Harmons Donates nearly $245,000 to National MS Society

Harmons Grocery Stores has given $244,287 to the Utah-Southern Idaho Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Society as part of the food chains 80th anniversary celebration.

The West Valley City-based chain raised money in May and June for the local non-profit by collecting donations at check stands, selling bratwursts and hot dogs on the weekends, hosting a charity golf tournament and sponsoring a bike team. All proceeds will go directly to the local National MS Society chapter.

"We are incredibly grateful to Harmons for getting behind Bike MS and going over the top every year in raising funds for our programs," said Royle-Mitchell, MS chapter president "Utah has one of the highest incidence rates of multiple sclerosis in the nation and the funds raised by Harmons will support critical research, information and referral programs, professional and community education, financial assistance, scholarships, wellness programs, advocacy, support groups and a lending library."

The National MS Society seeks a world free of multiple sclerosis. Every hour someone is newly diagnosed with MS, a chronic, unpredictable often disabling disease of the central nervous system. It is estimated that one in 300 Utahns has MS.

Harmons is one of Utahs few remaining locally-owned and operated grocery chains. It supports local charities throughout the year and is one of the largest contributors in the state to Special Olympics Utah, the National MS Society and the Utah Food Bank.

Copyright 2012 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Harmons Donates nearly $245,000 to National MS Society

Dementia information roadshow on the Isle of Wight

THE Alzheimers Society Dementia Community Roadshow will visit the Isle of Wight this week, offering advice and information about the condition.

It will be at the Tesco store, Ryde, today (Tuesday) and tomorrow, from 10am to 4pm.

People living with dementia and those worried about a friend or relative are encouraged to drop by with any questions.

Carol Elliott, services manager at the Alzheimers Society, said: "The roadshow is pioneering as it helps us reach out to communities, tackle stigma by raising awareness of the condition and encourage people who are worried about their memory to visit their GP."

MP Andrew Turner, who will be visiting the roadshow today morning, said: "It is estimated there are more than 2,500 Islanders suffering from dementia but less than 40 per cent of them have received a formal diagnosis.

"The onset of dementia can be confusing and frightening, both for the person affected and for those around them so I welcome this free drop-in service coming to the Island so people can easily find out information about the condition.

"They can also get information about what help and support is available, such as the excellent Alzheimers Cafes, which are now held regularly in four Island towns."

Reporter: emilyp@iwcpmail.co.uk

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Dementia information roadshow on the Isle of Wight

Research and Markets: Spinocerebellar Ataxias – Pipeline Review, H1 2012

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/pgsg7h/spinocerebellar_at) has announced the addition of Global Markets Direct's new report "Spinocerebellar Ataxias - Pipeline Review, H1 2012" to their offering.

Global Markets Direct's, 'Spinocerebellar Ataxias - Pipeline Review, H1 2012', provides an overview of the Spinocerebellar Ataxias therapeutic pipeline. This report provides information on the therapeutic development for Spinocerebellar Ataxias, complete with latest updates, and special features on late-stage and discontinued projects. It also reviews key players involved in the therapeutic development for Spinocerebellar Ataxias. 'Spinocerebellar Ataxias - Pipeline Review, H1 2012' is built using data and information sourced from Global Markets Direct's proprietary databases, Company/University websites, SEC filings, investor presentations and featured press releases from company/university sites and industry-specific third party sources, put together by Global Markets Direct's team.

Scope

- A snapshot of the global therapeutic scenario for Spinocerebellar Ataxias.

- A review of the Spinocerebellar Ataxias products under development by companies and universities/research institutes based on information derived from company and industry-specific sources.

- Coverage of products based on various stages of development ranging from discovery till registration stages.

- A feature on pipeline projects on the basis of monotherapy and combined therapeutics.

- Coverage of the Spinocerebellar Ataxias pipeline on the basis of route of administration and molecule type.

- Profiles of late-stage pipeline products featuring sections on product description, mechanism of action and research & development progress.

