Category Archives: Cell Biology

FDA Approves Furosemide Injection for At-Home Treatment of Congestion in Chronic Heart Failure – MD Magazine

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved furosemide injection 80 mg/ 10 mL (FUROSCIX) for the at-home treatment of congestion in patients with chronic heart failure.

Announced on October 10 in a statement from scPharmaceuticals, the approval adds to the armamentarium available for prescribers managing worsening heart failure, a disease that impacts more than 6 million Americans and costs more than $30 billion in care annually.

The first and only self-administered subcutaneous loop diuretic for at-home treatment of congestion in chronic heart failure, the proprietary furosemide solution is administered in subcutaneous doses via a wearable, pre-programmed delivery system, called the On-Body Infusor, placed on the patients body.

This marks a tremendous opportunity to improve the at-home managementofworsening congestion in patients with heart failurewho display reduced responsiveness to oral diureticsand require administration of intravenous diuretics, which typically requires admission tothe hospital, said William T. Abraham, MD, Professor of Internal Medicine, Physiology and Cell Biology at The Ohio State University and scPharmaceuticals Board member, in the aforementioned statement. The FDAs approval of FUROSCIX is significant and will allow patients to be treated outside of the hospital setting, and I look forward to incorporating it into my own practice as quickly as possible.

The furosemide solution targets heart failure-related congestion by reducing fluid overload in adult patients with NYHA Class II and III chronic heart failure who do not require hospitalization but also have not had full response to oral diuretics. As such, it will be available for outpatient use.

Data from the phase 2 AT HOME-HF Pilot studya multicenter, randomized trial assessing subcutaneous furosemide 80 mg/10 mL versus standard care in 51 patients with chronic heart failure with congestion uncontrolled by diuresisshowed a 37% reduced risk of heart failure hospitalization among treated patients compared to standard-care patients at 30 days.

In key secondary endpoints, furosemide was associated with greater reductions in mean patient body weight from baseline to day 3 (2.8 vs 0.8; P = .035), as well as improvements in pulmonary-related metrics including mean 5-item dyspnea score improvement from baseline to day 3 (-0.5 vs 0.1; P = .019).

The data, presented at the Heart Failure Society of America (HFSA) 2022 Annual Meeting in Washington, DC last week, signaled a new opportunity to manage heart failure in pre-hospitalized patients.

This small study points to a possible new way to treat patients with heart failure exacerbation without hospitalization, said Marvin Konstam, MD, professor of medicine at Tufts University School Medicine, said in his AT HOME-HF presentation at HFSA 2022. The AT-HOME HF study, with limited statistical power, generated a directional favorable primary end point which was not statistically significant.

Konstam added the findings support a cohesive message with statistical significance across body weight, dyspnea scores, and functional capacity, with an analogous trend in health-related quality of life.

In their release, scPharmaceuticals noted furosemide injection is not indicated for use in emergency situations or in patients with acute pulmonary edema. Additionally, furosemide injection is contraindicated in patients with anuria, patients with a history of hypersensitivity to furosemide or medical adhesives, and in patients with hepatic cirrhosis or ascites.

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FDA Approves Furosemide Injection for At-Home Treatment of Congestion in Chronic Heart Failure - MD Magazine

The global live cell imaging market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 8.44% during 2022-2027 – GlobeNewswire

New York, Sept. 28, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Live Cell Imaging Market - Global Outlook & Forecast Market 2022-2027" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p06323431/?utm_source=GNW In 2021, North America accounted for the highest share of the global live cell imaging market.

Live cell imaging has revolutionized studying cells, processes, and molecular interactions. Imaging techniques for living cells allow scientists to study cell structures and processes in real-time and over time. Such factors have significantly impacted the growth of the market. A few of the most widespread applications include examining the structural components of a cell, the dynamic studying processes, and the localization of molecules.

MARKET TRENDS & DRIVERS

Rising Target Patient Population

Live cell imaging is a vital tool in the study of cancer biology. Although high-resolution imaging is indispensable for studying genetic and cell signaling changes in underlying cancer, live cell imaging is essential for a deeper understanding of the function and disease mechanisms. Around 400,000 children develop cancer every year. Developed and emerging countries are facing the burden of communicable diseases. Most developing countries get exposed due to several factors that include demographic, socio-economic, and geographic conditions. Hence, the growing number of deaths and chronic conditions drive the live cell imaging market.

Deep Learning & Artificial Intelligence

The role of Artificial intelligence (AI) in life science is rapidly expanding and holds great potential for microscopy. In the past, the power of microscopy for supporting or disproving scientific hypotheses got limited by scale, and the time associated with quantifying, capturing, and analyzing large numbers of images was often prohibitive. Recently, AI has made fast inroads into many scientific fields and the world of microscopy. AI-based self-learning microscopy shows the potential to produce high throughput image analysis that is more effortless and less time-consuming. Newer AI technology allows better visualization of unlabeled live cells over a prolonged period.

Increase in Funding for Cell & Gene Therapy

The demand for regenerative medicine has increased across developed countries, and investments in cell & gene therapy have grown drastically in recent years. The public and private sectors are at the forefront of funding cell and gene therapy developers. Recently, many government organizations and private firms have started funding many biotech start-ups and research institutes that invest in the R&D of cell and gene therapy products. According to the Alliance for Regenerative Medicines, there was a 164% jump in funding for cell & gene therapy in 2019 compared to 2017.

Advancements & Newer Imaging Techniques

Live cell imaging arises from scientific interest coupled with imaging and labeling technology improvements. Putting together various technological advancements with biological interests gives scientists many more ways to use live cell imaging. In particular, exciting progress in probe development has enabled a broad array of nucleic acids, proteins, glycans, lipids, ions, metabolites, and other targets to be labeled. Many recent advancements in microscopic technologies use software that enables a better quantitative image analysis of label-free images.

Also, current microscopy techniques limit the quantity and quality of information available to researchers and clinicians and harm the living cells during long-term studies. Hence new imaging technologies are being developed to overcome various limitations. These advancements will help towards future market growth. For instance, the progress of combining 3D fluorescence imaging and holotomography microscopy has overcome some limitations.

Growing Research-based Activities

In the past two decades, the spending on R&D and the introduction of newer drugs have increased rapidly. In 2019, the pharma industry spent around $83 billion on R&D. From 2010 to 2019, the number of novel drugs were approved, whose sales increased by 60% compared with the previous decade, with a peak of 59 new drugs approved in 2018. The rising amount of R&D expenditure and the number of R&D activities in the pharmaceutical sector has led to the significant growth of the market.

