Category Archives: Cell Biology

Live Cell Imaging Market size, trends, global industry report to 2019-2025 made possible by top research firm – WhaTech

Global Live Cell Imaging Market Size, Share & Trends Analysis Report by Product (Instruments, Consumables, and Software & Services), By Application (Stem Cells, Drug Discovery, Cell Biology, and Others), By End-User (Pharmaceutical & Biotechnology Companies, Research Institutes, and Contract Research Organizations) and Forecast 2019-2025

The global market for live cell imaging is estimated to have a CAGR of around 8.7% during the forecast period. The market is mainly driven due to growing prevalence of cancer, increasing application of high content screening and cell culture in drug discovery.

Cancer is one of the fatal diseases increasing rapidly across the globe. Cancer involves the development of abnormal cells which spread on mammoth scale and have potential to destroy other normal cells.

Therefore, early diagnosis and on time replacement of affected cells plays a significant role in the treatment of cancer. Live cell imaging technology is being used widely in the form of models to investigate disease mechanism and to develop therapies.

The models based on live cell imaging technology generates biological information in order to facilitate medical solutions promising preclinical drugs. Across the globe, there is a rise in the cancer patients each year.

According to the WHO, cancer was considered to be the second leading cause of mortalities in the year 2018. It is also estimated that 1 out of 6 deaths was due to cancer, therefore growing cancer across the globe further propels the market growth.

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Segmental Outlook

The global live cell imaging market is segmented based on product, application and end-user. Based on the product, the market is further classified into instruments, consumables, and software & services.

The instruments segment is projected to have considerable share owing to the high application of microscopes in various live cell imaging and technological advancements in the live cell imaging instruments. Based on the application, the global live cell imaging market is further segmented into stem cells, drug discovery, cell biology, and others.

The stem cells application segment is projected to hold considerable growth during the forecast period owing to growing investment in the stem cell research activities. On the basis of end-user the market is further segregated into pharmaceutical & biotechnology companies, research institutes, and contract research organizations (CRO).

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Market Segmentation

Global Live Cell Imaging Market by Product

Global Live Cell Imaging Market by Application

Global Live Cell Imaging Market by End-User

Regional Analysis

North America

Europe

Asia-Pacific

Rest of the World

Company Profiles

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Live Cell Imaging Market size, trends, global industry report to 2019-2025 made possible by top research firm - WhaTech

Dartmouth Professor Prachee Avasthi Wins National Award in Cell Biology – India New England

HANOVER, NHPrachee Avasthi, an associate professor of biochemistry and cell biology atthe Geisel School of Medicineand one of the medical schools newest faculty members, has received the 2020 Women in Cell Biology Junior Award for Excellence in Research from the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB).

The prestigious award is given each year to a woman in an early stage of her career who is making exceptional scientific contributions to cell biology, is developing a strong independent research program, and exhibits the potential for continuing at a high level of scientific endeavor and leadership.

Established in 1961, the ASCB is an inclusive, international community of biologists studying the cell as the fundamental unit of life. Now with more than 9,000 members worldwide, the organization is dedicated to advancing scientific discovery, advocating sound research policies, improving education, promoting professional development, and increasing diversity in the scientific workforce. More than 30 past or current ASCB members have won Nobel Prizes in medicine or chemistry.

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Dartmouth Professor Prachee Avasthi Wins National Award in Cell Biology - India New England

Magenta Therapeutics to Participate in Upcoming Healthcare Investor Conferences in September – Business Wire

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Magenta Therapeutics (NASDAQ: MGTA), a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing novel medicines to bring the curative power of immune reset to more patients, today announced that the company will participate in the following September investor conferences:

Live webcasts can be accessed on the Magenta Therapeutics website at https://investor.magentatx.com/events-and-presentations. The webcast replays will be available for 90 days following each event.

About Magenta Therapeutics

Magenta Therapeutics is a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing medicines to bring the curative power of immune system reset through stem cell transplant to more patients with autoimmune diseases, genetic diseases and blood cancers. Magenta is combining leadership in stem cell biology and biotherapeutics development with clinical and regulatory expertise, a unique business model and broad networks in the stem cell transplant world to revolutionize immune reset for more patients.

Magenta is based in Cambridge, Mass. For more information, please visit http://www.magentatx.com.

Follow Magenta on Twitter: @magentatx.

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Magenta Therapeutics to Participate in Upcoming Healthcare Investor Conferences in September - Business Wire

Russia published the results of its COVID-19 vaccine and they dont live up to the hype – The Next Web

President Vladimir Putin recently announced that a team of Russian scientists had developed a COVID-19 vaccine and that it had been approved for use by the regulators at least, in Russia.

