Unique high-tech track waiting for competition at Baldwin Wallace University – cleveland.com

BEREA, Ohio - Anyone watching track and field sees athletes who lace up the spikes, stretch, and take off. Practice and training shaves tenths of seconds off times. But at Baldwin Wallace University, a new track aims to give an added edge to competitive runners.

A lot of science, dedicated research, a keen understanding of physiology and a tree indigenous to the rainforest have contributed to the quarter-mile track at George Finnie Stadium.

We're a far cry from the days when runners traversed grass, dirt, cinder and asphalt surfaces in competition.

Synthetic material began to be developed in the 1950s and '60s, which makes Roger Bannister's 1954 vanguard achievement of becoming the first person to break the 4-minute mile all that impressive.

Some surfaces used to be poured to form a track, buckets of "goop" squeegeed out, said Joe Eby, who coaches B-W's men's and women's teams. It yielded an imperfect, uneven oval.

Technological advancements have resulted in surfaces like the Mondo Super X 720. It sounds like a video game, but it's a state-of-the-art-track.

"We're the only (college) track in the state of Ohio to have a Mondo surface," Eby said. "This is like the Cadillac of track surfaces."

The biggest challenge for Eby is the litany of coronavirus restrictions the Ohio Athletic Conference and other conferences are facing. So the school of just more than 3,000 students has a pristine track with no formal competitions scheduled.

The latex-based track is about half an inch thick and laid over the school's previous track, which was installed in 2008 and lies atop asphalt and a French drain. Workers in May began the installation process, laying it down from 49-foot rolls and assembling it with glue between seams. It took about a week or two, Eby said, and another week to paint the lines.

Mondo Super X 720 has a hexagon shape designed for "the way people move," said Phil Rickaby, regional sales manager for Kiefer USA, which distributes the line of tracks.

But as Eby strode on the surface recently, he sees a simple yet important necessity: "These tracks are built for competition."

Eby - who grew up in Silver Lake and went to Walsh Jesuit High School and ran for the University of Mount Union - has been coaching at Baldwin Wallace since 2015. He knows about competition. In 2016, the B-W women were national indoor champs and runner-up outdoors.

"This was always one of my favorite places to run," he said. "I've run multiple PRs (personal best times) at this facility on this surface. It's always been known as the fastest track in the area."

But behind the speed is a lot of science.

Baldwin Wallace University track coach Joe Eby checks out the new Mondo track.

It's a "dual durometer" surface, meaning it's a two-layered product. The top layer serves primarily for durability, energy return and traction. The bottom strip is a performance layer for shock absorption and energy return.

The track holds a "three-dimensional component of the way people move," said Rickaby, who competed for and coached at Kent State.

Down a straightaway, runners need that "forward and backward horizontal-type movement."

When taking off in a jumping event - like hurdles and pole vault, for instance - "you want that vertical energy return and also that shock absorption as you take off the ground and when you hit back down."

Then there are curves in the 400 or 800 meters, distance events and high jump. "You want that energy return," Rickaby said.

It all comes from the track's hexagon shape that allows for consistent energy return - athlete to athlete, lane to lane, event to event.

Rickaby puts the science into layman's terms:

"If you imagine a bow string, when energy is stored in a particular product, that energy return is very important to an athlete. If you have a track that is too soft - consider sand. It's a good shock absorber, but it has no energy return. You want to have a very fine balance of having a product that stores that energy with the force that an athlete applies to the ground but is able to return that energy without that energy disbursing through that surface."

Mondo, an Italian company, has had years to study tracks. The company has been around for about 70 years, starting with toy and bike-tire production, Rickaby said.

Its first Olympic track was for the 1976 Games in Montreal, and recently the company finished work for the 2020/2021 Games slated for Tokyo. To date, Mondo has installed tracks in 170 countries, with dozens throughout the United States, as well as flooring for recreation centers, weight rooms and multi-purpose gyms.

And it all starts with a tree.

All the product is extracted from the Hevea tree, much like latex is, he said. So its a latex-based product from a rubber tree where they take the product from the tree and then they harvest the raw material and turn it into a running track. Its a product of nature.

The sustainable effort is like tapping a tree for maple syrup. Bark is cut, latex is extracted. That liquid will harden and undergo vulcanization. The resulting surface is anti-bacterial and anti-microbial, decreasing staph infections, Rickaby said.

Surfaces have come a long way since Roger Bannister broke the 4-minute mile on May 6, 1954. AP

The physiology of the foot is the basis for much of the research.

"As the athlete hits the ground, they don't hit flat-footed; they actually roll from the first out to the fifth metatarsal. As the pressure is put onto the foot, it moves effectively from one toe out to the next toe. The track allows the energy to be stored, and as the pressure is applied and then released that energy also is released back to the foot as it lifts off the track."

The metatarsal bones are one to five, middle joints numbered from big toe on out.

The track minimizes contact time, allowing more energy to be returned. It helps reduce injuries because the track allows athletes to apply less force to take another step, Rickaby said.

Over time, those steps add up. The track's lifespan ranges with use. Some of the Mondo tracks in indoor facilities have lasted 29 years, Rickaby said. Outdoor surfaces can go about 15 years, and the tracks come in multiple colors.

Prices are based on square footage, from half a million dollars on up. B-W's was paid for mostly through donors, Eby said. Indoor hydraulic systems, creating banked curves resembling a NASCAR track for athletes to stay within the curve, "can run upwards of $3 million," Rickaby said.

This is B-W's third iteration of a Mondo track, and its newness compares to the football field turf, which is a year old.

All the technology can improve performance, but it cannot conquer coronavirus and its ever-changing restrictions. For now, the OAC has postponed all sports until Jan. 1, 2021, Eby said.

I feel so bad for the kids, he said. We had our spring season taken away, and all summer theyve been training and training and training, and now fall season is taken away. So a lot of them are Whats the point? Eventually were going to get back to it. Its hard to just train with no light at the end of the tunnel.

When they do get back, having a high-tech track can lead to a "wow factor" for recruiting, Eby said.

"We've got a brand new facility at this point," he said. "I'm glad we got it in when we did."

I am on cleveland.coms life and culture team and cover food, beer, wine and sports-related topics. If you want to see my stories, heres a directory on cleveland.com.

Go here to see the original:
Unique high-tech track waiting for competition at Baldwin Wallace University - cleveland.com

Gregory Carter, MD, MS, Honored With Ernest Johnson Outstanding Educator Award – Newswise

Newswise The American Association of Neuromuscular & Electrodiagnostic Medicine (AANEM) is honoring Gregory Carter, MD, MS, with the Ernest Johnson Outstanding Educator Award for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PMR). This award honors a PMR AANEM member for significant contributions related to neuromuscular (NM) and electrodiagnostic (EDX) medicine.

"Teaching, like the practice of medicine and research endeavors, is a challenging intellectual task," said Dr. Carter. "It is one of the most important things we can do in the course of our careers. Even in this age of nearly instantaneous information transfer, the most important aspects of clinical medicine cannot be learned off of a smartphone, website, or even a YouTube video. It is the hands-on, personal interactions with our trainees that passes on the knowledge that ensures the future of our field."

Dr. Carter's contributions to the AANEM Annual Meeting were a determining factor in his receiving the award. He has presented at over 20 sessions and was always a popular speaker. He is adamant about the value of being an AANEM member.