SEGMENTATION ANALYSIS

The global live cell imaging market by product includes sub-segments by equipment, consumables, and software. In 2021, the equipment sector accounted for the highest share in the global live cell imaging market.Under the equipment sector, live-cell imaging microscopes are opening novel and exciting avenues for studying cellular health, viability, colony formation, migration, and cellular responses to external stimuli. The demand for microscopes is at a larger scale, majorly due to the technological advancements in microscopes and increasing studies into cell behavior. Fluorescence microscopy, confocal microscopy, transmitted light microscopy, and other techniques are included in the global live cell imaging market by technique. Fluorescence microscopy held the largest share of 53.68% in the global live cell imaging market in 2021. Live-cell imaging techniques are involved in a wide spectrum of imaging modalities, including widefield fluorescence, confocal, multiphoton, total internal reflection, FRET, lifetime imaging, super-resolution, and transmitted light microscopy. An increasing number of investigations are using live-cell imaging techniques. Owing to these advances, live-cell imaging has become a requisite analytical tool in most cell biology laboratories. Cell biology, drug discovery, developmental biology, and stem cell are the applications primary segments of the live cell imaging market. In 2021, cell biology accounted for the highest share of 38.72% in the global live cell imaging market. The end-user market includes segments by pharma & biotech companies, academic & research institutes, and others. Academic and research institutions identify promising discoveries and seek to initiate their development and commercialization. Most new insights into biology, disease, and new technologies arise in academia, funded by public grants, foundations, and institutional funds. The discovery and development of new therapies have and will likely continue to require contributions from academic institutions and the biopharmaceutical industry.

Segmentation by Product Type Equipment Consumables Software

Segmentation by Technique Fluorescence microscopy Confocal microscopy Transmitted light microscopy Others

Segmentation by Application Cell Biology Drug Discovery Developmental Biology Stem Cells

Segmentation by End-Users Pharma & Biotech Companies Academic & research centers Others

GEOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS

By geography, the report includes North America, Europe, APAC, Latin America, and the Middle East & Africa. In 2021, North America accounted for the highest share of the global live cell imaging market.

Live cell imaging systems are used for diagnostics purposes, drug discovery & development, and precision medicine. The increase in healthcare expenditures and funding for R&D activities for live cells-driven drug discovery, development, and personalized medicine is one of the major driving factors for leading the North American region. Europe holds the second-largest share of the global market, owing to a growing patient population in need of new treatments such as stem cell therapy and gene therapy, an increasing number of drug approvals for precision medicine, government funding for research-based activities, rapid advancements in live cell imaging, and a variety of other factors.

The APAC region will likely witness the fastest growth in the global live cell imaging market. The significant factors behind this growth can be due to the constant rise in cancers and infectious diseases, growing demand for stem cell research studies, rising R&D expenditures, the increased utility of biomarkers for diagnostic purposes, rising awareness for cell & gene therapies, need for precision medicine, and advances in drug discovery & cell and biology development. However, Latin America and Middle East & Africa accounted for minimal shares in the global market.

Segmentation by Geography

North Americao THE USo Canada Europeo Germanyo Franceo UKo Italyo Spain APACo Japano Chinao Indiao South Koreao Australia Latin Americao Brazilo Mexicoo Argentina Middle East & Africao Turkeyo Saudi Arabiao South Africao UAE

COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE

The leading players in the market are implementing various strategies such as marketing and promotional activities, mergers & acquisitions, product launches, and approvals. Also, high R&D investments and boosting distribution networks have helped companies enhance their market share and presence.

The global live cell imaging market includes global and regional players. Major players contributing to the markets significant shares include Agilent, Bruker, Carl Zeiss AG, Danaher, Merck KGaA, PerkinElmer, and Thermo Fisher Scientific. Other prominent players in the market include Axion (CytoSMART Technologies), Bio-Rad Laboratories, blue-ray biotech, Etaluma, Grace Bio Labs, ibidi GmbH, KEYENCE, NanoEnTek, Nanolive SA, Nikon, Olympus, and others.

Recent Developments in the Global Market

In 2021, CytoSMART launched CytoSMART Lux3 BR, a new type of bright-field microscope, i.e., a live-cell imaging microscope equipped with a high-quality CMOS camera to assist label-free cell imaging procedures. In 2021, the Zeiss group announced that they would launch Zeiss Visioner 1, a Zeiss live cell imaging system, an innovative digital microscope that facilitates real-time all-in-one focus via a micro-mirror array system. In 2020, CytoSMART Technologies launched CytoSMART Multi Lux, a remote live cell imaging system.

Key Vendors Danaher Agilent Technologies PerkinElmer Merck KGaA ZEISS Thermo Fisher Scientific

Other Prominent Vendors Axion BioSystems BD Bio-Rad Laboratories Blue-Ray Biotech Bruker Eppendorf Etaluma Grace Bio-Labs ibidi GmbH Intelligent Imaging Innovations KEYENCE Logos Biosystems NanoEntek Nanolive SA Nikon Evident ONI Oxford Instruments Phase Focus Phase Holographic Imaging PHI AB Proteintech Group Sartorius AG Sony Biotechnology Tomocube

KEY QUESTIONS ANSWERED1. What is the expected live cell imaging market size by 2027?2. What is the live cell imaging market growth?3. What are the latest trends in the live cell imaging market?4. Who are the market leaders in the global live cell imaging market?5. Which region has the largest live cell imaging market share?Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p06323431/?utm_source=GNW

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The global live cell imaging market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 8.44% during 2022-2027 - GlobeNewswire

Molecular and Cell Biology

The teaching and research activities of the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology (MCB) concern the molecular structures and processes of cellular life and their roles in the function, reproduction, and development of living organisms. The types of living organisms from which the departmental faculty draws its working materials range from viruses and microbes through plants, roundworms, annelids, arthropods, and mollusks to fish, amphibia, and mammals.

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Molecular and Cell Biology

Who will get the call from Stockholm? It’s time for STAT’s 2022 Nobel Prize predictions – STAT

We live in a time where the rate of medical and superlative scientific advances is accelerating by more than 1,300% since 1985, according to one recent estimate. With so many unprecedented, transformative breakthroughs happening, forecasting which one will be awarded top research honors isnt getting any easier. But with the naming of this years Nobels fast approaching the medicine award will be announced on Oct. 3, physics on Oct. 4, chemistry on Oct. 5 prize prognosticating for the World Series of Science is once again in full swing.