However, the announcement caused consternation among scientists and clinicians in the rest of the world as human trials for the vaccine nicknamed Sputnik V had only started a couple of months before Putins announcement.

The results of the phase one and two human trials of this vaccine have just been published in The Lancet. So what have we learned?

First, lets look at what type of vaccine this is. The vaccine platform used in this study used adenoviruses. These common cold viruses, called Ad5 and Ad26, are made safe and are incapable of growing in the body. They only function to deliver the genetic code of one of the novel coronavirus proteins, called the spike protein, into a cell.

By injecting people with these modified adenoviruses, the immune system is stimulated to respond to the spike protein at the time of immunization, and hopefully to respond for many years in the future, if the immunized person is exposed to the COVID-causing coronavirus, known as SARS-CoV-2.

[Read: These tech trends defined 2020 so far, according to 5 founders]

The vaccine platform the Russians are using is not novel. Some of the leading COVID-19 vaccines use adenoviruses, including the Oxford University vaccine and an Ad26 vaccine developed by Johnson and Johnson. Following successful animal trials, both are now being tested in humans. CanSino Biologicals, a Chinese company, has also shown that its Ad5 vaccine is safe and induces immunity against the coronavirus in humans.

However, the Russian group has shown that their stable, freeze-dried preparation of the vaccine works to the same extent as their frozen liquid vaccine preparation. This is important for shipping and deploying a vaccine.

The Lancet paper outlines acceptable safety data, even with the high dose used. These safety results are not unexpected as the safety of several adenovirus-based vaccines for different diseases has been demonstrated in earlier research.

So its safe, at least in healthy people aged 18 to 60, but does it work does it protect against COVID-19?

The Russian group showed that their vaccine induces high levels of antibodies that can bind to the spike protein. But a more important measure is the level of antibodies that are functional. That is, can the antibodies prevent, or neutralize, infection of a virus into a cell?

The levels of neutralizing antibodies were quite low in this study, compared with other published vaccine trials. So too were the T cell responses (the other arm of the immune systems adaptive response).

One interpretation of this is that these vaccines do not induce good neutralizing protection. Alternatively, the methods used to measure these immune responses may not have been optimal. In the absence of international reference standards, we cant tell if this vaccine is better or worse compared with others.

Crucially, as with other COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials, we dont know if that level of neutralization is enough to protect from infection and how long these antibodies remain in the blood. The publication shows responses only up to one month after immunization. The ultimate question of whether these vaccinated people are protected against COVID-19 was not a focus of this paper.

Despite the positive results of the small phase one trial of the Sputnik V vaccine, it needs to be tested in a much larger group of people before it can be used on an entire population with confidence.

All vaccines need to be tested in large numbers of people, of different ages and ethnicities, in phase three clinical trials. Phase three trials are necessary to gain a high level of confidence that the vaccine protects against infection. They also help to tease out rare side effects that may not be evident in a small group of healthy volunteers. This final stage of testing is not one that can or should be left out.

Unfortunately, the Sputnik moniker highlights the politicization of earnest scientific and medical efforts to develop vaccines against COVID-19. This vaccine nationalism is a source of much concern for everyone in the vaccine field who understands the power of vaccines to eliminate the disease, but only when used with the acceptance of the population.

This article is republished from The Conversation by Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry and Cell Biology, University College Cork under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Read next: The UKs first EV-only service station set to open soon

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Russia published the results of its COVID-19 vaccine and they dont live up to the hype - The Next Web

A Microbiology and Human Disease Professor’s Perspective on COVID-19 – The Journal

It appears as if much of the information about the novel coronavirus pandemic is muddled with political bias, unsubstantiated claims, limited amounts or improper usage of research and even conspiracy theories. One finds great difficulty deciding which information to trust, and from which sources. While it is important to be able to fact-check and discern these things on ones own, the likelihood of finding objective information with a high level of veracity increases in direct proportion to the scientific credentials of the source. The Journal staff reached out to Dr. Noah Reynolds, Assistant Professor in the Department of Biology at UIS, for his perspective on the matter.

UIS Journal: What is your .job description?

Noah Reynolds: I teach courses in cell biology, introductory biology, microbiology, and human disease. I also work with students in the research laboratory investigating microbial protein synthesis.

UIS Journal: Can you discuss how you helped with COVID-19 testing and mitigation efforts, [and] what that was like?

