Ember Therapeutics Announces Cell Publication of Key Data Showing TRPV4 Inhibition Activates Brown/Beige Fat and …

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Ember Therapeutics, Inc., a company harnessing breakthroughs in brown fat biology and insulin sensitization to revolutionize the treatment of metabolic disease, today announced the publication of key preclinical data demonstrating that inhibition of the Transient Receptor Potential Vanilloid (TRPV) family of ion channels - specifically TRPV4 - resulted in activation of brown/beige fat and protection from diet-induced obesity, inflammation and insulin resistance. Ember holds an exclusive option to license these TRPV4 findings and technology.

This breakthrough TRPV4 research was led by Ember co-founder Bruce Spiegelman, Ph.D., professor of cell biology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, in collaboration with fellow company co-founder Patrick Griffin, Ph.D., professor and chair of the department of molecular therapeutics and director of the Translational Research Institute at The Scripps Research Institute. Additional co-authors on the paper included researchers from Boston Childrens Hospital, Duke University Medical Center and Massachusetts General Hospital. The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

This research is exciting in that it looks at the role of TRPV4 and, from high throughput screening to in vivo pharmacological inhibition, demonstrates the important impact it could have on obesity and metabolic disease, said Louis Tartaglia, Ph.D., president and interim chief executive officer of Ember. Not only do these findings identify TRPV4 as a compelling therapeutic target, but they continue to build out our understanding of the role of brown fat in humans and in developing novel brown fat treatments for metabolic disease.

The publication details how researchers first developed a high throughput screen to identify molecules that increase PGC1 gene expression in white fat cells. PGC1 is a key regulator of energy metabolism and drives the browning of white fat and increased thermogenesis. The researchers then demonstrated that small molecule inhibition of TRPV4 not only increased PGC1 levels, but also expression of UCP1 - a gene that is specifically expressed in brown/beige fat. In cultured fat cells, blocking TRPV4 resulted in reduced expression of multiple proinflammatory genes that are involved in the development of insulin resistance. Finally, preclinical mouse models using either mice with a null mutation for TRPV4 or wild-type mice treated with a TRPV4 antagonist demonstrated increased thermogenesis in brown/beige fat tissues and protection from diet-induced obesity, inflammation and insulin resistance. Collectively, these findings demonstrate the compelling therapeutic potential of small molecule TRPV4 inhibition in obesity, type 2 diabetes and other metabolic diseases.

The paper, TRPV4 is a Regulator of Adipose Oxidative Metabolism, Inflammation and Energy Homeostasis, is now available online and will publish in the print edition of Cell on September 28.

About Ember Therapeutics, Inc.

Ember Therapeutics is a product-focused company harnessing breakthroughs in brown fat biology and insulin sensitization to revolutionize the treatment of metabolic disease. Todays rising epidemic of obesity and Type 2 diabetes coupled with the lack of innovation in the industrys metabolic disorder treatment pipeline underscores the need for novel, peripherally-acting treatments with improved safety profiles. Embers unique approach leverages recent research breakthroughs in brown fat biology to develop a pipeline of proprietary large and small molecules designed to amplify the bodys innate ability to efficiently burn fuels like glucose. Embers expertise is also driving the development of the next generation of highly selective insulin sensitizers that have robust anti-diabetic effects, but lack the serious side effects of currently approved insulin sensitizers. Ember is a private company launched in 2011 by renowned scientific founders, an experienced leadership team and Third Rock Ventures. For more information, please visit http://www.embertx.com.

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Ember Therapeutics Announces Cell Publication of Key Data Showing TRPV4 Inhibition Activates Brown/Beige Fat and ...

New Anatomy Lab at UCSF Prepares Next Generation of Clinicians – Video

25-09-2012 23:25 The days of carrying hefty, 1500-page Gray's Anatomy textbooks may be long gone, but not much more has changed over the decades in how medical students learn anatomy - until now. Students at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) have just begun studies in a new, state-of-the-art anatomy learning center equipped with interactive iPad textbooks, giant video displays and roving cameras that will allow them to observe, discover, and come to understand, in a new way, the complex architecture of the human body.

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New Anatomy Lab at UCSF Prepares Next Generation of Clinicians - Video

Nuvilex's Subsidiary, Austrianova Singapore, to Provide Confirmatory Findings From Additional Pancreatic Cancer Trial …

SILVER SPRING, Md., Sept. 27, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Nuvilex, Inc. (NVLX), an international biotechnology provider of cell and gene therapy solutions, announced today that Austrianova Singapore Pte Ltd (ASPL) will reveal confirmatory findings from a second phase 2 pancreatic cancer clinical trial that used the encapsulated cytochrome P450 expressing cells followed by chemotherapy to treat pancreatic cancer at the International Society for Cell and Gene Therapy (ISCGT) meeting next week.

