Enzyme offers new therapeutic target for cancer drugs

Public release date: 21-Jun-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Scott LaFee slafee@ucsd.edu 619-543-6163 University of California - San Diego

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have uncovered a new signal transduction pathway specifically devoted to the regulation of alternative RNA splicing, a process that allows a single gene to produce or code multiple types of protein variants. The discovery, published in the June 27, 2012 issue of Molecular Cell, suggests the new pathway might be a fruitful target for new cancer drugs.

Signal transduction in the cell involves kinases and phosphatases, enzymes that transfer or remove phosphates in protein molecules in a cascade or pathway. SRPK kinases, first described by Xiang-Dong Fu, PhD, professor of cellular and molecular medicine at UC San Diego in 1994, are involved in controlling the activities of splicing regulators in mammalian cells.

Prior studies have implicated SRPK1 in cancer and other human diseases. For example, it has been shown that SRPK1 plays a critical role in regulating the function of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor or VEGF, which stimulates blood vessel growth in cancer. SRPK1 has been found to be dysregulated in a number of cancers, from kidney and breast to lung and pancreatic.

Conversely, studies suggest the absence of SRPK1 may be problematic as well, at least in terms of controlling some specific cancer phenotypes. Reduced SRPK1, for example, has been linked to drug resistance, a major problem in chemotherapy of cancer.

In their new paper, Fu and colleagues place SRPK1 in a major signal transduction pathway in the cell. "The kinase sits right in the middle of the PI3K-Akt pathway to specifically relay the growth signal to regulate alternative splicing in the nucleus," said Fu. "It's a new signaling branch that has previously escaped detection."

As such, the SRPK offers a new target for disease intervention and treatment, researchers say. "It's a good target because of its central role and because it can be manipulated with compounds that suppress its activity, which appears quite effective in suppressing blood vessel formation in cancer," Fu said.

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Co-authors of the paper are Zhihong Zhou, Jinsong Qiu, Yu Zhou and Hairi Li, Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, UC San Diego; Liu Wen, Qidong Hu and Michael G. Rosenfeld, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Medicine; Ryan M. Plocinik and Joseph A. Adams, Department of Pharmacology, UC San Diego; and Gourisanker Ghosh, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UC San Diego.

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Enzyme offers new therapeutic target for cancer drugs

Pizuya’s Cell: Excelsior feat.3L–Cosmic Mind Arrange – Video

21-06-2012 12:32 Circle: ??????/Pizuya's Cell Arrange: ???/Pizuya Vocals: 3L (NJK Record) Album: Excelsior Release: Reitaisai 9 (May 27, 2012) Track 02 of 12 Original Song: ?????? ? Cosmic Mind (Sentimental Skyscraper ~ Cosmic Mind) Original Game: ????? ? Undefined Fantastic Object (Eastern Star-Lotus Ship ~ Undefined Fantastic Object) Picture Link: Ohhhh man. I had not expected this. From what I had seen, I had always thought Pizuya's Cell was a metal group. I like metal, but in small doses. I don't even remember what compelled me to check this album out, but I did. Checked the website, listened to the crossfade. The instant I heard this song, the first on the crossfade, I was in love. This is my absolute favorite type of jazz; mature, sexy and sultry. The lyrics add to that feel fantastically--read them here: (I'll probably sub this video one day.) I never would have imagined this type of arrange for Byakuren's theme, but it works ridiculously well. Beautiful. Not to mention 3L's vocals. 3L is one of the best vocalists in the Touhou scene primarily because of how well her vocals seem to fit a variety of genres. Dark arranges, pop arranges, sultry arranges...You can find her vocals anywhere and it works. I really can't think of another vocalist who would have been able to pull this song off the way 3L does. The entire album is full of jazz arranges. I'll upload a few more, but this one, in my opinion, just takes the cake.

