Finnish Research Centre Selects Cutting Edge Nanotechnology from Vistec

ESPOO, Finland & WATERVLIET, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Vistec Lithography Inc. (www.vistec-semi.com) announced today that Micronova Nanofabrication Centre (www.micronova.fi) has selected one of its electron-beam lithography systems. The leading nanotechnology laboratory in Finland aims to use Vistecs EBPG5000plusES for the design, development and fabrication of micro- and nanosystems. The cutting edge technology is specialized for multi-user environments and is therefore a future-proof match to the needs of Micronova.

At Micronova more than 360 employees and students of different facilities carry out research in diverse fields of nanotechnology. The Finnish institute aims to use the system for research in the fields of nanoelectronics, nanofabrication, microelectronics, nanophotonics and microfabrication. This state-of-the-art electron-beam lithography system gives us the possibility to continue future-proof research at the very highest level. But not only the characteristics of the system determined our decision also the long term experience of Vistec in this field of research were decisive, comments Dr. Veli-Matti Airaksinen, director of Aalto Nanofab at Micronova, the acquisition of the new system.

The Vistec EBPG5000pES is a high-performance lithography tool based on reliable and well-proven system architecture. The system is equipped for true 100kV / 1mm performance under regular electron-optical conditions with a wide capability for high throughput applications. Rainer Schmid, General Manager Vistec Lithography, Inc., explains further characteristics: Its electron-optical column, rated for acceleration voltages of 50 and 100kV, enables the EBPG5000pES to provide a spot size down to <2.2nm. On the other hand nano-lithography structures smaller than 8nm can easily be generated. Furthermore the system incorporates an interactive graphical user interface (GUI). With this feature we enable the use for diverse, multiuser environments such as used at huge research institutes like Micronova or universities.

Micronova is one of the most scientific nano-research institutes in Europe. Therefore we are glad to have come to this agreement, comments Schmid the order. By providing a steady growing number of advanced research institutes and universities with electron-beam lithography systems Vistec has demonstrated that its technology is state-of-the-art and best choice. Vistec is known for its great support to its customers. But not only do our customers benefit from the cooperation, we do it as well. Having such a strong connection to cutting edge research institutes like Micronova enables us to continue the development of our technology to the demands of an even wider target group.

Micronova

Micronova Nanofabrication Centre is Finlands National Research Infrastructure for micro- and nanotechnology, jointly operated by Aalto University and VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland. Micronovas activities extend from fundamental physics to device prototyping, applied research and small-scale manufacturing. Technologies developed at Micronova include nanoelectronic and photonic devices, MEMS sensors, particle and X-ray detectors and THz technology.

Aalto University

Aalto University is a new multidisciplinary science and art community merging the strengths of three universities in the fields of science, technology, economics, art and design. Aalto University's cornerstones are its strengths in education and research, and its goal is to become one of the world's top universities. Aaltos community includes 20,000 students as well as a staff of 4,700 of which 340 are professors.

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Finnish Research Centre Selects Cutting Edge Nanotechnology from Vistec

Research and Markets: Nanotechnology in Health Care. An In-Depth Investigation of Nanotechnology-Based Therapy

Dublin - Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/e0c7cab9/nanotechnology_in) has announced the addition of the "Nanotechnology in Health Care" book to their offering.

Nanotechnologies are among the fastest growing areas of scientific research, and this is expected to have a substantial impact on human health care, especially in biomedical applications and nanomedicine now and in the near future. In the present scenario, nanotechnology is spreading its wings to address the key problems in the field of nanomedicine and human health care by improving diagnosis, prevention, treatment, and tissue engineering.

This book provides an in-depth investigation of nanotechnology-based therapy and recent advancements in this field for revolutionizing the treatments for various fatal diseases, including cardiovascular and infectious diseases.

Key Features

- Covers significant applied aspects of nanotechnology with up-to-date information and its breakthrough in various fields of human health care

- Presents comprehensive coverage of the dominant technology in various aspects of human health, supported by excellent photographs, figures, and references

- Provides important information regarding a variety of topics that will influence improved nanomedicine and biomedical research

Readership

Advanced undergraduate- and graduate-level students in nanotechnology, nanobiotechnology; researchers in macromolecular science, nanosciences, nanotechnology, chemistry, biology, and medicine, especially those with an interest in drug delivery or cancer therapy.

Key Topics Covered:

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Research and Markets: Nanotechnology in Health Care. An In-Depth Investigation of Nanotechnology-Based Therapy

Medical students' talent show to display diverse acts, including songs and traditional dances

Joshua Elder is going to become a doctor.

Tomorrow, Elder, a fourth-year medical student, will find out where hell be attending residency, a stage of graduate medical training when medical students train at a hospital or clinic in another city, sometimes across the country. But as for tonight, hell be doing something hes been doing since he was in high school: singing.

Between taking board examinations, attending class and auditioning for residency, any time Elder has just 10 minutes to spare, he will pick up his guitar and strum a couple of Tyrone Wells tunes. Tonight, hell be performing at the David Geffen School of Medicines 15th annual talent show.

This year represents a very different place. Im essentially done with medical school now. This (event) will be happening the day before I find out where Ill be going for the next three to four years of my life, Elder said. Itll be nice to take my mind off of whats happening the next day.

This years theme is A Night At The OSCEs, in reference to the Oscars. OSCEs are a type of hands-on examination used in the health sciences, in which the medical school hires professional actors to play the role of patients, and students have to diagnose the patients.

The talent show will feature medical students of all years, and performances range from acoustic sets and piano pieces to dances such as the traditional Chinese Wushu.

First-year medical student Christine Thang, the organizer of the event, said the show counters the assumption that all medical students do is study.

