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Grey’s Anatomy and Station 19: Watch the New Trailer for the 2-Hour Crossover Premiere ‘It’s a War Zone’ – PEOPLE

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Grey's Anatomy and Station 19: Watch the New Trailer for the 2-Hour Crossover Premiere

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Grey's Anatomy and Station 19: Watch the New Trailer for the 2-Hour Crossover Premiere 'It's a War Zone' - PEOPLE

Who Is the Most ‘Toxic’ Character on ‘Grey’s Anatomy’? – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Greys Anatomy is well known for its drama. Thats a large part of the reason it has such great ratings. Its also known for its toxic characters.

While waiting for the next season to premiere, fans on Reddit discussed the most toxic characters that have appeared on the show over the years. Here are the top three characters, and the reasons why fans both love and hate them.

Fans were on the fence about Mark. He had moments when he was a complete jerk, only to switch to a really sweet guy within the same episode. To say that he left fans conflicted was an understatement.

When Mark first appeared on the show, it was to reconnect with Derek after he slept with Addison. That sort of became a theme for Mark. He would sleep around with multiple women, but due to his roguish charm, he was often forgiven for it.

Fans had a hard time forgiving him when he cheated on Lexie, however. She had grown from an annoying character no one could stand to one of the most prominent on the show, and the way he treated her left fans heartbroken.

Mark did manage to make things right, as he always did, and fans were heartbroken when he was later killed off. Fans continue to argue about whether he was truly a toxic character or not.

One fan summed it up well when they said: I actually dont think Mark was toxic. He was very upfront about who he was and what he wanted.

RELATED: Greys Anatomy: Seeing Michael ONeill in Other Shows Still Brings Back Bad Memories

Few characters get as much hate as Owen Hunt. From the first episode, it was clear there was potential between him and fan-favorite Cristina Yang. Yet he strung her along, pressured her into a relationship, and showed very controlling behaviors.

Once that relationship ended, Owen went on to show the same tendencies with other women. He also had a vicious temper that didnt win him any points with fans.

One fan stated, For me OWEN he brings out the worst in every woman with whom he has been with, EVERY.SINGLE.ONE.

Another Reddit user said, I really believe its Owen. Over the years hes become the one with the least redemptive qualities, if he hasnt lost them at all yet.

Patrick Dempsey starred as Derek Shepherd on the show, and it wasnt clear whether Dempsey or the character he played caused more conflict. There were plenty of rumors that Dempsey and Ellen Pompeo didnt get along behind the scenes.

Yet Dr. Shepherd, also known as McDreamy, was considered the most toxic character on the show by many fans.

There were many red flags that McDreamy wasnt such a dreamboat after all. The biggest red flag came in the season one finale when it was finally revealed he was married. This happened when his wife Addison showed up and announced it to Meredith. The fact that Derek was livid that she outed him was very telling.

Things went downhill from there. He cheated on Meredith multiple times, took credit for their medical trial, and refused to let Meredith move on.

One Reddit user said:

For me, its Derek, but theres a lot more to it than just narcissism and playing with Merediths feelings. He slut-shamed her and got so angry, treating her horribly, after she started to move on while he was still with Addison, he was extremely selfish, and was overall just a very self-righteous person and bad husband. At least the other characters get called out on their crap and have worked on themselves.

Many fans feel that things got dark after Dempsey left the show. But then things smoothed out and began to pick up again. Now that season seventeen is swiftly approaching, fans are eager to see who will be the new character who really shakes things up at Seattle Grace Mercy West Hospital.

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Who Is the Most 'Toxic' Character on 'Grey's Anatomy'? - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

What Is Medical 3D Printingand How Is it Regulated? – The Pew Charitable Trusts

Overview

Advances in 3D printing, also called additive manufacturing, are capturing attention in the health care field because of their potential to improve treatment for certain medical conditions. A radiologist, for instance, might create an exact replica of a patients spine to help plan a surgery; a dentist could scan a broken tooth to make a crown that fits precisely into the patients mouth. In both instances, the doctors can use 3D printing to make products that specifically match a patients anatomy.

