological recordings to study hippocampal network activity in the mice. As expected, the APOE4 mice had deficits in hippocampal activity that can underlie the memory impairments associated with Alzheimer's disease. Specifically, the mice had fewer sharp-wave ripples and their associated slow gamma power in the hippocampus both of which are critical for memory formation and retrieval. When each mouse was transplanted with approximately 120,000 iPSC-derived human interneuron progenitors carrying APOE3, these measurements of hippocampal activity both improved to the levels seen in healthy mice 7 months later.

"These results as a whole represent a critical step toward a potential interneuron-based therapy for APOE4-related Alzheimer's disease," said Qin Xu, PhD, senior director at GABAeron. "This builds up a solid foundation for our further work with clinical-grade human iPSCs."

GABAeron scientists are now adapting their culture techniques for the mass production of clinical-grade human iPSC-derived GABAergic interneuron progenitors. They are also working to identify the molecular characteristics of the mature GABAergic interneurons, which become successfully integrated into the hippocampus in the Alzheimer's disease mouse model.

"With this critical milestone reached, GABAeron will move forward, with great confidence, toward IND-enabling studies and future trials with clinical-grade human iPSC-derived interneuron progenitors for treating APOE4-related Alzheimer's disease," said Sheng Ding, PhD, scientific co-founder of GABAeron and a serial entrepreneur who co-founded two leading public companies, Fate Therapeutics (FATE) and Tenaya Therapeutics (TNYA). "We also plan to explore the usefulness of such a cell-based therapy for other neurological diseases with interneuron deficits or loss."

The ISSCR/JSRM international meeting "Stem Cells: From Basic Science to Clinical Translation" runs from October 2729, 2021 and is being held virtually this year.

About GABAeron

GABAeron, Inc. is a biopharmaceutical company founded in 2017, based on pioneer work initiated at the Gladstone Institutes, to build on the promise of combining precision medicine, regenerative medicine, and pharmaceutical intervention. The company is exploring a new first-in-class IND candidate to replace or restore neurons injured or lost in the brains of patients suffering from neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders.

For more information about GABAeron, please visit http://www.GABAeron.com.

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The above press release was provided courtesy of PRNewswire. The views, opinions and statements in the press release are not endorsed by Gray Media Group nor do they necessarily state or reflect those of Gray Media Group, Inc.

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The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine Announces Election of 2022 Officers, Executive Committee, and Board of Directors – Yahoo Finance

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:05 am

Washington, DC, Oct. 21, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NewMediaWire -- The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM), the leading international advocacy organization dedicated to realizing the promise of regenerative medicines and advanced therapies, today announced the election of its 2022 Officers, Executive Committee, and Board of Directors.

The Executive Committee and Board of Directors oversee the formation and execution of ARMs strategic priorities and focus areas for the coming year.

ARM welcomes the diverse expertise and experience of our 2022 Board of Directors, said ARM Chief Executive Officer Janet Lambert. Our sector is poised to shape healthcare for years to come and our Board will be instrumental in advancing the delivery of transformative therapies for patients globally, while helping to eradicate barriers and legacy policy that could slow access.

ARM 2022 Officers:

Emile Nuwaysir, Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Ensoma (Chairman)Usman 'Oz' Azam, M.D. President and Chief Executive Officer, Tmunity Therapeutics (Vice Chairman)Amy Butler, Ph.D. President, Biosciences, Thermo Fisher Scientific (Secretary)Devyn Smith, Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Arbor Biotechnologies (Treasurer)

ARM 2022 Executive Committee:

Usman 'Oz' Azam, M.D. President and Chief Executive Officer, Tmunity TherapeuticsAmy Butler, Ph.D. President, Biosciences, Thermo Fisher ScientificMiguel Forte, M.D., Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Bone TherapeuticsClaudia Mitchell, MBA, Ph.D. Senior Vice President, Product and Portfolio Strategy, Astellas PharmaEmile Nuwaysir, Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, EnsomaBob Smith, MBA Senior Vice President, Global Gene Therapy Business, PfizerDevyn Smith, Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Arbor BiotechnologiesArthur Tzianabos, Ph.D. President and Chief Executive Officer, Homology MedicinesChristopher Vann Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, Autolus Therapeutics

