samedi 30 juillet 2016

Flexible Building Blocks of the Future

New mechanical "metamaterial" developed at Tel Aviv University may revolutionize prosthetics and wearable technologies

Tel Aviv — Ill-fitting joint sockets, contact dermatitis and sebaceous cysts are just a few of the problems plaguing prosthetic patients. They are all a result of the pressure that their prosthetic devices place on the soft tissue of their bodies.

Now researchers at Tel Aviv University, FOM Institute AMOLF and Leiden University in the Netherlands have developed a new approach to manufacturing mechanical "metamaterials" — synthetic composite materials with structures and properties not usually found in natural materials — that can be programmed to deform in a uniquely complex manner.

The breakthrough may have future applications in soft robotics and wearable technologies — and may lead to more close-fitting, comfortable and user-friendly prosthetics. The research was published this week in the journal Nature.

Putting a smile on a cube

Dr. Yair Shokef of TAU's School of Mechanical Engineering and Prof. Martin van Hecke of Leiden University and AMOLF, the Netherlands, illustrated their approach through a three-dimensional printing of a metamaterial cube. A smiley-face pattern emerged on the side of the cube when it was compressed between custom-patterned surfaces.

To demonstrate that any pattern can be produced on a cube's surface, the 
researchers developed a cube of 10x10x10 centimeter blocks
on which a smiley appears when the cube is compressed.
Photo: Corentin Coulais.

"We started with a series of flexible building blocks, or bricks, that had deformation properties that varied with their position," said Dr. Shokef. "The blocks were able to change their shape when we applied pressure. From there, we were able to develop a new design principle to enable these bricks to be oriented and assembled into a larger metamaterial with machine-like functionalities."

The metamaterial has the unusual property that spatially-patterned compression in one direction leads to predictable spatially-patterned deformation (dents and protrusions) in other directions.

"A pattern of specific bulges appears when our seemingly normal cube is compressed," said Dr. Shokef. "Using metamaterials, we can 'program' the material's behavior by carefully designing its spatial structure."

"For example, a pattern of holes in a sheet of material produces a mechanical response that is completely different than in the same material without holes," said Prof. van Hecke. "We also wanted to investigate this phenomenon for a three-dimensional pattern of holes."

One cube atop another

The researchers calculated the number of possible stacks for different cubes of building blocks. They then developed a cube of 10x10x10 centimeter blocks on which a smiley face appears when the cube is compressed. This demonstrated that any given pattern can be produced on a cube's surface.

"For each possible stack, the deformation within the cube results in a specific pattern on the sides of the cube," said Dr. Shokef. "We can carefully combine the building blocks in a way that any desired pattern can appear on the sides of a compressed cube. We can also use the cube to analyze these patterns."

There are many applications on the horizon for this new basic research. "This type of programmable 'machine material' could be ideal for prostheses or wearable technology in which a close fit with the body is important," Dr. Shokef said. "If we can make the building blocks even more complex or produce these from other materials, the possibilities really are endless."

Explanatory video:
http://ift.tt/2alLpLT
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NxcCtimWxn0


Tel Aviv University (TAU) is inherently linked to the cultural, scientific and entrepreneurial mecca it represents. It is one of the world's most dynamic research centers and Israel's most distinguished learning environment. Its unique-in-Israel multidisciplinary environment is highly coveted by young researchers and scholars returning to Israel from post-docs and junior faculty positions in the US.

American Friends of Tel Aviv University (AFTAU) enthusiastically and industriously pursues the advancement of TAU in the US, raising money, awareness and influence through international alliances that are vital to the future of this already impressive institution.

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Flexible Building Blocks of the Future

vendredi 29 juillet 2016

Emory to begin first U.S. clinical trial using adult allogeneic stem cells to treat Alzheimer's disease

Woodruff Health Sciences Center

A new study to assess the safety, tolerability and preliminary efficacy of allogeneic stem cells in persons with mild to moderate dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is beginning enrollment at Emory University and University of California, Irvine. It is the first clinical trial in the U.S. to use this stem cell-based treatment.

The randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled study uses a treatment developed by Stemedica Cell Technologies, Inc. and its subsidiary, Stemedica International, SA that involves implanting stem cells from healthy people to the study participants.

The study will enroll approximately 40 subjects diagnosed with mild to moderate dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) at least three months prior to enrollment, based on the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer's disease and Related Disorders Association (NINCDS-ADRDA) Alzheimer’s criteria.

 “Since therapeutic options for Alzheimer’s disease are limited, stem cells may offer new ways to manage this illness,” says Ihab Hajjar, MD, associate professor of medicine and neurology at Emory University School of Medicine, researcher for the Emory Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and principal investigator at Emory for this trial. “This study’s main goal is to demonstrate the safety of using stem cells in AD and we are pleased to be a site for this Stemedica International trial.”

“As we begin the enrollment process at Emory and UCI, we get closer to reaching our vision for an effective treatment for this devastating disease,” says Nikolai Tankovich, MD, PhD, president and chief medical officer of Stemedica Cell Technologies and executive chairman of Stemedica International.

More information about this clinical trial, including enrollment details, can be found at: http://ift.tt/2al0Jbq

Contact

Robin Reese
404-727-9371
[email protected]

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Dementia: Is LMTX a major breakthrough?

The Week: LMTX slows Alzheimer's progression - but it doesn't work on everyone and experts are urging caution

LMTX is taken twice a day in tablet form. In the trial, it was used to treat 891 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's for 18 months, with the results presented at a conference in Toronto, Canada. It is the first time a major drug trial has targeted tau tangles – abnormal clumps of protein that disrupt brain function – instead of beta-amyloid, a different type of protein that forms plaques as it accumulates in the brain, the New Scientist reports.

The discovery was hailed by many, with the US Alzheimer's Association describing it as "a significant event" in the history of dementia research. "In a field that has been plagued by consistent failures of novel drug candidates in late-stage clinical trials and where there has been no practical therapeutic advance for over a decade, I am excited," said Dr Serge Gauthier, the director of the Alzheimer's Disease Research Unit at McGill University, Canada.Others, however, have urged caution. Alzheimer's Research UK's Dr David Reynolds said he was concerned LMTX appeared not to work alongside other medications. "The data suggests it is slowing down the disease, but the important caveat is these small numbers," he said. "It is encouraging, but we need more data and will have to run a study with it as just a monotherapy [on its own]," he added. "It will still be years from reaching patients, even assuming it works."

Dr Rachelle Doody, the director of the Alzheimer's disease and Memory Disorders Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Texas, was even more pessimistic. "To present it to the public now as a promising approach seems unjustified," she told the New York Times.

British Geriatrics Society

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Dementia: Is LMTX a major breakthrough?

Florida investigation links four recent Zika cases to local mosquito-borne virus transmission

Contact: Media Relations
(404) 639-3286

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been informed by the State of Florida that Zika virus infections in four people were likely caused by bites of local Aedes aegypti mosquitoes.  The cases are likely the first known occurrence of local mosquito-borne Zika virus transmission in the continental United States.  CDC is closely coordinating with Florida officials who are leading the ongoing investigations, and at the state’s request, sent a CDC medical epidemiologist to provide additional assistance.

State officials have responded rapidly with mosquito control measures and a community-wide search for additional Zika cases.  Under the current situation, there are no plans for limiting travel to the area.

“All the evidence we have seen indicates that this is mosquito-borne transmission that occurred several weeks ago in several blocks in Miami,” said Tom Frieden, M.D., M.P.H., director of the CDC. “We continue to recommend that everyone in areas where Aedes aegypti mosquitoes are present—and especially pregnant women—take steps to avoid mosquito bites. We will continue to support Florida’s efforts to investigate and respond to Zika and will reassess the situation and our recommendations on a daily basis.”

Zika virus spreads to people primarily through the bite of an infected Aedes species mosquito (Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus), but can also be spread during sex by a person infected with Zika to their partner.  Most people infected with Zika won’t have symptoms, but for those who do, the illness is usually mild.  However, Zika infection during pregnancy can cause a serious birth defect of the brain called microcephaly and other severe fetal birth defects.

“We have been working with state and local governments to prepare for the likelihood of local mosquito-borne Zika virus transmission in the continental United States and Hawaii,” said Lyle Petersen, M.D., M.P.H., incident manager for CDC’s Zika virus response. “We anticipate that there may be additional cases of ‘homegrown’ Zika in the coming weeks.  Our top priority is to protect pregnant women from the potentially devastating harm caused by Zika.”

CDC has been working with state, local, and territorial health officials to prepare for locally transmitted Zika infection in the United States.  Officials from Florida participated in all these activities, and their experience in responding to mosquito-borne diseases similar to Zika, including dengue and chikungunya, has helped guide their current investigations. To date, CDC has provided Florida more than $8 million in Zika-specific funding and about $27 million in emergency preparedness funding that can be used for Zika response efforts.   