And the technology is not limited to planning surgeries or producing customized dental restorations such as crowns; 3D printing has enabled the production of customized prosthetic limbs, cranial implants, or orthopedic implants such as hips and knees. At the same time, its potential to change the manufacturing of medical productsparticularly high-risk devices such as implantscould affect patient safety, creating new challenges for Food and Drug Administration (FDA) oversight.

This issue brief explains how medical 3D printing is used in health care, how FDA regulates the products that are made, and what regulatory questions the agency faces.

Unlike traditional methods, in which products are created by shaping raw material into a final form through carving, grinding, or molding, 3D printing is an additive manufacturing technique that creates three-dimensional objects by building successive layers of raw material such as metals, plastics, and ceramics. The objects are produced from a digital file, rendered from a magnetic resonance image (MRI) or a computer-aided design (CAD) drawing, which allows the manufacturer to easily make changes or adapt the product as desired.1 3D printing approaches can differ in terms of how the layers are deposited and in the type of materials used.2 A variety of 3D printers are available on the market, ranging from inexpensive models aimed at consumers and capable of printing small, simple parts, to commercial grade printers that produce significantly larger and more complex products.

To date, most FDA-reviewed products developed via 3D printing have been medical devices such as orthopedic implants; more than 100 have been reviewed.3 Such a manufacturing approach offers several clinical advantages. For example, manufacturers have used 3D printing technologies to create devices with complex geometries such as knee replacements with a porous structure, which can facilitate tissue growth and integration.4 3D printing also provides the ability to create a whole product or device component at once while other manufacturing techniques may require several parts to be fabricated separately and screwed or welded together.

Because this type of manufacturing does not rely on molds or multiple pieces of specialized equipment and designs can rapidly be modified, 3D printing can also be used for creating patient-matched products based on the patients anatomy. Examples include joint replacements, cranial implants, and dental restorations.5 While some large-scale manufacturers are creating and marketing these products, this level of customization is also being used at the site of patient care in what is called point-of-care manufacturing. This on-demand creation of 3D-printed medical products is based on a patients imaging data. Medical devices that are printed at the point of care include patient-matched anatomical models, prosthetics, and surgical guides, which are tools that help guide surgeons on where to cut during an operation. The number of U.S. hospitals with a centralized 3D printing facility has grown rapidly in the past decade, from just three in 2010 to more than 100 by 2019.6 As the technology evolves, this point-of-care model may become even more widespread.

3D printing also has potential applications in other product areas. For example, research is underway to use 3D printing to manufacture pharmaceuticals with the potential for unique dosage forms or formulations, including those that might enable slower or faster absorption. FDA approved one such 3D-printed drug in 2015, an epilepsy treatment formulated to deliver a large dose of the active ingredient that can disintegrate quickly in water.7 3D printing could also one day be used to make personalized treatments that combine multiple drugs into one pill, or a polypill.8 Additionally, researchers are using bioprinters to create cellular and tissue constructs, such as skin grafts9and organs,10 but these applications are still in experimental phases.11

FDA does not regulate 3D printers themselves; instead, FDA regulates the medical products made via 3D printing. The type of regulatory review required depends on the kind of product being made, the intended use of the product, and the potential risks posed to patients. Devicesthe most common type of product made using 3D printing at this timeare regulated by FDAs Center for Devices and Radiological Health and are classified into one of three regulatory categories, or classes. (The agency may also regulate the imaging devices and software components involved in the production of these devices, but these are reviewed separately.)