Public polls, tallies of other elite awards, and journal citations have helped betting-minded people collect the names of whos most likely in the running. The shortlist includes researchers who elucidated how cells make energy, those who discovered the chemical chatter of bacteria, many of the brilliant minds who shepherded us into the era of the genome, and most prominently, the pioneers behind the mRNA Covid vaccines.

How Nobels are decided is a matter of grave secrecy records of who nominated and voted for whom are sealed for 50 years making forecasting new winners even more of a challenge. Still, some experts have developed systems that do a decent job.

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David Pendlebury of Clarivate looks at how often a scientists key papers are cited by peers and awarded so-called predictive prizes like the Lasker or Gairdner awards. Each year he comes up with a group of Citation Laureates, and since 2002, 64 of his picks have gone on to receive a Nobel Prize.

Using that strategy, Pendlebury thinks the medicine Nobel could go to the researchers who discovered that different kinds of malformed protein aggregates, in different cell types, underlie a number of neurological diseases including Parkinsons, ALS, and frontotemporal dementia. Virginia Man-Yee Lee of the University of Pennsylvania published a seminal Science paper in 2006, which has now been cited more than 4,000 times. When Pendlebury dug into those citations, he noticed that researchers almost always mentioned that paper in tandem with a very similar but much lower-profile study published a few months later by Masato Hasegawa of the Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science.

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This phenomenon of simultaneous independent discovery is very common in science, more than I think people understand, Pendlebury told STAT. So the citations tend to go to the first mover, but they are really a pair. And since their papers, the field has blossomed in many directions, because it was a big step forward for trying to find therapies for these kinds of diseases.

For similar reasons, Pendlebury also has his eyes on two scientists who made groundbreaking discoveries about the genetic basis of disease: Mary-Claire King of the University of Washington for uncovering the role of mutations in the BRCA genes in breast and ovarian cancers, which revolutionized cancer screening, and Stuart Orkin of Harvard Medical School for identifying the genetic changes behind the various types of thalassemia leading to promising new gene-based therapies for inherited blood disorders.

Another thing that Pendlebury takes into account in his predictions is periodicity. The committees tend to take turns rewarding different disciplines; neuroscience, cancer, or infectious-disease discoveries win every decade or so. For the medicine prize, periodicity also shows up between discoveries of basic molecular biology and ones that lead to people actually being treated or cured of the things that ail them.

In the past decade, the medicine prize has more times than not gone back to basics. In 2013, it went to intra-cell transportation, in 2016 to the process of cellular self-destruction, in 2017 to the genetic clocks that control circadian rhythms, in 2019 to how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability, and last year to how cells sense temperature and touch. Prizes with a more clinical focus have been awarded in 2015, (roundworm and malaria therapy), 2018 (immuno-oncolgy), and 2020 (hepatitis C).

Thats just one reason why cancer biologist Jason Sheltzer of the Yale School of Medicine is so bullish on this years medicine prize going to Katalin Karik of BioNTech and Drew Weissman of Penn Medicine for taking messenger RNA, or mRNA, on a 40-year journey from an obscure corner of cell biology to a pandemic-halting vaccine technology. Its such a radical change in vaccine technology, at this point billions of doses have been given, and it has incontrovertibly saved millions of people from dying of Covid, Sheltzer said. To me, its just a slam dunk.Sheltzer has been making Nobel predictions on Twitter since 2016 and correctly chose immuno-oncology pioneer James Allison for the 2018 medicine prize. His methodology is a bit more straightforward; he tracks winners of seven major science prizes the Horwitz, Wolf, Albany, Shaw, and Breakthrough Prize, in addition to the Lasker and Gairdner because the data show that theres only so long the Nobel Committee can ignore people whove won at least two. Karik and Weissman have won five of the six. Its not a question of if it will happen, its just a question of when, he said.

Hes less certain about the chemistry prize. Might David Allis of Rockefeller and Michael Grunstein of UCLA finally get the call to Stockholm? They discovered one way genes are activated through proteins called histones for which they shared a 2018 Lasker and a 2016 Gruber Prize in genetics. The control of gene expression, otherwise known as epigenetics, is a fundamental process in cell biology that researchers and industry are just beginning to harness to treat human disease. But the last time epigenetics got the Nobel nod was in 2006, with Roger Kornbergs win in chemistry for his work unlocking the molecular mystery of how RNA transcripts are assembled.

Its been nearly 20 years since that field has been recognized with a prize, so you could make the case that its very much due this year, said Sheltzer.

Thats even more true for DNA sequencing, which was last awarded a Nobel in 1980 to Wally Gilbert and Frederick Sanger for their work developing the first (eponymously named) method for determining the order of base pairs in nucleic acids. But so much has happened in the field since then, that the slate of worthy sequencing successors is practically overflowing.

Should it go to the scientists who gave us the first-ever draft of the human genome, and if so, which ones? Hundreds of researchers all over the world aided in the effort, which was a feat of engineering and mass production as much as scientific innovation. If the chemistry or medicine Nobel committees takes a cue from their physics counterpart, who in 2017 honored the organizers of the international project that discovered gravitational waves, then the top contenders would likely be the Human Genome Projects cat-herder-in-chief and recently departed director of the National Institutes of Health, Francis Collins, and Eric Lander, whose lab at the Broad Institute churned out much of the draft sequence. A third might be Craig Venter, whose competing private sequencing push at Celera raced the public effort to a hotly contested draw.

Perhaps a more deserving trio would be Marvin Caruthers of the University of Colorado, Leroy Hood of the Institute for Systems Biology, and Michael Hunkapiller, former CEO of DNA-sequencing behemoth Pacific Biosciences. They invented the technology behind the first automated sequencers, which powered the Human Genome Project (and were Pendleburys pick for the chemistry Nobel in 2019).

Or perhaps the call from Stockholm will go out to David Klenerman and Shankar Balasubramanian of the University of Cambridge, who developed the sequencing-by-synthesis technology that came after the Human Genome Project and is now the workhorse of the modern sequencing era (and for which they won the 2020 Millennium Technology Prize and this years Breakthrough Prize in life sciences). More recent inventions, like the nanopore sequencing technologies that have enabled the construction of the first actually complete human genomes in the last few years are also in the running, but probably a longer shot, despite their obvious contributions to both chemistry and medicine. Thats because the Nobel committees tend to tilt toward true trailblazers and away from those who extend an initial, foundation-laying discovery or insight.

The Human Genome Project, a perennial topic of conversation among Nobel-casters, has inspired even more intrigue than usual this year, following the surprise exit of Eric Lander from his position as White House science adviser in the wake of workplace bullying allegations.

