Grey’s Anatomy star Jesse Williams’ new movie Random Acts of Violence is the goriest and most disgusting of 2020 – digitalspy.com

With a title like Random Acts of Violence, you're not exactly expecting a family-friendly affair, but you might not be expecting just how violent these random acts get.

Directed by Jay Baruchel (the voice of Hiccup from How to Train Your Dragon, lest we forget) and on Shudder now, the movie based on the comic book of the same name sees Grey's Anatomy star Jesse Williams play Todd Walkley, who is struggling to find a way to end his comic book SLASHERMAN.

Todd sets off on a road trip with his wife Kathy (Fast & Furious star Jordana Brewster), assistant Aurora (Niamh Wilson) and best friend/publisher Ezra (Baruchel) to New York Comic-Con, hoping that he'll solve his creative dilemma along the way.

What he doesn't expect is to be trailed by a series of grotesque murders, seemingly inspired by the deaths in his own comic book and things soon get really bloody, really fast.

Shudder/Elevation Pictures

Watch Random Acts of Violence on Shudder

For a movie with a runtime of around 80 minutes, Random Acts of Violence sure packs a lot into its brief stay. It's smarter and sharper than you'd expect from its bloody concept, so you could almost say it has a brain to go with its literal brains on display.

One of the reasons Todd wants to end his successful comic book is that he's dismayed with the continued violence in it, especially since SLASHERMAN was inspired by real-life murders with genuine victims whose families were forever affected by their loss.

When the real-life murders start up again, Todd is forced to assess his responsibility for the killing spree. Would they have happened even if he didn't publish his comic book? How much of an effect does art have on real life?

It's a meaty subject and while Random Acts of Violence addresses it, it certainly offers no easy answers. There's also a fine balancing act on display too, as in telling its story, the movie offers some extremely graphic violence of its own.

We're not being dramatic when we say the movie is set to be the goriest and most disgusting of 2020, one that even the most hardened gore hounds might not want to watch while eating.

Not only are the killings graphic, but the killer's signature touch is to leave their victims in gruesome displays that they believe is their art. Think Hannibal, just with more blood.

The effects on display are truly impressive and gut-churning, whether it's an unforgettable 'threesome' or the most messed-up family Christmas dinner ever. You'll both want to look away and applaud the work.

With most of the crimes committed against women though, it feels at times though that Random Acts of Violence wants to have its cake and eat it too. There's a hypothetical version of this movie that could have been made without the need for the bloody violence and macabre displays. It could be argued that the movie is doing the exact thing that it seems to be criticising.

Equally, by making it hard to watch and so extreme, does that make its point more effective? By confronting us with it in its rawest form, it forces you to think about your reaction to the violence.

"I've wondered a lot how much this idea of 'the woman as victim' had been sort of drilled into my subconscious, from music videos to victims in horror movies," Baruchel told The Independent in a recent interview.

"I could name the Zodiac Killer and John Wayne Gacy, but almost none of the people they killed. I could name Freddy and Jason and Michael Myers, but none of their victims on screen. What the f**k is that?"

Baruchel recalled the debate around the Columbine shootings when Marilyn Manson's music was being blamed, while artists were defending their right to make art about anything without social consequence.

"But once you put that out there, once you engage in a debate with a stranger, or on Twitter, or you put up a poster, I believe you are somewhat connected to that, and you are somewhat responsible. There are consequences to putting shit out," he added.

Shudder/Elevation Pictures

To that extent, he likely will relish the debate that Random Acts of Violence is sure to provoke in terms of whether it goes too far in displaying the very thing it aims to criticise.

You can say what you want about it, but the movie certainly isn't easy to forget.

Random Acts of Violence is available to watch now on Shudder.

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Grey's Anatomy star Jesse Williams' new movie Random Acts of Violence is the goriest and most disgusting of 2020 - digitalspy.com

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Will Have the Most Mask Compliance of Any Film Set This Fall – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Like so many projects on television,Greys Anatomy was cut short by four episodes due to the coronavirus pandemic and the dangers of everyone being on set together.

The decision was made to simply end Season 16 and move on to Season 17 this fall, just to be safe. Several storylines were never wrapped up, including romantic entanglements, whether or not some characters would return to the show, and if the show will tackle the pandemic at all in the next episodes.

Showrunner Krista Vernoff address this and more as actors tease the continuance of production happening in the next few weeks.