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Pizuya's Cell: Excelsior feat.3L--Cosmic Mind Arrange - Video

'Obstructionist capuchin'

THE DIARY

Paul Keating ... "If the public takes him they will get a large kick in the bum and they will deserve it." Photo: Lee Besford

It surprised nobody to hear the former prime minister Paul Keating had once again held little back when asked what he thought of the current crop of politicians, but it was interesting yesterday to see the man's grasp of fauna as he railed against Tony Abbott, Julia Gillard and even the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, while speaking at the Eureka Report Congress in Melbourne.

Merkel, he said, was ''intellectually limited and she is taking the whole world down''. Gillard's government, he said, ''just don't have a convincing and persuasive narrative''.

And Abbott? He was ''dumb'', an ''obstructionist capuchin'' (that's a small monkey) and: ''If the public takes him they will get a large kick in the bum and they will deserve it.''

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Uplifting ... It was all hands on deck for the Wall of Hands. Photo: Nick Moir

The Eureka Congress will continue in Sydney tomorrow.

LOVES A GOOD BOOK

Don't be too surprised if the young adult sections of Australia's libraries start filling out in coming weeks. Ryan Stokes, son of the Perth media baron Kerry Stokes, has been named incoming chairman of the National Library of Australia Council. Ryan, who at 36 years old is three decades younger than the outgoing chairman, the former judge James Spigelman, would begin his three-year-term next month, said the Arts Minister, Simon Crean. It's hoped Stokes, with his youth, will bring a new vigour to the council, particularly in the one area he has most experience: digital. ''Mr Stokes has extensive experience serving on a number of boards across a range of industries and brings a high level of corporate expertise to the National Library,'' Crean said yesterday. ''He has shown leadership in driving digital content and developing the digital economy. This experience will assist the National Library as it continues to open-up its collection through digitisation.'' Not that it means he'll be abandoning the old, Stokes was quick to tell the Financial Review; he's well aware of the library's ''obligation to retain the physical heritage''. His appointment follows a family tradition in the Stokes clan. His father was chairman of the National Gallery of Australia in the late 1990s.

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'Obstructionist capuchin'

O'Brien: New apps that make sharing too easy on Facebook could destroy it

When Facebook first announced an ambitious initiative last September to induce us to share even more stuff on the social network, I was pretty enthusiastic. While many people fret about oversharing and privacy, I'm more than happy to have every tidbit of my digital life channeled through Facebook.

Several months later, however, I've changed my mind about so-called "frictionless sharing." Not only has it made my use of Facebook more complicated and more frustrating, but I think the argument can be made that it threatens the foundation of the social network's business model.

Though Facebook continues to expand the service and the number of applications that run on it, I think the company would be well served by hitting the pause button and seriously rethinking the pitfalls of a service that makes sharing too easy.

Let me start by giving you a personal example.

My first use of "frictionless sharing" came through Spotify. To join the social music service, I created an account using my Facebook login information. Now, when I listen to a song on Spotify, it automatically feeds directly into my Facebook profile, where friends will see it on their news feeds.

It's important to note how this is new. Years ago, the only way to share information on Facebook was to copy a link into a box or upload something directly and then hit post. Then, sharing evolved with the introduction of the so-called "open graph," which allowed Websites

Now we have what's been called "frictionless sharing." There are no buttons to click, no links to copy. If you are logged into a service with your Facebook account that allows frictionless sharing, each time you read a news story, visit a Website, or listen to a song your activity flows right into Facebook.

When I saw this with Spotify last summer, I was thrilled. I'm a huge music fan and the ease with which I could share every song I heard felt awesome. At the same time, I loved being able to see what friends were playing as they played it. Even better, I could now click on a button on Facebook that let me listen along with them.

The problems began a couple of months later. My kids at home were listening to Spotify using my account, which automatically shared their tunes with my Facebook friends. While at work, my Facebook page would record that I was listening to all sorts of kids' music, or appalling selections from the likes of Justin Bieber. Friends would post snarky comments mocking me for my lame musical taste.