Although the rare Nobel has been awarded to well-known jerks or kooks Kary Mullis, the eccentric inventor of PCR, and James Watson, the dubious co-discoverer of the double-helix structure of DNA (and frequent maker of racist, sexist remarks) come to mind the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which selects the physics and chemistry laureates, and the Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institute, which chooses the physiology/medicine winner, tend to steer clear of controversy.

Its hard to find many examples of a Nobel being awarded to someone whos been super controversial, said Sheltzer.

Among Pendleburys picks, the person who skirts closest is perhaps Stephen Quake of Stanford University and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, who provided advice to He Jiankui, the Chinese scientist who created the worlds first CRISPR babies. Stanford later cleared Quake of any misconduct. Quake has made important discoveries in microfluidics which led to rapid advances in noninvasive testing and single cell sequencing, and Pendlebury sees him as a favorite for a physics Nobel.

In chemistry, Pendlebury likes another Stanford University engineer, Zhenan Bao, for her paradigm-shifting work in the field of semiconducting polymers making stretchable electronic skin. Hes also got his eye on Daniel Nocera at Harvard University for foundational work illuminating the proton-coupled electron transfer process that powers cells, and the team of Bonnie Bassler from Princeton University and E. Peter Greenberg of the University of Washington for their discovery of quorum sensing a chemical communication system between bacteria.

Besides citations, prediction prizes, and periodicity, Pendlebury is also playing the long game. I pay special attention to papers that are 15, 20, 25, 30 years old, because it usually takes a decade or two for research to be selected by the Nobel Prize Committee, he said.

That might complicate things for one of the leading vote-getters in an online poll for the chemistry Nobel John Jumper of the Alphabet-owned company DeepMind and a 2023 Breakthrough Prize in life sciences winner. His work leading the AlphaFold artificial intelligence program stunned the world two years ago by essentially solving one of biologys most enduring challenges: quickly and accurately predicting the 3D structure of a protein from its amino acid sequence.

Thats why this first-time Nobel forecaster is betting on another top vote-getter for the chemistry prize, Carolyn Bertozzi of Stanford University, who has spent much of her illustrious career devising methods to understand an elusive but critical class of sugar-coated molecules called glycans found on the surface of almost all living cells. Shes been a member of the National Academy of Sciences since 2005 and won the Wolf prize earlier this year, in recognition of founding the field of bioorthogonal chemistry a term Bertozzi coined two decades ago that refers to reactions scientists can perform within living organisms without interfering with their normal functions.

Sticking with dark-horse picks (because, why not), Im going with Yuk Ming Dennis Lo of the Chinese University of Hong Kong for the medicine prize. In 1997, he reported that a growing fetus sheds cell-free DNA into the mothers blood. Ten years later, he found a way to use that DNA to detect the signature abnormalities associated with Down syndrome. Together, these discoveries revolutionized clinical practice of screening for fetal genetic abnormalities, leading to the development of non-invasive prenatal testing now used by millions of people every year. Lo has only just begun to be recognized for that work, winning last years Breakthrough Prize for life sciences and this years Lasker Award for clinical medical research, which was announced on Wednesday. He also founded companies based on this same principle for the early detection of multiple cancers, one of which was acquired by pioneering liquid biopsy giant Grail.

Other crowdsourced efforts to predict Nobel winners arent making a return appearance, including the March Madness-style brackets run for many years by the scientific research honors society Sigma Xi. (Last year saw Bertozzi lose in the finals to Omar Yaghi and Makoto Fujita, pioneers of metal-organic self-assembling structures.) Sigma Xi couldnt be reached for comment, but the change comes amid increasingly loud criticism of the Nobel Prizes, for the way they distort the collaborative nature of the scientific enterprise and overlook many of its important contributors (including many women and people of color).

Even Nobel obsessives like Sheltzer admit those arguments are becoming more compelling. But he likes how, at least for a few days every October, he can count on scientific discoveries splashing across the front page of the New York Times and leading the hour on the nightly news. There are amazing things happening in the scientific world right now, like CRISPR gene editing and immunotherapy for cancer, that I think should really be front-page news much more frequently than they are, said Sheltzer. But Im glad that the Nobel Prize shines a spotlight on them and elevates them into the national consciousness, even if just for a brief period of time.

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Who will get the call from Stockholm? It's time for STAT's 2022 Nobel Prize predictions - STAT

Can plants think? The burgeoning field of plant neurobiology has a lot to say on the matter – Salon

Americans like to mow their lawns, but blades of grass aren't supposed to all have the same length. Left un-sheared, an all-natural lawn contains grasses of wildly varying heights, more akin to an unruly, uncombed head of hair right after a long night's sleep. A lawn is not a single organism, but a large community of plants that have individual heights; being mowed is not the natural state for a blade of grass.

This raises a disturbing question: When a human mows a lawn, is that the equivalent of mass torture to the grass assuming the grass can "feel" or "think" the way we can? The proposition is not as outlandish as it might seem. Recent research suggests that plants are far from the stationary automatons that most of us think of them as. And though they don't have brains in the same way most animals do, plants seem to possess a different set of evolutionary tools that suggest they may experience consciousness, albeit in a radically different way from us.

"There are numerous definitions but the most simple and relevant is this: Consciousness is a feature of living systems allowing them awareness of their external and internal conditions."

One such theory of how this might work is known as the "Cellular Basis of Consciousness" theory. This posits that all life, from the smallest single-celled organism and on upwards to the largest animals on Earth, possesses something akin to consciousness.

"In our Cellular Basis of Consciousness (CBC) Theory, consciousness evolved with the very first cells and all cellular life is endowed with consciousness which is essential for their agency, survival and evolution," explainedDr. Frantisek Baluska, a scientist at the University of Bonn'sDepartment of Plant Cell Biology, in an email interview with Salon. Baluska has published articles in scholarly journals from BioEssaysto Philosophical Transactions Bon the subject of plant consciousness. According to CBC Theory, every cell that exists possesses the innate qualities necessary to possess a level of self-awareness. It points out that individual cells are able to interact with their surroundings in a manner that clearly displays a sense of agency. Baluska and other scholars like psychologist Dr. Arthur S. Reber and neurobiologist Dr. Stefano Mancuso have argued that there are structures in all cells that endow each organism with a certain amount of consciousness.

"There are numerous definitions but the most simple and relevant is this: Consciousness is a feature of living systems allowing them awareness of their external and internal conditions," Baluska wrote to Salon when asked to define consciousness in the sense used to understand the inner lives of plants.

