Identification of tunnels connecting neurons in the developing brain – Science Daily

Over a hundred years after the discovery of the neuron by neuroanatomist Santiago Ramn y Cajal, scientists continue to deepen their knowledge of the brain and its development. In a publication in Science Advances on April 5, a team from the Institut Pasteur and the CNRS, in collaboration with Harvard University, revealed novel insights into how cells in the outer layers of the brain interact immediately after birth during formation of the cerebellum, the brain region towards the back of the skull. The scientists demonstrated a novel type of connection between neural precursor cells via nanotubes, even before the formation of synapses, the conventional junctions between neurons.

In 2009, Chiara Zurzolo's team (Membrane Traffic and Pathogenesis Unit at the Institut Pasteur) identified a novel mechanism for direct communication between neuronal cells in culture via nanoscopic tunnels, known as tunneling nanotubes. These are involved in the spread of various toxic proteins that accumulate in the brain during neurodegenerative diseases. Nanotubes may therefore be a suitable target for the treatment of these diseases or cancers, where they are also present.

In this new study, the researchers discovered nanoscopic tunnels that connect precursor cells in the brain, more specifically the cerebellum -- an area that develops after birth and is important for making postural adjustments to maintain balance -- as they mature into neurons. These tunnels, although similar in size, vary in shape from one to another: some contain branches while others don't, some are enveloped by the cells they connect while others are exposed to their local environment. The authors believe these intercellular connections (ICs) may enable the exchange of molecules that help pre-neuronal cells physically migrate across various layers and reach their final destination as the brain develops.

Intriguingly, ICs share anatomical similarities with bridges formed when cells finish dividing. "ICs could derive from cellular division but persist during cell migration, so this study could shed light on the mechanisms allowing coordination between cell division and migration implicated in brain development. On the other hand, ICs established between cells post mitotically could allow direct exchange between cells beyond the usual synaptic connections, representing a revolution in our understanding of brain connectivity. We show that there are not only synapses allowing communication between cells in the brain, there are also nanotubes," says Dr. Zurzolo, senior author and head of the Membrane Traffic and Pathogenesis Unit (Institut Pasteur/CNRS).

To achieve these discoveries, the researchers used a three-dimensional (3D) electron microscopy method and brain cells from mouse models to study how the brain regions communicate between each other. Very high resolution neural network maps could thus be reconstructed. The 3D cerebellum volume produced and used for the study contains over 2,000 cells. "If you really want to understand how cells behave in a three-dimensional environment, and map the location and distribution of these tunnels, you have to reconstruct an entire ecosystem of the brain, which requires extraordinary effort with twenty or so people involved over 4 years," said the article's first author Diego Cordero.

To meet the challenges of working with the wide range of cell types the brain contains, the authors used an AI tool to automatically distinguish cortical layers. Furthermore, they developed an open-source program called CellWalker to characterize morphological features of 3D segments. The tissue block was reconstructed from brain section images. This program being made freely available will enable scientists to quickly and easily analyze the complex anatomical information embedded in these types of microscope images.

The next step will be to identify the biological function of these cellular tunnels to understand their role in the development of the central nervous system and in other brain regions, and their function in communication between brain cells in neurodegenerative diseases and cancers.The computational tools developed will be made available to other research teams around the globe.

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Identification of tunnels connecting neurons in the developing brain - Science Daily

Professor Neil Hanley to become new Head of the College of … – University of Birmingham

The University of Birmingham has appointed Professor Neil Hanley as Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Head of the College of Medical and Dental Sciences

The University of Birmingham has appointed Professor Neil Hanley as Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Head of the College of Medical and Dental Sciences.

Professor Hanley, who is currently Vice-Dean (Research and Innovation) in the Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health at the University of Manchester and an Honorary Consultant Endocrinologist at Manchester Royal Infirmary, will take up his new role from 1 September 2023.

Professor Adam Tickell, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham, said:

I am delighted to announce that we have found the next leader of our College of Medical and Dental Sciences. In Neil, we have an excellent clinician, educator, and researcher with an enviable CV, who will bring energy and experience to this important role.

Professor Hanley holds a BSc in Pharmacology, an MBChB from the University of Edinburgh, and a PhD in Molecular Genetics from Newcastle University. He was first made full professor in 2006 and is a past president of the Association of Physicians of Great Britain and Ireland. He has been at The University of Manchester since 2008, becoming Director of Research and Innovation at Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust in 2016, and Vice-Dean (Research and Innovation) in 2020.

There is a real sense of ambition at the University, making it an honour and a very exciting time to be joining the mission to change lives for the better through education and research.

Professor Hanley said:

The University of Birmingham has a strong track record for improving the health of people locally and across the world through new discoveries, treatments, and training the next generation of healthcare practitioners. There is a real sense of ambition at the University, making it an honour and a very exciting time to be joining the mission to change lives for the better through education and research.

An expert in early human development and stem cell biology, Professor Hanley has held doctoral, intermediate, and senior clinical fellowships from NIHR or Wellcome, and additional funding as lead investigator from MRC, BBSRC and EPSRC, among others. Over the last decade, this has led to outputs in several Nature journals, eLife, and PNAS. His current partnership as chief investigator with Innovate UK and industry leaders has translated his collaborative discovery science into integrated novel diagnostics for the early detection of liver disease.

Professor Hanley has a passion for education and training, having established an academy in Manchester for those embarking on their own research careers. He also directs the Wellcome-funded PhD programme for healthcare professionals across the universities of Leeds, Manchester, Newcastle and Sheffield, and led the future vision of NIHRs 2016 national review of training.

The University of Birminghams College of Medical and Dental Sciences is shaping the future of health and medicine through the provision of innovative education and exceptional research, both delivered by world-leading academics. Earlier this year, the University of Birmingham rose 30 places in the QS World Subject Rankings for Life Sciences and Medicine and is now ranked at number 62.

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Cell and Molecular Biology Student Wins $50000 ‘Faculty for the … – University of Arkansas Newswire

Cassandra Thomas

Selom Ametepe

Selom Ametepe, an international doctoral student in the Cell and Molecular Biology Program in the Graduate School and International Education of the U of A, won a $50,000 Faculty for the Future Fellowship from the Schlumberger Foundation.

The fellowship program works to accelerate gender equity in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics by breaking down barriers women face in pursuing scientific careers, specifically in developing and emerging nations. Specifically, the fellowships are awarded to women who are preparing for Ph.D. or post-doctoral study in STEM disciplines to pursue advanced graduate study at top universities in their disciplines abroad.

