New method identifies genome-wide off-target cleavage sites of CRISPR-Cas nucleases

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

16-Dec-2014

Contact: Sue McGreevey smcgreevey@partners.org 617-724-2764 Massachusetts General Hospital @MassGeneralNews

Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have developed a method of detecting, across the entire genome of human cells, unwanted DNA breaks induced by use of the popular gene-editing tools called CRISPR-Cas RNA-guided nucleases (RGNs). Members of the same team that first described these off-target effects in human cells describe their new platform, called Genome-wide Unbiased Indentification of DSBs Evaluated by Sequencing (GUIDE-seq), in a report being published online in Nature Biotechnology.

"GUIDE-seq is the first genome-wide method of sensitively detecting off-target DNA breaks induced by CRISPR-Cas nucleases that does not start with the assumption that these off-target sites resemble the targeted sites," says J. Keith Joung, MD, PhD, associate chief for Research in the MGH Department of Pathology and senior author of the report. "This capability, which did not exist before, is critically important for the evaluation of any clinical use of CRISPR-Cas RGNs."

Used to cut through a double strand of DNA in order to introduce genetic changes, CRISPR-Cas RGNs combine a bacterial gene-cutting enzyme called Cas9 with a short RNA segment that matches and binds to the target DNA sequence. In a 2013 Nature Biotechnology paper, Joung and his colleagues reported finding that CRISPR-Cas RGNs could also induce double-strand breaks (DSBs) at sites with significant differences from the target site, including mismatches of as many as five nucleotides. Since such off-target mutations could potentially lead to adverse effects, including cancer, the ability to identify and eventually minimize unwanted DSBs would be essential to the safe clinical use of these RGNs, the authors note.

The method they developed involves use of short, double-stranded oligonucleotides that are taken up by DSBs in a cell's DNA, acting as markers of off-target breaks caused by the use of CRISPR-Cas. Those tags allow the identification and subsequent sequencing of those genomic regions, pinpointing the location of off-target mutations. Experiments with GUIDE-seq showed it was sensitive enough to detect off-target sites at which CRISPR RGNs induced unwanted mutations of a gene that occur with a frequency of as little as 0.1 percent in a population of cells. These experiments also revealed that, since many such mutations took place at sites quite dissimilar from the targeted site, no easy rules would predict the number or location of off-target DSBs.

Two existing tools designed to predict off-target mutations by analysis of the target sequence were much less effective than GUIDE-seq in predicting confirmed off-target sites and also misidentified sites that did not prove to have been cut by the enzyme. Comparing GUIDE-seq with a tool called ChIP-seq - which identifies sites where proteins bind to a DNA strand - confirmed that ChIP-seq does not provide a robust method for identifying CRISPR-Cas-induced DSBs.

GUIDE-seq was also able to identify breakpoint hotspots in control cell lines that were not induced to express the CRISPR RGNs. "Various papers have described fragile genomic sites in human cells before," Joung notes, "but this method may be the first to identify these sites without the addition of drugs that enhance the occurrence of such breaks. We also were surprised to find those breaks occurred largely at different sites in the two cell lines used in this study. The ability to capture these RGN-independent breaks suggests that GUIDE-seq could be a useful tool for studying and monitoring DNA repair in living cells."

In addition, GUIDE-seq was able to verify that an MGH-developed approach for improving the accuracy of CRISPR-Cas by shortening the guiding RNA segment reduced the number of DSBs throughout the genome. Joung also expects that GUIDE-seq will be useful in identifying off-target breaks induced by other gene-editing tools. Along with pursuing that possibility, he notes the importance of investigating the incidence and detection of off-target mutations in human cells not altered to create cell lines - a process that transforms them into immortalized cancer cells. Understanding the range and number of off-target mutations in untransformed cells will give a better picture of how CRISPR-Cas RGNs and other tools would function in clinical applications.

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New method identifies genome-wide off-target cleavage sites of CRISPR-Cas nucleases

Ebola Fighters in the U.S. – TIME’s Person of the Year 2014 – Video


Ebola Fighters in the U.S. - TIME #39;s Person of the Year 2014
Dr. Kent Brantly and other health care workers talk about surviving Ebola Subscribe to TIME - http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=timemagazine With 24/7 reporting, TIME puts...

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Fight Ebola, Stigma & Racism, Solidarity With African Communities & Health-Care Workers – Video


Fight Ebola, Stigma Racism, Solidarity With African Communities Health-Care Workers
Speakers encouraging the fight against Ebola, Stigma Racism, and urging Solidarity With African Communities Health-Care Workers. December 9, 2014 at Black Theater of Harlem.