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Dr. Paco Calvo has an upcoming book, co-authored with Natalie Lawrence, called "Planta Sapiens: Unmasking Plant Intelligence." Calvo works at the MINT Lab (Minimal Intelligence Lab) at the University of Murcia in Spain, and provided Salon with his own definition of consciousness.

"There is no one single, agreed-upon definition of what 'consciousness' is," Calvo told Salon by email. To the extent that a coherent definition can be deduced based on what scientists know for sure about biology, however, Calvo speculated that "consciousness relates to the presence of 'feelings, subjective states, a primitive awareness of events, including awareness of internal states.'" Within that context, Calvo pointed out that scientists have already demonstrated that a number of non-human animals possess sentience, from cephalopods (like octopuses) to insects (like ants). As the list continues to grow, it is reasonable to at least wonder if plants as well as neurologically-wired organisms will be found to have self-awareness.

"Sentience, we may say, makes sense for life, as an essential underpinning to the business of living," Calvo explained. "And it is very unlikely that plants are not far more aware than we intuitively assume." To the "skeptics" who insist that consciousness must be tied to a central nervous system, and that plants would not need to evolve consciousness in the first place, "even if 'consciousness', as understood in vertebrates, is generated by complex neuronal systems, there is no objective way of knowing that subjective experience has not evolved with entirely different kinds of hardware in other organisms," Calvo argued. "We have no evidence to conclude that no brain means no awareness. It is certainly true that we cannot yet know if plants are conscious. But we also cannot assume that they are not."

Calvo added, "Plants, not unlike, say, locked-in patients, might well have significant conscious experience, although there is no way for us to intuit it nor for them to communicate it to us."

"Sentience, we may say, makes sense for life, as an essential underpinning to the business of living," Calvo explained. "And it is very unlikely that plants are not far more aware than we intuitively assume."

Not everyone is convinced by the various theories that exist for plant consciousness.Dr. David G. Robinson of the University of Heidelberg's Centre for Organismal Studies co-authored a 2021 articlefrom the scholarly journalBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications which addressed another theory that pro-plant consciousness proponents claims backs up their belief. On that occasion, Robinson discussedIntegrated Information Theory, which attempts to identify the fundamental properties of consciousness and then ascertain the physical bodies that correspond with them. More broadly, Robinson was dismissive of those scholars who say that plants can be conscious beings.

"I can only refer you to the article of Mallatt et al. (2020), where the 'debunking of myths' was painstakingly carried out," Robinson wrote to Salon. "Since plants don't have a brain, Mancuso in his 2015 book talks about 'distributed intelligence' to explain the fact that many animal-like properties (hearing, seeing, chemical signaling, etc) are shown by epidermal cells. He equates this with consciousness, but in all these cases these are genetically programmed responses which are not centrally coordinated and there is no indication of feedback. This is not consciousness."

Robinson added, "There is a huge popular following for books (e.g. from [Dr. Monica] Gagliano) humanizing plants, telling us that plants can communicate with us. This is shamanism, pure humbug it's fool's gold. We learn nothing about plants by reading this literature."

While it is likely an exaggeration to dismiss the ideas about plant consciousness as "pure humbug," it is fair to say that they remain unproved. Indeed, if they were validated, they would have remarkable implications in terms of the ethics of how humans interact with plants.

"We should acknowledge that plants are complex living systems which deserve dignity, as it is stated in the Swiss Constitution through amendment from 2008," Baluska argued. "As animals, humans and plants are in close co-evolution and have the same biological origins, we should treat them as living organisms deserving dignity."

Calvo noted that, even if humans only acknowledge that plants have a very primitive form of consciousness, that should still make us feel "uneasy" at the realization that "plants are agents, and not mere objects or resources to be exploited more or less wisely."

"Most people would dismiss the very possibility that plants are sentient at the outset, negating the need for an ethical standpoint, and arguing that it would lead to absurd implications," Calvo pointed out. "And I must confess that for many years, the ethical implications of the proposition that sentience might extend well beyond the animal world hadn't troubled me. But the parallels that are emerging between the ways that plants sense, understand and respond to their environments and the ways that animals do, are making it increasingly difficult to avoid these questions. In fact, our success at tackling the ecological crisis may depend upon facing these issues head-on."

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Can plants think? The burgeoning field of plant neurobiology has a lot to say on the matter - Salon

Scientists Discover That Chromosomes Are Fluid – SciTechDaily

The study found that chromosomes are fluid, almost liquid, outside of their division phases.

Researchers from CNRS, theCurie Institute, and Sorbonne University have successfully physically acted onchromosomes in live cells for the first time. They found that, outside of cell division phases, chromosomes are actually very fluidalmost liquidby subjecting to different forces using magnets. The study was recently published in the prestigious journal Science.

When they are not in their division phases, chromosomes are fluid, though not quite liquid. This discovery was made possible by the first-ever direct mechanical manipulation of chromosomes in the nucleus of live cells.

Previously, chromosomes, which are extraordinarily long DNA molecules, were represented as entangled like loose balls of yarn and creating a sort of gel. This new publications findings present a completely different picture. Chromosomes are fluid and free to move, unrestricted by the other parts that make up the nucleus and can reorganize themselves.

To reach these conclusions published in Science, scientists from CNRS, theCurie Institute, and Sorbonne University, working in the Nuclear Dynamics, Physical Chemistry and Cell Biology, and Cancer laboratories, in collaboration with scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, attached magnetic nanoparticles to a small portion of a chromosome in a living cell. Then, they stretched the chromosome, exerting different degrees of force, thanks to a micro-magnet outside the cell. Using this approach, the teams managed to measure the response of a chromosome to external forces, for the very first time in a living cell.

Through these experiments, the scientists were able to see that the range of forces exerted naturally in the nucleus for example by enzymes replicating DNA is sufficient to substantially alter the conformation of a chromosome. This major discovery, at the interface between physics and biology, changes the hitherto established representation of chromosomes. It also adds new elements to our understanding of biological processes, the biophysics of chromosomes, and the organization of the genome.

Reference: Live-cell micromanipulation of a genomic locus reveals interphase chromatin mechanics by Veer I. P. Keizer, Simon Grosse-Holz, Maxime Woringer, Laura Zambon, Koceila Aizel, Maud Bongaerts, Fanny Delille, Lorena Kolar-Znika, Vittore F. Scolari, Sebastian Hoffmann, Edward J. Banigan, Leonid A. Mirny, Maxime Dahan, Daniele Fachinetti and Antoine Coulon, 28 July 2022, Science.DOI: 10.1126/science.abi9810

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Many diverse nanopore research directions and applications beyond DNA sequencing – News-Medical.Net

In a recent Nature Nanotechnology study, researchers describe diverse applications of nanopore-based technology beyond deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequencing. More specifically, the current research focuses on the advancements of this technology within chemistry, biophysics, and nanoscience.

