New embryonic stem cell line will aid research on nerve condition

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

Contact: Kara Gavin kegavin@umich.edu 734-764-2220 University of Michigan Health System

The University of Michigan's second human embryonic stem cell line has just been placed on the U.S. National Institutes of Health's registry, making the cells available for federally-funded research. It is the second of the stem cell lines derived at U-M to be placed on the registry.

The line, known as UM11-1PGD, was derived from a cluster of about 30 cells removed from a donated five-day-old embryo roughly the size of the period at the end of this sentence. That embryo was created for reproductive purposes, tested and found to be affected with a genetic disorder, deemed not suitable for implantation, and would therefore have otherwise been discarded when it was donated in 2011.

It carries the gene defect responsible for Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a hereditary neurological disorder characterized by a slowly progressive degeneration of the muscles in the foot, lower leg and hand. CMT, as it is known, is one of the most common inherited neurological disorders, affecting one in 2,500 people in the United States. People with CMT usually begin to experience symptoms in adolescence or early adulthood.

The embryo used to create the cell line was never frozen, but rather was transported from another IVF laboratory in the state of Michigan to the U-M in a special container. This may mean that these stem cells will have unique characteristics and utilities in understanding CMT disease progression or screening therapies in comparison to other human embryonic stem cells.

"We are proud to provide this cell line to the scientific community, in hopes that it may aid the search for new treatments and even a cure for CMT," says Gary Smith, Ph.D., who derived the line and also is co-director of the U-M Consortium for Stem Cell Therapies, part of the A. Alfred Taubman Medical Research Institute. "Once again, the acceptance of these cells to the registry demonstrates our attention to details of proper oversight, consenting, and following of NIH guidelines."

U-M is one of only four institutions including two other universities and one private company to have disease-specific stem cell lines listed in the national registry. U-M has several other disease-specific hESC lines submitted to NIH and awaiting approval, says Smith, who is a professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Michigan Medical School. The first line, a genetically normal one, was accepted to the registry in February.

"Stem cell lines that carry genetic traits linked to specific diseases are a model system to investigate what causes these diseases and come up with treatments," says Sue O'Shea, Ph.D., professor of Cell and Developmental Biology at the U-M Medical School, and co-director of the Consortium for Stem Cell Therapies.

Each line is the culmination of years of preparation and cooperation between U-M and Genesis Genetics, a Michigan-based genetic diagnostic company. This work was made possible by Michigan voters' November 2008 approval of a state constitutional amendment permitting scientists to derive embryonic stem cell lines using surplus embryos from fertility clinics or embryos with genetic abnormalities and not suitable for implantation.

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New embryonic stem cell line will aid research on nerve condition

Following life's chemistry to the earliest branches on the tree of life

ScienceDaily (Apr. 24, 2012) In a study published in PLoS Computational Biology, the Santa Fe Institute's Rogier Braakman and D. Eric Smith map the development of life-sustaining chemistry to the history of early life and trace six methods of carbon fixation seen in modern life back to a single ancestral form.

Carbon fixation -- life's mechanism for making carbon dioxide biologically useful -- forms the biggest bridge between Earth's non-living chemistry and its living biosphere. All organisms that fix carbon do so in one of six ways. These six mechanisms have overlaps, but it was previously unclear which of the six types came first, and how their development interweaved with environmental and biological changes.

The authors used a method that creates "trees" of evolutionary relatedness based on genetic sequences and metabolic traits. From this, they were able to reconstruct the complete early evolutionary history of biological carbon-fixation, relating all ways in which life today performs this function.

The earliest form of carbon fixation identified by scientists achieved a special kind of built-in robustness -- not seen in modern cells -- by layering multiple carbon-fixing mechanisms. This redundancy allowed early life to compensate for a lack of refined control over its internal chemistry, and formed a template for the later splits that created the earliest major branches in the tree of life.

For example, the first major life-form split came with the earliest appearance of oxygen on Earth, causing the ancestors of blue-green algae and most other bacteria to separate from the branch that includes Archaea, which, outside of bacteria, are the other major early group of single-celled microorganisms.

"It seems likely that the earliest cells were rickety assemblies whose parts were constantly malfunctioning and breaking down," explains Smith, an SFI External Professor. "How can any metabolism be sustained with such shaky support? The key is concurrent and constant redundancy."

Once early cells had more refined enzymes and membranes, allowing greater control over metabolic chemistry, environmental driving forces directed life's unfolding. These forces included changes in oxygen level and alkalinity, as well as minimization of the amount of energy (in the form of ATP) used to create biomass.

In other words, the environment drove major divergences in predictable ways -- in contrast to the common widely held belief that chance dominated evolutionary innovation and that rewinding and replaying the evolutionary tape would lead to an irreconcilably different tree of life.

"Mapping cell function onto genetic history gives us a clear picture of the physiology that led to the major foundational divergences of evolution," explains Braakman, an SFI Omidyar Fellow. "This highlights the central role of basic chemistry and physics in driving early evolution."

With the ancestral form uncovered and evolutionary drivers pinned to branching points in the tree, the researchers now want to make the study more mathematically formal and further analyze the early evolution of metabolism.

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Following life's chemistry to the earliest branches on the tree of life

Research and Markets: Green Corrosion Chemistry and Engineering: Opportunities and Challenges

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/6s2bcn/green_corrosion_ch) has announced the addition of John Wiley and Sons Ltd's new book "Green Corrosion Chemistry and Engineering: Opportunities and Challenges" to their offering.