FDA classifies devices based on their level of risk and the regulatory controls necessary to provide a reasonable assurance of safety and effectiveness.12 Class I devices are low risk and include products such as bandages and handheld surgical instruments. Class II devices are considered moderate risk and include items such as infusion pumps, while Class III devices, which are considered high risk, include products that are life-supporting or life-sustaining, substantially important in preventing impairment of human health, or present an unreasonable risk of illness or injury. A pacemaker is an example of a Class III device.13

Regulatory scrutiny increases with each corresponding class. Most Class I and some Class II devices are exempt from undergoing FDA review prior to entering the market, known as premarket review; however, they must comply with manufacturing and quality control standards. Most Class II devices undergo what is known as a 510(k) review (named for the relevant section of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act), in which a manufacturer demonstrates that its device is substantially equivalent to an existing device on the market, reducing the need for extensive clinical research. Class III devices must submit a full application for premarket approval that includes data from clinical trials.14 FDA then determines whether sufficient scientific evidence exists to demonstrate that the new device is safe and effective for its intended use.15

FDA also maintains an exemption for custom devices. A custom device may be exempt from 510(k) or premarket approval submissions if it meets certain requirements articulated under Section 520(b) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. These requirements include, for example, that the manufacturer makes no more than five units of the device per year, and that it is designed to treat a unique pathology or physiological condition that no other device is domestically available to treat.16 In addition, FDA has the option to issue emergency use authorizations as it did in response to the COVID-19 pandemic for certain 3D-printed ventilator devices.17

All devices, unless specifically exempted, are expected by FDA to adhere to current good manufacturing practices, known as the quality system regulations that are intended to ensure a finished device meets required specifications and is produced to an adequate level of quality.18

In 2017, FDA released guidance on the type of information that should be included for 3D-printed device application submissions, including for patient-matched devices such as joint replacements and cranial implants. The document represents FDAs initial thinking, and provides information on device and manufacturing process and testing considerations.19 However, the guidance does not specifically address point-of-care manufacturing, which is a potentially significant gap given the rapid uptake of 3D printers by hospitals over the past few years. FDA has also cleared software programs that are specifically intended to generate 3D models of a patients anatomy;20 however, it is up to the actual medical facility to use that software within the scope of its intended useand to use it correctly.

Although specific guidance from FDA does not yet exist for 3D printing in the drug or biologic domains, these products are subject to regulation under existing pathways through FDAs Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) or FDAs Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER). Each product type is associated with unique regulatory challenges that both centers are evaluating. CDERs Office of Pharmaceutical Quality is conducting its own research to understand the potential role of 3D printing in developing drugs and has been coordinating with pharmaceutical manufacturers to utilize this technology.21 CBER has also interacted with stakeholders who are researching the use of 3D printing for biological materials, such as human tissue. In 2017, former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said that FDA planned to review the regulatory issues associated with bioprinting to see whether additional guidance would be necessary outside of the regulatory framework for regenerative medicine products.22 However, no subsequent updates on this review have emerged.

For medical 3D printing that occurs outside the scope of FDA regulation, little formal oversight exists. State medical boards may be able to exert some oversight if 3D printing by a particular provider is putting patients at risk; however, these boards typically react to filed complaints, rather than conduct proactive investigations. At least one medical professional organization, the Radiological Society of North America, has released guidelines for utilizing 3D printing at the point of care, which includes recommendations on how to consistently and safely produce 3D-printed anatomical models generated from medical imaging, as well as criteria for the clinical appropriateness of using 3D-printed anatomical models for diagnostic use.23 Other professional societies may follow suit as 3D printing becomes more frequent in clinical applications; however, such guidelines do not have the force of regulation.

3D printing presents unique opportunities for biomedical research and medical product development, but it also poses new risks and oversight challenges because it allows for the decentralized manufacturing of highly customized productseven high-risk products such as implantable devicesby organizations or individuals that may have limited experience with FDA regulations. The agency is responsible for ensuring that manufacturers comply with good manufacturing practices and that the products they create meet the statutory requirements for safety and effectiveness. When used by registered drug, biologic, or device manufacturers in centralized facilities subject to FDA inspection, 3D printing is not unlike other manufacturing techniques. With respect to 3D printing of medical devices in particular, FDA staff have stated that [t]he overarching view is that its a manufacturing technology, not something that exotic from what weve seen before.24

However, when 3D printing is used to manufacture a medical product at the point of care, oversight responsibility can become less clear. It is not yet apparent how the agency should adapt its regulatory requirements to ensure that these 3D-printed products are safe and effective for their intended use. FDA does not directly regulate the practice of medicine, which is overseen primarily by state medical boards. Rather, the agencys jurisdiction covers medical products. In some clinical scenarios where 3D printing might be used, such as the printing of an anatomical model that is used to plan surgery, or perhaps one day the printing of human tissue for transplantation, the distinction between product and practice is not always easy to discern.