NR: I was asked by the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dr. Lemke, to provide input on safety and disinfecting protocols that were being assembled. It is nice to get to put some of your expertise to use for the safety of the university, even if just in a very small wayThis was one of the great things that was happening. There is a lot of expertise at the university and everyone was happy to help as much as they could.

UIS Journal: Microphysiologically speaking, how do people become infected with COVID-19?

NR: A protein located on the SARS-CoV-2 viral particle called the spike protein engages with a protein, known as ACE2, on host cells. The interaction between the spike protein and ACE2 begins the process of the virus entering into the host cell. It appears that the ACE2 protein is expressed highly on cells of the respiratory tract, cornea, and gastrointestinal tract. It is important to stress that other factors are known to be important for viral entry into cells and we are really just starting to understand how the infection takes place.

UIS Journal: I heard that, while antibodies may not last very long, people can stay protected anyway. How does COVID-19 immunity work, and why dont we need antibodies to stay protected?

NR: Antibodies are only one part of our bodys response that protects us from a pathogen. Our adaptive immune system also includes B-cells and T-cells. These cells can provide us with immunological memory, and a second exposure to the pathogen activates the memory response. This provides us with protection if we ever encounter a pathogen again.

UIS Journal: Is there anything you wish people knew about COVID-19, or anything relating to the pandemic?

NR: We dont know the long-term effect of COVID-19. We are just starting to learn about heart damage and neurological consequences but it will be years before we really understand the long-term health problems that could be associated with COVID-19.

As Dr. Reynolds stated, it is hard to know what the future will hold regarding the novel coronavirus. Each month seems to hold new or ever-changing information, one prime example being the efficacy and importance of mask-wearing. The best option is to fact-check all information, learn to distinguish between reputable and disreputable sources, think critically for oneself, stay updated on the legislation, follow the appropriate CDC and local guidelines, mitigate risk, and stay prepared.

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A Microbiology and Human Disease Professor's Perspective on COVID-19 - The Journal

Dr. Ma on First- and Second-Generation BTK Inhibitors in B-Cell Malignancies – OncLive

Shuo Ma, MD, PhD, highlights ongoing research withBTK inhibitors in B-cell malignancies.

Shuo Ma, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine (hematology and oncology), Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, highlights ongoing research withBTK inhibitors in B-cell malignancies.

Currently, the BTK inhibitorsibrutinib (Imbruvica), acalabrutinib (Calquence), and zanubrutinib (Brukinsa)have indications in chronic lymphocytic leukemia, mantle cell lymphoma, and Waldenstrm macroglobulinemia,says Ma. Ibrutinib is a first-generation BTK inhibitor, whereas acalabrutinib and zanubrutinib are second-generation BTK inhibitors.

Ibrutinib inhibits the BTK enzyme, which is a critical component of B-cell biology, survival, and proliferation. However, ibrutinibaffects other tyrosine kinases, such as EGFR, Ma explains.

As a result, patients may experience off-target toxicities with ibrutinib, adds Ma.

Although head-to-head clinical trials are needed, acalabrutinib and zanubrutinib may elicit less toxicity compared with ibrutinib as the agents are more selective,Ma concludes.

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Dr. Ma on First- and Second-Generation BTK Inhibitors in B-Cell Malignancies - OncLive

Track Etched Membrane Market: Information, Figures and Analytical Insights 2018 2026 – Scientect

Global Track Etched Membrane Market was valued US$330.97 Mn in 2017 and is estimated to reach US$847.98 Mn by 2026 at a CAGR of 11.02%.

Track-etched membrane market is segmented by product type, material, application, end user, and region. Based on product type, track etched membrane market is classified by a membrane filter, capsule & cartridge filter, and cell culture insert. Membrane filter segment is expected to hold the largest share of the market during the forecast period due to the applicability of membrane filters in final filtration, sample preparation, filtration of aqueous and organic solutions. In terms of application, track etched membrane market is divided by cell biology, micrology, analytical testing, and others. Cell biology is estimated to hold the largest market of the track-etched membrane during the forecast period due to rising applications in pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries for research. On basis of the end user, track etched membrane market is segmented by food & beverage, academic & research institute, pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries, and others. Pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries are estimated to hold the largest share of the market in forecast period due to rising manufacturing of generic drugs and growing research of the developments of biological molecules.

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

In terms of region, North America estimated to holds largest share of the track etched membrane market in forecast period due to rising adoption of laboratory equipments and growing health & environmental concerns. Followed by Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and Middle East & Africa.