"The AANEM is an outstanding organization and has the highest quality training and educational materials, including an excellent journal in Muscle and Nerve. The meetings are always top-notch, and bring in a mix of educational and research topics, said Dr. Carter.

Dr. Carter graduated from Loyola University of Chicagos Stritch School of Medicine. He is Board Certified by the American Board of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, and the American Board of Electrodiagnostic Medicine. He completed a residency for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, and a research fellowship for neuromuscular disease at the University of California, Davis. He also earned a Masters degree in physiology there, before accepting a MayDay pain fellowship at the University of Washington. He holds faculty appointments at both University of Washington and Washington State University medical schools. He currently serves as chief medical officer for St Lukes Rehabilitation Institute in Spokane, Washington. He is now in the process of starting a new PM&R residency program. Dr. Carter served on the AANEM Board from 2013-2016 and served on the Muscle & Nerve Editorial Board as Senior Associate Editor. He also was a member of the following AANEM Committees: Research, Podcasting Editorial Board, and the NM Update Course Committee.

About the American Association of Neuromuscular & Electrodiagnostic Medicine (AANEM)

Based in Rochester, Minnesota, the American Association of Neuromuscular & Electrodiagnostic Medicine (AANEM) is the premier nonprofit membership association dedicated to the advancement of neuromuscular (NM), musculoskeletal and electrodiagnostic (EDX) medicine. The organization and its members work to improve the quality of patient care and advance the science of NM diseases and EDX medicine by serving physicians and allied health professionals who care for those with muscle and nerve disorders.

Read the original:
Gregory Carter, MD, MS, Honored With Ernest Johnson Outstanding Educator Award - Newswise

Free Webinar: Multi-Year Contraception for Wild Horses & Deer – Patch.com

FREE WEBINAR ADDRESSES MULTI-YEAR REVERSIBLE CONTRACEPTION FOR WILD HORSES AND DEER

The Botstiber Institute for Wildlife Fertility Control (BIWFC) will host a free webinar addressing the development, assessment and application of PZP-22 controlled-release vaccine as a wildlife management tool, with a focus on wild horses and deer. "PZP-22: Multi-Year Reversible Contraception for Wild Horses and Deer" is scheduled for Tuesday, August 18 at 1:00 PM (EDT).

The management of wildlife in the face of robust reproduction and changing habitats is a major issue for both the present and future. The development and testing of contraceptive vaccines for this purpose began with a porcine Zona Pellucida (PZP)-adjuvant emulsion, which proved highly effective in preventing fertilization. This vaccine remains in use, but eventually the practical benefits of reducing the need to access animals repeatedly for treatment led to the development of PZP-22 as a single-injection, multi-year vaccine.

This webinar will be presented by John Turner, Jr. PhD, Professor of Physiology engaged in teaching and research at the University of Toledo College of Medicine (UTCOM) and Allen Rutberg, PhD, Director, Tufts Center for Animals and Public Policy and Research Associate Professor, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine.

For more information or to register visit wwwwildlifefertilitycontrol.org/pzp22/.

Link:
Free Webinar: Multi-Year Contraception for Wild Horses & Deer - Patch.com

Praxis Media Group and Global Brands network announces winners of the National Healthcare Excellence Awards, 2020 and Indias Top 50 Healthcare, 2020…

New Delhi [India], Aug 17 (ANI/BusinessWire India): Praxis Media in association with Healthcare Leaders announced the prestigious National Healthcare Excellence Awards on August 15, 2020 to celebrate and honor more than 30 winners at 5 different levels for epitomizing strength, ingenuity, knowledge and foresight for the growth of the healthcare sector with vision and inspiration. Winners of Indias Top 50 Healthcare, 2020 were also declared by the Global Brands Network.These awards are announced each year to identify, celebrate and encourage excellence in healthcare and medicine. The endeavor is to recognize and reward quality excellence, innovative initiatives and exemplary work in the healthcare Sector in a spectacular style. The exacting and daunting feat of zeroing-in on the winners is achieved by the Praxis Media Group, with support from its associates and partners, after an elaborate and meticulous selection process which included inviting nominations from potential nominees, substantial research and surveys, collation of feedback and opinions, screening based on judging parameters and subsequently choosing the winners through an independent jury panel.The significant parameters which were considered for selecting the winners included Qualification & Professional Experience, Infrastructure & Facilities, Market Presence & Competition, Growth & Profitability, Quality & Operational Excellence, Financial & Business Acumen, Innovation & Novelty in Services, Ingenuity and Imagination, Sustainability & Environmental Awareness, Job & Impact Potential, Client/Customer & Industry Feedback, Use of Technology & Trends, Efforts for Risk & Setback Mitigation, Previous Awards & Achievements etc.National Healthcare Excellence Awards and Indias Top 50 Healthcare are an initiative of Praxis Media Group which are designed to recognize excellence and showcase the outstanding work by healthcare professionals. It intends to celebrate the trailblazing people and organizations that make our healthcare system more skilled, more compassionate and more equitable.These awards are not limited to medical professionals, but also aims at acknowledging the outstanding services and commitment from those involved in administration, staffing, consultation, product development, laboratory services as well as those supplying peripheral services that acts as the backbone of the healthcare sector.These awards, as a hallmark of excellence are not only a defining moment for the winners, but also intend to inspire others towards bigger and better achievements.The initiative was well supported by Healthcare Leaders Brand Partner, The Pharma Times Online Media Partner, Health Vision Magazine Partner, Global Brands Network Associate Partner and Lawspective Consulting LLP Knowledge Partner who echoed the same objective of healthcare excellence.A comprehensive list of winners of the National Healthcare Excellence Awards, 2020:Dr. Ankita Bhargava Most Promising Endocrine Dietitian in Bengaluru, Homoeopathic & Lifestyle Clinic Best Homoeopathic Clinic in Delhi & NCR, Dr. Indrajeet Kumar Tiwary Best Gastrointestinal and Liver Transplant Intensivist in Eastern India, Dr. Achyut Trivedi Best Consultant Neuropsychiatrist in Rajasthan, Dr. Jasjit Singh Best Hospital Administrator of the Year, Dt. Chaitali Mondal Best Nutrition Consultant in West Bengal, Dr. P.C. Jagadeesh Best Orthopaedic Surgeon in Karnataka, Dr. Abhishek Massey Best Consultant Physiotherapist in Delhi, Dr. Neha Nasa Best Dentist in Patient Care and Treatment in Gurgaon, Plexus Neuro and Stem Cell Research Centre Best Centre for Stem Cell Therapy in India, 2020, Dr. Premkumar Balachandran Excellence in Hernia Surgery and Abdominal Wall Reconstruction, Dr. Lokesh Jain Healthcare Leader of the Year, Dr. Manish Jain Best Aesthetic and Plastic Surgeon in Rajasthan, Dr. VijaitaSyngle Best Obesity Medicine Doctor of the Year, Manorama Infosolutions Private Limited Best Healthcare IT Application Company in India, Ziva Embryology and Fertility Institute Best Fertility Centre in Telangana, Ziva Embryology and Fertility Institute Best Embryology Training Institute in India, Androcare Andrology & Mens Health Institute Best Male Fertility Centre in India, Operon Biotech and Healthcare Best In-Vitro Diagnostic Company in Karnataka, Mr. Navdeep Kanwer Best Consultant Audiologist in Punjab, Swasth Bhoomi Private Limited Healthcare Start-Up of the Year, Sidana Dental Care Best Dental Clinic in Mohali, Dr. KedarBakshi Most Promising Dentist in Maharashtra, Dr. Smita Sanjay Deorukhkar Best Alternate Medicine Practitioner in Western India, Dr. Sunil Kumar Singh Best Oral Implantologist in Azamgarh, SAAOL Heart Center Best Heart Care Centre in Delhi & NCR, Bhrigu Sons Pharmaceuticals Award for the Pharmaceutical Brand of the Year, Dr. Uday DattaramTalwadker Best Dentist in Goa, Dr. Jagdish Shinde Best Radiation Oncologist in Maharashtra, Osho Medicare Best Ayurvedic Kidney Speciality Clinic in Gujarat.Dr. Rushda Riaz Best Gynaecologist in North India and Dr. Monga Ayurvedic Medi Clinic Private Limited Best Ayurveda Treatment Clinic in New Delhi were the exclusive winners of Indias Top 50 Healthcare Leaders in 2020.The Founder-Director of the media group, Mrs. Swagateeka Patel Singh congratulated all the winners and said that each winner has exemplified excellence and typifies the very best of healthcare practices and ethics. The National Healthcare Excellence Awards, 2020 are a small token of appreciation from Praxis Media to all these inspirational individuals and organization.These recognitions will further strengthen their ability to steer their objective through turbulent times, apply the best of the professional modules to manage and keep their missions afloat.This story is provided by BusinessWire India. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/BusinessWire India)

