HPU Students, Faculty and Staff Recognized for Research and Innovation – High Point University

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.

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 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 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.

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How do we ensure Global Health research leads to practical solutions at the local level? – BugBitten – BMC Blogs Network

While every research is good, very few resonate well among the general public. The public in LMICs will probably only get on board research that will directly benefit them. Credit: Paul Adepoju.

For my masters degree in cell biology and genetics, I screened for gene polymorphisms in adults co-infected with helminth and latent tuberculosis in a rural community in Nigerias south west region. The journey from my university (the University of Ibadan) to the study site took several hours and along the way, I began to ask myself why my supervisor, Dr Chiaka I. Anumudu, was attracted to the particular study site.

The days that we spent at the site were quite eye opening for me as I found myself in Eggua village, a peaceful community which, I found out, largely relies on the Yewa river for daily life.

I did not grow up very rich but no matter how much I thought we lacked, my family never had to bathe, drink or wash using water from a river that some people do urinate and defecate near resulting in haematuria and other symptoms of schistosomiasis. Even though we were providing praziquantel for those that had the disease, I knew that it may not stop future episodes of the disease as the people will still go back to the river which is the main source of infection.

On our last day at the village, a PhD grad student that is also a member of the research team took me round the village. We saw huts, farmlands and buildings inhabited by individuals of all age groups. Then we proceeded to the river because he needed the coordinates for his thesis. Out of my curiosity and probably naivety, I asked aloud why will people be drinking or doing anything in the water the popular Yewa River? A villager passing by heard and smiled. He boasted that at birth, he was bathed with the water from the river and he continues to drink it to this day.

Almost every household in the community, including the kings, has had at least one person that suffered from schistosomiasis, making it a perfect study site for studies focusing on schistosomiasis.

But I began to ask myself what direct benefit will the man that has been drinking the water from birth enjoy from my work that is on gene polymorphism? I also asked myself whether my line of research would result in any direct benefit to the community.

A quicker solution to the schistosomiasis crisis in the community would be the provision of safer and cleaner sources of water. Even though I overheard my supervisor talking about plans to get the community the much needed assistance from government and other parties to achieve this, she was quick to tell me that it is not researchers job to be providing water to communities.

But what about making the water safer and unable to allow vectors of schistosomiasis to thrive? I responded.

She drew my attention to the world of molluscicide. While reading up this particular line of research, I noticed that the idea has been floating around since the 1950s, or probably much earlier.

Walter L. Newton and Willard T. Haskins in July 1953 described the dosage-mortality responses of some strains of Australorbis Glabratus to sodium pentachlorophenate.

In fact the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that snail control be implemented as a key

component of any schistosomiasis control and elimination strategy. Currently the WHO has licenced only one molluscide compound for the control of snails in areas affected by schistosomiasis, called Niclosamide.The WHO has developed guidelines on the evaluation of molluscicides and a manual for the field application of molluscicide. However it is known that the application of Niclosamide may not be appropriate or feasible for all transmission settings, though safe for humans and mammals, it is known to be toxic to other aquatic animals such as fish and ampibians. It also biodegrades rapidly meaning it can not be applied to large expanses of water, such as big lakes. Whilst snail control is a key component for schistomiasis elimination, further reseach and development is needed to produce low-cost, suitable and effective snail control and transmission control strategies.

For example a 2018 review mentioned Euphorbia milii var. hislopii, described by Eugene Ursch and Jacques Dsir Leandri in 1955, as the most promising phytochemical molluscide for use in official schistosomiasis control programs.

Considering the few number of scientific publications on molluscicides since 2018, it may take several years or decades before an effective molluscicide will emerge and may still take more years for such to become available to the people of Eggua village and others around the world that are still dealing with schistosomiasis.

This is not something that is peculiar to schistosomiasis as it seems like the situation is the same for several other parasitic diseases. While the body of knowledge on various parasites, vectors and associated diseases are expanding at a very rapid rate, many of the diseases continue to kill more people.

Few weeks ago, I visited one of Africas highly respected experts in virology, Prof Oyewale Tomori, and he drew my attention to how science is getting sidelined in the scheme of things and the general public, especially in several low and middle-income countries are struggling to understand the importance and relevance of the science ecosystem.