Because we are in mosquito season, CDC continues to encourage everyone, especially pregnant women and women planning to become pregnant, to protect themselves from mosquito bites.  Remember to use an  insect repellent  registered by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants, use or repair screens on windows and doors, use air conditioning when available, and remove standing water where mosquitoes can lay eggs.

We continue to learn about Zika virus, and we are working hard to find out more about these cases. Here is what we do know:

  • Zika is spread to people primarily through the bite of an infected Aedes species mosquito (Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus). 
  • A pregnant woman can pass Zika virus to her fetus during pregnancy or during birth.
  • Zika virus infection can cause microcephaly and other severe fetal brain defects, and is associated with other adverse pregnancy outcomes.
  • A person who is infected with Zika virus can pass it to sex partners.
  • Many people infected with Zika virus won’t have symptoms or will only have mild symptoms.
  • No vaccines or treatments are currently available to treat or prevent Zika infections.                                                                                                                              

As of July 27, 2016, 1,658 cases of Zika have been reported to CDC in the continental United States and Hawaii; none of these were the result of local spread by mosquitoes. These cases include 15 believed to be the result of sexual transmission and one that was the result of a laboratory exposure.  This number does not include the four Florida cases likely caused by local transmission.

For more information about Zika: http://ift.tt/1lX0TJ3.

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Florida investigation links four recent Zika cases to local mosquito-borne virus transmission

Zika vaccine development: UNC researchers seeking individuals exposed to arboviruses

Drs. Aravinda de Silva and Matt Collins hope to use blood samples from people who have been previously diagnosed with or potentially exposed to specific viruses as part of their vaccine development work.

Media contact: Caroline Curran, [email protected], (984) 974-1146

CHAPEL HILL, NC – Researchers at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine are conducting studies that utilize blood donations from individuals who have been diagnosed with or potentially exposed to mosquito-borne viruses as part of ongoing dengue and Zika research and vaccine development.

Aravinda de Silva, PhD, professor of microbiology and immunology, and Matt Collins, MD, PhD, an infectious diseases fellow, are among more than 10 groups studying and researching Zika at UNC.

De Silva’s lab received supplemental funding on two existing grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to study Zika, and is now seeking blood donations from people who have been diagnosed with or potentially exposed to arboviruses such as dengue, chikungunya, and Zika. Specifically, de Silva is seeking participation from people who have traveled to tropical areas such as Southeast Asia, India, Central and South America, and Africa.

“Research studies of participants’ immune cells and antibodies may help us develop vaccines and better clinical tests to diagnose these viral infections,” de Silva said. 

While many people don’t realize they are infected – 85 percent of people believed to have Zika are asymptomatic – common symptoms of these viruses include fever, rash, joint paint, muscle aches, and headaches. Pregnant women are especially vulnerable to Zika infection because of potential birth defects. The main birth defect associated with Zika is microcephaly, a rare neurological condition in which an infant is born with a much smaller head – an effect of abnormal brain development. 

The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that 65 countries and territories have reported cases of Zika virus.

UNC researchers are currently working with state and federal health officials, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and NIH. The NIH has supplemented current grants so researchers can broaden the scope of their work to expedite the research and response to Zika, de Silva said. 

The UNC School of Medicine has a decades-long history of studying arboviruses. 

“There’s real expertise here,” de Silva said. “My group and others, we have been studying dengue viruses for many years. Dengue is very closely related to Zika, but distinct. And we have a program that includes epidemiology, human immunology, and pathogenesis, and this work includes a lot of international work in South Asia, as well as in the Americas.”

A vaccine for Zika could be developed based on previous work to successfully develop Yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis, and dengue vaccines, de Silva said. Currently, there are three phase-three clinical trials for a dengue vaccine and UNC is collaborating with vaccine developers to understand data from these trials. 

According to the WHO, an estimated 390 million people are infected with dengue worldwide each year. 

“There’s a tremendous amount of work going on right now on dengue vaccines,” de Silva said. “Our group at UNC has been working very closely with all the leading vaccine developers.”

Participation requires a one-time blood donation. The study is open to all healthy adults, including pregnant women.

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Zika vaccine development: UNC researchers seeking individuals exposed to arboviruses

Down but not out with multiple sclerosis

A mailer for USC’s Optimal Living program lands on a woman’s doorstep one day and changes her life

BY Breanne Grady

Debulyn Salinas was at her breaking point when she got into the USC Optimal Living with MS program in late 2015.

Her journey through the 11-week program this spring has restored her faith in people and most importantly in herself.

Salinas, now 51, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis when she was only 24.

“There went the high heels and pencil skirts,” she quipped with a laugh, almost 30 years later.

A healthy dose of humor

Salinas hasn’t come by this sense of humor easily. Over the past five years especially, she has dealt with increasing depression and less than ideal medical treatment — factors creating a profound despair that caused her to isolate herself from friends and family.

"I needed a purpose. I thought my life was over."

Debulyn Salinas

“I needed a purpose,” she explained, her voice cracking a bit. “I thought my life was over.”

As fate would have it, she received a mailer for the USC Optimal Living program in November. She mentions that she now keeps this mailer in her Bible and asserts “it’s going to stay there.”

Co-sponsored by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the USC Mrs. T.H. Chan Division of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy and the USC Division of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy, the program works with MS patients from all walks of life who are recruited by the MS Society. Salinas was selected for the spring 2016 class.

Assistant professor of clinical occupational therapy Ashley Uyeshiro Simon ’08, MA ’10, OTD ’11 explains that a main tenet of the program is Lifestyle Redesign, a treatment technique focused on helping patients improve daily habits and routines to improve their overall health outcomes.

“The most beautiful part of this model is that the participant is not just a passive recipient of therapy,” Uyeshiro Simon said. “We emphasize their role as a teacher and encourage them to teach the students what it is like to live with MS on a daily basis — the types of physical, emotional and occupational problems that they encounter.”

Conserving energy

Throughout the program, class members are paired with current USC Chan students who then work together on a variety of topics such as occupational roles and engagement, stress management and dealing with social isolation, home evaluations and safety/fall risk prevention; and self-advocacy and assertiveness.

Salinas was paired with Christina Huynh MA ’16 for a group module focused on energy conservation and fatigue management in which participants were taught how to recognize their own signs of fatigue and use different skills to conserve energy. All class modules encourage participants to analyze their own habits and routines, then implement positive changes from an arsenal of techniques at their disposal.

“This program is so amazing because it is so holistic,” Huynh said. “The participants receive OT and PT services and learn about other topics like Tai Chi, expressive journaling and nutrition.”

Hope ahead

Since participating this spring, Salinas has a newfound hope about her life.

“The therapists cared and believed in me, but they also had faith that things were going to get better,” Salinas said. “That overrode all the negativity I had been carrying around for the last five years.”

Uyeshiro Simon stresses that Salinas never hesitated to express her gratitude to the many faculty members involved. This gratitude seems to be shared by all in the program — patients, students and faculty alike.

“I taught Debulyn skills such as how to be safer in her home, to conserve energy and to manage stress, but what she taught me was bigger than that,” Huynh said. “She really showed me the importance of human connection, compassion and staying positive. And for that I am so thankful.”

Salinas will continue to project her gratitude in the future. During the photo shoot, it’s visible on her face.

“Each morning, I wake up, and even if I have nowhere to go, I still get dressed as if I’m going somewhere,” she said. “I have a large collection of pajamas; now I’m not using them as much. I want to experience life, I want to be able to say, ‘I’m in!’”

University of Southern California

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Down but not out with multiple sclerosis

Fighting ALS with mind, hand, and heart

When Bobby Forster proposed to his girlfriend, they were both covered in beads and face paint, among the hordes at Mardi Gras in New Orleans. He dropped to one knee; she said yes. In an instant, he was on his feet, wrapping his arms around her. They kissed for so long the revelers, hooting for them, ran out of breath.

That was less than two years ago. A few months prior he had been diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, an affliction that methodically destroys the nerves that control your muscles. His life has flashed by since then: an engagement; a wedding; a series of fundraisers; advocacy work — and a rapid degeneration of his body’s ability to move and to speak. Forster is 27 years old.

Enter Pison Technology, an MIT startup with four members, including Forster. On a recent evening, the team gathered to advance a novel idea that, if successful, will help people with ALS engage with the world around them. Kneeling by Forster’s wheelchair, David Cipoletta, a robotics engineer, placed electrodes along his right arm, counted to three, and told him to flex. Forster’s arm remained motionless — but on a nearby laptop, waves on the screen tracked electrical signals in his muscles. When he thought about raising his forearm, the waves shot upward.

