Call to bioscientists: choose and use your chemicaI probes very carefully – The Institute of Cancer Research (blog)

Our article is written for a bioscience audience and offers guidance on best practice in chemical probe selection, evaluation and use.

I have previously postedabout how small molecule chemical probes of high quality are crucial for investigating the function of proteins in cells and organisms and also for validating them (or not) as drug targets. This applies to all areas of biomedical research see articles by Stephen Fryeand Mark Bunnage and colleagues.

My colleague Julian Blagg and I have today published a Perspective on choosing and using chemical probes in the journal Cancer Cellthat is written specifically with the audience of biologists in mind.

There are numerous examples of how the use of fit-for-purpose chemical probeshas led to important discoveries in biomedical research. The value of chemical probes is particularly well demonstrated in the field of cancer research.

A good case in point is the relatively recent rapid growth in our understanding of the biology and pharmacology of bromodomains that was triggered by the discovery of potent chemical probes such as JQ1and I-BETand their closely matched inactive partner compounds used as controls.

Yet in my earlier blogI also drew attention to how loose standards in the selection and use of chemical probes are leading to serious errors in biomedical research studies.

To be effective as chemical probes, small molecule agents need to be cell permeable and to bind potently (i.e. strongly at low concentrations) to the desired protein target and modulate its function in the cell as measured by direct target interaction and appropriate downstream biomarker changes. And they also need to bind selectively, meaning that they dont interact with and modulate other cellular targets or more realistically that they only affect an acceptable number of additional relevant proteins.

However, use of poorly selective, or otherwise unsuitably flawed even frankly dreadful chemical compounds is widespread. This is sloppy science and contributes to what is often referred as a crisis in the reproducibility and robustness of biological findings.

Moreover, recent calculations have suggested that spending $150 on a poor quality, out-of-date chemical compound from a vendor catalogue, instead of buying a high quality chemical probe, can cost the scientific community billions of dollars. There are at least200 historic compoundsthat are often used and should be replaced with better probes.

So misuse of chemical probes is wasting scientists time and money and in many instances is undoubtedly leading to delays in the discovery of much needed medicines.

I explained in my previous posthow, in a Commentary article in the journal Nature Chemical Biology by Arrowsmith et alpublished in August 2015, an international panel of chemical biology scientists (of which I was a member) had issued a call-to-arms aimed at eliminating the use of substandard research tools in biomedical research and promoting best practice. That call was linked with the launch of a new community-based, 'TripAdvisor-style' online resource available at the Chemical Probes Portal.

The non-profit Portal works by offering online expert annotation and recommendations for use of chemical probes for particular molecular targets. These are provided by a Scientific Advisory Board (for full disclosure I am a member of this and a Board Director) with about 400 probes assessed to date.

Theres no doubt that great progress has been made in discovering high quality tools for cancer biology and target validation. Unfortunately two years on now from the publication of the Arrowsmith et al paper and the initial launch of the Chemical Probes Portal it is abundantly obvious that bad practice in the selection and use of chemical probes is still very widespread in biomedical research, including numerous, continuing high profile examples in cancer.

Its clear that biologists commonly choose chemical probes based on querying search engines such as Google which will lead them to vendor catalogues that provide variable levels of information, do not prioritize probes based on quality, and sometimesrecommend the same compound as a probe for different protein targets.

Alternatively, use of search engines like Google Scholar will return as top hits publications that are the most highly cited, but that also describe the oldest chemical probes. Such searches are less likely to find the best, usually more recent tools. For example, when Chemical Probes Portal staff looked at 10 compounds, randomly selected from the 200 no longer recommended historical probes listed on the Portal website, they found that since 2016 these past-their-sell-by date reagents have been used in 2,090 publications.

A specific illustration is the still very frequent use of one of the above historical compounds, LY294002 an initially valuable early inhibitor of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase lipid kinases (PI3 kinase) that was originally described in 1994. Although a usefulpathfinder probe,LY294002 exhibits only weak, micromolar potency for PI3 kinases and through chemoproteomic studies it was subsequently found to be active against numerous members of the PI3 kinase family, and also other unrelated proteins including bromodomains.

LY249002 has been cited in over 30,000 publications; moreover despite its poor potency and selectivity and its supersedence by severalsuperior compounds as chemical probes for PI3K, a recent search for LY294002 on Google Scholar returned 1,190 publications for the year 2016 alone and this now outdated and flawed probecontinues to be sold by many commercial vendors.

Its clear then that we need to find a way make things change and especially influence behaviour of biological research community which is the main user group for chemical probes. This is why Julian Blagg and I have written our Perspectivein way that we hope will get the message out to biologists.

