More calls for masks in the Hillsborough County Schools – Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA In advance of Tuesdays meeting of the Hillsborough County School Board, proponents of mandatory masks at school have continued to call for a stricter policy.

A letter to that effect went out over the weekend, signed by close to 200 people who identified themselves as physicians. We are printing the petition below.

So far, the district has said it is providing a limited number of reusable masks for children, but only encouraging their use.

PREVIOUS: Parents: Children should wear masks to school

Calls went out over Facebook for concerned citizens to gather outside the School Board building at 3:30 p.m. for a socially distanced, masked protest. Those interested were also asked to address the board during the public comment period. The initial announcement said the Hillsborough Classroom Teachers Association was behind this event. But union spokeswoman Stephanie Baxter-Jenkins said it was not a union-organized event, and a notice went out later clarifying that fact.

Either way, interest is high on the subject of masks.

Tuesdays board meeting begins at 4 p.m. at 901 E Kennedy Boulevard.

The letter:

Dear Superintendent Davis and Hillsborough County School Board:

As a concerned group of Pediatricians and Physicians serving children and teachers/staff in Hillsborough County, we urge you to mandate masks and face coverings in our public schools during this global pandemic of COVID-19.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations in COVID-19 Planning Considerations: Guidance for School Re-entry (attached) indicate that masks and face coverings are high priority for elementary, middle, and high school students.

Exemptions to wearing masks for children with individualized education plans or with medical conditions that would prohibit safe and effective use of masks should be handled on a case-by-case basis. Though some of our youngest (pre-school and kindergarten) students may be initially unable to wear a mask the full school day, with time and proper modeling, many of these young students may be able to properly wear masks when social distancing is not possible.

At a population level, masks are undeniably useful at reducing cases of COVID-19 in our community. Mask usage is most effective when all persons wear them, and families that chose to not wear masks endanger others by risking asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic spread of the virus. Mandating masks in our schools can: 1) prevent spread of viral infection that will compromise the health of children, their families and school employees, 2) reduce outbreaks that will threaten school or classroom closure 3) prevent unnecessary time off work for parents, staff and teachers, and 4) save health care resources of our pediatric practices which will be tasked with testing and clearing students for return to school.

We appreciate the hard work of our educators and administrators in Hillsborough County. We value the guidance and commitment of our School Board to make schools safe, accessible, and academically robust. We hope that you will follow the recommendations of the American Academy of Pediatrics and make masks and face coverings required for students and faculty in our schools.

https://services.aap.org/en/pages/2019-novel-coronavirus-covid-19-infections/clinical-guidance/covid-19-planning-considerations-return-to-in-person-education-in-schools/