Study:Nanopore-based technologies beyond DNA sequencing. Image Credit: Yurchanka Siarhei / Shutterstock.com

In a conventional application, analytes of interest will enter the nanopore under an applied current that changes the flow of ions through the nanopore. This change in ion flow is reflected as a time-dependent current recording that can be used to sense and characterize various biomolecules such as DNA, RNA, proteins, peptides, metabolites, and protein-DNA complexes at the molecular level.

The type of nanopore employed for a given study depends upon the analyte of interest, as both the nanopore and analyte dimensions should be comparable to produce a recordable change in ionic current.

Biological nanopores, for example, can recognize biomolecules with diameters within the range of -1 to 10 nanometers (nm). Comparatively, solid-state nanopores are used for optical applications, including electron/ion million, laser-based optical etching, and the dielectric breakdown of ultrathin solid membranes.

Although nanopores were initially developed for sensing ions and small molecules, particularly for DNA sequencing purposes, the applications of this technology have expanded considerably.

Some of the key advantages of nanopores that have contributed to their widespread application include their ability to capture single molecules consecutively and at a rapid rate, convert both the structural and chemical properties of analytes into a measurable ionic current, and identify label-free species for signal amplification.

Solid-state nanopores can help extract the generic properties of proteins, such as volume, dipole, and shape. In addition, ligands, such as biotin, aptamers, protein domains, or antibodies, can directly attach to biological nanopores, even in the presence of complex media, such as serum.

In addition to identifying proteins, nanopores can act as single-molecule sensors to provide information on proteins' activity, dynamics, and conformational changes. By trapping a protein inside of a biological nanopore, for example, researchers can obtain information on the proteins conformational changes and dynamics as it remains within the nanopore.

Although nanopores cannot provide information on the activities of individual enzymes, they may be able to monitor the formation of products following enzymatic reactions, mainly when conventional spectroscopic assays are unavailable.

Biological nanopores engineered to contain reactive sites are referred to as protein nanoreactors. These specific nanopores could assist in the analysis of bond-making and bond-breaking events of individual molecules attached to the interior wall of a nanopore as it modulates the ionic current. Additional applications of nanoreactors include the analysis of phytochemistry, stereochemical transformations, polymerization steps, and a primary isotope effect.

Cells feature several nm-sized pores within their membranes that act as gateways for molecular transport between cell compartments. To better understand the mechanisms involved in the transport of biomolecules through these pores, they could be extracted from the cell and docked within planar lipid membranes. Unfortunately, this reconstitution approach is extremely difficult; thus, nanopores offer exciting opportunities to study cell biology.

Various engineered nanopore-based systems can mimic biological pores in vitro, such as asymmetric solid-state nanopores, which could mimic switchable ion channels to study ion pumps and ion- and pH-gated pores. In addition, synthetic DNA origami pores can also be used to mimic ligand-gated ion channels, whereas biological nanopores can be designed to mimic passive or active membrane transporters.

The nuclear pore complex (NPC), a larger pore that regulates the transportation of proteins and RNAs between cellular compartments, may also be studied through biomimetic NPCs. Although considerable information is available on the biological function of NPCs, biomimetic NPCs can be used to better understand the specific transport properties of these biological pores.

Analyzing the presence of specific biomarkers within biomedical samples, such as bodily fluids, tissue biopsies, or other biological specimens, such as viruses, bacteria, and cell cultures, is associated with numerous challenges.

For example, target biomolecules within samples, many of which are nucleic acids or proteins, can be present in concentrations ranging from tens of attomolar (1018M) to the subnanomolar (109M) range. In addition, such clinical samples also comprise various other biomolecules that may interfere with the nanopore sensor itself.

To overcome these limitations, various smart bioassays and devices utilizing nanopore sensing technology have been developed to analyze clinical samples. For example, novel microfluidic devices integrated with nanopore sensors can potentially be used for sample preparation or detecting analyte concentration levels.

Furthermore, specific biochemical assays based on biological nanopores can enhance molecular specificity while simultaneously eliminating unwanted interactions from background molecules. This approach can also reduce the loss of targeted molecules during sample preparation while ensuring that the nanopore is protected against any potential degradation from surrounding biomolecules.

With nanopore design improvements, these technologies will continue to evolve and address scientific challenges. Moreover, researchers anticipate that nanopores will find novel applications in a wide range of areas, from molecular sensing and sequencing to chemical catalysis and biophysical characterization.

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Live-Cell Imaging Market Size And Forecast To 2022 |GE Healthcare, Olympus Corporation, Danaher Corporation, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Sartorius…

In a report currently being published by Verified Market Research titled GlobalLive-Cell Imaging Market Size, Manufacturers, Supply Chains, Sales Channels and Customers, 2022-2029, analysts presented a detailed overview of the Live-Cell Imaging market. The report is a comprehensive study of Live-Cell Imaging global markets, taking into account growth factors, recent trends, events, opportunities and the competitive environment. Market analysts and researchers conducted an extensive analysis of the Global Live-Cell Imaging Market, using research methodologies such as the analysis of the five strengths of PESTLE and Porter. They provided accurate and reliable market data and useful recommendations to help participants better understand the overall scenario of the current and future market. The report includes an in-depth study of potential segments, including the type of product, Application and end user, as well as their contribution to the overall market size.

Highlight

Live-Cell Imaging Market size was valued at USD 2.36 Billion in 2020 and is projected to reach USD 4.24 Billion by 2028, growing at a CAGR of 7.47% from 2021 to 2028.

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Scope of the report

This report aims to provide a comprehensive view of the Global Live-Cell Imaging Market, with quantitative and qualitative analysis to help readers develop business/growth strategies, assess the competitive market situation, analyze their current market position and make informed business decisions regarding Live-Cell Imaging.

The size, estimates and forecasts of the Live-Cell Imaging market are presented in terms of revenue (in millions of US dollars), taking into account 2021 as the base year, with historical and forecast data for the period from 2017 to 2028. This report comprehensively segments the Global Live-Cell Imaging Market. Regional market sizes related to products by type, applications and participants are also presented. The impact of COVID-19 and the Russian-Ukrainian war was taken into account when assessing the size of the markets.

