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Stem Cells for Zoos: Conservation with Cellular Technologies – Labiotech.eu (blog)

Stem cells are recognized for their therapeutic promise in regenerative medicine. A contributor looks at how they are also used to save endangered species.

Four hours north of Nairobi, closely safeguarded by armed security, the last remaining northern white rhinoceros are waiting for extinction. Only three animals are left, all three of them living in a 700-acre enclosure within the Ol Pejeta Conservancy Park: there is Sadu, a 43 year-old male, the 27-year-old female Najin and her 16-year-old daughter Fatu. Once roaming great parts of Eastern and Central Africa, heavy poaching diminished their number to just a handful of individuals.

The last successful birth of a northern white rhinoceros was in 2000, with all following reproduction efforts in captivity staying unsuccessful. Natural reproduction is sadly out of reach for the last three individuals, with Sadu having a low sperm count, a difficult leg injury of Najin and a uterine disorder in Fatu that prevents her from becoming pregnant.

The sad truth is that many more species will share this dark prospect with the three rhinos. With largely human-made threats ranging from excessive poaching, loss of habitat, climate change and disease, many species are simply not capable of adapting fast enough to endure the ever increasing environmental pressure they are facing. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species is providing detailed information on the conservation status of endangered species for the past 50 years (video).

White rhinos

Currently it is listing 11,316 vulnerable, 7781 endangered and 5210 critically endangered species, with prominent examples such as the Eastern Gorilla, the cheetah and as one of the latest additions, the giraffe. Similar to the northern white rhinos situation, even the most ambitious conservation efforts will come too late for many of them. Conventional conservation strategies, including breeding programs in the wild or in captivity often remain ineffective (especially in captivity) and facilitated methods such as In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) have not been achieved or even tried in most species.

An additional lack ofknowledge about the reproductive cycle of most animals makes any breeding efforts a difficult undertaking. And even if breeding efforts were successful, the low diversity in gene pools of bred populations, together with the shrinkage of natural habitats would make the successful establishment of a self-sustaining population extremely difficult.

Amidst this dark prospect, recent milestones in stem cell and reproductive technologies spark new hope among scientists. In November last year, a group of scientists underKatsuhiko Hayashi at Kyushu University in Japan has achieved one of the holy grails in reproductive biology: engineering artificial egg cells from reprogrammed mouse skin cells, entirely in a dis.

Eastern Gorilla

The foundation for this success originates in earlier work that Hayashi did as student, where he succeeded in converting reprogrammed stem cells into primordial germ cells (PGCs), the precursor cells for both sperm and egg cells. When injected into ovaries or testis of living mice these artificially derived cells gave rise to fertile sperm and egg cells.

Now leading his own lab, Hayashi proved that the last maturation step in a living mammal is in fact not necessary but can be completely achieved in vitro. The derived egg cells were successfully used to give birth to pups which themselves were healthy and fertile. With a similar strategy Chinese researchers recently announced the generation of rudimentary sperm cells in a dish.

With the prospect of reconstituting the entire male and female germ line cycle in a dish, scientists hope to translate this success story to other fields of public interest. While some dream of the eradication of human infertility and the possibility of offspring for same sex couples, it also offers a completely new avenue for species conservation and with that the rescue of the northern white rhino.

In case you were wondering, this is how a giraffe eats.

Zoo Dvr Krlov in the Czech Republic the official owner of the last three northern white rhinoceroses has now assembled a consortium of mostly European research institutions to make the impossible possible. Members include wildlife and reproduction biology experts from the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin (IZW), stem cell experts from the Max Delbrck Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin (MDC), the Helmholtz Institute of Stem Cell Research in Munich (ISF), Dr. Hayashis lab in Japan, as well as Avantea, an Italian biotech company specialized in Assisted Reproduction services.

Under the title, Conservation by Cellular Technologies, the consortium members released an ambitious road map plan early last year, where they sketched out a dual strategy, involving both the collection of natural gametes and inspired by Hayashis success in mice the generation of artificial ones.

For the collection of natural gametes first trials have been pursued in the closest relative of the northern white rhino, the southern white rhino. By now, oocytes from several females have been successfully retrieved by Dr. Thomas Hildebrandt, head of the Department of Reproduction Management at the IZW. The collected eggs were then shipped to Avantea, an Italian company with renowned expertise in cloning and assisted reproduction of large animals such as horses, cattle and pigs.