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Research and Markets: Spinocerebellar Ataxias - Pipeline Review, H1 2012

Three Continents, One Gene: DNA Detectives Track Down Nerve Disorder Cause

Gene mutation responsible of inherited ataxia found through sophisticated genetic analysis of Asian, European & American families

Newswise ANN ARBOR, Mich. A global hunt for the cause of a crippling inherited nerve disorder has found its target. The discovery opens the door for better diagnosis and treatment of this particular disease but also for better understanding of why nerves in the brains movement-controlling center die, and how new DNA-mapping techniques can find the causes of other diseases that run in families.

In a new paper in the Annals of Neurology, a team from Taiwan, France and the University of Michigan Health System report that mutations in the gene KCND3 were found in six families in Asia, Europe and the United States that have been haunted by the same form of a disease called spinocerebellar ataxia or SCA. The disease causes progressive loss of balance, muscle control and ability to walk.

The new paper finds the disease gene in a region of chromosome 1 where a Dutch group had previously shown linkage with a form of SCA called SCA19, and the Taiwanese group on the new paper had shown similar linkage in a family for a form of the disease that was then called SCA22.

The Dutch group has just published results in the same issue of the journal, zeroing in on the same gene as the U-M/Taiwanese/French groups.

The gene governs the production of a protein that allows nerve cells to talk to one another through the flow of potassium. Pinpointing its role as a cause of ataxia will now allow more people with ataxia to learn the exact cause of their disease, give a very specific target for new treatments, and perhaps allow the families to stop the disease from affecting future generations.

But the findings also have significance beyond ataxia. The researchers also show that when KCND3 is mutated, it causes not only poor communication between nerve cells in the cerebellum but also the death of those cells. Its information that could aid research on other neurological disorders involving balance and movement.

Margit Burmeister, Ph.D., the U-M geneticist who helped lead the work, notes that the gene could not have been found without a great deal of DNA detective work and the cooperation of the families who volunteered to let researchers map all the DNA of multiple members of their family tree.

We combined traditional genetic linkage analysis in families with inherited diseases with whole exome sequencing of an individuals DNA, allowing us to narrow down and ultimately identify the mutation, she says. This new type of approach has already resulted in many new gene identifications, and will bring in many more.

U-M neurologist Vikram Shakkottai, M.D., Ph.D., an ataxia specialist and co-author on the paper, notes that the new genetic information will help patients find out the specific cause of their disease a reassuring thing in itself.

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Three Continents, One Gene: DNA Detectives Track Down Nerve Disorder Cause

The dizzy spells that mean you need to see the doctor

By Jill Foster

PUBLISHED: 21:29 EST, 13 August 2012 | UPDATED: 21:29 EST, 13 August 2012

Nigel Kilvington was on holiday in Lanzarote with his wife Hazel when he realised something was not quite right with his balance.

I noticed I was wobbling while going up and down stairs, he says.

My balance felt off and then my speech was slurring a little.

Ataxia is Greek for 'lack of balance or order'. There are at least 50 types - many of which are rare

It was worrying, but as Hazel is a nurse we knew it wasnt an emergency because the symptoms had not happened suddenly.

'We wondered if it was the heat.

I felt fine in other respects, so I didnt seek medical attention in Lanzarote I waited until I got home a few days later, says the 44-year-old, who works for U.S. bank Citigroup in London.

At home in Brentwood, Essex, Nigel visited his GP.

Excerpt from:
The dizzy spells that mean you need to see the doctor

Autism advocate Temple Grandin in Arkansas

(ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images)

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KTHV) - A national autism advocate is speaking in Little Rock about autism, what it is, and how to address it in your family.

Temple Grandin, is a source of inspiration for those with autism and their families. Grandin is an autism activist who was diagnosed with the disorder at age 2. She's also one of the nation's foremost experts on the treatment of livestock and says she remembers what it was like to grow up autistic.

"When I was little kid I couldn't talk. I can remember the frustrations of not being able to talk. I had extremely good early education and early intervention. I can't emphasize enough develop the child's strength," says Grandin.

Grandin, who designed curved chutes and other systems for cattle handling, worries other autistic children won't get those opportunities. That's the message she spoke about Monday in Little Rock.

"If you have a 2 or 3 year old child who's not talking worst thing you can do is do nothing. Then you got the kids who are quirky and different and I'm very upset that these schools have taken the hands-on classes out. All the art and woodshop and cooking and sewing and welding, because those classes teach practical problem solving," Grandin says.