As we say in the Abstract of the Perspective:

Small-molecule chemical probes or tools have become progressively more important in recent years as valuable reagents to investigate fundamental biological mechanisms and processes causing disease, including cancer. Chemical probes have also achieved greater prominence alongside complementary biological reagents for target validation in drug discovery. However, there is evidence of widespread continuing misuse and promulgation of poor-quality and insufficiently selective chemical probes, perpetuating a worrisome and misleading pollution of the scientific literature. We discuss current challenges with the selection and use of chemical probes, and suggest how biologists can and should be more discriminating in the probes they employ.

Despite the efforts so far within the chemical biology community, we point out that we have been guilty of: largely preaching to the choir [meaning chemical biology specialists] and failing to connect to a really critical audience: namely, the wider cancer biology community who rely upon small-molecule tool compounds, often in harness with biological reagents, to interrogate cancer cell biology and who frequently draw important and highly impactful biological interpretations, whether correct or misleading, from such studies.

A topical example that we highlight in our Perspectiveis the initially erroneous discovery and validation of the proposed target MTH1 in cancer. MTH1 has a role in breaking down damaged metabolites called nucleotides in cells and thus preventing them from being incorporated into DNA and was first published as a cancer target in very high profile publications in the journal Nature.

Small molecule agents that were originally used to validate MTH1 include compounds TH287 and TH588 as well as S-crizotinib. We discuss in our Perspectivethe elegant publicationfrom AstraZeneca scientists that identifies three different chemical series of potent and highly selective chemical probes that clearly inhibit MTH1 in cancer cells but despite this have no therapeutic effect on cancer cells.

Furthermore, the same article shows that neither small interfering RNA (siRNA) reagents that deplete MTH1 nor CRISPR-mediated removal of MTH1 had any beneficial effect of cancer cells, pointing to off-target activity with the original siRNA reagent as well the chemical compounds used.

Furthermore, the blogger Derek Lowehas just a couple of days ago updated this story by discussing a new publication from researchers at Bayerwho discovered BAY-707, yet another highly potent and selective inhibitor of MTH1, and found it to have no therapeutic effect on cancers cells. Hence at this stage the balance of opinion strongly indicates that MTH1 is not a valid target for cancer treatment.

One piece of evidence in the AstraZeneca study that was particularly critical in invalidating the initial chemical probes was the demonstration that both TH287 and S-crizotinib killed cancer cell lines lacking MTH1 and subsequent protein screening workshowed that the binding of TH287 and TH588 to tubulin is responsible for their cytotoxic effects.

We provide in the Perspectiveseveral other examples of how the close integration of orthogonal chemical and biological tools can be very powerful, as in the case of studies on SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complex components, the transcription factor HIF2 and the Jumonji family of histone lysine demethylases. In addition, we describe cautionary tales of the problems arising with uncritical use of claimed chemical probes for proteins including poly ADP ribose polymerases (PARPs; for which a flawed PARP compound progressed to the clinic and failed); the molecular chaperone HSP70; KRAS-regulated autophagy; and pan-steroid receptor co-activators.

We discusshow a gold-standard test to validate the functional on-target response to a chemical probe is to demonstrate reversal of the cellular effects of a proposed small molecule probe compound by mutation in the protein target that abrogates compound binding.

Another useful technique is to engineer the target to interact with chemical probes not recognized by the natural (so-called) wild-type protein. An additional approach now becoming common is to determine the effects of the chemical probe in cells where the proposed protein target has been removed by CRISPR technology.

We point outthat although Small molecules are from Mars, biological tools are from Venus, they are nevertheless part of the same overall universe, providing orthogonal and complimentary approaches to understanding biology and target validation a very powerful, multidisciplinary and essential toolkit for modern biomedical research.

Also in our Perspectivewe highlight and explain an important aspect of target binding selectivity that is rarely articulated in discussion of chemical probes that it is absolutely to be expected that most small molecules will generally interact with multiple biological targets in cells and organisms. By contrast, biological reagents, for example siRNA oligonucleotides and antibodies, are intrinsically more likely than small molecules to bind selectively to the desired biological target as a result of the greater breadth, complexity and thus specificity of their combined intermolecular interactions.

Of course there are also major problems with the use of insufficiently selective biological reagents and greater rigour in their use is important too as elegantly discussed recently by Bill Kaelin but biologists need to be even more critical in their use of small molecule probes because their smaller size and lower complexity means that at least some degree promiscuity is likely to be the rule rather than the exception. This tendency can be mitigated by careful design and optimization of the probe but even then rigorous and broad experimental testing for selectivity is essential.

Indeed, we strongly advisethe maxim of caveat emptor let the buyer beware! when choosing and using chemical probes for biological exploration and target validation.

In discussing the challenge of selectivity, we illustrate how the off-target effects can range from an interaction with one or two proteins perhaps but necessarily related to the target of interest through binding to tens of other targets, all the way to the extreme end of unacceptability where compounds are frequent hitters or chemical impostersthat have totally unacceptable features like indiscriminate chemical reactivity, aqueous insolubility and self-aggregation that make them worthless for biological research.

