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Adaptive changes of telocytes in the urinary bladder of patients affected by neurogenic detrusor overactivity. – UroToday

Urinary bladder activity involves central and autonomic nervous systems and bladder wall. Studies on the pathogenesis of voiding disorders such as the neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO) due to suprasacral spinal cord lesions have emphasized the importance of an abnormal handling of the afferent signals from urothelium and lamina propria (LP). In the LP (and detrusor), three types of telocytes (TC) are present and form a 3D-network. TC are stromal cells able to form the scaffold that contains and organizes the connective components, to serve as guide for tissue (re)-modelling, to produce trophic and/or regulatory molecules, to share privileged contacts with the immune cells. Specimens of full thickness bladder wall from NDO patients were collected with the aim to investigate possible changes of the three TC types using histology, immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopy. The results show that NDO causes several morphological TC changes without cell loss or network interruption. With the exception of those underlying the urothelium, all the TC display signs of activation (increase in Caveolin1 and caveolae, SMA and thin filaments, Calreticulin and amount of cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, CD34, euchromatic nuclei and large nucleoli). In all the specimens, a cell infiltrate, mainly consisting in plasma cells located in the vicinity or taking contacts with the TC, is present. In conclusion, our findings show that NDO causes significant changes of all the TC. Notably, these changes can be interpreted as TC adaptability to the pathological condition likely preserving each of their peculiar functions.

Journal of cellular and molecular medicine. 2017 Aug 07 [Epub ahead of print]

Chiara Traini, Maria-Simonetta Fausssone-Pellegrini, Daniele Guasti, Giulio Del Popolo, Jacopo Frizzi, Sergio Serni, Maria-Giuliana Vannucchi

Histology and Embryology Research Unit, Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, University of Florence, Florence, Italy., Department of Neuro-Urology, Careggi University Hospital, Florence, Italy., Department of Urology, Careggi University Hospital, Florence, Italy.

PubMed http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28782880

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Adaptive changes of telocytes in the urinary bladder of patients affected by neurogenic detrusor overactivity. - UroToday

Dyes detect disease through heartbeat signals – Phys.Org

UConn Health researchers developed and patented voltage-sensitive dyes that cause cells, tissues, or whole organs to light up as a result of electrical impulses and allow this activity to be measured. Now they have launched a startup to spread their product, which has potential in the process of drug discovery, beyond academia. Credit: Peter Morenus/UConn Photo

Vibrant tones of yellow, orange, and red move in waves across the screen. Although the display looks like psychedelic art, it's actually providing highly technical medical information the electrical activity of a beating heart stained with voltage-sensitive dyes to test for injury or disease.

These voltage-sensitive dyes were developed and patented by UConn Health researchers, who have now embarked on commercializing their product for industry as well as academic use.

Electrical signals or voltages are fundamental in the natural function of brain and heart tissue, and disrupted electrical signaling can be a cause or consequence of injury or disease. Directly measuring electrical activity of the membranes with electrodes isn't possible for drug screening or diagnostic imaging because of their tiny size. In order to make the electrical potential visible, researchers use fluorescent voltage sensors, also known as voltage-sensitive dyes or VSDs, that make cells, tissues, or whole organs light up and allows them to be measured with microscopes.

Not all dyes respond to voltage changes in the same way, and there is a common trade-off between their sensitivity and speed. Slower dyes can be used for drug screening with high sensitivity, but they can't measure the characteristics of rapid action potentials in some tissues, like cardiac cells. Fast dyes can be used to image action potentials, but they require expensive, customized instrumentation, and are not sensitive enough for crystal clear results on individual cells.

Professor of cell biology and director of UConn's Center for Cell Analysis & Modeling, Leslie Loew and his team have developed new fast dyes that are also highly sensitive, eliminating the speed/sensitivity trade-off.

Moving Ideas Beyond the Lab

Loew and research associates Corey Acker and Ping Yan have devoted much of their careers to developing and characterizing fluorescent probes of membrane potential like voltage-sensitive dyes. The team has even been providing their patented fast dyes to fellow researchers for the past 30 years, but they only recently became interested in commercializing their work.

To learn more about the science of entrepreneurship, they took advantage of several of UConn's homegrown programs. Loew and Acker's first step into entrepreneurship began in the fall of 2016, when they were accepted into UConn's National Science Foundation (NSF) I-Corps site, Accelerate UConn. They credit the program with giving them a solid foundation to evaluate their technology and business strategy.