ASPL's Chief Operating Officer, Dr John Dangerfield, will be presenting the clinical data at the upcoming ISCGT meeting in Singapore, October 4-7. The ISCGT has previously organized numerous meetings in the US, England, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, China, India and Egypt. The ISCGT works in close collaboration with national societies and organizations, as well as local clinicians, to promote cell and gene therapies for use in cancer therapy advancement and treatment. Council members of the ISCGT include leading experts and peers that have made major contributions to advance cell and gene therapies.

Dr. Brian Salmons, CEO of ASPL stated, "We determined that the ISCGT would be an important forum for presenting this additional data. The value for bringing this to ISCGT is a result of how they have been championing major developments in cell and gene therapy based approaches to treat cancer over the past several years. We are very pleased to have Dr. Dangerfield representing us as a speaker at this year's conference and presenting this important advancement to our work."

Dr. Robert F. Ryan, CEO of Nuvilex said, "The most important aspect of what will be presented at ISCGT is that safety and mean survival pancreatic cancer trial data being shown has not previously appeared in the public domain. Therefore, we are very pleased that this data will be shown at this conference. The data that Dr. Dangerfield will present confirms and extends the previous clinical trial results - namely that our encapsulated cell therapy, when used in combination with the appropriate chemotherapy, is safe, well-tolerated and efficacious for treating pancreatic cancer."

About Nuvilex

Nuvilex, Inc. (NVLX) is an international biotechnology provider of live therapeutically valuable, encapsulated cells and services for research and medicine. Substantial progress in multiple areas will be providing the Company with increased potential and we look forward to bringing those forward shortly. Our company's clinical offerings will include cancer, diabetes and other treatments using the company's cell and gene therapy expertise and live-cell encapsulation technology.

The Nuvilex, Inc. logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=13494

Safe Harbor Statement

This press release contains forward-looking statements described within the 1995 Private Securities Litigation Reform Act involving risks and uncertainties including product demand, market competition, and meeting current or future plans which may cause actual results, events, and performances, expressed or implied, to vary and/or differ from those contemplated or predicted. Investors should study and understand all risks before making an investment decision. Readers are recommended not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements or information. Nuvilex is not obliged to publicly release revisions to any forward-looking statement, reflect events or circumstances afterward, or disclose unanticipated occurrences, except as required under applicable laws.

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Nuvilex's Subsidiary, Austrianova Singapore, to Provide Confirmatory Findings From Additional Pancreatic Cancer Trial ...

'Online freedom sees setbacks'

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ARE THE DAYS OF online freedom numbered? Screen grab from YouTube (TechfluffTV)

WASHINGTON, USA - Online freedom has suffered setbacks in many countries but also some gains amid the Arab Spring uprisings and political upheaval in parts of the world, a new study showed.

The report by the research group Freedom House found that 20 countries "experienced a negative trajectory since January 2011" as authorities used newer, more sophisticated controls to quell dissent on the Internet.

"The findings clearly show that threats to Internet freedom are becoming more diverse," said Sanja Kelly, project director at Freedom House and co-author of the report released Monday covering the period from January 2011 to May 2012.

"As authoritarian rulers see that blocked websites and high-profile arrests draw local and international condemnation, they are turning to murkier but no less dangerous methods for controlling online conversations."

The study found that Estonia had the highest level of online freedom among the 47 countries examined, while the United States ranked second.

Iran, Cuba and China received the lowest scores and 10 other countries received a ranking of "not free" Belarus, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Ethiopia, Bahrain and Syria.

The worst declines, according to the report, were in Bahrain, Egypt and Jordan, reflecting "intensified censorship, arrests and violence against bloggers."

It said online freedom was also hurt in Mexico "in the context of increasing threats of violence from organized crime," and in Ethiopia, "possibly reflecting a government effort to establish more sophisticated controls before allowing access to expand."

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'Online freedom sees setbacks'

A cockroach could save your life

Researchers from North Carolina State University have turned the cockroach - perhaps the world's most despised insect - into an emergency rescue worker.

The idea is to develop a cyborg cockroach, one that could be remotely controlled.

With a camera on its back, thecockroach could enter and maneuver through tiny crevices, searching for survivors from an earthquake or another disaster.

Search and rescue workers often have difficulty investigating these areas, and this new and improved (though still disgusting) little guy could be one way to locate survivors.

Reuters reports on how it works:

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/weird-wide-web/cockroach-could-save-your-life

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A cockroach could save your life

Sharks that stray too close to beaches to be killed

Colin Barnett, Western Australia premier, unveiled a Aus$6.85 million (4.4 million) package in shark mitigation strategies, including a track, catch and destroy programme, in the wake of five fatal attacks over the past year.

A further Aus$2 million would be set aside for shark research, while the remaining funding would be devoted to extra jet-skis for life guards, a study and trial of enclosures and a smartphone application for shark alerts.

"These new measures will not only help us to understand the behaviour of sharks but also offer beachgoers greater protection and confidence as we head into summer," said Barnett.

Western Australia's government has come under growing pressure to increase protection measures after the five deaths over the past year an unprecedented number for such a short period.