For a deeper understanding of the market, the report presents profiles of the competitive environment, the main competitors and their respective positions in the market. The report also examines technological trends and new product developments.

The report will help Live-Cell Imaging companies, newcomers and companies associated with the industry chain in this market to provide revenue information for the entire market and sub-segments of various segments by company, product type, application and region.

Key companies and market share

In this section, readers will get acquainted with the main participants of the competition. This report examined key growth strategies such as innovation trends and developments, product range expansion, mergers and acquisitions, collaboration, innovation in new products and geographical expansion undertaken by these participants to maintain their presence. In addition to business strategies, the study includes current events and key financial indicators. Readers will also have access to data on global corporate turnover for the period 2017-2022. This comprehensive report will certainly help clients stay up to date and make effective decisions in their companies.

Some of the main participants reviewed in the research report include:

Market segmentation of Live-Cell Imaging market:

Live-Cell Imaging market is divided by type and application. For the period 2021-2028, cross-segment growth provides accurate calculations and forecasts of sales by Type and Application in terms of volume and value. This analysis can help you grow your business by targeting qualified niche markets.

Live-Cell Imaging Market, By Product

Instruments Consumables Software

Live-Cell Imaging Market, By Application

Drug Discovery Developmental Biology Cell Biology Stem Cell Biology

Live-Cell Imaging Market, By End User

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

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Live-Cell Imaging Market Report Scope

Regional Perspectives

This section of the report provides key information about the various regions and the main players operating in each region. Economic, social, environmental, technological and political factors were taken into account when assessing the growth of the region/country in question. Readers will also learn about the income of each region and country for the period 2017-2028.

The market has been segmented into several major geographic regions, including North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, South America, the Middle East and Africa. A detailed analysis of the main countries, such as the USA, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, France, China, Japan, South Korea, Southeast Asia and India, will be considered in the regional segment. For market estimates, data will be provided for 2021 in connection with the base year, with estimates for 2022 and revenue forecast for 2028.

Middle East and Africa (GCC countries and Egypt)North America (USA, Mexico and Canada)South America (Brazil, etc.)Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia, Great Britain, Italy, France, etc.)Asia-Pacific region (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia and Australia)

Table of Contents

Report Overview:It includes major players of the global Live-Cell Imaging Market covered in the research study, research scope, and Market segments by type, market segments by application, years considered for the research study, and objectives of the report.

Global Growth Trends:This section focuses on industry trends where market drivers and top market trends are shed light upon. It also provides growth rates of key producers operating in the global Live-Cell Imaging Market. Furthermore, it offers production and capacity analysis where marketing pricing trends, capacity, production, and production value of the global Live-Cell Imaging Market are discussed.

Market Share by Manufacturers:Here, the report provides details about revenue by manufacturers, production and capacity by manufacturers, price by manufacturers, expansion plans, mergers and acquisitions, and products, market entry dates, distribution, and market areas of key manufacturers.

Market Size by Type:This section concentrates on product type segments where production value market share, price, and production market share by product type are discussed.

Market Size by Application:Besides an overview of the global Live-Cell Imaging Market by application, it gives a study on the consumption in the global Live-Cell Imaging Market by application.

Production by Region:Here, the production value growth rate, production growth rate, import and export, and key players of each regional market are provided.

Consumption by Region:This section provides information on the consumption in each regional market studied in the report. The consumption is discussed on the basis of country, application, and product type.

Company Profiles:Almost all leading players of the global Live-Cell Imaging Market are profiled in this section. The analysts have provided information about their recent developments in the global Live-Cell Imaging Market, products, revenue, production, business, and company.

Market Forecast by Production:The production and production value forecasts included in this section are for the global Live-Cell Imaging Market as well as for key regional markets.

Market Forecast by Consumption:The consumption and consumption value forecasts included in this section are for the global Live-Cell Imaging Market as well as for key regional markets.

Value Chain and Sales Analysis:It deeply analyzes customers, distributors, sales channels, and value chain of the global Live-Cell Imaging Market.

To Gain More Insights into the Market Analysis, Browse Summary of the Research Report @https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/product/live-cell-imaging-market/

Visualize Anesthesia Delivery Systems Market using Verified Market Intelligence:-

Verified Market Intelligence is our BI-enabled platform for narrative storytelling of this market. VMI offers in-depth forecasted trends and accurate Insights on over 20,000+ emerging & niche markets, helping you make critical revenue-impacting decisions for a brilliant future.

VMI provides a holistic overview and global competitive landscape with respect to Region, Country, and Segment, and Key players of your market. Present your Market Report & findings with an inbuilt presentation feature saving over 70% of your time and resources for Investor, Sales & Marketing, R&D, and Product Development pitches. VMI enables data delivery In Excel and Interactive PDF formats with over 15+ Key Market Indicators for your market.

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Verified Market Research is the Globals leading research and consulting firm serving more than 5,000 clients. Verified market research provides advanced analytical research solutions, offering research enriched with information. We offer information about strategic analysis and growth, data needed to achieve business goals, and important revenue decisions.

Our 250 analysts and representatives of small and medium-sized businesses have a high level of knowledge in the field of data collection and management. They use industrial methods to collect and analyze data in more than 15,000 highly efficient niches and markets. Our analysts are trained to combine modern data collection methods, excellent research methodologies, years of collective experience and expertise to conduct informative and accurate research.

We study more than 14 categories of semiconductors and electronics, chemicals, advanced materials, aerospace and defense industries, energy and consumables, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, Automotive and Transportation, Information and Communication Technologies, software and services, information security, mining, minerals and metals, construction, agricultural industry and medical equipment from in more than 100 countries.

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Live-Cell Imaging Market Size And Forecast To 2022 |GE Healthcare, Olympus Corporation, Danaher Corporation, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Sartorius...

2022 Hettleman Prizes awarded to four exceptional early-career faculty – UNC Research – UNC Research

The annual Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Prizes for Artistic and Scholarly Achievement have been awarded to four promising faculty members who exemplify groundbreaking and innovative research along with future career promise.

The late Phillip Hettleman, a member of the Carolina class of 1921, and his wife Ruth established their prestigious named award in 1986 to recognize the achievements of outstanding junior faculty. The recipients of the $5,000 prize will be recognized at an upcoming Faculty Council Meeting, and will deliver a presentation on their research during University Research Week.

This years Hettleman Prize awardees are: Danielle Christmas, associate professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature within the College of Arts and Sciences; Yuliya Pylayeva-Gupta, associate professor in the Department of Genetics within the School of Medicine; Seth A. Berkowitz, assistant professor in the Department of Medicine within the School of Medicine; and Frank Leibfarth, assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry within the College.