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ARM 2022 Board of Directors* New to the Board for 2022

Usman 'Oz' Azam, M.D. President and Chief Executive Officer, Tmunity TherapeuticsMark Battaglini Senior Vice President, Global External Affairs & US Government Payer, bluebird bioAmy Butler, Ph.D. President, Biosciences, Thermo Fisher ScientificBradley Campbell, MBA President and Chief Operating Officer, Amicus TherapeuticsMiguel Forte, M.D., Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Bone TherapeuticsBobby Gaspar, M.D., Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Orchard TherapeuticsJerry Keybl, Ph.D. Senior Director, Cell & Gene Therapy, MilliporeSigmaBrett Kopelan Executive Director, Debra of AmericaDave Lennon, Ph.D. Former President, Novartis Gene TherapiesBruce Levine, Ph.D. Founding Director, Clinical Cell and Vaccine Production Facility, Abramson Cancer Center, University of Pennsylvania* Timothy Lu, M.D., Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Senti BiosciencesJohn Maslowski, M.S. Chief Commercial Officer, Forge Biologics* Chris Mason, M.D., Ph.D. Chief Scientific Officer, AVROBIO* Debra Miller Chief Executive Officer & Founder, CureDuchenneClaudia Mitchell, MBA, Ph.D. Senior Vice President, Product and Portfolio Strategy, Astellas Pharma* Alison Moore, Ph.D. Chief Technology Officer, Allogene TherapeuticsAdora Ndu, PharmD, J.D. Group Vice President, Worldwide Research & Development Strategy, Scientific Collaborations and Policy, BioMarinSusan Nichols President & Chief Executive Officer, Propel BioSciencesEmile Nuwaysir, Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, EnsomaKarah Parschauer, J.D. Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, UltragenyxLouise Rodino-Klapac, Ph.D. Executive Vice President, Chief Scientific Officer, Sarepta TherapeuticsJeff Ross, Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Miromatrix Medical* Laura Sepp-Lorenzino, Ph.D. Executive Vice President, Chief Scientific Officer, Intellia TherapeuticsR.A. Session, MBA President, Founder & Chief Executive Officer, Taysha TherapeuticsCurran Simpson, M.S. Senior Vice President, Product Development and CTO, REGENXBIOSanjaya Singh, Ph.D. Vice President & Global Head, Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, Janssen Research & DevelopmentBob Smith, MBA Senior Vice President, Global Gene Therapy, PfizerDevyn Smith, Ph.D. Chief Executive Officer, Arbor BiotechnologiesJoseph Tarnowski, Ph.D. Senior Vice President of Cell and Gene Therapy Platforms, Medicinal Science & Technology, R&DArthur Tzianabos, Ph.D. President and Chief Executive Officer, Homology MedicinesChristopher Vann Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, Autolus TherapeuticsKristin Yarema, Ph.D. Chief Commercial Officer, Atara Biotherapeutics

About the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine

The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM) is the leading international advocacy organization dedicated to realizing the promise of regenerative medicines and advanced therapies. ARM promotes legislative, regulatory, reimbursement and manufacturing initiatives to advance this innovative and transformative sector, which includes cell therapies, gene therapies and tissue-based therapies. Early products to market have demonstrated profound, durable and potentially curative benefits that are already helping thousands of patients worldwide, many of whom have no other viable treatment options. Hundreds of additional product candidates contribute to a robust pipeline of potentially life-changing regenerative medicines and advanced therapies. In its 12-year history, ARM has become the voice of the sector, representing the interests of 400+ members worldwide, including small and large companies, academic research institutions, major medical centers and patient groups. To learn more about ARM or to become a member, visit http://www.alliancerm.org.

Kaitlyn Dupont8037278346kdupont@alliancerm.org

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Vivex Biologics, Inc. to Attend the Symposium of Advanced Wound Care – UpperMichigansSource.com

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:05 am

Leading regenerative medicine company to participate in initiatives to further educate and improve patient care.