The most recent fatality was in July, when a surfer was bitten in half in a savage attack near Wedge Island, north of Perth, with another mauled but escaping alive last month at far-flung Red Bluff.

Most fatal attacks in the region involve great whites, among the largest shark species in the world and made famous by the horror movie "Jaws". They can grow up to 20 feet and weigh up to two tonnes.

Sharks are common in Australian waters but deadly attacks have previously been rare, with only one of the average 15 incidents a year typically proving fatal.

Experts say the average number of attacks in the country has increased in line with population growth and the popularity of water sports.

Source: AFP

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Sharks that stray too close to beaches to be killed

Blue flag fears after poor summer

27 September 2012 Last updated at 09:45 ET

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Up to a quarter of Welsh beaches are "at risk" of losing their Blue Flag award next year

Almost a third of Wales' blue flag beaches could be stripped of their status due to the poor summer weather.

Environment Agency Wales (EAW) said the wettest UK summer in 100 years has resulted in a rise in bacteria levels in the water due to sewage pollution.

Businesses have expressed fear of a drop in trade if the blue flag status of their local beach is lost.

From next year, new rules will see water quality for blue flags assessed over four years rather than one.

The blue flag award is issued by the Foundation for Environmental Education (FEE), which rates beaches on categories including facilities, environmental management, water quality and all-round cleanliness.

The heavy rain this summer has not only caused significant flooding and problems for farmers and tourism, it has also affected bathing waters at some of our beaches

Forty three beaches and five marinas in Wales earned the status in 2012, two more than in 2011.

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Blue flag fears after poor summer

The danger lurking off Brazil's beaches

27 September 2012 Last updated at 07:24 ET

Brazil's northeast coast boasts warm waters and beautiful beaches. But the coastal waters are home to many aggressive sharks, and in the last 20 years a spate of attacks has made this one of the most dangerous places in the world to swim. Rob Sawers reports.

In the last week of August, the body of Tiago Jose de Oliveira da Silva, 18, was found in the sea just south of Recife, in north-eastern Brazil. An autopsy ruled he had been killed by sharks.

His death was the 56th shark attack in Recife in 20 years. What is so shocking about Recife's attacks is that so many of them are fatal - 21 of the 56, a death rate of about 37%. This is much higher than the worldwide shark attack fatality rate, which is currently about 16%, according to Florida State Museum of Natural History .

According to Dr Rosangela Lessa of the Federal Rural University of Pernambuco (UFRPE), and president of the state's team trying to reduce shark attacks, the blame lies with recent environmental disturbances in the region. It is also because there are lots of beachgoers - and lots of aggressive sharks - sharing the water.

Scientists believe most of these attacks are committed by two species - bull sharks and tiger sharks - but forensic evidence has only been able to confirm the species responsible in eight of these attacks.

Bull sharks are considered the be one of the most dangerous shark species, with many proven attacks against man.

There are almost two million people in Recife and surrounding areas, and there are many beaches conveniently located in and around the city. But, some 700 metres off the coast lies a deep trench running parallel to the beaches near the city.

Sharks use this trench as a migratory route and emerge from it to hunt in the shallows.

It is Recife's Port Suape, though, that many see as the biggest cause of the recent attacks. Located 20km (12 miles) south of Boa Viagem Beach, where most of the attacks have occurred, the port has been the cause of much disturbance for marine life along the coast and the nearby estuaries.

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The danger lurking off Brazil's beaches

DIAGNOS Inc.: CODELCO, the Main Copper Producer in the World, Has Signed a Second Service Agreement for the Use of …

BROSSARD, QUEBEC, CANADA--(Marketwire - Sept. 27, 2012) - DIAGNOS inc. ("DIAGNOS" or "the Corporation") (ADK.V), a leader in the use of artificial intelligence and advanced knowledge-extraction techniques, announced today the signature of a second agreement for the use of its CARDS (Computer Aided Resource Detection System) technology, to generate potential exploration targets on Codelco's (Corporacion Nacional del Cobre de Chile) exploration programs in Chile.

DIAGNOS will assist Codelco in identifying targets by using its CARDS technology, which makes possible the identification of sites having the same signature as known mineralized occurrences. DIAGNOS uses its proprietary technology to analyze geological, geophysical and geochemical to enable the identification of patterns hidden in the large amount of data each customer owns.

DIAGNOS can count on a multidisciplinary team that includes professionals in geophysics, geology, Artificial Intelligence, mathematics, as well as remote sensing and image interpretation.

About Codelco

Codelco is the world's largest copper producer, is headquartered in the Chile. In 2011 Codelco produced 1,796,000 tons of copper, 11% of total world copper production (including its share in El Abra mine). It is also one of the top companies in molybdenum production, with 23,098 metric tons during this period. Codelco is a 100% state-owned company and it has the largest copper reserves and resources known in the world. Codelco's sales in 2011 were US$17,515 million.

About DIAGNOS

Founded in 1998, DIAGNOS is a publicly traded Canadian corporation (ADK.V), with a mission to commercialize technologies combining contextual imaging and traditional data mining thereby improving decision making processes. DIAGNOS offers products, services, and solutions to clients in a variety of fields including healthcare, natural resources.