See the article here:
Praxis Media Group and Global Brands network announces winners of the National Healthcare Excellence Awards, 2020 and Indias Top 50 Healthcare, 2020...

Relationship status and BMI used to determine access to IVF – BioNews

17 August 2020

Relationship status and body mass index (BMI), are being used to restrict people's access to NHS-funded fertility treatment.

A report, published by the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS), has outlined the policies of England's 135 Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) for fertility services. They discovered that 24 CCGs require patients to be in a 'stable relationship' and that BMI restrictions for women exist across almost all CCGs (96 percent), with 24 percent also restricting on the basis of male BMI.

'Access to any form of healthcare should be rooted in clinical evidence', Dr Marta Jansa Perez, director of embryology at BPAS, told iNews, 'Sadly, this report demonstrates that for most patients in need of fertility treatment, this is simply not the case.'

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) state in fertility guidelines that women under 40 should be offered three cycles of IVF and women between 40-42 should be offered one cycle, a recommendation guided by cost and clinical effectiveness. They do not mention relationship status and only advise that men and women 'should be informed' of the risks to infertility associated with obesity or low body weight in women and obesity in men.

CCGs do not have to follow NICE recommendations, and there is significant regional variation in fertility funding, leading to a 'postcode lottery' where access to IVF is determined by where you live.

Some CCGs require proof of a 'stable relationship' by longevity, specifying couples should be together for at least two years. Others require evidence of long-term cohabitation or 'financial interdependence'.

Single women and women in same-sex female couples must use six to 12 cycles of artificial insemination to determine infertility, in alignment with NICE guidelines. But the majority (54 percent) of CCGs do not provide any funding for this process and 20 percent set a minimum length of time these cycles must occur.

The widespread denial of treatment based on female or male BMI is not backed up by evidence provided by NICE. Four CCGs require BMI is maintained for six months prior to treatment, a further barrier to IVF access.

BPAS conclude that withholding fertility services has 'real consequences' for patients and the health service. As well as experiencing psychological harm, patients unable to access fertility treatment in the UK often travel abroad for care. This is associated with higher rates of multiple births, the single biggest risk to mother and baby.

'Reform in this area is long overdue,' said Dr Emily Scott, founder of IVF Fairness, 'IVF Fairness stands with BPAS in urging policy makers at a local and national level to finally take action, for the sake of fair and equal access to reproductive health services and in genuflection to the governing principles on which our National Health Service is founded.'

Originally posted here:
Relationship status and BMI used to determine access to IVF - BioNews

Mother’s partner not legal parent of donor-conceived child – BioNews

17 August 2020

'Appalling' planning between a lesbian couple and the man who acted as the sperm donor has resulted in a missed opportunity for the mother's partner to become a legal parent.

High Court Judge, Mr Justice O'Hara, declined to grant a parental order after criticising the lack of any agreements in regard to the role of the biological father in the child's life.

'It is appalling that the planning between the adults for something so important and long-lasting was so inadequate,' Justice O'Harasaidin his judgment. 'People put more care into arranging a holiday than these three adults did for [the child].'

In 2014 R and A,who at the time were not married or in a civil partnership, agreed to co-parent a child. P provided sperm with which R conceived a baby, C, who was born later the same year.

R was listed on the birth certificate as the child's mother and only parent. P willingly surrendered all parental responsibilities, but he argued that it had been agreed he would have some contact and at least one visit after the child's birth. R and A disagreed as no agreement had been drawn up and felt he should have no right to contact as he is not C's father in any legally recognised way.

R and A are now civil partners and wished for A to be added to C's birth certificate as a second mother. They argued that although P 'provided the gamete by which fertilisation occurred', he was not the natural father of C, and the two women were the child's only natural parents. The couple claimed that refusal would be discriminatory and that C was born when they were in a long-standing relationship which should be recognised officially.

The couple's request was opposed by P, the Department of Finance, the UK Secretary of State for Health, and the Attorney General.

In hisjudgment, Justice O'Hara explained that A does not meet the requirements of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 for legal parenthood, as they did not use a licensed clinic for treatment and they only entered a civil partnership after C's birth.

He ruled that 'Ms A is not and cannot be the natural parent of C. Had she and Ms R taken one of the routes open to them, they could have become the recognised legal parents. By failing to do so they have lost that opportunity, at least so far as Ms A is concerned.'

Justice O'Haraexplained that although he would not grant a parental order, there were other ways that A could legally recognise her relationship with C: 'In particular, orders can be made giving her parental responsibility and shared residence which, in the circumstances of this case, are likely to be long-lasting in their effect since Mr P isn't seeking anything more than some form of contact'.

Read more:
Mother's partner not legal parent of donor-conceived child - BioNews

Scientists hope to find clues about how life emerged by tinkering with its oldest components – News-Medical.net

Reviewed by Emily Henderson, B.Sc.Aug 15 2020

"I'm fascinated with life, and that's why I want to break it."

This is how Betl Kaar, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona with appointments in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Department of Astronomy and the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, describes her research. What may sound callous is a legitimate scientific approach in astrobiology. Known as ancestral sequencing, the idea is to "resurrect" genetic sequences from the dawn of life, put them to work in the cellular pathways of modern microbes - think Jurassic Park but with extinct genes in place of dinosaurs, and study how the organism copes.

In a recent paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Kaar's research team reports an unexpected discovery: Evolution, it seems, is not very good at multitasking.

Kaar uses ancestral sequencing to find out what makes life tick and how organisms are shaped by evolutionary selection pressure. The insights gained may, in turn, offer clues as to what it takes for organic precursor molecules to give rise to life - be it on Earth or faraway worlds. In her lab, Kaar specializes in designing molecules that act like tiny invisible wrenches, wreaking havoc with the delicate cellular machinery that allows organisms to eat, move and multiply - in short, to live.