Launched in 2015, Accelerate UConn aims to successfully advance more university technologies along the commercialization continuum. Under the auspices of the Office of the Vice President for Research and the Connecticut Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation (CCEI), Accelerate UConn provides participants with small seed grants and comprehensive entrepreneurial training.

"Dr. Loew's experience is a prime example of how UConn can transform high-potential academic discoveries into viable products and services with the right training," says Radenka Maric, UConn's vice president for research. "Accelerate UConn helps our preeminent faculty move their ideas beyond the lab so they can join the ranks of other successful Connecticut entrepreneurs and industry leaders, and have an impact in our communities and on the state economy."

Acker says the program also helped them identify an exciting new market opportunity targeting pharmaceutical companies. These companies need dyes that are both fast and sensitive for high-throughput screening of potential therapeutic targets. In high-throughput drug screening, scientists create special cell lines, and then use advanced equipment to robotically apply different drugs to rotating dishes of cells. The cells are stained with a voltage-sensitive dye that displays any change in membrane potential or voltage after drug application with changes in fluorescence. Acker estimates that pharmaceutical companies and contract research organizations (CROs) spend over $10,000 on these dyes for each week-long study.

The dyes that Loew, Acker, and Yan develop will also allow drug companies to respond to new cardiac safety screening regulations from the Food and Drug Administration called CiPA (the Comprehensive in vitro Proarrythmia Assay).

CiPA regulations aim to establish better ways to detect side effects of new drugs that could cause a cardiac arrhythmia. In a key component of CiPA, screening is completed in cardiac cells with a realistic electrical heartbeat. The Loew team's fast-sensitive dyes could offer drug companies more effective options than are currently available. Since CiPA applies to any new therapies from weight-loss drugs to allergy medications, Loew and Acker anticipate high demand for their technology.

"We initially joined the Accelerate UConn program to learn how to build a business so we could sell our existing fast dyes to other scientists like us. Instead, we ended up discovering an entirely new customer segment with greater potential and more urgent need," says Acker. "We feel lucky to have had the opportunity to participate in this elite program based right here at UConn."

Gaining Outside Input

By following one of Accelerate UConn's most important tenets to "get out of the building," Acker conducted dozens of interviews with experts from industry who use VSDs for drug screening. They all expressed a need for dyes with improved sensitivity, faster speed, and fewer unwanted interactions or toxicity with the cells being tested.

Loew and his team were confident they could deliver.

Loew, Acker, and Yan's new dyes improve on the current sensors used for drug screening, which involve a two-component system and energy transfer between the components. The researchers produce dyes that use a novel VSD system where energy transfer is more efficient, resulting in faster, more sensitive, and less toxic dyes.

Loew says that support from UConn's entrepreneurship programs was pivotal in transforming their initial discovery from project to product.

"We learned so much from these programs, and we're still reaping the benefits," says Loew. "Targeting the right customer helped us gain additional research funding through UConn's SPARK Technology Commercialization Fund, and encouraged us to form a startup, Potentiometric Probes, to advance our product towards the market.

"We've been supplying VSDs to hundreds of cardiac and neuroscience research labs for over 30 years," he adds. "We're hopeful that Potentiometric Probes will assure that this continues, especially now that the demand is high and new commercial sector applications are emerging."

The team is currently developing a new website that will be a resource for researchers using these voltage imaging techniques. Once launched it will be accessible at http://www.potentiometrics.com.

Looking to the Future

Through their UConn SPARK Technology Commercialization funding, the team has been able to develop and test two new dyes, and they have conceptualized a few additional possibilities. One of their current prototypes is extremely promising, Loew says.

Loew and Acker are continuing to optimize their dyes and pursue follow-on funding to commercialize their products through the NSF's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program and BiopipelineCT, which is administered by Connecticut Innovations.

They have also continued to grow as entrepreneurs by participating in the CCEI Summer Fellowship. Potentiometric Probes was named a finalist in this program, and will compete for an additional $15,000 prize in the Wolff New Venture Competition, also administered by CCEI.

The team members hope that one day their dyes will have a major impact for both the pharmaceutical industry and fellow university researchers.