The Corporation's objective is to develop a royalty stream by significantly enhancing and participating in the exploration success rate of mining.

For more information, please visit our website at http://www.diagnos.com or the SEDAR website at http://www.sedar.com.

The TSX Venture Exchange has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

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DIAGNOS Inc.: CODELCO, the Main Copper Producer in the World, Has Signed a Second Service Agreement for the Use of ...

Global Supply Chain Summit – Aerospace 2012 – Sustainable development, a priority for the aerospace supply chain

MONTREAL, Sept. 27, 2012 /CNW Telbec/ - Aro Montral, Qubec's aerospace cluster, in collaboration with the Green Aviation Research and Development Network (GARDN), is holding today and tomorrow at the Palais des congrs de Montral the 2nd edition of the Global Supply Chain Summit - aerospace under the theme "Sustainable development with regards to supply." This event is chaired by Janice Davis, Vice President and Chief Procurement Officer, Bombardier Aerospace,

This industry initiative is in response to a need as expressed by SMEs, that by improving the sustainability of their supply chain it will help them to stand out from the growing competition. The Summit will bring together nearly 400 industry representatives from Qubec, Canada and abroad, including SMEs, OEMs, policy makers and journalists.

"To stay in the race and maintain its position in the world, Qubec's aerospace industry must continue to mobilize and bring solutions to the various challenges and be ready for the long-term growth of the sector," said Gilles Labb, Chairman of the Board of Aro Montral and President and Chief Executive Officer of Hroux-Devtek. "The Summit that begins today will provide unique opportunity to spark concerted discussions on the issue of sustainable development within the supply chain."

"This event, which represents the first activity of the organizations regrouped under Aro Montral, will give aerospace SMEs tools that will help them to better meet the needs of their customers, in particular the compliance with new environmental standards," adds Suzanne M. Benot, CEO of Aero Montral. It will also help them position themselves within the Canadian government's military procurement program."

The Summit program includes conferences and workshops that will address the structural changes that are taking place within the aerospace industry, such as OEM's growing preference for integrators. More than 500 B2Bs are also planned to allow participating companies to network with each other and develop business opportunities. To view the full program of the Global Supply Chain Summit - Aerospace, click here.

About Aro Montral

Aro Montral, Quebec's aerospace cluster, is a strategic think tank that groups all the major decision makers in Quebec's aerospace sector, including companies, educational and research institutions, associations and unions.

Aro Montral's mission is to mobilize industry players around common goals and concerted actions to increase the cohesion and optimize competitiveness of Quebec's aerospace cluster. It aims to foster the growth and expansion of the cluster to ensure that it may continue to create wealth for Montreal, Quebec and Canada. To find out more about Aro Montral, visitwww.aeromontreal.ca.

SOURCE: AERO MONTREAL

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Global Supply Chain Summit - Aerospace 2012 - Sustainable development, a priority for the aerospace supply chain

Research and Markets: Global Aerospace and Defense Market 2011-2015 – Rapid Evolution of New Technologies Proving to …

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/sxdzqw/global_aerospace) has announced the addition of the "Global Aerospace and Defense Market 2011-2015" report to their offering.

TechNavio launched its report Global Aerospace and Defense Market 2011-2015 based on an in-depth study covering the US, and Europe and Rest of the World regions. The report aims to aid decision makers' understanding of the significant trends impacting this market.

Commenting on the report, an analyst from TechNavio's Automotive team said: ''The Civil Aviation industry in the US has recorded significant growth over the past few years. The Aerospace industry in the US has emerged as an industry with high potential across the world, despite the negative impact of the global financial crisis. The Aerospace industry in the US is showing an uptrend in line with strong market developments. It is expected that the US will buy a huge amount of airplanes by 2028. It is also expected that the world's airlines will take delivery of massive commercial aircraft by the end of 2029. Hence, the growth of the Aerospace industry in the US is helping companies to increase the demand for their products in this market.''

According to the report, the increase in defense spending is one of the major factors driving the growth of the Global Aerospace and Defense market. Governments in countries such as China, India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Russia, the United Arab Emirates, South Korea, and Spain are expected to increase their defense budget to double digits by 2015. Hence, the allocation of a huge budget by various governments across the world is driving the Global Aerospace and Defense market.

Further, the report also discusses that one of the main challenges for aerospace and defense vendors is the rapid evolution of new technologies.

The study was conducted using an objective combination of primary and secondary information including inputs from key participants in the industry. The report contains a comprehensive market and vendor landscape in addition to a SWOT analysis of the key players.

Key Topics Covered:

01. Executive Summary

02. Introduction

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Research and Markets: Global Aerospace and Defense Market 2011-2015 - Rapid Evolution of New Technologies Proving to ...