Sincerely,

1. Anne M. Lenz, MD (Pediatrician, Endocrinology)

2. Tiffany Hernandez, MD (General Pediatrician)

3. Kiersten Hartlage, MD (General Pediatrician)

4. Leigh J. Ruth, MD (Child and Adolescent Psychiatry)

5. Sapnalaxmi Amin, MD (Family Medicine)

6. Rachel Irby, MD (Internal Medicine, Infectious disease)

7. Alisa Pierce-Kee, MD (General Pediatrician)

8. Grace Dougan, MD (Pediatrician, Endocrinology)

9. Rebecca Pruitt, MD (General Pediatrician)

10. Karina A. Parilo, MD (Family Medicine)

11. Shikha Sharma, MD (Internal Medicine)

12. Crystal Jacovino, DO (Internal Medicine)

13. Elisa Thompson, MD, FAAFP (Family Medicine)

14. Lindsey Bowser, MD (Family Medicine)

15. Melinda Murphy, MD, FAAP (General Pediatrician)

16. Monique Sajjad, DO (Hematology-Oncology)

17. Eric Schilling, DO (Pulmonary Critical Care)

18. Paul Nanda, MD (Urgent Care Medicine)

19. Leslie Turner, MD (Pathology)

20. Edgard Janer, MD (Rheumatology)

21. Richard Wilde, MD, FAAP (General Pediatrician)

22. Preeti Kallu, MD (Internal Medicine)

23. Heather Simpson Khanna, MD (Adult and Adolescent Psychiatry)

24. Amanda Sergay, MD (Dermatology)

25. Lilly Chang, MD, DDS (Pediatric CranioMaxillofacial Surgery)

26. Eva Gupta, MD (Hematology-Oncology)

27. Parul Aneja, MD (Infectious Disease)

28. Anil Chopra, MD (Infectious Disease)

29. Kate Knupp, MD (Internal Medicine, Pediatrics)

30. Catherine Kubiak, MD (Allergy Immunology)

31. Maria del Pilar Cekan, MD (Family Medicine)

32. Alex Anton, MD (General Pediatrics)

33. Jacqueline Hartman, MD, FAAP (General Pediatrician)

34. Christina Paulson, MD (General Pediatrician)

35. Shara Young, MD (OB-Gyn)

36. Catherine Hough-Telford, MD (General Pediatrician)

37. Rachel Rapkin, MD, MPH (OG-Gyn)

38. Andrew Galligan, MD (Pediatric Hematology-Oncology)

39. Lisa Rush, MD (General Pediatrician)

40. Matt Minick, MD (General Pediatrician)

41. Francesca Sabia, MD, FAAP (General Pediatrician)

42. Eliana Piedrahita-Llano, MD (General Pediatrician)

43. Gwennaelle A. Wilson, MD, MPH, FAAP (General Pediatrician)

44. Mary Chrisochos, DO, FAAP (Pediatrician)

45. Jennifer White, MD (Psychiatry)

46. Bhumi Kumar, DO, FAAP (General Pediatrician)

47. Elizabeth Harris, MD (General Pediatrician)

48. Natasha Hughes, MD (General Pediatrician)

49. Nay Hoche, MD (OB-Gyn)

50. Madhurima Sanka, DO (Pediatrics, Allergy and Immunology)

51. Sheila Mak, DO (General Pediatrician)

52. Rachel Epstein, DO, FAAD, FACMS (Dermatology)

53. Celia Williams, DO (General Pediatrics)

54. Solimar Salud, MD (General Pediatrics)

55. Lauren Sequeira, MD (Family Medicine)

56. David Van, DO (Family Medicine)

57. Ria Ross, DO (Dermatology)

58. Jennifer Pesce, MD (General Pediatrician)

59. Tracey DeLucia, MD, PhD, FAAOS (Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery)

60. Danita Wongchantara, MD (Primary Care Medicine and Pediatrics)

61. Julie Dekle, MD (General Pediatrician)

62. Ashley McPhie, MD (General Pediatrician)

63. Sara Ansari, DO (General Pediatrician)

64. Anjali Nirmalani-Gandhy, MD (Child Psychiatry)

65. Ana Maria Oliva, MD (Ophthalmology)

66. Beena Wilkins, MD (General Pediatrician)

67. Rosmery Victoria, DO (Family Medicine)

68. Jennifer Sawka, MD (General Pediatrician)

69. Carolyn Robinson, MD, FAAP (Pediatrician, Pulmonology)

70. Theresa Dam Lohmiller, MD (Family Medicine)

71. Jean Del Valle, MD (Child Psychiatry)

72. Laura Cruse, MD (Rheumatology)

73. Denise Edward, MD (Internal Medicine- Pediatrics)

74. Tsu-Hui Lin, MD (Pediatrics, Endocrinology)

75. Kelly Grabbe, DO (Emergency Medicine)

76. Lisa Hayes, DO (General Pediatrician)

77. Maliena Longley, MD (Pediatrics, Allergy and Immunology)

78. Dolores Razman, MD (General Pediatrician)

79. Michelle Mendoza, MD (Emergency Medicine)

80. Julie Hallanger Johnson, MD (Endocrinology)

81. Lisa Champoux-Rhoden, MD (General Pediatrician)

82. Kimberly Hartney, MD (Psychiatry)

83. Marsha Ramsay, MD, FAAP (General Pediatrician)

84. Shahla Escobar, MD (Pediatric Anesthesiology)

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More calls for masks in the Hillsborough County Schools - Tampa Bay Times

Aichi Cancer Center and NEC Aimed at Advanced Cancer Immunotherapy – AiThority

Through the Fusion of AI and Experimental Immunology

Aichi Cancer Center(1) and NEC Corporation announced the launch of fundamental research aiming to realize the promise of advanced personalized cancer immunotherapy by improving the performance of NECs neoantigen prediction system and developing predictive biomarkers for patient stratification through the fusion of AI and experimental immunology.

This research aims to identify suitable neoantigen for vaccine use by using the neoantigen prediction system which NEC has been working on and the screening techniques using T cells for neoantigen from Aichi Cancer Center. In addition, this research aims to develop biomarkers for patient stratification using AI based on analytical data on a tumor immune microenvironment and clinical data.

The partners will realize the promise of advanced personalized cancer immunotherapy which boosts the immune system especially in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).

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Although the ICIs showed a certain degree of therapeutic success in cancer therapeutics, the therapeutic effect is limited to few cases. Previous studies have suggested that there is a significant correlation between tumor neoantigen load and the clinical efficacy of ICIs. Accordingly, the immunotherapy could improve the therapeutic efficacy if the brakes on the immune system are disabled, and at the same time, the immune responses to neoantigens are accelerated. The important things for realizing effective cancer immunotherapies are 1.) the selection of neoantigens that harness the immune system and 2.) the patient stratification in treatment planning for ICI therapy, cancer vaccine therapy, and their combination therapy.

The Division of Translational Oncoimmunology at the Aichi Cancer Center has been conducting translational research using patient samples in collaboration with the departments of Thoracic Surgery and Thoracic Oncology at the Aichi Cancer Center Hospital. Specifically, this division specializes in experimental immunology and focuses on analyzing the immune microenvironment and the tumor-specific immune responses of each patient.

NEC is actively working on applied research in the drug development field using AI and has developed a unique AI-based neoantigen prediction system. NEC was accepted into the Tumor neoantigEn SeLection Alliance (TESLA) consortium given the uniqueness of this system and became the first Japanese company to join TESLA, founded and managed by the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy and the Cancer Research Institute.

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1. Performance improvement of the neoantigen prediction systemAichi Cancer Center and NEC will identify neoantigens recognized by T cells by using both the neoantigen prediction system and the immunological experimental approach. In the future, NEC will improve the performance of the neoantigen prediction system by using this high-quality data.