In recognition of this complexity, FDAs Center for Devices and Radiological Health is developing a risk-based framework that includes five potential scenarios in which 3D printing can be used for point-of-care manufacturing of medical devices. (See Table 1.)25

Sources: U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Center for Devices and Radiological Health Additive Manufacturing Working Group; The American Society of Mechanical Engineers

Questions remain related to each regulatory scenario for point-of-care manufacturing. For example, it is unclear how minimal risk should be evaluated or determined. Should only Class I devices be considered minimal risk or is this determination independent of classification? Is off-label use considered minimal risk? Under the scenarios that involve a close collaboration between a device manufacturer and a health care facility, such as scenarios B and C, who assumes legal liability in cases in which patients may be harmed? Who ensures device quality, given that a specific 3D-printed device depends on many factors that will vary from one health care facility to another (including personnel, equipment, and materials)? Co-locating a manufacturer with a health care facility raises questions about the distinction between the manufacturer and the facility, in addition to liability concerns. Finally, many health care facilities may be ill-prepared to meet all the regulatory requirements necessary for device manufacturers, such as quality system regulations.26

More broadly, challenges will emerge in determining how FDA should deploy its limited inspection and enforcement resources, especially as these technologies become more widespread and manufacturing of 3D-printed devices becomes more decentralized. Furthermore, as the technology advances and potentially enables the development of customized treatments, including drugs and biological products, FDAs other centers will need to weigh in on 3D printing. The agency may need to define a new regulatory framework that ensures the safety and effectiveness of these individualized products.

3D printing offers significant promise in the health care field, particularly because of its ability to produce highly customized products at the point of care. However, this scenario also presents challenges for adequate oversight. As 3D printing is adopted more widely, regulatory oversight must adapt in order to keep pace and ensure that the benefits of this technology outweigh the potential risks.

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What Is Medical 3D Printingand How Is it Regulated? - The Pew Charitable Trusts

UConn Health Researcher Receives Patent for Cancer-fighting Antibody – UConn Today

UConn Health professor of cell biology Kevin Claffey recently received a patent for a novel antibody designed to target an important cancer cell membrane protein.

Heat Shock Protein 90 (Hsp90) plays an important role in cancer cell proliferation. Hsp90 is a chaperone protein that helps other proteins fold properly and stabilizes many proteins, including those required for tumor growth. Hsp90 is integral to the survival of the cells it assists. Cancer cells are more dependent on elevated levels of Hsp90 than healthy, non-cancerous cells making it an attractive target for therapies.

Claffey has derived antibodies produced in breast cancer patients lymph nodes that specifically target this protein on cancer cell membranes. These biological antibodies directly and specifically target only tumor cells rather than all cells that have Hsp90 on their surface.

The antibody HCAb2, which occurs naturally in cancer patients, specifically targets cancer cells Hsp90 proteins. Claffey used this biological antibody as a template to develop a synthetic version which could be a potent treatment for multiple kinds of cancer.

Other antibodies used in cancer treatment target signally receptors on the surface of tumor cells. However, these receptors are also essential for normal cell functioning leading to a host of adverse side effects.

While there have been many attempts to develop a drug that targets Hsp90, this is the first time a researcher has found antibodies that bind specifically to the tumor and the selectively induced stress protein.

Claffeys molecule has demonstrated the potential to inhibit Hsp90 selectively for melanoma, bladder and ovarian cancer types.