Aéro Montréal and Ohio Aerospace Institute sign a strategic collaboration agreement

MONTREAL, Sept. 27, 2012 /CNW Telbec/ - Aro Montral, Qubec's aerospace cluster, and the Ohio Aerospace Institute (OAI), signed a framework agreement on cooperation during the second edition of Aro Montral's Global Supply Chain Summit - aerospace taking place at the Palais des congrs de Montral.

Suzanne M. Benot, president of Aro Montral, welcomed the initiative, saying it will help to create business opportunities in the Qubec's aerospace industry, particularly the defence sector given OAI's relationship with the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. "We share similar objectives for our respective members and strongly believe in the potential sharing of best practices and mutual challenges," she said.

Michael L. Heil, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Ohio Aerospace Institute added that "Ohio and Quebec are known worldwide for our leadership in aerospace. We are delighted to sign this agreement with Aero Montreal, and believe that it will be mutually beneficial for our respective organizations and members."

"The Ohio Aerospace Institute is a research and development organization which has a collaborative model similar to that of CRIAQ. There are several complementary industrial themes between Qubec and Ohio. We look forward to the concrete projects that will emerge over the coming years," said Clment Fortin, President and CEO of CRIAQ.

The collaboration agreement involves the exchange of information concerning the two clusters' respective programs and initiatives. It also involves the exchange of information about their respective members' needs, offers and capabilities, allowing for shared knowledge on how both clusters could better integrate, leverage each other's core competencies and therefore develop complementary value chains.

About the agreement signatories

About Aro Montral

Aro Montral, Qubec's aerospace cluster, is a strategic think tank that groups all the major decision makers in Qubec's aerospace sector, including companies, educational and research institutions, associations and unions.

Aro Montral's mission is to mobilize industry players around common goals and concerted actions to increase the cohesion and optimize competitiveness of Qubec's aerospace cluster. It aims to foster the growth and expansion of the cluster so as to ensure that it may continue to create wealth for Montral, Qubec and Canada. To find out more about Aro Montral, visit http://www.aeromontreal.ca.

About the Ohio Aerospace Institute

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Aéro Montréal and Ohio Aerospace Institute sign a strategic collaboration agreement

Aerospace Materials protect surfaces against chafing, abrasion.

GORE SKYFLEX Aerospace Materials for anti-chafe applications helps minimize vibration force and reduce the abrasive effects of foreign debris between surfaces. In applications such as access panels, fuel bladders, tail booms, and transmission panels, mechanical wear from vibration can cause small particles to become trapped between the interfaces, resulting in chafing, pitting, and scoring. Gores soft durable materials are chemically inert and resistant to aircraft fluids, thereby minimizing potential corrosive effects.

GORE SKYFLEX Aerospace Materials for edge protection are abrasion-resistant and engineered specifically to prevent abrasion and cut-through damage from composite floorboard edges and reduce the likelihood of corrosion. More durable than fiberglass tapes, these materials protect edges by isolating carbon and other components that are galvanically dissimilar. These lightweight, highly conformable materials are easy to install because of their single-component construction, and they simplify maintenance because they are easy to remove for inspection.

According to Ross Livington, Gores global product specialist for GORE SKYFLEX Aerospace Materials for surface protection, the mechanical properties of these materials have been engineered to withstand wear and increase the durability of their protective performance. With decades of experience in the aerospace industry, we understand the importance of reliability and aircraft availability. Our highly conformable materials reduce downtime of the aircraft through their long-term performance, and with easy installation the aircraft availability can be improved.

For more information about Gores full line of products for the aerospace industry, contact Petra Tillmanns at ptillman@wlgore.com or +49/9144/601-6389, or visit http://www.gore.com/aerospace.

About W. L. Gore & Associates, Inc. Gore is a technology-driven company focused on discovery and product innovation. Well-known for waterproof, breathable GORE-TEX fabric, the companys portfolio includes everything from high-performance fabrics and implantable medical devices to industrial manufacturing components and aerospace electronics. Headquartered in the United States, Gore posts annual sales of more than $3.2 billion and employs approximately 10,000 associates in 30 countries worldwide. In Europe, Gore started its first business operations only a few years after the Enterprise's founding in 1958. Gore now has locations sales offices as as well as production facilities in the key European countries with around 2,000 associates dedicated to serving the markets of all of Gore's product divisions. Gore is one of a select few companies to appear on all of the U.S. 100 Best Companies to Work For lists since the rankings debuted in 1984. For several years now, Gore has also been voted one of the best workplaces in Europe and has been ranked on top workplace lists in France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy and Sweden. Learn more at gore.com.

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Aerospace Materials protect surfaces against chafing, abrasion.

The Physiological Society and Wiley renew partnership

Public release date: 26-Sep-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Ben Norman sciencenewsroom@wiley.com 44-012-437-70375 Wiley

Hoboken, NJ, September 25, 2012. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., and The Physiological Society have announced the renewal of their publishing partnership, building on over eight years of collaboration. The renewed partnership will ensure the society's titles, The Journal of Physiology and Experimental Physiology, continue to develop as thought leaders of physiological research.