“Yes, I see it. We’re getting there,” said Dexter Ang '05, a student at the MIT Sloan School of Management and a graduate in mechanical engineering. It was Ang’s idea, inspired by a remark made by his mother, to tap into the nerves of people with ALS using electromyography, or EMG, sensors and create a device that can translate those nerve signals into operational commands.

In practice, it would look like this: People with ALS wear wireless electrode pads on either their jaws, biceps, or thighs. The pads, which are equipped with small sensors, signal a device that is widely compatible with assistive and other technology. The new equipment — wireless and wearable — enables people with ALS to control an array of things, such as a computer, a phone, or a wheelchair.

Driven by this possibility, Ang assembled the startup team, which along with Forster and Cipoletta, includes Wenxin Feng, a PhD student in human-computer interaction at Boston University. From the outset, the project has drawn support.

Most recently, Pison Technology received $25,000 from the MIT Sandbox Innovation Fund Program. Influential MIT alum Brian Rosnov, head of the Philips Digital Accelerator in Cambridge, Massachusetts, a founding corporate sponsor of Sandbox, is actively mentoring the team.

“What I see in Dexter is a new hope for people with ALS around the world,” says Rosnov. The startup is on the right track, he said, with promising early results and feedback. Ang has drawn on pivotal resources, such as Sandbox, with amazing results. “Dexter has rallied the entire community around the needs of ALS families and his mission,” he says.

Pursuit of Ang’s vision, however, will require significantly more funding, along with a great deal of tenacity. He is ready. It’s a fight he takes personally.

The cost of communicating

Last fall, Ang lost his mother to ALS. He witnessed her try, and fail, to communicate using eye-tracking technology, which employs sensors that enable a device to follow exactly where a user is looking. Only about 10 percent of people living with ALS have the stamina and patience to take advantage of it. Forster is among them. He uses the technology to turn his gaze into words. It is painstaking work. At eight words per minute, he is faster than most. A male voice with an Australian accent (reminiscent of Crocodile Dundee, a testament to Forster’s intact sense of humor), delivers his messages with panache. Such systems not only make Herculean demands on their users, they cost about $17,000 and are often not covered by insurance. Forster’s was donated to him by a nonprofit. Like so many others, he could not have afforded it otherwise.

Ang wants to find a better way. He uprooted his life to do so. He left behind Chicago, the city he adopted after graduation and before his mother grew ill, and made a clear-cut decision. Instead of returning to the world of high-frequency trading, where he used complex algorithms to analyze markets and earn a high paycheck, Ang came back to MIT to learn more, live on his savings, and launch a startup that he hopes will make a difference in the world — or, to be more precise, draw people who are imprisoned by ALS back into it.

The advance he envisions holds vast potential. Patient information about the strength of their nerves and muscles could be tracked to a degree that was previously impossible. Neurologists could monitor how nerves are being affected, and better watch for disease progression. Just as important as its clinical applications and the freedom it could give to patients, Ang says, is its potential availability. At under $500, it will remove a major hurdle.

“We are going to develop the most effective technology possible. We want every person diagnosed with ALS to receive it from their neurologist at the time of diagnosis and, in essence, be told: ‘Here is something that can help you from the beginning until the end,’” said Ang.

One in every 300 men and 1 in every 800 women in the U.S. will be diagnosed with this affliction, according to the ALS Association. Life expectancy after diagnosis is two to five years. These are statistics that Casey Forster has memorized, a sliver of the information she has absorbed since her husband was diagnosed. The cruelty of the disease is stunning.

Now as she watches members of the startup team bustle around Forster, she lets out a sigh. “A year ago, Bobby could still walk and talk. He walked me down the aisle,” says Casey.

Looking over at Ang as he speaks softly to Forster, she shakes her head. Ang’s mother died shortly before they met within the ALS community, which is small and tight. “If I lost Bobby, I don’t know if I could put myself right back into this environment with other ALS patients. Especially not right away,” she says. “But Dexter has gone all in. His connection to the community is incredible. His drive to help, to make a breakthrough, is tireless.”

"Step 2 out of 300"

In this particular meeting, the startup team is addressing an early-stage problem: proof of concept. Few, if any, in the medical field have studied surface EMG signals in people with ALS. There has been no apparent reason to do so. So, the first challenge is to consistently demonstrate the reliability of such signals.

“Now flex. Good. See it?” Ang says, a common refrain for nearly three hours. Neither Ang, nor Forster, nor the rest of the team, appear to notice the time. Their test results are proving a cause for optimism, but they are far from definitive. When Forster is cued, the waves on screen often show a surge of electrical activity, but not always.

“Wait, look at that,” Ang says, two hours in — “see how the reading is changing. Bobby, are you doing something different?” Using the eye-tracking screen, Forster declares he is making a fist rather than flexing his arm.

“Let’s think about it. Let’s work the problem,” Ang says with excitement. “That motion requires significant muscle activity — you’re activating more nerves. A lot more neurons. Let’s focus on that.”

Forster is looking from key to key on the screen before him. Ang waits patiently. “I am going to read up on the best pathways for the next time we meet,” Forster writes.

One challenge down, hundreds to go. “We are at step 2 out of 300 — that’s how I think about it,” Ang says. “This is a really hard problem. If this journey wasn’t worth it, we wouldn’t be doing it. But it is.”

Listening intently, Forster uses his eye-tracking technology to type out: “What we are doing will significantly change the lives of people living with ALS.”

Ang has set an ambitious timeline for the team. Over the next two months, they hope to raise $300,000 for research and development, which marks only a fraction of what they will need over time. By October, they aim to have a working prototype to present to the ALS Association. “That’s our first major milestone,” says Ang. “I know we have the right team. If anyone is going to build this, it’s going to be us.”

The urgency is plain to Casey. She wants to take in all that her husband has to share. For now, she sits nearby, and runs her fingers along the beads of a costume necklace. It features a perfectly gaudy plastic pendant that reads, in green on neon yellow, “Will you marry me?” A playful gift from Forster from that proposal at Mardi Gras.

She tells the engagement story and, as she does, Forster’s eyes move to her. His concentration — flex, hold, stop — breaks, and it takes the team a minute to see why. His mind is with his wife. Now she is describing when they first met, and how much prodding it took, on her part, before Forster asked for a date.

As she begins to share another memory, the familiar digital Australian voice announces: “Sorry, you know I have no game.” This is clearly a joke between them, and she smiles.

Ang says that Pison Technology is operating on a premise so basic to life that it’s rarely articulated: human communication matters. All people with ALS, not just a fraction, need a means to connect. The practical reasons for this are clear and the emotional ones, they must be felt.

MIT

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Fighting ALS with mind, hand, and heart

Retailers set to become more dementia friendly

Alzheimers.org: 850,000 people live with dementia in the UK, and research * carried out by the charity has shown that 8 out of 10 of those with the condition list shopping as their favourite activity.

However, 63 per cent of people surveyed don’t think that shops are doing enough to help people with dementia and one in four people with dementia have given up shopping since being diagnosed. Many cite difficulties with shopping including finding their way around stores, picking up the wrong items, problems at the checkout and worries about staff and other shoppers’ reactions. Getting out and about and performing everyday tasks like shopping are important because people with dementia want to live well within their own communities and remain independent for as long as possible.

Alzheimer’s Society has launched 'Becoming a dementia friendly retailer, a practical guide' at an exclusive industry event attended by retail leaders, including senior representatives from Sainsbury’s, East of England Cooperative, British Council of Shopping Centres and Tesco.

The guide is aimed at a wide range of retailers from corner-shop owners to retail park managers in a bid to help them improve the shopping experience for people with dementia.

Alzheimer’s Society’s Dementia Friendly Communities initiative aims to ensure people with dementia remain active members of their communities, the guide contains information about how dementia affects people’s experience of shopping. It is also packed with practical tips on how retailers can best support customers with dementia while they shop - from staff signing up to become Dementia Friends to making store layouts more accessible.

The guide sets out four commitments that retailers can make for customers with dementia and their carers:

  • Improve staff awareness and understanding of dementia
  • Review the physical environment of the store/premises
  • Support staff who develop dementia or care for a person with dementia
  • Support the local community

British Geriatrics Society

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Retailers set to become more dementia friendly

A virtual brain helps decrypt epilepsy

Researchers at CNRS, INSERM, Aix-Marseille University and AP-HM have just created a virtual brain that can reconstitute the brain of a person affected by epilepsy for the first time. From this work we understand better how the disease works and can also better prepare for surgery. These results are published in Neuroimage, on July 28, 2016.