The funds will help Ametepe, who is a native of Togo, focus on her research toward her goal of becoming a faculty member.

"I'm excited about resources to advance my research," Ametepe said. "I'm excited to meet other women working in other STEM fields and getting to know about their research. I want to thank my adviser, Dr. Timothy Evans, for his unconditional support of my academic endeavors which led to me getting this fellowship. I am very grateful to him for creating a positive working environment where he facilitates our learning opportunities."

"I'm proud of Selom's development as a scientist, and I'm delighted that her potential for leadership has been recognized by the Schlumberger Foundation," said Evans, who is an associate professor of biological sciences. "She's been an essential part of our lab for the last couple of years, and I look forward to seeing her continue to grow her scientific and leadership skills with the support of this fellowship."

Ametepe's research focuses on the nervous system in fruit flies in hopes of transferring knowledge to the human nervous system. She is interested in the mechanisms that guide neurons extensions, axons to form connections with other neural or non-neural cells. She focuses specifically on the gene Roundabout3, which is critical to the development of the nervous system. Using a sophisticated genetic engineering technique called CRISPR gene editing, Ametepe is cutting some portions of the gene to see what parts are crucial for the function of the protein.

"My research will help us know specific ways that the gene controls development of the nervous system," she said.

Before coming to the U of A, Ametepe completed her undergraduate studies at the Universite de Lome, where she graduated with a bachelor's in biomedical sciences. She then worked for five years as a lab analyst at the National Institute of Health in Togo.

Her decision to undertake graduate studies was influenced by two people who she considers as role models: her father, who was a dedicated lab technician, and one of her professors, Dr. Satoguina, professor of immunoparasitology.

"Getting close to her and learning her work ethics gave me hopes and wings and reassured me that I could become a scientist as well," Ametepe said.

Faculty for the Future Fellows are expected to return to their home countries upon completion of their studies to contribute to the economic, social and technological advancement of their home regions by strengthening the STEM teaching and research faculties of their home institutions, as well as through their leadership in science-based entrepreneurship. They are also expected to contribute to the public sector ,where their newly acquired technical and scientific skills can help provide evidence-based support for STEM policy making, including topics of gender representation.

Since its launch in 2004, the program has awarded fellowships more than 800 women from 86 countries for Ph.D. and post-doctoralSTEM research programs. Faculty for the Future is the SLB Foundation's flagship program, a nonprofit organization that supports science and technology education.

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Cell and Molecular Biology Student Wins $50000 'Faculty for the ... - University of Arkansas Newswire

Bio-IT World Announces 2023 Innovative Practices Winners – PR Web

Recognizing and Celebrating Innovation that Advances Life Sciences Research

NEEDHAM, Mass. (PRWEB) April 20, 2023

Bio-IT World today announced the 2023 Innovative Practices Awards winners. Six projects were honored; companies involved in the winning entries included AbbVie, Inc. Information Research; Bayer G4A; Carenostics; City of Hope; Generate Biomedicines; Hackensack Meridian Health; Higher Steaks; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals; SciBite; and Synthace. The awards ceremony will be held during the opening plenary program on Tuesday, May 16, at the 2023 Bio-IT World Conference & Expo in Boston.

Since 2003, Bio-IT World has hosted an elite awards program with the goal of highlighting outstanding examples of how technology innovations and strategic initiatives can be applied to advance life sciences research. This years winning projects represent excellence in innovation in the categories of Informatics, Personalized & Translational Medicine, Knowledge Management, Research, Laboratory Technology, and Clinical Diagnostics.

Each year, the Innovative Practices Awards call out the highest levels of collaboration and creativity, said Allison Proffitt, Bio-IT World Editorial Director. This year, our panel of peer judges was particularly impressed with data commons efforts, augmented design experiments, and proven efforts to streamline and optimize the research progress.

2023 Bio-IT World Innovative Practices Awards WinnersHere are the six winning groups and their projects, as described in their own words.

AbbVie Project: AbbVie R&D Convergence Hub (ARCH)

The AbbVie R&D Convergence Hub (ARCH), is driving convergence in AbbVie R&D as a central knowledge platform that brings together harmonized, normalized, and curated data from over 170 internal and external sources. Giving scientists across R&D access to this integrated knowledge platform provides them unparalleled access and potential to extract insights and generate hypotheses in novel and powerful ways. Helping AbbVies community of researchers to access this knowledge faster, easier, and in automated ways is leading towards a goal to double the productivity of AbbVie R&D. Ultimately, the ARCH and the applications and utilities developed from it are already helping AbbVie to deliver innovative medicines and solutions to patients.

City of Hope nominated by SciBite LimitedProject: POSEIDON - Precision Oncology Software Environment Interoperable Data Ontologies Network

Precision Oncology Software Environment Interoperable Data Ontologies Network (POSEIDON) is an enterprise-wide data platform developed by The City of Hope Research Informatics and the Center for Precision Medicine to support their precision medicine program. Built on the DNAnexus technology stack with custom features and functionality created by City of Hope Research Informatics, POSEIDON unifies patient data and comprehensive germline and somatic genomic profiling for every patient, supporting data from more than 670,000 patients. Within the POSEIDON platform, SciBite supports data armonization; with data standards being managed with CENtree, SciBites award winning ontology management platform and normalization being provided by SciBites named entity recognition engine, TERMite. POSEIDON enables de-identified and harmonized clinical and multi-omic data to be analysed and visualised by researchers, supporting cohort discovery and exploration as well as preliminary feasibility testing to derive patient specific insights from real world data (RWD) and real-word evidence (RWE). POSEIDON supports clinico-genomic research at City of Hope, driving the development of more effective therapeutics and improving outcomes.

Generate BiomedicinesProject: Intrinsically Digital, Audaciously Ambitious: Building a data platform to support ML-driven drug discovery

Generate Biomedicines goal of leveraging machine-learning powered generative biology to discover and develop new drugs faster and cheaper is supported by an integrated and cohesive R&D data platform. This platform creates a common source of truth for the research organization with robust and nimble data modeling capabilities, flexible integrations with third-party software, and a core suite of powerful tools designed to streamline research and maximize the value of experimental results. FAIR to its core, this integrated data platform leverages industry best practices and lessons-learned from a talented team of informatics engineers to form the critical foundation of a unique company with equal parts bio and tech.