"Since their establishment The Society's journals have built a reputation for excellence and quality," said Professor Jonathan Ashmore, President of The Physiological Society. "Over the last eight years this reputation has grown and our partnership with Wiley has helped to build on this."

Professor Ashmore continued, "Our journals already accommodate the needs of funders and research scientists around the world, offering an open access route for those who wish to make their article available to non-subscribers through Wiley's OnlineOpen option, and all our journal content becomes free to access after 12 months. Our renewed partnership with Wiley will ensure that the journals stay at the forefront of innovation in a time of rapid evolution in academic publishing."

"The renewal of Wiley's partnership with The Physiological Society allows us to build upon almost a decade of collaboration, with new initiatives that benefit both authors and readers of these prestigious journals," said Stephen M. Smith, President and CEO, Wiley. "Together we will continue to support and promote the latest world-class physiological research through sustained innovation using new delivery channels and models."

The Journal of Physiology publishes the latest research from across the discipline, with the aim of developing our understanding of the principles and mechanisms which govern our bodies. Published since 1879, the journal's international editorial board is led by Editor-in-Chief, Professor David Paterson of Oxford University, and currently holds an Impact Factor of 4.881.

Wiley has supported the journal's role as an opinion leader with new initiatives including the publication of dedicated neuroscience issues eight of which will be published in 2012.

Experimental Physiology, edited by Professor Paul McLoughlin of University College Dublin, focuses on emerging areas of physiological and pathophysiological research, with emphasis on molecular and cellular functions. The journal holds an impact factor of 3.211 and will move to online-only publication from 2013.

Under this renewed agreement The Physiological Society and Wiley will also collaborate closely on a number of new initiatives including Wiley's role as principal sponsor of the 2013 Union of Physiological Sciences Congress.

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The Physiological Society and Wiley renew partnership

AMP appeals breast cancer gene patent case to US Supreme Court

Public release date: 26-Sep-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Mary Steele Williams mwilliams@amp.org 301-634-7921 Association for Molecular Pathology

Bethesda, MD, September 26, 2012: The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) has petitioned the United States Supreme Court to review the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit's (CAFC's) recent ruling in Association for Molecular Pathology v. U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, a case that challenges the validity of patents on two human genes, BRCA1 and BRCA2, that predispose women to hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. The American Civil Liberties Union and the Public Patent Foundation filed the appeal to the High Court on behalf of AMP and other medical and professional organizations representing over 150,000 physicians and scientists. Other plaintiffs in the suit include individual physicians and scientists, genetic counselors, women's groups and patients.

After a district court initially declared the BRCA1 and BRCA2 patents invalid in March 2010, the CAFC reversed. That decision was appealed to the Supreme Court, which remanded the case to the lower court for further consideration in light of its recent decision in Mayo v. Prometheus. In Mayo, the Supreme Court found a method patent on another biological relationship was invalid under section 101 of the Patent Act because it claimed an unpatentable natural phenomenon. Upon reconsideration, the CAFC again upheld the patents on the breast cancer genes, claiming that the patentees had invented a new chemical substance through their identification of the disease-causing genetic mutations.

"AMP is now looking to the Supreme Court to correct this wrong on behalf of patients and their at risk family members. Patents on genes such as BRCA1 and BRCA2 grant diagnostic test monopolies to commercial companies, which often assemble the genetic knowledge acquired through testing in proprietary databases to which the medical community lacks access," stated Mary Steele Williams, Executive Director of the Association for Molecular Pathology.

Iris Schrijver, MD, President of the Association for Molecular Pathology added, "Gene patents prevent pathologists from reading their patients' DNA sequences to assess their risks for disease, their prognoses, or their potential responsiveness to therapy. The result of this lack of competition is increased test costs; decreased patient access; reduced innovation in the development of new test methods; and dramatically reduced knowledge dissemination."

"The Court of Appeals' decision was disappointing," said Roger D. Klein, MD, JD, Chair of the AMP Professional Relations Committee, "but we are optimistic the High Court will continue to uphold longstanding precedents that prohibit the patenting of natural phenomena. The CAFC's majority opinion failed to acknowledge the reasoning underlying the Mayo decision. Further, it took an extremely narrow approach to the question of patent eligibility of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, considering only whether there were physical changes to the genes' organizational arrangements, not whether these changes altered their fundamental properties. The essence of DNA is its ability to store the blueprints for human life within its code. The CAFC's decision was analogous", he added, "to treating genes as computer hardware, when their essence is really that of software. In this case, of course, the software code was written by nature, not man."

###

ABOUT AMP:

The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) is an international medical professional association dedicated to the advancement, practice, and science of clinical molecular laboratory medicine and translational research based on the applications of molecular biology, genetics, and genomics. For more information, please visit http://www.amp.org.

