‘Promiscuous’ enzymes still prevalent in metabolism: Challenges fundamental notion of enzyme specificity and efficiency

ScienceDaily (Aug. 30, 2012) Open an undergraduate biochemistry textbook and you will learn that enzymes are highly efficient and specific in catalyzing chemical reactions in living organisms, and that they evolved to this state from their "sloppy" and "promiscuous" ancestors to allow cells to grow more efficiently. This fundamental paradigm is being challenged in a new study by bioengineers at the University of California, San Diego, who reported in the journal Science what a few enzymologists have suspected for years: many enzymes are still pretty sloppy and promiscuous, catalyzing multiple chemical reactions in living cells, for reasons that were previously not well understood.

In this study, the research team, led by Bernhard Palsson, Galetti Professor of Bioengineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering, brought together decades of work on the behavior of individual enzymes to produce a genome-scale model of E. coli metabolism and report that at least 37 percent of its enzymes catalyze multiple metabolic reactions that occur in an actively growing cell.

"We've been able to stitch all of the enzymes together into one giant model, giving us a holistic view of what has been driving the evolution of enzymes and found that it isn't quite what we've thought it to be," said Palsson.

When organisms evolve, it is the genes or proteins that change. Therefore, gene and protein evolution has classically been studied one gene at a time. However in this work, Palsson and his colleagues, introduce an important paradigm shift by demonstrating that the evolution of individual proteins and enzymes is influenced by the function of all of the other enzymes in an organism, and how they all work together to support the growth rate of the cell.

Using a whole-cell model of metabolism, the research team found that the more essential an enzyme is to the growth of the cell, the more efficient it needs to be; meanwhile, enzymes that only weakly contribute to cell growth can remain 'sloppy.' The study found three major reasons why some enzymes have evolved to be so efficient, while others have not:

Enzymes that are used more extensively by the organism need to be more efficient to avoid waste. To increase efficiency, they evolve to catalyze one specific metabolic reaction. When enzymes are responsible for catalyzing reactions that are necessary for cell growth and survival, they are specific in order to avoid interference from molecules that are not needed for cell growth and survival.

Since organisms have to adapt to dynamic and noisy environments, they sometimes need to have careful control of certain enzyme activities in order to avoid wasting energy and prepare for anticipated nutrient changes. Evolving higher specificity makes these enzymes easier to control.

"Our study found that the functions of promiscuous enzymes are still used in growing cells, but the sloppiness of these enzymes is not detrimental to growth. They are much less sensitive to changes in the environment and not as necessary for efficient cell growth," said Nathan Lewis, who earned a Ph.D. in bioengineering at the Jacobs School in March and is now a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Medical School.

This study is also a triumph in the emerging field of systems biology, which leverages the power of high-performance computing and an enormous amount of available data from the life sciences to simulate activities such as the rates of reactions that break down nutrients to make energy and new cell parts. "This study sheds light on the vast number of promiscuous enzymes in living organisms and shifts the paradigm of research in biochemistry to a holistic level," said Lewis. "The insights found in our work also clearly show that fine-grained knowledge can be obtained about individual proteins while using large-scale models." This concept will yield immediate and more distant results.

"Our team's findings could also inform other research efforts into which enzymes require further study for overlooked promiscuous activities," said Hojung Nam, a postdoctoral researcher in Palsson's lab. "Besides testing and characterizing more enzymes for potential promiscuous activities, enzyme promiscuity could have far-reaching impacts as scientists try to understand how unexpected promiscuous activities of enzymes contribute to diseases such as leukemia and brain tumors," said Nam.

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'Promiscuous' enzymes still prevalent in metabolism: Challenges fundamental notion of enzyme specificity and efficiency

'Ultima Forever' wants you to be 'good'

In "Ultima Forever," players must make choices based on questions that often don't have black-or-white answers.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

(CNN) -- Making a video game espousing the virtues of compassion, sacrifice and spirituality doesn't sound like a winner in today's battle-happy gaming environment. But 27 years ago, it was exactly the type of game that caught the imagination and spurred excitement in gamers.