Its cool to see how diverse (in talent) our class is, Thang said. When they talk about well-rounded medical students, its what we have here, giving students opportunities to share their talents with peers. Its nice to get away from the books and studying, and its nice to show another side of our medical students.

Elder, who has performed twice in the talent show and also organized and emceed the event his first year, said that, although medical school and singing contrast with each other, he believes medicine is very much an art.

I think people are attracted to medicine when you are interested in the arts because medicine is a mix of art and science. For me the art is research; my creative abilities for music have fit in with medicine at different times. I didnt expect that as much, Elder said.

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Medical students' talent show to display diverse acts, including songs and traditional dances

Premeds, Physicians Can Help Meet Global Medical Needs

From Syria and the Sudan to the Democratic Republic of the Congo and beyond, political instability, crumbling or vacuous medical infrastructure, and the refugee crises that follow result in a foreseeable amount of unmet medical need. Many aspiring physicians express that they want to "help people" and "work overseas," but when pressed, they often can't articulate where, whom, and how they intend to help.

Physicians, medical students, and even premedical students are able to make a significant impact on people's lives. In an increasingly interconnected world, which is only getting "flatter," having an understanding of the scope of medical needs worldwide, the human impact of these political crises, and how you can help will empower you to be a more empathetic physician and have a greater impact.

[Learn how medical schools are seeking empathetic students.]

Physicians from throughout the world are working with literally thousands of nongovernmental (NGO) and government-supported international aid organizations to deliver care to those who need it most. One particularly well-known organization is Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF)also known as Doctors without Borderswhich was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1999 for its international aid work. The MSF website provides a wealth of information on humanitarian crises from the field, as well as its internship program.

Contrary to what some may think, the people who work for MSF and similar organizations aren't only internists or infectious disease specialists. Surgeons, ophthalmologists, OB-GYNs, and other specialists are desperately needed. The American Medical Association (AMA) has a physician volunteer section that helps to organize and delineate the options as well.

At many medical schools throughout the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean, medical students have an abundance of international service opportunities available to them, particularly in the latter part of their third and final years of medical school. These opportunities are especially valuable at this stage of medical training, because they help reinforce the importance of taking a comprehensive patient history, help hone physical examination skills, and illustrate how medicine is practiced in a resource-poor environment.

While conducting your medical school search, inquiring about international clinical opportunities is recommended, and discussing these opportunities during medical school interviews can help highlight your interest in the school and your commitment to patient care.

[Learn how to prepare for a medical school interview.]

Premedical students also have myriad opportunities available to them. Naturally, premedical students will not have the independent or supervised clinical autonomy of a physician or medical student, respectively. However, they can still make an impact, learn a tremendous amount, and do meaningful work that can improve their medical school application.

To identify opportunities, reach out to the premedical society at your school to get started. The International Medical Volunteers Association provides a comprehensive and no-frills background on how to identify organizations. It also has a student's corner with tips for students, as well as a link to the global health Supercourse, a repository of lectures on global health and prevention. Additional opportunities can be found through idealist.org, and potentially through the religious organization of your choosing.

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Premeds, Physicians Can Help Meet Global Medical Needs

Theravalues: Extensive Clinical Trials Affirms the Benefits of Theracurmin™ on Diastolic Function in Hypertensive …

CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The research group led by Dr. Koji Hasegawa, Director of the Translational Research Division at the National Hospital Organization Kyoto Medical Center and Dr. Tatsuya Morimoto, Professor at the Molecular Medicine School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Shizuoka, announced today based on the recent human clinical trials, that Theracurmin has continuously shown positive impact on human diastolic functions. Theracurmin is a patented absorption-enhanced form of curcumin, developed by Theravalues Corporation, a Japanese bio-venture.

At the American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Session held in November 2011, the research group unveiled the results of a 24-week long human clinical trial, which affirmed Theracurmins efficacy in improving the symptoms of the left ventricular diastolic failure.

After demonstrating the positive impact of Theracurmin at AHA 2011, we have completed clinical trials administering Theracurmin for 24 weeks to another 8 participants, said Dr. Morimoto. The analysis on the clinical trials for 38 participants conducted by the end of 2011 has been presented at the American College of Cardiology 2012. We are very excited to discover that the result of the clinical trials underscores the effectiveness of Theracurmin in the improvement of the diastolic function in hypertensive patients.

Curcumin, a polyphenol derived from turmeric (Curcuma Longa L), has anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant therapeutic properties, which effectively treat chronic inflammatory diseases. However, its poor bioavailability due to low oral absorption has been an ongoing challenge. Theravalues innovative technology, which has been applied to Theracurmin, addresses this issue by creating surface controlled colloidal dispersion, which enhances body absorption by 27 times compared to that of conventional curcumin powder.

We are pleased to affirm that Theracurmin has positive effects in curbing left ventricular diastolic failure at a statistically significant level, said Dr. Hasegawa, the leader of the research group. We plan on starting a new clinical trial, increasing the dosage up to 180 mg of Theracurmin from 60 mg for patients with hypertensive cardiac hypertrophy patients.

The research group has been investigating curcumins exceptional properties to curb excessive activation of NF-kappaB, a widely-known agent that controls many genes that cause inflammation.

Tadashi Hashimoto, President of Theravalues, said, Chronic inflammation often leads to several forms of illness such as cancer, metabolic disease, neuro-cognitive diseases, and arthritis. We anticipate that Theracurmin will potentially alleviate these conditions.

Theracurmin is currently used for a broad spectrum of clinical trials both in Japan and the U.S., including impaired glucose tolerance at National Hospital Organization Kyoto Medical Center, advanced cancer at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, and Alzheimers prevention at the UCLA Longevity Center.