"As academics," says Loew, "we don't really think about money. We're just happy to do our science and hope that it helps people one day. But considering the needs of an end user beyond other scientists will potentially lead to greater adoption of our discoveries, more funding for our projects, and ultimately more scientific breakthroughs. That's a culture change worth considering."

Explore further: New device improves measurement of water pollution

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Dyes detect disease through heartbeat signals - Phys.Org

Molecular volume control – Phys.Org

The larval Drosophila chordotonal organ seen under the scanning electron microscope. This sensory functional unit modulates the processing of mechanical stimuli by means of the latrophilin receptor. Scale: 10 m. Credit: Scholz et al., 2017

About two years ago, scientists from the University of Wrzburg discovered that a certain class of receptors is capable of perceiving mechanical stimuli. Now they have begun to unravel the molecular mechanisms behind the discovery.

The receptor studied by scientists from the universities of Wrzburg and Leipzig over the past years works similarly to the volume control of a stereo which enhances or attenuates the incoming signal. The receptor in question is called latrophilin/CIRL.

A little more than two years ago, the researchers had surprised the scientific community by proving that certain receptors, including latrophilin, respond to mechanical stimuli from the environment for example vibration, sound waves or expansion. By doing so, the receptors help organisms to hear, perceive movements and control their own movements.

How the information gets inside the cell

At the time, however, the details of the receptors' contribution were still unclear, i.e. how the process works at the molecular level. In the meantime, the researchers have been able to shed light on some crucial details. They present their results in the current issue of the scientific journal eLife. The lead authors of the study are Dr Robert Kittel, who heads a working group at the Institute of Physiology/Department of Neurophysiology at the University of Wrzburg, and Professor Tobias Langenhan, who recently relocated from Wrzburg to the University of Leipzig.

"In order for cells to perceive and respond to external stimuli, the information must somehow get inside the cell," Robert Kittel explains the central aspect of the study. This may be accomplished through ion channels where a mechanical stimulus is converted into an electrical response in a very straightforward and fast process.

With the latrophilin receptor things are different: "It does not form a channel and it does not forward the stimulus electrically," Kittel says. Instead, it activates intracellular messengers that trigger special signal cascades inside the cell which ultimately also affect the ion channels. According to Kittel, the receptor thus has a modulating effect on stimulus perception like some kind of volume controller.

Collaboration with numerous experts

The study just published is the result of collaborating with specialists from various domains at the University of Wrzburg an aspect which Robert Kittel particularly appreciates.

One of the contributing experts is the plant physiologist Professor Georg Nagel who was one of the scientists who discovered a celebrated technique which became known as "optogenetics". The underlying principle: Nagel characterizes ion channels and enzymes that can be controlled with light. Robert Kittel and Tobias Langenhan used the larvae of Drosophila, the fruit fly, for their experiments which are almost transparent so that the researchers were able to study the functioning of the receptors with simple flashes of light.

The second expert involved was Professor Markus Sauer, head of the Department of Biotechnology and Biophysics at University of Wrzburg's Biocenter. With his team, Sauer developed special forms of high-resolution fluorescence microscopy. This "super resolution" microscopy allows imaging cellular structures and molecules with up to tenfold increased resolution compared to conventional optical microscopes. "By using super-resolution microscopy, we were able to pinpoint the position of the cell membrane where the receptor is located," Robert Kittel says.

Dr. Isabella Maiellaro and Professor Esther Asan are also specialists in the field of imaging procedures. By teaming up with Isabella Maiellaro from the Department of Pharmacology, the researchers were able to directly visualize the intracellular receptor signal. Esther Asan, Professor at the Institute of Anatomy and Cell Biology II at the University of Wrzburg, also contributed to the success of the study with her expertise in electron microscopy.

Moreover, the project was supported by the extensive experience of Professor Matthias Pawlak at the Institute of Physiology of the University of Wrzburg in the field of sensory physiology and Dr Simone Prmel, a pharmacologist at the University of Leipzig. Robert Kittel sees these collaborations as a good example of how modern biotechnological methods can help answer physiological questions.

A very important molecular family

Latrophilin/CIRL is a member of a family of molecules that has more than 30 members in humans: the so-called adhesion GPCRs, a subgroup of the G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Hundreds of them are encoded in the human genome; their importance is underpinned among others by the fact that around half of all prescription drugs target these receptors and help treat common diseases such as high blood pressure, asthma or Parkinson's.