Developers at Bioware are hoping to catch that same virtual lightning in a bottle with "Ultima Forever: Quest for the Avatar," the next chapter in the search for the Avatar of Britannia.

In it, the hero must achieve the highest levels in eight virtues: Valor, Justice, Honor, Compassion, Honestly, Humility, Sacrifice and Spirituality. Through actions in the game, players strive to become a shining example of good for the population.

The new title is based off "Ultima IV," a computer game dating all the way to 1985. It is considered one of the most innovative games ever because of its divergence from the typical hack-and-slash approach. Lead designer Kate Flack said "Ultima Forever" hopes to bring back the appeal of being a good person in a video game.

"Games are a cultural artifact. They are affected by all the things around them," Flack said. The developers of "Ultima IV" "were saying games can be about being a good person. At the time, it was in reaction to a backlash against the violence and things in video games.

"I think the parallel nowadays is that we are almost frightened of high fantasy. If it's not covered in blood, we don't believe it. I'm going to be as subversive as 'Ultima IV' was at the time."

"Ultima Forever" picks up 21 years after "Ultima IV" left off. Players can join up to three friends, as each works toward the goal of becoming the virtuous "avatar" of the land.

While the graphics, look and feel have obviously been upgraded due to advancements in technology over the years, Flack said the concept still remains true to what it was nearly three decades ago.

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'Ultima Forever' wants you to be 'good'

Spacewalkers do repairs at space station

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Sticky bolts proved too much for spacewalking astronauts Thursday, forcing them to leave a new power-switching box dangling from the International Space Station instead of bolted down.

It was a major disappointment for NASA's Sunita Williams and Japan's Akihiko Hoshide, who spent hours struggling with the bolts. They used all sorts of tools and tactics as the spacewalk went into overtime, but nothing worked.

With time running out, Mission Control finally told them to tie down the box and head back inside. The work will be left for a future spacewalk, presumably sometime soon.

"We'll figure this out another day," Mission Control radioed.

Thursday's spacewalk was supposed to last six and a half hours but instead went for eight hours and 17 minutes. It ended up in NASA's top 10 list for longest spacewalks at the No. 3 spot.

The power router is one of four, and NASA stressed that the other three all of them redundant are working fine. Nonetheless, the electrical system will need to be reconfigured at the 260-mile-high (418-kilometer-high) lab, given Thursday's failed effort.

The old box started acting up last fall, and NASA decided to replace it before it failed altogether. This was the first spacewalk by Americans since the final shuttle flight a year ago.

Williams and Hoshide had trouble getting the old unit out because of two sticky bolts, and they found metal shavings in the area. They squirted in compressed nitrogen gas to clear the holes, and some debris came out. But still, the bolts wouldn't go back in to secure the new box. None of the tools seemed to do the trick.

Space news from NBCNews.com

Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: Saturn's shades of blue and butterscotch are changing along with the planet's seasons, as illustrated by true-color photos from the Cassini orbiter.

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Spacewalkers do repairs at space station

Space Station Astronauts Battle Stuck Bolts in Record-Setting Spacewalk

Two astronauts were thwarted by stubborn bolts during a record-setting spacewalk today (Aug. 30) to repair broken equipment on the outside of the International Space Station. During the marathon eight-hour excursion, the orbiting complex passed over Tropical Storm Isaac, which was recently downgraded from a hurricane after mercilessly hammering the state of Louisiana and the U.S. Gulf Coast with ...

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Space Station Astronauts Battle Stuck Bolts in Record-Setting Spacewalk

NASA and Boeing Busy Testing Next Generation Space Capsules

Its been a busy seven days in the world of space capsule testing, with both Boeing and NASA taking steps towards the eventual first missions of their CST-100 and Orion spacecraft. NASAs Orion program managed to test phases of the reentry process with a water impact and parachute test of the capsule designed for taking humans beyond earth orbit for the first time since the Apollo era.