ABOUT THERAVALUES CORPORATION

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Theravalues: Extensive Clinical Trials Affirms the Benefits of Theracurmin™ on Diastolic Function in Hypertensive ...

Ottawa Integrative Cancer Centre and Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation Collaborate on Whole-Person Cancer-care Education

New Integral Healing Program provides cancer patients and families with awareness of whole-person cancer care and complementary medicine benefits

OTTAWA, March 26, 2012 /CNW/ - The Ottawa Integrative Cancer Centre (OICC) has launched an innovative whole-person cancer-care education program in partnership with the Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation's Maplesoft Centre.

The "Integral Healing Program: Empowerment on the Cancer Journey" provides a set of educational modules designed to share evidence-informed complementary care options with cancer patients, survivors and their support network, providing them with knowledge and tools to take better control of their disease management.

Consisting of four, weekly half-day workshops, each session incorporates hands-on interactive learning, audio-visual teaching aids, and lively group discussions.

The next four-week Integral Healing Program will begin on April 10, 2012. The program will repeat several times throughout 2012. All sessions are free of charge and are being held at the Maplesoft Centre, 1500 Alta Vista Drive, in Ottawa. To register, please visit the Maplesoft Centre's online program registration at http://www.ottawacancer.ca and click on the Maplesoft Centre icon or call 613-274-3527. For more information on workshop content and the health-care instructors, please visit OICC events at http://www.oicc.ca

"The Cancer Foundation strongly supports the complementary approach to cancer care and is pleased to partner with the OICC to make this educational program available to cancer patients and survivors visiting the Maplesoft Centre," says Linda Eagen, President and CEO of the Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation. "We ran a pilot program in the fall of 2011 which was overwhelmingly popular. People felt empowered and excited to learn about the benefits of complementary and naturopathic medicine. We believe the program's teachings will have lasting impact on the care of cancer patients in the Ottawa region."

"We are very pleased to be working with the Cancer Foundation to educate as many cancer patients and survivors as possible about the benefits of integrative oncology and whole-person care," says Dugald Seely, ND, M.Sc., FABNO, the executive director and founder of the OICC. "Attendees learn how natural therapies can strengthen their immune system, support their body's inherent healing ability, improve quality of life and ultimately help support them during aggressive cancer treatments. They will also learn how to talk with their oncologists about complementary care options. The program instructors include a number of regulated health-care practitioners with training and experience in cancer care."

About the Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation

The Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation is dedicated to increasing cancer survivorship in Eastern Ontario. The Cancer Foundation is the most significant philanthropic contributor to cancer care and research in the Ottawa regionby raising the most dollars in our community and allocating the most funds locally to fight cancer. The Cancer Foundation works with its regional partners to ensure local residents have the best possible care close to home, shorter wait times for diagnosis and treatment, access to the latest research and new therapies and overall improved quality of lifewhich includes the opening of Canada's first Cancer Survivorship Centre. The Maplesoft Centre offers Cancer Survivorship Care Coaching that helps to address the emotional, physical, spiritual, informational and psychological needs of cancer survivors and their families. For more information about the Maplesoft Centre and the Cancer Foundation, please visit http://www.ottawacancer.ca.

About OICC

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Ottawa Integrative Cancer Centre and Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation Collaborate on Whole-Person Cancer-care Education

Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine Opens First Integrative Cancer Centre in Eastern Canada

The Ottawa Integrative Cancer Centre is a not-for-profit cancer care and research center delivering whole-person cancer care and scientifically grounded, evidence-informed complementary medicine

OTTAWA, March 26, 2012 /CNW/ - The Ottawa Integrative Cancer Centre (OICC) has opened its doors to provide multi-disciplinary complementary medicine and whole-person care for people with cancer, and to those wanting to prevent cancer or its recurrence. The OICC is both a treatment clinic and an integrative oncology research centre, which exists to assess and reduce possible causes of cancer while exploring innovative integrative methods to treat the disease.

The Centre's clinical practice and visionary research agenda is led by Dugald Seely, ND, MSc, FABNO, the executive director and founder of the OICC. "As the director of research and clinical epidemiology at the Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine (CCNM), Dugald has helped to establish CCNM as one of North America's leading research centres in complementary medicine. I am confident that under Dugald's leadership the OICC will soon be recognized as a world-class integrative cancer centre that will serve as a model for additional centres across the continent," says Bob Bernhardt, PhD, CCNM's president and CEO.

According to Bernhardt, "The OICC will stand as a beacon for innovation in the Canadian cancer care community. The Centre's approach to integrative oncology will bridge the gap that too often exists between conventional and complementary cancer therapy and research, ensuring the best practices from both domains are integrated in the quest to overcome this debilitating disease."

"Providing complementary therapies in an evidence-based manner, supporting conventional medicine, is both desired by patients and is much needed in the cancer community," says Seely. "Well over half of all cancer patients embrace complementary therapies alongside conventional treatments during their cancer journey and this proportion is growing. Often patients do not communicate their complementary care choices with conventional oncologists. A common concern among oncologists is the potential for complementary medicine to interfere with conventional therapies such as chemotherapy and radiation therapy. The OICC is committed to working with patients, their families and their health-care providers to develop a complementary, non-interfering therapeutic program to optimize overall wellness," adds Seely.

Pioneering a Contemporary Cancer Treatment Model

The OICC is the first integrative oncology and research centre in Eastern Canada to provide whole-person cancer care that includes complementary medicine. HV The Centre has an experienced team of regulated health-care practitioners with advanced training in cancer care. Supervised by the OICC's chief clinical medical officer, Leesa Kirchner, B.Sc., ND, FABNO, the Centre offers naturopathic medicine, physiotherapy, psychiatry, nutrition, massage therapy, exercise therapy, acupuncture and yoga, as well as the services of a medical doctor.