2. Development of biomarkers for patient stratificationAichi Cancer Center and NEC will comprehensively analyze the tumor immune microenvironment of each patient. This research aims to develop biomarkers for patient stratification using AI based on clinical information, genetic mutation, gene expression, and experimental data obtained from the experiments described above.

Aichi Cancer Center will aim to carry out clinical trials of cancer immunotherapy. The clinical trials of cancer immunotherapy will be conducted at Aichi Cancer Center Hospital, and additional research will be conducted at Aichi Cancer Center Research Institute. The hospital and research institute will work together as a comprehensive cancer center.

NEC has been conducting applied research in the drug development field using AI for about 20 years. Through this joint research, NEC will accelerate its AI-driven drug development business by improving the performance of neoantigen prediction systems and developing biomarkers for patient stratification.

(1) Aichi Cancer CenterDesignated by Japans Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare as a hub hospital for cancer genome medical care.(2) NEC becomes the first Japanese company to join the TESLA consortiums fight against cancerhttps://www.nec.com/en/press/201905/global_20190514_01.html

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Aichi Cancer Center and NEC Aimed at Advanced Cancer Immunotherapy - AiThority

Taoiseach fears international travel will reignite spread of coronavirus – Belfast Telegraph

Taoiseach Micheal Martin says there are fears that international travel will cause a resurgence in coronavirus and reiterated advice that people should not travel overseas.

he Cabinet is meeting on Monday to discuss the restrictions, although agreen list of countries where it is safe to travel to and from without having to quarantine is not expected to be published until July 20.

Mr Martin said: The travel advisory for the last while had been strong that its not advisable to travel overseas. We have to put public health first. That is the overarching issue.

Today the Cabinet will meet and make a formal decision on travel. We had a Cabinet sub-committee on Covid on Friday. The public health advice is extremely cautious now in relation to opening up for travel.

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The Cabinet is meeting to discusss the restrictions (Julien Behal/PA)

PA

Asked about when the Government will publish a list of green countries where it will be safe for Irish people to travel, Mr Martin said the matter was under constant review because the situation is changing very rapidly.

He said the Government is drawing up the list of countries, but noted there are countries where there are high numbers of cases.

We have countries that would have made the safe list two weeks ago wouldnt make it today, so the overarching objective is to suppress the virus and keep it down. There is a fear international travel could reignite the virus, he told Corks 96FM.

Meanwhile, Professor Kingston Mills said asking people travelling into Ireland from abroad to self-isolate for 14 days is not working.

That restriction was supposed to be lifted on Thursday of this week, but it is now expected to be extended until July 20 and then reviewed every two weeks thereafter.

Prof Mills, professor of experimental immunology and head of the Centre for the Study of Immunology at Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute in Dublin, said Ireland has done well in suppressing the spread of coronavirus but allowing unrestricted travel into the country would unravel this.

Were one of the countries with the lowest levels of the virus in Europe and were an island. We have a chance to do even better than we have done in terms of completely eliminating the virus and preventing any further surges of the virus, he told RTEs Morning Ireland.

The idea of non-mandatory self isolation is not really working as I understand there are a significant amount of people not self-isolating or they are not being followed up.

People are effectively ignoring the advice from Government not to travel because you only have to look at the number of flights going in and out of Dublin to see that.

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People arriving in Ireland are expected to self-quarantine for 14 days (Brian Lawless/PA)

PA

Prof Mills said there are some European countries that may be safe to travel in and out from but he noted there are cities in the US where there are high numbers of cases.

Theres flights coming into Ireland from places like Chicago where they have a significant number of cases. If you have unrestricted flights coming in and people are not self isolating when they get here, then you are asking for trouble in terms of the virus resurging.

One more person has died with Covid-19 in Ireland on Sunday.

There has now been a total of 1,741 related deaths in the country, the National Public Health Emergency Team said.

PA

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Taoiseach fears international travel will reignite spread of coronavirus - Belfast Telegraph

Auto Injectors Market Revenue Growth Defined by Heightened Product Innovation – 3rd Watch News

An auto-injector is a small, pen shaped device, which contains a hypodermic needle used for delivering a fixed dose of drug to patients. The drug is delivered by inserting the syringe needle at the desired site of injection, and on a push of a button. The site of insertion usually depends upon the nature of the drug to be administered, however intramuscular route is the preferred route of administration. Most of these auto-injector devices are spring loaded, pre filled syringes, and are used during serious allergic reactions also known as anaphylaxis or anaphylactic shock, and also in the cases of rheumatoid arthritis, and multiple sclerosis among others. Auto-Injectors are easy to use, and intended for self-administration by patients or any other care taker or personnel at home.

Increasing prevalence and incidences of anaphylaxis and food allergies around the world is majorly responsible for the growth of the global auto-injectors market. According to American Academy of Allergy Asthma and Immunology (AAAAI) around 15 Mn people in U.S. suffered from food allergies in 2015, while 17 Mn people in Europe out of which 3.5 Mn children suffered from food allergies in 2015 according to European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI). World Health Organization (WHO) estimated around 200 250 Mn people in the world suffered from food allergies in 2015. The increasing prevalence of anaphylaxis is increasing demand for adrenaline, and epinephrine auto-injectors, in the global market. Furthermore, new formulations and new drug delivery systems, combined with innovation and developments in the biological drugs segments are expected to drive the growth of the global auto-injectors market during the forecast period of 2016-2024. Rising self-medication practices, growing demand for targeted drug delivery systems for treatments of chronic diseases, coupled with government reimbursements and marketing approvals for auto-injectors are some other factors that are fuelling the demand for auto-injectors in the global market. However, higher prices for injectors, lack of practices of self-injection in emerging countries, and presence of substitute products are certain factors that are restraining the growth of the global auto-injectors market.