This shows just how important the research results of the scientists from Wrzburg and Leipzig are. After all, knowing what is going on inside the cells is a prerequisite for developing a better understanding of pathological processes and designing new therapies. "The cell biology processes are well conserved in terms of evolution," Robert Kittel says. Similar mechanisms are also at work in human cells.

Robert Kittel and Tobias Langenhan are also members of a research unit funded by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG FOR 2149) which studies the signalling behaviour of adhesion GPCRs. The current study harnesses the good experimental accessibility of Drosophila to bring new technologies into a biomedical context more quickly. This allows basic molecular mechanisms to be described for the first time. These mechanisms are now to be studied in further organisms and physiological contexts in collaboration with other scientists.

Explore further: Receptor dynamics provide new potential for pharmaceutical developments

More information: Nicole Scholz et al. Mechano-dependent signaling by Latrophilin/CIRL quenches cAMP in proprioceptive neurons, eLife (2017). DOI: 10.7554/eLife.28360

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Molecular volume control - Phys.Org

Hendrix Genetics is an economic ‘win-win’ for GI – Grand Island Independent

The opening of Hendrix Genetics in Grand Island on Aug. 15 is an excellent example of the power of markets supplemented by appropriate government policy.

Feeding a growing world population now estimated to be 7.5 billion provides both a challenge and an opportunity as food producers endeavor to meet the growing demand for food. For Hendrix Genetics this demand represents opportunity as it is a world leader in turkey, layer and trout breeding as well as a major player in swine, salmon and guinea fowl production.

The numbers connected with Hendrix Genetics are impressive. They currently have 25 percent of the United States egg hatchery market and the new hatchery in Grand Island will serve 10 percent of the U.S. market. With good science and management, poultry production is an excellent way to provide quality food for both domestic and world markets.

Hendrix Genetics was willing and able to create the Grand Island plant because essential markets were available to meet their needs. After a nationwide search they determined that Grand Island was an excellent location. It provided needed isolation that was essential for the required biosecurity. In our area they found infrastructure for transportation needs, access to willing, affordable and capable labor and area producers to build and manage outlying barns as well as to provide feed.

For each component in the production process, prices, profits and wages had to be sufficient to bring together all the resources necessary to open and operate the plant.

Government policies had to align with needs of Hendrix Genetics and our community gave them an excellent invitation to grow our economy. The work of the Grand Island Area Economic Development Corporation was very important and we would add necessary and effective. Government and private enterprise had an effective partnership.

Also to be noted is that Hendrix Genetics is based in Holland and joins other industries in our community that are based in other countries such as New Holland-Italy and JBS-Brazil. Global interdependence is a reality and a plus for all those ready and willing to participate in the global economy.

America first may be effective political rhetoric in some parts of our country, but it is not good long term economic policy. Free trade and open borders will serve us better, particularly the food producers in the Midwest who are willing and able to feed the growing world population and rely on world markets.

This confluence of markets has added an $18 million investment to the city of Grand Island, more than 40 permanent jobs and an economic infusion estimated at $40 million.

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Hendrix Genetics is an economic 'win-win' for GI - Grand Island Independent

Oxford Genetics Secures 7.5M Investment – FinSMEs (blog)

Oxford Genetics, a UK-based developer of innovative synthetic biology-based technologies for biologics discovery, development and delivery, received a 7.5m investment.

Backers included existing investor Mercia Technologies and Invesco Perpetual.

The company intends to use the funds to open a new office in Boston, US and extend its UK facility at the Oxford Science Park by November 2017, which includes cell line engineering capabilities, viral vector production and purification suites, high-throughput robotic screening systems and process development facilities, invest in its research and development capabilities to increase its intellectual property (IP) portfolio and grow its of technology-enabled licensing business.

Led by Ryan Cawood, CEO, Oxford Genetics is a UK based biotechnology company specializing in the production of versatile cloning plasmids for research in academic and biotechnology institutions. The company also provides custom cloning and DNA synthesis.During the latest year, the company has increased the number of clients, key appointments, and market momentum in the growth areas of cell and gene therapy. It has also signed a number of licenses for use of its technologies, including two collaborative partnerships with gene therapy companies designed to develop its IP offering further, as well as filing five new patents intended to improve the discovery, development or delivery of biotherapeutics.