The writers room atGreys Anatomy includes a group they refer to as Team Medical, according to Vernoff. Theyre medical professionals that consult on the show to try to keep the medicine as true to real life as possible. They convinced Vernoff and the other writers that it would be irresponsible to leave out the story of the pandemic.

Theres a lot to address, though, and Vernoff says of the challenge via Deadline: How do we do that and provide some escapism? How do we do that and create romance, and comedy, and joy, and fun?

Vernoff implied that the stories that were cut short at the end of Season 16 would still be picked back up, but without the physical contact weve seen in the past.

Instead of fevered make-out sessions and heavy breathing, itll be more subtle but still sexy. Theyll have to play around with the camera angles and placement of actors in order to show what they want to but the implication was that fans should be excited.

In the past, Ellen Pompeo teased that her character, the iconic Meredith Grey would be leaving the show but now she teases Merediths return.

During all the controversy over masks, fans wondered if the show would address the issue of anti-maskers. The teasers and rumors for the show say that they have no intention of getting political.

Being a medical show that has people wearing medical-grade masks regularly, it will be easy for the show to start back up with everyone wearing masks all the time on set. But thats as far as the writers are willing to go when it comes to addressing masks in the shows plot.

Meredith faced jail time for her activism in season 16. It appears that Kevin McKidds character Dr. Owen Hunt will have a bigger role to play in the pandemic storyline of season 17. His character went through a war and lives with PTSD. Vernoff talked about how those skills will come into play with this new story.

RELATED: Greys Anatomy: Some Fans are Ready For the Series to End

What became the season 16 finale was the episode where Teddy and Owen were supposed to get married. Owen heard the accidental voicemail where Teddy and Dr. Tom Koracick were supposedly ending their affair. Theres a lot of heavy breathing and obvious noises with an ending of Tom asking Teddy to run away with him.

Vernoff revealed that those last four episodes that didnt get filmed were supposed to revolve heavily around the Teddy Owen Tom triangle. With mask compliance being a big deal when the show continues production, those stories may have to change.

It was confirmed that Carina DeLucas character would leave the show after her and Station 19s Maya Bishop solidified their relationship.

Series regular Amelia Shepherd had her baby with Dr. Atticus Link Lincoln and the birth process didnt go as planned at all. Even Merediths half-sister and head of the cardio thoracic surgery department Dr. Margaret Pierce (a.k.a Maggie) has a love interest.

All of these romances are set to return but with mask compliance in place on set. Fans will have to wait a few weeks more to find out what that will look like.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Will Have the Most Mask Compliance of Any Film Set This Fall - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Covid-19 Impact on Global Cell Biology Cloud Computing Market 2020 by Company, Type and Application, Forecast to 2025 – The Daily Chronicle

Global Cell Biology Cloud Computing Market 2020 by Company, Type and Application, Forecast to 2025 published on MarketQuest.biz offers an extremely intelligent and deep assessment of the present market condition along with the overall market size, share, and dynamics estimated from 2020 to 2025. The report showcases a comprehensive analysis of the leading business programs, future market, and business-oriented planning. The report sheds light on changing market scenarios and initial and future assessments of the global Cell Biology Cloud Computing market. It investigates desirable factors related to market situations such as growth rates, demands, and differentiable business-oriented strategies used by the market manufacturers with respect to distinct tactics and the futuristic prospects in brief.

The report then covers gives a detailed overview of global Cell Biology Cloud Computing industry prime vendors and regional evaluation with forecast period 2020 to 2025. The research focuses on primary and secondary drivers, market share, leading segments, and regional analysis. It also delivers the market competitive landscape and an elementary inspection of the regional growth of the market. It also provides analysis pertaining to the global market trends, growth, as well as major collaborations, merger & acquisitions along with upcoming and trending innovation. The report comprises the assessment of cost and pricing operating in the specific geographies. Graphs are used to support the data format for a clear understanding of facts and figures.

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NOTE: Our analysts monitoring the situation across the globe explains that the market will generate remunerative prospects for producers post COVID-19 crisis. The report aims to provide an additional illustration of the latest scenario, economic slowdown, and COVID-19 impact on the overall industry.