Published: Oct. 27, 2021 at 12:00 PM EDT|Updated: 14 hours ago

MIAMI, Oct. 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Vivex Biologics, Inc., a leading regenerative medicine company specializing in the development of naturally sourced treatment options, will be attending the Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) in Las Vegas on October 29-31, 2021.

SAWC brings together wound care teams, including physicians, nurses, physical therapists, researchers, scientists, podiatrists and dietitians, to improve the overall outcome of patients through furthering wound care education. The event will be comprised of various presentations, case studies, clinical research and practice innovations on topics including wound healing and wound care issues.

VIVEX professionals will host booth #440 during the forum, showcasing VIVEX's portfolio of wound care products and solutions. The inherent properties of VIVEX's amniotic allograft products provide mechanical protection and act as a barrier for external wounds, such as diabetic foot ulcers, venous leg ulcers, pressure ulcers and burns while VIVEX's IntegrityProcessing retains the nutrient-rich growth factors essential for signaling.

In-person and virtual SAWC attendees at the Poster Grand Rounds on Oct. 30 at 5:20 p.m. will be able to review the "New Amniotic Allograft Used To Treat Clinically Challenging Chronic Wounds"poster, number CS-087, highlighting the real world experience of Sarah Hull, FNP-C, WCC, DWC with CYGNUS products. The poster demonstrates a series of clinically challenging chronic wounds, treatment methods and resulting patient outcomes.

"We are thrilled to attend SAWC for our first time and hear from the best and brightest industry experts in wound care," said Gail Farnan, VP and General Manager of VIVEX's Wound Care & Amnion Therapies business unit. "VIVEX is focused on creating the best products and solutions for patients and collaborating with wound care professionals to educate and find innovative ways to further our shared initiatives."

For more information on VIVEX and itsadvanced regenerative medicine solutions, please visit VIVEX.com.

About Vivex Biologics, Inc.

Vivex Biologics is a pioneer in regenerative medicine, specializing in the development of naturally sourced treatment options that improve clinical, surgical, and therapeutic patient care through innovation. With tissue damage resulting from a variety of diseases, direct injury or trauma, there is a significant need for advanced solutions. By leveraging the resources of the nation's oldest civilian tissue bank, VIVEX is channeling the body's inherent healing qualities to bring patients optimal care and to provide medical professionals and patients with innovative treatment options for a broad range of indications.

Media Contact: rbb CommunicationsRachel Gerardirachel.gerardi@rbbcommunications.com

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Vivex Biologics, Inc. to Attend the Symposium of Advanced Wound Care - UpperMichigansSource.com

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COVID-19: Researchers warn against overhyping early-stage therapies – Medical News Today

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:05 am

The COVID-19 pandemic has created a sense of urgency to generate new drugs and vaccines. In many cases, this urgency became a regulatory opportunity to bypass established regulatory pathways for new drugs.

While this has led to the fast emergence of many useful drugs and vaccines for COVID-19, it has also led to a general reduction in the quality of medical research from which to derive conclusions.

For example, according to Janet Woodcock, former director of the Food and Drug Administrations (FDA) Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, an FDA analysis found that 6% of clinical trials are yielding results the agency deems actionable.

The lack of regulation coupled with a sense of urgency has also led to overhype and rushed development of certain treatments, including cell-based therapies often sold as stem cell treatments.

While some of these products have undergone well-designed, adequately controlled trials, most are in the early stages. Some clinics are nevertheless offering these unproven and unlicensed treatments to people, promising to boost their immune system or overall health to protect against COVID-19.

Promoting and selling unproven and unlicensed treatments can harm public health and could lead many to undergo untested and potentially harmful treatments.

Recently, a group of researchers from the University of California, Irvine, the Georgia Institute of Technology, the University at Buffalo, NY, and the University of Melbourne in Australia, published a report outlining misinformation around cell-based treatments for COVID-19, calling for their stronger regulation.

Efforts to rapidly develop therapeutic interventions should never occur at the expense of the ethical and scientific standards that are at the heart of responsible clinical research and innovation, said Dr. Laertis Ikonomou, assistant professor of Oral Biology at the University at Buffalo, and co-author of the study.