Cheetah cub

Here the collected eggs were fertilized and successfully developed into early embryos ready for transfer into potential surrogate animals. First results were presented early this March at a two-day meeting of the European Northern White Rhino Working Group at Zoo Dvr Krlov. Encouraged by the first results, members aim to harvest gametes from the two remaining female northern white rhinos as early as this year.

To complement this first strategy, stem cell experts from the MDC Berlin and the Helmholtz Institute in Munich are working closely together with Dr. Hayashi to attempt the production of artificial gametes. For this the scientists rely on frozen tissue material which has formerly been collected from eleven deceased northern white rhinos and is now stored at zoological biobanks, primarily at the San Diego Zoo and the IZW.

Similar to in mice and humans, it was shown that these adult tissue cells can be converted into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), thereby providing a potentially indefinite sourceof artificial rhinoceros gametes. Currently, the scientists work on a protocol to differentiate the iPSC lines into primordial germ cells, which may then be matured into egg and sperm cells.

With the consortium road map underway, how realistic is the rescue of the northern white rhino? According to Dr. Hildebrand from the IZW, the first delivery of a northern white rhino may be possible within the next decade, assuming the outlined approach proves fruitful.This groundbreaking work would not only be the last chance to save the (sub)species of northern white rhinos but would also shift paradigms as to what is currently considered possible in todays species conservation.

Christina studied Cell Biology and Molecular Medicine with special focus on Stem Cell Research and (Epi)genomics. During her PhD she worked at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute und Broad Institute in Cambridge, USA. Currently she is working as Post Doc at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics in Berlin.

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Stem Cells for Zoos: Conservation with Cellular Technologies - Labiotech.eu (blog)

Virginia Western joins international project to provide biology students with hands-on research – Roanoke Times

Virginia Western Community College is one of 15 institutions in the United States to become part of the 10th cohort to participate in the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes (HHMI) Science Education Alliance Phage Hunters Advancing Genomics and Evolutionary Science project (SEA-PHAGES). The project is intended to spark an interest in science among students by teaching them to creatively and critically use the scientific method to address real-world issues.

Thus far, 142 colleges and universities, including Carnegie Mellon, James Madison University, Virginia Tech and Johns Hopkins University, have participated in SEA-PHAGES. Virginia Western is the only community college in Virginia that has been selected to participate. Training for Virginia Western faculty begins this summer and the project will be available to students as part of a two-semester course of study starting Fall Semester 2017.

This is an exciting opportunity for students at Virginia Western to be introduced to the scientific method while significantly contributing and connecting to the larger scientific community, says Amy White, Dean of STEM. Our aim, along with HHMIs mission, is to contribute to the scientific body of knowledge and inspire future scientists.

Open enrollment for Virginia Westerns Fall Semester will begin on June 21; returning students may enroll now. To learn more about course offerings and enroll, visit http://www.virginiawestern.edu or call 1-855-874-6690.

The SEA-PHAGES program at Virginia Western will be incorporated into an Introductory Biology (BIO-101) course in Fall Semester 2017 and continues into Spring Semester 2018 in Cell Biology. Students will begin by isolating novel bacteriophage viruses from local soil. They will then use various microbiological technologies to characterize the bacteriophage as well as isolate and sequence the viral DNA. The continuation of the program into Cell Biology shows students how to annotate the vial genome and learn about bioinformatics. After Spring Semester, a faculty member and student representatives will present their findings at the SEA Symposium, a scientific conference hosted by HHMI. Last year the symposium had more than 3,400 students from 84 different colleges and universities participate.

Students who complete the SEA-PHAGES program acquire many skills currently utilized in the scientific community. Students learn to maintain proper laboratory notebooks, perform many standard laboratory techniques such as polymerase chain reaction and gel electrophoresis, and employ software used for genome annotation and bioinformatics analysis. Additionally, students gain meaningful research experience early in their academic career, which connects them to the larger scientific community and instills a true sense of discovery.

Research has shown that students introduced early to meaningful research work are inspired to continue their education and scientific careers. Whereas, students introduced to meaningful research later in their careers see the work as validating to their choice and look to their peers ahead of them for inspiration. Early-exposure to active participation in authentic research is contributing significantly to science and shaping career choices.

For more information about the HHMI and SEA-PHAGES, visit: https://www.hhmi.org/news/science-education-alliance-begins-its-tenth-year.