Now, if this seems like a minor annoyance, think about this: How many people do you share your Facebook login with? How many people do you let post on your Facebook account? Zero. You just don't do it because Facebook is supposed to be all about you.

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O'Brien: New apps that make sharing too easy on Facebook could destroy it

Medicine's Cutting Edge: $40K Baby Doll

Its a critical moment in an emergency room, when a baby stops breathing.

However, in this hospital room, the patient bounces back in seconds when hospital staffers simply push the reset button.

Rady Childrens Hospital showed off its newest piece of training technology Thursday.

Thanks to a donation from Fuerte Hills Unit of Rady Children's Auxiliary, doctors and nurses have access to a realistic simulator that looks a lot like a toy.

SimBaby was developed by a company in Sweden and is on the cutting edge of simulation in medicine.

The doll is as life-like as it can be, said Charles Sauer, DO, a Neonatologist at Rady Childrens Hospital.

SimBaby gurgles, breathes and even turns blue depending on how trainers manipulate the program.

We can collapse a lung and do all sorts of training with it, Sauer adds. Thats wonderful for our staff.

Nurses and doctors monitor SimBabys heartbeat, check blood pressure and can even practice placing IVs or inserting chest tubes on the tiny doll.

Then, when trainees take the correct action, the doll cries signaling an end to the exercise.

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Medicine's Cutting Edge: $40K Baby Doll

Gentris Corporation Partners with the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine

MORRISVILLE, N.C., June 21, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Gentris Corporation (www.gentris.com), a global leader in the application of genomic biomarkers to clinical studies, announced today that it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine to advance global personalized medicine. The goal of this USA-China collaboration is to create translational research and epidemiological projects, as well as training and education programs, focused on pharmacogenomics and clinical sample banking, which will drive innovation in drug development and improvements in patient care.

Through this collaboration, Gentris and the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine will work together to launch cutting-edge research projects to discover, develop, and validate new genomic biomarkers. Gentris will take the lead to identify sponsors in the United States, e.g., pharmaceutical companies, for these personalized medicine projects while the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine will seek support from Chinese organizations.

The tuberculosis drug-induced liver injury pilot (TB DILI Study), conducted between Gentris, the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine, and a non-profit research institute in Research Triangle Park (RTP) serves as a model for USA-China collaborations. In this study, investigators designed a common protocol and pooled their resources to investigate DILI among tuberculosis patients in three Shanghai hospitals. By utilizing metabolomics and pharmacogenomics, they are evaluating biomarkers for early detection. Dr. Tong Zhou, Senior Director of China Initiatives for Gentris, is Co-Principal Investigator for the TB DILI Study and has significant experience in developing and managing collaborations between the United States and China. Dr. Zhou has also drawn upon his extensive network in China to begin establishing a satellite laboratory for Gentris in Shanghai that complies with U.S. regulatory standards.

Dr. Wu Fan, Director General of the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine and the Shanghai Municipal Center for Disease Control and Prevention (Shanghai CDC), and Dr. Howard McLeod from the University of North Carolina will provide strategic scientific oversight for personalized medicine collaborations. Director Wu is recognized internationally as a leader in public health initiatives. Dr. McLeod, Chief Scientific Advisor for Gentris, has been involved in numerous global initiatives including the Pharmacogenetics for Every Nation Initiative (PGENI), which he founded. It is anticipated that combining the resources and expertise of a research institute, academic institution, and industryin both the United States and Chinawill lead to more rapid improvements in drug development and public health.

For this personalized medicine program, research studies and epidemiological projects will be designed for implementation in Shanghai based on sponsor needs. Key targeted therapeutic areas include oncology, infectious disease, and chronic disease. Training and education initiatives will also be created to bring U.S. quality standards to China including GLP, GCP, CLIA, and CAP. Gentris, the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine, and their collaborators will work with leading experts to develop workshops, courses, and a fellowship program to educate academic and industry scientists in China regarding best practices in the application of pharmacogenomics for drug development.