The Hackensack Meridian Health & Carenostics CKD Collaboration, nominated by Bayer G4AProject: AI for earlier clinical intervention in chronic kidney disease

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is a leading cause of mortality, affecting >800M people worldwide. Early detection and intervention have been shown to slow disease progression, saving lives and reducing costs. Unfortunately, ~85% of CKD cases are estimated to be undiagnosed. To tackle this, Carenostics has developed machine learning (ML) models that have retrospectively identified 50% of the undiagnosed CKD population at 3x the specificity of current testing practices. Carenostics is deploying these models into clinical practice at Hackensack Meridian Health (HMH), an 18-hospital health system with >6M patient records. The solution identifies undiagnosed & untreated CKD patients using existing EHR data, addresses health inequities through bias-adjusted ML, and activates clinicians with an intuitive, EHR-integrated interface. In the next 12 months, Carenostics projects to help HMH diagnose 50,000 previously undiagnosed CKD patients and will expand its platform to help HMH identify and proactively treat patients with other chronic diseases.

Higher Steaks nominated by SynthaceProject: DOE-led media optimization for porcine stem cell lines

HigherSteaks is a lab-grown meat company on a mission to reduce traditional meat consumption by having a 5% share of the global pork market by 2030. HigherSteaks is ushering in a new era of sustainable food production through lab-grown meat and is doing so through design of experiments (DOE) to accelerate media optimization, and by running factor screens based on different cell lines of porcine stem cells. Synthace, a life sciences SaaS platform, and HigherSteaks core experimental solution, allows them to use DOE and fractional factorialsscreening 22 factors, as well as interaction profiles, in only 320 experimental runs. Synthace saved HigherSteaks 6-9 months of work and delivered an optimized media for pig stem cells 15x cheaper compared to commercial media. This experiment proves the concept, and demonstrates the viability, of DOE methodologies for the cultured meat sector, without additional lab investment.

Regeneron PharmaceuticalsProject: Regeneron Optimization of Instruments (ROI)

Regeneron's Research and Preclinical Development organization invests millions of dollars each year to acquire and operate specialized lab instruments that support scientists in the discovery of potential new medicines. To optimize the usage of these instruments across finite lab space, a project was undertaken to measure instrument utilization. We sought to answer questions like: Are there opportunities to better utilize existing instruments? and Could we plan and budget more effectively if we better understood existing instrument usage? Additionally, this data enables new opportunities to optimize instrument maintenance and other lab processes to increase the likelihood Regeneron is achieving the most value from its investments. Regeneron is now measuring utilization across 600 of the most expensive and/or lab space constrained instruments and using this data to make informed decisions to change processes or defer capital purchases that optimize utilization of a given instrument.

Beyond the Innovative Practices Awards, the conference & expo is packed full with 12 unique tracks, 2 symposia, workshops, a Hackathon, Best of Show Awards, exhibit hall of 150+ leading technology service providers, and networking receptions and activities. Visit https://www.bio-itworldexpo.com for more information and to register.

About Bio-IT World Conference & ExpoFor over 20 years, the Bio-IT World Conference & Expo has been the worlds premier event showcasing technologies and analytic approaches that solve problems, accelerate science, and drive the future of precision medicine. Bio-IT World unites a community of leading life sciences, pharmaceutical, clinical, healthcare, informatics and technology experts in the field of biomedical research, drug discovery & development, and healthcare from around the world.

About Cambridge Healthtech InstituteCambridge Healthtech Institute Your Life Science Network

Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI) is the preeminent life science network for leading researchers and business experts from top pharmaceutical, biotech, and academic organizations. CHIs portfolio of products includes Cambridge Healthtech Institute Conferences, Barnett Educational Services, Cambridge Meeting Planners and Healthtech Publishing, which includes publications such as Bio-IT World, Clinical Informatics News, and Diagnostics World, as well as numerous e-newsletters. Founded in 1992, Cambridge Healthtech Institute strives to develop quality information sources that provide valuable new insights and competing points of view while offering balanced coverage of the latest developments. Basic research related to commercial implications is covered, with a heavy emphasis placed on end-user insights into new products and technology as well as coverage on the strategy behind the business. The executive team has a combined 170+ years of experience and drives the CHI portfolio to deliver cutting-edge information and the most up-to-date research.

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Bio-IT World Announces 2023 Innovative Practices Winners - PR Web

Biology major Andy Shar discovers 3D printable ink that ‘everyone … – VCU News

By Mary Kate Brogan

Finding a 3D printable ink that conducts electricity, yet is strong, flexible and stretchable, has been a goal of materials scientists around the world since 3D printing began, says Daeha Joung, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the Department of Physics at Virginia Commonwealth Universitys College of Humanities and Sciences.

So last year, when Andy Shar came into his lab eager to look for the solution, Joung was apprehensive but gave Shar a chance. And he is grateful he did.

I was trying to find that ink myself, Joung said. But somehow, Andy discovered the recipe.

The discovery has opened up new opportunities for Shar, now a sophomore majoring in biology in the College of Humanities and Sciences and minoring in religious studies in the School of World Studies. He has been working with Joung and his research team through the VCU Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program.

Alongside Phillip Glass, a student in the Ph.D. in nanoscience and nanotechnology program, Shar has published two academic papers, including one in the journal Advanced Functional Materials for which he served as the first author. He also has submitted another plus a book chapter and has been invited to present at conferences about the discovery.

The material we discovered was a composite of silicone polydimethylsiloxine, or PDMS and we dispersed carbon nanotubes, or CNT, inside of that silicone, which is something that is kind of difficult to do, Shar said. We used a pretty simple environmentally friendly technique to do it that can occur at room temperature. The fabrication process being easy allows it to be accessible to other people and maybe even companies who want to use it commercially.

Joung, Shar and Glass continue to use the 3D printable ink in the development of customizable patient health monitoring devices and of electronic skin, or eSkin wearable sensors to detect motion of joints or monitor cardiac and respiratory health.

What Dr. Joung has been really pioneering is using 3D printing to create scaffolds that can simulate the spinal cord architecture, Shar said. He and Joung hope this technology, infused with bioprinted information that would allow cells to regrow, can help people with spinal cord injuries regain sensory and motor function.

Here, student and mentor share thoughts on what they learned working together.

What attracted you to this project?