Related to this technology, Claffey has developed a platform for cancer antigen discovery that applies a unique biochemistry and molecular biology technology. This platform recovers antibodies from patients and identifies the cancer proteins that their own immune system has targeted as abnormal. This platform-based method can therefore isolate and identify tumor-specific antigens as well as patient-derived single domain antibodies specific to those antigens. By using this platform, Claffey found the HSP90-beta isoform that is inadvertently present on the extracellular face of highly metabolic cancer cells, and thus presents a cancer-selective target for antibodies which can then be incorporated into engineered T-cell therapies, such as CAR-T cells.

The platform was validated using materials available to the PI from late stage metastatic breast cancer patients; breast cancer patients; melanoma patients; and breast cancer patient sentinel lymph nodes. For more information about the technology and partnering opportunities, contact Amit Kumar (a.kumar@uconn.edu).

Claffey holds a Ph.D. in biochemistry and molecular biology from Boston University. He completed his postdoctoral training at the Dana-Faber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology. His research focuses on pre-clinical models of breast cancer, targeting angiogenesis and VEGF-dependent mechanisms.

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UConn Health Researcher Receives Patent for Cancer-fighting Antibody - UConn Today

A systems-level approach to understanding the immunology of COVID-19 in adults and children on SelectScience – SelectScience

This webinar will present recent studies from Dr. Petter Brodin's group at Karolinska Institute in Stockholm that provide important new insights into the immune system responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection. These studies took a systems-level approach to analyze both the cellular and protein components involved, using methodologies including mass cytometry, flow cytometry and high-multiplex proteomics.

A longitudinal study of severe COVID-19 patients identified distinct patterns of immune cell coregulation in four different stages of the disease and demonstrated a shared trajectory of immunological recovery that may provide future biomarkers of disease progression. In an investigation of Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C), a relatively rare complication of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children, important differences in inflammatory response were seen between MIS-C and severe COVID-19 in adults. Moreover, while some similarities were observed between inflammatory responses in MIS-C and Kawasaki disease, important differences were also apparent, particularly in the T-cell subsets involved.

Key Learning Objectives

Who Should Attend

Certificate of attendance

All webinar participants can download a certificate of attendance for continuing education purposes from the webinar auditoriums resources section.

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A systems-level approach to understanding the immunology of COVID-19 in adults and children on SelectScience - SelectScience

Eck Institute members host webinar to combat COVID-19 myths, misinformation – Observer Online

Heidi Beidinger-Burnett and Mary Ann McDowell, both of the University of Notre Dames Eck Institute for Global health, are taking on misinformation and misunderstanding of the coronavirus pandemic with their new webinar series called Consider This! Simplifying the COVID-19 Conversation.

Beidinger-Burnett serves as the director of the Eck Institute for Global Health and president of the St. Joseph County Board of Health. McDowell, an associate professor of biological sciences and a member of the Eck Institute for Global Health, is an expert in infectious disease and immunology. Through their combined backgrounds, the two doctors said they hope to increase the scientific literacy of the Notre Dame community regarding the virus and public health policies.

We were finding misconceptions or myths about the science and public health of COVID-19, Beidinger-Burnett said. The idea for us is to simplify the conversation for people to be more comfortable with the terminology and to be more in control of the information.

Consider This! aims to cut through the growing distrust in the media and correct the common myths of the virus so that the Notre Dame and St. Joseph County communities can better protect themselves.

McDowell said the myths that concern her the most are the beliefs that herd immunity should be embraced, that the coronavirus pandemic is over and that a widely available vaccine will arrive prior to election day or early next year.

You have to model the behavior. This is leadership 101, Burnett-Beidinger said. We have a president who was saying, We dont need a mask, oh, its not masculine, I dont need it. Remember, he made fun of Joe Biden. Well, Joe Biden was adhering to what CDC and all the others were telling us that we needed to be doing to safeguard ourselves. So that void in leadership has significantly contributed to the myths and the rumors that have been spread about this, and the distrust in the science.

The webinar series will be conversational in tone while also drawing upon the expertise of over 15 specialists in immunology, public health and public policy.