The OICC offers the following for people undergoing cancer care:

Bridging Gaps in Canadian Cancer Research

The OICC is committed to building the evidence base in the emerging field of integrative oncology through high impact research. Our research agenda has two pillars: clinical trials of complementary therapies and evaluating integrative whole-systems of care. This agenda addresses significant research gaps in regards to the safety, clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of complementary therapies and integrative oncology. To date, these gaps in research have seriously hindered policy development. Future plans include developing a research agenda to explore relevant issues in the field of environmental oncology, particularly in relation to risk factors that influence cancer development and recurrence.

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Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine Opens First Integrative Cancer Centre in Eastern Canada

Value Subjectivism and Monetary Instability

By Ron Hera

2012 Hera Research, LLC

Subjectivism is the philosophy that reality is what we perceive to be real and that no underlying, true reality exists independent of human perception. In other words, the nature of reality for an individual person is dependent on that individuals own consciousness. It follows that each person experiences their own reality that is not shared with others. What is true and what seems moral to one person may not be true or moral for another person, i.e., truth and morality are relative. In contrast, objectivism is the philosophy that reality exists independent of human consciousness; that human beings have direct contact with reality through sense perception; and that objective knowledge of reality can be obtained through perception, evidence and logic, e.g., through scientific methods.

A subjectivist might view the stock market as a perpetual bubble floating on the hopes and dreams of entrepreneurs and investors who invest in stocks in the same way that gamblers place chips on a craps table in a casino, without any concept of an objective economic reality outside of the game. A subjectivist might view technical analysis, which is based purely on trading activity in the stock market, as the ideal tool to understand financial markets, despite the fact that is has no direct connection to the objective economic realities of the companies that stocks represent. In contrast, an objectivist might view the stock market as a venue for participation in business ownership where stocks have value as a function of the particular businesses that they represent and because of the goods and services that the businesses provide in the objective world. A subjectivist might say that everything is relative (although the statement is self contradictory), while an objectivist might say that they believe in justification, not by faith, but by verification (Thomas H. Huxley 1825-1895). Although they may not know it, Keynesian economists, bankers and day traders are often philosophical subjectivists while Austrian economists, advocates of the gold standard and value investors are often philosophical objectivists.

An objectivist interpretation of morality is that morality flows naturally from people pursuing their own interests and that immorality results from coercion. For the vast majority of individuals, self interest includes supporting their own family and community, simply because human beings are social animals. Parents naturally care for their own children, for example. Morality is a natural phenomenon, not a product of coercion. Human beings naturally live peacefully together in communities and the vast majority of individuals experience empathy. Both charity and resistance to coercion occur naturally and voluntarily in human communities. Those who do not experience empathy (sociopaths) and who disregard the interests of their fellow human beings or act in ways that harm the community are extremely rare. Philosopher Ayn Rand wrote Force and mind are opposites; morality ends where a gun begins. Human beings do not act morally because they are being watched by police or because a gun is held to their heads. In all cultures and at all times and places throughout recorded history, and certainly before, what is immoral is initiating violent force or coercion without cause, most especially when it harms the community. Although particular rules vary from one culture to another, morality is neither subjective nor relative.

Ironically, the objectivist view of morality has been widely misconstrued as a sanction for selfishness. Selfishness typically results in the deprivation or coercion of others. In contrast, pursuing their own self interest is what human beings naturally and voluntarily do in the absence of coercion. In fact, the idea that what is moral arises in a natural way based on the freedom to pursue ones own self interest, i.e., freedom from coercion, is precisely the moral doctrine of the 1776 American Declaration of Independence:

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Value Subjectivism and Monetary Instability

J. Craig Venter describes biofuels, vaccines and foods from made-to-order microbes

In a plenary talk titled, "From Reading to Writing the Genetic Code," Venter described a fundamental shift in his field of genomics, and its promise for producing synthetic life that could help provide 21st century society with new fuels, medicines, food and nutritional products, supplies of clean water and other resources. Venter, a pioneer in the field, led the team at Celera Genomics that went head-to-head with the government-and-foundation-funded Human Genome Project in the race to decode the human genome. This quest, in which the 23,000 human genes were deciphered, ended with the teams declaring a tie and publishing simultaneous publications in 2001.

"Genomics is a rapidly evolving field and my teams have been leading the way from reading the genetic code deciphering the sequences of genes in microbes, humans, plants and other organisms to writing code and constructing synthetic cells for a variety of uses. We can now construct fully synthetic bacterial cells that have the potential to more efficiently and economically produce vaccines, pharmaceuticals, biofuels, food and other products."

The work Venter described at the ACS session falls within an ambitious new field known as synthetic biology, which draws heavily on chemistry, metabolic engineering, genomics and other traditional scientific disciplines. Synthetic biology emerged from genetic engineering, the now-routine practice of inserting one or two new genes into a crop plant or bacterium. The genes can make tomatoes, for instance, ripen without softening or goad bacteria to produce human insulin for treating diabetes. Synthetic biology, however, involves rearranging genes on a much broader scale that of a genome, which is an organism's entire genetic code to reprogram entire organisms and even design new organisms.

Venter and his team at the not-for-profit J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI), which has facilities in Rockville, Maryland, and San Diego, announced in 2010 that they had constructed the world's first completely synthetic bacterial cell. Using computer-designed genes made on synthesizer machines from four bottles of chemicals, the scientists arranged those genes into a package, a synthetic chromosome. When inserted into a bacterial cell, the chromosome booted up the cell and was capable of dividing and reproducing.