Ill start from the beginning and go to what attracted me to Dr. Joungs lab in the first place: [my] past experience with high school research. Ive always really liked hands-on stuff, and materials science and nanotechnology were two of my main interests coming into VCU. So I liked how he incorporated that with 3D printing which was something Ive never done before but was also excited to use with biological applications. I intend to go into the medical field, so that would be something that would relate to my future profession. So that was definitely something of interest.

For that specific project, I actually started by working with Phillip Glass, whos a physics graduate student, on his project, and it just became a natural progression because I was helping him. I had some interest in chemistry and the process of making the ink and making the material. And as I was helping him, I decided to do my own trials. And I really credit Dr. Joung for giving me the flexibility and independence to do that. I was experimenting around, and once I found an ink that I thought would work, then we decided that if it was unique enough and if it had certain advantages over what was seen in the literature, then we could write a paper about it. So I did more research there.

What did you get out of the experience?

There were a few things I got out of it. Definitely knowledge, learning about the materials science aspect of it, a lot of lessons in perseverance. It took dozens of trials Dr. Joung has seen my array of vials with hundreds of failed attempts. So just being able to learn from your past mistakes. And I didnt give up, because I knew I was getting closer and closer to the end result.

That was really a lesson that I learned, and I also think teamwork. As a group, we held meetings where we presented our findings, so you learn communication skills, how to interact with the group, how to just work with different (technologies) how to use the gantry, how to use the texture analyzer, different machines and then spreading that knowledge as well, and teaching other people who join the lab how to use those same machines.

And then, because of the project, Ive also been able to present at multiple conferences for example, the UROP Symposium, which I will be presenting at this spring, and the annual Network for Undergraduate Research in Virginia conference at Christopher Newport University, which was in January. Being able to present to the public and explain to them our findings in terms that they can understand is definitely a skill that Ive learned.

Whats one lesson you learned from Dr. Joung?

From Dr. Joung, Ive learned really just how to be an effective PI [principal investigator]. Its about the coordination of an effective team and really encouraging teamwork and making sure everybodys staying involved, everybody is going at a pace thats comfortable for them but also making sure to push them a little bit. I remember Dr. Joung helping me out whenever I had certain trials not go the way I wanted to and then also setting certain deadlines for me, making sure I met them and just encouraging me to do my best.

I remember, especially during the summer, I was there for maybe 15 to 20 hours a week. And we were really trying to get the paper published. At the very end, it was a lot of data collection, a lot of writing. And I credit Dr. Joung with coordinating me and Phillip, and just making sure that we got everything done in time and that time management wasnt a problem. Thats definitely a lesson I learned from him.

Why does this research matter?

eSkin technology is the future of wearable devices. So what Andy, Phillip and I found is that 3D printable electronic skins can be useful for patients who suffer from skin diseases. Or we can have one that does health monitoring so that its a system where we can directly 3D-print into human organs. We can actually offer new therapeutic options. [As a physicist] Im not going to use these directly with patients. However, this technology can be transferred to the operating room in the future. Then the patients can have the advantage to use this technology. That is our long-term goal for this project.

Lets say we developed a 3D printable electronic device, or wearable flexible device. Now we want to make a connection from this technology into the spinal cord regeneration project. With spinal cord regeneration, there are always issues because of the structural complexity, right? So one of the therapeutic options is stem cell and electrical stimulation therapy. What Andy is doing is adding to it. As Andy mentioned, I am a pioneer of printing stem cells for spinal cord injury regeneration. So now Andy is combining these stem cell printing technologies and these flexible electronics.

We want to test how these two different elements of technology can combine to create a new opportunity for spinal cord regeneration. Everything is kind of related. As physicists, as material scientists, as engineers, our long-term goal is we want to produce and provide new therapeutic options and potential future applications for treatments.

How did Andy help advance the project?

Even before Andy joined, Ive been working on 3D-printing flexible electronics. But the point is that every researcher in the world has the problem of printing flexible and conductive ink. I think Andy spent around four or five months [on it].

He did the hard work on developing that ink that everyone, most every 3D-printing researcher, was looking for. Then Phillip, our graduate student, expanded the inks capabilities and applied it to 3D-printed wearable devices. Thats why their paper is in one of the top-tier materials science journals. When we talk about this paper, whenever I mention that the first author of this paper is a sophomore, people are amazed. Based on this, we got a lot of conference invitations. This is amazing work.

Whats one lesson you learned from Andy?

Although Andy is an undergraduate, there are many things I learned from him, but the main thing was that I had doubted myself: Can I give an independent project to an undergraduate student? In general, many PIs do not really give independent projects to undergraduates, but Andy wanted to be very independent. He actually emphasized to me, I can do it. I can do it. I was a little bit doubtful the very first time; however, I saw his motivation, so thats why I gave him independent projects. He did a great job, and Im continuously giving him very independent projects.

The way Ive trained Andy is like a graduate student. So for me, with Andy and the other graduate students, our training for Andy is all the same.

Beyond the knowledge hes developed and the ink discovery, Andy is a very motivated student-researcher, so he has a strong sense of responsibility. Research is not only about being smart. Research is about where you get the motivation and what excites you. Andys an undergraduate student and sophomore who wants to apply to medical school, especially M.D.-Ph.D. programs. I give a lot of credit to Andy consider how busy he is; however, he still spends a lot of time in the lab. I could see that. I could see hes so excited, and he enjoys his time in the research lab. Hes always smiling, and he always has energy to do new challenges.

So to come back to the question of what I learned from Andy: Motivation is the most important factor to be successful in research.

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The Future of Fertility – The New Yorker

In 2016, two Japanese reproductive biologists, Katsuhiko Hayashi and Mitinori Saitou, made an announcement in the journal Nature that read like a science-fiction novel. The researchers had taken skin cells from the tip of a mouses tail, reprogrammed them into stem cells, and then turned those stem cells into egg cells. The eggs, once fertilized, were transferred to the uteruses of female mice, who gave birth to ten pups; some of the pups went on to have babies of their own. Gametes are the cells, such as eggs and sperm, that are essential for sexual reproduction. With their experiment, Hayashi and Saitou provided the first proof that whats known as in-vitro gametogenesis, or I.V.G.the production of gametes outside the body, beginning with nonreproductive cellswas possible in mammals. The mice that had descended from the lab-made egg cells were described as grossly normal.