With its unique focus on specifically addressing the problems for societies and economies associated with corrosion and their solution, this book provides an up-to-date overview of the progress in corrosion chemistry and engineering.

International experts actively involved in research and development place particular emphasis on how to counter the economic and environmental consequences of corrosion with the help of science and technology, making this a valuable resource for researchers as well as decision makers in industry and politics.

Further major parts of the book are devoted to corrosion prevention in the naval and energy sector as well as to corrosion monitoring and waste management.

Key Topics Covered:

- Basics of Corrosion Chemistry?

- Corrosion and Electrochemistry

- Application of Microelectrochemical Techniques in Corrosion Research

- Protective Coatings: an Overview?

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Research and Markets: Green Corrosion Chemistry and Engineering: Opportunities and Challenges

Dotmatics Launches Novel Chemistry Add-In for Microsoft(R) Office at the Bio-IT World Conference & Expo

BISHOPS STORTFORD, UNITED KINGDOM--(Marketwire -04/24/12)- Dotmatics, a leading provider of informatics solutions and services to the pharmaceutical and bio-technology industries, today announced that it will showcase a new chemistry add-in for Microsoft Office at the Bio-IT World Conference and Expo (Booth 323). The software, Dotmatics for Office, will facilitate communication and sharing of scientific data across applications and teams.

Dotmatics for Office allows scientists to easily import, create and modify scientific data in Microsoft Excel, Word, Outlook and PowerPoint as well as seamlessly move data between applications. Users can perform structure searches and scientific property calculations without leaving familiar Office applications. Integration with Browser, the flagship enterprise search platform from Dotmatics, allows the add-in to effortlessly incorporate data from multiple databases in an Office document. Information can be shown in a variety of formats chosen by the user, or according to predefined templates. Further analysis can be carried out within Vortex, Dotmatics' exploratory data analysis platform.

"We are delighted to announce our latest developments at Bio-IT World. The addition of Chemistry into Microsoft Office gives our customers a simple and efficient way to work with their research data within industry standard Office applications. Dotmatics for Office brings a new level of integration and efficiency to this important part of the discovery process." said Dr Mike Hartshorn, Director and CSO of Dotmatics. "The integration of Dotmatics for Office with Browser will enable scientists to uncover and retrieve data hidden in enterprise systems such as corporate registration databases and electronic notebooks into the user friendly Office applications. This avoids transcription errors, uncovers trends and, ultimately, expedites research" he added.

About Dotmatics for Office: Dotmatics for Office is a common set of tools across the Microsoft Office suite that gives you chemistry and data at the touch of a button.

About Browser: Browser is a flexible and powerful web-based query and reporting solution that interacts with relational databases to give scientists an integrated view of their data.

About Vortex: Chemically intelligent, intuitive and versatile data visualization and analysis solution that enables scientists to explore and understand data sets of any complexity or size.

About Dotmatics

Dotmatics has rapidly emerged as a preferred informatics supplier to many of the top global pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and academic organisations. Dotmatics is a scientific software company deploying web-based knowledge solutions that dramatically improve the way scientific data is queried, managed and shared within companies. Dotmatics has significant expertise in chem- and bioinformatics techniques including chemical databases, SAR analysis, data management and data visualization. A privately owned company, Dotmatics was founded in 2005 and has its head office based south of Cambridge, UK.

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Dotmatics Launches Novel Chemistry Add-In for Microsoft(R) Office at the Bio-IT World Conference & Expo

Chicago Bulls work chemistry heading into NBA playoffs

Chicago, already assured of the top seed in the NBA's Eastern Conference playoffs, used Derrick Rose and other key players in their 92-87 victory over playoff-bound Indiana.

Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said injuries throughout the season had left his preferred starting unit of Rose, Richard Hamilton, Luol Deng, Carlos Boozer and Joakim Noah needing more playing time together.

Some other playoff-bound teams were opting to rest their stars on the penultimate night of the lockout-shortened regular season.

"We still need to find some rhythm with guys," Thibodeau said. "They need some time together."

Deng played 33 minutes and Rose, who has been sidelined for 26 games, played 26 minutes and said he welcomed the opportunity.

"I love playing games, getting my rhythm back," Rose said. "I'm coming along, man. I'm very positive. My spirits are up."

The Bulls lost to Miami in the Eastern Conference finals last season after posting the league's best record.

Thibodeau, therefore, was low-key on the importance of holding the top seed in the East.

"It's the next step along the way," he said. "You try to put as many things in your favor as possible. It's not the end-all. It doesn't guarantee anything. But I think it also gives you your best chance."

In New York, the Knicks held off the charging Los Angeles Clippers 99-93, denying the Clippers a chance to claim home court advantage over Memphis in the first round of the playoffs.

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Chicago Bulls work chemistry heading into NBA playoffs

Evotec and Active Biotech Extend and Expand Medicinal Chemistry Collaboration

HAMBURG, Germany, April 26, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Evotec AG (EVT.F - News) (TecDAX) today announced that it has extended and expanded its medicinal chemistry collaboration with Active Biotech AB (NASDAQ OMX: ACTI), to further advance an existing programme, which has entered the lead optimisation phase. The programme aims to find novel small molecule modulators of a priority biological target, selected by Active Biotech, involved in immune disorders and cancer.