In the ACS talk, Venter described progress on major projects, including developing new synthetic cells and engineering genomes to produce biofuels, vaccines, clean water, food and other products. That work is ongoing at both JCVI and at his company, Synthetic Genomics Inc. (SGI). A project at SGI for instance, aims to engineer algae cells to capture carbon dioxide and use it as a raw material for producing new fuels. Another group uses synthetic genomic advances with the goal of making influenza vaccines in hours rather than months to better respond to sudden mutations in those viruses.

Venter also described his work in sequencing the first draft human genome in 2001 while he and his team were at Celera Genomics, as well as the work on his complete diploid genome published in 2007 by scientists at JCVI, along with collaborators at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto and the University of California, San Diego. In addition to continued analysis of Venter's genome, he and his team are also studying the human microbiome, the billions of bacteria that live in and on people, and how these microbes impact health and disease.

While technology is rapidly changing, making human genome sequencing more and more accessible, the accuracy of these next generation machines remain a challenge. Thus, Venter believes it may be years before such full-genome sequences become accurate enough to find a place in routine medical care.

Provided by American Chemical Society (news : web)

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J. Craig Venter describes biofuels, vaccines and foods from made-to-order microbes

Genetics of flu susceptibility

Public release date: 25-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Aileen Sheehy as22@sanger.ac.uk 44-122-349-2368 Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

A genetic finding could help explain why influenza becomes a life-threating disease to some people while it has only mild effects in others. New research led by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute has identified for the first time a human gene that influences how we respond to influenza infection.

People who carry a particular variant of a gene called IFITM3 are significantly more likely to be hospitalised when they fall ill with influenza than those who carry other variants, the team found. This gene plays a critical role in protecting the body against infection with influenza and a rare version of it appears to make people more susceptible to severe forms of the disease. The results are published in the journal Nature.

A central question about viruses is why some people suffer badly from an infection and others do not. IFITM3 is an important protein that protects cells against virus infection and is thought to play a critical role in the immune system's response against such viruses as H1N1 pandemic influenza, commonly known as 'swine flu'. When the protein is present in large quantities, the spread of the virus in lungs is hindered, but if the protein is defective or absent, the virus can spread more easily, causing severe disease.

"Although this protein is extremely important in limiting the spread of viruses in cells, little is known about how it works in lungs," explains Aaron Everitt, first author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. "Our research plays a fundamental part in explaining how both the gene and protein are linked to viral susceptibility."

The antiviral role of IFITM3 in humans was first suggested by studies using a genetic screen, which showed that the protein blocked the growth of influenza virus and dengue virus in cells. This led the team to ask whether IFITM3 protected mice from viral infections. They removed the IFITM3 gene in mice and found that once they contracted influenza, the symptoms became much more severe compared to mice with IFITM3. In effect, they found the loss of this single gene in mice can turn a mild case of influenza into a fatal infection.

The researchers then sequenced the IFITM3 genes of 53 patients hospitalised with influenza and found that some have a genetic mutant form of IFITM3, which is rare in normal people. This variant gene encodes a shortened version of the protein which makes cells more susceptible to viral infection.

"Since IFITM3 appears to be a first line defender against infection, our efforts suggest that individuals and populations with less IFITM3 activity may be at increased risk during a pandemic and that IFITM3 could be vital for defending human populations against other viruses such as avian influenza virus and dengue virus" says Dr. Abraham Brass, co-senior author and Assistant Professor at the Ragon Institute and Gastrointestinal Unit of Massachusetts General Hospital.

This research was a collaboration between institutes in the United States and the United Kingdom. The samples for this study were obtained from the MOSAIC consortium in England and Scotland, co-ordinated from the Centre for Respiratory Infection (CRI) at Imperial College London, and the GenISIS consortium in Scotland at the Roslin Institute of the University of Edinburgh. These were pivotal for the human genetics component of the work.

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Genetics of flu susceptibility

J. Craig Venter, Ph.D., describes biofuels, vaccines and foods from made-to-order microbes

Public release date: 25-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Michael Bernstein m_bernstein@acs.org 619-525-6268 (March 23-28, San Diego Press Center) 202-872-6042

Michael Woods m_woods@acs.org 619-525-6268 (March 23-28, San Diego Press Center) 202-872-6293 American Chemical Society

SAN DIEGO, March 25, 2012 Just as aspiring authors often read hundreds of books before starting their own, scientists are using decades of knowledge garnered from sequencing or "reading" the genetic codes of thousands of living things to now start writing new volumes in the library of life. J. Craig Venter, Ph.D., one of the most renowned of those scientists, described the construction of the first synthetic cell and many new applications of this work today at the 243rd National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society, which is underway this week.

In a plenary talk titled, "From Reading to Writing the Genetic Code," Venter described a fundamental shift in his field of genomics, and its promise for producing synthetic life that could help provide 21st century society with new fuels, medicines, food and nutritional products, supplies of clean water and other resources. Venter, a pioneer in the field, led the team at Celera Genomics that went head-to-head with the government-and-foundation-funded Human Genome Project in the race to decode the human genome. This quest, in which the 23,000 human genes were deciphered, ended with the teams declaring a tie and publishing simultaneous publications in 2001.

"Genomics is a rapidly evolving field and my teams have been leading the way from reading the genetic code deciphering the sequences of genes in microbes, humans, plants and other organisms to writing code and constructing synthetic cells for a variety of uses. We can now construct fully synthetic bacterial cells that have the potential to more efficiently and economically produce vaccines, pharmaceuticals, biofuels, food and other products."

The work Venter described at the ACS session falls within an ambitious new field known as synthetic biology, which draws heavily on chemistry, metabolic engineering, genomics and other traditional scientific disciplines. Synthetic biology emerged from genetic engineering, the now-routine practice of inserting one or two new genes into a crop plant or bacterium. The genes can make tomatoes, for instance, ripen without softening or goad bacteria to produce human insulin for treating diabetes. Synthetic biology, however, involves rearranging genes on a much broader scale that of a genome, which is an organism's entire genetic code to reprogram entire organisms and even design new organisms.