He noted that even though lots of research papers are published annually on malaria resulting in the emergence of several professors of malaria, their findings are yet to transform into the end of malaria as most of the successes recorded in malaria control are attributed to expanding access to antimalarial drugs and insecticide-treated nets and not local malaria researches. Little or nothing from the local research ecosystem has significantly changed or helped the malaria response.

As COVID-19 continues to be the center of attention as far as science is concerned and researchers working on the disease are publishing their research at a faster rate than for other diseases, I believe that it should serve as a key moment for researchers in the parasite and vector-borne diseases community to think of reevaluating their research priorities and consider not just how their science will provide additional knowledge regarding their research interest, but will also provide direct and quick benefit to the people that are living with the disease that we are researching.

Tens of thousands of people, largely young children, die annually of malaria. They will not benefit directly from research exploring the genome of the malaria parasite or its vector, while indirect impact might take decades if there will be any at all.

I know that it is not every researcher that can focus on solutions but I believe that the community needs to be frank with itself and find out how solutions-focused research can be better prioritised because no matter how much attention that COVID-19 is getting, malaria and other disease burdens remain, so do the whole spectrum of vector-borne parasitic diseases.

The villager that overheard me thinking aloud regarding the awful state of the water that he and other members of Eggua community rely on may not understand what single nucleotide polymorphisms mean and may get bored just listening to me explain. But I believe he and other residents will be excited to know about a molluscicide that will ensure that the Yewa River no longer harbors any vector of the parasitic infection that has plagued their community for decades.

Simply put, even when the attention of the global science community is on demystifying COVID-19, societies that are directly benefiting from our research will still be interested in the science that affects their daily lives and could be active advocates for such research even when government policies and priorities fluctuate and change. As a global health research community, is it time for us to rethink how we involve societies in our research, so that together we can find practical solutions aimed at improving their lives?

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How do we ensure Global Health research leads to practical solutions at the local level? - BugBitten - BMC Blogs Network

2020 Study on the Innovations in Live Cell Imaging, Portable Imaging and Screening Devices, and Digital Screening and Diagnostics Solutions -…

The "Innovations in Live Cell Imaging, Portable Imaging and Screening Devices, and Digital Screening and Diagnostics Solutions" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This latest issue of Advanced MedTech Technology Opportunity Engine (TOE) profiles a wide range of innovations from the advanced medical device and imaging industry. The innovations span the breadth of market segments in the MedTech space, from advanced holotomographic microscopy, holographic microscopy, portable screening, and diagnostic devices such as portable X-ray, breast, or lung cancer detection device, and smartphone-based retinal imaging and wound management solutions.

In addition, innovations in AI-based diagnostic devices, novel surgical robotic systems, skin patch for drug delivery, and vital sign monitoring, non-contact patient monitoring are also covered. These innovations portray the diversity in their technology readiness levels, indicating an immediate or potential market impact. The growth opportunities for all these advanced medical device technologies are also covered in this issue.

The Advanced MedTech TOE analyzes and reports new and emerging technologies; advances in R&D, product development and regulatory matters specifically related to the areas of CT, MRI, NM, PET, ultrasound, X-ray, neurology, ophthalmology, respiratory/anesthesia, wound care and management, surgical tools and instrumentation, drug delivery, orthopedics, endoscopy, cardiology, and monitoring. In addition, relevant developments in fusion technologies, functional imaging technology, interventional cardiology, and image-guided surgery, and healthcare IT related areas such as PACS, medical information storage, and disaster recovery/business continuance will also be covered.

Medical devices and imaging technology and innovation research covers cutting-edge global developments in medical devices and imaging sectors such as biosensors, biomaterials, biomechanics, microtechnologies, nanotechnologies, assistive technologies, and imaging technologies and platforms.