Kaar has focused her attention on the translation machinery, a labyrinthine molecular clockwork that translates the information encoded in the bacteria's DNA into proteins. All organisms - from microbes to algae to trees to humans - possess this piece of machinery in their cells.

We approximate everything about the past based on what we have today. All life needs a coding system - something that takes information and turns it into molecules that can perform tasks - and the translational machinery does just that. It creates life's alphabet. That's why we think of it as a fossil that has remained largely unchanged, at least at its core. If we ever find life elsewhere, you bet that the first thing we'll look at is its information processing systems, and the translational machinery is just that."

Betl Kaar, Assistant Professor, University of Arizona

So critical is the translational machinery to life on Earth that even over the course of more than 3.5 billion years of evolution, its parts have undergone little substantial change. Scientists have referred to it as "an evolutionary accident frozen in time."

"I guess I tend to mess with things I'm not supposed to," Kaar said. "Locked in time? Let's unlock it. Breaking it would lead the cell to destruction? Let's break it."

The researchers took six different strains of Escherichia coli bacteria and genetically engineered the cells with mutated components of their translational machinery. They targeted the step that feeds the unit with genetic information by swapping the shuttle protein with evolutionary cousins taken from other microbes, including a reconstructed ancestor from about 700 million years ago.

"We get into the heart of the heart of what we think is one of the earliest machineries of life," Kaar said. "We purposely break it a little, and a lot, to see how the cells deal with this problem. In doing this, we think we create an urgent problem for the cell, and it will fix that."

Next, the team mimicked evolution by having the manipulated bacterial strains compete with each other - like a microbial version of "The Hunger Games." A thousand generations later, some strains fared better than others, as was expected. But when Kaar's team analyzed exactly how the bacteria responded to perturbations in their translational components, they discovered something unexpected: Initially, natural selection improved the compromised translational machinery, but its focus shifted away to other cellular modules before the machinery's performance was fully restored.

To find out why, Kaar enlisted Sandeep Venkataram, a population genetics expert at the University of California, San Diego.

Venkataram likens the process to a game of whack-a-mole, with each mole representing a cellular module. Whenever a module experiences a mutation, it pops up. The hammer smashing it back down is the action of natural selection. Mutations are randomly spread across all modules, so that all moles pop up randomly.

"We expected that the hammer of natural selection also comes down randomly, but that is not what we found," he said. "Rather, it does not act randomly but has a strong bias, favoring those mutations that provide the largest fitness advantage while it smashes down other less beneficial mutations, even though they also provide a benefit to the organism."

In other words, evolution is not a multitasker when it comes to fixing problems.

"It seems that evolution is myopic," Venkataram said. "It focuses on the most immediate problem, puts a Band-Aid on and then it moves on to the next problem, without thoroughly finishing the problem it was working on before."

"It turns out the cells do fix their problems but not in the way we might fix them," Kaar added. "In a way, it's a bit like organizing a delivery truck as it drives down a bumpy road. You can stack and organize only so many boxes at a time before they inevitably get jumbled around. You never really get the chance to make any large, orderly arrangement."

Why natural selection acts in this way remains to be studied, but what the research showed is that, overall, the process results in what the authors call "evolutionary stalling" - while evolution is busy fixing one problem, it does at the expense of all other issues that need fixing. They conclude that at least in rapidly evolving populations, such as bacteria, adaptation in some modules would stall despite the availability of beneficial mutations. This results in a situation in which organisms can never reach a fully optimized state.

"The system has to be capable of being less than optimal so that evolution has something to act on in the face of disturbance - in other words, there needs to be room for improvement," Kaar said.

Kaar believes this feature of evolution may be a signature of any self-organizing system, and she suspects that this principle has counterparts at all levels of biological hierarchy, going back to life's beginnings, possibly even to prebiotic times when life had not yet materialized.

With continued funding from the John Templeton Foundation and NASA, the research group is now working on using ancestral sequencing to go back even further in time, Kaar said.

"We want to strip things down even more and create systems that start out as what we would consider pre-life and then transition into what we consider life."

Source:

Journal reference:

Venkataram, S., et al. (2020) Evolutionary stalling and a limit on the power of natural selection to improve a cellular module. PNAS. doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1921881117.

Original post:
Scientists hope to find clues about how life emerged by tinkering with its oldest components - News-Medical.net

Rockville cell and gene company may have found treatment for HIV – BethesdaMagazine.com

Jeff Galvin believes his Rockville cell and gene technology company has found a breakthrough treatment for people living with HIV

By David Goldstein

| Published: 2020-08-17 08:31

When Jeff Galvin was 13 years old, he came across a lone computer in the basement of Muzzey Junior High School in Lexington, Massachusetts. It was actually a teletype machine attached to a minicomputer. This was, after all, the 1970s.

He doesnt remember why it was there, but he got permission to use it and taught himself how to program. My first love affair, Galvin recalls. My head exploded with the possibility that you had this thing that never got tired. You just fed it electricity.

At 15, he was taking classes at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in nearby Cambridge and teaching computer science to high school and college students on weekends. This may be starting to sound like Good Will Hunting, the 1997 film in which actor Matt Damon plays an MIT janitor who secretly solves complex equations on a classroom blackboard, but theres a difference. He was a math genius, Galvin says. I was a highly passionate, excited kid who had just seen the most amazing toy in history.

In his 20s, Galvin was an early recruit to Silicon Valley in those heady nascent days of the 1980s when it was fast becoming the high-tech Xanadu. His time in California included six years at Apple, but it was a visit to the National Institutes of Health in 2007 that took his career in a much different direction.

Now 61, hes the founder and CEO of a Rockville cell and gene technology company, and he believes his company stands on the cusp of a medical breakthrough. Galvins team of molecular biologists at American Gene Technologies (AGT) thinks it has developed a gene therapy procedure that can cure HIV, the virus that leads to AIDS. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1.1 million people are currently living with HIV in this country; the World Health Organization estimates that 75 million people across the globe have been infected with the virus since the AIDS epidemic began in 1981. About 32 million have died.

Galvin says he made HIV his target because a cure for the virus has remained elusive. People with HIV must take a daily regimen of medications that control infections and suppress the virus, but dont eliminate it. Over time, these drugs can cause everything from nausea and fatigue to more serious conditions affecting the kidneys, heart and central nervous system, according to NIH.

He believes the gene therapy procedure AGT has developed, in which genes are transferred to modify cells or tissue through the use of viral vectors, could actually be a platform to cure any number of diseases.

What cant we cure with this? Galvin says during a call to the head of a financial securities firm one afternoon in February. Hes seated at a large oval table in the AGT conference room with the phone on speaker.

Galvin spends much of his time wooing potential investors. What he brings to the task is his salesmans personality: a bit over the top, a healthy dollop of bravado, and an inclination to push the envelope. And his companys HIV treatment is getting a serious lookthe U.S. Food and Drug Administration is determining whether the procedure is safe enough for human testing.

Galvin says the gene and cell therapy industry has been exploding in recent years, causing a slowdown in the regulatory process for those kinds of treatments. But AGT is hopeful that the FDA will approve the human clinical trials by this fall. I cant imagine we cant cure almost everything in the world, he says on the call. Were going to send chemotherapy and radiation the way of bloodletting and leeches.