I think that we have a science literacy problem all over the world but [also] in the United States, McDowell said. And you know, I would say thats really a fault of the scientists, in some ways, because we havent done a good job of communicating our work and making it accessible.

The two co-hosts want their series to be as accessible and conversational as possible to students and community members. They hope this approach can alleviate fears and increase cooperation with community guidelines set by teams of public health experts. McDowell also encouraged students to contact [emailprotected] with any questions or myths they want the series to address.

Monday night, Consider This! went live for the first time. The two co-hosts began by discussing the current virus statistics in St. Joseph County. They continued on to a segment titled Rumor Has It, in which they confronted herd immunity parties on college campuses and the dangers they pose to young adults.

The episode concluded with a conversation with University Provost Marie Lynn Miranda. Miranda has a background in the field of childrens environmental health and, while provost, teaches in the applied and computational mathematics and statistics department at Notre Dame.

The inaugural episode emphasized one thing: COVID-19 is still around and something that communities will have to learn to live with. Next week, Beidinger-Burnett and McDowell will talk with Brian Baker, department head in the department of chemistry and biochemistry, and Jeffery Schorey, a professor in the department of biological sciences.

Registration for the webinars can be found under the Eck Institute for Global Healths website.

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Eck Institute members host webinar to combat COVID-19 myths, misinformation - Observer Online

Skyhawk Therapeutics Expands Leadership Team with Chief Medical Officer and Head of Chemistry, and adds to its Scientific Advisory Board – BioSpace

Joseph Duffy PhD brings 20+ years of small molecule discovery chemistry and operations to his role as SVP Chemistry of Skyhawk Therapeutics, Elliot Ehrich MD brings 20+ years of clinical development for novel pharmaceuticals to his role as Chief Medical Officer of Skyhawk Therapeutics,and Rob Hershberg MD-PhD with 25+ years of biotech and pharma experience has joined Skyhawk's Scientific Advisory Board.

WALTHAM, Mass., Oct. 5, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Skyhawk Therapeutics today announced that Dr. Elliot Ehrich has joined the Company as Chief Medical Officer and Dr. Joseph Duffy has joined as Senior Vice President of Chemistry. The Company also strengthened its Scientific Advisory Board with the addition of Dr. Rob Hershberg.

"We are delighted that Joe and Elliot have come on board at Skyhawk," said Bill Haney, co-founder and CEO of Skyhawk Therapeutics. "Their combined scientific and clinical accomplishments will be invaluable in shepherding our novel RNA-targeting small molecule drug candidates successfully into the clinic. We are also excited to welcome Rob to our Scientific Advisory Board. His clinical and scientific insight and deep experience as a drug developer will be a tremendous addition to Skyhawk."

Elliot Ehrich, MD most recently served as a Venture Partner at 5AM Ventures and Chief Medical Officer (CMO) at Expansion Therapeutics, a 5AM Ventures portfolio company. Previously, Dr. Ehrich spent 17 years at Alkermes ultimately as Executive Vice President of R&D and CMO. At Alkermes he led the development and successful FDA registration of multiple new medicines. Dr. Ehrich has also worked in clinical pharmacology and clinical research at Merck &Co, Inc..

Dr. Ehrich received a BA in biochemistry from Princeton University and an MD from Columbia University. He completed a residency in internal medicine and a fellowship in immunology and rheumatology at Stanford University Medical School followed by postdoctoral research the Department of Microbiology and Immunology.

Over the past four years, Joseph Duffy PhD, served as Executive Director of Discovery Chemistry atMerckResearch Laboratories in Rahway and Kenilworth, New Jersey, where he oversaw multiple preclinical drug discovery teams. Dr. Duffy's contributions over 24 years at Merck included all phases of drug discovery, from lead identification through clinical phase candidate development. He directed successful lead optimization efforts for multiple indications, resulting in clinical candidates and Investigational New Drug (IND) applications from both internal projects and international collaborative research with biotech organizations. Dr. Duffy received his B.Sc. in Chemistry from Kent State University and his Ph.D. from Harvard University.