The programme was initiated in 2010 with a high throughput screen followed by extensive hit validation and hit-to-lead activities, leveraging Evotec's hit identification and integrated medicinal chemistry platforms.

Dr Mario Polywka, Chief Operating Officer at Evotec stated: "We are delighted that our already successful collaboration with Active Biotech has been extended and expanded with the aim of taking this exciting programme through lead optimisation towards candidate nomination. This is an area where Evotec has a significant track record of success and we look forward to leveraging our expertise to assist Active Biotech in finding novel treatments addressing cancer and autoimmune disorders."

Dorthe da Graca Thrige, Director of Development of Active Biotech, commented: "Active Biotech strives to develop, efficiently and cost-effectively, new remedies for illnesses where today's treatment options are inadequate, especially in the area of cancer and autoimmune diseases. It is key for us to collaborate with first class companies and we have been very impressed with Evotec's hit identification and subsequent hit to lead activities on this important target and now look forward to progressing the leads through to candidate drug selection."

No financial details are disclosed.

ABOUT EVOTEC AG

Evotec is a drug discovery alliance and development partnership company focused on rapidly progressing innovative product approaches with leading pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies. We operate worldwide providing the highest quality stand-alone and integrated drug discovery solutions, covering all activities from target-to-clinic. The Company has established a unique position by assembling top-class scientific experts and integrating state-of-the-art technologies as well as substantial experience and expertise in key therapeutic areas including neuroscience, pain, metabolic diseases as well as oncology and inflammation. Evotec has long-term discovery alliances with partners including Boehringer Ingelheim, CHDI, Genentech, Medimmune/Astra Zeneca, Novartis and Ono Pharmaceutical. In addition, the Company has existing development partnerships and product candidates both in clinical and preclinical development. These include partnerships with Boehringer Ingelheim, MedImmune and Andromeda (Teva) in the field of diabetes, and with Roche in the field of Alzheimer's disease. For additional information please go to http://www.evotec.com.

ABOUT ACTIVE BIOTECH AB

Active Biotech AB (NASDAQ OMX NORDIC:ACTI) is a biotechnology company with focus on autoimmune/inflammatory diseases and cancer. Projects in pivotal phase are laquinimod, an orally administered small molecule with unique immunomodulatory properties for the treatment of multiple sclerosis, TASQ for prostate cancer and ANYARA for use in cancer targeted therapy, primarily of renal cell cancer. In addition, laquinimod is in Phase II development for Crohn's and Lupus. Further projects in clinical development comprise the two orally administered compounds, 57- 57 for SLE and Systemic Sclerosis as well as RhuDexTM for RA. Please visit http://www.activebiotech.com for more information.

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS -- Information set forth in this press release contains forward-looking statements, which involve a number of risks and uncertainties. The forward-looking statements contained herein represent the judgement of Evotec as of the date of this report. Such forward-looking statements are neither promises nor guarantees, but are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control, and which could cause actual results to differ materially from those contemplated in these forward-looking statements. We expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any such statements to reflect any change in our expectations or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based.

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Evotec and Active Biotech Extend and Expand Medicinal Chemistry Collaboration

Carolina Liquid Chemistries Brings CLC 720 Chemistry Analyzer to Market

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Carolina Liquid Chemistries announces the market launch of the CLC 720 floor model chemistry analyzer. The system received FDA 510(k) clearance on March 23, 2012, and is the second chemistry analyzer to be developed and FDA-cleared from Carolina Chemistries efforts in the Piedmont Triad Research Park (PTRP). The CLC 720 is the first product to be launched from the new Wake Forest Biotech Place.

This chemistry analyzer is the first in its class to be designed since the 1990s, says Phil Shugart, President of Carolina Liquid Chemistries. The CLC 720 is the newest, most technologically sophisticated chemistry analyzer in America. We took advantage of the latest advances in software, electronics, motion control and fluidics in order to offer customers a truly exceptional product.

The CLC 720 analyzes 100 different blood chemistry tests, such as glucose, cholesterol and drugs of abuse with a throughput of 400 photometric tests per hour and 320 ISEs per hour. The systems design is greener, which means it generates less heat, operates more quietly and consumes 40 percent less chemicals, 25 percent less water, 20 percent less serum and 50 percent less electricity. The CLC 720 also takes up 25 percent less space and is less expensive than other systems in its class. With its large menu, small footprint and easy Windows 7 software, its an excellent fit for a large clinic, small- to medium-sized hospital or a small reference lab, Shugart says.

The launch of the CLC 720 exemplifies the mission of the PTRP, which is the journey from mind to market, says John D. McConnell, M.D., chief executive officer of Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. Carolina Liquid Chemistries has successfully taken innovative technology from inception to commercialization, and we congratulate them on their new product launch.

The market for the CLC 720 is 400 instruments per year. Carolina Chemistries, a company that makes customer satisfaction its top priority, expects to obtain a 20 percent market share within the first two years of sales. Customers from all over the United States will come to the Winston-Salem, N.C., headquarters to take part in system operation training classes in Carolina Chemistries state-of-the-art training facilities at Wake Forest Biotech Place. In addition, Carolina Chemistries has a nationwide staff of field service engineers, technical specialists and sales representatives.

In addition to its chemistry analyzers such as the benchtop Biolis 24i, the CLC 480 and the CLC 720, Carolina Chemistries offers a complete line of bar-coded, liquid, ready-to-use reagents and service for use on Olympus and Beckman instruments. The company can provide the large physician clinic or the small- to medium-sized hospital with a complete stat lab consisting of chemistry, hematology and an immunochemistry analyzer, along with a laboratory information system (LIS).