Hard to believe, but there are even isolated examples of vendors supplying the incorrect chemical compound and routine checking for evidence of authenticity is advisable. Related to this, in our Perspectivewe call for further efforts in the community to eliminate the especially egregious behaviour of publishing biological results without disclosing compound structures which of course means that the suitability of a probe cannot be assessed, nor can the claims be independently checked. Reviewers of submitted papers and grant applications as well as journal editors should be especially vigilant about this.

We recognize that for many if not most biologists these considerations of the selectivity of chemical probes are not part of their training or expertise. They may not have ready access to advice from chemical biology or medicinal chemistry colleagues. And they may find articles in the specialist chemical biology literature off-putting and full of jargon as most scientific disciplines are.

So in our Perspective we provide what we hope will be useful tools for biologists using chemical probes. Firstly, we include as Box 1a Glossary so that that any specialist terminology that cannot really be avoided is not too much of a turn-off.

We provide in Box 2a comparison of the desired selectivity profiles of chemical probes with those of approved drugs making the point that in comparison to drugs, chemical probes generally need to be even more selective than drugs so that probes can be used with confidence to modulate the intended target of interest.

In Box 3we summarize the factors that determine the fitness and quality of chemical probes and in Figure 2we present an overview of Dos and Donts for their selection and use. In particular, we strongly recommend taking a routinely sceptical approach, including the use of orthogonal chemical and biological reagents; the use of at least two different chemical series (chemotypes) of probe along with inactive control compounds; demonstration of potency and selectivity; and obtaining evidence for selective target engagement and modulation in cells (e.g. using thePharmacological Audit Trail).

We advise (on page 13 of the Perspective) strongly against a common and dangerous practice, which is to expose cells with ever increasing concentrations of a chemical probe until a desired cell effect (phenotype), usually cell death, is seen and then attributing this phenotype to the specific effect of the probe on the protein target under investigation.

Higher probe concentrations increase the likelihood of off-target effects and the general range that should not be exceeded is 10-20 micromolar to minimize non-specific effects. Accompanying biomarker evidence of target modulation is also important.

Alongside the general guidance provided in our Cancer Cell Perspective, we strongly recommend the use of the Chemical Probes Portalfor expert advice and ratings for specific probes and targets.

We likenthe provision of advice on the selection and use of chemical probes to ensuring the biological researcher avoids being equipped with the equivalent of a defective global positioning/satellite navigation system, as illustrated in the cartoon below:

Download a larger version of Professor Julian Blagg's cartoon (PDF, 51KB)

Caption: The right way and wrong way with chemical probes

We finish the Perspectivewith the following strong new call-to-action:

We need to maximize the promise and minimize the peril of chemical probes and this requires the broad research community to use high-quality chemical probes that have been critiqued with equivalent rigor to biological reagents. It is time to put our house in order and biologists as well as chemists have an important responsibility to do so.

Im grateful to my colleague and joint senior co-author of our Cancer Cell PerspectiveProfessor Julian Blaggfor his excellent collaboration and insights. We developed the content of the Perspective very much in partnership. I also thank Julian for drafting the cartoon illustration.

In addition, I thank many colleagues and collaborators for helpful discussions and input, including the anonymous reviewers of the Perspective, and those in the field whose outstanding work we have built upon.

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Call to bioscientists: choose and use your chemicaI probes very carefully - The Institute of Cancer Research (blog)

Cancer Research Institute Announces $1 Million Technology Impact Award Winner – Immuno-Oncology News

Dongeun Huh, PhD, from the University of Pennsylvanias Department of Bioengineering, is the recipient of theCancer Research Institutes (CRI) inauguralTechnology Impact Awardto advance the field ofimmuno-oncology.

Huh will receive a $1 million grant paid over three years to develop a microchip-based research model that mimics human cancer and immune cell interactions, a technological innovation that has the potential to accelerate the development of effective immunotherapies across different types of cancer.

There is an urgent need within the research community for new ways to model, observe, and interrogate complex interactions between the human immune system and tumorsa dynamic interplay that current two-dimensional cell cultures and animal models cannot characterize optimally, Jill ODonnell-Tormey, PhD, CRIs chief executive officer and director of scientific affairs, said in apress release.

Dr. Huhs microchip-based human cancer models represent a highly innovative intersection of cell biology and microengineering, which, when applied to cancer immunotherapy research, may spur advances in our understanding of how malignant human tumors interact with the immune system and surrounding tissues, providing researchers with new insights that will lead to improved cancer treatments, she added.

Huh has teamed up with two University of Pennsylvania immunologists to carry out the project: E. John Wherry, PhD, and G. Scott Worthen, MD. Together, they will oversee the investigation of cancer-immune cell interactions using Huhs technology.

Huh and his colleagues will use new bioengineering technology to apply microfabrication techniques originally developed for manufacturing computer chips to create a cancer-on-a-chip micro-device, which would enable cultures to be made of patient cancer cells.