Rob Hershberg MD-PhD began his career as an Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School and an Associate Physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. Later, Dr. Hershberg co-founded VentiRx Pharmaceuticals and, as President and Chief Executive Officer, led the company through its transformational partnership with Celgene. Dr. Hershberg joined Celgene in 2014 to lead their efforts in Immuno-Oncology, was promoted to Chief Scientific Officer in 2016, and was subsequently Executive Vice President and Head of Business Development & Global Alliances and served as a member of the Executive Committee until the acquisition of Celgene by Bristol-Myers Squibb in 2019. Rob is currently a Venture Partner on the Frazier Life Sciences team. He completed his undergraduate and medical degrees at the University of California, Los Angeles and received his Ph.D. at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.

Dr Hershberg joins Skyhawk's distinguished Scientific Advisory Board which includes:

Skyhawk Therapeutics is committed to discovering, developing and commercializing therapies that use its novel SkySTARTM (Skyhawk Small molecule Therapeutics for Alternative splicing of RNA) platform to build small molecule drugs that bring breakthrough treatments to patients.

For more information visit: http://www.skyhawktx.com, https://twitter.com/Skyhawk_Tx, https://www.linkedin.com/company/skyhawk-therapeutics/

SKYHAWK MEDIA CONTACT:Anne Deconinckanne@skyhawktx.com

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SOURCE Skyhawk Therapeutics

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Skyhawk Therapeutics Expands Leadership Team with Chief Medical Officer and Head of Chemistry, and adds to its Scientific Advisory Board - BioSpace

CSU scientists work to curb the spread of COVID-19 with targeted testing – Source

Susan DeLong, associate professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and students Nicholas Mohammed and Thomas Anderson, sample wastewater that will be tested by Professor Carol Wilusz lab on campus.

After move-in week, CSU pivoted its efforts to wastewater surveillance from 17 locations tied to residence halls on campus. Coronavirus is shed in the feces before it can be identified from the standard swab test and days before a person would develop symptoms.

Two CSU professors, Carol Wilusz from the Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology and Susan DeLong from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, developed a method to collect wastewater in a 24-hour composite sample and return results for SARS-CoV-2 30 hours later.

Wastewater testing is supplemental to and helps drive nasal-swab testing, since it is used to help identify target populations to test. Targeted surveillance in helping to reduce the spread of the virus also can help reduce the overall cost of testing. The process used for each COVID-19 nasal swab costs $100 and includes collection and analysis by an independent company.

When you have limited funds and limited access to tests, (wastewater monitoring) is one way that you can make the most of the funding that you have, said Wilusz.

When a wastewater sample shows a spike in viral counts, the university focuses nasal-swab testing efforts on the people in those areas and its working, according to Wilusz.

There was a bit of a signal from one residence hall at the beginning of September, she said. It wasnt a huge one, and (through individual testing) they found six people in there that had it.

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CSU scientists work to curb the spread of COVID-19 with targeted testing - Source

Ludwig Study Finds a Common Nutritional Supplement Might Boost the Effects of Cancer Immunotherapy – Newswise

Newswise OCTOBER 5, 2020, NEW YORK A Ludwig Cancer Research study has uncovered a mechanism by which the tumors harsh internal environment sabotages T lymphocytes, leading cellular agents of the anticancer immune response. Reported in Nature Immunology, the study describes how a variety of stressors prevalent in the tumor microenvironment disrupt the power generators, or mitochondria, of tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes (TILs), pushing them into a permanently sluggish state known as terminal exhaustion.

The study, led by Ludwig Lausanne Associate Member Ping-Chih Ho, also found that a widely available nutritional supplementnicotinamide riboside (NR)helps TILs overcome the mitochondrial dysfunction and preserves their ability to attack tumors in mouse models of melanoma and colon cancer.