Clarke Delp knows all too well how autism can affect families. She says Grandin has offered her help with her own autistic child.

"At the age of 6 he was diagnosed with autism. Part of me was a little relieved because I knew what I was dealing with then. Because for 6 years not knowing what I was dealing with was a struggle," says Delp.

Now, her autistic son Warren is 10-years old. She says Grandinhelped her cope with his disorder.

"She has made sure that her life has not been defined by autism. She has accomplished such incredible things. Autism certainly comes with great challenges, but it doesn't necessarily mean that you cannot live a fulfilling life, a successful independent life," says Delp. "She gives me hope, she gives most of the parents, all the parents I know hope that their child can be successful as she is."

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Autism advocate Temple Grandin in Arkansas

ReNeuron Group plc – Stroke Trial Update

ReNeuron Group (Berlin: RQE.BE - news) plc

("ReNeuron" or the "Company")

ReNeuron receives DSMB clearance to progress to higher dose in stem cell clinical trial in stroke patients

First (OTC BB: FSTC.OB - news) patient treated in this higher dose cohort

Guildford, UK, 14 August 2012: ReNeuron Group plc (AIM: RENE) today provides an update on progress with the PISCES clinical trial of its ReN001 stem cell therapy for disabled stroke patients. In this open label, dose-ranging Phase I safety study, taking place in Scotland, ReNeuron's ReN001 stem cell therapy is being administered in ascending doses to a total of 12 stroke patients who have been left disabled by an ischaemic stroke, the most common form of the condition.

The Company is pleased to report that the independent Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) for the clinical trial has recommended that the trial advances to the evaluation of a higher dose of ReN001 in the third of four dose cohorts to be treated in the study. In arriving at this recommendation, the DSMB reviewed safety data from the first two dose cohorts of six patients treated with ReN001. Of these patients, two are through 18 month follow-up, one is through 12 month follow-up, one is through 9 month follow-up, one is through 6 month follow-up and one is through three month follow-up. No cell-related adverse events or adverse immune-related responses have been reported in any of the patients treated to date.

The Company is also pleased to report that the first patient in this third dose cohort of three patients has now been successfully treated with ReN001 and discharged from hospital with no acute safety issues arising.

The primary aim of the PISCES study is to test the safety and tolerability of the treatment in ascending doses of the ReN001 cells, in patients with moderate to severe functional neurological impairments resulting from their stroke. The secondary aim of the study is to evaluate efficacy measures for the design of future clinical trials with ReN001, including imaging measures as well as a number of tests of sensory, motor and cognitive functions.

In June of this year, interim data from the PISCES study from the first five patients treated was presented by the Glasgow clinical team at Glasgow at the 10th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR) in Yokohama, Japan (EUREX: FMJP.EX - news) . Reductions in neurological impairment and spasticity were observed in all five patients compared with their stable pre-treatment baseline performance and these improvements were sustained in longer term follow-up.

The PISCES study is the world's first fully regulated clinical trial of a neural stem cell therapy for disabled stroke patients. Stroke is the third largest cause of death and the single largest cause of adult disability in the developed world. The trial is being conducted in Scotland at the Institute of Neurological Sciences, Southern General Hospital, Greater Glasgow and Clyde NHS Board.

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ReNeuron Group plc - Stroke Trial Update

Rasheda Ali, Daughter of Legendary Muhammad Ali and Advisory Board Member of BrainStorm, Visits Company Laboratories …

NEW YORK & PETACH TIKVAH, Israel--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics (BCLI), a leading developer of adult stem cell technologies and CNS therapeutics, announced that Rasheda Ali Walsh, daughter of the legendary Muhammad Ali, visited the Companys laboratories as well as its cleanrooms at Hadassah Medical Center, where she received a briefing on the companys clinical trial conducted there. Ms. Ali Walsh, an internationally known advocate for promoting research and awareness of neurodegenerative diseases, is a member of the Advisory Board of BrainStorm.