Venter and his team at the not-for-profit J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI), which has facilities in Rockville, Maryland, and San Diego, announced in 2010 that they had constructed the world's first completely synthetic bacterial cell. Using computer-designed genes made on synthesizer machines from four bottles of chemicals, the scientists arranged those genes into a package, a synthetic chromosome. When inserted into a bacterial cell, the chromosome booted up the cell and was capable of dividing and reproducing.

In the ACS talk, Venter described progress on major projects, including developing new synthetic cells and engineering genomes to produce biofuels, vaccines, clean water, food and other products. That work is ongoing at both JCVI and at his company, Synthetic Genomics Inc. (SGI). A project at SGI for instance, aims to engineer algae cells to capture carbon dioxide and use it as a raw material for producing new fuels. Another group uses synthetic genomic advances with the goal of making influenza vaccines in hours rather than months to better respond to sudden mutations in those viruses.

Venter also described his work in sequencing the first draft human genome in 2001 while he and his team were at Celera Genomics, as well as the work on his complete diploid genome published in 2007 by scientists at JCVI, along with collaborators at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto and the University of California, San Diego. In addition to continued analysis of Venter's genome, he and his team are also studying the human microbiome, the billions of bacteria that live in and on people, and how these microbes impact health and disease.

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J. Craig Venter, Ph.D., describes biofuels, vaccines and foods from made-to-order microbes

A hidden architecture: Researchers use novel methods to uncover gene mutations for common diseases

Public release date: 25-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Marjorie Montemayor-Quellenberg mmontemayor-quellenberg@partners.org 617-534-2208 Brigham and Women's Hospital

BOSTON, MAHuman geneticists have long debated whether the genetic risk of the most common medical conditions derive from many rare mutations, each conferring a high degree of risk in different people, or common differences throughout the genome that modestly influence risk.

A new study by Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) researchers has harnessed data and new analysis tools to address this question in four common diseases: rheumatoid arthritis; celiac disease; coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction (heart attack); and type 2 diabetes.

The study will be electronically published on March 25, 2012 in Nature Genetics.

The researchers developed a new statistical method built upon "polygenic risk score analysis" to estimate the heritable component of these diseases that is explained by common differences throughout the genome.

Their method takes advantage of data from previously published genome-wide association studies, or GWAS, an approach used to scan DNA samples for common genetic markers seen throughout the populationcalled SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms).

According to senior author Robert Plenge, MD, PhD, BWH director of Genetics and Genomics in the Division of Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy, "We used GWAS data and a Bayesian statistical framework to demonstrate that a substantial amount of risk to these four common diseases is due to hundreds of loci that harbor common causal variants with small effect, as well as a smaller number of loci that harbor rare causal variants."

Using data on rheumatoid arthritis, they estimated that variation in hundreds of locations throughout the genome might explain 20 percent of rheumatoid arthritis risk, after excluding all of the known rheumatoid arthritis genetic risk factors.

They used computer simulations to demonstrate that the underlying genetic risk in rheumatoid arthritis is largely explained by many common alleles rather than rare mutations.

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A hidden architecture: Researchers use novel methods to uncover gene mutations for common diseases

PerkinElmer Launches Ensemble for Chemistry Informatics Platform at ACS 2012

SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

At the American Chemical Societys Spring 2012 National Meeting & Expo, PerkinElmer, Inc., a global leader focused on improving the health and safety of people and the environment, today announced the launch of its Ensemble for ChemistryTM integrated informatics suite for enhancing chemist productivity and decision-making, for industry segments including biopharmaceutical, environmental, food and chemical, as well as academia and government.

The Ensemble for Chemistry platform provides a suite of software applications to improve chemists efficiency. This is delivered through tools and content for more efficient planning and recording of experiments, the creation of structure-searchable databases of compounds, reactions and data, and the ability to locate, share and communicate results directly in their workflow.

The software suite allows users to manage chemical structures and their associated data and properties in intelligent and intuitive ways, and integrates disparate data from customers' Electronic Laboratory Notebooks (ELN), informatics systems and databases, maximizing the value of an organization's scientific intellectual capital.

Chemists across a wide range of scientific and commercial endeavors, whether from academic, biopharma, environmental, food or other segments, share the same core informatics needs ease of use, workflow efficiency, data integrity, knowledge sharing and collaboration, and secure storage, said Michael Stapleton, general manager, Informatics, PerkinElmer. The Ensemble for Chemistry suite provides researchers with the tools they need to understand the chemistry behind the names, structures and reactions, so that compounds and associated data are leveraged effectively on business-relevant pipeline projects.

The Ensemble for Chemistry suite helps businesses meet the challenges facing chemists by enabling them to:

About PerkinElmer, Inc.

PerkinElmer, Inc. is a global leader focused on improving the health and safety of people and the environment. The Company reported revenue of approximately $1.9 billion in 2011, has about 7,000 employees serving customers in more than 150 countries, and is a component of the S&P 500 Index. Additional information is available through 1-877-PKI-NYSE, or at http://www.perkinelmer.com.

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PerkinElmer Launches Ensemble for Chemistry Informatics Platform at ACS 2012

State opens up nominations for green chemistry awards

LANSING, MI (WNEM) -

Going Green could earn you an award from the state. The Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (EPA) has announced open nominations for the fourth annual Michigan Green Chemistry Governor's Awards.

The Governor's Awards recognize advances that incorporate the principles of green chemistry into chemical design, manufacture, or use, or that promote activities which support or implement those technologies and efforts. The awards acknowledge efforts to design and implement safer and more sustainable chemicals, processes, and products.