The model will be engineered to form a network of living blood vessels that simulate the same vessels that immune cells use to circulate inside our bodies. Using this platform, Huh expects to study the interactions between cancer cells with key components of the immune system involved in cancer elimination, such as macrophages and T-cells.

Huh believes the research will lead to discoveries that could pave the way for new strategies to treat cancer with immunotherapies. In addition, the model could be developed into a screening platform to test and predict the effectiveness and safety of new drug candidates without having to test them on patients first.

Dr. Huhs proposal is truly exciting in terms of its potential to make an impact on how cancer immunotherapy research is conducted as well as how we predict patient response to immunotherapy, said Mark M. Davis, PhD, professor of immunology at Stanford Universitys School of Medicine and chair of the CRI Technology Impact Awards scientific committee.

This is sorely needed, and we also think this project could help us develop strategies that will extend the benefits of immunotherapy to more and more patients, he added.

The CRI Technology Impact Award is a new program designed to offer scientists and researchers a platform for multidisciplinary collaboration to transform the field of immuno-oncology. Organizers hope to fund technologies that improve our understanding of the antigenic profile, cellular interplay, and mechanistic pathways within the tumor microenvironment that are critical for an effective anti-tumor response. By supporting the development of highly innovative technologies, the program aims to enable researchers to develop the next generation of cancer immunotherapies.

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Genetics: The Study of Heredity – Live Science

A chart shows the dominant and recessive traits inherited in successive generations of guinea pigs.

Genetics is the study of how heritable traits are transmitted from parents to offspring. Humans have long observed that traits tend to be similar in families. It wasnt until the mid-nineteenth century that larger implications of genetic inheritance began to be studied scientifically.

Natural selection

This is one of the last photographs taken of Charles Darwin, who developed the theory of evolution whereby changes in species are driven, over time, by natural and sexual selection.

In 1858, Charles Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace jointly announced their theory of natural selection. According to Darwins observations, in nearly all populations individuals tend to produce far more offspring than are needed to replace the parents. If every individual born were to live and reproduce still more offspring, the population would collapse. Overpopulation leads to competition for resources.

Darwin observed that it is very rare for any two individuals to be exactly alike. He reasoned that these natural variations among individuals lead to natural selection. Individuals born with variations that confer an advantage in obtaining resources or mates have greater chances of reproducing offspring who would inherit the favorable variations. Individuals with different variations might be less likely to reproduce.

Darwin was convinced that natural selection explained how natural variations could lead to new traits in a population, or even new species. While he had observed the variations existent in every population, he was unable to explain how those variations came about. Darwin was unaware of the work being done by a quiet monk named Gregor Mendel.

Inheritance of traits

In 1866, Gregor Mendel published the results of years of experimentation in breeding pea plants. He showed that both parents must pass discrete physical factors which transmit information about their traits to their offspring at conception. An individual inherits one such unit for a trait from each parent. Mendel's principle of dominance explained that most traits are not a blend of the fathers traits and those of the mother as was commonly thought. Instead, when an offspring inherits a factor for opposing forms of the same trait, the dominant form of that trait will be apparent in that individual. The factor for the recessive trait, while not apparent, is still part of the individuals genetic makeup and may be passed to offspring.

Mendels experiments demonstrated that when sex cells are formed, the factors for each trait that an individual inherits from its parents are separated into different sex cells. When the sex cells unite at conception the resulting offspring will have at least two factors (alleles) for each trait. One inherited factor from the mother and one from the father. Mendel used the laws of probability to demonstrate that when the sex cells are formed, it is a matter of chance as to which factor for a given trait is incorporated into a particular sperm or egg.

We now know that simple dominance does not explain all traits. In cases of co-dominance, both forms of the trait are equally expressed. Incomplete dominance results in a blending of traits. In cases of multiple alleles, there are more than just two possible ways a given gene can be expressed. We also now know that most expressed traits, such as the many variations in human skin color, are influenced by many genes all acting on the same apparent trait. In addition, each gene that acts on the trait may have multiple alleles. Environmental factors can also interact with genetic information to supply even more variation. Thus sexual reproduction is the biggest contributor to genetic variation among individuals of a species.

Twentieth-century scientists came to understand that combining the ideas of genetics and natural selection could lead to enormous strides in understanding the variety of organisms that inhabit our earth.

Mutation

Historically, scientists have defined living creatures by the presence of DNA, but how living creatures process information may be a better hallmark of life, a new study argues

Scientists realized that the molecular makeup of genes must include a way for genetic information to be copied efficiently. Each cell of a living organism requires instructions on how and when to build the proteins that are the basic building blocks of body structures and the workhorses responsible for every chemical reaction necessary for life. In 1958, when James Watson and Francis Crick described the structure of the DNA molecule, this chemical structure explained how cells use the information from the DNA stored in the cells nucleus to build proteins. Each time cells divide to form new cells, this vast chemical library must be copied so that the daughter cells have the information required to function. Inevitably, each time the DNA is copied, there are minute changes. Most such changes are caught and repaired immediately. However, if the alteration is not repaired the change may result in an altered protein. Altered proteins may not function normally. Genetic disorders are conditions that result when malfunctioning proteins adversely affect the organism. [Gallery: Images of DNA Structures]

In very rare cases the altered protein may function better than the original or result in a trait that confers a survival advantage. Such beneficial mutations are one source of genetic variation.