Companies profiled and studied for this market report include: Accenture, Oracle, Cisco Systems, Amazon Web Services, DXC Technology, Benchling, IPERION, IBM, Dell Emc, ScaleMatrix, NovelBio

The report further provides the new and existing players in the global Cell Biology Cloud Computing market with information such as company profiles, facts and figures, product pictures and specifications, sales, market share, and contact information. It covers segments such as competitor segment, product type segment, end use/application segment, and geography segment. The report utilizes a series of analytical tools including Porters five forces analysis, SWOT analysis, feasibility study as well as the survey of the investment return.

Market segmentation, on the basis of types: Public Cloud Computing, Private Cloud Computing, Hybrid Cloud Computing

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Geographically, the detailed analysis of consumption, revenue, global Cell Biology Cloud Computing market share and growth rate, historic and forecast (2015-2025) of the following regions are covered: North America (United States, Canada and Mexico), Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy), Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia), South America (Brazil, Argentina, etc.), Middle East & Africa (Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa)

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Covid-19 Impact on Global Cell Biology Cloud Computing Market 2020 by Company, Type and Application, Forecast to 2025 - The Daily Chronicle

New tools catch and release cellular targets at the flip of a light switch – Princeton University

A Princeton team has developed a class of light-switchable, highly adaptable molecular tools with new capabilities to control cellular activities. The antibody-like proteins, called OptoBinders, allow researchers to rapidly control processes inside and outside of cells by directing their localization, with potential applications including protein purification, the improved production of biofuels, and new types of targeted cancer therapies.

This time-lapse movie shows a new tool called an OptoBinder that can latch onto and release molecules in response to light. In this case, a fluorescent OptoBinder is attaching to actin, a component of cells key to their structure and shape. The OptoBinder strongly binds to actin in the dark, but releases its hold in the presence of blue light (indicated by blue box at top right).

Video courtesy of the researchers; GIF by Bumper DeJesus

In a pair of papers published Aug. 13 in Nature Communications, the researchers describe the creation of OptoBinders that can specifically latch onto a variety of proteins both inside and outside of cells. OptoBinders can bind or release their targets in response to blue light. The team reported thatone type of OptoBinderchanged its affinity for its target molecules up to 330-fold when shifted from dark to blue light conditions, whileothersshowed a five-fold difference in binding affinity all of which could be useful to researchers seeking to understand and engineer the behaviors of cells.

Crucially, OptoBinders can target proteins that are naturally present in cells, and their binding is easily reversible by changing light conditions a new capability that is not available to normal antibodies, said co-authorJos Avalos, an assistant professor ofchemical and biological engineeringand theAndlinger Center for Energy and the Environment. The ability to let go [of a target protein] is actually very valuable for many applications, said Avalos, including engineering cells metabolisms, purifying proteins or potentially making biotherapeutics.

The new technique is the latest in a collaboration between Avalos andJared Toettcher, an assistant professor ofmolecular biology. Both joined the Princeton faculty in 2015, and soon began working together on new ways to applyoptogenetics a set of techniques that introduce genes encoding light-responsive proteins to control cells behaviors.

We hope that this is going to be the beginning of the next era of optogenetics, opening the door to light-sensitive proteins that can interface with virtually any protein in biology, either inside or outside of cells, said Toettcher, the James A. Elkins, Jr. 41 Preceptor in Molecular Biology.

The research team included (from left) Jos Avalos, an assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering and the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment; associate research scholar Csar Carrasco-Lpez; assistant professor of molecular biology Jared Toettcher; and postdoctoral research fellow Agnieszka Gil.

Avalos and his team hope to use OptoBinders to control the metabolisms of yeast and bacteria to improve the production of biofuels and other renewable chemicals, while Toettchers lab is interested in the molecules potential to control signaling pathways involved in cancer.

The two papers describe different types of light-switchable binders: opto-nanobodies and opto-monobodies. Nanobodies are derived from the antibodies of camelids, the family of animals that includes camels, llamas and alpacas, which produce some antibodies that are smaller (hence the name nanobody) and simpler in structure than those of humans or other animals.

Nanobodies small size makes them more adaptable and easier to work with than traditional antibodies; they recently received attention for their potential as a COVID-19 therapy. Monobodies, on the other hand, are engineered pieces of human fibronectin, a large protein that forms part of the matrix between cells.

These papers go hand in hand, said Avalos. The opto-nanobodies take advantage of the immune systems of these animals, and the monobodies have the advantage of being synthetic, which gives us opportunities to further engineer them in different ways.