Awards are open to individuals, groups, and organizations, both non-profit and for profit. The program was established by the Michigan Green Chemistry Roundtable, and it celebrates innovations using green chemistry in Michigan. Eleven awards have been presented in the first three years of the program.

Entries must be sent no later than July 20. The awards will be presented at the 2012 Michigan Green Chemistry and Engineering Conference: "Driving Sustainable Manufacturing," which is scheduled Oct. 26 at Wayne State University.

For a copy of the nomination packet, or more information on the Michigan Green Chemistry Program, visit the DEQ Web site at http://www.michigan.gov/greenchemistry, or call the DEQ Environmental Assistance Center at 800662-9278.

Copyright 2012 WNEM (Meredith Broadcasting). All rights reserved.

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State opens up nominations for green chemistry awards

Angel Biotechnology – Update on Cramlington

26 March 2012

Angel Biotechnology Holdings plc

("Angel" or "the Company")

Company update

Angel Biotechnology Holdings plc, (AIM:ABH), the biopharmaceutical contract manufacturer, is pleased to announce that commissioning of the Cramlington facility is now complete as anticipated and that the plant is now available for development, technical transfer and other non-GMP (KOSDAQ: 018290.KQ - news) activities.

Completion of recommissioning reflects a period of concerted effort by all staff from across the business and our contractor WHP. Angel intends to utilise this facility to provide additional GMP manufacturing capabilities for the production of cell therapies, antibody purification and production of recombinant proteins.

By investing the additional capital, raised in the recent placing, into the infrastructure of the facility; such as environmental monitoring systems, utilities and superstructure, Cramlington has been upgraded to a state of the art manufacturing site offering three GMP cleanrooms, two Quality Control laboratories, a fermentation pilot plant and additional flexible development laboratory space.

Central to this progress has been the on-going recruitment of local staff into positions in Quality, Validation and Operations functions. This initial phase of recruitment has provided a core of five full time key individuals who, along with staff from the Pentlands site, will ensure the facility is fully prepared for the Medicines (Xetra: 938858 - news) and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) audit in May. We will continue to focus on recruiting a further five high calibre individuals during Q2 and Q3 this year.

Work is underway to transfer pilot processes from the Pentlands facility as a necessary first step in securing our MHRA licences. Data from activities is required to complete the dossier that will be reviewed by MHRA inspectors and will ensure that the facility is licenced in the most efficient and cost effective manner. Following grant of a licence the facility can be used for GMP manufacturing activities.

A first draft of the legal documents required to implement the joint venture with Materia Medica Holdings (MMH) has completed review. MMH have asked for changes to be made to the layout of their dedicated GMP facility to provide greater flexibility to introduce new programmes and new drawings have been submitted for approval.

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Angel Biotechnology - Update on Cramlington

Ariosa Diagnostics Announces Completion of Laboratory-Developed Test Study for the Harmony™ Prenatal Test

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 26, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Ariosa Diagnostics (formerly Aria Diagnostics), a molecular diagnostics company, today announced the completion of its clinical validation study for the Harmony Prenatal Test. The multi-national study represents the largest clinical study performed to date for non-invasive prenatal detection of common fetal trisomies. The test utilizes a directed, non-invasive approach to cell-free DNA (cfDNA) analysis in maternal blood. Additionally, information about the company's proprietary biochemistry and algorithm platforms, which work together to efficiently analyze patient samples in order to provide individualized risk scores, will be presented at the 2012 American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) Annual Clinical Genetics Meeting in Charlotte, N.C.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120326/NY75864LOGO )

"The completion of our validation study is an important milestone as we prepare to bring the Harmony Prenatal Test to market," said Ken Song, MD, chief executive officer at Ariosa Diagnostics. "The Harmony Prenatal Test's performance is the largest study to date using cell-free DNA technology and supports findings from our previous studies recently published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Prenatal Diagnosis demonstrating highly accurate fetal trisomy detection."

At the upcoming ACMG meeting, additional data on Ariosa's technology will be shared during an oral platform presentation (Molecular session) titled, "Non-Invasive Fetal Aneuploidy Detection in Cell-free DNA from Maternal Blood Using Digital Analysis of Selected Regions (DANSR) and the Fetal-fraction Optimized Risk of Trisomy Evaluation (FORTE) Algorithm" on Thursday, March 29, 2012 from 8:30 to 8:45 a.m. at the Charlotte Convention Center.

Formerly known as Aria Diagnostics, the company has changed its name to Ariosa Diagnostics in an effort to further distinguish and differentiate itself from other companies and products.

About Ariosa Diagnostics (formerly Aria Diagnostics)

Ariosa Diagnostics, Inc., is a molecular diagnostics company committed to providing safe, highly accurate and affordable prenatal tests for maternal and fetal health. Led by an experienced team, Ariosa is using its proprietary technology to perform a directed analysis of cell-free DNA in blood. Ariosa's simple blood test equips pregnant women and their healthcare providers with reliable information to make decisions regarding their health, without creating unnecessary stress or anxiety.

The company began operations in 2010 and is headquartered in San Jose, Calif. For more information, visitwww.ariosadx.com.

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Ariosa Diagnostics Announces Completion of Laboratory-Developed Test Study for the Harmony™ Prenatal Test

Professor leaves positive legacy

By Stephen Brooks | Originally Published: 12 hours ago |Modified: 12 hours ago |

Biochemistry professor Rawle Hollingsworth in his lab on Wednesday March 9, 2005.

During biochemistry professor Rawle Hollingsworths nearly 30 years at MSU, Tom Sharkey, chair of the biochemistry and molecular biology department, remembers having many conversations with him during casual run-ins outside the office.

One encounter sticks out in Sharkeys mind, who said he has a strong memory of listening to Hollingsworth explain carbohydrate involvement in blood types one day in the parking lot.