Orion is expected to make its first test flight in 2014 with an unmanned mission to a point 3,600 miles from Earth. The test flight will take the capsule about 15 times further out than the International Space Station and is designed to test the heat shield and parachutes at reentry speeds similar to what the capsule will experience after returning from deep space.

The recent water impact test was of an 18,000 pound version of the Orion capsule being used specifically for testing. The spacecraft is dropped into water at different angles from whats essentially a giant swing set at the Langley Water Impact Basin, which has been used for decades for this kind of testing.

Orion will be dropped from different trajectories and different heights to simulate the many ways it may hit the ocean, including a straight impact as well as a sideways velocity that could be experienced if it were swinging underneath the parachutes during the descent.

In the most recent tests Orion impacted the water both with a side angle trajectory and a classic belly flop, straight in the pool.

While one Orion test article was busy practicing its dives, another was high over the desert being pushed out ofa C-130 Hercules to test the parachutes. Its actually less of a capsule and more of a dart-shaped design engineered to be the same basic weight as the Orion to test the drogue, pilot and main parachutes of the Orion re-entry system.

After the smaller drogue and pilot parachutes deploy at 20,000 feet, three main chutes each 116 feet in diameter are deployed to provide the familiar ride back to Earth seen in many spaceflights dating back to the Mercury missions.

In the meantime, Boeing completed a jettison test of its forward heat shield that will protect the parachutes of its CST-100 spacecraft during reentry. The CST-100 is part of NASAs program to use commercial space transportation for future manned missions to low earth orbit.

The jettison testing of the heat shield is a small early step in the development of a complete spacecraft from Boeing capable of carrying humans to the International Space Station and elsewhere in earth orbit.

Boeing is one of three companies, along with SpaceX and Sierra Nevada Corporation, developing spacecraft with funding help from NASA capable of carrying humans into orbit.

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NASA and Boeing Busy Testing Next Generation Space Capsules

NASA launches twin satellites to radiation belts

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Twin satellites rocketed into orbit Thursday on a quest to explore Earth's treacherous radiation belts and protect the planet from solar outbursts.

NASA launched the science probes before dawn, sending them skyward aboard an unmanned rocket.

"They're now at home in the Van Allen belts where they belong," said Nicola Fox, the deputy project scientist for the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.

It's the first time two spacecraft are flying in tandem amid the punishing radiation belts of Earth, brimming with highly charged particles capable of wrecking satellites.

These new satellites shielded with thick aluminum are designed to withstand an onslaught of cosmic rays for the next two years.

"We're going to a place that other missions try to avoid and we need to live there for two years. That's one of our biggest challenges," said Richard Fitzgerald, project manager for Johns Hopkins.

Fitzgerald wore a black tuxedo for the big event, "my good-luck tux." It's the same suit he wore for the launch of another set of twin science satellites that still are going strong after 10 years. "I'm hoping for the same" with these Radiation Belt Storm Probes, he said.

The Johns Hopkins lab built the radiation belt probes for NASA, and is operating them from Maryland following a week of launch delays.

Scientists expect the $686 million mission to shed light on how the sun affects the Van Allen radiation belts, named after the astrophysicist who discovered them a half-century ago.

Earth's two doughnut-shaped radiation belts stretch thousands of miles into space; these inner and outer belts are full of high-energy particles from the sun and elsewhere in the cosmos, trapped by Earth's magnetic field.

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NASA launches twin satellites to radiation belts

NASA snaps stunning shots of Saturn and Titan

(SPACE.com) NASA's Cassini probe has beamed home stunning images of Saturn and Titan, the ringed planet's largest moon.

The new natural-color Cassini photos, which were unveiled Wednesday (Aug. 29), capture the Saturn system as it undergoes a seasonal shift. The ringed planet and its many moons look quite different today than they did when Cassini arrived on the scene eight years ago, researchers said.

"As the seasons have advanced, and spring has come to the north and autumn to the south throughout the Saturn system, the azure blue in the northern winter Saturnian hemisphere that greeted Cassini upon its arrival in 2004 is now fading; and it is now the southern hemisphere, in its approach to winter, that is taking on a bluish hue," Cassini imaging team leader Carolyn Porco, of the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo., said in a statement.