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Part II: The Downtown — Virtual Tour of the Parkwood Institute Mental Health Care Building – Video


Part II: The Downtown -- Virtual Tour of the Parkwood Institute Mental Health Care Building
Part II: The Downtown Deb Corring, Director, Mental Health Care and Cameron Shantz, Principal Parkin Architects Limited tour through spaces in the #39;The Downtown #39; area of the Mental Health...

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Part II: The Downtown -- Virtual Tour of the Parkwood Institute Mental Health Care Building - Video

State retiree health care gap reaches $72B

California's unfunded obligation to pay for the health and dental care of retired state government workers grew by 11 percent during the most recent fiscal year to nearly $72 billion, according to a report released Tuesday by the state controller's office.

In a report he has issued annually since 2007, Controller John Chiang proposed a five-year plan to start pre-funding the benefit, which is rarely offered in the private sector.

Retiree health care is an obligation of state government similar to public employee pensions, a system that also is badly underfunded. Unlike pensions, however, the cost of providing health and dental care to retirees is handled annually on a pay-as-you-go basis. The cost of future pension obligations is partially covered by investment returns on contributions made by workers and the government agencies that employ them.

The controller's report says California's budget should allocate more than $5 billion in this fiscal year to fund the current and future costs of retiree health care. Instead, the budget provides just $1.9 billion. Doing nothing about the funding gap will lead to a future financial crisis, Chiang said.

"This is a liability that has grown over decades of poor fiscal planning and a callous willingness to pass along debt to our children's generation," he said in the report.

Specifically, the unfunded liability represents the cost of paying for the health benefits earned by retired state workers and current employees when they eventually retire.

The system covers 167,839 retired employees, according to the controller's office. Their immediate family members also are eligible with some exceptions, including parents, grandparents and children who are married.

Longer life spans are one reason the unfunded cost has soared by $24 billion in just the past eight years, the controller said. The fact that retirees are living longer outweighs the savings that have been realized through changes in the design of health care plans and slower growth in the payouts for medical claims.

An initial goal of pre-funding the benefit is to set aside enough money each year in the state budget to cover the expected health care costs of the current crop of state government workers when they retire. Money also would be set aside in a trust that would be dedicated solely to future retiree health care benefits, with investment earnings used to reduce the liability.

Gov. Jerry Brown plans to address the issue in the state budget proposal he will release in January, said H.D. Palmer, spokesman for the administration's finance department. The Democratic governor already has begun making changes to the pension funds covering state workers and teachers, although the fiscal benefits are expected to be decades away.

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State retiree health care gap reaches $72B

Czech health care to get 10 billion crowns more in 2015

A total of 239 billion crowns should go to health care next year, which is nine billion crowns more than this year. The add-up has been made possible by a higher collection of health insurance and one billion crowns come from health insurance companies.

"The decree on payments for treatments next year is pro-growth and it ensures the fulfilment of the priorities set, or the compensation of the abolished health care fees, the raising of salaries by 5 percent, and quality and available care," Nemecek said.

The fees per visit to a doctor, per day in hospital and per prescription in pharmacies were introduced by the rightist government in 2008. The current centre-left government decided to abolish them this year and to only keep 90 crowns per visit to extra-hours.

The decree sets the value of the point with which treatments and prevention are evaluated, the level of payments for health care services paid from public health insurance and regulatory limits.

Of the 10 billion crown add-up, 4.2 billion crowns are destined for the compensation of the abolished regulatory fees, 1.6 billion crowns for an increase in the payments for treatments in out-patient surgeries, 0.5 billion crowns in specialist centres and 3.8 billion crowns for bed care.

Nemecek said he could not fulfill all demands for which he would need another 50 billion crowns.

He said the employee health insurance companies have a balance of four billion crowns as from the years end and their reserve funds are filled. The largest, state-run General Insurance Company (VZP) has a zero balance and it did not fill its reserve fund this year. In the course of next year, it will repay half-a-billion crowns of a loan from the state.

Nemecek said the health insurance companies can spend more money on care because the collection of health insurance increased last year and further rise is expected next year too.

The companies will also use for health care 700 million crowns originally earmarked for their own operation and another 600 million crowns will go from their reserves.