Gene flow

Another source of genetic variation is gene flow, the introduction of new alleles to a population. Commonly, this is due to simple migration. New individuals of the same species enter a population. Environmental conditions in their previous home may have favored different forms of traits, for example, lighter colored fur. Alleles for these traits would be different from the alleles present in the host population. When the newcomers interbreed with the host population, they introduce new forms of the genes responsible for traits. Favorable alleles may spread through the population. [Countdown: Genetics by the Numbers 10 Tantalizing Tales]

Genetic drift

Genetic drift is a change in allele frequency that is random rather than being driven by selection pressures. Remember from Mendel that alleles are sorted randomly into sex cells. It could just happen that both parents contribute the same allele for a given trait to all of their offspring. When the offspring reproduce they can only transmit the one form of the trait that they inherited from their parents. Genetic drift can cause large changes in a population in only a few generations especially if the population is very small. Genetic drift tends to reduce genetic variation in a population. In a population without genetic diversity there is a greater chance that environmental change may decimate the population or drive it to extinction.

Mary Bagley, LiveScience Contributor

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Genetics: The Study of Heredity - Live Science

BRIEF-Newlink Genetics receives notice of allowance from USPTO … – Reuters

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Memphis Researchers Planning Big Upgrades to Online Genetics Database – Memphis Daily News

VOL. 132 | NO. 135 | Monday, July 10, 2017

A pair of scientists in Memphis is using almost $2 million in grant money to make improvements to an online database and open-source software system called GeneNetwork, used by researchers to study genetic differences and evaluate disease risk.

Drs. Robert Williams and Saunak Sen, both part of the faculty at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, won a grant from the National Institutes of Health for the project. GeneNetwork was launched in 2001 as part of a NIH Human Brain Project grant to UTHSC and was one of the first websites designed for gene mapping.

Williams, who chairs the Department of Genetics, Genomics and Informatics at UTHSC, said the grant money will be used to support major upgrades for the software infrastructure for gene mapping and analysis for the system. One of the systems main uses, he said, is being able to predict more accurate health outcomes from genetic and environmental data.

The system itself is like a combination of Microsofts popular Excel spreadsheet software paired with large amounts of financial data. Except in this case, its biological rather than financial data, combined with a sophisticated spreadsheet that allows users to perform their analyses.

Those users include undergraduate, graduate and postdoctoral students. The biggest slice of users is scientists, Williams said, who are interested in understanding the relationship between genetic differences and health status.

The grant has four major aims that will be stretched out over four years, Williams said. The first is to make this more useful to a larger community of users. Getting data in and out of GeneNetwork is quite a bit of work, so were going to be building some software that allows easier data entry into GeneNetwork.

The team at UTHSC which is where the GeneNetwork hub exists also wants to make some statistical improvements to the system. Theyll also be developing new analytical methods as well as tools so that the system is accessible not only to students and scientists but also professional statisticians, computer scientists and users at big pharmaceutical companies who Williams said need a different type of interface than what exists now.

The team supporting GeneNetwork actually extends beyond Memphis, spanning the globe, in fact. Other key members include Dr. Pjotr Prins, a computer programmer based in the Netherlands whos responsible for the software architecture. Dr. Karl Broman, a statistical geneticist from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is also contributing to the project. And at UTHSC, Dr. Yan Cui, a computational biologist in the Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Biochemistry, is also working on the project.

According to Dr. Sen, GeneNetwork will facilitate reproducible research because of the way it gives researchers open access to both the data and the software code used to process it. Reproducibility, he said, is essential to the scientific method, and were proud to be part of the open science movement.

The second generation of the service, called GeneNetwork 2, can be accessed at http://gn2.genenetwork.org/.

There are exponentially growing databases on humans and mice and rats and plants, Williams said. And its really difficult to handle all those huge data sets. So what we need are online tools for analyzing and integrating those data sets, and GeneNetwork is a tool for doing just that.

It provides access to a lot of data sets and the genotypes of subjects, and it allows you to analyze what the relationship is between genetic differences and outcome measurements. Like, how much do you weigh, are you likely to have diabetes, how long will you live, things like that.