About Carolina Liquid Chemistries Corp.

Founded in 1997 in Brea, Calif., Carolina Liquid Chemistries is a manufacturer, distributor and service provider of chemistry systems and reagents for hospitals, clinical reference laboratories and physician practices. Now headquartered in the new Wake Forest Biotech Place of the Piedmont Triad Research Park of Winston-Salem, N.C., Carolina Chemistries offers chemistry instruments that range in throughput from 180 to 1,400 tests per hour and can provide the complete laboratory package consisting of chemistry, hematology and an immunochemistry analyzer, along with a laboratory information system (LIS). Visit http://www.carolinachemistries.com.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=50250509&lang=en

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Carolina Liquid Chemistries Brings CLC 720 Chemistry Analyzer to Market

Bangalore Biotechnology

24-04-2012 05:39 Highlights of an industrial visit by a delegation of Thai technology-based entrepreneurs and scientists to booming biotechnology and IT industries in and around Bangalore. The one-week study visit took place in March 2012. It was partially supported by Thailand's Department of International Economic Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs in cooperation with National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA). The delegates visited Biocon, Infosys, Sartorius Stedim India, Metahelix Life Sciences, Bhat Bio-Tech India, Association of Biotechnology Led Enterprises (ABLE), Institute of Bioinformatics and Applied Biotechnology (IBAB), Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum, and Government of Karnataka's Department of Information Technology and Biotechnology. Sightseeing sites visited include Lal Bagh Botanical Garden, Brigade Road, MG Road, ISKCON Temple, Tipu Palace, Bangalore Palace, and Nandi Hills.

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Bangalore Biotechnology

Representative Rogers Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) announced today its selection of Representative Mike Rogers (R-MI) as Legislator of the Year for 2011-2012. Representative Rogers receives the award in conjunction with todays BIO Legislative Day Fly-In reception.

"Representative Rogers' achievements on the Energy and Commerce Committee have been instrumental for the growth of the life science industry, which is researching and developing new cures and treatments for debilitating diseases, and providing cutting-edge technologies to improve crop yields, and discover cleaner forms of home-grown energy," said BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood. We salute him for introducing and supporting critically important legislation, including the Pandemic and All Hazard Preparedness Act, the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act and the Pediatric Research Equity Act.

Representative Rogers has quickly established himself as a champion of the biotechnology industry, both here in Michigan and throughout America. We appreciate his consistent support for this industry that provides almost 40,000 high-paying jobs in this state alone," said Stephen Rapundalo, PhD, MichBio President & CEO.

More than 200 biotechnology industry representatives from 41 states will participate in hundreds of meetings with Members of the House and Senate during the BIO Legislative Day Fly-In.Participants will discuss issues critical to the biotechnology industry including reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, the Transforming the Regulatory Environment to Accelerate Access to Treatments (TREAT) Act/Faster Access to Specialized Treatments (FAST) Act, adequate reimbursement for vital therapies under Medicare, and capital formation issues relevant to biotechnology companies.

Photos of the award presentation are available upon request.

BIO represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the worlds largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world.

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Representative Rogers Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

Senator Enzi Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) announced today its selection of Senator Michael Enzi (R-WY) as a Legislator of the Year for 2011-2012. Senator Enzi receives the award in conjunction with todays BIO Legislative Day Fly-In reception.

"As the ranking minority member of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, Senator Enzi has been instrumental to the growth of the life science industry. Thanks to his support, American doctors and scientists are better able to translate innovative research into new cures and treatments for debilitating diseases, such as multiple sclerosis and HIV/AIDS, and provide cutting-edge technologies to improve crop yields, and discover cleaner forms of home-grown energy," said BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood.As a champion of American biotechnology, his steadfast support for a timely reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, as well as efforts to ensure reforms to the Accelerated Approval pathway at the FDA, reflect a keen understanding of important healthcare issues.

More than 200 biotechnology industry representatives from 41 states will participate in hundreds of meetings with Members of the House and Senate during the BIO Legislative Day Fly-In.Participants will discuss issues critical to the biotechnology industry including reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, the Transforming the Regulatory Environment to Accelerate Access to Treatments (TREAT) Act/Faster Access to Specialized Treatments (FAST) Act, adequate reimbursement for vital therapies under Medicare, and capital formation issues relevant to biotechnology companies.

Photos of the award presentation are available upon request.

BIO represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the worlds largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world.

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Senator Enzi Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

Representative Schwartz Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) announced today its selection of Representative Allyson Schwartz (D-PA) as Legislator of the Year for 2011-2012. Representative Schwartz receives the award in conjunction with todays BIO Legislative Day Fly-In reception.

"As the leading House advocate for the renewal of the Therapeutic Discovery Project Tax Credit and repeal of the Independent Payment Advisory Board, Representative Schwartz has been an ardent advocate for the growth of the life science industry, which is researching and developing new cures and treatments for debilitating diseases, and providing cutting-edge technologies to improve crop yields, and discover cleaner forms of home-grown energy," said BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood.