Story continues

Key Topics Covered:

Innovations in Medical Devices & Imaging

Holotomographic Microscopy with 3D Fluorescence Imaging

Automated Long-term Holotomographic Live Cell Imaging

Growth Opportunity: Holotomographic Microscopy has Applications in Cell Biology, Disease Diagnosis, and Drug Discovery

Holographic Microscope for Live Cell Imaging Inside an Incubator

Holographic Microscopy Modules for Observing Cells in Suspension and Adherent Cell Cultures

Transmission Holographic Microscopy for Advanced Biological Imaging Applications

Growth Opportunity: Holographic Microscopy Reduce Cost, Time, Complexity and Size of Equipment

Saline Enhanced Radiofrequency Ablation Therapy for Treating Ventricular Tachycardia

Growth Opportunity: Saline Enhanced Radiofrequency Ablation Reduces Time and Complexity and Increases Safety of Treatment

Wireless, Compact and Portable X-ray Machines

Growth Opportunity: Portable X-ray Device Has Growth Opportunities in Medical, Veterinary and Dental Imaging

Portable, Home-use Fertility Tracking Device

Growth Opportunity: Use of AI to provide Accurate and Personalized Insights

Portable Screening Test for Breast Cancer Detection

Growth Opportunity: Accurate Diagnosis of Breast Cancer to Enable Better Patient Survival Rates

Automated Screening Tool for Detecting Diabetic Retinopathy

Growth Opportunity: Early Diagnosis of Diabetic Retinopathy to Minimize Risk of Vision Loss among Patients

Smartphone-based Retinal Imaging Device for Diabetic Retinopathy Diagnosis

Growth Opportunity: Ease of Use across Different Clinical Settings to Improve Patients' access to Diabetic Retinopathy Screening

AI-powered Platform for Detecting Myocardial Infarction

Growth Opportunity: Fast and Precise Diagnosis to Facilitate Improved Patient Health Outcomes

Next-Generation Robotic System for Minimally Invasive Procedures

Growth Opportunity: Versatile and Cost-effective System for Improving Hospital Efficiency and Clinical Outcomes

Smartphone-enabled Application for Wound Care Management

Growth Opportunity: Use of Artificial Intelligence for Providing Comprehensive Wound Assessment

Non-invasive Breath Test for Lung Cancer Detection

Growth Opportunity: Early and Accurate Diagnosis of Lung Cancer to Enable Better Patient Survival Rates

Imaging Technology for Cardiovascular Disease

Growth Opportunity: Solution for Pre-operative Planning for Heart Valve Surgeries

First Open-sourced Electronic Health Records

Growth Opportunities: Healthcare Ecosystem Platform Empowering Patients, Hospitals, and Medical Research Institutions

Wearable Smart patch for Needle-free Drug Delivery

Growth Opportunities: Smartpatch for Delivery of Macromolecules in Patients with Chronic Diseases

Highly Sensitive IoT-enabled Smart Tattoo Sensor for Vital Sign Monitoring

Growth Opportunities: Smart Tattoo Sensor to Create Connected Health Ecosystem with all Stakeholders

Non-contact Vital Signs Monitoring Device

Growth Opportunities: Long-term Vital Sign Monitoring Device for Home and Hospital Setting

Machine Learning-based Mobile Application for Diagnosis

Growth Opportunities: Health Application with Advanced Technology for Multiple Disease Screening

Acoustic Device with AI Capabilities to Predict Heart Disorders

Growth Opportunities: Smart Stethoscope to Enable Physician to Predict Heart Disorders at Clinics

Automated and Intelligent System for Ventilated Patients

Growth Opportunities: Automated and Closed Hygiene System for COVID-19 Patients

Next-generation Smartphone Compatible Ophthalmoscope

Growth Opportunities: Smartphone-based Ophthalmoscope for Preventing Blindness

Robotic Surgical System for Vitreoretinal Procedures

Growth Opportunity: High Precision Treatment and Ability to Limit Post-procedural Complications to Help in Improving Patient Outcomes

Portable Retinal Imaging Device for Performing Contactless Eye Exams

Growth Opportunity: AI-based Solution to Enable Early and Faster Diagnosis

Industry Contacts

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

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200814005407/en/

Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com

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2020 Study on the Innovations in Live Cell Imaging, Portable Imaging and Screening Devices, and Digital Screening and Diagnostics Solutions -...