Galvin is a ball of energy and nonstop talker. Politics. Facebooks troubled relationship with privacy. Hell opine as long as someone will listen and he doesnt have a pressing appointment. He is 6 feet tall, has a genial smile and an eagerness to engage. And he burns with the passion of the committed.

Were down here in Rockville, Maryland. Lots of good opportunities down here, he says during the pitch, which goes on for more than an hour. Right now [we have] the beginnings of what is turning into a revolution in pharmaceuticalswere talking about the creation of probably another $3 to $5 trillion industry over the next 10 to 15 years. I think this is bigger than the dot-com boom. I think it doesnt have quite the same bubble. This isnt the kind of thing that will all go off the cliff simultaneously like dot-com because theres real science behind it. And if it works out, it can be monetized.

Galvin is a cheerleader for Montgomery Countys growth as a hub for health technology. AGT is just off Interstate 270 at Exit 6B in the life sciences corridor, where it percolates among a cluster of tech, biotech and pharmaceutical companies, as well as educational centers. Branches of the University of Maryland and Montgomery College help incubate new startups. Thats the atmosphere that got AGT off the ground in 2008.

In addition to HIV, AGT is developing therapies for several types of cancerous tumors that affect the breasts, lungs and prostate. The company hopes that its work on a treatment for liver cancer will be approved for human clinical trials in 2022. The lab is also working on a gene therapy for phenylketonuria, known as PKU, a rare inherited metabolic disorder.

Theres this great economic engine which is evolving that will make Maryland the next Silicon Valley, Galvin tells the head of the financial securities firm. I call it DNA Valley.

Galvin, it should be noted, is not a scientist. Hes an economist by training, a 1981 graduate of Harvard University. Hes a computer prodigy by pedigreehis mother was one of the rare female computer software experts in the 1960s, and his father is an MIT-trained electrical engineer who did national security work.

Galvin has this thing about disruptive technologies, he says, systems that upend the old way of doing something and change the culture in a significant way. Like how Apple co-founder Steve Jobs simplified and popularized the computer mouse. Or how GPS changed the way we get from here to there. Thats how he sees AGT and gene therapy. Ive been through a lot of technologies: computers, software, the internet, apps, IT, Galvin says.

So I understand how these technologies grow. Gene and cell therapies are bigger than any of those, and its much more emotional because its your health.

He has a fluency in arcane subjects that arent connected to his own skills. This is Galvins explanation for how HIV infects a cell through a protein known as CCR5, located on the surface of white blood cells, and why AGT believes it has developed a defense: One element of our cell product is the removal of CCR5 from the surface of CD4+ T cells. Howeverwe have also added siRNAs against conserved regions of the vif and tat HIV genes for additional protection against R5 viruses as well as extending protection to CXCR4 versions of HIV.

Heres how he puts it in plain English: We have removed thedoor handle (CCR5) that HIV uses to get into cells. Most forms of HIV use that common surface protein in cells to infect the cell, but some forms do not need that handle. AGT has added specially designed genes to our HIV treatment that are capable of producing substances inside the cell that protect against several known mutations of HIV that do not require that handle. AGT is the first company to provide this type of broad protection to the various known versions of HIV.

HIV is an insidious virus that infects a patients T cells, a type of white blood cell that helps the body fight off infection. In Montgomery County, 3,489 people were infected with HIV between 2009 and 2018, with 123 new cases in 2018, according to the Maryland Department of Health. AGTs gene therapy approach modifies the HIV-specific T cells so they can resist infections and do their job of protecting the body from pathogens that cause disease.

AGT does this by using viral vectors; the viruses are cracked open to remove the bad genes and replaced with newly modified genes that will improve the cell. Instead of a virus with the intention of infecting you and going to the next person, its been tamed to do only one part of that process, says C. David Pauza, a molecular biologist and longtime researcher in gene cloning and HIV who serves as AGTs chief science officer. We put things in it we want it to deliver and it makes one infection and stopsand doesnt go any farther. According to Galvin, once HIV T cells are able to carry out their protective work as intended, HIV patients would eventually become permanently immune to the virus and hopefully have no need to continue taking antiretroviral drugs.

AGTs concept is not new, according to Carl Dieffenbach, director of the Division of AIDS at NIHs National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. What has improved are the vectors, he says. Its reasonable to continue to watch this. Whats unknown, Dieffenbach says, is the human reaction. Once the therapy is tried on people, what you dont know is how this will actually behave.

Tami Howie, an attorney who represents tech and biotech companies, first met Galvin in 2017, when she was CEO of the Maryland Technology Council. He is one of the rare people who epitomizes the convergence in tech and biotech, she says. Hes totally cutting edge.

But messing around with the human genome can be fraught with risk. We know there are viruses out there that get into your body and activate genes that do all kinds of good things and bad things, Pauza says. [One] good thing is a very old virus thats in most of us that controls the efficiency of pregnancy in women. But then you can get other viruses that go in and they stimulate things to be made inappropriately and trigger horrible results.

To Galvin, no risk, no reward. When he made public late last year that AGT was developing a cure for HIV, he was criticized by some in the HIV/AIDS community for peddling false hope. But Galvin has no regrets and is sympathetic to their concerns. Its reasonable to experience a gut reaction to the word cure when humanity has been struggling against HIV for decades, he says. I dont fault anyone for working to protect their community. We are always clear that we will only know for sure once we prove it in a human trial, he says. He calls AGTs work the future of medicine.

Its going to be typical that many of the diseases that strike you are going to be cured by gene and cell therapy, he tells the prospective investor. And we plan to lead that revolution becausewere going to prove were the most efficient competitor in it by curing HIV this year.

If hes right, that would be seismic.

Enormous, Pauza says.

The oldest of three children, Galvin didnt get a lot of attention when he was young so he tended to get into a lot of trouble, he says. I figured out how things worked early, so it was hard to lock me in the house.

As a child, hed come home with a bloody hand, having found a razor blade, or wander into a snowstorm looking for twigs for the fireplace. His father, Aaron, says Galvin was a handful because his mind was so active. We were on a first-name basis with all the emergency wards, he says with a chuckle.

Galvin showed his entrepreneurial spirit early on, his father says. When he was 6 and the familys house in Lexington was under construction, the boy collected dirt from the excavation site and sifted it through a window screen and into plastic bags. Then he pulled his little red wagon up and down the street, selling topsoil for 50 cents a bag.

Harvard didnt offer a degree in computer science when he went there, so Galvin majored in economics and took all the computer classes he could. After graduation, he left for California to take a job with Hewlett-Packard, but he didnt like the corporate culture and went to work for Apple. Apple was more like me, Galvin says. It was in love with what computers could do.

He stayed on the West Coast for parts of the next three decades. Silicon Valley was on fire when I was there, says Galvin, whose sister, Laurie, and brother, Mark, also pursued careers in the tech world. He describes the atmosphere there as a group of people with the right ideas andpushing things at light speed. There was such a clarity of vision and purpose. There was no limit on what we could do there.

It was a fast life, though. As a marketing manager and later director of international marketing for Claris, an Apple spinoff, Galvin was always on the move: Europe, the Middle East, Indonesia, New Zealand. While in Paris on a trip to show clients how to service Apple hardware, he fell asleep at the wheel while driving through a tunnel at 70 mph after having been up for three days. When he brushed a curb, he awoke and was able to right the car. But it was a chilling experience.