BrainStorms President, Mr. Chaim Lebovits, and CEO Dr. Adrian Harel accompanied Ms. Ali Walsh for a meeting with Prof. Dimitrios Karussis, Principal Investigator of the Companys ongoing Phase I/II clinical trial at Hadassah, and Prof. Tamir Ben-Hur, Head of the Neurology Department. The group discussed the latest innovative treatments for neurodegenerative diseases and BrainStorms leading role in this area.

Having heard so much about the recent positive interim safety report and the outstanding progress being made by BrainStorm at Hadassah, I felt the need to actually meet the team in person, commented Ms. Ali. The amazing work being done here gives a ray of hope to patients and families worldwide that autologous stem cell transplants may be the answer theyve been waiting for to overcome neurodegenerative diseases.

According to Dr. Adrian Harel, BrainStorms CEO, The support and encouragement by world-renowned individuals like Rasheda Ali is important for increasing awareness of the need for a cure for debilitating neurodegenerative diseases. We are hopeful that this awareness will lead to more widespread efforts by governments and health organizations worldwide to fund research in this area and provide assistance to patients and their families.

About BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics, Inc. BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics Inc. is a biotechnology company engaged in the development of adult stem cell therapeutic products derived from autologous bone marrow cells and intended for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases. The Company holds the rights to develop and commercialize its NurOwn technology through an exclusive, worldwide licensing agreement with Ramot, the technology transfer company of Tel-Aviv University. For more information, visit the companys website at http://www.brainstorm-cell.com.

Safe Harbor Statement Statements in this announcement other than historical data and information constitute "forward-looking statements" and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics Inc.'s actual results to differ materially from those stated or implied by such forward-looking statements. Terms and phrases such as may, should, would, could, will, expect, likely, believe, plan, estimate, predict, potential, and similar terms and phrases are intended to identify these forward-looking statements. The potential risks and uncertainties include, without limitation, risks associated with BrainStorm's limited operating history, history of losses; minimal working capital, dependence on its license to Ramot's technology; ability to adequately protect the technology; dependence on key executives and on its scientific consultants; ability to obtain required regulatory approvals; and other factors detailed in BrainStorm's annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q available at http://www.sec.gov. These factors should be considered carefully, and readers should not place undue reliance on BrainStorms forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release are based on the beliefs, expectations and opinions of management as of the date of this press release. We do not assume any obligation to update forward-looking statements to reflect actual results or assumptions if circumstances or managements beliefs, expectations or opinions should change, unless otherwise required by law. Although we believe that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, we cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements.

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Rasheda Ali, Daughter of Legendary Muhammad Ali and Advisory Board Member of BrainStorm, Visits Company Laboratories ...

Bob Hoskins Retires Due to Parkinson's Disease

Golden Globe winner and Oscar nominee Bob Hoskins has retired from acting after being diagnosed with Parkinson's disease.

"He wishes to thank all the great and brilliant people he has worked with over the years, and all of his fans who have supported him during a wonderful career," his rep said in a statement to the BBC. "Bob is now looking forward to his retirement with his family, and would greatly appreciate that his privacy be respected at this time."

Hoskins, 69, was diagnosed in the fall.

Check out photos of Bob Hoskins

A native of Suffolk, England, Hoskins started acting in the 1960s and spent the '70s on British TV series, including Villains. His breakthrough role was as gangster Harold Shand in 1980's The Long Good Friday, which co-starred Helen Mirren. He won a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, a Cannes Film Festival award and earned a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his portrayal of George, a criminal who gets involved with a high-class call girl in 1986's Mona Lisa.

He earned a second Globe nomination for perhaps his most memorable role: private investigator Eddie Valiant in the 1998 live-action and animated hit Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

Other credits include Mermaids, Hook, Nixon and 2005's Mrs. Henderson Presents, for which he earned his third Globe nod.

Hoskins' final film was this summer's hit Snow White and the Huntsman, in which he played the dwarf Muir.

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Bob Hoskins Retires Due to Parkinson's Disease

Bob Hoskins Retires Due to Parkinson’s Disease

Golden Globe winner and Oscar nominee Bob Hoskins has retired from acting after being diagnosed with Parkinson's disease.

"He wishes to thank all the great and brilliant people he has worked with over the years, and all of his fans who have supported him during a wonderful career," his rep said in a statement to the BBC. "Bob is now looking forward to his retirement with his family, and would greatly appreciate that his privacy be respected at this time."