Worldwide, one percent of the population suffers from epilepsy. The disease affects individuals differently, so personalized diagnosis and treatment are important. Currently we have few ways to understand the pathology's mechanisms of action, and mainly use visual interpretation of an MRI and electroencephalogram. This is especially difficult because 50% of patients do not present anomalies visible in MRI, so the cause of their epilepsy is unknown.

Researchers have succeeded for the first time in developing a personalized virtual brain, by designing a base "template" and adding individual patient information, such as the specific way the brain's regions are organized and connected in each individual. Mathematical models that cause cerebral activity can be tested on the virtual brain. In this way, scientists have been able to reproduce the place where epilepsy seizures initiate and how they propagate. This brain therefore has real value in predicting how seizures occur in each patient, which could lead to much more precise diagnosis.

Moreover, 30% of epileptic patients do not respond to drugs, so their only hope remains surgery. This is effective if the surgeon has good indications of where to operate. The virtual brain gives surgeons a virtual "platform." In this way they can determine where to operate while avoiding invasive procedures, and especially prepare for the operation by testing different surgical possibilities, seeing which would be most effective and what the consequences would be, something that is obviously impossible to do on the patient.

In the long run, the team's goal is to provide personalized medicine for the brain, by offering virtual, tailored, therapeutic solutions that are specific for each patient. The researchers are currently working on clinical trials to demonstrate the predictive value of their discovery. This technology is also being tested on other pathologies that affect the brain, such as strokes, Alzheimer's, degenerative neurological diseases, and multiple sclerosis.

This work involves researchers at the Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes (INSERM/AMU), the Centre de Résonance Magnétique Biologique et Médicale (CNRS/AMU/AP-HM), the Département Epileptologie et du Département Neurophysiologie Clinique at AP-HM, and the Epilepsy Center of Cleveland. It was done in the Fédération Hospitalo-Universitaire Epinext (www.epinext.org).

cerveau virtuel

© INS UMR1106 INSERM/AMU.

The Virtual Brain: reconstruction of brain regions and where they are connected. The green cubes indicate the center of brain regions that are connected.


Patient virtuel

© INS UMR1106 INSERM/AMU.

The Virtual Epileptic Patient: brain regions and their connections are rebuilt by computer. Digital simulations generate an electric signal similar to that generated by the brain during seizures. These simulations allow digital testing of new therapeutic strategies.


Bibliography:

The Virtual Epileptic Patient: individualized whole-brain models of epilepsy spread. Jirsa VK, Proix T, Perdikis D, Woodman MM, Wang H, Gonzalez-Martinez J, Bernard C, Bénar C, Guye M, Chauvel P, Bartolomei F. Neuroimage, July 28, 2016.
doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2016.04.049
View web site

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A virtual brain helps decrypt epilepsy

Two research discoveries offer hope for managing ovarian cancer

Ovarian cancer is the fifth most common cancer for women in the UK, with about 7100 new cases each year. However, it can be difficult to diagnose because it grows virtually unseen into the abdominal cavity. If detected early enough, ovarian cancer responds well to chemotherapy. However, once it metastasizes (spreads) it becomes resistant to chemotherapy and far more likely to kill.

"Early treatment hugely improves the odds for patients, so early detection is essential."

Professor Ahmed Ahmed, University of Oxford

In their first paper, in the online journal EBioMedicine, the Oxford team show that levels of a protein called SOX2 are much higher in the fallopian tubes of people with ovarian cancer and also in some people who are at high risk of developing ovarian cancer such as those with inherited mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. 

Professor Ahmed Ahmed, from the MRC Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine at Oxford University, said: 'Ovarian cancer can be undetectable for up to four years and only a third of people with the cancer get an early diagnosis. A test for SOX2 could not only help detect cancers early but in some cases would enable us to detect a tumour before it becomes cancerous. Early treatment hugely improves the odds for patients, so early detection is essential. However, there is still a lot of work to be done because detecting SOX2 in the fallopian tubes is not an easy task.'

In the second paper, in Cancer Cell, the team identified an enzyme that enables ovarian cancer to spread. When ovarian cancer spreads, it usually does so to the omentum, an apron of fatty tissue covering the small intestine. The most common cause of death in ovarian cancer patients is malnutrition as the growing cancer obstructs the intestines.

Professor Ahmed explained: 'The omentum is rich in adipocytes – fat cells – and previous research found that the free fatty acids produced by these cells increase the spread of cancer.

'However, we have found that ovarian cancer could only proliferate – grow – in the presence of an enzyme called SIK2, which has a role in 'burning' fat to produce energy that is needed by the cancer cells to survive in the omentum. 

'We continued this study of SIK2 and found that levels of the enzyme were higher in secondary tumours in the omentum than in the related primary tumours in the ovaries.'

"SIK2 is an important target for future treatments because it provides cancer cells with energy and also drives their increase in number."

Professor Ahmed Ahmed, University of Oxford

A series of experiments confirmed that SIK2 not only played a key role in growing ovarian tumours, but in the metastasis that spreads them to the omentum, where they become so much more deadly. Further experiments revealed the processes, know to medical researchers as ‘pathways’, involving SIK2 that support the development and spread of ovarian cancer.

Professor Ahmed said: 'SIK2 is an important target for future treatments because it provides cancer cells with energy and also drives their increase in number. Our experiments showed that suppressing SIK2 disrupted these pathways, which in the human body would reduce the possibility of cancer cells spreading and 'coming back'.'

Lord Maurice Saatchi, who campaigns for better access to cancer treatment, said: 'By explaining these very detailed processes, the Oxford team are providing maps for researchers working on ways to treat and defeat cancer. The more we understand, the closer we come to beating not just ovarian cancer, but all types of cancer.'

Katherine Taylor, Chief Executive at research charity Ovarian Cancer Action, one of the study's funders, said: 'We need to save the lives of more women by making ovarian cancer treatment more effective. There has been little progress in ovarian cancer treatment in the past 30 years so these findings are promising, and have provided two areas of focus for scientists working on ovarian cancer. Early detection and effective treatment are vital, and these discoveries will hopefully being us closer to both.'

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Two research discoveries offer hope for managing ovarian cancer

jeudi 28 juillet 2016

Harvesting seaweed to make skin from the sea

Researchers from the South Coast of NSW are hoping to develop new treatments for burns and wounds, by using the most plentiful resource at their fingertips – the sea.

The ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science (ACES) at the University of Wollongong and Venus Shell Systems (VSS) have started a collaborative research project to fast-track the development and commercialisation of the seaweed wound healing materials.

The process starts with unique Aussie seaweed, which is harvested to extract valuable molecules.

VSS Director Dr Pia Winberg said the seaweed molecules are very similar to the natural molecular matrix that supports and repairs human skin cells.

“This is in part because the salty environment in the sea is similar to than in humans, but also because of the unique chemical structure of the seaweed,” Dr Winberg said.

From there, high-tech processing and fabrication techniques at ACES, including a new customised 3D printer in development, will be used to turn the molecules into medical treatments, with artificial skin a potential end product to treat burns.

ACES Director Professor Gordon Wallace said he encourages regional manufacturers to take advantage of the Centre’s knowledge and expertise in areas such as materials processing and fabrication techniques including 3D printing.

“Local industry can realise global opportunities by tapping into the internationally recognised and networked research organisations,” Professor Wallace said.

This research was supported under Australian Research Council's Centres of Excellence funding scheme.


University of Wollongong

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Research linking cancer drugs to overcoming drug-resistant malaria puts team in contention for Eureka Prize

The team, led by Professor Leann Tilley, is in the running for the Infectious Diseases Research prize for its work on resistance to artemisinin, the most commonly used frontline malaria treatment.

Professor Tilley said artemisinin resistance is looming as a major global health crisis, with the World Health Organisation confirming multi-drug resistance in five countries: Thailand, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam and Cambodia.

“Malaria already kills nearly half a million children each year,” Professor Tilley said.

“As multi-drug resistance spreads, we risk wiping out the gains the world has made in fighting the disease, with potentially catastrophic results for children living in South-East Asia — as well as Africa, where the disease is endemic.”

The multidisciplinary team draws together experts from the University’s Bio21 Molecular Science and Biotechnology Institute, School of Mathematics and Statistics and School of Population and Global Health to understand how malaria parasites become resistant:

  • Professor Tilley — the biochemistry and cell biology of malaria

  • Dr Nick Klonis — computational biology

  • Associate Professor Julie Simpson — synthesising and translating

    mathematical modelling data

  • Associate Professor James McCaw — mathematical biology

Artemisinin damages proteins and the team found that resistant parasites are better at repairing the damage. They then homed in on proteasomes — enzymes that act as disposal units within cells. When this recycling function is blocked, the efficacy of artemisinins against malaria parasite is restored.

Some cancer drugs also target proteasomes to stop cancers spreading. “We’ve found that some cancer drugs already on the market have excellent antimalarial activity and are highly effective in combination with artemisinin,” Professor Tilley said.