FinSMEs

22/08/2017

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Oxford Genetics Secures 7.5M Investment - FinSMEs (blog)

ETMC Cancer Institute to host women’s luncheon Sept. 12 – Jacksonville Daily Progress

The ETMC Cancer Institute will host Cancer, Genetics and You, a luncheon addressing what every woman should know about how genetics is changing cancer detection, on Tuesday, Sept. 12, at the CrossWalk Conference Center, located on the campus of Green Acres Baptist Church.

The event will feature keynote speaker Damini Desai Morah, MS, CGC, a genetic counselor and specialist from Myriad Genetics.

Science now identifies cancer as a genetic disease, meaning that cancer is caused by certain changes to genes that control the way our cells grow and divide, said Dianne Adelfio, vice president of the ETMC Cancer Institute. The speaker will discuss how your genetic makeup can affect your likelihood of developing cancers specific to women, as well as other cancers.

Attendees will be given a cancer genetic questionnaire to see if they should consider future testing. Cancer physicians and genetic specialists also will be on hand to answer questions.

Since 2015 the ETMC Breast Care Center has offered forms of genetic testing that involve taking a sample of blood or cheek mucosa to analyze a womans genes. The results can help women with breast cancer make treatment decisions, and alert them to risks of developing other cancers. Genetic testing for those who have not had cancer provides a better understanding of their own cancer risks including risks that can impact other family members.

Genetics is leading the way in medical advancements in cancer detection and targeted treatment, said Adelfio. This luncheon is designed to inform and inspire women to be healthcare advocates as they understand more about how the genetic code is providing a deeper understanding of cancer and helping save lives.

Tickets for the event are $20 per person or a table of eight for $150. Doors open at 11 a.m., with the program taking place from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Reservations are required and may be made online at etmc.org or by calling 903-535-6302.

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ETMC Cancer Institute to host women's luncheon Sept. 12 - Jacksonville Daily Progress

Bruker Announces Novel D8 VENTURE BIOTOOLS for Advanced Structural Biology Research by X-Ray … – Markets Insider

HYDERABAD, India, Aug. 21, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --At the 24th Congress & General Assembly of the International Union of Crystallography (IUCr), Bruker today announces the new, high-performance D8 VENTUREBIOTOOLS for laboratory macromolecular crystallography.

The D8VENTUREBIOTOOLS feature major advances in source, detector and sample handling technology:

Dr. Vernon Smith, the Business Development Manager for Macromolecular Crystallography at Bruker AXS, noted: "With the D8 VENTUREBIOTOOLS, Bruker has once again set new standards in crystallography systems for the home laboratory. Our extremely bright and stable ImSDIAMOND X-ray source and our large area PHOTONIII photon counting detector enable highly accurate data to be collected very quickly. By combining this unprecedented performance with fast, reliable handling automation, the new D8 VENTUREBIOTOOLS provide researchers the opportunity to move from crystal to structure more efficiently than ever before."

Professor Elena Conti, Director at the Max-Planck-Institute for Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany, stated: "The D8VENTURE with METALJET has enabled my group to collect quality data from even our most difficult projects and has made our synchrotron trips more productive. With the addition of the new SCOUT sample changer, we expect this productivity to increase even further by being able to identify crystals suitable for structure determination more effectively. Taking less time to determine individual protein structures will enable us to push forward in our overall research goals more quickly."

About Bruker Corporation (NASDAQ: BRKR)For more than 55 years, Bruker has enabled scientists to make breakthrough discoveries and develop new applications that improve the quality of human life.Bruker's high-performance scientific instruments and high-value analytical and diagnostic solutions enable scientists to explore life and materials at molecular, cellular and microscopic levels. In close cooperation with our customers, Bruker is enabling innovation, productivity and customer success in life science molecular research, in applied and pharma applications, in microscopy, nanoanalysis and industrial applications, as well as in cell biology, preclinical imaging, clinical phenomics and proteomics research, clinical microbiology and molecular pathology research. For more information, please visit: http://www.bruker.com.