The two types of OptoBinders both incorporate a light-sensitive domain from a protein found in oat plants.

When you turn the light on and off, these tools bind and release their target almost immediately, so that brings another level of control that was not previously possible, said co-author Csar Carrasco-Lpez, an associate research scholar in Avalos lab. Whenever you are analyzing things as complex as metabolism, you need tools that allow you to control these processes in a complex way in order to understand what is happening.

When you turn the light on and off, these tools bind and release their target almost immediately, so that brings another level of control that was not previously possible, said co-author Csar Carrasco-Lpez, an associate research scholar in Avalos lab.

In principle, OptoBinders could be engineered to target any protein found in a cell. With most existing optogenetic systems, you always had to genetically manipulate your target protein in a cell for each particular application, said co-author Agnieszka Gil, a postdoctoral research fellow in Toettchers lab. We wanted to develop an optogenetic binder that did not depend on additional genetic manipulation of the target protein.

In a proof of principle, the researchers created an opto-nanobody that binds to actin, a major component of the cytoskeleton that allows cells to move, divide and respond to their environment. The opto-nanobody strongly bound to actin in the dark, but released its hold within two minutes in the presence of blue light. Actin proteins normally join together to form filaments just inside the cell membrane and networks of stress fibers that traverse the cell. In the dark, the opto-nanobody against actin binds to these fibers; in the light, these binding interactions are disrupted, causing the opto-nanobody to scatter throughout the cell. The researchers could even manipulate binding interactions on just one side of a cell a level of localized control that opens new possibilities for cell biology research.

OptoBinders stand to unlock scores of innovative, previously inaccessible uses in cell biology and biotechnology, said Andreas Mglich, a professor of biochemistry at the University of Bayreuth in Germany who was not involved in the studies. But, Mglich said, there is much more to the research because the design strategy can be readily translated to other molecules, paving the way to an even wider repertoire of customized, light-sensitive binders.

The impressive results mark a significant advance, he said.

Future applications will depend on being able to generate more OptoBinders against a variety of target proteins, said Carrasco-Lpez. We are going to try to generate a platform so we can select OptoBinders against different targets using a standardized, high-throughput protocol, he said, adding that this is among the first priorities for the team as they resume their experiments after lab research was halted this spring due to COVID-19.

Beyond applications that involve manipulating cell metabolism for microbial chemical production, Avalos said, OptoBinders could someday be used to design biomaterials whose properties can be changed by light.

The types of OptoBinders developed by postdoctoral research fellow Agnieszka Gil and colleagues could in principle be engineered to target any protein in a cell, opening new possibilities for fundamental research, biofuel production and therapeutics.

The technology also holds promise as way to reduce side effects of drugs by focusing their action to a specific site in the body or adjusting dosages in real time, said Toettcher, who noted that applying light inside the body would require a device such as an implant. There arent many ways to do spatial targeting with normal pharmacology or other techniques, so having that kind of capability for antibodies and therapeutic binders would be a really cool thing, he said. We think of this as a sea change in what sorts of processes can be placed under optogenetic control.

Other authors on the opto-monobody paper were Evan Zhao, who earned a Ph.D. in chemical and biological engineering from Princeton in 2019; and Nathan Alam, an undergraduate from the Class of 2021. Zhao was also a co-author on the opto-nanobody paper, along with Liyuan Zhu, a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry; Pavithran Ravindran, a research specialist in molecular biology; Maxwell Wilson, a former associate research scholar in molecular biology who is now an assistant professor at the University of California-Santa Barbara; and Alexander Goglia, a medical student in the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and Princeton University M.D./Ph.D. program.

The work was supported in part by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation and Department of Energy; the Pew Charitable Trusts; and the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund.

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New tools catch and release cellular targets at the flip of a light switch - Princeton University

Better Tool Created to Aid COVID-19 Diagnosis – SciTechDaily

An LSU Health New Orleans radiologist and evolutionary anatomist have teamed up to show the same techniques used for research on reptile and bird lungs can be used to help confirm the diagnosis of COVID-19 in patients. Their paper published in BMJ Case Reports demonstrates that 3D models are a strikingly clearer method for visually evaluating the distribution of COVID-19-related infection in the respiratory system. Credit: LSU Health New Orleans

A Louisiana State University Health New Orleans radiologist and evolutionary anatomist have teamed up to show the same techniques used for research on reptile and bird lungs can be used to help confirm the diagnosis of COVID-19 in patients. Their paper published in BMJ Case Reports demonstrates that 3D models are a strikingly clearer method for visually evaluating the distribution of COVID-19-related infection in the respiratory system.