To remain ahead of your competitors, request for a sample [emailprotected] https://www.persistencemarketresearch.com/samples/12580

The global market for auto-injectors is segmented on basis of product, application, distribution channels and geography:

Based on product type segmentation, the disposable auto-injectors dominated the global auto-injectors market in 2015 in terms of value, and it is expected to continue this dominance during the forecast period of 2016-2024. Factors such as rising patient awareness and inclination of patients towards self-administration, increasing demand for auto-injectors due to increasing prevalence of anaphylaxis, and other emergency conditions, combined with easy to use disposable auto-injectors, are some factors that are expected to drive the growth of disposable auto-injectors segment in the global auto-injectors market during the forecast period of 2016-2024. Based on applications, the anaphylaxis segment is expected to dominate the global auto-injectors market during the forecast period of 2016-2024.

To receive Methodology request here@ https://www.persistencemarketresearch.com/methodology/12580

On the basis of regional presence, global auto-injectors market is segmented into five key regions viz. North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia Pacific, and Middle East & Africa. North America is expected to lead the global auto-injectors market in terms of revenue owing to the advanced healthcare infrastructure, advancements in medical devices technologies, higher demand for quality products, and availability of reimbursement policies. According to World Health Organization (WHO), an estimated 26 Mn people in U.S. suffered from allergies, and according to Healthline Networks, an estimated 400,000 people in the U.S., and 2.5 Mn people around the world suffered from multiple sclerosis in 2015 with over 400 new cases of multiple sclerosis identified each week in the U.S. Asia Pacific market is anticipated to grow at the fastest growth rate during the forecast period, owing to factors such as increasing anaphylaxis and food allergies in countries such as China, Japan, Singapore, Australia and India. According to Australian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy (ASCIA), Australia and New Zealand topped the list of countries with most prevalence of food allergies in 2015 followed by Japan, Singapore, and Thailand. Growing medical tourism and high growth of the medical devices industry in these countries, is expected to drive the growth of the global auto-injectors market during the forecast period of 2016-2024.

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Some of the major players in global auto-injectors market are

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Auto Injectors Market Revenue Growth Defined by Heightened Product Innovation - 3rd Watch News

Global Leukapheresis Market is Expected to Reach at a CAGR of 9.60% from 2018 to 2025 – PharmiWeb.com

A new research report published by Fior Markets with the titleGlobal Leukapheresis Market by Type (Leukapheresis Devices, Leukapheresis Disposables), Application, End-Users, and Region and Global Forecast 2018-2025.

As per the report, theglobal leukapheresis marketis expected to grow from USD 19.29 Million in 2017 to USD 41.07 Million by 2025 at a CAGR of 9.60% during the forecast period from 2018-2025. Asia Pacific is expected to dominate the market during the forecast period. Ongoing regenerative medicine research in the region, rise in the number of clinical trials and the presence of leading pharma and biotech companies in the region are some of the major factors driving the growth of the market in region.

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Prominent players operating in the market are Asahi Kasei Medical Co., Ltd, Macopharma SA, Fresenius Se & Co. KGaA, Bioivt, Haemonetics Corporation, PPA Research Group, Inc., Hemacare Corporation, Key Biologics, LLC, Terumo BCT, ALLCells, LLC, Stemexpress, LLC, Stemcell Technologies, Inc., Caltag Medsystems Limited, Zenbio, Inc, Precision for Medicine, Inc and others. Major firms are incorporating various strategies to increase their market reach. For instance, in April 2018, Fresenius Kabi expanded its production site for medical devices in Dominican Republic (U.S). This plant manufactures and exports apheresis systems for plasma and platelet collection. This new production facility has enhanced its production capabilities to meet the demand for apheresis systems.

The type segment is classified into leukapheresis devices and leukapheresis disposables. The leukapheresis disposables segment accounted for the largest market share in 2017. The increasing applications for the isolation of primary cells from blood for cell therapy research applications is estimated to drive the growth of the segment. Applications segment is divided into research applications and therapeutic applications. The research applications segment is dominating and was valued around USD 11.13 million in 2017. Growing adoption in research activities for cancer, immunology, infectious diseases, drug discovery, regenerative medicine, and cell-based therapies are contributing to the growth of the segment. End user segment is classified into blood component providers and blood centers, academic and research institutes, pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies and hospitals and transfusion centers. The blood component providers & blood centers segment is expected to grow with the highest CAGR in the forecast period. Increasing number of blood donations and rising demand for leukopaks in clinical conditions like cancer are driving the growth.

Increasing prevalence of leukemia and rise in the blood donations are boosting demand of market in forecast period. In addition, research activities including development of cell-based immunotherapies is also boosting the growth of the market. High costs of leukapheresis may restrict the growth of the market. However, innovations in R&D activities and commercialization of new products are propelling the growth of the market in forecast period.