The Japanese experiment may change the science of human reproduction. The first successful in-vitro fertilization, in 1978, made it possible to conceive an embryo outside the body. Today, approximately two per cent of all babies in the United States are conceived in a lab, through I.V.F.last year, analysts valued the global I.V.F. market at more than twenty-three billion dollars. Egg cells have become commodities that are harvested, bought, donated, and preserved. But egg cells, some of the most complex cells in the body, and large enough to be visible to the naked eye, are difficult to obtain; as a woman ages, their number and quality decline. If ripe human eggs could be derived from a persons skin cells, it would avoid most of the cost, almost all of the discomfort, and all of the risk of IVF, the Stanford bioethicist Henry Greely wrote in his 2016 book, The End of Sex and the Future of Human Reproduction, addressing new techniques to make stem cells which had won the Nobel Prize in 2012. He predicted that in the next twenty to forty years sex will no longer be the method by which most people make babies (among humans with good health coverage, he qualified).

A hundred years ago, many Americans died in their mid-fifties. Today, we can expect to live into our seventies and eighties. In the U.S., as in many other countries, women give birth for the first time at older ages than they did several decades ago, but the age at which women lose their fertility has not budged: by forty-five, a persons chances of having a pregnancy without assisted reproductive technology are exceedingly low.

Biologists have theories, none of them conclusive, about why women have such a sharp decline in fertility at midlife, and why ovaries age at least twice as fast as the other organs in the body. Deena Emera, an evolutionary geneticist and the author of a forthcoming book about evolution and the female body, told me that the vast majority of female mammals, including chimpanzees, maintain the ability to get pregnant for most of their lives. Elephants, which can live up to seventy years, can conceive and give birth into their sixth decade. Human females share their long post-reproductive life span with only a few other mammals, mostly species of toothed whales. We are connected in this strange and frustrating reality with narwhals, belugas, and orcas. Theres much debate, if not a definitive answer, about why.

In the U.S., according to census data, the number of births to women under the age of twenty-five has dropped significantly since 1990; an increase in births to women over thirty-five has not compensated for the decline. The United Nations has estimated that in 2019 nearly half the global population lived in countries with below-replacement fertility rates, which the U.N. defines as fewer than 2.1 births per woman. (In our country, population growth is also driven by immigration.) While the over-all growth in human population is not anticipated to plateau until the mid-twenty-eighties, economists say that aging populations in countries with fewer children can affect, among other things, the continued growth of economies, the provision of health care, and the funding of pension systems. Although there are also social and environmental benefits to a decrease in the global population, many countries are recognizing that they can no longer take a passive approach to fertility issues.

In recent years, the science of extending female reproductive longevity has seen a new flurry of interest, and biotech companies are attempting to begin clinical trials of a number of therapies, including new I.V.F. techniques and pharmaceuticals. (The research has earned philanthropic attention as wellHayashis and Saitous labs are funded in part by Open Philanthropy, a foundation set up by the Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and his wife, the former journalist Cari Tuna.) But the ability to make egg cells without human ovaries would apply not only to people who are designated female at birth. This March, Hayashi, who is not currently trying to make a human egg, had another announcement: his lab had repeated the I.V.G. process in mice, but this time it had produced fertilized embryos whose egg cells had been developed using stem cells from male micemice with two dads, as the headline in Nature put it. Futurists have speculated about broader possibilities, such as an embryo formed with the DNA of four people instead of two, or even a so-called unibaby, the result of a person reproducing with herself. In a less hypothetical realm, in-vitro gametogenesis may have applications in livestock breeding, and might one day play a role in preserving endangered speciesa group of scientists, including Hayashi, have been attempting to use the method to generate eggs from the northern white rhinoceros, a species of which only two females remain.

In some circles, I.V.G. is already seen as the future of reproductive science. Bianka Seres, a co-founder of a startup called Conception Biosciences, which is trying to make egg cells from stem cells, told me that I.V.G.along with a related, though more far-fetched, prospect, artificial wombswas a prominent theme at the American Society for Reproductive Medicines annual conference in 2021, hinting at a time when gestation could happen outside the human body. It wasnt Oh, maybe this will happen, she said. It was very factual: when this happens, this is how were going to use it. She and her colleagues believe that one day dozens of egg cells might be generated from a simple biopsy or blood sample, perhaps even one taken from someone who is biologically male. Conception might not be the company that figures out I.V.G., but the prevailing sense is that its only a matter of time before someone does.

In late January, I visited the headquarters of Conception, in Berkeley. The company was founded in 2018, and has since raised almost forty million dollars in venture capital in pursuit of in-vitro gametogenesis. The staff was temporarily based in a single-story co-working space near Aquatic Park, and things had gotten crowded. Conceptions C.E.O., a thirty-one-year-old entrepreneur named Matt Krisiloff, was working from an armchair wedged between two desks. Krisiloff first tweeted about his interest in I.V.G. in 2017. At the time, he was the director of a nonprofit wing of Y Combinator, the startup incubator, established to fund technological research for the benefit of the world, as the company put it. Sam Altman, who was then running Y Combinator, told me that he and Krisiloff were both interested in what he called hard-tech companies that invest a long time in developing a difficult technology first and then dont bring a first product to market for many, many years. Krisiloff had helped out in the early months of OpenAI, which went on to invent ChatGPT, Dall-E, and the transcription service Whisper, an experience he has cited as formative in learning how to set up a research-oriented company with an ambitious end goal.

Krisiloff has close-cropped hair and a gap-toothed smile, and on the day of my visit he was dressed in jeans, a black crew-neck sweatshirt, and sneakers made by the Swiss brand On. He does not have a degree in the hard sciencesas an undergraduate, he majored in Law, Letters, and Society at the University of Chicagoand was still in his twenties when he and two scientists founded Conception, which was initially known as Ovid Research. Krisiloffs interest in I.V.G. was partly personal: he is gay, and liked the thought of one day being able to have biological children with a male partner. (Krisiloff once dated Altman; he is now in a relationship with Lucas Harrington, the co-founder of Mammoth Biosciences, which is focussed on the gene-editing technology CRISPR.)

While visiting Hayashis lab in Japan in 2018, Krisiloff met Pablo Hurtado Gonzlez, a Spanish biochemist who was a visiting scholar there. Over dinner at a ramen restaurant in Fukuoka one evening, the mission of Conception began to take shape. Hurtado Gonzlez, who is thirty-two, is also gay, and has a Ph.D. in reproductive health and a particular interest in male-male reproduction. (The bio on his Instagram profile reads Trying to make genetic gaybies at Conception Bioscience.) After placing an ad in Nature, Krisiloff and Hurtado Gonzlez hired their third co-founder, Seres, who was born in Romania and raised in Hungary. She had worked as an embryologist at a fertility clinic in England before completing her Ph.D. at Cambridge University under Melina Schuh, a German cell biologist who is an expert in meiosis, the type of cell division unique to reproductive cells, which leads to the production of eggs and sperm. Coming from I.V.F., in-vitro gametogenesis was the single most important solution to not having enough eggs, Seres told me. Seres, who is thirty-six, has a daughter conceived without assisted reproductive technology, but her experience working at fertility clinics had made the issue personal to her: she had seen many patients with infertility issues for which no clear cause could be found.