TILs often have a high affinity for antigens expressed by cancer cells, says Ho. This means that, in principle, they should attack cancer cells vigorously. But we often dont see that. People have always wondered why because it suggests that the best soldiers of the immune system are vulnerable when they enter the battlefield of the tumor. Our study provides a mechanistic understanding of why this happens and suggests a possible strategy for preventing the effect that can be quickly evaluated in clinical trials.

The inner recesses of tumors are often starved of oxygen and essential nutrients, such as the sugar glucose. Cells in these stressful conditions adjust their metabolic processes to compensatefor example, by making more mitochondria and burning their fat reserves for energy.

In tumors, prolonged stimulation by cancer antigens is known to push TILs into an exhausted state marked by the expression of PD-1a signaling protein that suppresses T cell responses and is targeted by existing checkpoint blockade immunotherapies. If sustained, such exhaustion can become permanent, persisting even when the stimulus of cancer antigens is removed.

Ho and his colleagues found that exhausted TILs are packed with damagedor depolarizedmitochondria. Like old batteries, depolarized mitochondria essentially lack the voltage the organelles require to generate energy.

Our functional analysis revealed that those T cells with the most depolarized mitochondria behaved most like terminally exhausted T cells, said Ho.

Ho and colleagues show that the accumulation of depolarized mitochondria is caused primarily by the TILs inability to remove and digest damaged ones through a process known as mitophagy. The TILs can still make new mitochondria but, because they dont remove the old ones, they lack the space to accommodate the new ones, said Ho.

The genomes of these TILs are also reprogrammed by epigenetic modificationschemical groups added to DNA and its protein packagingto induce patterns of gene expression associated with terminal exhaustion.

The researchers found that the breakdown in mitophagy stems from a convergence of factors: chronic stimulation by cancer antigens, PD-1 signaling and the metabolic stress of nutrient and oxygen deprivation. They also show that the epigenetic reprograming that fixes TILs in a terminally exhausted state is a consequence, not a cause, of the mitochondrial dysfunction.

Related work done by other researchersincluding co-authors in the current study, Ludwig Lausanne Investigator Nicola Vannini and Ludwig Lausanne Branch Director George Coukoshas shown that NR, a chemical analogue of vitamin B3, can boost mitophagy and improve mitochondrial fitness in a variety of other cell types.

With this in mind, the researchers explored whether NR might also prevent TILs from committing to terminal exhaustion. Their cell culture experiments showed that the supplement improved the mitochondrial fitness and function of T cells grown under stressors resembling those of the tumor microenvironment.

More notably, dietary supplementation with NR stimulated the anti-tumor activity of TILs in a mouse model of skin cancer and colon cancer. When combined with anti-PD-1 and another type of checkpoint blockade, anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapy, it significantly inhibited the growth of tumors in the mice.

We have shown that we may be able to use a nutritional approach to improve checkpoint blockade immunotherapy for cancer, said Ho.

He and his colleagues are now exploring the signals from depolarized mitochondria that epigenetically reprogram TILs for terminal exhaustioninformation that could be more generally applied to improve cancer immunotherapy.

Ho is an Associate Member of the Lausanne Branch of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and an Associate Professor at the University of Lausanne.

This study was supported by Ludwig Cancer Research, the Swiss National Science Foundation, the Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research, European Research Council, the Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Foundation, the Austrian Science Fund, the Austrian Academy of Sciences, the European Research Council, the Swiss Ministry of Science and Technology, the National Health Research Institute in Taiwan and the Swiss Cancer League.

About Ludwig Cancer Research

Ludwig Cancer Research is an international collaborative network of acclaimed scientists that has pioneered cancer research and landmark discovery for nearly 50 years. Ludwig combines basic science with the ability to translate its discoveries and conduct clinical trials to accelerate the development of new cancer diagnostics and therapies. Since 1971, Ludwig has invested $2.7 billion in life-changing science through the not-for-profit Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and the six U.S.-based Ludwig Centers. To learn more, visit http://www.ludwigcancerresearch.org.

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Ludwig Study Finds a Common Nutritional Supplement Might Boost the Effects of Cancer Immunotherapy - Newswise