Emma R. Schachner, PhD, Associate Professor of Cell Biology & Anatomy, and Bradley Spieler, MD, Vice Chairman of Radiology Research and Associate Professor of Radiology, Internal Medicine, Urology, & Cell Biology and Anatomy at LSU Health New Orleans School of Medicine, created 3D digital models from CT scans of patients hospitalized with symptoms associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2).

Three patients who were suspected of having COVID-19 underwent contrast enhanced thoracic CT when their symptoms worsened. Two had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, but one was reverse transcription chain reaction (RT-PCR) negative. But because this patient had compelling clinical and imaging, the result was presumed to be a false negative.

An array of RT-PCR sensitivities has been reported, ranging from 30-91%, notes Dr. Spieler. This may be the result of relatively lower viral loads in individuals who are asymptomatic or experience only mild symptoms when tested. Tests performed when symptoms were resolving have also resulted in false negatives, which seemed to be the result in this case.Given diagnostic challenges with respect to false negative results by RT-PCR, the gold standard for COVID-19 diagnostic screening, CT can be helpful in establishing this diagnosis. Importantly, these CT features can range in form and structure and appear to correlate with disease progression. This allows for 3D segmentation of the data in which lung tissue can be volumetrically quantified or airflow patterns could be modeled.

The CT scans were all segmented into 3D digital surface models using the scientific visualization program Avizo (Thermofisher Scientific) and techniques that the Schachner Lab uses for evolutionary anatomy research.The full effect of COVID-19 on the respiratory system remains unknown, but the 3D digital segmented models provide clinicians a new tool to evaluate the extent and distribution of the disease in one encapsulated view, adds Spieler. This is especially useful in the case where RT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2 is negative but there is strong clinical suspicion for COVID-19.

To date, there havent been good models of what COVID is doing to the lungs. So, this project focused on the visualization of the lung damage in the 3D models as compared to previous methods that have been published volume-rendered models and straight 2D screen shots of CT scans and radiographs.Previously published 3D models of lungs with COVID-19 have been created using automated volume rendering techniques, says Dr. Schachner. Our method is more challenging and time-consuming, but results in a highly accurate and detailed anatomical model where the layers can be pulled apart, volumes quantified, and it can be 3D printed.

The three models all show varying degrees of COVID-19 related infection in the respiratory tissues particularly along the back of the lungs, and bottom sections. They more clearly show COVID-19-related infection in the respiratory system compared to radiographs (x-rays), CT scans, or RT-PCR testing alone. Schachner and Spieler are now segmenting more models for a larger follow-up project.

Reference: Three-dimensional (3D) lung segmentation for diagnosis of COVID-19 and the communication of disease impact to the public by Emma R Schachner and Bradley Spieler, 18 August 2020, BMJ Case Reports.DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2020-236943

Link:
Better Tool Created to Aid COVID-19 Diagnosis - SciTechDaily

3D Cell Cultures Industry Report 2020-2025: Impact of COVID-19 on the World of Cell Culture – PRNewswire

DUBLIN, Aug. 19, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- The "3D Cell Cultures: Technologies and Global Markets" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The report includes:

Whether the discussion is about stem cells, tissue engineering, or microphysiological systems, their vital role in drug discovery, toxicology, and other areas leading to new product development, 3D cell culture is becoming the environment that will increasingly define the basis for future advances.

To mix metaphors, 3D cell culture is also cross-roads through which just about everything else passes on its way to building knowledgebases or introducing new products. This study is needed to bring together and make sense out of the broad body of information encompassed by 3D cell culture.

Three-dimensional cell culture has been used by researchers for many years now, with early adoption and now key roles in cancer and stem cells. Organ-on-a-chip technology, also known as microphysiological systems, is leading to dramatic breakthroughs. Also, stem cell research coupled with synthetic biology is opening new areas. This study is needed to provide a perspective on these advances.