Danielle Christmas

Danielle Christmas studies twentieth- and twenty-first century American literature and is an author of the forthcoming book, Plantation Predators & Nazi Monsters in American Fiction and Film, and a book-in-progress titled, The Literature of Blood and Soil: White Nationalism and a New American Canon.

Danielles contributions to these literary studies are innovative and groundbreaking, says Jeanne Moskal, professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature. Her research speaks decisively not only to specialists in her field but also to non-specialists and the general public.

In her letter of nomination for Christmas, Moskal goes on to say her comparative approach to this subject is groundbreaking. Christmas recovers and analyzes historical Black experiences and texts on their own terms, but also places these experiences and texts in a comparative frame to understand their further ramifications.

In addition to her two books, Christmas has published eight substantive peer-reviewed scholarly articles, an entry for a reference book, and an article which appeared in The New Republic.

She earned her doctorate in English literature from the University of Illinois at Chicago and her bachelors in English literature from Washington University in St. Louis.

Yuliya Pylayeva-Gupta

Yuliya Pylayeva-Guptas research is focused on pancreatic cancer, specifically pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), which is one of the deadliest and most difficult to treat of all cancers. She is a member of the UNC Lineberger Cancer Comprehensive Center (LCCC) and is internationally recognized in her field.

Pylayeva-Guptas research is aimed at reversing the immunosuppressive pancreatic cancer tumor microenvironment. She is making strides in understanding how the immune system is subverted to aid pancreatic cancer growth, metastasis, and insensitivity to immunotherapy.

In a joint nomination letter for Pylayeva-Gupta, Director of LCCC Shelton Earp says, She has done a remarkable job laying the groundwork for success in all aspects of her role as a faculty member. She has distinguished herself scientifically, devising important and timely research directions in a deadly disease which is increasing in incidence. She has built her laboratory team with talented trainees who she has mentored effectively, paying attention to their personal and professional development. She is an effective educator and a caring mentor.

Pylayeva-Gupta has published seven peer-reviewed research articles on work done in her lab at UNC-Chapel Hill, as well as two reviews and one invited editorial. She also has two research articles in press at Cell Reports Medicine and at Nature.

She earned her doctorate in cell biology and genetics at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York and her bachelors in biological chemistry and Russian language and literature at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.

Seth A. Berkowitz

Seth A. Berkowitzs research examining and addressing health-related social needs is having an impact in social medicine and is inspiring faculty and students at UNC-Chapel Hill to consider that, in many cases, the most important root causes of health are social and economic.

Throughout over 50 peer-reviewed original research publications, Berkowitz has moved from epidemiologic studies of food insecurity to designing and testing innovative interventions to address it. His work has been published in high-impact journals and has had a real impact on nutrition and health policy.

At the end of the day, medicine in America is political, and Seth is representing UNC at highly visible venues, and doing it effectively, says Janet Rubin, professor and vice chair for research in the Department of Medicine. We are very proud of his work, especially as it goes some way towards improving the health of our citizens.

Berkowitz earned his MD from the UNC School of Medicine, his bachelors in public policy analysis and psychology from UNC-Chapel Hill, and his MPH in clinical effectiveness from Harvard School of Public Health.

Frank Leibfarth

Frank Leibfarth studies polymer stereochemistry and functionalization fields that he has advanced using fundamental principles of reactivity to overturn decades-old beliefs and expand the definition of what is possible in the design of next-generation sustainable and functional materials.

Leibfarth has pioneered three innovative research programs in his group, one of which focuses on the remediation of toxic PFAS chemicals from water in North Carolina, for which he recently received a $10 million allocation in the 2021-2022 state budget.

He is listed as a coauthor on over 42 peer-reviewed manuscripts, and regularly collaborates with organic chemists, computer scientists, environmental engineers, materials scientists, and mechanical engineers.

Quite simply, Professor Leibfarth is one of the most creative, fearless, and talented young scientists of his generation, says Wei You, professor and chair of the Department of Chemistry. I strongly contend that he is and will continue to be one of the most important chemists of his generation.

Leibfarth earned his doctorate in chemistry and biochemistry at the University of California Santa Barbara and his bachelors in chemistry and physics from the University of South Dakota.

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2022 Hettleman Prizes awarded to four exceptional early-career faculty - UNC Research - UNC Research

Lipids, lipids everywhere! – ASBMB Today

Lipids not only taste delicious (at least in our opinion) but are the major components of biological membranes and play essential roles in most aspects of human biology. In fact, if we look closely at the lipids and membranes of eukaryotes and prokaryotes, we see they contribute to fundamental roles in compartmentalizing cells, stress responses, metabolism, gene regulation, inflammation, and activating both cell protective and cell destructive mechanisms.

As such, the study of lipids and membranes remains a critical and emerging area for cutting-edge research one that has great potential to impact human health and the understanding and treatment of diseases.

Our symposia at Discover BMB, the annual meeting of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, in Seattle in March will bring together leading investigators in lipid metabolism and membrane function in replication of microorganisms and viruses, communicate novel protein structural information in lipid metabolism and transport, and promote the understanding of membrane structure and biophysics in cell physiology.

Keywords: Enzyme regulation, lipid droplets, lipid domains, membrane structure and tension, sphingolipids, infectious disease.

Who should attend: Lipid and membrane enthusiasts and anyone interested in learning more about lipid metabolism, lipidprotein interactions or membrane structure.

Theme song: Insane in the Membrane by Cypress Hill.

This session is powered by Hass avocados, rich in healthy fats.

New roles for lipids in microorganisms and virusesMichael Airola (chair), Stony Brook UniversityRobert V. Stahelin,Purdue UniversityElizabeth Johnson,Cornell UniversityEric A. Klein,Rutgers UniversityCamdenNihal AltanBonnett,National Institutes of Health

Molecular insight into lipid metabolism and transportAbdou Rachid Thiam (chair), Centre national de la recherche scientifique, Ecole Normale Suprieure de ParisMichael Airola,Stony Brook UniversityAngeline Lyon,Purdue UniversityEric Ortlund,Emory University School of MedicineSaskia Neher,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Membrane structure and dynamicsRobert Stahelin (chair), Purdue UniversityAbdou Rachid Thiam,Centre national de la recherche scientifique, Ecole Normale Suprieure de ParisSarah Keller,University of WashingtonSuzanne Scarlata,Worcester Polytechnic InstituteIlya Leventhal,University of Virginia

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Lipids, lipids everywhere! - ASBMB Today