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Memphis Researchers Planning Big Upgrades to Online Genetics Database - Memphis Daily News

Nano-magnetic Devices Market, Separation, Data Storage, Medical and Genetics, and Imaging; End User – Electronics … – PR Newswire (press release)

LONDON, July 10, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Global Nano-magnetic Devices Market: Overview

Rigorous scaling down of the metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) has occurred for improvement of electronic appliance performances. However, it has come to a stage where further scaling of these devices are no longer possible due to their physical and fabrication limitation. The nano-magnetic devices are useful in these scenarios as they can reduce size of electronics considerably and also increase its efficiency. These devices also helps in reduction of size and increase in product longevity. Nano-magnetic devices have multiple advantages like low static power dissipation, high density, robustness towards thermal noise room temperature operation, and radiation hardened nature. Radiation-resistant is another feature of nano-magnetic devices.

Download the full report: https://www.reportbuyer.com/product/4743088/

Global Nano-magnetic Devices Market: Top Drivers and Key Restraints

One of the major driving force for nano-magnetic devices market is the growing demand for nanotechnology and increasing usage of sensors across various sectors such as building automation and HVAC system. Nano-magnetic devices are also anticipated to be used in building automation, HVAC systems, and communication system. Also, the augmented use of nano-magnetic devices in industrial applications is also forecasted to primarily drive the global nano-magnetic devices market over the next few years to come. Increasing industrialization and manufacturing industries require high end technologies which are highly efficient and low energy consuming, nano-magnetic devices helps in full filling this requirement. The demand for these devices are more prominent in the developed countries due to their expensive nature and high implementation cost. However, its extensive usage in a variety of applications across various advanced manufacturing processes is driving this market during the forecast period from 2016 to 2024. These devices are constantly being incorporated in several segments and also its application in new segments are increasingly driving global demand for this market. Increasing usage of nano-magnetic devices in sensors, medical and genetics segments is forecasted to increase the global market of nano-magnetic devices over the forecast period of 2016-2024.

The increase in demand for the nano-magnetic devices is also driven by the increasing usage of nano technology-enabled sensors that are used in chemical, physical, and biological sensing. These sensors empower increased recognition specificity, multiplexing capability, sensitivity, and portability for a wide variety of health, safety, and environmental assessments.

Global Nano-magnetic Devices Market: Geographic Analysis

Nano-magnetic devices market is segmented on the basis of type and region. On the basis of type, the market is divided as sensors, separation, data storage, medical and genetics, imaging and others. On the basis of regional segmentation, nano-magnetic devices market is segmented into five regions such as North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East & Africa (MEA) and Latin America. Regionally, North America accounted for the largest market share in 2015 thereby leading the market due to its extensive usage in building automation and advanced manufacturing, followed by the regions of Europe and Asia-Pacific. The region of Asia Pacific is forecasted to grow with the highest growth rate over the forecast period. Asia Pacific has been maintaining the constant adaptation of these nano-magnetic devices owing to the rapid increase in demand for consumer electronics and growing awareness over environmental issues.

Global Nano-magnetic Devices Market: Competitive Landscape

In this report, nano-magnetic devices have been analyzed in a very detailed manner. Major players of this market have been incorporated into this report. Their financial details and strategic overview have been studied here. This strategic overview showcase agenda and development of these key players in this market segment. With it, competitive outlook of these key players have been studied as well. SWOT analysis of key players have also been incorporated in this report. In this report, global nano-magnetic devices market have been analyzed on the basis of revenue and the projection period runs from 2016 to 2024.

Some of the major players operating in Nano-magnetic devices market are Intel Corporation (the U.S.), Samsung Electronics (South Korea), LG Electronics Inc. (South Korea), among others.

Global Nano-magnetic Devices Market, 2016 2024: By Product Type

Sensors Biosensors and bioassays Giant magneto resistive (GMR) sensors Separation Data Storage Hard disks MRAM Others Medical and Genetics Imaging Others

Global Nano-magnetic Devices Market, 2015 2023: By End-User Industry

Electronics & IT Medical & Healthcare Energy Environment

Global Nano-magnetic Devices Market, 2015 2023: By Geography

North America Europe Asia Pacific (APAC) Middle East & Africa Download the full report: https://www.reportbuyer.com/product/4743088/

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‘When Does a Human Life Begin?’ Answered by Science | LifeZette – LifeZette

When does a human life begin?

This question should not be hard to answer but in todays culture, the topic is more contentious than ever.

"This is not about opinions, politics, or religion nor should it be. It is about modern, objective, relevant science," Brooke Stanton, founder and CEO of the nonprofit Contend Projects, wrote on her organization's website. Based in Washington, D.C., and founded two years ago, the secular and nonpartisan Contend Projects is working to inform people, based on science, about when life begins.

"Although we live in a secular and scientific society, it's surprising how many intelligent, educated and otherwise informed people don't know fundamental truths about the beginning of human life, sexual reproduction, and human embryology," said Stanton.

She added, "Throughout my research and learning, I kept returning to the idea of taking a step back and separating the objective science from the drama and politics surrounding these issues."