Hoskins, 69, was diagnosed in the fall.

Check out photos of Bob Hoskins

A native of Suffolk, England, Hoskins started acting in the 1960s and spent the '70s on British TV series, including Villains. His breakthrough role was as gangster Harold Shand in 1980's The Long Good Friday, which co-starred Helen Mirren. He won a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, a Cannes Film Festival award and earned a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his portrayal of George, a criminal who gets involved with a high-class call girl in 1986's Mona Lisa.

He earned a second Globe nomination for perhaps his most memorable role: private investigator Eddie Valiant in the 1998 live-action and animated hit Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

Other credits include Mermaids, Hook, Nixon and 2005's Mrs. Henderson Presents, for which he earned his third Globe nod.

Hoskins' final film was this summer's hit Snow White and the Huntsman, in which he played the dwarf Muir.

View original Bob Hoskins Retires Due to Parkinson's Disease at TVGuide.com

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Bob Hoskins Retires Due to Parkinson's Disease

Multiple sclerosis: A chameleon among diseases

CHICAGO - There's a common saying among people who have Multiple Sclerosis: If you've met one person with MS, you've met one person with MS.

Each person's experience with the disease - from the age they got it to the way it has affected their body - is so unique, MS can't be generalized. For some, MS simply leaves them feeling tired. Others are plagued by periodic difficulties in walking or thinking. Still others may lose permanent use of their arms and legs and become paralyzed.

Multiple Sclerosis, a degenerative disease that attacks the brain and spinal cord, can be as emotionally destructive as it can be physically damaging, said Gloria Crews-McAdoo, who started the "I CAN" MS support group in Chicago after her son was diagnosed with the disease.

"It is the uncertainty of MS," Crews-McAdoo said. "If you don't know what's going to happen to you from one day to the next it is very frightening."

While the National Multiple Sclerosis Society estimates that about 400,000 Americans have the disease, MS has gained more attention this year because Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney's wife, Ann, has it. Diagnosed with MS in 1998, Ann Romney in recent months has opened up about her battles with fatigue, depression and mobility, suggesting her experience may help shape her goals as first lady should her husband be elected.

The stories of those living with MS in the Chicago area show the many paths the disease can take and the varied ways people have chosen to navigate its uncharted course.

Meghan Melone

On Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday nights, Meghan Melone removes a syringe from the refrigerator, waits for the liquid inside to warm and then injects it into her body.

The drug, known as Rebif, is just one of many designed to help slow the progression of MS.

At times, it has left Melone, 22, fighting headaches and chills, but until this spring it seemed to be working.

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Multiple sclerosis: A chameleon among diseases

Dementia now a national health priority

Dementia has been added to the list of national health priority areas following a meeting of federal and state health ministers in Sydney.

The first priority areas, set down in 1996, were cardiovascular health, cancer control, injury prevention and control, and mental health.

Diabetes was added in 1997, followed by asthma in 1999, arthritis and musculoskeletal conditions in 2002 and obesity in 2008.

Now, in 2012, dementia has been added to the list following a meeting of federal and state health ministers in Sydney.

That takes the number of priority areas to nine.

'This will focus attention and drive collaborative efforts aimed at tackling dementia at national, state and territory and local government levels,' the ministers said in a joint statement on Friday.

Some 280,000 Australians have dementia today, but that figure is expected to reach one million by 2050.

Ten years after that, spending on the disease is set to outstrip the outlay on any other health condition.

'We expect dementia spending to top $80 billion by 2062/63,' federal Ageing Minister Mark Butler said in a statement on Friday.

'But early diagnosis has been shown to have significant potential benefits for both the person with dementia and their carers and family, including improvements to quality of life and reducing care burden.'

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Dementia now a national health priority

Contemplating the Causes of Immunosenescence

The immune system is vital for many reasons. It is not just a barrier against pathogens of all sorts, such as bacteria, fungi, and viruses, but also a watchdog that hunts down and destroys harmful cells, such as those that have entered senescence or are in danger of becoming cancerous. In later life the immune system declines and fails in characteristic ways, partly a consequence of its evolved structure and resource limits, and partly the same general accumulation of damage that affects all cells in the body. The failure of the immune system is important because it contributes to other threads in aging: allowing senescent cells to build up, failing to catch cancers when they can be easily destroyed, and generating ever higher levels of inflammation. This increasing incapacity alongside increasing inflammation is known as immunosenescence or inflammaging.