Hamilton Thorne to Announce Q2 2020 Financial Results and Hold Conference Call on August 20, 2020 – GlobeNewswire

BEVERLY, Mass. and TORONTO, Aug. 13, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Hamilton Thorne Ltd. (TSX-V: HTL), a leading provider of precision instruments, consumables, software and services to the Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART), research, and cell biology markets, today announced that it will release its financial results for the three- and six-month periods ended June 30, 2020 before market open on Thursday, August 20, 2020. The press release, with accompanying financial information, will be posted on the Companys website at http://www.hamiltonthorne.ltd and on http://www.sedar.com.

The Company will follow with a conference call on the same day at 11:00 a.m. EDT to review highlights of the results. All interested parties are welcome to join the conference call by dialing toll free 1-855-223-7309 in North America, or 647-788-4929 from other locations, and requesting Conference ID 2789186. A recording of the call will be available on Hamilton Thornes website shortly after the call.

About Hamilton Thorne Ltd. (www.hamiltonthorne.ltd)

Hamilton Thorne is a leading global provider of precision instruments, consumables, software and services that reduce cost, increase productivity, improve results and enable breakthroughs in Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART), research, and cell biology markets. Hamilton Thorne markets its products and services under the Hamilton Thorne, Gynemed, Planer, and Embryotech Laboratories brands, through its growing sales force and distributors worldwide. Hamilton Thornes customer base consists of fertility clinics, university research centers, animal breeding facilities, pharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, and other commercial and academic research establishments.

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange, nor its regulation services provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the exchange), accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

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Hamilton Thorne to Announce Q2 2020 Financial Results and Hold Conference Call on August 20, 2020 - GlobeNewswire

Cell Imagers Market Size by Top Companies, Regions, Types and Application, End Users and Forecast to 2027 – Bulletin Line

New Jersey, United States,- Verified Market Researchhas recently published an extensive report on the Cell Imagers Market to its ever-expanding research database. The report provides an in-depth analysis of the market size, growth, and share of the Cell Imagers Market and the leading companies associated with it. The report also discusses technologies, product developments, key trends, market drivers and restraints, challenges, and opportunities. It provides an accurate forecast until 2027. The research report is examined and validated by industry professionals and experts.

The report also explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the segments of the Cell Imagers market and its global scenario. The report analyzes the changing dynamics of the market owing to the pandemic and subsequent regulatory policies and social restrictions. The report also analyses the present and future impact of the pandemic and provides an insight into the post-COVID-19 scenario of the market.

Global Cell Imagers Market is growing at a faster pace with substantial growth rates over the last few years and is estimated that the market will grow significantly in the forecasted period i.e. 2019 to 2026.

The report further studies potential alliances such as mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures, product launches, collaborations, and partnerships of the key players and new entrants. The report also studies any development in products, R&D advancements, manufacturing updates, and product research undertaken by the companies.

Leading Key players of Cell Imagers Market are:

Competitive Landscape of the Cell Imagers Market:

The market for the Cell Imagers industry is extremely competitive, with several major players and small scale industries. Adoption of advanced technology and development in production are expected to play a vital role in the growth of the industry. The report also covers their mergers and acquisitions, collaborations, joint ventures, partnerships, product launches, and agreements undertaken in order to gain a substantial market size and a global position.

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

Regional Analysis of Cell Imagers Market:

A brief overview of the regional landscape:

From a geographical perspective, the Cell Imagers Market is partitioned into

North Americao U.S.o Canadao MexicoEuropeo Germanyo UKo Franceo Rest of EuropeAsia Pacifico Chinao Japano Indiao Rest of Asia PacificRest of the World

Key coverage of the report:

Other important inclusions in Cell Imagers Market:

About us:

Verified Market Research is a leading Global Research and Consulting firm servicing over 5000+ customers. Verified Market Research provides advanced analytical research solutions while offering information enriched research studies. We offer insight into strategic and growth analyses, Data necessary to achieve corporate goals, and critical revenue decisions.

Our 250 Analysts and SMEs offer a high level of expertise in data collection and governance use industrial techniques to collect and analyze data on more than 15,000 high impact and niche markets. Our analysts are trained to combine modern data collection techniques, superior research methodology, expertise, and years of collective experience to produce informative and accurate research.