Submitted by Josh Meyer

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Virginia Western joins international project to provide biology students with hands-on research - Roanoke Times

BRIEF-Beijing Leadman Biochemistry to buy 23 pct stake in pharma device subsidiary for 92000 yuan – Reuters

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BRIEF-Beijing Leadman Biochemistry to buy 23 pct stake in pharma device subsidiary for 92000 yuan - Reuters

New book ‘Anatomy of Innocence’ allows wrongfully convicted to tell their stories – 89.3 KPCC

People who have made good faith estimates are hoping that our human system of criminal justice gets it right 95% of the time. If we got it right 95% of the time there would still be 110,000 innocent people in jail. -- Laura Caldwell, co-editor, "Anatomy of Innocence"

In recent years, wrongful conviction stories like the ones in Serial and Netflixs Making a Murderer have captivated audiences. The characters in these stories are ordinary people. That's what makes the stories so intriguing this could happen to anyone.

Anatomy of Innocence is a new anthology that tells the stories of over a dozen people who were convicted of crimes they did not commit. What makes it unique is that the stories are told by the actual exonerees, with the help of thriller and mystery writers like Sara Paretsky, Lee Child, Brad Parks, and Laurie King. Laura Caldwell and Leslie Klinger teamed up to co-edit the collection of stories.

Author Laura Caldwell is a professor at Loyola University Chicago School of Law. In 2008, she founded Life After Innocence at Loyola, which provides resources for innocent people who have been affected by the criminal justice system as they re-enter society. Leslie Klinger is best known for his annotated editions of Sherlock Holmes, Dracula, and the works of H.P. Lovecraft.

Off-Ramp archive: Leslie Klinger on H.P. Lovecraft ... great writer, horrible man

They worked together on Anatomy of Innocence to examine the real life consequences of wrongful convictions. The idea was to present them almost like a novel to present the arc, to present the typical experience of the exonerees, Klinger says. From the very first moment from the arrest all the way through reentering society and the mental adjustments.

Sales of the book support Life After Innocence, and if it sells well enough, some of the proceeds will go to the exonerees who tell their stories. The book sites statistics from the National Registry of Exonerations, a registry kept by Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, which says there are about 2,000 cases of exonerations that have been publicly recognized.

Klinger says they worked hard to mirror the overall demographics of the wrongfully convicted: almost a third are black, about 10% were first arrested under the age of 18, and half were under the age of 25 when they first became involved in their case and ended up incarcerated.

Its not always about being at the wrong place at the wrong time.

67% of wrongful convictions that involved big level felonies involved prosecutorial or police misconduct, Caldwell says. Now, that is not to say that the majority of police or prosecutors engage in misconduct unfortunately we have seen such egregious things happen on behalf of police and prosecutors.

When we were envisioning this book Making a Murderer wasnt out, but Serial was. The average person wasnt as well versed in wrongful convictions, Caldwell says. By the time we got to actually publishing, the hope is that you understand that this happens. Its a human system it's bound to happen for various reasons so now that its bound to happen for various reasons what does it feel like to be in that person's head? What does it feel like to be in their soul? What does it feel like to be in their eyes?

For the full conversation with Laura Caldwell and Leslie Klingerclick on the audio player above.

With contributions from Jesus Ambrosio

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New book 'Anatomy of Innocence' allows wrongfully convicted to tell their stories - 89.3 KPCC

Neuroscience and Rehabilitation Center opens at St. Rita’s – Lima Ohio

LIMA A Neuroscience and Rehabilitation Center that opened Tuesday at St. Ritas Medical Center will provide comprehensive care to patients with neurological impairments, hospital officials said.

Located at 770 W. High St. in Lima, the NRC features a team of physicians, nurse practitioners and medical assistants who will administer a variety of services. The newly renovated facility will provide neurology, pain management, physical medicine and rehabilitation services, all under one roof.

Adjacent to the NRC is St. Ritas Ambulatory Surgery Center, where procedures to reduce pain are performed. Outpatient physical, occupational, and speech therapy services are also in close proximity.

I think the collaboration of providers all working together to deliver services is an enormous benefit to patients, said Dr. Matthew Owens, medical director of St. Ritas Neuroscience Institute.

Dr. Michael Rivera, pain management specialist at St. Ritas, added that the NRC provides a unique opportunity for patients to use multiple specialties in one location.

Its all in one place, so the patients dont have to go out of town or even around the corner, Rivera said. That way, the patient can get the best care possible.

The NRC houses 18 exam rooms and one massage therapy room, and is staffed with three physicians and four nurse practitioners. Owens said two medical assistants will also be added within the next several weeks.

For Owens, the NRC is part of a larger movement to ensure providers from multiple specialties are working closely together to administer the best outcome for patients.