Written by: TK http://www.ctk.cz

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Czech health care to get 10 billion crowns more in 2015

Colorado receiving $65M mental health care grant

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Winter Weather Advisoryissued December 17 at 4:08AM MST expiring December 17 at 11:00PM MST in effect for: Archuleta, Dolores, La Plata, Montezuma, San Miguel

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Winter Weather Advisoryissued December 16 at 3:01PM MST expiring December 18 at 3:00AM MST in effect for: Archuleta, Delta, Dolores, Garfield, Gunnison, Hinsdale, La Plata, Mesa, Montezuma, Montrose, Ouray, San Juan, San Miguel

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Colorado receiving $65M mental health care grant

Are transgender veterans at greater risk of suicide?

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

16-Dec-2014

Contact: Kathryn Ryan kryan@liebertpub.com 914-740-2100 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News @LiebertOnline

New Rochelle, NY, December 16, 2014--Veterans of the U.S. armed forces who have received a diagnosis consistent with transgender status are more likely to have serious suicidal thoughts and plans and to attempt suicide. A new study shows that this group has a higher risk of suicide death than the general population of veterans, as described in an article in LGBT Health, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the LGBT Health website until January 16, 2015.

Based on data gathered from the VA National Patient Care Database from 2000-2009, John Blosnich, PhD, MPH and coauthors from VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System and University of Pittsburgh (PA), University of Rochester (NY), VA Central Office (Washington, DC), East Tennessee State University (Johnson City, TN), and VISN2 Center of Excellence for Suicide Prevention (Canandaigua, NY), determined that while the suicide death rate among veterans with transgender-related diagnoses was higher than for veterans in general, it was similar to the suicide death rate for veterans with serious mental illness such as depression or schizophrenia.

The authors report their findings in the article "Mortality among Veterans with Transgender-Related Diagnoses in the Veterans Health Administration, FY2000-2009."

"Although this study suggests comparably elevated rates of suicide among veterans with transgender-related ICD-9-CM diagnoses and veterans with any psychiatric diagnosis, suicides among transgender veterans occurred at a younger age, resulting in greater potential years of life lost," says LGBT Health Editor-in-Chief William Byne, MD, PhD, James J. Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, NY and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY. "VA has a multifaceted strategy to reduce suicide among veterans. Its commitment in 2011, and reaffirmed in 2013, to provide respectful transgender-specific healthcare as well staff training in transgender cultural awareness and sensitivity may also address the high suicide rate among transgender veterans."

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About the Journal

Spanning a broad array of disciplines, LGBT Health, published quarterly online with Open Access options and in print, brings together the LGBT research, health care, and advocacy communities to address current challenges and improve the health, well-being, and clinical outcomes of LGBT persons. The Journal publishes original research, review articles, clinical reports, case studies, legal and policy perspectives, and much more. Complete tables of content and a sample issue may be viewed on the LGBT Health website.

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Are transgender veterans at greater risk of suicide?

Do caffeine's effects differ with or without sugar?

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

16-Dec-2014

Contact: Kathryn Ryan kryan@liebertpub.com 914-740-2100 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News @LiebertOnline

New Rochelle, NY, December 16, 2014-Consuming caffeinated or sugary drinks can affect the body's metabolism, causing changes in heart and respiratory rate and weight gain. The results of a new study exploring whether individuals respond differently to caffeinated drinks that do or do not contain sugar and to sugar alone are published in Journal of Caffeine Research: The International Multidisciplinary Journal of Caffeine Science, a peer-reviewed publication from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Journal of Caffeine Research website at http://online.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/jcr.2014.0023 until January 16, 2015.

The article entitled "Caffeine With and Without Sugar: Individual Differences in Physiological Responses During Rest", by Elaine Rush, PhD and coauthors, Auckland University of Technology (Auckland, New Zealand), describes a study in which heart rate and carbon dioxide production (as a measure of respiration) were measured 30 minutes before and after individuals consumed a defined quantity of sugar, caffeine, or sugar and caffeine. Responses to the different treatments varied widely among individuals.

"Given the caveat that sugar itself affects brain reward just as caffeine does, and this effect will in itself cause variations, this is still an essential paper for the scientist and the lay person to read," says Patricia A. Broderick, PhD, Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Caffeine Research, Medical Professor in Physiology, Pharmacology & Neuroscience, The Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education, The City College of New York, The City University of New York, and Adjunct Professor in Neurology, New York University Langone Medical Center and Comprehensive Epilepsy Center.