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Hybrid treatment hunts down and kills leukemia cells

SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — Researchers at UC Davis and Ionis Pharmaceuticals have developed a hybrid treatment that harnesses a monoclonal antibody to deliver antisense DNA to acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells and that may lead to less toxic treatments for the disease.

The study, published in the journal Molecular Medicine, demonstrated that once delivered, the therapeutic DNA reduced levels of MXD3, a protein that helps cancer cells survive. This novel conjugate therapy showed great promise in animal models, destroying ALL cells while limiting other damage.

“We’ve shown, for the first time, that anti-CD22 antibody-antisense conjugates are a potential therapeutic agent for ALL,” said Noriko Satake, associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics at UC Davis. “This could be a new type of treatment that kills leukemia cells with few side effects.”

ALL is the most common type of childhood cancer. It is a disease in which the bone marrow makes too many immature lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell. While most children survive ALL, many patients suffer late- or long-term side effects from treatment, which may include heart problems, growth and development delays, secondary cancers and infertility.

Antisense oligonucleotides are single strands of DNA that can bind to messenger RNA, preventing it from making a protein. While antisense technology has long shown therapeutic potential, getting the genetic material inside target cells has been a problem.

In the study, researchers attached antisense DNA that inhibits the MXD3 protein to an antibody that binds to CD22, a protein receptor expressed almost exclusively in ALL cells and normal B cells.

Once the antibody binds to CD22, the conjugate is drawn inside the leukemia cell, allowing the antisense molecule to prevent MXD3 production. Without this anti-apoptotic protein, ALL cells are more prone to cell death.

The hybrid treatment was effective against ALL cell lines in vitro and primary (patient-derived) ALL cells in a xenograft mouse model. Animals that received the hybrid therapy survived significantly longer than those in the control group.

Designed to be selective, the treatment only targets cells that express CD22. While it does attack healthy B cells, the therapy is expected to leave blood stem cells and other tissues unscathed.

“You really don’t want to destroy hematopoietic stem cells because then you have to do a stem cell transplant, which is an extremely intensive therapy,” noted Satake. “Our novel conjugate is designed so that it does not harm hair, eyes, heart, kidneys or other types of cells.”

While the study shows the conjugate knocked down MXD3, researchers still have to figure out how this was accomplished. In addition, they will investigate combining this treatment with other therapies. Because it hastens cell death, the conjugate could make traditional chemotherapies more effective. In addition, the approach might work against other cancers.

"You can see this as proof of principle,” Satake said. “You could switch the target and substitute the antibody, which could be used to treat other cancers or even other diseases.”

Other authors included Connie Duong, Sakiko Yoshida, Cathy Chen, Yueju Li, Laurel Beckett, Jong Chung, Jan Nolta, Nitin Nitin and Joseph Tuscano, all of UC Davis, and Michael Oestergaard, Rachael Peralta, Shuling Guo and Punit Seth at Ionis Pharmaceuticals.

This research was supported by The Hartwell Foundation, Keaton Rafael Memorial Foundation, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine and the National Institutes of Health (grants UL1 418 TR000002, R01GM099688, CTSC-MCRTP) and UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center Support Grant P30CA093373.

To learn more about the UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center, visit http://ift.tt/1qCQ3X3.

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A Zika treatment could already be on the market

A drug to treat Zika virus infections could already exist and be available on the market, according to the latest research from scientists at The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.

A team of researchers, led by Dr. Mariano A. Garcia-Blanco, a professor and chair of the biochemistry and molecular biology department at UTMB, and Shelton S. Bradrick, an assistant professor in the department, tested over 770 different U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved therapeutics and found that more than 20 of those decreased Zika virus. Their findings are in the August edition of Cell Host & Microbe.

“We were driven by the lack of any available treatment options when confronted with severe Zika infections, specifically in pregnancy,” Garcia-Blanco said. “We decided to look for treatment opportunities among FDA-approved drugs.”

The team is recommending that some of the drugs found to be effective against Zika virus be considered for testing in clinical studies. Among the effective therapeutics in the study were drugs used to treat a wide range of ailments and diseases including bacterial and parasitic infections, cancers and depression.

“Given that viruses highjack many of our own cellular processes, and these are targets of known drugs, this approach seemed reasonable,” said Nicholas Barrows, the first author of the study.

First isolated in 1947 in Uganda, Zika virus emerged as a global concern in 2007 with a series of outbreaks across the Pacific followed by a dramatic spread in the Americas in 2014 and 2015. Declared a global health emergency by the World Health Organization, researchers are now working to understand many facets of the virus including the potential neurological complications those infected could suffer and the microcephaly related birth defects some babies have experienced.

There are no approved vaccines or specific therapies available yet. Researchers, including some at UTMB, are working on possible vaccines but it could still take some time before they are ready for clinical trials.

Meanwhile, many of the drugs shown to be effective in the study have already been tested and approved for human use.

“Multiple drugs that inhibit Zika virus in our studies have been used previously during pregnancy to treat other diseases and have been used safely in the U.S. and abroad,” Bradrick said.

To find the effective drugs the researchers tested 774 FDA-approved drugs using a variety of human cell types, including human neural stem cells and primary amnion epithelial cells.

“Although it can be difficult to extrapolate from in vitro experiments to efficacy on people, it is promising that our testing in primary human cells discovered several drugs with anti-Zika virus activity,” Garcia-Blanco said.

Other authors of this study include, Rafael K. Campos, Steven Powell, K. Reddisiva Prasanth, Geraldine Schott-Lerner, Ruben Soto-Acosta, Gaddiel Galarza-Muñoz, Erica L. McGrath, Rheanna Urrabaz-Garza, Junling Gao, Ping Wu, Ramkumar Menon, George Saade, Ildefonso Fernandez-Salas, Shannan L. Rossi, Nikos Vasilakis, and Andrew Routh. This work was supported by funds from The University of Texas Medical Branch, a University of Texas System STARs Award, National Institutes of Health RO1 and R24 grants, a National Institutes of Health- National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke fellowship, the Chief Research Office at UTMB, and the John S. Dunn Foundation. Dr. Garcia-Blanco is also Professor in the Programme for Emerging Infectious Diseases, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore.

The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.

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Insurance, distance to care can be barriers to breast reconstruction

Researchers say breast reconstruction can help with self-esteem, sexuality and body image after cancer treatment. But a UNC Lineberger study led by Michelle Roughton, MD, has found that the type of insurance a woman has as well as distance to a plastic surgeon's office can be barriers to the procedure.

Media Contact: Laura Oleniacz, 919-445-4219, [email protected]

CHAPEL HILL – Women were less likely to have breast reconstruction surgery after mastectomy if they had Medicaid or Medicare rather than private insurance or if they lived 10 or more miles from a plastic surgeon’s office, a University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center study has found.

Researchers said the findings, published in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, highlight additional barriers to breast reconstruction alongside other obstacles that have been identified including race, socioeconomic class and age. The new data are concerning, researchers said, as they say the procedure can help with self-esteem, sexuality and body image after cancer treatment.

“We know that breast cancer affects not only the physical wellbeing of the patient, but also her psychosocial wellbeing, and we know that breast reconstruction can help address those issues,” said the study’s first author Michelle Roughton, MD, an assistant professor of surgery and the program director for the UNC School of Medicine Section of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. “These findings highlight the fact that there are more barriers to breast reconstruction access than we previously recognized.”

In the study, researchers analyzed insurance claims data for 5,381 women in North Carolina diagnosed with breast cancer between 2003 and 2006. The study included women with Medicaid, Medicare, or private insurance health plans, who had a mastectomy within six months of diagnosis and who continued to maintain their insurance coverage for at least two years after the procedure. Twenty percent of women included in the study chose breast reconstruction.

The study drew upon UNC Lineberger’s Integrated Cancer Information Surveillance System (ICISS), a research tool that links to population and clinical data to health claims data for about 5.5 million people insured by Medicare, Medicaid, or private insurance policies.

According to the unadjusted data, they found that 56 percent of women with private insurance received breast reconstruction, compared with 10 percent of women with Medicare, or 11 percent of those with Medicaid. The study found after adjusting for related patient factors such as age or stage of disease, Medicare recipients had 42 percent lower odds of receiving breast reconstruction than women with private insurance, and women with Medicaid had 76 percent lower odds. 

“Even when you control for age, the type of insurance patients had was still an independent predictor of whether patients received breast reconstruction,” Roughton said.

By federal law, group health plans that pay for mastectomy must also cover breast prosthetics and reconstructive procedures. Medicare does cover the procedure, while Medicaid coverage can vary by state. Roughton said one factor affecting access to reconstruction may be that not all surgeons accept all types of insurance for the procedure.