Furthermore, classical toxicology testing programs have been in place for many decades, and over the past 20 years, animal welfare and scientific activities have spurred the development of in vitro testing methods. In silico methods are advancing in novel ways that need to be analyzed and considered in terms of their impacts on cell culture.

This report investigates the recent key technical advances in 3D cell culture equipment, raw materials, assay kits, analytical methods, and clinical research organization (CRO) services. It should also be pointed out that this report takes a somewhat different position on 2D cell culture. It has been criticized for its inadequacies and the misleading information it can produce. However, a review of industry practices makes it clear that it still has its place and will contribute to future advances in unexpected ways.

The company section looks at many of the suppliers who provide equipment, assays, cells, reagents, and services used in 3D cell culture. This study sought to understand business models and market maturity dynamics in greater depth as well as providing more quantitative analysis of their operations.

Key Topics Covered

Chapter 1 Introduction

Chapter 2 Summary

Chapter 3 Highlights and Issues

Chapter 4 Tissue and Cell Culture: Technology and Product Background

Chapter 5 Assays, Imaging and Analysis

Chapter 6 Regulation and Standardization

Chapter 7 3D Models for Cancer

Chapter 8 Landscape for Toxicology and Drug Safety Testing

Chapter 9 Stem Cell Landscape

Chapter 10 Regenerative Medicine: Organ Transplants and Skin Substitutes

Chapter 11 Company Profiles

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/jesu26

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

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3D Cell Cultures Industry Report 2020-2025: Impact of COVID-19 on the World of Cell Culture - PRNewswire

Researchers Identify Enzyme Linked to Colitis – Rutgers Today

Rutgers-Newark study may help develop future treatments for inflammatory bowel disease Nan Gao, associate professor of cell biology in the Department of Biological Sciences, School of Arts and Sciences-Newark, discovered that an enzyme, which should stop bacterial growth in the digestive tract, instead stimulates inflammation in people with colitis.

Devyn Nunez, Shine Portrait Studio

An enzyme that usually stops bacterial growth in the large intestine stimulates inflammation in some people, resulting in ulcerative colitis a chronic digestive disease that affects more than 750,000 Americans, according to scientists at Rutgers University-Newark.

In a new study published inImmunity, lead author Nan Gao, associate professor of cell biology in the Department of Biological Sciences, School of Arts and Sciences-Newark, reports that in people with ulcerative colitis, the gut enzyme lysozyme, which normally functions to restrain bacterial growth, instead stimulates inflammation.

This results in the formation of ulcers and sores in the large intestine and rectum, hallmarks of the inflammatory bowel disease. Detecting these cells in the inner lining of the colon and rectum is a standard diagnostic feature of chronic intestinal inflammation.

This study demonstrated the existence of a delicate balance between inflammatory and anti-inflammatory factors in our intestines, said Gao, who conducted it with postdoctoral researcher Richard Yu and doctoral student Iyshwarya Balasubramanian. Insights about how to gain such beneficial immune balance may be useful for future intervention of inflammatory bowel disease.

In biochemical and genetic mouse laboratory studies, Gao and his team focused on Paneth cells, the main producers of lysozyme, which are typically found in the small intestine and rarely observed in the large intestine or healthy colon. In cases of patients with inflammatory bowel disease, which affects 1.6 million people in the United States, Paneth cells are often seen in the colon and rectum.

The frequent appearance of Paneth cells in the inflamed tissues of patients' colons is highly unusual and poorly understood, Gao said.

In the Rutgers-Newark study, scientists discovered that lysozyme secreted by Paneth cells located in colon results in suppressing the growth of certain bacterial species and results in an imbalance in the gut microbiome, which leads to intestinal inflammation.

In healthy individuals that have normal production of gut lysozyme, these bacteria flourish enabling an individual immune response that prevents colitis.

This delicate balance is achieved and maintained by a constant interaction between our body and the commensal microorganisms that play a significant role in digestion, metabolism, and the immune system, Gao said.

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Researchers Identify Enzyme Linked to Colitis - Rutgers Today

Cell Imagers Market is Booming Worldwide 2020-2027 By Product Analysis, By Application, By End-Users, By Regional Outlook, By Top Companies and…

New Jersey, United States,- The Cell Imagers MarketResearch Report byVerified Market Research focuses on some of the vital aspects of the market such as Revenue Rate, Market Share, Key Regions, and Production as well as Key Players. This Cell Imagers report also provides the readers with detailed figures at which the Cell Imagers market was valued in the historical year and its expected growth in upcoming years. Besides, the analysis also forecasts the CAGR at which the Cell Imagers is expected to mount and major factors driving the markets growth. All the latest technological innovations, industry trends, and market data are provided in the Global Cell Imagers report for the forecast period. The in-depth view of the Cell Imagers industry on the basis of market size, market growth, opportunities, and development plans offered by the report analysis.