What we want to accomplish is the idea of a patient being able to come to one location to start their journey of taking care of whatever condition they may be suffering from, he said. We want them to feel like we can help navigate and guide them through all these levels of care. That way, they can sit back and only have to worry about getting better.

Dr. Michael Rivera, a pain management specialist at St. Ritas Medical Center, speaks at a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday for the hospitals Neuroscience and Rehabilitation Center.

http://limaohio.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/web1_neuroscience-center.jpgDr. Michael Rivera, a pain management specialist at St. Ritas Medical Center, speaks at a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday for the hospitals Neuroscience and Rehabilitation Center. John Bush | The Lima News

Reach John Bush at 567-242-0456 or on Twitter @Bush_Lima.

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Neuroscience and Rehabilitation Center opens at St. Rita's - Lima Ohio

Peabody Essex Museum appoints neuroscience researcher to guide enrichment of visitor experience – Blooloop

The move is a first for an art museum.

Dr. Tedi Asher has been tasked with synthesising neuroscience research findings and making recommendations to help PEM enrich and enhance its offering.

We are very excited by the opportunity to be the first art museum to employ a full-time neuroscientist as a means to help develop new ways of designing experiences that are highly meaningful and relevant to visitors, reports Dan Monroe, PEMs Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Director and CEO.

Dr. Ashers unique perspective and deep insight will enable us to make the process of art exploration and discovery especially rewarding, stimulating, and fun.

Monroe added that the pioneering collaboration could well benefit the art museum community at large.

PEM began its neuroscience initiative over two years ago. Research suggests that the established methods of presenting and interpreting art are not always a good fit with the ways our brains work.

PEMs cross-disciplinary approach is exciting and comes at a time when neuroscience findings are beginning to be more widely embraced outside of the scientific community, comments Asher.

Neuroscience has the potential to deepen our fundamental understanding of human nature and reveal the mechanisms behind our human experiences. I am thrilled to have such a unique opportunity to collaborate with an organisation that embraces such a spirit of curiosity, ingenuity and experimentation.

Ashers appointment has been funded by a grant from Bostons Barr Foundation. PEM was founded in 1799 and is the USs oldest continuously operating museum. Its collections encompass American art and architecture, Asian export art, photography, maritime art and history, Native American, Oceanic and African art. Among the many historic structures on the campus is Yin Yu Tang, a 200-year-old Chinese house.

Other research into the science of sensation at museums and theme parks includes the work of Professor Brendan Walker.

Images courtesy PEM

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Peabody Essex Museum appoints neuroscience researcher to guide enrichment of visitor experience - Blooloop

Immunology market to see strong growth, despite patent expiries – The Pharma Letter (registration)

The global immunology market, which covers autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis,

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Immunology market to see strong growth, despite patent expiries - The Pharma Letter (registration)

BRIEF-JK Agri Genetics posts March-qtr profit – Reuters

Reuters is the news and media division of Thomson Reuters. Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Learn more about Thomson Reuters products:

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BRIEF-JK Agri Genetics posts March-qtr profit - Reuters

One hundred women of influence: Sally Dunwoodie – Western Advocate

4 Aug 2015, 1 p.m.

The answer to the question of why so many babies are born with heart defects lies in research into the unknown and fearless funders.

Sydney embryologist Professor Sally Dunwoodie works at the frontier of genetic coding to decipher which of our 20,000 genomes are activated to help a baby's heart develop in utero. Pic supplied

ITS a curious concept, striving to fail," Sydney embryologist Professor Sally Dunwoodiesays. "It doesn't come comfortably to most people."

It's not clear that it comes easily to Dunwoodie, either, but it's a regular part of her job,working at the frontier of genetic coding to decipher which of our 20,000 genomes areactivated to help a baby's heart develop in utero.

When I ask how important failure is to her work, she laughs, and tells me about the currentresearch project into birth defects that she's running as head of embryology at the VictorChang Institute.

When the human genome was first sequenced, it took a decade and $3 million, now it can be sequenced in a week for $1600... - Professor Sally Dunwoodie

It's the biggest in Australia by a long stretch, and one of the biggest in respect of overseasresearch. Through it she hopes to find which genetic mutations trigger congenital heartdisease.

"Are we setting up to fail?" she says.

"We don't know how successful this will be. We havepredictions, that we might be able to solve 30 per cent or 40 per cent of cases, but it's in thefailure of the other 60 or 70 per cent that we will learn more, so we can know what we needto do next time."