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AMP appeals breast cancer gene patent case to US Supreme Court

KFC Nutrition – Calories In KFC Food – Healthy Options #LLTV – Video

25-09-2012 21:27 I LOVE IT when you: Click LIKE, COMMENT, & SUBSCRIBE & SHARE these videos! ? FULL BLOG POST AT: ? MY SITE: ? GO SHOPPING ? LIVE LEAN CLOTHING: ? FOLLOW: ? INSTAGRAM: (@BradGouthro) ? LIKE: ? PINTEREST: ? FREE E-BOOK STARTER GUIDE: LIVE LEAN FOREVER: Music by: Kevin MacLeod - Cut And Dry, Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons "Attribution 3.0" http

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Molecular process in fat cells that influences stress and longevity identified

ScienceDaily (Sep. 26, 2012) As part of their ongoing research investigating the biology of aging, the greatest risk factor for type 2 diabetes and other serious diseases, scientists at Joslin Diabetes Center have identified a new factor -- microRNA processing in fat tissue -- which plays a major role in aging and stress resistance. This finding may lead to the development of treatments that increase stress resistance and longevity and improve metabolism.

The findings appear in the Sept. 5 online edition of Cell Metabolism.

Over the past several years, it has become clear that fat cells (adipocytes) are more than just repositories to store fat. Indeed, fat cells secrete a number of substances that actively influence metabolism and systemic inflammation. Previous studies have found that reducing fat mass by caloric restriction (CR) or surgical or genetic means can promote longevity and stress resistance in species from yeast to primates. However, little is known about how CR and fat reduction produce these beneficial effects. This study investigated one type of molecular mediator -- change in microRNAs (miRNAs) and the processing enzymes required to make them- that is influenced by aging and reversed by caloric restriction. miRNAs are involved in the formation of mature RNA.

Based on studies conducted using human cells, mice and C. elegans (a microscopic worm used as a model organism for aging studies), the researchers demonstrated that levels of multiple miRNAs, decrease in fat tissue (adipose) with age in all three species. This is due to a decrease in the critical enzyme required from converted pre-miRNAs to mature miRNAs, Dicer. In the human study, which compared the miRNA levels in preadipocytes (fat cell precusors) of young, middle-aged and older people, people aged 70 and older had the lowest miRNA levels. "The fact that this change occurs in humans, mice and worms points to its significance as a general and important process," says lead author C. Ronald Kahn, MD, Chief Academic Officer at Joslin Diabetes Center and the Mary K. Iacocca Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Caloric restriction, which has been shown to prolong lifespan and improve stress resistance in both mice and worms, prevents this decline of Dicer, and in the case of the mice, restore miRNAs to levels observed in young mice. Conversely, exposure of adipocytes to major stressors associated with aging and metabolic diseases, including toxic agents, Dicer levels decreased. Mice and worms engineered to have decreased Dicer expression in fat showed increased sensitivity to stress, a sign of premature aging. By contrast, worms engineered to "overexpress" Dicer in the intestine (the adipose tissue equivalent in worms) had greater stress resistance and lived longer.

Overall, these studies showed that regulation of miRNA processing in adipose-related tissues plays an important role in longevity and an organism's ability to respond to age-related and environmental stress. "This study points to a completely new mechanism by which fat might affect lifespan and is the first time that anyone has looked at fat and miRNAs as factors in longevity," according to co-author T. Keith Blackwell, MD, PhD, co-head of Joslin's Section on Islet Cell and Regenerative Biology and Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School.

Based on this study, Blackwell suggests that "finding ways to improve miRNA processing to keep miRNA levels up during aging might have a role in protecting against the stresses of everyday life and the development of age- and stress-related disease."

Dr. Kahn and the study investigators are currently working on ways to genetically control Dicer levels in the fat tissues of mice, to create mouse models that are more or less resistant to stress. "We would love to find drugs that would mimic this genetic manipulation to produce a beneficial effect," says Dr. Kahn. "If we can better understand the biology of aging, we might also understand how age impacts diabetes," says Kahn.

Study co-authors include Marcelo A. Mori, Prashant Raghavan, Jeremie Boucher, Stacey Robida-Stubbs, Yazmin Macotela, Steven J. Russell, and T. Keith Blackwell of Joslin; and James L. Kirkland and Thomas Thomou of the Mayo Clinic.

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Molecular process in fat cells that influences stress and longevity identified

Male DNA found for first time in female brains

Male DNA has for the first time been found inside the female brain, according to new research led by a Canadian scientist.

No, the finding doesn't explain why women sometimes know what their husbands are thinking.

But it could lead to refining what "the self," biologically speaking at least, really means.

Plus, in an unexpected finding, the researchers found that women with Alzheimer's disease had less male DNA in their brains -- and in lower concentrations in the brain region's most affected by the memory-robbing disease -- than women without Alzheimer's.

Observers said the finding also raises the hypothesis that, if male DNA can infiltrate a woman's brain, it might have some "masculinizing" affect on the female brain.

And, if that's so, "what consequences does this have on how the brain functions -- in other words, thinking and behaviour?" said neuroscientist Dr. Sandra Witelson, a professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton.

Appearing in the latest edition of the journal, PLOS ONE, the study is the first to describe the presence of male "microchimerism" in women's brains.