How lucky can you get? Galvin says.

In 2001, after nearly two decades of 16-hour workdays, he decided he was done. At 42, hed made investments in startups, real estate, software and internet companies. I looked at my bank account and realized I didnt have to work anymore, Galvin says.

He bought a house on Maui and traveled between there and his home in San Carlos in Silicon Valley. He started dating, thinking he should settle down before he got too old. He and his wife, Cherry, married in 2004.

The couple enjoyed a carefree life in the tropics. But after five years, Galvin was bored out of my mind, so they moved back to California. He decided to tiptoe back into the game by looking for a project where he could become an angel investor, someone who puts money behind a startup often in exchange for ownership equity. The word got out, and Galvin received a proposal from a postdoctoral researcher at a lab at NIH headed by Dr. Roscoe Brady, a renowned biochemist and pioneer in the treatment of enzyme deficiencies. Galvin visited the lab in 2007 and met Brady, who explained the science behind viral vectors. It was Galvins eureka moment.

When I learned that there was a mechanism to update the DNA in a human cell, my head practically exploded, Galvin says. He reasoned that if you look at a cell as the human bodys computer, and the DNA contained in the cell as the operating system, you could employ viral vectors to convert viruses into updates for the human computer and thereby correct defects.

DNA is the instruction set for the cell, Galvin says. Your genes are just instructions to make enzymes and proteins that then react in the cell. Basically, your cell is an organic computer. You change the software, you change the cell.

Brady was retiring and NIH was closing his lab. Galvin says NIH gave him the intellectual property, free of charge, on the condition that he continue the research. I felt like he was close to making major breakthroughs, Galvin says. So he hired two of Bradys research assistants and signed Brady on as a scientific adviser. Thats how AGT was born.

In the early days, Galvin continued to live on the West Coast and funded the work out of his own pocket. His mother, Frayda, was suffering from Stage 4 pancreatic cancer. She died in 2009 after battling the disease for 15 months. Knowing what she went through bolstered Galvins conviction that AGTs work could help people. In 2010, he realized he needed to be in Rockville full time. Over the next few years, he received $1 million in grants from NIH, which was interested in innovative approaches to gene and cell therapies. Galvin says obtaining funding that way was easier than trying to lure investors, and he kicked in an additional $2 million.

AGT began as a small but determined undertaking. An early supporter was Dr. Robert Redfield, a virologist who now heads the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and became visible during the White House coronavirus briefings in the spring. He served as an adviser to AGT beginning in 2011 and subsequently chaired the companys clinical advisory board for its HIV gene therapy program until 2018. By that time, AGT had been granted patents for its HIV therapy and had enlisted NIH as a research partner in its search for a cure. Fast forward to today, Galvin says, we have curative therapies for HIV.

Galvins day usually begins in my sweats, he says, in the kitchen of his Rockville condo where he has a three-screen computer. He calls it command central. He can work uninterrupted for about three hours, and hes usually at AGT by noon. He presides over a three-story warren of offices where employees handle regulatory affairs, marketing, finance and other administrative business.

Its in the labs, spread over 11,500 square feet on the third floor, where the microbiologists and other scientists do the research and delicate work of separating genes, the link between one generation and the next. Behind glass walls and clad in blue protective gowns and gloves, they employ an array of biological tools as they work with T cells, viral vectors and other microscopic particles. Their findings spill out of white data machines spaced at regular intervals along the work counters.

Talking up AGT requires Galvin to travel a lot. Before the coronavirus pandemic, he was often on trains to Manhattan for meetings and dinners with prospective investors, and flying around the country for conferences and other events. But the world has new rules these days. Video conference calls and Zoom meetings have become the new way of doing business.

To relax, Galvin plays Xbox or watches The Simpsons. He enjoys how the shows writers parody American culture.

I can tell these people feel the same way about the world as I do, he says. He also reads or catches up on the news. On his nightstand in February was Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, a New York Times bestseller.

His wife, Cherry, prefers warm weather, so she spends her winters at the couples home in Silicon Valley. They got married late in life, Galvin says, and dont have children. Cherrys sister, a single mother, lived with the couple and in 2004 sent for her daughter, who was 6 years old and staying with her grandmother in Wuhan, China. Now 21, Galvins niece, Jesse, recently graduated from the University of Washington, where she majored in molecular and cellular biology. Interning at AGT during her high school summers might have had something to do with that. I love my niece like a daughter, Galvin says.

Galvin says hes having the most fun hes ever had. Still, securing funding for new therapies and medicines can be a struggle if youre not a pharmaceutical giant. Investors generally want a quick return, and human trials for a new drug or therapy can be costly.

To be a successful entrepreneur and forging new territory, you get a lot of arrows in the back. A lot of people say no way, says Drew Palin, a physician and chief innovation officer of Intellivisit, a Madison, Wisconsin, online medical diagnosis company. Hes also one of Galvins investors. He has had to raise lots of nickels and dimes that allowed him to be a little more patient and persistent. To do that, you have to have a lot [of] drive, a lot of personal passion and a way to survive.

When Galvin isnt pitching AGTs upside to venture capitalists, blue-chip finance houses like JPMorgan Chase, big financial institutions like Citibank, and angel investors like Palin, hes championing the promise of genetic engineering.

Im basically an evangelical person that is spending his entire day either connecting people with our mission and trying to engage them [in] some way to support it or propel it, or inspiring people to achieve greatness within the mission, Galvin says.

Should AGTs experimental HIV treatment work and eventually be approved for commercial sales, Galvin says it would likely be licensed to a large pharmaceutical company with global reach to ensure the products wide availability.

Galvin doesnt have any idea how much the treatment could cost, but predicted it would be less expensive than what insurance companies now pay to cover the costs of daily antiretroviral treatments, medicine for the side effects and appointments with doctors. Hes not chasing the dollar. Hes chasing every life he can save, Tami Howie says. He figures every minute hes not working, people are dying.

Galvins fundraising has pushed investments to $40 million, and his staff has grown to 30. His commitment to AGT, however, put a strain on both his marriage and retirement nest egg. Both have survived and recovered, he says, but it took sustained engagement with high risk and giant potential downfall for me.

Now he weighs the possibility that it all could pay off. If we get a handful of cured HIV patientsI think the [National] Mall is going to look like the days of the AIDS quilt because these people have been suffering for so long, Galvin says, and I think the emotional response is going to be quite profound.

David Goldstein is a former political and investigative reporter in Washington, D.C., for McClatchy Newspapers and The Kansas City Star.

Continued here:
Rockville cell and gene company may have found treatment for HIV - BethesdaMagazine.com

Following the data – Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

Kiani Arkus Gardner, AB 07 (biology), was pretty confident she had the experiment right.

An ambitious Washington University sophomore in the lab of biologist Joseph Jez, she was sure she was asking the right questions, formulating the right hypotheses, following the right procedures.

But the answer wasnt coming up the way she had hoped.

We were one or two experiments away from wrapping it up, and having a result to publish, recalls Gardner, a native Hawaiian and self-professed science fair nerd, who matriculated at WashU in the fall of 2003 to study biology and see where the science would take her academia, research, ultimately perhaps college administration.