“As doctors working for the state’s flagship cancer hospital, we aim to provide breast reconstruction to every woman who desires it despite distance and payer,” Roughton said.

Distance to the nearest plastic surgeon was also predictive of whether women underwent reconstruction. The study found that women living 20 or more miles away had 27 percent lower odds of receiving breast reconstruction compared to women living within 10 miles of a surgeon. Women living 10 to 20 miles away from the nearest surgeon had 22 percent lower odds.

The study also found that minority women had 50 percent lower odds of receiving reconstruction compared to non-Hispanic whites, and, consistent with previous studies, they found that increasing age at diagnosis, advanced cancer stage, and radiation treatment also decreased odds.

Roughton said she has tried to overcome distance obstacles for her patients by using telemedicine for initial consultations, and by using text and email to help assess patients after the operation.

The study was supported by the University Cancer Research Fund.

In addition to Roughton, other authors include: Paul DiEgidio, MD, of the UNC School of Medicine; Lei Zhou, MSPH, of UNC Lineberger; Karyn Stitzenberg, MD, MPH, of the UNC School of Medicine; and Anne Marie Meyer, PhD, of UNC Lineberger and the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health.

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Why working the night shift can pose a cancer risk

A handful of large studies of cancer risk factors have found that working the night shift, as nearly 15 percent of Americans do, boosts the chances of developing cancer. MIT biologists have now found a link that may explain this heightened risk.

In humans and most other organisms, a circadian clock governed by light regulates the timing of key aspects of human physiology, by controlling cellular activities such as metabolism and division. In a study of mice, the MIT team found that two of the genes that control cells’ circadian rhythms also function as tumor suppressors.

Loss of these tumor suppressors, either through gene deletion or disruption of the normal light/dark cycle, allows tumors to become more aggressive.

“It doesn’t matter how you disrupt the clock — both ways, loss of it seems to drive tumorigenesis,” says Thales Papagiannakopoulos, a former postdoc at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and the lead author of the study, which appears in the July 28 issue of Cell Metabolism.

Tyler Jacks, director of the Koch Institute and the David H. Koch Professor of Biology, is the paper’s senior author.

Breaking the circadian clock

In humans, the central circadian clock is located in the brain’s suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), which receives information about light levels from the retina. The SCN communicates this information to cells in the body through hormones and other signaling molecules.

Within cells, a gene called Bmal1 is responsible for turning on other genes that control circadian activities, including one called Per2. Levels of the proteins encoded by these genes normally oscillate throughout the day, but when normal light/dark cycles are disrupted, those oscillations disappear.

“Cells need the light cue, which is like a reset button for the clock. When you lose that cue, you lose the normal rhythms in every cell in your body,” says Papagiannakopoulos, who is now an assistant professor of pathology at New York University School of Medicine.

He and his colleagues set out to investigate a possible link between cancer and these genes, in mice that are genetically engineered to develop a type of lung cancer known as non-small cell lung cancer.

They began by exposing the mice to two different light/dark schedules. One group of mice lived with a normal schedule of 12 hours of light followed by 12 hours of darkness, while the other mice went onto a “jet lag” schedule: Every two to three days, they were exposed to an additional eight hours of light. This mimics the biological clock disruption that occurs when humans work night shifts or travel through multiple time zones.

Under the jet lag scenario, tumors grew faster and were more aggressive than those in the mice living with a normal light/dark schedule.

In their next set of experiments, the researchers kept the mice on a normal light/dark schedule but knocked out the genes for Bmal1 and Per2. In those mice, tumors grew faster, just as they did under the jet lag scenario.

“If you disrupt these genes in every cell of the body, the light cues that you normally receive do not apply,” Papagiannakopoulos says. “It’s a way of taking a molecular hammer and just breaking this clock.”

Out-of-control growth

Bmal1 and Per2 control the timing of production of a cancer-promoting protein known as c-myc, so when those genes are disrupted, c-myc begins to accumulate, spurring an increase in cell metabolism and proliferation.

“C-myc turns on this program that makes cells produce more metabolites, more nutrients, more building blocks for new cells. It’s essential for the ability of cells to proliferate,” Papagiannakopoulos says.

Joseph Takahashi, chair of the Department of Neuroscience at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, says the study offers an important link between cancer and circadian clock dysfunction.

“This work is very clear and definitive,” says Takahashi, who was not involved in the research. “That’s what we need to really show that the circadian clock may have implications for cancer and tumor progression.”

The MIT researchers also analyzed human lung tumor samples and found much lower levels of Bmal1 and Per2 gene expression, as well as other key circadian clock genes, in the tumors than in normal lung tissue from the same patients. The most aggressive tumors had even lower levels of those genes.

Papagiannakopoulos is now investigating whether cancer cells that have a broken clock, for example through loss of Bmal1 and Per2, have any weaknesses that could be exploited as potential drug targets. He also plans to study how circadian disruptions affect other types of cancers, including pancreatic cancer.

The research was funded by a National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Core Grant, the Lung Cancer Research Foundation, and the Koch Institute Frontier Fund.

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Scientists discover new therapeutic target for lung cancer driven by KRAS

DALLAS – UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers have identified a new way to target lung cancer through the KRAS gene, one of the most commonly mutated genes in human cancer and one researchers have so far had difficulty targeting successfully.

Researchers studying the underlying biology of KRAS in lung cancer determined that activity resulting from the ACSL3 gene is essential for these lung cancer cells to survive, and that suppressing ACSL3 causes these lung cancer cells to die.

The findings are significant because genetic mutations of KRAS occur in about 30 percent of lung cancer cases, and they are associated with aggressive, therapy-resistant disease with a poor prognosis. Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the U.S., according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

Pier Paolo Scaglioni, M.D., and team

UT Southwestern researchers (left to right) Dr. Mahesh Padanad, Dr. Smita Rindhe, Dr. Pier Paolo Scaglioni, and Dr. Margherita Melegari have found a new way to target lung cancer through the KRAS gene, one of the most commonly mutated genes in human cancer.

“Despite some recent advances, mutant KRAS remains a very challenging target. There is a dearth of treatment options for tumors initiated by this gene,” said senior author Dr. Pier Paolo Scaglioni, Associate Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Hematology and Oncology, and a member of the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The KRAS gene (Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog), produces proteins called K-Ras that influence when cells divide. Mutations in K-Ras can result in normal cells dividing uncontrollably and turning cancerous. 

“Mutant KRAS not only promotes the growth of tumors, but also the survival of established lung cancer. Since we have no clinically-relevant effective inhibitors of mutant KRAS at this time, there has been an intense clinical interest in developing a treatment that is proven effective,” said Dr. Scaglioni, who leads the Cancer Signaling Laboratory at the Simmons Cancer Center.

The team found that the enzymatic activity of ACSL3 (Acyl-CoA synthetase long-chain family member 3) is needed for the mutant KRAS gene to promote the formation of lung cancer, and further demonstrated that fatty acids, which are the substrates of ACSL3 enzyme, have a critical role in lung cancer.

“There is an urgent need for discovery of additional targets that inhibit lipid metabolism in cancer cells that could lead to targeted therapies: the discovery of the importance of ACSL3 in lung cancer meets this unmet need,” said Dr. Mahesh S. Padanad, first author and part of the UT Southwestern team, which also includes postdoctoral fellow Dr. Smita Rindhe, and Dr. Margherita Melegari, research associate.

The study, published in Cell Reports, used several complementary approaches, including cell lines, mice, and human patient tumor samples to understand the biological significance of ACSL3 in lung cancer.

The work was supported by the American Cancer Society Research Scholar grant, the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT), UT Southwestern Friends of the Comprehensive Cancer Center, the Gibson Foundation, Texas 4000, the National Cancer Institute, a Welch Foundation Research Grant, the NCI Lung Cancer SPORE grant, and the University of Texas MD Anderson Institutional Tissue Bank. UT Southwestern’s Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) grant from the National Cancer Institute, now in its 18th year, is the largest thoracic oncology effort in the U.S.

Researchers from MD Anderson Cancer Center, and the Department of Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System in California also contributed to the study. UT Southwestern researchers involved in this study include:

  • Dr. Jerry W. Shay, Professor of Cell Biology, who holds The Southland Financial Corporation Distinguished Chair in Geriatrics;
  • Dr. John D. Minna, Professor and Director of the Nancy B. and Jake L. Hamon Center for Therapeutic Oncology Research, and Director of the W.A. “Tex” and Deborah Moncrief Jr. Center for Cancer Genetics, who holds the Max L. Thomas Distinguished Chair in Molecular Pulmonary Oncology, and the Sarah M. and Charles E. Seay Distinguished Chair in Cancer Research;
  • Dr. Jeffrey G. McDonald, Associate Professor of Molecular Genetics and in the Center for Human Nutrition;
  • Dr. Ralph J. DeBerardinis, Chief of the Division of Pediatric Metabolism and Genetics, and Associate Professor with Children’s Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern (CRI), who holds the Joel B. Steinberg, M.D. Chair in Pediatrics.