Microchimerism is the "intermingling" of small numbers of cells or portions of DNA in a person or animal from a genetically different inpidual.

In this case, the male DNA found in women's brains most likely came from cells from a pregnancy with a baby boy.

But women can acquire male DNA without ever having a son. In women without boys, male DNA can come from sharing her mother's womb with a male twin, from a non-irradiated blood transfusion and possibly even from an older sibling.

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Male DNA found for first time in female brains

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Space Debris Threat May Require Avoidance Maneuver for Space Station

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International Space Station officials are keeping a watchful eye on two different pieces of space junk that may require the ISS to steer away from potential impact threats. Debris from the Russian COSMOS satellite and a fragment of a rocket from India may come close enough to the space station to require a debris avoidance maneuver. If needed, the maneuver would be done using the ESAs Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) Edoardo Amadi. The ATV was supposed to undock last night, but a communications glitch forced engineers to call off the departure. Both pieces of debris are edging just inside the so-called red zone of miss distance to the station with a time of closest approach calculated to occur Thursday at 14:42 UTC (10:42 a.m. Eastern time.) It is not known how large the object is.

An approach of debris is considered close only when it enters an imaginary pizza box shaped region around the station, measuring 1.5 x 50 x 50 kilometers (about a mile deep by 30 miles across by 30 miles long) with the vehicle in the center.

NASA says the three-person Expedition 33 crew is in no danger and continues its work on scientific research and routine maintenance. The current crew includes NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide and Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko.

If the maneuver is required and NASA said it could be called off any time it would occur at 12:12 UTC (8:12 a.m. EDT) Thursday, using the engines on the ATV, which remains docked to the aft port of the Zvezda Service Module. It usually takes about 30 hours to plan for and verify the need for an avoidance maneuver.

Debris avoidance maneuvers are conducted when the probability of collision is greater than 1 in 100,000, if it will not result in significant impact to mission objectives. If it is greater than 1 in 10,000, a maneuver will be conducted unless it will result in additional risk to the crew.

Only three times during the nearly 12 years of continual human presence on the ISS has a collision threat been so great that the crew has taken shelter in the Soyuz vehicles. (Those events occured on March 12, 2009, June 28, 2011 and March 24, 2012.) During those events, the station was not impacted. While the ISS likely receives small micrometeoroid hits frequently (based on experiments left outside the ISS and visual inspections of the stations hull) no large debris impacts have occurred that have caused depressurization or other problems on the ISS.

Tuesdays initial attempt to undock the ATV was called off due to a communications error between the Zvezda modules proximity communications equipment and computers on the ATV. Russian engineers told mission managers that they fully understand the nature of the error and are prepared to proceed to a second undocking attempt, which has been postponed to Friday at the earliest, due to the potential space debris threat.

Once it is undocked, the ATV will move to a safe distance away from the station for a pair of engine firings that will send the cargo ship back into the Earths atmosphere to burn up over the Pacific Ocean.

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Space Debris Threat May Require Avoidance Maneuver for Space Station

Orbital debris sets off space station alert

Space officials are keeping a watchful eye on two different pieces of space junk that may force the International Space Station to steer away from potential impact threats.

Debris from the Russian COSMOS satellite and a fragment of a rocket from India may come close enough to the space station to require a debris avoidance maneuver. If needed, the maneuver would be done using the ESAs Automated Transfer Vehicle "Edoardo Amadi." The ATV was supposed to undock on Tuesday night, but a communications glitch forced engineers to postpone the departure.

Both pieces of debris are edging just inside the so-called "red zone" of miss distance to the station with a time of closest approach calculated to occur Thursday at 10:42 a.m. ET. It is not known how large the object is.

An approach of debris is considered close only when it enters an imaginary "pizza box" region around the station, measuring 1.5 by 50 by 50 kilometers (about a mile deep, by 30 miles across, by 30 miles long) with the vehicle in the center.

NASA says the three-person Expedition 33 crew is in no danger and continues its work on scientific research and routine maintenance. The current crew includes NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide and Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko.

If the maneuver is required and NASA said it could be called off any time it would occur at 8:12 a.m. ET Thursday, using the engines on the ATV, which remains docked to the aft port of the station's Zvezda service module. It usually takes about 30 hours to plan for and verify the need for an avoidance maneuver.

Debris avoidance maneuvers are conducted when the probability of collision is greater than 1 in 100,000, if the maneuver will not result in significant impact to mission objectives. If it is greater than 1 in 10,000, a maneuver will be conducted unless it results in additional risk to the crew.

If there's not enough time to conduct an avoidance maneuver, the space station's astronauts may be alerted to take shelter in their Soyuz vehicles. The last time that happened was on March 24, but the threatening object passed by without incident.

Space news from NBCNews.com

Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: A new comet superstar named C/2012 S1 (ISON) is heading for the spotlight starting in November 2013 but will it perform as some hope it will, or will it be a dud of cosmic proportions?

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Orbital debris sets off space station alert