Contact us:

Mr. Edwyne Fernandes

US: +1 (650)-781-4080UK: +44 (203)-411-9686APAC: +91 (902)-863-5784US Toll-Free: +1 (800)-7821768

Email: [emailprotected]

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Cell Imagers Market Size by Top Companies, Regions, Types and Application, End Users and Forecast to 2027 - Bulletin Line

Dave Schubert, Salk scientist who aimed to unlock mysteries of human body, dies at 77 – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Renowned cell biologist and Salk Institute researcher Dave Schubert, whose research helped identify chemicals that can slow the progression of Alzheimers and related diseases, died last week at a local hospital. He was 77.

The La Jolla resident had been undergoing tests since early July to diagnose a case of severe anemia, but he had continued to work in his lab at Salk. On Aug. 4, he was diagnosed with B cell lymphoma and hospitalized at UC San Diego Thornton Hospital, where he died just two days later on Aug. 6.

His sudden passing came as a shock to family and friends of the vital and active scientist who had been an Ironman triathlete and ultra-marathon runner in his earlier years, according to his wife of 32 years and research partner, Dr. Pamela Maher, who is a senior staff scientist at Salk.

Among his friends, they all thought hed be the last of the old guard to go, Maher said. People thought of him as a fighter, that hed battle it and overcome it. But it was too late.

Salk Institute researcher and professor David Schubert and his wife, Dr. Pamela Maher, who is a senior staff scientist at Salk.

(Courtesy of Salk Institute)

In his more than five decades of work at Salk, Schubert became known for the development of novel screening techniques that allowed his team to identify naturally occurring chemicals that can slow or prevent the neurological damage that occurs in neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimers disease.

We are deeply saddened by the news of Daves passing, Salk President Rusty Gage said in statement. He was one of the earliest graduate students at Salk and spent close to 55 years of his scientific career here. Dave will be greatly missed and we are forever thankful for his contributions to our research community.

Maher described her husband as a classic, old-school scientist with a reputation for integrity. He was driven by his passion for helping others, rather than a desire to seek out the largest research grants. Jan Lewerenz, a senior physician at Ulm University Hospital in Germany, and one of Schuberts former postdoctoral researchers, said she would always remember Schubert as one of the best human beings I had the privilege to know.

Without him, my life would have been different, Lewerenz said. Whenever I have to deal with slimeballs, I am reminded of his integrity and honesty. The world, now more than ever, is in desperate need of people like Dave. He will always be my role model for how to navigate the murky waters of academic research without selling ones soul.

Schubert was born in 1943 in Indianapolis and earned his bachelors degree in chemistry from Indiana University in 1965. He arrived at Salk later that year as a graduate student, while working on his doctorate in cell biology at UC San Diego. At Salk, Schubert started out in the lab of the late Salk professor and immunologist Melvin Cohn. From there, he moved to Paris to do his postdoctoral fellowship at the Pasteur Institute under the direction of Nobel laureate Franois Jacob. He returned to Salk in 1970 as a member of the faculty.

Schubert established the first neurobiology laboratory at Salk, where he developed and characterized a large number of nerve, glial and muscle cell lines that have served as the basis for numerous important discoveries by labs around the world. He also served as a professor and the head of Salks Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory until his passing. His diverse body of research included studying factors influencing the health and development of nerve and muscle cells, studies on neuroblastoma cancer and research on genetically modified crops, according to Salk officials.

In recent years at Salk, Schubert and Maher developed a novel screening technique to test for naturally occurring chemicals that can prevent the type of nerve cell death found in neuro-degenerative diseases. This led to the establishment of the first medicinal chemistry lab at Salk where he worked to make derivatives of the neuro-protective natural products that have improved medicinal, chemical and pharmacological properties over the parent compounds.

One such natural product is fisetin, which can be found in strawberries. It prevents memory and learning deficits in mouse models of Parkinsons and Alzheimers diseases. A synthetic derivative of fisetin is now undergoing the studies necessary for moving into clinical trials. Also, Schubert and Maher found that a synthetic derivative of the curry spice curcumin, called J147, improves behavioral and pathological symptoms associated with Alzheimers, traumatic brain injury and stroke. This compound is currently in a phase 1 clinical trial for the treatment of Alzheimers.