And when the eager first-year student couldnt find a lab those first two semesters, she landed a summer internship at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center and found herself in the lab of Jez, who is now the Spencer T. Olin Professor in Biology and chair of the Department of Biology in Arts & Sciences. She made an immediate impression, acing every task and earning the right to work alongside Jez and his graduate assistants.

She was utterly fearless and quite comfortable in the lab, recalls Jez, who at the time was in his second year as a lab head at the Danforth Center. We threw everything at her, and she responded beautifully.

Yet with her goal publishing her first paper before age 20 in sight, Gardner became frustrated when those last experiments didnt turn out the way she had envisioned. I was pretty upset, she says, almost in meltdown mode. Jez, ever the teacher, patiently listened to the young scientist and told her that the experiments were fine; it was her ideas that were getting in the way.

He said, Look. The data is what the data is, Gardner says. He told me not to be so in love with your ideas that youre willing to overlook the data, because thats where youre going to go wrong.

For Gardner, it was a light-bulb moment. I said, OK, well keep working the experiment, and well get to it, she says.

And get to it she did. Gardner studied the data, re-hypothesized and rethought the experiments, and ultimately published that paper, Mechanistic Analysis of Wheat Chlorophyllase Reveals a Connection to the Carboxyesterase Enzyme Family, as a sophomore. It was presented at a conference, won an award and appeared in the Notables section of the campus newspaper, The Record, a rare occasion for an undergraduate. And it was the first of a long line of published papers on the vitae for the now 34-year-old Gardner.

Gardner would work three years in Jezs lab and have eight published papers by the time she graduated in 2007. I had a bit of street cred, she says, entering Duke with more publications than most have when they leave the doctorate program.

I was brash, and I was bold. In fact, my program director told one P.I., If youre going to take her in the lab, you have to be sure you can handle her, she recalls. It made for some tough going early on, but she eventually ended up in the lab of Dukes Harold Erickson and earned her doctorate in cell biology.

All important lessons for a young scientist: the starts and the stops, two steps forward and one step back, stuck with her as she learned to trust the data at every turn. Jezs words, The data is what the data is, would become her catchphrase.

The words also would be the thread that would take her from WashU to Duke, to marriage and a family, to a career as a community college professor first in North Carolina, to ultimately the southern coast of Alabama in the Mobile metropolitan area.

Thats where this year, Gardner a Hawaiian, a wife, a mom, a scientist would throw her hat in the ring as a Democratic candidate for Congress in Alabamas 1st congressional district, a place that hasnt sent a Democrat to Congress since 1963. An unlikely candidate in an unprecedented time.

A force of nature is what she is, says Jez, who has kept in touch with Gardner through the years as both colleague and friend, and who remembers the day she told him she was a candidate. She was on the phone from a park, and you could hear her kids playing in the background, he says. Shes like, Yeah, Im running for Congress.

No rules

My life is a series of being in the right place at the right time, says Gardner via a Zoom call from her kitchen in her Spanish Fort, Ala., home with her two young sons, Ethan, 5, and Nolan, 3, playing nearby.

Its late June, about 3 weeks before a runoff election in which the voters of south Alabama will choose between two Democratic candidates for the November ballot. Its been almost four months since the initial primary in early March necessitated a runoff that can finally take place. Why? Because its a campaign season cloaked in COVID-19, with social distancing campaigns behind face masks and indoors with YouTube and Facebook Live providing both the messages and the medium.

Its good and its bad, she says, shrugging off the unprecedented challenge. As far as the pandemic goes, its a whole new world, but thats true for all the candidates. No one has the leg up here. I think Im a bit more tech savvy, though, and we already had a decent digital infrastructure set up.

When the campaign began in the summer of 2019, Gardner was a young mom using her PhD to teach biology at a community college, because thats where she felt she could be the most useful. Even when she was living in North Carolina, she gravitated toward teaching at that level. I really like the community college, the teaching philosophies and its role in society, she says.

But when the family moved to rural Alabama for her husband Matts job, she found a vastly different world, and she got involved in local politics because she wanted to improve the community in which she and Matt were raising their boys.

I had already begun to get involved, she says, insofar as How do I make sure the community in which I live is one that my children can enter into, and no one has to move across the world to get a good job?

When members of the local Democratic party witnessed her intellect and enthusiasm for public service, they came calling for a PhD with no political experience to run for Congress.

When members of the local Democratic party witnessed her intellect and enthusiasm for public service, they came calling for a PhD with no political experience to run for Congress. She first thought it was the craziest thing she had ever heard, but then she finally said yes with the support of her family. If youre going to do it, do it right and do it well, her husband advised her. Quit your job and make this what you do.

In July 2019, she made it official, and Gardner says the campaign was going pretty much as expected, with lots of hand-shaking and church picnics. But then you-know-what happened. The scientist simply took campaign matters in her own hands and pivoted. There are no rules in place for a pandemic campaign, she says. Since I had a following, and a platform and a message, the campaign pivoted from asking for votes to providing leadership.

The result was a Facebook Live video series called #QuarantinewithKiani, in which Gardner used a whiteboard to explain everything from what COVID-19 was, to how to safely re-enter the public sphere, to the importance of face masks. The campaign started food drives, distributed hand sanitizer and passed out masks. She offered step-by-step tutorials on absentee voting and helped explain personal finance in describing how best to use the stimulus checks.

Were making America to stop writing off south Alabama, and thats huge.

And she picked up endorsements. A few weeks prior to the July 14 runoff, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren endorsed her candidacy, a rare occurrence of a national candidate paying attention to Democratic politics in Alabamas first district. Were making America to stop writing off south Alabama, and thats huge, Gardner says. Im very proud of that.

Jez, her old professor, wasnt surprised. Kianis one of these individuals who can do anything, he says.

It wasnt just her work in the lab while a WashU student that had an impact on Gardner. When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in late August 2005, Gardner had just begun her junior year. She remembers the university taking in students from Tulane University, and the food drives and social awareness the hurricane generated on the Danforth Campus.

The next spring, she took a seminar-style class through American culture studies called Hurricane Katrina: A Case Study in Disaster Relief, which was team-taught and looked at the disaster from all sides. The course also included a trip to New Orleans for spring break that year.

That was really powerful, she says. It was really the first time I thought that my academic life could be about service, which paved the way for where I am now.

The following summer, I packed up my car, left my dog with a friend, and went back to New Orleans by myself to work.

She always had a good sense of helping other people and finding ways to give back, Jez says. She was constantly looking for ways to connect with people.

Gardner is in her kitchen a week after the runoff, in which she lost by a 57-43 percent margin to James Averhart, who will face Republican Jerry Carl in November.

Thats politics. Thats runoffs, and why theyre so terrible for so many reasons. I am proud of the race I ran and the campaign infrastructure I put in place.

Thats politics, she says. Thats runoffs, and why theyre so terrible for so many reasons. I am proud of the race I ran and the campaign infrastructure I put in place.

Its hard not to think what might have been. Gardner hints that shes not finished with politics yet, that shell remain involved through November and try to help as many candidates as she can while being a mom and helping her boys navigate through the pandemic. And shes still using her voice to educate voters, disseminating public health information on COVID-19 and encouraging blood donations.

Asked if, like that experiment in the Jez lab so many years ago, perhaps this election setback could eventually produce something bigger and better for her?

She laughs. Yes and no, she says. The better analogy is one of those lab experiments in which you go where the data takes you.