Here is an open access paper on the subject:

Hallmarks of human "immunosenescence": adaptation or dysregulation?

Is immunosenescence an intrinsic ageing process leading to dysregulation of immunity or an adaptive response of the individual to pathogen exposure? Age-associated differences in bone marrow immune cell output and thymic involution suggest the former. Accepted hallmarks of immunosenescence (decreased numbers and percentages of peripheral naïve T cells, especially CD8+?cells, and accumulations of memory T cells, especially late-stage differentiated CD8+ cells) suggest the latter, viewed as the result of depletion of the reservoir of naïve cells over time by contact with pathogens and their conversion to memory cells, the basis of adaptive immunity.

Thymic involution beginning early in life limits the generation of naive cells such that the adult is believed to rely to a great extent on the naïve cell pool produced mostly before puberty. Thus, these hallmarks of immunosenescence would be markedly affected by the history of the individual's exposure to pathogens, [and] in humans, particularly to infection with CMV.

...

One very striking difference [between industrialized Western populations and those of poorer regions is that in] the "wild-type" situation, all humans are infected with CMV from the age of ca. 2?months on, when they no longer receive only anti-CMV antibody in the mother's milk, but also the infectious virus that has reactivated in the meantime. CMV-negativity is an artifact of civilization, hygiene and decreased breast feeding. Hence, in our pilot study of young and old men in rural Pakistan, all the young were already CMV-positive. As "old" is viewed as [greater than] 50?years in this society, we sought to establish whether age-associated differences in immune phenotypes that we and others had established in older European and US populations were similar in Pakistanis, and whether they manifested earlier in the latter.

We concluded that there were two major differences between the Pakistani population and the historical controls of [subjects from Western, industrialized regions]. One was that we did indeed see age-associated differences in CD8+ T cells earlier in the Pakistanis, and the other was that we saw for the first time in a healthy population that not only the CD8+ subset but also the CD4?+?T cells were affected. This we had otherwise only seen in pathological European populations, eg. those with Alzheimer's. We interpret this to mean that the level of "antigenic stress" in the Pakistani population, old at 50, could indeed be leading to "premature immunosenescence".

Some thoughts on what can be done to reverse some of the declines in the aging immune system - alongside a few concrete results in laboratory animals - can be found a little way back in the Fight Aging! archives.

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Proposing a Hyperfunction Theory of Aging

There are a great many theories of aging, and here is another for the pile from a researcher who leans towards aging as genetic programming rather than aging as accumulated damage: "The biological mechanisms at the heart of the aging process are a long-standing mystery. An influential theory has it that aging is the result of an accumulation of molecular damage, caused in particular by reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by mitochondria. This theory also predicts that processes that protect against oxidative damage (involving detoxification, repair and turnover) protect against aging and increase lifespan. ... However, recent tests of the oxidative damage theory, many using the short-lived nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans, have often failed to support the theory. This motivates consideration of alternative models. One new theory [proposes] that aging is caused by hyperfunction, i.e. over-activity during adulthood of processes (particularly biosynthetic) that contribute to development and reproduction. Such hyperfunction can lead to hypertrophy-associated pathologies, which cause the age increase in mortality. ... Here we assess whether the hyperfunction theory is at all consistent with what is know about C. elegans aging, and conclude that it is. In particular, during adulthood C. elegans show a number of changes that may reflect pathology and/or hyperfunction. Such changes seem to contribute to mortality, at least in some cases (e.g. yolk accumulation). ... Our assessment suggests that the hyperfunction theory is a plausible alternative to the molecular damage theory to explain aging in C. elegans."