Additional UT Southwestern researchers involved in this study include: Niranjan Venkateswaran, research associate in Internal Medicine; Dr. Matthew Mitsche, postdoctoral research fellow in the Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth and Development and Department of Molecular Genetics; Dr. Chendong Yang, research scientist at CRI; Dr. Kimberly Batten, computational biologist in Cell Biology; and Dr. Kenneth E. Huffman, research scientist in the Hamon Center for Therapeutic Oncology Research.

UT Southwestern’s Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center is the only NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center in North Texas and one of just 45 NCI-designated comprehensive cancer centers in the nation. Simmons Cancer Center includes 13 major cancer care programs and its education and training programs support and develop the next generation of cancer researchers and clinicians. Simmons Cancer Center is among only 30 U.S. cancer research centers to be designated by the National Cancer Institute as a National Clinical Trials Network Lead Academic Participating Site.

About UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern, one of the premier academic medical centers in the nation, integrates pioneering biomedical research with exceptional clinical care and education. The institution’s faculty includes many distinguished members, including six who have been awarded Nobel Prizes since 1985. The faculty of almost 2,800 is responsible for groundbreaking medical advances and is committed to translating science-driven research quickly to new clinical treatments. UT Southwestern physicians provide medical care in about 80 specialties to more than 100,000 hospitalized patients and oversee approximately 2.2 million outpatient visits a year.

###

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Research note: Yale team identifies common pathway involved in childhood vascular tumors

By Ziba Kashef

Vascular tumors are the most common abnormal growths in infants and children, affecting 5%-10% of newborns. Most are benign infantile hemangiomas (strawberry birthmarks) which spontaneously regress or respond to treatment with beta-blocking drugs. But a small subset of these tumors remain resistant to pharmacological therapies and require surgery. In a new study, a team of Yale-led researchers identified specific mutations in the GNA14 and GNA11 genes within these unresponsive tumors, and revealed that these mutations act via a chain of proteins known as the MAPK pathway. This insight highlights the importance of differentiating vascular tumors in children, because those that do not respond to conventional therapy may require an alternative, targeted approach, said Young Lim, an M.D.-Ph.D. student and author of the study. The findings raise the possibility for developing novel therapeutic approaches for these growths, said Keith Choate, M.D., associate professor of dermatology at Yale School of Medicine. The study was published July 28 in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

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FDA approves Adlyxin to treat type 2 diabetes

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Adlyxin (lixisenatide), a once-daily injection to improve glycemic control (blood sugar levels), along with diet and exercise, in adults with type 2 diabetes.

“The FDA continues to support the development of new drug therapies for diabetes management,” said Mary Thanh Hai Parks, M.D., deputy director, Office of Drug Evaluation II in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Adlyxin will add to the available treatment options to control blood sugar levels for those with type 2.”

Type 2 diabetes affects more than 29 million people and accounts for more than 90 percent of diabetes cases diagnosed in the United States. Over time, high blood sugar levels can increase the risk for serious complications, including heart disease, blindness and nerve and kidney damage.

Adlyxin is a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist, a hormone that helps normalize blood sugar levels. The drug’s safety and effectiveness were evaluated in 10 clinical trials that enrolled 5,400 patients with type 2 diabetes. In these trials, Adlyxin was evaluated both as a standalone therapy and in combination with other FDA-approved diabetic medications, including metformin, sulfonylureas, pioglitazone and basal insulin. Use of Adlyxin improved hemoglobin A1c levels (a measure of blood sugar levels) in these trials.

In addition, more than 6,000 patients with type 2 diabetes at risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease were treated with either Adlyxin or a placebo in a cardiovascular outcomes trial. Use of Adlyxin did not increase the risk of cardiovascular adverse events in these patients.

Adlyxin should not be used to treat people with type 1 diabetes or patients with increased ketones in their blood or urine (diabetic ketoacidosis).

The most common side effects associated with Adlyxin are nausea, vomiting, headache, diarrhea and dizziness. Hypoglycemia in patients treated with both Adlyxin and other antidiabetic drugs such as sulfonylurea and/or basal insulin is another common side effect. In addition, severe hypersensitivity reactions, including anaphylaxis, were reported in clinical trials of Adlyxin.

The FDA is requiring the following post-marketing studies for Adlyxin:

  • Clinical studies to evaluate dosing, efficacy and safety in pediatric patients.
  • A study evaluating the immunogenicity of lixisenatide.

Adlyxin is manufactured by Sanofi-Aventis U.S. LLC, of Bridgewater, New Jersey.

The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency is also responsible for the safety and security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco products.

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Promising Results with New Gene Therapy Approach for Treating Inherited Neurodegenerative Diseases

New Rochelle, NY —A new gene therapy approach designed to replace the enzyme that is deficient in patients with the inherited neurodegenerative disorders Tay-Sachs and Sandhoff diseases successfully delivered the therapeutic gene to the brains of treated mice, restored enzyme function, and extended survival by about 2.5-fold. The implications of these promising results for developing similar gene therapies for use in humans and for targeting additional brain disorders are discussed in two articles published in Human Gene Therapy, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The articles are part of a special issue on CNS disorders and are available free for download on the Human Gene Therapy website until August 26, 2016.

Both studies demonstrate the feasibility and efficacy of gene transfer in preclinical models. The articles are entitled “Novel Vector Design and Hexosaminidase Varieant Enabling Self-Complementary Adeno-Associated Virus for the Treatment of Tay-Sachs Disease,” by Karumuthil-Melethil, et al.; and “Systemic Gene Transfer of a Hexosaminidase Variant Using a scAAV9.47 Vector Corrects GM2 Gangliosidosis in Sandhoff Mice,” by Osmon et al.

Steven Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Jagdeep Walia, Queen's University (Kingston, Canada), led a team of researchers from SickKids and University of Toronto (Canada), New Hope Research Foundation (North Oaks, MN), and University of Manitoba (Winnipeg, Canada), in the successful development of a specialized adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector designed to deliver a gene coding for portions of the alpha and beta subunits of the enzyme that are defective in the Tay-Sachs and Sandhoff mice, respectively. The novel gene transfer vector, administered intravenously, was able to deliver the therapeutic gene to the brain and spinal cord, the targeted site of action.

“This important proof-of-concept study sheds important information on the optimal design of rAAV vectors for this class of disorders,” says Editor-in-Chief Terence R. Flotte, MD, Celia and Isaac Haidak Professor of Medical Education and Dean, Provost, and Executive Deputy Chancellor, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA.

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Promising Results with New Gene Therapy Approach for Treating Inherited Neurodegenerative Diseases

CD4/CD8 Ratio a Predictor of Heart Disease in HIV-Infected Patients

New Rochelle, NY —The ratio of CD4 to CD8 T cells in the blood—a marker of immune system health and associated with mortality risk in the general population—is an independent predictor of coronary heart disease in HIV-infected patients, according to a new study published in AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses website until August 28, 2016.

The article “The CD4/CD8 Ratio is Inversely Associated with Carotid Intima-Media Thickness Progression in Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Patients on Antiretroviral Treatment” demonstrates an inverse correlation between the CD4/CD8 ratio (<1) and progression of carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT), a marker of atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease.

Coauthors Enrique Bernal Morell, José Serrano Cabeza, Ángeles Muñoz, Irene Marín, and Alfredo Cano, Hospital General Universitario Reina Sofia de Murcia, and Mar Masía and Félix Gutiérrez, Hospital General Universitario de Elche, Spain, present the results of the 3-year study that evaluated virally suppressed HIV-infected patients receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART). The researchers measured patients' CD4/CD8 ratio, assessed their cardiovascular risk factors, and determined the degree of subclinical atherosclerosis using cIMT at the beginning of the study and after 3 years.

“The biomarker identified here will allow physicians to identify HIV infected individuals at highest risk to develop atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease early and offer appropriate interventions,” says Thomas Hope, PhD, Editor-in-Chief of AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses and Professor of Cell and Molecular Biology at Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine (Chicago, IL). “This work is critical because aging populations of HIV-infected individuals utilizing effective drug therapy to inhibit HIV are at increased risk for developing heath issues normally observed in much older individuals.”

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CD4/CD8 Ratio a Predictor of Heart Disease in HIV-Infected Patients

New findings provide deeper understanding of the way people with autism use reasoning skills.