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About the report:The globalleukapheresis market is analysed on the basis of value (USD Billion), volume (K Units), export (K Units), and import (K Units). All the segments have been analyzed on global, regional and country basis. The study includes the analysis of more than 30 countries for each segment. The report offers in-depth analysis of driving factors, opportunities, restraints, and challenges for gaining the key insight of the market. The study includes porters five forces model, attractiveness analysis, raw material analysis, and competitor position grid analysis.

Customization of the Report:The report can be customized as per client requirements. For further queries, you can contact us onsales@fiormarkets.comor +1-201-465-4211. Our executives will be pleased to understand your requirements and offer you the best-suited reports.

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Global Leukapheresis Market is Expected to Reach at a CAGR of 9.60% from 2018 to 2025 - PharmiWeb.com

Pregnancy Test for Water Delivers Fast, Easy Results on Water Safety and Quality – SciTechDaily

Tests glow green when they detect a contaminant. Credit: Northwestern University

Handheld platform technology uses single sample to test for a variety of contaminants.

A new platform technology can assess water safety and quality with just a single drop and a few minutes.

Likened to a pregnancy test, the handheld platform uses one sample to provide an easy-to-read positive or negative result. When the test detects a contaminant exceeding the EPAs standards, it glows green.

Led by researchers at Northwestern University, the tests can sense 17 different contaminants, including toxic metals such as lead and copper, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and cleaning products. The platform which is powered by cell-free synthetic biology is so flexible that researchers can continually update it to sense more pollutants.

Professor Julius Lucks explains how to use ROSALIND. Credit: Northwestern University

Current water tests rely on a centralized laboratory that contains really expensive equipment and requires expertise to operate, said Northwesterns Julius Lucks, who led the study. Sending in a sample can cost up to $150 and take several weeks to get results. Were offering a technology that enables anyone to directly test their own water and know if they have contamination within minutes. Its so simple to use that we can put it into the hands of the people who need it most.

The research will be published today (July 6, 2020) in the journal Nature Biotechnology. Lucks is a professor of chemical and biological engineering in Northwesterns McCormick School of Engineering and a member of the Center for Synthetic Biology. Jaeyoung Jung and Khalid Alam, members of Lucks laboratory, are co-first authors of the paper.

A major challenge of ensuring water quality is that people typically cant see or taste contaminants. Northwesterns platform uses synthetic biology to sense this unnoticeable contamination, filling in the gaps where human senses fall short.

In cell-free synthetic biology, researchers take the molecular machinery including DNA, RNA and proteins out of cells, and then reprogram that machinery to perform new tasks. The idea is akin to opening the hood of the car and removing the engine, which allows researchers to use the engine for different purposes, free from the constraints of the car. In this case, Lucks team used molecular machinery from bacterial cells.

Nature has already solved this problem, Alam said. Biology has spent over three billion years evolving an elegant solution to detect contaminants.

We found out how bacteria naturally taste things in their water, Lucks added. They do so with little molecular-level taste buds. Cell-free synthetic biology allows us to take those little molecular taste buds out and put them into a test tube. We can then re-wire them up to produce a visual signal. It glows to let the user quickly and easily see if theres a contaminant in their water.

These reprogramed taste buds are freeze-dried to become shelf-stable and put into test tubes. Adding a drop of water to the tube and then flicking it sets off a chemical reaction that causes the freeze-dried pellet to glow in the presence of a contaminant.

The magic is in the tubes, Lucks said. We compose everything and freeze dry it the same process as making astronaut ice cream.

Lucks and his team call this testing platform RNA output sensors activated by ligand induction. But his team has nicknamed it ROSALIND for short, in honor of famed chemist Rosalind Franklin, who discovered the DNA double helix alongside James Watson and Francis Crick. Franklins 100th birthday would have been next month (July 25).

Her work essentially eventually enabled us to learn how to reprogram DNA to act in our technology, Lucks said.

When starting this project, Lucks took inspiration from another woman scientist in his life: his wife, Northwestern anthropologist Sera Young, who studies global food and water security and the role of household water insecurity in societal well-being.

Sera researches how poor water quality impacts peoples daily lives, Lucks said. People tend to go to the most convenient sources to get water. But if they knew that water was contaminated, they might choose to travel farther to find safer water. We want everyone to have the tools they need in order to make informed decisions.

To test the new platform in the field, Lucks, Jung, Alam and fellow Northwestern professor Jean-Francois Gaillard visited Paradise, California at the end of last year. One year earlier, a string of massive wildfires obliterated the northern California town, destroying nearly 19,000 buildings and displacing most of its population. Gaillard, a professor of environmental engineering, is an expert in the biogeochemical processes that affect metals in the aquatic system.

Wildfires basically melted the town, Lucks said. They burned down buildings and melted cars that released toxic metals into the environment.

Lucks, Gaillard and their teams tested ROSALIND alongside gold-standard water tests and discovered that ROSALIND was able to identify the presence of elevated toxic metals in the water supply. It also provided much faster and less expensive results.

Lucks and his team envision that ROSALIND could help recovery efforts like the one in Paradise, in which residents needed to perform tens of thousands of tests in order to know if their community was safe to re-enter.

Laboratory testing doesnt scale, Alam said. It shouldnt take days to get an answer to the simple question: Is my water safe to drink?'