Link: http://extremelongevity.net/2012/08/09/is-aging-due-to-hyperfunction/

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Towards a Blood Test for Alzheimer's Disease

Progress towards a non-invasive test for Alzheimer's disease: "Reliability and failure to replicate initial results have been the biggest challenge in this field. We demonstrate here that it is possible to show consistent findings. ... [Researchers] measured the levels of 190 proteins in the blood of 600 study participants [including] healthy volunteers and those who had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). MCI, often considered a harbinger for Alzheimer's disease, causes a slight but measurable decline in cognitive abilities. A subset of the 190 protein levels (17) were significantly different in people with MCI or Alzheimer's. When those markers were checked against data from 566 people participating in the multicenter Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, only four markers remained: apolipoprotein E, B-type natriuretic peptide, C-reactive protein and pancreatic polypeptide. Changes in levels of these four proteins in blood also correlated with measurements from the same patients of the levels of proteins [beta-amyloid] in cerebrospinal fluid that previously have been connected with Alzheimer's. The analysis grouped together people with MCI, who are at high risk of developing Alzheimer's, and full Alzheimer's. ... Though a blood test to identify underlying Alzheimer's disease is not quite ready for prime time given today's technology, we now have identified ways to make sure that a test will be reliable."

Link: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-08/eu-btf080912.php

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Towards a Blood Test for Alzheimer’s Disease

Progress towards a non-invasive test for Alzheimer's disease: "Reliability and failure to replicate initial results have been the biggest challenge in this field. We demonstrate here that it is possible to show consistent findings. ... [Researchers] measured the levels of 190 proteins in the blood of 600 study participants [including] healthy volunteers and those who had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). MCI, often considered a harbinger for Alzheimer's disease, causes a slight but measurable decline in cognitive abilities. A subset of the 190 protein levels (17) were significantly different in people with MCI or Alzheimer's. When those markers were checked against data from 566 people participating in the multicenter Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, only four markers remained: apolipoprotein E, B-type natriuretic peptide, C-reactive protein and pancreatic polypeptide. Changes in levels of these four proteins in blood also correlated with measurements from the same patients of the levels of proteins [beta-amyloid] in cerebrospinal fluid that previously have been connected with Alzheimer's. The analysis grouped together people with MCI, who are at high risk of developing Alzheimer's, and full Alzheimer's. ... Though a blood test to identify underlying Alzheimer's disease is not quite ready for prime time given today's technology, we now have identified ways to make sure that a test will be reliable."

Link: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-08/eu-btf080912.php

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Replacement Parts: Xenotransplantation Versus Organ Engineering

A number of diverse lines of research and development will lead to new technologies that replace or repair organs. The present list looks much as follows:

A recent article at the Scientist looks at a couple of these lines of work - organ engineering versus xenotransplantation, both of which draw heavily upon the comparatively new techniques of decellularization in order to achieve new and better results, both in the laboratory and for patients in trials:

Today, the organ shortage is an even bigger problem than it was in the 1980s. ... he supply has stagnated despite well-funded attempts to encourage donations, and demand is growing, especially as the organs of a longer-lived population wear out.

Faced with this common problem, Vacanti and Cooper have championed very different solutions. Cooper thinks that the best hope of providing more organs lies in xenotransplantation - the act of replacing a human organ with an animal one. From his time in Cape Town to his current position at the University of Pittsburgh, he has been trying to solve the many problems that occur when pig organs enter human bodies, from immune rejection to blood clots. Vacanti, now at Massachusetts General Hospital, has instead been developing technology to create genetically tailored organs out of a patient's own cells, abolishing compatibility issues. "I said to myself: why can't we just make an organ?" he recalls.

In the race to solve the organ shortage, xenotransplantation is like the slow and steady tortoise, still taking small steps after a long run-up, while organ engineering is more like a sprinting hare, racing towards a still-distant finish line. Most of those betting on the race are backing the hare. Industry support has dried up for xenotransplantation after years of slow progress, leaving public funders to pick up the expensive tab. Stem cells, meanwhile, continue to draw attention and investment. But both fields have made important advances in recent years, and the likely winner of their race - or whether it will result in a draw - is far from clear.

...

Xenotransplants will always have to deal with an immune clash of some degree, so growing an organ that is perfectly matched to a patient would be preferable. The question is whether tissue-engineering technologies will reach that point before genetic engineering enables the first transgenic pig hearts or kidneys to be successfully installed in patients. Sachs says, "I consider xenotransplantation still the nearest-term, best hope for solving the organ shortage, but in the long run, I think tissue engineering will replace it."