Maher said their Alzheimers derivitive research was an unusual project for Salk, in that all of its development, from the earliest ideas to the trial phase, was conducted in-house. Usually, the research gets passed on to drug development firms much earlier.

He will be disappointed that he doesnt get to see what happens, but getting it that far was really quite a feather in his cap, Maher said.

Besides his research work, Schubert also served as a member of the County of San Diego Scientific Advisory Board and the National Water Reuse Panel for San Diego County. He was also an environmental justice advocate who wrote frequent op-ed pieces on the topic for The San Diego Union-Tribune and most recently had reached out to the city of San Diego and San Diego Unified School District to encourage them to stop using Roundup weed-killer because of its possible impact on the environment.

Schubert is survived by Maher, his son Bruno Schubert and three grandchildren. There are no memorial services planned at this time. Maher said her husband will be cremated and his ashes will be scattered under his favorite plants in their garden.

This is what he told people that he wanted, Maher said. Dave loved the garden and spent a lot of time working in it as well as enjoying it. As with the science, he was very passionate about the garden and actually was breeding plants that are endangered in the wild, to help keep them going.

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Dave Schubert, Salk scientist who aimed to unlock mysteries of human body, dies at 77 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Guosong Hong wins a Science & PINS Prize for Neuromodulation | The Dish – Stanford University News

by Taylor Kubota on August 12, 2020 4:12 pm

Guosong Hong

GUOSONG HONG, assistant professor of materials science and engineering, is the 2020 Science & PINS Prize for Neuromodulation finalist for his essay Seeing the Sound.

The prize, which has one grand prize and one finalist, is administered by Science and Science Translational Medicine. Winners are chosen based on essays describing outstanding neuromodulation research research on modulating neural activity through physical stimulation of targeted sites in the nervous system with implications for translational medicine. This years grand prize essay was written by Viviana Gradinaru, professor of neuroscience and biological engineering at California Institute of Technology. Both essays were published Aug. 7 in Science.

I wanted to use this essay to convey to the general public how engineering can help biologists and medical researchers come up with new tools for understanding and treating life-threatening and severely debilitating diseases, said Hong. In addition, by this essay I aimed to encourage the awareness of multidisciplinary sciences in public, thereby improving the societal outcomes and making broader impacts of fundamental research at the intersection of engineering and neuroscience in my lab.

Hongs essay focuses on his research in sono-optogenetics, a technique where sound waves are applied to the body and converted to light to precisely modulate the activity of neurons. (The light emission controls neuron activity via ion channels that are sensitive to light.) Sono-optogenetics is less invasive than optogenetics an existing technique for controlling neurons with light because in sono-optogenetics the ultrasound has much deeper tissue penetration than light and is converted to light emission through interaction with special nanoparticles injected into the bloodstream. In contrast, optogenetics relies on the insertion of optical fibers to deliver light to the brain.

As a result of this reduced invasiveness, Hong has high hopes for the possibility of someday using sono-optogenetics in humans to address a wide variety of health issues.

I envision sono-optogenetics will enable clinical translation of optogenetic neural modulation for treatment of a number of neurodegenerative and psychiatric diseases, such as epilepsy and Parkinsons disease, said Hong. And this method can be extended broadly to any application that needs a light source deep in the body, including photodynamic therapies to treat cancer and viral infection (such as delivering UV and blue light for inactivating COVID-19 viruses), as well as light-induced in vivo genome editing with spatiotemporal precision.

Currently, Hongs lab is focused on developing what they refer to as a light sculpting method. This would make it possible to produce user-defined light emission patterns in any biological tissue in the body by combining materials development with acoustic engineering.

This will offer unprecedented capabilities to control any light-induced physiological processes inside the body in a non-invasive manner, said Hong.

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Guosong Hong wins a Science & PINS Prize for Neuromodulation | The Dish - Stanford University News

Recalling Memories From a Third-Person Perspective Changes How Our Brain Processes Them – Technology Networks

Adopting a third-person, observer point of view when recalling your past activates different parts of your brain than recalling a memory seen through your own eyes, according to a new paper.