"Congresswoman Schwartz has been a strong and consistent champion of the life sciences industry. She recognizes the tremendous economic and societal benefits this industry produces and has distinguished herself as a leader for national policy that ultimately benefits people everywhere," said Pennsylvania Bio President Christopher Molineaux. "Pennsylvania companies,universities, andresearch institutesare fostering one of the most robust biotechnology sectors in the country. To continue our leadership in the biosciences, the support of our policymakers is critical, and we have a great champion in Representative Schwartz."

More than 200 biotechnology industry representatives from 41 states will participate in hundreds of meetings with Members of the House and Senate during the BIO Legislative Day Fly-In.Participants will discuss issues critical to the biotechnology industry including reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) V, the Transforming the Regulatory Environment to Accelerate Access to Treatments (TREAT) Act/Faster Access to Specialized Treatments (FAST) Act, adequate reimbursement for vital therapies under Medicare, and capital formation issues relevant to biotechnology companies.

Photos of the award presentation are available upon request.

BIO represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the worlds largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world.

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Representative Schwartz Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

Senator Hagan Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) announced today its selection of Senator Kay Hagan (D-NC) as Legislator of the Year for 2011-2012. Senator Hagan receives the award in conjunction with todays BIO Legislative Day Fly-In reception.

As the sponsor of the TREAT Act, Senator Hagan has offered renewed hope to patients desperately in need of cures and breakthrough new medicines as well as a boost to our nations economy. The legislation will help the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) retain its leadership position as the global gold standard for regulatory science and consumer protection, said BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood.

Senator Hagan has distinguished herself as a strong leader for national policy that will help our nations biotechnology sector thrive and benefit people everywhere.She is a proven advocate for patient care and preserving incentives for innovation, said Sam Taylor, President of the North Carolina Biosciences Organization. On behalf of all North Carolina life sciences companies, we salute Senator Hagan's efforts.She is a true friend to our bioscience community and the patients that we serve."

More than 200 biotechnology industry representatives from 41 states will participate in hundreds of meetings with Members of the House and Senate during the BIO Legislative Day Fly-In.Participants will discuss issues critical to the biotechnology industry including reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, the Transforming the Regulatory Environment to Accelerate Access to Treatments (TREAT) Act/Faster Access to Specialized Treatments (FAST) Act, adequate reimbursement for vital therapies under Medicare, and capital formation issues relevant to biotechnology companies.

Photos of the award presentation are available upon request.

BIO represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the worlds largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world.

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Senator Hagan Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

Senator Bob Menendez Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) announced today its selection of Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) as Legislator of the Year for 2011-2012. Senator Menendez receives the award at todays BIO Legislative Day Fly-In reception.

The Senators long-standing service to the Finance Committee has been critically important to this nations healthcare industry and the patients it serves, said BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood. Senator Menendez has been a proponent of issues critical to our nations biotech industry, as exemplified through his hard work instituting, and fighting for the reauthorization of, the Qualifying Therapeutic Discovery Project Credit.

The life sciences industry accounts for over 400,000 high-skilled, high-paying jobs in New Jersey.Senator Menendez understands the challenges facing our biotechnology industry, especially emerging companies, in the current economic environment. We thank him for his outstanding leadership on behalf of the biotechnology industry in New Jersey and throughout our country, said Debbie Hart, President of BioNJ.

More than 200 biotechnology industry representatives from 41 states will participate in hundreds of meetings with Members of the House and Senate during the BIO Legislative Day Fly-In.Participants will discuss issues critical to the biotechnology industry including reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, the Transforming the Regulatory Environment to Accelerate Access to Treatments (TREAT) Act/Faster Access to Specialized Treatments (FAST) Act, adequate reimbursement for vital therapies under Medicare, and capital formation issues relevant to biotechnology companies.

Photos of the award presentation are available upon request.

BIO represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the worlds largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world.

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Senator Bob Menendez Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

Representative Kingston Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) announced today its selection of Representative Jack Kingston (R-GA) as Legislator of the Year for 2011-2012. Representative Kingston receives the award in conjunction with todays BIO Legislative Day Fly-In reception.

As a senior member of the House Appropriations Committee and Chairman of the House subcommittee that oversees the Department of Agriculture, FDA, and related agencies, Representative Kingston has provided thoughtful and responsive leadership on issues vitally important to our nation, said BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood.As a champion of Americas biotechnology industry, he has helped to protect funding for programs essential to the survival of biotechnology companies across the United States.

The life science industry in Georgia provides a $23 billion annual economic impact and provides jobs for over 105,000 people.Representative Kingston has demonstrated his understanding of this industry's importance through his words and his actions, said Charles Craig, President of GeorgiaBio.We thank Representative Kingston for his outstanding leadership and dedication to supporting the innovative capacity and job creating potential of American life science companies, and we congratulate him on receiving this award.

More than 200 biotechnology industry representatives from 41 states will participate in hundreds of meetings with Members of the House and Senate during the BIO Legislative Day Fly-In.Participants will discuss issues critical to the biotechnology industry including reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, the Transforming the Regulatory Environment to Accelerate Access to Treatments (TREAT) Act/Faster Access to Specialized Treatments (FAST) Act, adequate reimbursement for vital therapies under Medicare, and capital formation issues relevant to biotechnology companies.

Photos of the award presentation are available upon request.

BIO represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the worlds largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world.

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Representative Kingston Honored as BIO Legislator of the Year

Cancer screening technique wins research prize

SAN DIEGO Carolyn Schutt, a Ph.D student in bioengineering at the University of California, San Diego is developing a new imaging technique that could lead to highly-sensitive light imaging deeper inside the body, improving the way we diagnose breast cancer. Schutts research, which was entered in the nanoengineering category, received the grand prize April 12 at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering Research Expo 2012.