Disasters, of course, arent the only causes of unsafe water. Heavy metals, such as copper and lead, that are naturally found in the environment can leech into pipes, contaminating household water taps and school drinking fountains. Personal care products, such as sunscreens and lotions, wash off peoples skin and end up in waterways. Unused pharmaceuticals and agricultural herbicides, too, run off into our water and end up in our sinks.

But, unless we can directly and regularly test for these pollutants, theres no way to maintain a peace of mind.

When testing water in their own home in Evanston, Illinois, Lucks and Young noted several difficulties. Consuming high levels of copper over many months or years can lead to liver damage and even death. With this concern, Lucks decided to check the copper levels in their household water. It cost $150 and took a month to receive the results.

This is a one-time test, Lucks said. It doesnt allow for checking levels from different taps in the house or temporal testing over time.

Testing for lead wasnt much easier. Lead-testing kits are available at most hardware stores. But after filling a tube with water, it still must be mailed to a centralized facility. It still costs up to $150 per test and takes weeks for results. And if people want to check their water for other contaminants, such as antibiotics, tests simply do not exist for consumers.

There has been a lot of advances in developing point-of-use diagnostics for monitoring pathogens, Jung said. But not nearly enough effort for detecting chemical contaminants.

To ensure access to safe and clean drinking water, we need technologies that will allow easy monitoring of water quality, Lucks said. With a simple, easy-to-use, handheld device like ROSALIND, you can test the water in your home or out in the field where you would want to use it most.

###

Reference: Cell-free biosensors for rapid detection of water contaminants 6 July 2020, Nature Biotechnology.DOI: 10.1038/s41587-020-0571-7

The research, Cell-free biosensors for rapid detection of water contaminants, was supported by the National Science Foundation (award numbers 1452441 and 1929912), the National Institutes of Health (award number R35 GM118157), the Crown Family Center for Jewish and Israel Studies at Northwestern University and Searle Funds at The Chicago Community Trust.

Editors note: Northwestern startup company, Stemloop, has optioned the ROSALIND technology with plans to commercialize it. Lucks, Alam and Northwestern will have financial interests (royalties, equities), if it is commercialized.

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Pregnancy Test for Water Delivers Fast, Easy Results on Water Safety and Quality - SciTechDaily

Global Track Etched Membrane Market : Industry Analysis and Forecast (2019-2026) by Product Type, Material, Application, End User, and Region. -…

Global Track Etched Membrane Market was valued US$ 250.00 Mn in 2018 and is expected to reach US$ XX Mn by 2026, at a XX % CAGR of around during a forecast period.

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Rising manufacturing of generic drugs and growing research of the developments of biological molecules, growing adoption of track-etched membrane market in various applications such as healthcare, fuel cells, telecommunication, and transportation, and rising applications in pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries for research will boost the market of track-etched membrane in forecast period.

The report covers the segments in the track etched membrane market such as product type, material, application, and end-user. Based on product type, the Membrane filter segment is expected to hold the largest share of the market during the forecast period due to applicability of membrane filters in final filtration, sample preparation, filtration of aqueous and organic solutions.

By application, Cell biology is estimated to hold the largest market of the track-etched membrane during the forecast period due to rising applications in pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries for research.

In terms of end-user, Pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries are estimated to hold the largest share of the market in the forecast period due to the rising manufacturing of generic drugs and growing research on the developments of biological molecules.

Region-wise, North America estimated to holds the largest share of the track etched membrane market in the forecast period due to rising adoption of laboratory equipment and growing health & environmental concerns. Followed by Europe, Asia Pacific, South America, and Middle East & Africa. The track- etched membrane market in South America and Middle East & Africa is expected to expand because of an increase in health care expenditure and expansion in the health care industry during the forecast period.

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The objective of the report is to present a comprehensive analysis of the Global Track Etched Membrane Market including all the stakeholders of the industry. The past and current status of the industry with forecasted market size and trends are presented in the report with the analysis of complicated data in simple language. The report covers all the aspects of the industry with a dedicated study of key players that includes market leaders, followers and new entrants by region. PORTER, SVOR, PESTEL analysis with the potential impact of micro-economic factors by region on the market have been presented in the report. External as well as internal factors that are supposed to affect the business positively or negatively have been analyzed, which will give a clear futuristic view of the industry to the decision-makers.

The report also helps in understanding Global Track Etched Membrane Market dynamics, structure by analyzing the market segments and project the Global Track Etched Membrane Market size. Clear representation of competitive analysis of key players by type, price, financial position, product portfolio, growth strategies, and regional presence in the Global Track Etched Membrane Market make the report investors guide.Scope of Report Track Etched Membrane Market:

Global Track Etched Membrane Market, by Product Type

Membrane filter Capsule & cartridge filter Cell culture insertGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by Material

Polycarbonate PolyimideGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by Application

Cell biology Micrology Analytical testing OthersGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by End User:

Food & beverage Academic & research institute Pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries OthersGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by Region

North America Europe Asia Pacific Middle East & Africa Latin AmericaKey Players in Global Track Etched Membrane Market