Investor Contact: Miroslava MinkovaBruker Head of Investor RelationsT: +1-978-663-3660, x1479E: rel="nofollow">miroslava.minkova@bruker.com

Media Contact: Dr. Heiko RessBruker AXS Director Marketing CommunicationsT: +49 (0)721-50997-0E: rel="nofollow">heiko.ress@bruker.com

The D8 VENTUREBIOTOOLS offer an unprecedented combination of high performance, low maintenance and low cost of ownership. The system incorporates the ISDIAMOND, the world's brightest microfocus X-ray source and the PHOTON III, a large area photon-counting X-ray detector. Its optional SCOUT robot can reliably handle 48 cryogenic samples automatically.

Keywords: macromolecular crystallography, X-ray detector, rotating anode

View original content with multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/bruker-announces-novel-d8-venture-biotools-for-advanced-structural-biology-research-by-x-ray-crystallography-300505401.html

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Bruker Announces Novel D8 VENTURE BIOTOOLS for Advanced Structural Biology Research by X-Ray ... - Markets Insider

New technology to capture live cell images opening new possibilities to the study of cell biology – Phys.Org

Research team with (First left, back row) Prof Karl Herrup, Head of Division of Life Science; (Second right, back row) Prof Hsing I-Ming, Head of Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering; (First right, back row) Prof Michael Altman, Head of Department of Physics. Credit: The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Researchers at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) have developed a new generation of microscope, which not only could capture 3D live cell videos, but the resulted images are also of much higher quality, greatly enhancing the accuracy and the scope of research on cell biology.

Researchers at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) have developed a new generation of microscope, which not only could capture 3D live cell videos, but the resulted images are also of much higher quality, greatly enhancing the accuracy and the scope of research on cell biology.

While an existing confocal microscope can also capture 3D bio-images, the laser light hitting on the sample is typically one million times that of summer sunlight, such intense light exposure inevitably disrupts cell activities and eventually kills the cell, posing limits to the study of cell biology.

The LiTone Line Bessel Sheet (LBS) microscope invented by a team led by Prof Du Shengwang and Prof Michael Loy from HKUST, however, is 1,000 times less photo-toxic than the current confocal model, allowing the cell to live much longer for observation. Phototoxicity is a type of sensitivity induced by light, which could cause molecular changes. The new microscope is also about 1,000 times faster, allowing much higher temporal resolution for a smooth video taking. Scientists can then study how proteins are transported within cells with great accuracy and efficiency, and what happens when the cell becomes abnormal. Prof Du is a Professor from the Department of Physics and the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering; he is also the Associate Director of the Super-Resolution Imaging Center. Prof Loy is an Emeritus Professor of Physics.

"It is a powerful technology out of sophisticated science and engineering, but we make it simple to users so that it can be operated by biologists with minimal amount of training," Prof Du said. "For the first time, scientists can study cells in much greater details. That could eventually help scientists unlock the mystery of how certain diseases were formed and developed in a cellular level."

Explore further: A microscope within a microscope

Provided by: The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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New technology to capture live cell images opening new possibilities to the study of cell biology - Phys.Org

TPR Lifeline: Clinical Genetics Is A Growing Field – Texas Public Radio

We all have about 24,000 genes. How those genes are structured and interact can determine our current health and our future health.

Modern medicine includes specialists in this field called Clinical Geneticists. In todays TPR Lifeline, Bioscience-Medicine reporter Wendy Rigby talks to Baylor College of Medicines Scott McLean, MD, about his work at the Childrens Hospital of San Antonio.

Rigby: Dr. McLean, what is clinical genetics?

McLean: Clinical genetics is the medical specialty that uses genetic information to improve your genetic health or to understand the basis for a variety of medical conditions.

Those of us who have had children in Texas know that while youre still in the hospital, you get some genetic testing done. What is that called and what are you looking for?

We have newborn screening which is actually a blood test that is given to all babies 24 and 48 hours of age. The blood test involves collecting that blood on a piece of paper, filter paper, and sending that to the Texas State Department of Health Services in Austin where they do a series of tests.

This is the foot prick?

This is where you prick the heel. It seem awfully cruel. Babies cry. Parents dont like it. But its actually a wonderful test because it allows us to screen for over 50 conditions.

Give us some examples. What are some of the genetic conditions we might have heard of?

Well, the initial condition that was screened for in newborn screening in the United States was PKU which stands for Phenylketonuria. This is a condition that results in intellectual disability and seizures. We can change that outcome if we are able to identify the condition early enough and change the diet.