Schutt's aim is to build a bridge between optical imaging and ultrasound imaging, in order to get the benefits of both technologies: the chemical sensitivity of visible light and the tissue penetrating properties of ultrasound. Such a "smart particle contrast agent" would render biological tissue effectively transparent to light and enable highly sensitive light imaging deeper inside the body, improving the way we diagnose cancer. Conventional X-ray mammography can only show the density of tissue, indicating the presence of a mass, but cannot determine any of the biochemical differences between a benign mass and a malignant tumor.

There is a very high false positive rate with just X-ray mammography, said Schutt, who was honored with the best poster award for the Department of NanoEngineering and Jacobs School-wide Rudee Outstanding Poster Award. By being able to extract chemical information we hope to avoid unnecessary biopsies that are done on benign lesions.

For example, because of their rapid growth, cancerous tumors consume a lot of oxygen so the area around a tumor is likely to be hypoxic or depleted of oxygen. Cancer cells also require increased blood flow to fuel their growth creating a region of new blood vessel formation. The use of this technique could allow this sort of biochemical information to be determined for tumor diagnosis.

Schutts work, advised by nanoengineering professor Sadik Esener, focuses on the use of gas-filled microbubble contrast agents that change their fluorescence intensity, or blink, only in response to focused ultrasound. A solution of these microbubbles would be injected into the body to circulate through the blood stream. When gas microbubbles encounter an ultrasound pressure wave, they contract and expand their outer surface in response to the pressure peaks and troughs. By loading the microbubble surface with a fluorescent dye that turns off when it is very close to other dye molecules the ultrasound creates a blinking signal. Initially, less than 10 percent of the bubbles produced this modulating fluorescence. Analysis of the nanostructure by super-resolution microscopy showed that most of the dye partitioned into isolated clusters, which were likely preventing the dye from blinking in response to ultrasound. Schutt was able to manipulate the bubble nanostructure by heating the bubbles to melt their outer surface and distribute the dye more evenly, and then rapidly cooling them to lock in this distributed state. This melting and quick cooling process increased the fraction of blinking microbubbles to over 50 percent, making this a more viable imaging platform.

This blinking light can then be used to build up an image of the ultrasound-scanned tissue (a suspected tumor, for example) with the sensitivity and contrast offered by optical imaging. This is a new and powerful capability that could significantly improve present diagnostics as well as image guided therapeutic capabilities. In addition to NanoEngineering, Esener is affiliated with the departments of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science and Engineering, and UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center and director of the multi-institutional NanoTumor Center.

Schutt is also active in campus outreach and leadership programs. As a Gordon Scholar, Schutt participates in the Gordon Engineering Leadership Centers engineering leadership programs, a course of study Schutt takes seriously. In her current position as outreach chair of the Bioengineering Graduate Student Society, Schutt organized the groups exhibit at the recent San Diego Festival of Science and Engineering as well as a festival-wide science challenge for K-12 students to learn and discuss key science concepts. Read our chat with Schutt about organizing the Home Run Science Challenge.

Schutt was one of more than 230 graduate students who presented at Research Expo, which was sponsored by Qualcomm, ViaSat and SAIC. Judges were impressed by the students high level of technical proficiency and their ability to communicate their ideas.

Three-time Research Expo judge Silvia De Dea, a staff scientist at Cymer, which is a member of the Jacobs School Corporate Affiliates Program, was impressed by the entrepreneurial mindset of many of the students she met who already had some experience with the patent process, including thinking about how their technology could be eventually sold or licensed to industry. Realizing that they had that type of mindset was very interesting, said De Dea, a Jacobs School alumna who earned a masters (2004) and doctorate (2008) in chemical engineering.

Judge Greg Kusinski, DeepStar director with Chevron Energy Technology Co., who serves on the Industrial Advisory Board for the Department of NanoEngineering, said the winners demonstrated a unique capacity to explain the relevance of their research. The students had the ability to present the big picture, said Kusinski. Thats why they stood out. He said that they did a great job at showing the problem they were trying to solve, steps taken during the research process and the next steps in their research.

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Cancer screening technique wins research prize

'Blinking Microbubbles' for Early Cancer Screening Take Grand Prize at Research Expo 2012

This news release and any accompanying images can be accessed on the web at: http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/pressreleases/ blinking_microbubbles_for_early_cancer_screening _take_grand_prize_at_resear/ Blinking microbubbles for early cancer screening take grand prize at Research Expo 2012

Newswise Carolyn Schutt, a Ph.D student in bioengineering at the University of California, San Diego is developing a new imaging technique that could lead to highly-sensitive light imaging deeper inside the body, improving the way we diagnose breast cancer. Schutts research, which was entered in the nanoengineering category, received the grand prize April 12 at the UC San Diego Jacob School of Engineering Research Expo 2012.

Schutt's aim is to build a bridge between optical imaging and ultrasound imaging, in order to get the benefits of both technologies: the chemical sensitivity of visible light and the tissue penetrating properties of ultrasound. Such a "smart particle contrast agent" would render biological tissue effectively transparent to light and enable highly sensitive light imaging deeper inside the body, improving the way we diagnose cancer. Conventional X-ray mammography can only show the density of tissue, indicating the presence of a mass, but cannot determine any of the biochemical differences between a benign mass and a malignant tumor.