Krisiloff had secured an initial million dollars from Hydrazine Capital, a fund, co-founded by Altman, in which he was an investor. (Conceptions investors now include Jaan Tallinn, the founder of Skype, and Laura Deming, who has a fund devoted to technologies that target the aging process to treat disease.) At first, Conceptions plan was more modest: to try to bring undeveloped eggs from a human to maturation in vitro. But a conversation with a surgeon convinced Krisiloff that immature eggs would be too difficult to extract. One of our investors gave us really good advice, like, Hey, if in-vitro gametogenesis is the main thing you care about, you can probably go surprisingly far if you just choose to focus on that rather than defer it for later, Krisiloff said. That changed our trajectory.

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The Future of Fertility - The New Yorker

Ending diabetes is within reach of Canadian scientists – Niagara Falls Review

Our health care system is struggling with challenges in funding, staffing and the deep scars left by the coronavirus pandemic. But Canada is also leading the world in research for the chronic diseases that put the most pressure on our health care system.

Canada has the ability and talent to launch the moon shots that lead to next-generation treatments utilizing stem cell and gene therapy or regenerative medicine. We just need the ambition to do it. The reality today is Canada lags behind other nations in translating research success into health innovation, as was acknowledged recently by the federal governments Advisory Panel on the Federal Research Support System. Its time to address the obstacles in the way.

Advanced medical research in Canada is making dramatic progress with discoveries that have the potential to heal damaged organs, reverse the effects of chronic conditions and create economic growth. Policymakers and government officials should support and fund life-science innovations so the benefits of our discoveries are realized here and take pressure off our health care system. This means following through on targeted medical research until advanced therapies are ready to benefit patients in large numbers.

Potential to cure Type 1 diabetes

For example, Canadian researchers have discovery projects underway with the potential to cure Type 1 diabetes, which requires patients to regularly inject insulin. A broad network of research and innovation experts are working to improve the function of insulin-producing stem cells that can be transplanted into diabetes patients in a project led by the University of Torontos Medicine by Design and UHNs McEwen Stem Cell Institute. Its a transformative therapy that could make certain types of diabetes curable rather than a lifelong condition. Once realized, these new therapies can free up health care resources for other ailments.

This project, among others at Medicine by Design, is made possible by the federal governments $114-million grant from the Canada First Research Excellence Fund in 2016. It has produced positive results toward the goal of ending diabetes, but its funding is based on a date on the calendar and its due to end this year.

Our goal for a diabetes cure should be on par with other big societal challenges like climate change. But there is a lack of funding and policy support to take our best research discoveries and provide them with the resources to get homegrown treatments into the clinic faster.

Canada loses out on economic benefits

Projects on track to be successful are often stymied when their funding expires. When that happens, these projects and the research talent behind them may relocate to other countries. So Canada starts the research with heavy taxpayer investment, but often loses out on the economic benefits flowing from the breakthroughs.

We must provide a complete path for promising discoveries. That means providing resources for taking projects all the way to scaleup, regulatory approval and the clinic. As outlined by the advisory panel, increased investment in world-leading discovery research is essential to ensure a pipeline of new opportunities. But we also need a strategic approach to support promising scientific discoveries based on reaching ambitious targets.

What does success look like? New made-in-Canada advances will keep more people out of hospital. Patients whose treatment options are now limited will have a much higher quality of life. And long-term economic growth and high-paying career opportunities in life science and biomanufacturing, two important sectors of the global innovation economy.

Regenerative medicine can help reinvent a health-care system where common diseases and chronic treatments are a thing of the past, or require much less medical care. Canada can be a world leader in exporting these advances.

The missing ingredients are a strategic framework, research funding that targets innovation goals and the ambition to launch medical research moon shots.

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Ending diabetes is within reach of Canadian scientists - Niagara Falls Review

Propulsion of Osteoarthritis Pipeline as Novel and Extensive 130+ … – Digital Journal

PRESS RELEASE

Published April 19, 2023

DelveInsights, Osteoarthritis Pipeline Insight 2023 report provides comprehensive insights about 130+ companies and 130+ pipeline drugs in the Osteoarthritis pipeline landscape. It covers the Osteoarthritis pipeline drug profiles, including Osteoarthritis clinical trials and nonclinical stage products. It also covers the therapeutics assessment by product type, stage, route of administration, and molecule type. It further highlights the inactive pipeline products in this space.

Key Takeaways from the Osteoarthritis Pipeline Report

Request a sample and discover the recent breakthroughs happening in the Osteoarthritis Pipeline landscape @Osteoarthritis Pipeline Outlook Report

Osteoarthritis Overview

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common form of arthritis. Some people call it degenerative joint disease or wear and tear arthritis. It occurs most frequently in the hands, hips, and knees. Osteoarthritis is most likely to affect the joints that bear most of weight, such as the knees and feet. Joints that the person use a lot in everyday life, such as the joints of the hand, are also commonly affected. The main symptoms of osteoarthritis are pain and sometimes stiffness in the affected joints.