The Memorandum of Understanding leverages the relationships that Gentris CEO Rick Williams and Dr. Zhou have built during the past few years between North Carolina and China. While assisting a non-profit research institute in RTP, they helped to create the North Carolina-China Global Bioscience Gateway, a public-private partnership that addresses how to enhance global research innovation. Mr. Williams and Dr. Zhou are also members of the N.C. China Advisory Council, which works with the N.C. Office of the Governor and N.C. Department of Commerce to facilitate economic development between the state and China.

One of the major goals for this new agreement between Gentris and the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine is to create an expanded network of collaborators among leading universities, pharmaceutical companies, and public health organizations that leads to new pharmacogenomics discoveries, which accelerate drug development and improve patient care globally.

Related Links: http://www.gentris.com, http://www.scdc.sh.cn

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"I have worked with the Shanghai CDC and Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine for nearly four years to develop a translational research bridge between our two countries. I'm honored that Gentris now has an opportunity to work even more closely with the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine," said Rick Williams, Gentris CEO. "Gentris will take the lead to identify U.S. sponsors in the pharmaceutical industry that would like to jointly develop new research, epidemiological, and training programs in Shanghai."

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Gentris Corporation Partners with the Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine

Research and Markets: Research Report on China's Antihypertensive Medicine Market, 2012

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/fg6ftp/research_report_on) has announced the addition of the "Research Report on China's Antihypertensive Medicine Market, 2012" report to their offering.

In recent years, with Chinese people's living standards continuously improving and elderly people increasing, prevalence rate of hypertension incessantly rises. Presently, there's still no effective means to cure hypertension. According to the WHO statistics about death of various diseases, death toll of cardiovascular disease which is represented by hypertension increases from 28.8% of the total mortality toll in 1997 to 36.0% in 2002. Hypertension is a serious danger to human health.

According to a press release issued by the International Society of Hypertension, the number of global hypertension or abnormally high blood pressure crowds reaches 972 million, accounting for 26.4% of the world's adult population. With the invention and application of CCB, ACEI, ARB and other new-generation antihypertensive medicines, the mortality rate of various cardiovascular diseases sharply declines. Nevertheless, there are still 17 million people across the world die from cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases caused by hypertension and half of them die from acute myocardial infarction and cerebrovascular embolism. So people pay high attention to antihypertensive medicine market.

More following information can be acquired through this report:

- China's Hypertensive Attack Situation

- Current Market of China's Antihypertensive Medicine

- Development Trend of China's Antihypertensive Medicine

Following people are recommended to buy this report:

- Pharmaceutical Enterprises

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Research and Markets: Research Report on China's Antihypertensive Medicine Market, 2012

Planned Tulsa medical school gets $30M donation

TULSA, Okla. (AP) - The Oxley Foundation says it will donate $30 million for the proposed Tulsa School of Community Medicine.

The planned school will be a partnership between the University of Tulsa and the University of Oklahoma-Tulsa. The universities say they're creating the 4-year community medical education program to help address Oklahoma's physician shortage.

Oxley Foundation trustee R.H. Harbaugh says the gift is the largest commitment the foundation has ever undertaken

Tulsa television station KOTV reports (http://is.gd/hIjPEw ) that the first class at the Tulsa School of Community Medicine is expected to start in fall 2015.

Information from: KOTV-TV, http://www.newson6.com

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Planned Tulsa medical school gets $30M donation

Cooper Medical School of Rowan University set to open

CAMDEN Cooper Medical School of Rowan University will hold a grand opening July 24 and welcome its charter class on Aug. 13.

We move into the building in July, and we have our class of 50 set, said Dr. Paul Katz, founding dean of CMSRU on Wednesday. We have a really great group that matches our mission. We had 2,900 applicants and interviewed a little more than 300. We wanted to make sure we got the right 50 students, students who understand our school and what were about.