There is a very high false positive rate with just X-ray mammography, said Schutt, who was honored with the best poster award for the Department of NanoEngineering and Jacobs School-wide Rudee Outstanding Poster Award. By being able to extract chemical information we hope to avoid unnecessary biopsies that are done on benign lesions.

For example, because of their rapid growth, cancerous tumors consume a lot of oxygen so the area around a tumor is likely to be hypoxic or depleted of oxygen. Cancer cells also require increased blood flow to fuel their growth creating a region of new blood vessel formation. The use of this technique could allow this sort of biochemical information to be determined for tumor diagnosis.

Schutts work, advised by nanoengineering Professor Sadik Esener, focuses on the use of gas-filled microbubble contrast agents that change their fluorescence intensity, or blink, only in response to focused ultrasound. A solution of these microbubbles would be injected into the body to circulate through the blood stream. When gas microbubbles encounter an ultrasound pressure wave, they contract and expand their outer surface in response to the pressure peaks and troughs. By loading the microbubble surface with a fluorescent dye that turns off when it is very close to other dye molecules the ultrasound creates a blinking signal. Initially, less than 10 percent of the bubbles produced this modulating fluorescence. Analysis of the nanostructure by super-resolution microscopy showed that most of the dye partitioned into isolated clusters, which were likely preventing the dye from blinking in response to ultrasound. Schutt was able to manipulate the bubble nanostructure by heating the bubbles to melt their outer surface and distribute the dye more evenly, and then rapidly cooling them to lock in this distributed state. This melting and quick cooling process increased the fraction of blinking microbubbles to over 50 percent, making this a more viable imaging platform.

This blinking light can then be used to build up an image of the ultrasound-scanned tissue (a suspected tumor, for example) with the sensitivity and contrast offered by optical imaging. This is a new and powerful capability that could significantly improve present diagnostics as well as image guided therapeutic capabilities. In addition to NanoEngineering, Esener is affiliated with the departments of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science and Engineering, and UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center and director of the multi-institutional NanoTumor Center.

Schutt is also active in campus outreach and leadership programs. As a Gordon Scholar, Schutt participates in the Gordon Engineering Leadership Centers engineering leadership programs, a course of study Schutt takes seriously. In her current position as outreach chair of the Bioengineering Graduate Student Society, Schutt organized the groups exhibit at the recent San Diego Festival of Science and Engineering as well as a festival-wide science challenge for K-12 students to learn and discuss key science concepts. Read our chat with Schutt about organizing the Home Run Science Challenge.

Schutt was one of more than 230 graduate students who presented at Research Expo, which was sponsored by Qualcomm, ViaSat and SAIC. Judges were impressed by the students high level of technical proficiency and their ability to communicate their ideas.

Three-time Research Expo Judge Silvia De Dea, a staff scientist at Cymer, which is a member of the Jacobs School Corporate Affiliates Program, was impressed by the entrepreneurial mindset of many of the students she met who already had some experience with the patent process, including thinking about how their technology could be eventually sold or licensed to industry. Realizing that they had that type of mindset was very interesting, said De Dea, a Jacobs School alumna who earned a masters (2004) and doctorate (2008) in chemical engineering.

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'Blinking Microbubbles' for Early Cancer Screening Take Grand Prize at Research Expo 2012

UT students get hands-on opportunity with da Vinci surgical robot

by JIM BERGAMO / KVUE News and Photojournalist MICHAEL MOORE

kvue.com

Posted on April 24, 2012 at 9:05 PM

Updated yesterday at 9:04 AM

AUSTIN -- The words surgery and bioengineering did not seem to fit together a few decades ago. On Tuesday, students at the University of Texas got a first-hand look at how the two are now the perfect fit in the field of surgical technology.

Back in the day the board game Operation was as close as any kid got to performing an operation. On Tuesday,UT pre-med studentsand those just preoccupied with curiosity, got under the hood and took da Vinci Surgical Robots for a test drive.

"To allow students to handle equipment that is for operating procedures is fantastic," said Elizabeth Coyne, a junior studying biology. "I could not pass that up."

Students took turns on the da Vinci, and then took turns asking questions from real surgeons who shared their expertise on robotic surgery.

"It enables visualization effects that I cannot traditionally achieve," said Reginald Baptiste, M.D., who is a cardiothoracic surgeon.

Students learned that da Vinci's minimally invasive surgery benefits patients because there's less pain, blood loss and fewer complications,not to mention shorter recovery times.

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UT students get hands-on opportunity with da Vinci surgical robot

UT Dallas bioengineering head to be inducted as Fellow of Royal Society

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

Contact: LaKisha Ladson lakisha.ladson@UTDallas.edu 972-883-4183 University of Texas at Dallas

Dr. Mathukumalli Vidyasagar, an internationally known expert in control and system theory, has been elected a Fellow of The Royal Society, the oldest continuously operating scientific society in the world.

Vidyasagar, head of the Department of Bioengineering at The University of Texas at Dallas, joins the ranks of the most distinguished international scientists drawn from all areas of science, engineering and medicine.

Vidyasagar's selection recognizes his contributions to various aspects of control and system theory, robotics, statistical learning theory and computational biology. His citation reads: "He has combined probability theory, combinatorics, and artificial intelligence to produce a beautiful unified theory of statistical learning, and used it to solve NP-hard design problems."