There is also the matter of scale. Platt thinks that organ engineering is too costly to meet the needs of everyone waiting for a transplant. "You'd have to turn over the entire GDP of a country to accomplish that," he says. On the other hand, "I could get a pig for a couple of hundred dollars." But Macchiarini argues that organ engineering is in its infancy, and every advance improves efficiency and lowers cost. "What we did in 2008 in 6 months, we can now do in a few weeks," he says. "We do care about getting this to every patient." Vacanti adds that mass-producing artificial scaffolds will make organ engineering even more cost-effective. "When you scale them up, the bulk materials and manufacturing tech are extremely cheap," he says. "I think it's going to be cheaper than growing lots of pigs."

We shall see. The only sure thing in my book is that vigorous competition is good for both speeding progress and producing higher quality solutions. That is just as true in medicine as for every other field of human endeavor.

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Everyone At Risk From Mad Cow Disease

By John von Radowitz, Science Correspondent, PA News

No one is immune to the human form of mad cow disease, variant CJD, new research suggests today.

Some people whose genetic make-up normally acts as a barrier against infection may ultimately develop a different and so-far unrecognised type of disease, it is claimed.

Scientists have shown that individuals with a pair of genes known as MM about a third of the population acquire vCJD relatively easily.

No one with a different paring, VV, has been known to suffer the disease.

Then in August it emerged that a patient from a mixed MV genetic group had been infected with vCJD from contaminated blood, without showing any symptoms. Just over half the population has the MV pairing.

The news sparked fears of a mad cow disease timebomb in the population, with thousands of people unwittingly carrying the brain disease on a long incubation fuse. Read more…

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/integratedmedicine

Looking for Longevity-Related MicroRNAs in Centenarians

Efforts continue to correlate longevity with the activity levels of specific genes: "MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression and play a critical role in development, homeostasis, and disease. Despite their demonstrated roles in age-associated pathologies, little is known about the role of miRNAs in human aging and longevity. ... We employed massively parallel sequencing technology to identify miRNAs expressed in B-cells from Ashkenazi Jewish centenarians, i.e., those living to a hundred and a human model of exceptional longevity, and younger controls without a family history of longevity. ... we discovered a total of 276 known miRNAs and 8 unknown miRNAs ranging several orders of magnitude in expression levels, a typical characteristics of saturated miRNA-sequencing. A total of 22 miRNAs were found to be significantly upregulated, with only 2 miRNAs downregulated, in centenarians as compared to controls. Gene Ontology analysis of the predicted and validated targets of the 24 differentially expressed miRNAs indicated enrichment of functional pathways involved in cell metabolism, cell cycle, cell signaling, and cell differentiation. A cross sectional expression analysis of the differentially expressed miRNAs in B-cells from Ashkenazi Jewish individuals between the 50th and 100th years of age indicated that expression levels of miR-363* declined significantly with age. Centenarians, however, maintained the youthful expression level. This result suggests that miR-363* may be a candidate longevity-associated miRNA.

Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-13-353

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Is the cell therapy sector outperforming the major indices?


So here's what I did today.  I built a portfolio of public companies focused exclusively or predominately in the cell therapy space.  I excluded any companies that are in the sector but their products/services constitute less than a significant majority of their revenue and/or expenses.  The portfolio sits at 29 companies.  Here's the list:


Here's how the portfolio performs against the Dow Jones, Standard and Poor's, and NASDAQ indices so far this year.


When looking at the period 1 January 2012 to 10 August 2012, the cell therapy portfolio is up 42%, Dow Jones up 8%, Standard and Poor's up 12% and NASDAQ up 16%.

In the context of how much we hear about how harsh this sector is or has been on investors, I found today's analysis interesting and, honestly, pleasantly surprising.

This snapshot is useful but has its limitations. I'm relying on Google Finance for accuracy of the information provided.  Do your own due diligence. Invest accordingly.  I hope this helps.

--Lee

This snapshot has been brought to you by Cell Therapy Group: all cell therapy, all the time! 🙂

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/CellTherapyBlog