Our perspective when we remember changes which brain regions support memory and how these brain regions interact together, explained Peggy St Jacques, assistant professor in the Faculty of Science's Department of Psychology, member of the Neuroscience and Mental Health Institute, and co-author on the paper.

Specifically, the results show that recalling memories from an observer-like perspective, instead of through your own eyes, leads to greater interaction between the anterior hippocampus and the posterior medial network.

These findings contribute to a growing body of research that show that retrieving memories is an active process that can bias and even distort our memories, added St Jacques.

Adopting an observer-like perspective involves viewing the past in a novel way, which requires greater interaction among brain regions that support our ability to recall the details of a memory and to recreate mental images in our minds eye.

Adopting an observer-like perspective may also serve a therapeutic purpose, explained St Jacques. This may be an effective way of dealing with troubling memories by viewing the past from a distance and reducing the intensity of the emotions we feel.

This work builds on St Jacques previous research on visual perspective in memory, which found that the perspective from which we recall a memory can influence how we remember them over time.

Reference:

Heather Iriye et al. How visual perspective influences the spatiotemporal dynamics of autobiographical memory retrieval, Cortex (2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2020.05.007

This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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Recalling Memories From a Third-Person Perspective Changes How Our Brain Processes Them - Technology Networks

The Importance of Blood Tests for Alzheimer’s Disease Patients: 2 Neuroscientists Explain the Recent Find – Science Times

Steven DeKosky, University of Florida and Todd Golde, University of FloridaAug 14, 2020 10:34 AM EDT

A blood test to diagnose Alzheimers disease moved closer to reality this week after new findings were announcedat the Alzheimers Association International Conference on July 29, 2020. The test showed extremely high accuracyaround 90%for detecting chemicals in the blood that are specific for Alzheimers.

Those who treat patients with Alzheimers say that the tests need only a bit higher level of accuracy before they can be used clinically, which could be in two to three years. This breakthrough could perhaps allow doctors to not only identify symptomatic patients with the disease, but also to identify people with no symptoms who are at risk of developing the disease, and thus begin interventions.

About 5.7 million people in the U.S.live with Alzheimers, but that number could triple by 2050, the Alzheimers Association estimates.

While blood tests have been slowly increasing their diagnostic accuracy, the new blood testanalyzing the amount of a brain protein, p-217, in the bloodappears to be accurate in over 90% of cases in a study looking at blood samples from people with definite Alzheimers disease. Accuracy rates of other tests will likely increase over time. But this result shows that a breakthrough test is indeed possible. Before the tests are available to the public through FDA approval, well need another two to three years to complete the studies.

(Photo : pxhere)Testing a suspected Alzheimers patient for biomarkers isnt easy or cheap. Although the accuracy of an Alzheimers diagnosis has improved over the decades, it is still difficult.

As researcherswho have spent our professional livesstudying this disease and treating patients with it, we think this news is especially important. It represents a significant leap forward in our ability to use peripheral blood tests for detection of Alzheimers and possibly as a marker of effectiveness in developing medical treatments. Here is why.

Just one year ago, we wrote a piece for The Conversation on blood tests for Alzheimers disease, ending it with the hope that several promising blood tests would soon emerge as accurate and specific. Now, it appears they have. The tests have been centered on the ability to test for either beta amyloid or tau, the characteristic proteins that are deposited in the brain in Alzheimers disease, and the tau tests lagged behind the beta amyloid tests. Now tau testing has jumped into the lead.

Until the early 1990s, with the routine use of brain MRI scans, it was difficult to be certain whether a person with cognitive loss had Alzheimers. Even the best neurologists would get the diagnosis wrong about one in four times. MRIs increased accuracy; it could show vascular disease and atrophy characteristic of Alzheimers or other dementias, but could not confirm the diagnosis with certainty. Diagnosis was even harder in people over 80, where the changes in thinking and memory with aging were not always easy to separate from early Alzheimers symptoms, and normal age-related atrophy made differentiation from disease-based brain shrinkage more difficult.

Until this century, the only definitive diagnosisof the disease occurred after death, at autopsy, by finding certain levels of two specific lesions, or areas of abnormal tissue. Those two lesions are beta-amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles.