The primary election was an experiment, we got that data, moved forward. July 14 was an experiment. Got that data, moved forward. Now its time to chart a specific aim. Between the virus and the runoff, for a lot of people it exposed the weaknesses of our electoral system that day-to-day voters arent aware of.

Shes proud of the fact, for example, that her campaign pushed hard for no-excuse absentee voting, and it will be allowed in Alabama this November. When we did that work, a lot of people saw how difficult absentee balloting is, Gardner says, and how the lack of it disenfranchises communities of color, low-income communities and, in a major way, disabled communities.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is so inspiring, but not everyone can go from bartender to Congress. We need narratives that are not about superstars, but just super interesting women

Whats more, she hopes her story might be inspiring to other women who are thinking about entering the political arena.

I think we are inundated with stories of these amazing political successes, she says. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is so inspiring, but not everyone can go from bartender to Congress. So many women who aspire to national office dont see a path for themselves, so there has to be a story thats told that says, Heres what it looks like to get involved.

It pushes back against the burdensome narrative that women can have it all. You dont have to have it all, but you can do it all because it all matters: City council. School board. Moms Demand Action. The Wall of Moms. We need narratives that are not about superstars, but just super interesting women.

And whatever comes next, Gardner will continue to define herself by being Hawaiian, and a wife, and a mom, as a scientist because the data is what the data is.

Its this really powerful idea that we live in the world we live in, Gardner says, and it doesnt necessarily matter what your idea of perfect is, or what you wish had happened.

You have to deal with what you have right now.

View post:
Following the data - Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

High Point University Students, Faculty and Staff Recognized for Research and Innovation – Yes! Weekly

HIGH POINT, N.C., Aug. 14, 2020 Members of the High Point University community frequently conduct, publish and share research and creative works in a variety of ways. Below is a recap of recent research initiatives.

HPU Student, Alumna and Faculty Research Featured in National Scientific Journal

Casey Garr, HPU alumna; Candyce Sturgeon, HPU rising senior; Dr. Veronica Segarra, HPU assistant professor of biology; and Noah Franks, student at Penn Griffin School of the Arts in High Point, North Carolina; recently conducted research that was published in Autophagy, a national scientific journal.

Dr. Veronica Segarra, assistant professor of biology, recently co-authored research that was published in Autophagy, a national scientific journal.

The study, titled, Autophagy as an on-ramp to scientific discovery, examines HPUs Cell Art Collaborative program to gain understanding around how the recruitment of highly creative students into STEM fields through connections to art can be a first step in defining a specialized career path that leads to a valuable and unique contribution to science.

In addition to providing experiential learning opportunities for students at HPU to conduct hands-on research and co-author peer-reviewed articles, the Cell Art Collaborative program encourages students in the local community to explore careers that incorporate both science and art, says Segarra. This initiative continues to facilitate conversations around STEAM-based learning environments for educators to take advantage of a wider range of student talents and interests, preparing them to go forth into society as the creative thinkers and problem solvers the world needs.

HPU Students Research Featured in CBE: Life Sciences Education Journal

Clara Primus, a rising junior majoring in biology and Bonner Leader at HPU, recently collaborated with prominent scientists to conduct research that was published in CBE: Life Sciences Education, a quarterly journal published by the American Society for Cell Biology.

Clara Primus, a rising junior majoring in biology and Bonner Leader at HPU, recently collaborated with prominent scientists at the Mayo Clinic, University of California Davis and Northwestern to conduct research that was published in CBE: Life Sciences Education, a quarterly journal published by the American Society for Cell Biology. The article, titled, Scientific Societies Fostering Inclusive Scientific Environments through Travel Awards: Current Practices and Recommendations, examines how scientific societies can contribute to a diverse and inclusive workforce.

The research compares and contrasts the broad approaches that scientific societies within the National Science Foundation-funded Alliance to Catalyze Change for Equity in STEM Success (ACCESS) use to implement and assess their travel award programs for underrepresented minority (URM) trainees. Findings will improve collaboration and better position scientific societies to begin addressing some of these questions and learning from each other.

The recommendations included in this research shed light on how even scientific societies can be allies in furthering inclusion efforts, said Primus. Ive spent nearly two years studying equity and diversity, and I hope that I can take the knowledge Ive learned from all of my research to educate my peers at HPU.

HPU Exercise Science Professor Publishes Statement for the American Heart Association

Dr. Colin Carriker, assistant professor of exercise science in HPUs Congdon School of Health Sciences, recently co-authored a scientific statement for the American Heart Association (AHA).

Dr. Colin Carriker, assistant professor of exercise science in HPUs Congdon School of Health Sciences, recently co-authored an American Heart Association (AHA) scientific statement on medicinal and recreational cannabis use published in Circulation.

The statement critically reviews the use of medicinal and recreational cannabis from a clinical but also a policy and public health perspective by evaluating its safety and efficacy profile, particularly in relation to cardiovascular health. The purpose of this scientific statement was to explore the evidence and science pertaining to medical marijuana, recreational cannabis and cardiovascular health to provide physicians and health care providers with the information available to date. While cannabis may have some therapeutic benefits, these do not appear to be cardiovascular in nature. Health care providers would benefit from increased knowledge, education and training pertaining to various cannabis products and health implications, including recognition that cannabis use may, in fact, exacerbate cardiovascular events or other health problems. In this regard, the negative health implications of cannabis should be formally and consistently emphasized in policy, while aligning with the American Heart Associations commitment to minimizing the smoking and vaping of any products and banning cannabis use for youth.

It was an honor to work alongside such a high-quality team of researchers, says Carriker. I want to especially thank our committee chairs, Dr. Robert L. Page II and Dr. Larry A. Allen, as their extraordinary leadership and organization were integral components in the completion and publication of this AHA scientific statement. We publish these statements to counterbalance and debunk misinformation because the public requires high-quality information about cannabis from reputable organizations such as the American Heart Association.

Carriker is the advocacy ambassador for the American Heart Associations Council on Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health and served as a member of the writing committee tasked with writing this AHA Scientific Statement initiated by the AHAs Council on Clinical Cardiology.

At High Point University, every student receives an extraordinary education in an inspiring environment with caring people. HPU, located in the Piedmont Triad region of North Carolina, is a liberal arts institution with 5,400 undergraduate and graduate students. It is ranked No. 1 by U.S. News and World Report for Best Regional Colleges in the South, No. 1 for Most Innovative Regional Colleges in the South and No. 1 for Best Undergraduate Teaching in the South. The Princeton Review named HPU in the 2020 edition of The Best 385 Colleges and on the Best Southeastern Colleges 2020 Best Colleges: Region by Region list. HPU was recognized as a Great School for Business Majors and a Great School for Communication Majors. HPU was also recognized for Most Beautiful Campus (No. 18), Best College Dorms (No. 5) and Best Campus Food (No. 20). For nine years in a row, HPU has been named a College of Distinction with special recognition for business and education programs and career development, and The National Council on Teacher Quality ranks HPUs elementary education program as one of the best in the nation. The university has 60 undergraduate majors, 63 undergraduate minors and 14 graduate degree programs. It is a member of the NCAA, Division I and the Big South Conference. Visit High Point University on the web at highpoint.edu.

Link:
High Point University Students, Faculty and Staff Recognized for Research and Innovation - Yes! Weekly