"This change is likely due to the reduced intensity of ultraviolet light and the haze it produces in the hemisphere approaching winter, and the increasing intensity of ultraviolet light and haze production in the hemisphere approaching summer," Porco added. [More Spectacular Photos of Saturn by Cassini]

NASA's Cassini spacecraft looks toward the night side of Saturn's moon Titan and sees sunlight scattering its atmosphere, forming a colorful ring. The images were acquired on June 6, 2012, when Cassini was about 134,000 miles from Titan.

Another photo shows Titan's south polar vortex -- an odd mass of swirling gas that Cassini noticed earlier this year -- in clear and dramatic detail. The formation of the vortex is likely related to the seasonal changes occurring on Saturn, Titan and its other moons, scientists have said.

The south polar vortex of Saturn's moon Titan stands out in this natural-color view from NASA's Cassini spacecraft, snapped on July 25, 2012.

Cassini launched in 1997 and has been studying Saturn and its rings and moons since it arrived in orbit around the planet in 2004. Cassini's primary mission ended in 2008, but the probe's activities have been extended twice, most recently through 2017.

NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency have worked together on the mission over the years.

Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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NASA snaps stunning shots of Saturn and Titan

BG Medicine, Inc. to Present at Robert W. Baird 2012 Health Care Conference

WALTHAM, Mass., Aug. 30, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- BG Medicine, Inc. (BGMD), a company focused on the development and commercialization of novel, biomarker-based diagnostics, announced today that it will present at Robert W. Baird & Company's 2012 Health Care Conference on September 5, 2012 at 1:20 p.m. Eastern Time. Eric Bouvier, President and CEO of the Company, will present an overview of BG Medicine and updates on the Company's portfolio of cardiovascular diagnostic tests.

Webcasts of the Company's presentation will be available to the public and accessible by visiting: http://wsw.com/webcast/baird30/bgmd/ or on the "Investors" section of the Company's website at http://www.bg-medicine.com. Replays will be available on the Company's website for 30 days after the initial presentation.

About BG Medicine, Inc.

BG Medicine, Inc. (BGMD) is a life sciences company focused on the discovery, development and commercialization of novel cardiovascular diagnostics to address significant unmet medical needs, improve patient outcomes and contain healthcare costs. The Company's first commercialized product, the BGM Galectin-3(R) test for use in patients with heart failure, is available in the United States and Europe. BG Medicine is also developing the CardioSCORE TM test, a blood test designed to identify individuals at high risk for near-term major cardiovascular events, such as heart attack and stroke. For additional information about BG Medicine, heart failure and galectin-3 testing, please visit http://www.bg-medicine.com and http://www.galectin-3.com.

The BG Medicine Inc. logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=10352

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BG Medicine, Inc. to Present at Robert W. Baird 2012 Health Care Conference

Paging Dr. Tomorrow: U-M Medical Students Get Business Training

Newswise ANN ARBOR, Mich. With American health care poised on the brink of its largest change in decades, 177 students started down the path to becoming doctors this month at the University of Michigan Medical School.

Chosen from nearly 5,400 applicants, and coming from 26 states, they all have a history of strong academic achievements. They now all have short white coats and new stethoscopes, given to them by alumni in the White Coat ceremony on their first day of medical school, an event steeped in tradition and symbolism.

But they also share something else: the potential to be leaders of the medical profession and health care community.

Through a new partnership with U-Ms Stephen M. Ross School of Business, all the new medical students will receive training that goes beyond anatomy, physiology and other traditional subjects. They will learn how to work with others to lead change, helping set them on a course that will continue through their careers.

U-M is the first medical school to give all its students this kind of training, which will prepare them to be the impactful change agents that American health care will need in the coming decades.

For more than 160 years, our school has graduated some of the highest-achieving physicians in the country, and many of our alumni have gone on to lead large practices and hospitals, medical schools, companies, professional societies, government agencies and major research initiatives, says Rajesh Mangrulkar, M.D., associate dean for medical student education at the U-M Medical School. But this new training, which will continue throughout their four years, will equip our students with the specific leadership skills that will help them achieve even more.