I was just fascinated to learn the things he was explaining, Sharkey said. Its just one of those moments in time that get frozen for reasons that you dont really know why.

Hollingsworth, a 55-year-old Haslett, Mich. resident, died from a pulmonary embolism on Feb. 29.

After completing his doctorate at the University of the West Indies in the Caribbean, Hollingsworth started as an assistant professor at MSU in 1983 and climbed the ranks to become a full professor.

I would say his enthusiasm really was the thing I continually think about when I think of him, Sharkey said.

Rawle Hollingsworth met his wife, Saleela Hollingsworth, at the University of the West Indies. The two were married for 26 years and had two children, Misha, 20, and Akhil, 15.

Saleela Hollingsworth said her husband loved traveling, reading and music and always put the childrens interests first.

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Professor leaves positive legacy

RBCC: Michael J. Fox Foundation Invests $179 Million in the Fight Against Parkinson’s Disease

NOKOMIS, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Parkinsons disease is the core focus of the The Michael J. Fox Foundation. Rainbow BioSciences (OTCBB: RBCC) intends to join the Foundation in the fight against Parkinsons disease when it signs a letter of intent with an advanced therapy developer within the next few days, and with good reason: There could be 12 million people suffering from the disease by 2032.

Thanks in no small part to the high profile of its A-list namesake, the Michael J. Fox Foundation has over the past 12 years become the largest private funder of Parkinson's disease research in the world, investing nearly $179 million in research to date. Through its aggressive outreach work, the Foundation has realized unprecedented success in raising awareness of the disease and its effects around the world.

Though the global market for Parkinsons treatments is $3 billion and growing, there are currently no drugs or therapies available that are capable of stopping or slowing the diseases progression. With RBCCs focus on this devastating disease, effective new emerging therapies are on the horizon.

For more information on Rainbow BioSciences, RBCCs biotechnology division, please visit http://www.rainbowbiosciences.com/investors.

Rainbow BioSciences will develop new medical and research technology innovations to compete alongside companies such as Cell Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CTIC),Biogen Idec Inc. (NASDAQ:BIIB), Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT) and Elan Corp. (NYSE:ELN).

About Rainbow BioSciences

Rainbow BioSciences, LLC, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Rainbow Coral Corp. (OTCBB:RBCC). The company continually seeks out new partnerships with biotechnology developers to deliver profitable new medical technologies and innovations. For more information on our growth-oriented business initiatives, please visit our website at [www.RainbowBioSciences.com]. For investment information and performance data on the company, please visit http://www.RainbowBioSciences.com/investors.

Notice Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

Safe Harbor Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995: This news release contains forward-looking information within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including statements that include the words "believes," "expects," "anticipate" or similar expressions. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the company to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. In addition, description of anyone's past success, either financial or strategic, is no guarantee of future success. This news release speaks as of the date first set forth above and the company assumes no responsibility to update the information included herein for events occurring after the date hereof.

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RBCC: Michael J. Fox Foundation Invests $179 Million in the Fight Against Parkinson’s Disease

Muhammad Ali’s Celebrity Fight Night targets disease

by Philip Haldiman - Mar. 25, 2012 10:08 PM The Republic | azcentral.com

Everybody knows that Muhammad Ali floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee.

But he can also throw a pretty mean fundraising party.

Celebrity Fight Night has raised more than $70 million since it started in 1994, when celebrities first donned oversize boxing gloves and duked it out for the fight against Parkinson's disease in front of 400 people.

Celebrity Fight Night in Phoenix

Now a mainstay of fundraising events in the Valley, this year the gala set a record with 1,300 people in attendance and raised more than $9.1 million Saturday at JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort and Spa in north Phoenix.

The money raised will go to the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center at St. Joseph's Barrow Neurological Institute, as well as other charities.

The 10,000-square-foot facility, established in 1997 and named after the former heavyweight boxing champion, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's in 1984, is on the campus of St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix.

The progressive disorder of the brain can cause tremors, rigidity, poor posture and coordination, and difficulty performing voluntary movements.

Saturday's Fight Night XVIII was a black-tie affair featuring stars from many walks of life -- athletes, actors and comedians -- mingling with Valley residents. Celebrities like Evander Holyfield, Billy Crystal, Bo Derek and Kurt Warner walked the red carpet.

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Muhammad Ali's Celebrity Fight Night targets disease

Muhammad Ali's Celebrity Fight Night targets disease

by Philip Haldiman - Mar. 25, 2012 10:08 PM The Republic | azcentral.com

Everybody knows that Muhammad Ali floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee.

But he can also throw a pretty mean fundraising party.

Celebrity Fight Night has raised more than $70 million since it started in 1994, when celebrities first donned oversize boxing gloves and duked it out for the fight against Parkinson's disease in front of 400 people.

Celebrity Fight Night in Phoenix

Now a mainstay of fundraising events in the Valley, this year the gala set a record with 1,300 people in attendance and raised more than $9.1 million Saturday at JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort and Spa in north Phoenix.

The money raised will go to the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center at St. Joseph's Barrow Neurological Institute, as well as other charities.

The 10,000-square-foot facility, established in 1997 and named after the former heavyweight boxing champion, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's in 1984, is on the campus of St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix.

The progressive disorder of the brain can cause tremors, rigidity, poor posture and coordination, and difficulty performing voluntary movements.

Saturday's Fight Night XVIII was a black-tie affair featuring stars from many walks of life -- athletes, actors and comedians -- mingling with Valley residents. Celebrities like Evander Holyfield, Billy Crystal, Bo Derek and Kurt Warner walked the red carpet.

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Muhammad Ali's Celebrity Fight Night targets disease