And it was not unusual to find, following autopsy, that someone diagnosed clinically with Alzheimers disease had another neurodegenerative disease, disease related to blood vessels in the brain, or some combination of these.

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Over the last two decades, however, the medical field has made progress in detecting the disease by identifying specific diagnostic biomarkers, or biological signs of disease. MRI scans helped by showing shrinkage of the areas of the brain that underlie memory. But they are not specific for Alzheimers.

Two key biomarkers, amyloid protein, found in plaques, and tau protein, found in tangles, became the targets outside of the brain tissue itself, since their presence in the brain defines the disease.

With the identification of these biomarkers, doctors could test patients to see if either amyloid or tau, or both, were abnormal in patients in whom they suspected Alzheimers. But the testing has not been easy or cheap.

One way was a spinal tap, whereby doctors could obtain cerebro-spinal fluid, the fluid around your brain and spine, and measure levels of tau and amyloid, which change if the disease is present. While doctors consider this procedure safe and routine, it is not a favorite among patients.

Another method involves imaging the brain using a positron emission tomography (PET) scan following administration of compounds (amyloid or tau tracers)that bind one of the proteins that accumulates in the Alzheimer brain. The amyloid scans came first, about 15 years ago, and revolutionized research in Alzheimers; tau scans have been developed over the past several years, and reveal neurofibrillary tangles on the PET scans. Although extremely safe, individual PET scans are expensivetypically from US$3,000 upand Medicare does not pay for them.

The impact of these advances is huge, especially in research and clinical trials, where maximum likelihood of the right diagnosis is required. But the medical community badly needs a more convenient, less expensive, less invasive way to diagnose Alzheimers. Enter a blood test.

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For years, efforts to find such an easily obtainable Alzheimers diagnostic biomarker in the blood came up emptythey were not accurate enough.

A major reason for inconsistency of the prior reports was the extremely small amounts of these protein fragments in the blood. The tests have to be sensitive enough to detect either amyloid or tau, and be accurate enough that the blood level changes occurring in people with Alzheimers can be clearly different from those of non-affected people.

Now, several publicationsand presentations at the recent Alzheimers Association International Conference have demonstrated that blood tests measuring amyloid and tau proteins have become much more sensitive and accurate enough to allow their possible future use as routine aids in Alzheimers disease diagnosis.

These various tests are at different stages of validationassuring theyre accurate across many different patient populations. And, for each protein, there are several different methods for making the blood measurements. However, the research community is excited about the possibilities.

And one new tau blood test appears to meet a number of criteria necessary.

To be useful, the tests have to be nearly perfect predictors. Many arent there yet; so far, they seem to get it right up to over 85% of the time. And the accuracy will be very important if theyre to be used to screen people for positive tests and enter those people into clinical trials.

The newest blood assay for the tau protein, developed to look for a different site on the tau molecule than other tau tests, has now emerged with the highest accuracy yetwith data from three different large populations of patients.

In these studies, the sensitivityor the ability to detect the disease when it is really thereand the specificitynegative test in people who do not have Alzheimerswere above 90% to 95%. It even detected elevated tau in the blood of people who had the disease in their brains but had not yet had any symptoms, identifying people at risk for the disease to enroll in trials to prevent the disease. It is the result of advances in the technology of the assays, or analysis techniques, and the collaboration of researchers to provide blood samples from proven Alzheimers cases.

These tests mark real progress. Cost-effective screening and diagnostic tests will help us reach our goal of finding novel treatments that can better treat the clinical symptoms of Alzheimers or delay its development, or both.

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This article is updated from an original version, which was published Aug. 7, 2019.

This article is republished from The Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. | Authors:Steven DeKosky, Deputy Director, McKnight Brain Institute, Aerts-Cosper Professor of Alzheimer's Research, and Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience,University of FloridaandTodd Golde, Director, Evelyn F. and William L. McKnight Brain Institute Director, 1Florida Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Professor, Department of Neuroscience, College of Medicine University of Florida,University of Florida

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The Importance of Blood Tests for Alzheimer's Disease Patients: 2 Neuroscientists Explain the Recent Find - Science Times