Statisticsabout sex, abortion, and pregnancies can be alarming. "By their 19th birthday, seven in 10 teens have had intercourse," notes the Contend Projects site. And: "A new human being could beginto exist (and pregnancy could begin) within hours of sexual intercourse."

Related:The Newest Planned Parenthood Fetal-Tissue Scandal

Yet 22 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds think human life begins at birth, according to data from market research firm YouGov; 36percent of this demographic believe life begins at conception.

"It's surprising how many intelligent and educated people don't know fundamental truths about human life."

"Nearly half of pregnancies among American women in 2011 were unintended (2.8 million), and about fourin 10 of these were terminated by abortion," according to Contend Projects. "Unintended pregnancy rates are highest among women aged 18-24."

In 2014, there were about926,200 abortions in America, according to research from the Guttmacher Institute.

"These decisions are some of the most important we will make [in] our lives but surprisingly, the basic scientific facts about reproduction are widely misunderstood, or not understood at all," said Contend Projects.

For example, fertilization begins in a woman's fallopian tube. The embryo grows and in about a week implants itself in the uterus.

"As early as 12-24 hours after fertilization begins, pregnancy can be confirmed by detecting a protein called 'early pregnancy factor' or EPF in the mother's blood," said Contend Project. "Just as you and I were once toddlers, we were once embryos. Human development is a continuum, and at any point along this continuum including the very beginning there exists the same whole, individual, integrated human being. He or she is not a 'potential' human being, or a 'possible' human being, or a 'pre-embryo,' or 'just a cell.'"

Related:'Life Doesn't Always Go According to Plan,' Says Pro-Family Ad

"One of the basic insights of modern biology is that life is continuous, with living cells giving rise to new types of cells and, ultimately, to new individuals," according to the pro-life Charlotte Lozier Institute. "The conclusion that human life begins at sperm-egg fusion is uncontested, objective, based on the universally accepted scientific method of distinguishing different cell types from each other and on ample scientific evidence (thousands of independent, peer-reviewed publications)."

As any mother-to-be knows well the growing baby inside the womb is living and active.

In the Bible, the Lord says in Jeremiah 1:5: "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the nations."

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'When Does a Human Life Begin?' Answered by Science | LifeZette - LifeZette

Surviving cancer means lower pregnancy rates in women – BioNews

Female cancer survivors are 38 percent less likely to become pregnant compared with women in the general population, according to a study presented at the annual European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology conference in Geneva.

Professor Richard Anderson at Edinburgh University, UK, and his team studiedpregnancy rates in 23,201 female cancer survivors of reproductive age on the Scottish Cancer Registry and matched controls, over a 30-year-period. They found that 29 percent of cancer survivors achieved pregnancy, compared with 46 percent in the control group.

Reduction in fertility after cancer is often attributed to the effects of chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

Chemotherapy 'could add a decade to a womens reproductive age', commented Dr Gillian Lockwood, medical director of IVI Midland in Tamworth, UK. She emphasised the importance of accurate and comprehensive patient counselling.

Professor Anderson stressed that the results of his study only measure pregnancy post- cancer diagnosis, and do not indicate incidence of infertility. He explained that 'some women may have chosen not to have a pregnancy' and 'having a pregnancy after cancer does involve a range of complex issues' No increased risk of miscarriage or stillbirth was found.

The impact of cancer was more pronounced when it came to first pregnancies, with an almost 50 percent reduction in likelihood of a first pregnancy for women post-diagnosis compared with the control group. A reduction in pregnancies was observed in all types of cancer, but the largest effects occurred in survivors of breast and cervical cancer, and leukaemia.

The study highlights the need for renewed focus on fertility preservation, both in terms of driving forward further development in the field, as well as ensuring that there is consistent access to these medical interventions across the world. Professor Anderson described current fertility preservation services as 'very variable', even in the USA and Europe.

In 2016, Professor Anderson led the team which successfully re-implanted a section of ovarian tissue into an infertile cancer survivor, a decade after the tissue had been extracted. She gave birth to a healthy baby boy, becoming one of only a handful of women in the world to give birth after an ovarian tissue cryopreservation procedure, and the first in the UK.

While emphasising that this is very much an experimental procedure, Professor Anderson added: 'It comes at a time when NHS services for fertility preservation are developing across the UK, and we hope it will be the impetus to provide that to all who are in need.'

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Surviving cancer means lower pregnancy rates in women - BioNews

NEW: Man accused of lewd behavior, faces human trafficking charge – Palm Beach Post

BOYNTON BEACH

Authorities are investigating a suspected case ofhuman trafficking involving a 26-year-old suburban West Palm Beach man and a teenage girl.

Boynton Beach police arrested Steven Snipe on June 30 on three counts of lewd and lascivious battery against a person under the age of 18. Additional charges for human trafficking and production of child pornography are pending, waiting on the completion of a search warrant for a hotel room where Snipe is suspected of selling the teen into prostitution, and for his cellphone devices, according to a police report.