Recent Developmental Activities in the Osteoarthritis Treatment Landscape

For further information, refer to the detailed Osteoarthritis Drugs Launch, Osteoarthritis Developmental Activities, and Osteoarthritis News, click here forOsteoarthritis Ongoing Clinical Trial Analysis

Osteoarthritis Emerging Drugs Profile

Lorecivivint (SM04690) is a small-molecule CLK/DYRK1A inhibitor that modulates Wnt and inflammatory pathways and is in development as a potential disease-modifying osteoarthritis drug. Vehicle-controlled preclinical data suggest that lorecivivint has a dual mechanism of action with three potential effects on joint health: reduction of inflammation, slowing of cartilage breakdown, and generation of cartilage. The drug is currently in Phase III stage of clinical trial evaluation to treat the patients suffering from osteoarthritis

Cynatas CYP-004 MSC product is the subject of a Phase III clinical trial being sponsored by the University of Sydney and funded by an Australian Government National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) competitive Project Grant in addition to in-kind contributions from participating institutions. Cynata will supply Cymerus MSCs for use in the trial and will not be required to contribute any cash to fund the project. The clinical trial commenced in late 2020 and is entitled Stem Cells as a symptom- and strUcture-modifying Treatment for medial tibiofemoral OsteoaRthritis (SCUlpTOR): a randomised placebo-controlled trial

JTA-004 is Bone Therapeutics next generation of intra-articular injectable, which is currently in phase III development for the treatment of osteoarthritic pain in the knee. Consisting of a unique patented mix of plasma proteins, hyaluronic acid - a natural component of knee synovial fluid, and a fast-acting analgesic, JTA-004 intends to provide added lubrication and protection to the cartilage of the arthritic joint and to alleviate osteoarthritic pain. In a phase II study involving 164 patients, JTA-004 showed an improved pain relief at 3 and 6 months compared to Hylan G-F 20, the global market leader in osteoarthritis treatment.

SMUP-IA-01, SMUP allogeneic umbilical cord blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells, is currently under development for the treatment and prevention of Osteoarthritis. In SMUP-IA-01s phase I clinical trials in Korea, 12 patients with knee osteoarthritis were given a single injection into their knee joint cavity at Seoul National University Hospital. The response to the drug was then evaluated for 6 months, and the results were shown to demonstrate the safety and improvement of joint function and pain.

TTAX03 is a sterile, lyophilized and micronized particulate human Amniotic and umbilical cord co product manufactured using aseptic processing followed by terminal sterilization by gamma irradiation in compliance with current Good Tissue Practices (cGTP) and current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP) to preserve extracellular matrices and growth factors/cytokines therein without any living cells. TTAX03 is currently being investigated in Phase II stage of development for the treatment of patients with knee osteoarthritis

Osteoarthritis Pipeline Therapeutics Assessment

There are approx. 130+ key companies which are developing the Osteoarthritis emerging therapies. The Osteoarthritis companies which have their Osteoarthritis drug candidates in the most advanced stage, i.e phase III include Biosplice Therapeutics

Find out more about the Osteoarthritis Pipeline Segmentation, Therapeutics Assessment, and Osteoarthritis Emerging Drugs @Osteoarthritis Treatment Landscape

Scope of the Osteoarthritis Pipeline Report

Dive deep into rich insights for drugs for Osteoarthritis Pipeline Companies and Therapies, click here @Osteoarthritis Unmet Needs and Analyst Views

Table of Content

Got Queries? Find out the related information on Osteoarthritis Mergers and acquisitions, Osteoarthritis Licensing Activities @Osteoarthritis Emerging Drugs, and Recent Trends

About Us

DelveInsight is a Business Consulting and Market research company, providing expert business solutions for the healthcare domain and offering quintessential advisory services in the areas of R&D, Strategy Formulation, Operations, Competitive Intelligence, Competitive Landscaping, and Mergers & Acquisitions.

Media ContactCompany Name: DelveInsight Business Research LLPContact Person: Yash BhardwajEmail: Send EmailPhone: 9193216187Address:304 S. Jones Blvd #2432City: Las VegasState: NVCountry: United StatesWebsite: https://www.delveinsight.com/

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Propulsion of Osteoarthritis Pipeline as Novel and Extensive 130+ ... - Digital Journal

Schizophrenia: How blood vessel growth in the brain may be a factor – Medical News Today

Schizophrenia is a chronic mental disorder. Its symptoms can include disorganized speech, delusions and hallucinations.

About 24 million people have schizophrenia worldwide, less than 1% of the adult population.

What causes the condition remains unknown. Researchers suspect that a combination of genetic, physical, psychological, and environmental factors may play a role.

A growing amount of evidence suggests that schizophrenia may arise from an immune response in the brain.

Understanding more about how immune cells work in the brain in people with schizophrenia could lead to the development of treatments for the condition.

Recently, researchers investigated the role of astrocytes in the development of schizophrenia.

Astrocytes are glial cells a type of cell that support neurons that are found in the nervous system. They play a major role in immunity by secreting immune proteins known as cytokines. They also modulate the formation of new blood vessels in the brain known as vascularization- at the blood-brain barrier.

We know that glial cells are very important for antioxidant and inflammatory responses in the central nervous system, Dr. Andrew Farah, a psychiatrist at Novant Health in North Carolina, told Medical News Today.

Schizophrenia and untreated psychosis involve an inflammatory response, so the theory has long held that perhaps these brains are less well equipped to deal with inflammation, he added.

In a new study published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry, researchers found that astrocytes may increase inflammation and affect how blood vessels grow in the brain.

Dr. Michael McGrath, a psychiatrist and medical director of the Ohana Addiction Treatment Center in Hawaii who was not involved in the study, told Medical News Today:

This study adds to the growing research indicating that inflammation is involved in schizophrenia, he said. The process of inflammation is very complex and this study adds to the details that may lead to specific targeted anti-inflammatory treatments for biological psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia.

For the study, the researchers extracted skin samples from three people with schizophrenia and four people without the condition.

They then reprogrammed the cells to become induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and used them to produce neurons and astrocytes.

Next, the researchers analyzed the proteins in each sample. They found that samples from those with schizophrenia contained higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines.

They also contained different levels of other proteins that indicated less vascularization.

After this, the researchers placed the astrocytes into the vascular region of fertilized chicken eggs to observe how they affect blood vessel formation.

They found that astrocytes from people with schizophrenia produced less vascularization. The same astrocytes also secreted more of a pro-inflammatory cytokine known as interleukin-8 (IL-8).

Astrocytes are known to regulate the immune response in the central nervous system, so its possible that they promote more immature or less efficient vascularization, Pablo Trindade, Ph.D., an adjunct professor at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil and a study author, said in a press release.

Our patient-derived astrocytes secreted more interleukin-8 (IL-8) than the controls. IL-8 is proinflammatory and suspected to be the main agent of the vascular dysfunction associated with schizophrenia, he added.

The study authors noted that their findings demonstrate that astrocytes from those with schizophrenia may alter the thickness of blood vessels in the brain, reducing the passage of metabolites that reach the brain.

They added that astrocytes in people with schizophrenia might alter vascularization in fetal neurodevelopment, leading to early brain circuit malformation and potentially schizophrenia later in life.