GE Healthcare Danaher Corning Merck it4ip Sterlitech Oxyphen Sarstedt BRAND GMBH Sartorius SABEU Zefon International GVS Thermo Fisher Scientific Eaton Greiner Bio-One MaCHEREY-NAGEL Avanti Lipids Polar SKC Advantec Avestin Scaffdex Merck KGaA Graver Technologies

Major Table of Contents Report

Chapter One: Track Etched Membrane Market Overview

Chapter Two: Manufacturers Profiles

Chapter Three: Global Track Etched Membrane Market Competition, by Players

Chapter Four: Global Track Etched Membrane Market Size by Regions

Chapter Five: North America Track Etched Membrane Revenue by Countries

Chapter Six: Europe Track Etched Membrane Revenue by Countries

Chapter Seven: Asia-Pacific Track Etched Membrane Revenue by Countries

Chapter Eight: South America Track Etched Membrane Revenue by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Revenue Track Etched Membrane by Countries

Chapter Ten: Global Track Etched Membrane Market Segment by Type

Chapter Eleven: Global Track Etched Membrane Market Segment by Application

Chapter Twelve: Global Track Etched Membrane Market Size Forecast (2019-2026)

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Global Track Etched Membrane Market : Industry Analysis and Forecast (2019-2026) by Product Type, Material, Application, End User, and Region. -...

Abnormal proteins in the gut linked to Alzheimers Disease – The Siasat Daily

Hong Kong:Misfolded protein build-up in the gut could contribute to the development of Alzheimers-like symptoms, researchers have shown.

This new finding, published in the Journal of Physiology, suggests a new treatment approach for Alzheimers disease that would target the gut before symptoms of cognitive deficits appear in patients.

As these proteins were found in the gut, this suggests environmental factors might be contributing to cognitive deficits seen in Alzheimers disease and other conditions, the researchers from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, wrote.

Beta-amyloid, the misfolded protein known to be involved in Alzheimers disease, was injected into the guts of mice and travelled to the gut-brain (the nervous system in the gut), and also to the brain.

The proteins moved to the nervous system in the gut.

The misfolded proteins were seen a year later in parts of the brain involved in cognitive deficits of Alzheimers disease including the hippocampus, the part of the brain that affects the memory.

According to the researchers, these animals experienced cognitive impairment.

As this study was conducted in mice, it needs verification by looking for post-mortem changes in inflammation in the gut and brain of patients with Alzheimers disease, the research team noted.

This concept is similar to the transport of misfolded proteins from the gut such as those responsible for mad cow disease, said study senior author John A. Rudd.

If this is the case, a similar process may start in humans many years ahead of the manifestations of the classical hallmarks of AD including memory loss, and so prevention strategies would need to start earlier as well, he added.

Development of drug treatments for Alzheimers disease has been unsuccessful so we instead need new approaches for preventing AD development, the study authors wrote. This could be a potential route for preventing the disease by targeting these misfolded proteins in the gut, they noted.

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Abnormal proteins in the gut linked to Alzheimers Disease - The Siasat Daily

The Now and Next of Cotton Scouting Technology – CropLife

When it comes to in-season management, the cotton crop presents agronomists with challenges that must be monitored.

With the plethora of technologies unleashed on agriculture for a wide range of crops in recent years, a number of individuals, companies, and organizations are working to test their mettle in the cotton market. Among those leading the way is Ed Barnes, Senior Director of Agricultural and Environmental Research at Cotton Inc.

Barnes works extensively with companies and Universities on identifying the best pathways to commercializing technology for in-season scouting, and there are several promising products and practices that have, or will soon, emerge for use in the cotton production cycle.

The ubiquity of phone connectivity has led to targeted, highly functional apps to provide support and help maximize every scouting trip in the field.

For example, while irrigation in the southeast and mid-south regions has increased substantially in cotton and other crops, its a tricky business. Hyper-local pop-up storm activity is the norm, which confounds weather models based on ground sensing technology. And less is understood about the physiology of cotton as far as the impact of moisture depravation how much yield is lost if no rain falls during boll fill time?

Developed by the University of Georgia in conjunction with Cotton Incorporated, the SmartIrrigation Cotton app has been available to alert field scouts to irrigation deficit issues in fields since 2014. The app combines data from a farm-based sensor station, which is required for maximum effectiveness, with data aggregated from a range of available sources: Meteorological data, soil parameters, crop growth stage, crop coefficients, measured rainfall, and irrigation applications. The app returns an estimate of root zone soil water deficits in terms of inches of water and percent of total, which can be used to decide whether the time is right to apply water to a field.

GA Cotton Insect Advisor is an expert system for determining Extension prescribed insecticide treatments for management of cotton insect pests in the state of Georgia. The app displays the most appropriate insecticide or tankmix after users provide the appropriate week of bloom, predominant stink bug species, percent internal boll injury, and other pests present. At present, the app is intended for management of stink bugs. Recommendations are based on information on the manufacturers label and performance data from research and extension trials the University of Georgia.

On the insect side, North Carolina State University offers its Thrips Infestation Predictor for Cotton, an online tool that uses weather data to make predictions on the intersection of thrips dispersal and the development of susceptible seedlings, allowing for optimum timing of insecticide application.

There are also resources available through the Cotton Incorporated website, Cotton Cultivated, with connections to state level cotton sites that will keep you current with the latest recommendations specific to your area, notes Barnes.