University of Bath academics have uncovered findings to suggest that people with autism have a different way of reasoning than those not on the autism spectrum.

So far, 2016 has been a good year for understanding autism. Several television series have either featured autism, and one, The A Word, made autism central to the story. When it comes to understanding autism, researchers at the Centre for Applied Autism Research (CAAR), at the University of Bath, announce new findings that provide insight into the way people with autism reason.

Following the opening of its £30m state-of-the-art Psychology building and the new Centre for Applied Autism Research (CAAR), leading academics at the University of Bath have announced research findings that suggest people with autism prefer ‘deliberative’ reasoning over reasoning with intuition.

The ‘Dual Process Theory of Autism’ applies the theory of two key ways of reasoning to account for the strengths and difficulties associated with autism. Within psychology, it is argued that people typically have both a rapid, intuitive style of reasoning as well as a slower, deliberative style of reasoning. The Dual Process Theory of Autism proposes that people with autism can be characterised as being dominated by slower, deliberative processing.

Research by the University of Bath group led by Dr Mark Brosnan and Dr Chris Ashwin into the profiles of 97 people with higher levels of autism traits or diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), found that these people show a consistent bias towards deliberative reasoning and potentially away from intuition.

Marcus Lewton, a doctoral researcher on the project, said: ‘Deliberative reasoning is a uniquely human attribute, and central to many decision-making situations. For many activities, a domination of deliberative processing is advantageous’.

Autism is characterised by difficulties in social interaction and communication, which often occur in a rapidly-changing environment. People typically tend to rely a great deal more on intuitions in situations requiring fast social or emotional responses. Within these social situations, relying on slower, deliberative processing may explain some of the difficulties experienced by people with autism.

Dr. Chris Ashwin, CAAR Deputy Director (Research), said: ‘Whilst rapid, intuitive processing can be advantageous in social situations, it can also be prone to bias and errors. This research suggests that people with autism are best characterised as ‘unbiased’, and less prone to errors in situations where deliberative processing is appropriate’.

This account characterises autism as a bias in the reasoning processes that are in the general population, which may suggest that a great deal of research into intuitive and deliberative processing can be applied to autism research.

Dr Mark Brosnan, CAAR Director, said: ‘We do not yet know whether intuitive processing is absent in people with autism, or intact but being dominated by deliberative processing. The fascinating possibility exists that people with autism are using rapid, intuitive processing in other (non-social) situations’.

University of Bath

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New findings provide deeper understanding of the way people with autism use reasoning skills.

ACP reminds adults to discuss vaccinations they may need with their internist

ACP recognizes National Immunization Awareness Month

Philadelphia -- To emphasize the importance of immunizations throughout life -- and to help remind adults that they need vaccines, too -- the American College of Physicians is recognizing August as National Immunization Awareness Month.

“Immunizations guard against serious health problems, hospitalization, and even death,” said Nitin Damle, MD, MS, FACP, president, ACP. “National Immunization Awareness Month is the perfect time for internal medicine physicians to make sure that their patients are up-to-date on the latest recommended adult immunization schedule.”

ACP advises adults to get an annual flu vaccine with either the inactivated influenza vaccine or recombinant influenza vaccine to protect against seasonal flu and to use that opportunity to discuss with their internist other vaccinations they might need. These include Tdap to protect against tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis (whooping cough); pneumococcal to protect against pneumonia, bacteremia, and meningitis; HPV to prevent cervical, anal, and other cancers; Hepatitis B; and herpes zoster to help prevent shingles.

ACP offers resources to help internists increase immunization rates. These include

  • Webinars and videos that cover the latest vaccine recommendations for adults and how to utilize the entire health care team in organizing immunization services.
  • ACP Quality Connect Coaching Calls to assist physicians in implementing standing orders, providing patient recommendations, and purchasing and coding for vaccines in the office.
  • ACP Adult Immunization & Quality Improvement for Residents training program to help program directors identify quality improvement projects and promote them at ACP’s annual meeting.
  • The ACP Practice Advisor Adult Immunization Module is part of a practice management tool designed to improve office efficiency and enhance patient care. The immunization module focuses on steps that staff in primary care offices can take to improve the rates of immunization.

The latest adult immunization schedule and recommendations approved by Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) is available at http://ift.tt/1KTqNDj. ACP and other professional organizations reviewed and approved the schedule. In June 2016, ACIP voted that live attenuated influenza vaccine, also known as the “nasal spray” flu vaccine, should not be used during the 2016-17 flu season. ACIP’s recommendation must be reviewed and approved by the CDC’s Director. The final recommendation will be published in a CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report in late summer or early fall.

ACP is a member of the Campaign for Adult Immunization, an initiative of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases to ensure that all adults are fully aware of and have access to appropriate immunizations.

About the American College of Physicians

The American College of Physicians is the largest medical specialty organization and the second-largest physician group in the United States. ACP members include 148,000 internal medicine physicians (internists), related subspecialists, and medical students. Internal medicine physicians are specialists who apply scientific knowledge and clinical expertise to the diagnosis, treatment, and compassionate care of adults across the spectrum from health to complex illness. Follow ACP on Twitter and Facebook.

ACP has been a leader in helping internist and other primary care physicians to immunize their adult patients. ACP provides resources such as physician and patient education materials, strategies to engage practice staff, and information to help physicians effectively order and code for vaccines for both Medicare and other payers.

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ACP reminds adults to discuss vaccinations they may need with their internist

Why do antidepressants take so long to work?

An episode of major depression can be crippling, impairing the ability to sleep, work, or eat. In severe cases, the mood disorder can lead to suicide. But the drugs available to treat depression, which can affect one in six Americans in their lifetime, can take weeks or even months to start working.

Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago have discovered one reason the drugs take so long to work, and their finding could help scientists develop faster-acting drugs in the future. The research was published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry.

Neuroscientist Mark Rasenick of the UIC College of Medicine and colleagues identified a previously unknown mechanism of action for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, the most commonly prescribed type of antidepressant. Long thought to work by preventing the reabsorption of serotonin back into nerve cells, SSRIs also accumulate in patches of the cell membrane called lipid rafts, Rasenick observed, and the buildup was associated with diminished levels of an important signal molecule in the rafts.

“It’s been a puzzle for quite a long time why SSRI antidepressants can take up to two months to start reducing symptoms, especially because we know that they bind to their targets within minutes,” said Rasenick, distinguished professor of physiology and biophysics and psychiatry at UIC. “We thought that maybe these drugs have an alternate binding site that is important in the action of the drugs to reduce depressive symptoms.”

Serotonin is thought to be in short supply in people with depression. SSRIs bind to serotonin transporters – structures embedded within nerve-cell membranes that allow serotonin to pass in and out of the nerve cells as they communicate with one another. SSRIs block the transporter from ferrying serotonin that has been released into the space between neurons – the synapse – back into the neurons, keeping more of the neurotransmitter available in the synapse, amplifying its effects and reducing symptoms of depression.

Mark Rasenick (F)

Mark Rasenick, distinguished professor of physiology and biophysics and psychiatry.

Rasenick long suspected that the delayed drug response involved certain signaling molecules in nerve-cell membranes called G proteins.

Previous research by him and colleagues showed that in people with depression, G proteins tended to congregate in lipid rafts, areas of the membrane rich in cholesterol. Stranded on the rafts, the G proteins lacked access to a molecule called cyclic AMP, which they need in order to function. The dampened signaling could be why people with depression are “numb” to their environment, Rasenick reasoned.

In the lab, Rasenick bathed rat glial cells, a type of brain cell, with different SSRIs and located the G proteins within the cell membrane. He found that they accumulated in the lipid rafts over time — and as they did so, G proteins in the rafts decreased.

“The process showed a time-lag consistent with other cellular actions of antidepressants,” Rasenick said. “It’s likely that this effect on the movement of G proteins out of the lipid rafts towards regions of the cell membrane where they are better able to function is the reason these antidepressants take so long to work.”

The finding, he said, suggests how these drugs could be improved.

“Determining the exact binding site could contribute to the design of novel antidepressants that speed the migration of G proteins out of the lipid rafts, so that the antidepressant effects might start to be felt sooner.”

Rasenick already knows a little about the lipid raft binding site. When he doused rat neurons with an SSRI called escitalopram and a molecule that was its mirror image, only the right-handed form bound to the lipid raft.

“This very minor change in the molecule prevents it from binding, so that helps narrow down some of the characteristics of the binding site,” Rasenick said.

Samuel Erb of the UIC College of Pharmacy and Jeffrey Schappi of the College of Medicine are co-authors on the paper.

This research was supported by VA Merit Award BX001149, and National Institutes of Health awards R01 AT009169, P50 AA022538 and T32 MH067631.

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Why do antidepressants take so long to work?