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About the Journal

Journal of Caffeine Research: The International Multidisciplinary Journal of Caffeine Science is a quarterly journal published in print and online. The Journal covers the effects of caffeine on a wide range of diseases and conditions, including mood disorders, neurological disorders, cognitive performance, cardiovascular disease, and sports performance. Journal of Caffeine Research explores all aspects of caffeine science including the biochemistry of caffeine; its actions on the human body; benefits, dangers, and contraindications; and caffeine addiction and withdrawal, across all stages of the human life span from prenatal exposure to end-of-life. Tables of content and a sample issue may be viewed on the Journal of Caffeine Research website at http://www.liebertpub.com/jcr.

About the Publisher

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Do caffeine's effects differ with or without sugar?

Gang Bao combines genetic, nano and imaging techniques to fight disease

Gang Bao will bring a host of new expertise to Rice Universitys part in the fight against cancer and many other diseases when he joins the faculty March 1.

The highly regarded Robert A. Milton Chair in Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University is the latest recruit to move to Houston with $6 million in funding from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT).

Bao and his colleagues, nine of whom will join him at Rice, cover a wide range of research linked primarily by their interest in the genetic roots of disease and the promise of nanotechnology and biomolecular approaches to treat them.

Among their ongoing projects, lab members are working on targeted genome modification using engineered nucleases, the development of magnetic nanoparticles for use as contrast agents and for ablation of tumors and the application of fluorescent molecular beacons for specific RNA detection in living cells.

Dr. Bao has an outstanding track record of center leadership in developing and applying nanomedicine for disease diagnosis and treatment, and is a fantastic addition to the Rice effort in translational nanomedicine, said Michael Deem, chair of the Department of Bioengineering and the John W. Cox Professor of Biochemical and Genetic Engineering.

His work in the mid-2000s involved groundbreaking contributions to the molecular imaging field, and he has turned to nanomedicine and nanomaterials-based interventions, for example, with special contributions to the isolation of specific cell types from differentiating human pluripotent stem cells. Most recently, Dr. Bao has made major contributions to the use of the CRISPR/Cas9 system for genome editing, Deem said.

The opportunity to work at Rices BioScience Research Collaborative, with its close connections and proximity to the Texas Medical Center, made the offer too good to resist, said Bao, who will be the Foyt Family Professor in the Department of Bioengineering and the CPRIT Senior Scholar in Cancer Research at Rice.

One thing I really like is that this building is right in the Texas Medical Center, very close to (the University of Texas) MD Anderson (Cancer Center), Texas Childrens (Hospital) and Baylor (College of Medicine), he said. For cancer research, this will make it much easier for me to work with colleagues at MD Anderson, a few blocks away, or at Baylor.

Another attraction, really, is that the undergraduate programs at Rice are super strong. I always want to attract undergraduates to my lab to do research, he said.

Along with his lab, Bao brings his Nanomedicine Center for Nucleoprotein Machines to Rice. The National Institutes of Health-funded center is developing gene correction techniques to address an estimated 6,000 single-gene disorders. Their first target is sickle cell disease, caused by a single mutation in the beta-globin gene. The mutation causes the body to make sticky, crescent-shaped red blood cells that contain abnormal hemoglobin and can block blood flow in limbs and organs.

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Gang Bao combines genetic, nano and imaging techniques to fight disease

Pfizer Moving Into Gene Therapy Is A Welcome Move

In an interesting move, Pfizer ( PFE ) has struck a deal with Spark Therapeutics to establish a gene therapy platform. King's College Professor Michael Linden, who is an expert in gene therapy research, will lead the effort. Under the agreement, Pfizer will make an upfront payment of $20 million to Spark Therapeutics and $260 million in additional milestone-based payments. In return, Pfizer will handle late stage clinical trials, approval and commercialization of the product. Spark is currently investigating the efficacy of gene therapy forhemophilia B, and its program will enter early phase trials next year. Gene therapy has been under scientific research for over 2 decades, but viable therapies have yet to gain commercial acceptance due to safety and delivery-related issues. However, Pfizer's move and some other recent developments in the industry suggest that the therapy may be coming off age. There is another implication of this move. Even if successful, Pfizer is still a long way away from a commercialized gene-derived therapy. It is thus just a single step in its program to reverse its revenue decline in coming years. Other actions are possible, or even likely, including an outright acquisition of a substantially larger company, considering that most deals announced thus far are focused on early stage compounds.

Our price estimate for Pfizer stands at $35 , implying a premium of about 20% to the market price.