Vidyasagar's pattern in life has been to master a subject area, write a book about it, and then move to a different research problem at the forefront of the field. Two of his books co-authored with Dr. Mark W. Spong, dean of UT Dallas' Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science, are among the most popular textbooks on robot dynamics and control.

"Joining the Fellowship of the Royal Society is the proudest moment of my career. The joy and satisfaction this election brings is immeasurable."

Vidyasagar holds the Cecil H. and Ida Green Chair in Systems Biology Science at UT Dallas and leads the bioengineering department in the Jonsson School. The department collaborates with other schools within the University, UT Southwestern Medical Center and the University of Texas at Arlington.

"Dr. Vidyasagar has made many fundamental contributions in several areas of engineering, including control theory, robotics, and learning theory, which have earned him numerous awards and an international reputation as an outstanding scientist," Spong said. "His latest work in the area of computational biology, in collaboration with UT Southwestern Medical Center, has the potential to greatly advance our knowledge of the causes of cancer and the effectiveness of new drugs for the treatment of cancer. Election to the Royal Society is a very high honor and brings distinction to him, the Jonsson School, and to UT Dallas."

A native of India, Vidyasagar attended the University of Wisconsin and earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering by age 17. At 21, he completed his doctorate and by age 35, he was given an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers fellowship for "contributions to the stability analysis of linear and nonlinear distributed systems."

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UT Dallas bioengineering head to be inducted as Fellow of Royal Society

Researchers create first custom designed protein crystal

This is an illustration of the researchers' target protein crystal. Credit: Christopher MacDermaid, University of Pennsylvania

Protein design is technique that is increasingly valuable to a variety of fields, from biochemistry to therapeutics to materials engineering. University of Pennsylvania chemists have taken this kind of design a step further; using computational methods, they have created the first custom-designed protein crystal.

Picking an ambitious design target with challenging features, the researchers' success bodes well for the technique's use in better understanding proteins' makeup or using their self-assembling properties in making new materials with unique properties.

The research was conducted by professor Jeffrey G. Saven, postdoctoral fellow Christopher J. Lanci and graduate student Christopher M. MacDermaid, all of the Department of Chemistry in Penn's School of Arts and Sciences. Also contributing to the work were Seung-gu Kang and Xi Yang, formerly of the chemistry department, and Rudresh Acharya, Benjamin North, X. Jade Qiu and William F. DeGrado, formerly of Penn's Perelman School of Medicine's Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics.

The team's research was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Proteins are folded strings of molecular building blocks known as amino acids; their different functions are determined by their sequences of amino acids and the shapes they take when folded. As proteins are involved in most biological processes, determining sequences and structures is crucial to many scientific undertakings, such as understanding disease mechanisms or designing drugs to disrupt them.

To determine protein structures, scientists use crystals, which consist of many copies of a single protein lined up and stacked together. By irradiating the crystal with powerful X-rays, they can measure the way the light diffracts off the atoms and piece together the protein's overall three-dimensional shape and composition. Most proteins don't naturally crystalize, however, and making crystals of sufficient quality to do diffraction studies is a hit-or-miss process that can take years of painstaking work.

Protein crystals are also attractive as a nano-scale building material, as their properties, particularly their exterior surfaces, are highly customizable. However, bioengineers run into the same hurdles as crystallographers; making a protein crystal with a particular structure is a complex, hard-to-predict task.

"People have designed crystals out of smaller, much less complex molecules than proteins, but protein design is much more subtle," Saven said. "It's a complicated symphony of intermolecular interactions."

As accounting for these many interactions is one of the principal challenges behind designing a protein crystal, the researchers selected a complicated, honeycomb-shaped target to show their process could be widely applied.

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Researchers create first custom designed protein crystal

G-spot anatomy found in cadaver of 83-year-old

The elusive G-spot, a holy grail of lovers, now has an anatomical location precisely described in the medical literature thanks to a Florida researcher who dissected the cadaver of an 83-year-old woman.

For centuries, women have said they've enjoyed engorgement of the upper, anterior part of the vagina during sexual arousal, but it has never been formally described in medical literature.

In the May issue of the Journal of Sexual Medicine, Dr. Adam Ostrzenski of the Institute of Gynecology in St. Petersburg, Fla., describes where he found the G-spot while dissecting the 83-year-old cadaver in Poland.

"The anatomic existence of the G-spot was documented with potential impact on the practice and clinical research in the field of female sexual function," Ostrzenski concluded.

The dissection revealed the G-spot was on the dorsal or back perineal membrane, 16.5 millimetres from the upper part of the urethra, creating a 35-degree angle with the lateral or side border of the structure.

When the spot, which he described as "bluish grapeline compositions," was removed from a sac, it extended to 33 millimetres suggesting it was designed to contract and expand, he said.

"The anatomic discovery of the G-spot existence may inspire a new study for establishing the anatomic presence of 'a female prostate.'"

Ostrzenski also backed calls to revise traditional approaches in textbooks to female organ anatomy coupled with new terminologies.

The G-spot in the cadaver was under five layers of connective tissue and muscle in an area that is not normally accessed during gynecological surgery. Ostrzenski acknowledged he examined only one cadaver soon after death and he was unable to take tissue samples for confirmation.

"This case study in a single cadaver adds to the growing body of literature regarding women's sexual anatomy and physiology," the journal's editor in chief, Irwin Goldstein, said in a release.

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G-spot anatomy found in cadaver of 83-year-old