First symptoms of schizophrenia most often occur in young adulthood, but this study implies that some of this neuronal dysfunction may be present as early as fetal development, Dr. Stephanie Hartselle, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Brown University in Rhode Island who was not involved in the study, told Medical News Today.

This is yet another study indicating that inflammation likely plays an enormous role in brain health and more research in this area may provide ways that medications targeting inflammation may eventually help prevent or treat psychiatric disease, she noted.

Dr. David Merrill, an adult and geriatric psychiatrist and director of the Pacific Neuroscience Institutes Pacific Brain Health Center at Providence Saint Johns Health Center in California, told Medical News Today:

This study was conducted in cells derived from just three patients with schizophrenia. It remains to be seen if the findings will hold in a larger sampling of patients or if the findings might differ depending on the particular case, he said.

Medical News Today spoke with Dr, Omotola K. Ajibade, a psychiatry resident at Ocean University Medical Center in New Jersey who was not involved in the study, about its limitations.

The authors rightly point out this study is hamstrung by its small sample size, he said. While the results may not be generalizable to broader populations of those suffering with schizophrenia, they do pose a lot of interesting avenues for future research.

Additionally, many of the experiments were run in cultured media, which is a good approximation for certain cellular environments, but it cant always replicate the complexity seen in whole organisms, he noted.

Raphael Wald, Psy.D., a neuropsychologist at Marcus Neuroscience Institute, part of Baptist Health South Florida, who not involved in the study, also told MNT:

This study focuses on abnormalities at the cellular level. It does not necessarily point us to a direct cause of specific behavioral abnormalities that are expressed in daily life though it certainly suggests a relationship.

MNT also spoke with Emily Treichler, Ph.D., LCP, a licensed clinical psychologist who also was not involved in the study. She noted that while the study helps understand one component of schizophrenia, many other factors play a role too.

Once we zoom back out we can see that yes, inflammation is important, and so are genetics, the gut microbiome, perinatal development, early life experiences, and so much more, she said. Its a complex picture, and its likely to look different depending on the person. There isnt necessarily anything to do at this point in terms of treatment, but folks who have questions about inflammation can talk to their doctors, for example about anti-inflammatory diets.

When asked what these findings may mean for treating schizophrenia, John Cottone, Ph.D., a psychologist in New York who was not involved in the study, told MNT:

If the findings do legitimately identify faulty astrocytes and immature blood vessels as mediators, leading to the pathology of schizophrenia, this opens a broad new area for early detection of the disease and new treatment approaches, perhaps using stem cell treatments, among others.

To this point, the causal factors leading to schizophrenia on both a genetic and neurological level have focused on broader, nonspecific factors, but these findings identify more specific problems in neurodevelopment, which can yield more specific treatments and preventative measures, he concluded.

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Schizophrenia: How blood vessel growth in the brain may be a factor - Medical News Today

QUINCY UNIVERSITY TO HOST SIXTH ANNUAL ACADEMIC … – Quincy University

Quincy University will host its sixth annual Academic Symposium April 19 21 at the Connie Niemann Center for Music, South Auditorium, QU North Campus, 1700 Seminary Rd. This event is free and open to the public.

Students will present their original research April 19 and April 20 from 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Multiple poster presentations and special media presentations will be displayed Friday, April 21 from 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Presentations will be in the Connie Niemann Center for Music, South Auditorium except for one senior retrospective exhibition in Gray Gallery in Brenner Library scheduled at 1:30 p.m. on April 20.

The QU Academic Symposium will feature the work of 51 undergraduate students, with the support of 13 mentors, representing the following schools: School of Science & Technology, School of Humanities, School of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Education and Human Services and the Oakley School of Business. The Academic Symposium includes 14 platform presentations and 19 poster and special media presentations.

Academic Symposium awards presentations will begin at 1 p.m. on April 21.

During lunch on Friday, April 21, two keynote speakers will address presenters and attendees: Bridget Brengle, MA, Senior Associate Scientist in the Bioassay and Impurity Testing Group at Pfizer, and Maureen Dolan, PhD, Director of Biotechnology Program and Associate Professor of Molecular Biology at Arkansas State University.

Bridget Hunkins Brengle 19 will present From Sonic Hedgehog to Pharmaceutics (and everything in between). Brengle will talk about her undergraduate research under Dr. Michele Combs while a student at QU, how her research took her to Washington University and what she studied there, and what her career entails working as a scientist at Pfizer.

Brengle graduated from Quincy University with a major in Biology. The day after graduation, she began as a research technician at Washington University-St. Louis. A love of scientific outreach and career development changed her path in her third year of her Developmental, Regenerative, and Stem Cell Biology program. She completed her masters work and began at Pfizer in November of 2022 where she combines her talents at the bench and passion for medical science.

Dr. Maureen Dolan 87 will present Interdisciplinary Student-driven Undergraduate Research Launching Plastic-eating Waxworms into Space. Dolan will talk about her research project with a team of Arkansas State undergraduate researchers testing if Galleria mellonella larva, commonly known as the waxworm, may offer a solution to plastic waste buildup in space. The results of their study could pave the way for novel, more sustainable methods of plastic waste management not only for long-term space travel to the Moon or Mars but also for here on Earth.

Dolan graduated from Quincy College in 1987 with a double major in Biology and Chemistry. She earned her MS in Biochemistry from Iowa State University and a PhD in Molecular Biology & Biochemistry from the University of Florida. Her non-traditional research career path has opened opportunities to be involved in developing new and innovative DNA-based tests for the food industry, and bioengineering plants to become living factories for making protein-based medicines used to improve the health of agriculture animals and people.

The Academic Symposium aims to prepare academically talented students for professional schools, to reward academic achievement, to provide an opportunity for academic competition among students and to offer a platform for interaction among major programs.For more information, contact Caitlin Deskins, PhD, at deskica@quincy.edu.

Founded in 1860 by Franciscan friars, Quincy University is a small Catholic universityemphasizing the sciences, liberal arts and the professions. Quincy University offers undergraduate, graduate and adult education programs integrating practical experience and Franciscan values. Faculty and advisors work with students to design customized success plans to help them graduate on time, find their passion and prepare them for life. QU is a member of NCAA Division II for intercollegiate athletics. For more information, please visit http://www.quincy.edu or contact the Office of Community Relations at (217) 228-5275 or communityrelations@quincy.edu. Quincy University. Success by Design.

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QUINCY UNIVERSITY TO HOST SIXTH ANNUAL ACADEMIC ... - Quincy University