See Full Analysis For Pfizer

Establishing a gene therapy platform is a welcome move, and points towards Pfizer's willingness to innovate and take risks. Gene therapy involves treating a disease through modification of defective or absent gene. Such modification can include replacing, altering or supplementing existing genetic material. The approach offers the potential to treat rare hereditary diseases and open new doors in curing cancer. Although it is too early to estimate the revenue potential of this industry, a successful launch can pave way for big pharmaceutical firms to revive their declining businesses provided they jump on the bandwagon at the right time. Although Spark's gene therapy platform initially will focus on treatment of hemophilia B, there exists the potential for developing similar therapies for the treatment of cancer. This is where Pfizer is showing special interest. Its oncology drug sales jumped 16% globally in Q3 2014, sustaining the growth rate observed in the second quarter and representing a growth acceleration compared to the first quarter. For the first nine months, the segment's revenue growth stood at roughly 13%. The figure is the highest among the company's primary business segments, with vaccine sales racing past that of oncology drugs only in the third quarter. We expect the company to continue to push for deals and possibly, acquisitions, that can strengthen its oncology pipeline.

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Neal Stephenson Named 'Chief Futurist' at Magic Leap

Stephenson will help Magic Leap figure out "what to do with this tech once it is available to the general public."

Hot off an infusion of cash from Google, augmented reality startup Magic Leap has snagged another high-powered partner.

Science-fiction writer and game designer Neal Stephenson (pictured) has agreed to join the Fort Lauderdale-based firm as "Chief Futurist."

Announcing his new title in a blog post, Stephenson said he was intrigued by Magic Leapfrom what the company had already achieved ("I saw something on that optic table I had never seen before," he teased) to what it is capable of doing.

"Magic Leap is mustering an arsenal of techniquessome tried and true, others unbelievably advancedto produce a synthesized light field that falls upon the retina in the same way as light reflected from real objects in your environment," Stephenson explained.

Known for novels like 1992's Snow Crash, the author and sci-fi fan is familiar with virtual reality and augmented realityboth technologies which he expected to be widespread by the end of the 20th century.

"In practice, it has taken longer than just about anyone expected to get that kind of tech consumer-ready," he said. "The devil has turned out to be in the details of satisfying the amazingly finicky human visual system."

The Facebook-owned Oculus VR has helped to reinvigorate public interest in virtual reality, thanks to its Rift headset (slideshow above). But augmented reality remains a mystery to most peoplea detail Magic Leap hopes to change.

Founded in 2011, the secretive company in October earned $542 million in funding from tech giants like Google and Qualcomm. But details about its "Cinematic Reality" tech have yet to be revealed.

"I'm fascinated by the science, but not qualified to work on it," Stephenson admitted. "Where I hope I can be of use is in thinking about what to do with this tech once it is available to the general public. I took the job on the understanding that I would have the opportunity to get a few things done."

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Neal Stephenson Named 'Chief Futurist' at Magic Leap

Neal Stephenson signs on as tech company's 'chief futurist'

Science fiction writer Neal Stephenson has joined the tech start-up Magic Leap as "chief futurist". The author of "Snow Crash" and "Cryptonomicon," who has also been involved in creating video games, blogs about why he signed on with the company on its website.

"In a teeming, overcrowded hardware lab in a South Florida strip mall, I got the demo from Rony [Abovitz], the founder and CEO. Shortly thereafter, I agreed to become Magic Leaps Chief Futurist.... what fascinated me wasnt what Magic Leap had done but rather what it was about to start doing. Magic Leap is mustering an arsenal of techniques--some tried and true, others unbelievably advanced--to produce a synthesized light field that falls upon the retina in the same way as light reflected from real objects in your environment."

In other words, Magic Leap, which recently raised $542 million, is planning to create augmented reality technology that could project 3-D images in real space. The company's website shows images of schoolchildren sitting at a table surrounded by suspended seahorses, cupped hands holding a levitating elephant or a tiny girl holding a puppy, and dragons flying across the sky.

Stephenson spoke to the website io9 about his role: "[I]f you're not actually doing practical things with the technology and engaging with the engineers and understanding the science, then it's impossible to futurize. So I've been telling Rony and the other people involved with Magic Leap from the very beginning that I wanted to have direct involvement in actually using this hardware as a creative platform."

Stephenson's next novel, "Seveneves," is coming from HarperCollins in May 2015.

Book news and more; I'm @paperhaus on Twitter

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Neal Stephenson signs on as tech company's 'chief futurist'