Lets say a child comes in to Childrens Hospital of San Antonio. Doctors are having trouble figuring out whats going on. Are you called in to consult?

Most of our patients that we see in the outpatient clinic are sent to us by consultation from physicians in the community or from nurseries, neonatal intensive care units. They range from situations such as multiple birth defects, to autism, intellectual disability, seizures, encephalopathy, blindness, deafness. Theres a whole gamut of reasons that folks come to see us.

When these children become grownups, does that information that youve learned about them help them out if theyre planning to have their own children in the future?

So when pediatric patients make the transition from pediatric care to adult care, its very common for information and ideas to get lost. And we certainly would hope that people remember that. Sometimes when we have identified a situation in a little baby, I tell the parents that I want them to put a sticky note on the last page of their baby book so that when they are showing the baby book to their childs fiance and they get to the last page, it reminds them you need to go back to see the geneticist because theres this genetic situation that you need to have a nice long chat about so that you can plan your family as carefully as possible.

Right. So the work youre doing today could help someone 30 years in the future.

Well, genetics is a very unique specialty in that regard because when we see a patient were not thinking about their next year of life or their next two years of life or the next month. We do think about that. But this is a lifelong diagnosis and a lifelong situation. So I often joke with my patients that Im going to try to put them on the 90-year plan. What we figure out now about their genetics is going to be helpful for them throughout their entire lifespan, at least up until 90 years. And then after that theyre on their own. But well get them to 90.

So its an exciting time to be in the field.

Very exciting. I think the era of gene therapy which for many people we thought was never going to happen, its very promising because we have new technologies that I think are going to allow for advances in that area.

Dr. Scott McLean with Baylor College of Medicine and the Childrens Hospital of San Antonio, thanks for the information.

Youre quite welcome.

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TPR Lifeline: Clinical Genetics Is A Growing Field - Texas Public Radio

Christian Radio Host Bryan Fischer: Eclipse Is A Sign Of The Work Of Satan – HuffPost

Centuries ago, celestial events such as eclipses evoked deep superstition.

And they still do for some people,as a Christian radio host claimed that Mondays total eclipse of the sun may be a message from God.

Bryan Fischer, host of a Christian radio show called Focal Point, posted on Facebook that the Bible states the sun and moon serve as signs.

Then, he attempted to interpret those signs like a fortune teller.

This is a metaphor, or a sign, of the work of the Prince of Darkness in obscuring the light of Gods truth, he wrote, adding, Satan, and those who unwittingly serve as his accomplices by resisting the public acknowledgement of God and seeking to repress the expression of Christian faith in our land, are bringing on us a dark night of the national soul.

Fischer,whose radio show claims to bethe home of muscular Christianity, called on his followers to fight the darkness that we may return this nation to an unapologetic acknowledgement and embrace of the God of the Founders and his transcendent standard for human behavior as enshrined in the Ten Commandments.

He included a disclaimer that he did not, in fact, receive a revelation from God related to the eclipse but his post was instead an effort to ponder this sign in the heavens and speculate as to its possible spiritual implications.

Fischers attempt to paint a normal celestial event as some kind of message from God drew laughs from critics online, including the Church of Satan:

However, Fischer is not the only evangelical to interpret the eclipse as a possible warning from a deity.

Earlier this month, Anne Graham Lotz leader of AnGeL Ministries in North Carolina and daughter of famed evangelist Billy Graham also warned the eclipse could be a signal of darker things.

The celebratory nature regarding the eclipse brings to my mind the Babylonian King Belshazzar who threw a drunken feast the night the Medes and Persians crept under the city gate. While Belshazzar and his friends partied, they were oblivious to the impending danger. Belshazzar wound up dead the next day, and the Babylonian empire was destroyed.

Lotz said she doesnt view the eclipse as celebratory as a result.

While no one can know for sure if judgment is coming on America, it does seem that God is signaling us about something, she wrote.Time will tell what that something is.

Christian Post columnist Rev. Mark H. Creech wrote that he was inclined to agree with Lotz.

Is it a sign from the heavens calling upon our nation to turn from its sins and to Christ or suffer the consequences? I dont really know, he wrote.What I do know, however, is that we would be wise to treat it as though this very well may be the case.

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Christian Radio Host Bryan Fischer: Eclipse Is A Sign Of The Work Of Satan - HuffPost