Additionally, this report offers an extensive analysis of the supply chain, regional marketing, opportunities, challenges, and market drivers for the accurate prediction of the global Cell Imagers market. The Cell Imagers report also provides an in-depth analysis regarding the methodology and research approach, data sources, and authors of the study. The Cell Imagers report also covers the details about the manufacturing data such as interview record, gross profit, shipment, and business distribution which can aid the consumer to know about the competitive landscape.

Furthermore, the report also offers an in-depth assessment of the Cell Imagers market by highlighting data on several aspects that may include opportunities, market drivers, as well as threats. However, this data can aid providers to make proper decision making before investing in the Cell Imagers market. In addition, the research report has been designed on the basis of an in-depth analysis of the target market along with inputs from market professionals. The report focuses on the comprehensive landscape of the market and growth prospects over the forecast period. The Cell Imagers market report also comprises a broad overview of the major retailers operating in the target market.

Major Companies Profiled in This Cell Imagers Market Report:

Cell Imagers Market Segmentation:

Global Cell Imagers Market, By Product

Equipment Consumables Software

Global Cell Imagers Market, By Application

Drug Discovery Developmental Biology Cell Biology Stem Cell Biology

Global Cell Imagers Market, By End User

Academic & Research Institutes Pharmaceutical & Biotechnology Companies Academic & Research Institutes

Geographically, the Cell Imagers market report is segmented as North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East and Africa. This analysis report similarly reduces the present, past, and future market business strategies, company extent, development, share, and estimate analysis having a place with the predicted circumstances. Moreover, the possible results and the exposure to the enhancement of the Cell Imagers market widely covered in this report.

Cell Imagers Market: Regional Analysis Includes:

Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)

Europe(Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France)

North America (The United States, Mexico, and Canada)

South America(Brazil etc)

The Middle East and Africa(GCC Countries and Egypt)

This report also describes the key challenges and threats possible. The report presents a full description of the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats to the Cell Imagers market. The market report provides the analytical tools that help identify the key external and internal factors that should be considered for the growth of the market. The report also helps companies in marketing for tasks like identifying their prospective customers, building relationships with them, and retention.

Key Highlights of the Cell Imagers Market Report:

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Cell Imagers Market is Booming Worldwide 2020-2027 By Product Analysis, By Application, By End-Users, By Regional Outlook, By Top Companies and...

Some Immune Cells Appear to ‘Know’ the Coronavirus, Even Though They’ve Never Met | Newsroom – UC Merced University News

By Lorena Anderson, UC Merced

Thousands of researchers across the globe are trying to find out how to stop the spread of novel coronavirus.

Having had the common cold appears to have programmed some peoples immune cells to recognize the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

That discovery by an immunology team that includes a UC Merced alumnus could change scientists understanding of the virus behind the current pandemic.

Lorenzo Quiambao, who graduated with a bachelors of science degree in biology in 2016, is a research assistant at the La Jolla Institute of Immunology at UC San Diego. His team was working with cell samples taken from people in 2018, before COVID-19 was even known. By incubating them into the SARS-CoV-2 viruss proteins, they found that up to half of the donor T cells exhibited a cross-reactive memory response, even though they had never experienced COVID.

It could mean that exposures to other coronaviruses, such as the cold, give these people an immune advantage, or it could mean that when they get the novel coronavirus, they get sicker, Quiambao said. Or it might mean nothing. Well know much better in a month or two.

Lorenzo Quiambao, Class of 2016, plans to become a physician and continue research.

Quiambao, who is from Modesto, has a very personal reason for wanting to research SARS-CoV-2 right now. His mother, a nurse practitioner, contracted COVID-19. She has recovered and is back to treating patients, but the experience was frightening, he said.

She had mild symptoms heart palpitations and trouble breathing for a full 14 days, he said. It seemed to fade, get worse for a couple of days, and then go away.