The new students kicked off their leadership training in a couple of unusual and lighthearted ways.

First, they began to understand their individual leadership tendencies, participating in a workshop on Competing Values by Jeff DeGraff, a clinical professor at the Ross School of Business. Then, the students were assigned into one of four teams, and engaged in a MedChef cooking contest, a competition to prepare meals (along with a marketing and communication strategy) that were then judged by faculty and alumni.

They may have looked like a couple of fun orientation-week events, but they were specifically designed to test the medical students organizational, leadership and management skills.

Erin McKean, M.D., who is helping direct the Leadership Initiative, says, In the first year, well be focusing on building productive teams,what it means to be a team member and respecting the skills and values that other people bring to the table. In phase two, well go on to health care systems, including health policy, economics and finance. In the last phase, students will be planning and executing change, which is something that health leaders do every day. McKean is a clinical assistant professor of otolaryngology and is just about to graduate with her MBA from Ross.

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Paging Dr. Tomorrow: U-M Medical Students Get Business Training

Gold, Copper Explorer Liberty Star Receives ZTEM Proposal for the Tombstone Super Project – Southeastern Arizona

TUCSON, Ariz.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Mineral explorer Liberty Star Uranium & Metals Corp. (Liberty Star or the Company)(LBSR: OTCQB) is pleased to announce that a proposal for a helicopter-borne ZTEM (geophysical) survey has been received from Geotech LTD (Geotech) of Ontario, Canada, covering the Hay Mountain and other lands comprising the Companys Tombstone Super Project (TSP) in southeastern Arizona. The survey will also cover other land within and around the Tombstone caldera.

Geotech proposes 1,440 flight lines investigating the geophysical response in a single block measuring survey area, results in approximately 2,430 line kilometers at 200 meter line spacing. According to Geotech, The proprietary receiver design using the advantages of modern digital electronics and signal processing delivers exceptionally low-noise levels. The result is unparalleled depth of investigation in precision electromagnetic measurements with a geophysical measurement every 8.5 meters along the lines and a penetration of approximately 6,000 feet below the land surface. Liberty Stars target elements are gold, copper, moly, silver, rare earth metals, lead and zinc, along with other byproduct metals occurring in a porphyry gold copper environment, as indicated by Liberty Stars detailed geochemical survey results (News Release 127, June 29, 2012).

James A. Briscoe James A. Briscoe, Professional Geologist, AZ CA CEO/Chief Geologist Liberty Star Uranium & Metals Corp.

About the Tombstone Super Project (TSP)

The TSP initially consisted of 33 unpatented federal lode mining claims over a projected covered porphyry copper mineral center in Cochise County, Arizona. InSeptember 2011, more claims coveringapproximately eight square miles were added after Chief Geologist James Briscoe discovered a large multimodal anomaly over a large covered porphyry copper mineral center within the larger TSP area. In 2011, SRK Consulting prepared three NI 43-101 compliant technical reports over Liberty Stars holdings. Each report recommended further exploration on the area. An extensive geochemical survey for 64 elements revealed the presence of porphyry copper, gold, silver, lead, moly, zinc and several rare earth elements. Mining throughout the region began in the late 19th century and led to the rise of legendary boomtown Tombstone, Arizona. Many of the old mining sites, and what is now Liberty Stars unmined land, reside within or adjacent to a large volcanic and intrusive geologic feature known as a caldera. These caldera structures are present throughout southern Arizona, making the region one of the richest porphyry copper areas on the planet.

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Gold, Copper Explorer Liberty Star Receives ZTEM Proposal for the Tombstone Super Project – Southeastern Arizona

Paul Ryan and the libertarians: It’s complicated

TAMPA—Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan may not be a libertarian, but he is one of the few high-profile members of Congress who spend a lot of time hanging out with them. For years, Ryan has taken deliberate steps to nurture relationships with the libertarian intelligentsia in Washington, D.C., making himself available to the movement's [...]