The recent wave of technology investment in ag features extensive work in the area of sensing technology. And while a lot of stand-alone systems have come and gone, the next wave of systems and concepts are more targeted and collaborative.

Barnes notes that unmanned aerial systems (UAS) are continuing to demonstrate their value for crop scouting, in particular for taking plant counts. Research at the University of Tennessee and at North Carolina State University have demonstrated that UAV images can provide very robust stand counts to help in cotton replant decisions, he explains. More and more tools are coming to turn these UAS images into information.

Farmwaves on-the-go crop damage recognition system on soybeans.

A bit farther down the path but very focused technology is Farmwaves employment of artificial intelligence to detect disease issues on cotton. Using a camera mounted to a piece of field equipment to capture images in real time, the Farmwave system is able to see and diagnose disease issues while mounted on a rig travelling up to 20 miles per hour. The algorithm is powered by soybean and corn disease data collected over eight years and validated by scientists, and the results have been very positive, says Chris Palczynski, Farmwaves Chief Sales and Marketing Officer.

SpadeGeo is a recently launched company looking to expand machine learning technology to the broader agriculture industry, with particular interest in cotton. Cofounder Bobby Vick, who left a UAV company to start the new venture, sees opportunity to collaborate with existing ag companies and help farmers make gains in difficult but essential activities such as irrigation control, pest monitoring, harvest timing, and stand counts.

Schrimpf, an award-winning journalist, has covered the agriculture market since 1998. He is Group Editor of the Agribusiness Group at Meister Media Worldwide, with full editorial responsibility for CropLife, CropLife IRON, and PrecisionAg Professional. See all author stories here.

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The Now and Next of Cotton Scouting Technology - CropLife

News > Environment > The global abundance of palm trees – University of Leeds

A major study has conducted the first global assessment of palm tree numbers to better understand tropical forest diversity and reduce uncertainty about carbon balance in these ecosystems.

This study, which includedseveral Leeds researchers, surveyed the total numbers of palms in tropical rainforests around theglobe.

Led by Uppsala University (Sweden) and University of Campinas (Brazil), the research reveals that in the Neotropical rainforests such as the Amazon,palms are more than five times more numerous than in comparable Asian andAfrican forests. Many palms were already known to prefer land with a goodgroundwater supply, and the new study confirmed that palm trees were moreplentiful in wetter areas with less fertile soils and shallower groundwater.

Tropical rainforestsare often seen as synonymous with biodiversity. However, this diversity is notevenly distributed, and most plants in a given area belong to only a handful ofspecies. More than half of the total biomass in the Amazon rainforest isdistributed among fewer than 300 tree species including several species of palms.

Palms are among themost common tree species in the Amazon rainforest, but in some tropical areasthey are unusual, or conspicuously absent.Palms are more closely relatedto grasses than to the deciduous trees of the tropics. They therefore differ inmany fundamental ways, in anatomy and physiology, from other tropical trees.

These differences mayhave far-reaching implications when it comes to estimating uptake and storageof carbon in tropical forests, as well as their resilience to climate change.The new study provides knowledge with a vital bearing on further research intoboth of these aspects.

Aerial photo of Quistococha, a Mauritia felxuosapalmswamp close to Iquitos, Peru. Picture: Gabriel Hidalgo

By using large networks of forest plots, the researchers were able to compile a huge database of 2,548 plots and then quantified palm numbers relative to other tree species in the sample plots.The team drew heavily on the networks led by the University of Leeds, particularly RAINFOR, AfriTRON and ForestPlots.net.

Professor Oliver Philips, from Leeds'School of Geography, said:This study shows the exciting potential ofnew, collaborative science that reaches across the world's tropical forests.

We are linking more than 1,000 researchers via plotnetworks and the ForestPlots.net technology developed at Leeds. ForestPlots.netalone includes over 4.5 million tree measurements from more than 15,000different species. The first was made as long ago as 1939, the latest asrecently as last month.

This resource andothers like it combined a huge field effort to reveal the fundamental patternof the tropics' most iconic plants.

Study co-lead author,Bob Muscarella, from Uppsala University, said: To get a better understanding of tropical forests and reduceuncertainty about carbon balance in these ecosystems during climate change, wesummarised data to show how the number of palms vary around the world comparedwith other tree species.

Understanding thedominant species in tropical forests is crucial to recognising how theseforests function and how vulnerable theyre going to be to disturbances andclimate change in the future.

Livistonasaribus in Vietnam. Picture: Nguyen Xuan Hong

Study co-lead author ThaiseEmilio, from the University of Campinas, said: Impressive levels of palm abundance do not come as a surprise to manytropical forest researchers. Days of work may be necessary to measure all thepalms of a single hectare in some places in the middle of Amazon.

However, afair representation of palms in studies of tropical forests functioning is yetto come. Showing where and when palms must be considered is a majorcontribution of our new study.

Further information

Top image credit:Howea forsteriana in Lord Howe Island (Australia). Picture by WilliamJ Baker.

The paperThe Global Abundance of Tree Palms is published inGlobal Ecology and Biogeography 6 July 2020. DOI: 10.1111/geb.13123

For additional information contact University of Leeds press officer Anna Harrison viaa.harrison@leeds.ac.uk

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News > Environment > The global abundance of palm trees - University of Leeds