Quiambao majored in biology with emphases on immunology and microbiology and said his research position in La Jolla has been a dream job. Hes applying to medical schools now in hopes of becoming a practicing physician who also conducts research.

He and his teammates detailed their latest findings in a new article in Science.

Quiambao said the information would probably be more applicable to developing a vaccine than a treatment. He and the other researchers sequenced the viruss genome and are working at top speed to see what else they can learn, such as how this cross-reactive memory response could affect asymptomatic people, or people who are repeatedly exposed, such as those in the health care industry.

This coronavirus is so new, we really know very little about it, he said. But the world is on pause while everyone is trying hard to find the answers. Our whole institute is focused on it right now. Weve been really fortunate to have NIH funding and generous donors who have given us all this equipment that allows us to do in weeks what would have taken months before.

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Some Immune Cells Appear to 'Know' the Coronavirus, Even Though They've Never Met | Newsroom - UC Merced University News

Life Science Reagent Extracts Market, 2019-2025 by Segmentation Based on Product, Application and Region – Scientect

In 2025, the market size of the Life Science Reagent Market is expected to touch million US$ xx million. The revenue registered in 2019 was US$ xx million, thus depicting a growth at a CAGR of xx% from 2019. While in China, the market size was valued at US$ xx million in the forecast base year, further projected to increase up to US$ xx million till the end of 2025, with a CAGR of xx% during forecast period.

In this report, 2019 has been considered as the base year and 2019 to 2025 as the forecast period to estimate the market size for Life Science Reagent .

This report studies the global market size of Life Science Reagent , especially focusing on the key regions such as United States, European Union, China, and other geographical extents (Japan, Korea, India, and Southeast Asia).

For more insights into the Market, request a sample of this report (Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, Chart) @ https://www.marketresearchhub.com/enquiry.php?type=S&repid=2562876&source=atm

This study presents the Life Science Reagent market production, revenue, market share, and growth rate for each key company, and also covers the breakdown data (production, consumption, revenue and market share) by regions, type and applications. The historical data breakdown for Life Science Reagent for 2014-2019 is provided in the report along with company projection for 2019 to 2025.

For top companies in United States, European Union, and China, this report investigates and analyzes the production, value, price, market share, and growth rate for the manufacturers, key data from 2019 to 2025.

The following manufacturers are covered:High Throughput Genomics Inc.Illumina Inc.Abbott LaboratoriesAbcamEmd MilliporeBiologCell SciencesLonza Group AgCell Signaling TechnologyThermo Fisher Scientific Inc.Trilink BiotechnologiesCepheid Inc.Olympus Corp.Biomyx TechnologyAbgent Inc.

Segment by RegionsNorth AmericaEuropeChinaJapanSoutheast AsiaIndia

Segment by TypeCell Biology ReagentsAnimal ModelsRecombinant ProteinsOthes

Segment by ApplicationStem Cell ResearchDNA ResearchRNA ResearchProtein DetectionOthers

For Information On The Research Approach Used In The Report, Ask to Our Industry [emailprotected] https://www.marketresearchhub.com/enquiry.php?type=E&repid=2562876&source=atm

The content of the study subjects, includes a total of 15 chapters:

Chapter 1 describes Life Science Reagent product/service scope, market overview, market opportunities, market driving force, and market risks.

Chapter 2 profiles the top manufacturers of Life Science Reagent market, with price, sales, revenue and global market share of Life Science Reagent from 2014 2019.

Chapter 3 analyses the Life Science Reagent competitive situation, sales, revenue. The global Life Science Reagent market shares of top manufacturers are analyzed emphatically by landscape contrast.

Chapter 4 showcases the Life Science Reagent breakdown data at the regional level, to discuss the sales, revenue and growth by regions, from 2014 to 2019.

Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 emphasize the sales data at the country level, with sales, revenue, and market share for key countries in the world, from 2014 to 2019.

Chapter 10 and 11 explain the segments by sales under type and application, with market shares and growth rate under each category, from 2014 to 2019.

Chapter 12 depicts Life Science Reagent market forecasts by region, type, and application, with sales and revenue projections, from 2019 to 2025.

Chapter 13 and 14 describe Life Science Reagent sales channel, distributors, customers, research findings and conclusion, appendix, and other data sources.

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Life Science Reagent Extracts Market, 2019-2025 by Segmentation Based on Product, Application and Region - Scientect