Katz said 72 percent of the students are residents of New Jersey, 28 are women, 22 are men and 24 percent are underrepresented in medicine, which is twice the national average.

Our mission has been diversity and inclusivity, said Katz. We also have a significant percentage of students who are disadvantaged. The typical metrics are comparable to all students admitted at MD-granting schools, so its a very competitive group. We also have a lot of students with interesting life experiences which will contribute to learning. A fair number of our students are not coming directly from college. Some are coming from other careers, others from graduate schools and others from a unique array of experiences.

Katz said CMSRU did not have any applicants from the city of Camden, though he believes that will change for next year.

The grand opening, he said, will mostly serve to thank everyone who has participated in the medical schools progress. The orientation for students will begin on their first day.

College to medical school is a big jump, said Katz. Youre taught differently, and there are different expectations. When they walk into the medical school, they will be considered professionals and will be judged on what they do and how they act 24/7.

During the orientation, Katz said CMSRU staff will talk to students about what it means to be a physician and the responsibility that comes with the position.

Physicians have the ability to enter peoples lives in ways most occupations do not, he said. We expect them to understand their patients needs, that they come from many different places and that they must be understood beyond the nature of their illness.

Katz said he and the staff have emphasized, and will continue to emphasize, to the students that there will only be one charter class.

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Cooper Medical School of Rowan University set to open

Our View: UC medical school goes out of bounds

University of California at Davis medical school Professor Michael Wilkes doesn't shy from controversial positions, or criticism of the university where he teaches. That's how free speech rights work.

That's also how academic freedom works, a bedrock principle that criticism and open competition among ideas are the "surest safeguard of truth," in the words of the American Association of Universities in 1953.

But First Amendment and academic freedom principles are under challenge at the UC Davis medical school.

When Wilkes wrote an op-ed column in 2010, he received a document on letterhead from legal counsel saying the university could potentially sue him for defamation for hurting the reputation of the university. The dean of the UC Davis School of Medicine, Claire Pomeroy, had requested that the letter be sent to him.

That is outrageous and calls for action by Chancellor Linda Katehi.

So what drew that overwrought response from the medical school?

Wilkes, a recognized expert on prostate cancer, co-authored an op-ed piece with a USC professor. Published in the San Francisco Chronicle, it said prostate screening not only might do no good, it might actually be harmful -- and lambasted a UC Davis men's health seminar advertising "Prostate Defense Begins at 40."

The authors labeled the seminar an "infomercial endorsement" of prostate screening: "We can't say why UC Davis offers this course that ignores scientific evidence, but we wonder whether it just might have to do with money."

The proper response by supporters of screening would be to write their own columns -- or write a letter rebutting the claims.

An investigation by a committee of the UC Davis Academic Senate found that the medical school's letter on potential legal action -- before any "full and fair assessment" of the facts -- was a "blatant threat" and aimed "to stifle legitimate public debate."

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Our View: UC medical school goes out of bounds

Liberty Mutual to sponsor free public school field trips to USS Constitution Museum

By Chris Reidy, Globe Staff

Boston-based Liberty Mutual Insurance will sponsor all public school visits to the USS Constitution Museum from Sept. 2012 to June 2015, thus allowing for free field trips for students of all ages, in and outside of Massachusetts, the museum said.

The USS Constitution Museum recently opened an interactive exhibit called the Old Ironsides 1812 Discovery Center, which features computer activities simulating shipboard life, interactive lessons about the War of 1812 and its major events, and a feedback wall that enables visitors to deliver their own messages.

In a statement, Liberty Mutual president and chief executive David Long said: By keeping alive the inspiring story of Old Ironsides and its crew, the USS Constitution Museum has developed a range of innovative programs that teach our children about teamwork and service. As a Boston-based company that advocates these same values, we feel the best way to support the Constitutions legacy is to ensure students can experience these life lessons, first hand.