But what constitutes failure, on a larger scale, she wonders. "Is it a total failure, even if wesolve a small percentage of cases? Or is that right, from a cost-benefit perspective? Could orshould money be spent differently?"

Part of the difficulty scientists face, in embracing what American professors of managementlike Sim Sitkin refer to as "intelligent failure", is the hurdle it places on projects, at the leadingedge of science, being granted funding.

"There is a chronic lack of funding in this country, only 10 per cent of grant applications getfunding, down from 25 per cent last year, even though they [the funding bodies] say 70 percent of applications are worthy," Dunwoodie says.

"So everyone is safe.They like you to find safe things, to have done the work basicallybefore you've got the money. That research is important, but then there is another type ofresearch which is big, interdisciplinary, it's a bit unknown, you don't really know what you'llend up with and there's a fear of failure."

And that's where Dunwoodie's interests lie.

In Australia, about eight babies are born each day with a congenital heart defect. In theUnited States, it's 40,000 a year. Worldwide, that figure is about 1 million. For the seriouscases, they need open heart surgery within 48 hours, cutting into hearts the size of a walnut.Some children require three open heart surgeries before kindergarten.

Heart defects account for 30 per cent of all birth defects, but scientists still don't know whythey happen, or who might be at risk, genetically.Until recently, money and technology has held research back.

But Dunwoodie says that haschanged, and researchers can more easily sequence all of a person's 20,000 genes in onehit, even sequencing entire genomes, which includes the genes and the DNA materialbetween them.

"When the human genome was first sequenced, it took a decade and $3 million, now it canbe sequenced in a week for $1600 ... Cheap technology means we can think bigger thanwe've ever had the possibility to do."

In 2003, at Sydney's Westmead Children's hospital, cardiac surgeon David Winlaw hit on theidea of starting a DNA bank, collecting samples from his patients and their families in thehope that one day it would be useful.

"We're talking about sifting through 3 billion pieces of information per person," Dunwoodiesays of her decision to sequence the 2000 samples in the DNA bank, and more that her ownteam of researchers have collected.

"It's just absolutely phenomenal. That kind of project though, the government fundingagencies are not going to fund. It's a fishing expedition, you don't know what you're going tofind, you need a lot of money and it's risky. But how are you ever going to get anywhereunless you push the boundaries?"

The money problem has been solved, at least in part, by donations over the past three yearsfrom Chain Reaction, a group of lycra-clad senior executives who ride 1000 kilometres eachyear raising money for children's charities.

"I get anxious about the size of the project, what people might expect ... In the businessworld, people might expect things to happen quickly, or for an 80 per cent success rate,"Dunwoodie says.

"This is a long slow business."

The Australian Financial Review/Westpac 100 Women of Influence Awards promote bold and diverse women championing change in business and society. Enter yourself orsomeone you know in one or more of the 10 categories: local/regional, board/management,innovation, culture, public policy, business enterprise, diversity, young leader, global, socialenterprise/notforprofit. Entries close August 9. For more information go to 100 Women of influence.

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One hundred women of influence: Sally Dunwoodie - Western Advocate

Scottish musician claims unusual world record – Independent Online

London - A man who froze his sperm more than two decades before having twins with his partner has claimed a new world record.

The Scottish musician, who did not want to be named, had his sperm frozen when he was 21, before starting chemotherapy treatment for cancer, as doctors warned him he would become infertile.

After his sperm had been kept in cold storage for 26 years and 243 days, his partner underwent in-vitro fertilisation in 2010. Its quite a big deal for a woman to take that on, he said. The couple gave birth to a girl and a boy the following year. He was 47 and his partner was 37. Now 54, he knew he held a world record, but did not want to go public.

File photo: The previous world record holder, Alex Powell, had had his sperm frozen for 23 years and the story was reported around the globe. Picture: AP

The previous world record holder, Alex Powell, had had his sperm frozen for 23 years and the story was reported around the globe. He was also about to undergo chemotherapy.

But the musician learnt he could be listed anonymously in Guinness World Records, and he agreed to speak to one newspaper to highlight how long sperm can be frozen and then used to produce healthy children. For people going through chemotherapy, they should keep hope, he told The Times.

Marco Gaudoin, director of the GCRM medical clinic where the treatment took place, said that frozen sperm could theoretically be stored indefinitely.

The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority claims sperm can be frozen for more than 40 years, but that not all sperm survive the process.

It has to be frozen for at least six months before it can be used for treatment, to screen the donor for infections.

The Independent

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Scottish musician claims unusual world record - Independent Online