As of Monday morning, Snipe remained in custody at the Palm Beach County Jail after a judge set his bail bond amount at $45,000.

At least 10 people in Palm Beach County and one in Martin County have been arrested for human trafficking this year as local-law enforcement agencies have increasingly focused on a crime described by many as modern-day slavery.

Police say that Snipe met a juvenile runaway about two months ago through the Backpage website and forced her into prostitution.

This is a developing story. Check back later for more details.

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NEW: Man accused of lewd behavior, faces human trafficking charge - Palm Beach Post

From Trump Tweets to Kardashian saga, how online behavior affects kids in real life – Chicago Tribune

Young children know that name-calling is wrong. Tweens are taught the perils of online bullying and revenge porn: It's unacceptable and potentially illegal.

But celebrities who engage in flagrant attacks on social media are rewarded with worldwide attention. President Donald Trump's most popular tweet to date is a video that shows him fake-pummeling a personification of CNN. Reality TV star Rob Kardashian was trending last week after attacking his former fiance on Instagram in a flurry of posts so explicit his account was shut down. He continued the attacks on Twitter, where he has more than 7.6 million followers.

While public interest in bad behavior is nothing new, social media has created a vast new venue for incivility to be expressed, witnessed and shared. And experts say it's affecting social interactions in real life.

"Over time, the attitudes and behaviors that we are concerned with right now in social media will bleed out into the physical world," said Karen North, a psychologist and director of the University of Southern California's Digital Social Media Program. "We're supposed to learn to be polite and civil in society. But what we have right now is a situation where a number of role models are acting the opposite of that ... And by watching it, we vicariously feel it, and our own attitudes and behaviors change as a result."

Catherine Steiner-Adair, a psychologist and author of "The Big Disconnect: Protecting Childhood and Family Relationships in the Digital Age," said she's already seeing the effects.

She said she's been confronted by students across the country asking why celebrities and political leaders are allowed to engage in name-calling and other activities for which they would be punished.

On some middle-school campuses, "Trumping" means to grab a girl's rear end, she said.

And teenagers have killed themselves over the kind of slut-shaming and exposure of private images Kardashian leveled at Blac Chyna, with whom he has an infant daughter.

"We are normalizing behaviors, and it's affecting some kids," Steiner-Adair said. "And what's affecting kids that is profound is their mistrust of grown-ups who are behaving so badly. Why aren't they stopping this?"

Social media satisfies a human need for connection. Users bond over common interests and establish digital relationships with their favorite public figures, following and commenting on their lives just like they do their friends'.

Gossip is a bonding activity, and it doesn't take a Real Housewife to know people love to share dirt about others' perceived misdeeds. Collective disapproval creates a feeling of community, regardless of which side you're on. Having a common enemy is "one of the strongest bonding factors in human nature," North said.

With 352,000 retweets, Trump's CNN-pummeling post isn't in the realm of Ellen DeGeneres' Oscar selfie (3.4 million retweets). And Kardashian's rant against Chyna paled in popularity with Beyonce's Instagram pregnancy announcement, which collected 8 million likes.

Still, Trump's attack tweets have proven his most popular, according to a new study by Ohio State University Professor Jayeon "Janey" Lee.

"Attacks on the media were most effective," Lee said of her analysis of tweets posted during the presidential campaign. "Whenever Trump criticized or mocked the media, the message was more likely to be retweeted and 'favorited.' "

Trump, who has 33.4 million Twitter followers, has defended his social-media approach as "modern day presidential."

Cyber incivility, particularly when practiced by cultural leaders, can have a profound impact on human relations, North said.

Studies show that young people who witness aggressive behavior in adults model and expand on that behavior. She pointed to Stanford University psychologist Albert Bandura's famous "Bobo Doll Experiment," which found that kids who saw adults hit a doll in frustration not only hit the doll as well, but attacked it with weapons.

Social media is an atmosphere devoid of the social cues that mitigate behavior in real life, she said. When violating social norms in person, there's immediate feedback from others through body language and tone of voice. No such indicators exist online, and retweets can feel like validation.

Cruel and humiliating posts often become "an instant hit online," Steiner-Adair said. "It's one of the best ways to become popular."

Viral posts then get mainstream media attention, spreading digital nastiness into everyday conversation.

By not expressly rejecting cruel or hateful online behavior, "we are creating a bystander culture where people think this is funny," she said.

"When we tolerate leaders in the popular media like a Kardashian, or a president behaving in this way, we are creating a very dangerous petri dish for massive cultural change," Steiner-Adair said.

Young people, who may be the most plugged in, are getting mixed messages as they form their moral concepts.

"It behooves us all to question why we are participating in this mob of reactivity," Steiner-Adair said, "and what are the character traits we need to model for our children."

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From Trump Tweets to Kardashian saga, how online behavior affects kids in real life - Chicago Tribune