Scientists, regulators, and policymakers must guard against the proliferation of poorly designed, underpowered, and duplicative studies that are launched with undue haste because of the pandemic, but are unlikely to provide convincing, clinically meaningful safety and efficacy data, said co-author Dr. Leigh Turner, professor of Health, Society and Behavior at the University of California, Irvine.

The researchers published their report in Stem Cell Reports.

Researchers conducted a study in August 2020 of 70 clinical trials involving cell-based treatments for COVID-19. They found that most were small, with an average of 51.8 participants, and only 22.8% were randomized, double-blinded, and controlled experiments.

The authors concluded that the cell-based interventions for COVID-19 were likely to have a relatively small collective clinical impact.

Cell-based treatments for COVID-19 are still at an experimental stage, Dr. Ikonomou told Medical News Today. There are tens of clinical trials, of varied complexity and rigor, that evaluate various cell types, such as mesenchymal stromal cells, for COVID-19 treatment.

Expanded or compassionate use of cell-based interventions has also been reported, but these individual cases are unlikely to tell us whether and how cell therapies could help with COVID-19 and do not substitute for the systematic clinical evaluation of cell-based products, he added.

A few completed phase 1/2 trials have shown a favorable safety profile, but larger size trials are required. Eventually, properly-powered, controlled, randomized, double-blinded clinical trials will help determine whether cell-based treatments are a viable therapeutic option for COVID-19 and its complications, he explained.

The urgency of the pandemic has made it easy to exaggerate early-stage research. The scientists highlight this is especially the case in press releases, where media professionals can over-hype findings and understate or omit limitations to gain more media coverage.

The researchers also say that even when online media include limitations and key aspects of studies, other communication channels can strip these away easily. What is left then gets amplified, as the public is desperate to see positive news.

To address this, the researchers say science communicators should ensure they have an accurate understanding of the information they report and highlight the required steps for the science to advance without exaggerating its speed.

The researchers also say that simply feeding the public more information in what is known as the information deficit model alone is insufficient. They also suggest science communicators should strive for an engaged or dialogue-based communication approach.

Over-hyping of promising treatments and in particular cell-based treatments has been a longstanding problem, and it did not first emerge with the COVID-19 pandemic, said Dr. Ikonomou. It has become a salient issue during these times due to the global nature of this health emergency and the resulting devastation and health toll.

Therefore, it is even more important to communicate promising developments in COVID-19-related science and clinical management [responsibly]. Key features of good communication are an accurate understanding of new findings, including study limitations and avoidance of sensationalist language, he explained.

Realistic timeframes for clinical translation are equally important as is the realization that promising interventions at preliminary stages may not always translate to proven treatments following rigorous testing, he added.

The researchers say that commercial investments by biotechnology companies to develop cell-based therapies for COVID-19 have led to well-designed and rigorous clinical trials.

However, some other businesses have overlooked the demanding process of pre-marketing authorization of their products. Instead, they made unsubstantiated and inaccurate claims about their stem cell products for COVID-19 based on hyperbolic reporting of cell-based therapies in early testing.

Some clinics advertise unproven and unlicensed mesenchymal stem cell treatments or exosome therapies as immune boosters that prevent COVID-19 and repair and regenerate lungs.

Often, these businesses make their treatments available via infusion or injection. However, one anti-aging clinic in California shipped its kits to clients, where they were to self-administer with a nebulizer and mask.

Such companies often market stem cell treatments via online and social media. In an initial review of many of these brands, the researchers could not find published findings from preclinical studies and clinical trials to support their commercial activities.

Instead, they found that these companies drew from uncritical news media reports, preliminary clinical studies, or case reports in which those diagnosed with COVID-19 received stem cell interventions.

Promoting such therapies that have not undergone proper tests for safety and efficacy have the potential for significant physical and financial harm.

Health experts have documented adverse events due to unlicensed stem cell products, including vision loss and autoimmune, infectious, neurological, and cardiovascular complications.