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Paul Ryan and the libertarians: It’s complicated

Cook Islands, New Caledonia Unveil World’s Largest Marine Parks – And It’s Just The Beginning

The Cook Islands, a self-governing parliamentary democracy in the South Pacific Ocean, formally announced the creation of the world's largest marine park Tuesday at the opening of the 43rdPacific Islands Forum in the capital, Rarotonga.

Prime Minister Henry Puna said the more than 600,000 square mile reserve is the largest area in history by a single country for integrated ocean conservation and management and will cover a vast patch of the ocean nearly twice the size of France -- no small feat for a country whose combined landmass is barely larger than that of Washington, D.C.

"It is a major contribution to the well-being of humanity," Puna stated. "This is the Pacific challenge we face. Do we take this challenge on with a name and identity that makes us small and not linked with the ocean in our own eyes and the eyes of the world? Or do we stand together with renewed pride and commitment as the world's largest ocean-island states?"

The Pacific Islands Forum, founded in 1971, brings together 16 independent and self-governing states in the Pacific Ocean to work for a common cause. While they are often thought of as small island nations, their lands are mostly ocean, and their territories are some of the largest on earth, covering 8 percent of the planet.

These 16 members of the secretariat have been at the forefront of mitigating the effects of climate change, and the plan for the Cook Islands, to be legally established by 2013, is only the start. With the technical and scientific support of U.S.-based Conservation International, they have laid out an ambitious plan to protect some 25 million square miles of ocean, an area larger than the surface of the moon.

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"We believe, in fact, I know, that this is the largest multinational conservation initiative in history," Peter Seligmann, co-founder and CEO of Conservation International, said from his hotel room in Rarotonga. "This is the largest number of nations and the largest area geographically."

If you look at these island nations, he said, their waters are all connected, so what one does affects the other.

"What we are seeing is a rallying call, first with Kiribati, now the Cook Islands and New Caledonia, which will announce a 870,000 square mile marine protected area."

On Wednesday, New Caledonia, the Cook Island's Pacific neighbor and a former French territory, also announced that it would create a new marine park to protect an area roughly half the size of India.

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Cook Islands, New Caledonia Unveil World’s Largest Marine Parks - And It’s Just The Beginning

Is This Health Care Company Cheap According to Graham?

Earlier this year, I spent some time dissecting Benjamin Graham's The Intelligent Investor, the seminal book on value investing. Along the way, I talked about the Graham number as a means of valuation when it comes to stocks. The formula is pretty straightforward: Multiply earnings per share by book value per share, then multiply that by 22.5, and finally take the square root. The result, in dollars, is the Graham number.

However, a quick check can help determine whether or not a company might be worthy of a look using the teachings of Graham. He said that in an ideal situation, the P/E ratio and P/B ratio multiplied together should not exceed 22.5, with a maximum P/E ratio of 15 and P/B of 1.5. With that in mind, I looked at the stocks of the S&P 500 that exceeded a P/B of 1.5 but still met the ideal situation mentioned above. Currently, there are 68 companies in the index that meet these criteria. I will be making a CAPScall on these companies after comparing them to competitors and their current value in relation to their Graham numbers. Up next is health care provider Aetna (NYSE: AET) .

Who are they?Though much smaller than sector leader UnitedHealth Group, Aetna is still the third-largest health insurer in the United States, insuring over 18 million people at the end of its last quarter. In an effort to swell its membership further, Aetna agreed to acquire Coventry Health Care (NYSE: CVH) for $7.3 billion dollars. Not only will the acquisition boost Aetna's customer base by more than 5 million members, it will further expand its presence in Medicare and Medicaid and push its government business to over 30 percent of total revenue.

What's it worth? All the insurers below are currently trading well below their Graham number valuation, with WellPoint (NYSE: WLP) leading the way, currently trading for a 33% discount relative its Graham number:

Company

EPS (ttm)

Book Value per Share (mrq)

Graham Number

Recent Price

Upside

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Is This Health Care Company Cheap According to Graham?