Liberty Mutual Insurance employs more than 45,000 people around the world. As of Dec. 31, it had $117.1 billion in consolidated assets, $99.3 billion in consolidated liabilities, and $34.7 billion in annual consolidated revenue.

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Liberty Mutual to sponsor free public school field trips to USS Constitution Museum

Libertarian Party's VP nominee calls for change

The time is right for Libertarians to play a key role in the country's political future, Jim Gray, the party's vice presidential nominee, told a gathering in Thousand Oaks this week.

Gray, a retired Superior Court judge from Orange County, was chosen last month as the running mate for the party's presidential nominee, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson.

Speaking to about 40 people at Mimi's Cafe in Thousand Oaks on Wednesday at an event hosted by the Libertarian Party of Ventura County, Gray described the political climate as "a perfect storm."

"One of the real strengths that we have is we are not Republicans and we are not Democrats, and the people of our country are going to understand because today they are so polarized," Gray said.

"I'm not naive. I understand the odds," he said. "But we are going to run to win."

Praising Johnson as "a man of wisdom, a man of action and a man of courage," Gray outlined their platform: bringing prosperity, equal opportunity and liberty back to the United States. If elected, they will seek change in the economy, jobs and education.

Gray pledged that a Libertarian administration would reduce federal government spending by 43 percent and pass a balanced budget.

To stimulate job growth, officials would repeal the income tax and abolish the IRS. That would make U.S. goods more competitive and help bring manufacturing jobs back to America, he said.

"Imagine if we would be able to make business decisions for business reasons instead of tax reasons," he said. "Imagine making personal decisions for personal reasons instead of tax reasons."

A consumption or "fair" tax would replace the income tax, Gray said.

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Libertarian Party's VP nominee calls for change

China says Vietnam claim to islands "null and void"

BEIJING (Reuters) - China on Thursday "vehemently opposed" a Vietnamese law asserting sovereignty over islands in disputed waters, the latest escalation in tensions over the resource-rich South China Sea. The row comes days after an easing in a months-long stand-off between China and the Philippines, but shows the persistent cycle of territorial frictions triggered by what some see as Beijing's ...

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China says Vietnam claim to islands "null and void"

DNA clues to Queen of Sheba tale

21 June 2012 Last updated at 12:17 ET By Helen Briggs BBC News

Clues to the origins of the Queen of Sheba legend are written in the DNA of some Africans, according to scientists.

Genetic research suggests Ethiopians mixed with Egyptian, Israeli or Syrian populations about 3,000 years ago.

This is the time the queen, mentioned in great religious works, is said to have ruled the kingdom of Sheba.

The research, published in The American Journal of Human Genetics, also sheds light on human migration out of Africa 60,000 years ago.

According to fossil evidence, human history goes back longer in Ethiopia than anywhere else in the world. But little has been known until now about the human genetics of Ethiopians.

Professor Chris Tyler-Smith of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge, UK, a researcher on the study, told BBC News: "Genetics can tell us about historical events.

"By analysing the genetics of Ethiopia and several other regions we can see that there was gene flow into Ethiopia, probably from the Levant, around 3,000 years ago, and this fits perfectly with the story of the Queen of Sheba."

This paper sheds light on the very interesting recent and ancient population history of a region that played an important role in both recent and ancient human migration events

Lead researcher Luca Pagani of the University of Cambridge and the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute added: "The genetic evidence is in support of the legend of the Queen of Sheba."

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DNA clues to Queen of Sheba tale

Republicans have no plan to ‘replace’ the Affordable Care Act with another health care plan… – Video

20-06-2012 21:28 Cenk busts out of his "Rage Cage" to point out to the 77 percent of Americans who say they'd want a new health care system proposed to replace the Affordable Care Act if it is struck down by the Supreme Court. Tune in Weeknights at 7:00/6:00c on Current TV

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Republicans have no plan to 'replace' the Affordable Care Act with another health care plan... - Video