Early in the pandemic, scientific and professional societies, including the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine and the International Society for Stem Cell Research, have warned the public against businesses engaged in the marketing of cell-based treatments that have not undergone adequate testing.

The researchers highlight that it is unclear whether these warnings reached individuals and their loved ones or significantly affected public understanding of the risks of receiving unlicensed and unproven stem cell treatments for COVID-19.

They also indicate that it is unclear whether these societies and organizations have an important role in convincing regulatory bodies to increase enforcement in this space. Nevertheless, at the time of writing, the FDA and Federal Trade Commission have issued 22 letters to businesses selling unproven and unlicensed cell-based therapies.

And while many of these companies have ceased market activity, the presence of other companies continuing to pedal the same claims makes it clear that regulatory bodies must increase their enforcement.

Additionally, the researchers question whether warning letters are sufficient to disincentivize clinicians and others to sell unlicensed products. They write:

If companies and affiliated clinicians are not fined, forced to return to patients whatever profits they have made, confronted with criminal charges, subject to revocation of medical licensure, or otherwise subject to serious legal and financial consequences, it is possible that more businesses will be drawn to this space because of the profits that can be generated from selling unlicensed and unproven cell-based products in the midst of a pandemic.

The researchers conclude that regulators should increase enforcement against unproven and unlicensed therapies for COVID-19.

They also say that science communicators should report on scientific claims more realistically and include the public in more discourse.

In the U.S. and elsewhere, there are regulations and enforcement mechanisms that deal with harms caused by unproven and unlicensed cell-based interventions and false advertising claims, said Dr. Ikonomou. It may be preferable to implement existing regulations more vigorously than introduce new ones.

Stakeholders, such as scientific, professional, and medical associations, can contribute towards this goal with reporting and monitoring of cell therapy misinformation. There is a shared responsibility to combat cell-therapy related misinformation and disinformation that undercuts legitimate research and clinical efforts and portrays unproven interventions as silver bullets for COVID-19, he concluded.

For live updates on the latest developments regarding the novel coronavirus and COVID-19, click here.

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iTolerance, Inc. Strengthens Leadership Team with Key Appointments to Advance Regenerative Medicine Platform – Yahoo Finance

Posted: October 28, 2021 at 2:05 am

Dennis M. Hester, Ph.D., an accomplished biotech professional with over 30 years of experience in regulatory affairs, quality assurance and product development, appointed as Senior Vice President, Chemistry, Manufacturing and Controls

Sumitra M. Ghate, a proven regulatory affairs leader with over 25 years of pharmaceutical and biotech product development experience, appointed as Vice President, Regulatory Affairs

MIAMI, FL / ACCESSWIRE / October 25, 2021 / iTolerance, Inc. ("iTolerance" or the "Company"), a biotechnology company focused on the development of innovative regenerative medicines, today announced the appointments of and Dennis M. Hester, Ph.D., Senior Vice President of Chemistry, Manufacturing and Controls, effective July 2021, and Sumitra M. Ghate, Vice President, Regulatory Affairs, effective October 2021, to the Company's executive leadership team.

"We are pleased to welcome Dennis and Sumitra to the iTolerance leadership team. The ability to attract two industry-leading executives with such accomplished backgrounds represents a noteworthy achievement for the Company and speaks volumes to the potential of our regenerative medicine technology platform, iTOL-100," stated Dr. Anthony Japour, Chief Executive Officer of iTolerance. "With this leadership team in place, I believe we are now well positioned to execute on our development strategy as we work to advance our lead program, iTOL-101, toward a first-in-human study as quickly as possible."

Dennis M. Hester, Ph.D.

Senior Vice President, Chemistry, Manufacturing and Controls

Dr. Hester commented, "Regenerative medicine has the potential to be an important tool in the way physicians treat diseases. However, one significant drawback to cell/organioid implantation today is the need for patients to be on life-long immunosuppression due to the risk or rejection. I believe that iTolerance's technology may have the ability to solve that problem by creating localized immune tolerance. I am excited to be joining the team to drive iTOL-100 forward, opening up the possibilities of regenerative medicine."

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Dr. Hester has been involved with product development for over 30 years and has spent the last 20 years working with a broad range of therapeutic agents, formulation technologies and routes of administration. His experience spans small molecule solid oral therapeutics, a broad range of inhalation formulations, and peptide, protein and cell based sterile injectable products, for use in a number of indications including diabetes, infectious diseases and oncology. Dr. Hester has an impressive track record of successfully leading programs into, and through, clinical development resulting in launch readiness and/or commercial sales. He has contributed to over two dozen INDs and the approval of six commercial products with a number of compounds presently in late-stage clinical development.

Prior to joining iTolerance, Dr. Hester served as Senior Vice President, Technical Operations, with responsibilities for Regulatory Affairs, Quality Assurance, and Technical Operations including Chemistry, Manufacturing and Controls (CMC) at Calidi Biotherapeutics. Prior to joining Calidi, Dr. Hester held leadership roles at a number of companies including Vice President, Product Development and Head of CMC at Mirati Therapeutics, Senior Director, Pharmaceutical Sciences and Head of CMC at Aragon Pharmaceuticals and Director, Pharmaceutical Development and Head of CMC at Intellikine, Inc. Additionally, Dennis obtained extensive biologics experience while working at Nektar Therapeutics, Amylin Pharmaceuticals and other companies as a full time employee or as a consultant.

Dr. Hester holds a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from the University of Southern California, an American Chemical Society Accredited Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry from the United States Air Force Academy and is an inventor on seven issued patents.

Sumitra M. Ghate

Vice President, Regulatory Affairs

"Type 1 Diabetes is a significant unmet medical need and even with advances in insulin therapy, patients struggle to maintain glycemic targets and disease management can be a significant burden to these patients and their families. Regenerative medicine offers a potential solution, but chronic immunosuppression remains a challenge. I believe iTOL-101 can overcome this issue and has the potential to be a curative therapy for Type 1 Diabetes. I am thrilled to be joining the team as we work to advance iTOL-101 in a first-in-human clinical study in the near-term," added Ms. Ghate.

Ms. Ghate is an accomplished regulatory affairs leader with over twenty-five years of drug, biologic, and device development experience in the pharmaceutical and biotech industry. She has extensive expertise in developing and executing strong global regulatory strategies to minimize regulatory risk and accelerate development timelines. Over the course of her career, she has led the development of over twenty INDs and CTAs and three initial marketing applications, along with multiple marketing supplements.

Prior to joining iTolerance, Ms. Ghate's roles included Head of Regulatory Affairs at Histogenics Corporation, a regenerative medicine company developing a late phase tissue-engineered combination product. She also worked at Eli Lilly and Company across a nearly 20-year tenure in areas of CMC and regulatory with over ten years focused on diabetes. Most recently, she served as President of Artimus Regulatory Consulting, LLC providing strategic regulatory guidance for drugs and biologics, including regenerative medicine products. Additionally, she partnered with Bruder Consulting and Venture Group in the areas of regulatory strategy, FDA interactions, and regulatory submissions for cell therapy and tissue repair products.

Ms. Ghate received her BS in Organismal Biology and her BA in Chemistry from the University of Kansas. Additionally, she earned her US and EU Regulatory Affairs Certification (RAC) from the Regulatory Affairs Professional Society.

About iTolerance, Inc.

iTolerance isa privately held biotechnology company focused on the development of innovative regenerative medicines. The Company's lead program, iTOL-101, is an adjunct therapy with pancreatic islet cell implant currently in development for the treatment of or as a potential breakthrough cure for Type 1 Diabetes. iTOL-101 has demonstrated compelling efficacy in non-human primate studies. The Company plans to advance iTOL-101 towards an IND and first-in-man study. Additionally, the Company is advancing its regenerative cell therapy platform to fuel a robust pipeline addressing high-value indications. For more information, please visit itolerance.com.

Investor ContactJenene ThomasChief Executive OfficerJTC Team, LLCT: 833.475.8247iTolerance@jtcir.com

SOURCE: iTolerance, Inc.

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iTolerance, Inc. Strengthens Leadership Team with Key Appointments to Advance Regenerative Medicine Platform - Yahoo Finance

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