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Key players studies, analyzed, profiled and benchmarked in track etched membrane market are GE Healthcare, Danaher, Corning, Merck, it4ip, Sterlitech, Oxyphen, Sarstedt, BRAND GMBH, Sartorius, SABEU, Zefon International, GVS, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Eaton, Greiner Bio-One, MaCHEREY-NAGEL, Avanti Lipids Polar, SKC, Advantec, Avestin, Scaffdex, Merck KGaA, and Graver Technologies.Scope of Report Track Etched Membrane Market:Global Track Etched Membrane Market, by Product Type:Membrane filterCapsule & cartridge filterCell culture insertGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by Material:PolycarbonatePolyimideGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by Application:Cell biologyMicrologyAnalytical testingOthersGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by End User:Food & beverageAcademic & research institutePharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industriesOthersGlobal Track Etched Membrane Market, by Region:North AmericaEuropeAsia PacificMiddle East & AfricaLatin AmericaKey Players in Global Track Etched Membrane Market:GE HealthcareDanaherCorningMerckit4ipSterlitechOxyphenSarstedtBRAND GMBHSartoriusSABEUZefon InternationalGVSThermo Fisher ScientificEatonGreiner Bio-OneMaCHEREY-NAGELAvanti Lipids PolarSKCAdvantecAvestinScaffdexMerck KGaAGraver Technologies

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Track Etched Membrane Market: Information, Figures and Analytical Insights 2018 2026 - Scientect

Latest Update 2020: Cell Imagers Market by COVID19 Impact Analysis And Top Manufacturers: ZEISS International, Leica Microsystems, GE Healthcare,…

Cell ImagersMarket research report provides various levels of analysis such as industry analysis (industry trends), market share analysis of top players, and company profiles, which together provide an overall view on the competitive landscape; emerging and high-growth segments of the Cell Imagersmarket; high-growth regions; and market drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities.

The Cell Imagersmarket report elaborates insights on the Market Diversification (Exhaustive information about new products, untapped regions, and recent developments), Competitive Assessment (In-depth assessment of market shares, strategies, products, and manufacturing capabilities of leading players in the Cell Imagersmarket).

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Market segmentation based on the Key Players, Types & Applications.

Cell ImagersMarket on the basis of Product Type:Equipment, Consumables, Software

Cell ImagersMarket on the basis of Applications:Cell Biology, Stem Cells, Developmental Biology, Drug Discovery

Top Key Players in Cell Imagersmarket: ZEISS International, Leica Microsystems, GE Healthcare, Thermo Fisher Scientific

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Latest Update 2020: Cell Imagers Market by COVID19 Impact Analysis And Top Manufacturers: ZEISS International, Leica Microsystems, GE Healthcare,...

University subject profile: biosciences – The Guardian

What youll learnThe biosciences are a wide field including human biology, bioinformatics, botany, zoology, genetics, microbiology and biochemistry. What youll learn depends on how you decide to specialise you could learn the fundamentals of cell biology, the computer skills needed to understand protein sequences, or the mating habits of an orangutan.

Youll know how to research information, how to apply it and how to use specialist equipment. And youll develop an understanding of the ethical considerations associated with your field of study.

How youll learnYoull spend a lot of your time in the laboratory doing practical work, and most courses require students to conduct their own research. There will probably be group projects, so youll learn how to work in a team. Chances are youll be taught by those at the cutting edge of research. Assessment will involve a mix of coursework, projects and exams.

Some courses offer a year in industry a good way of building your CV.

Entry requirementsUniversities are likely to expect biology at A-level or equivalent, and sometimes chemistry. They may also ask for an additional science or maths (or further maths or pure maths). Course requirements will likely range from CCC to AAA. You may be required to attend an interview and give a short presentation on a topic in your field of study.

What job can you get?Lots of jobs are suited to biosciences graduates, but if you want to work as a scientist youll need to do further study at postgraduate level. If you want to specialise, your degree should give you the skills to turn your hand to forensic science, immunology and toxicology, to name but a few. You could then find suitable research posts in the public and private sector particularly in industry or in academia. According to Ucas, many biosciences graduates end up in the health and social care sector, and in education.

But the skills you acquire will also qualify you for jobs outside the lab. Work can be found in local and central government, in NGOs, doing conservation work, and in teaching.

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University subject profile: biosciences - The Guardian

Russian coronavirus vaccine results have been published heres what they reveal – Australian Times

Anne Moore, University College Cork

President Vladimir Putin recently announced that a team of Russian scientists had developed a COVID-19 vaccine and that it had been approved for use by the regulators at least, in Russia.

However, the announcement caused consternation among scientists and clinicians in the rest of the world as human trials for the vaccine nicknamed Sputnik V had only started a couple of months before Putins announcement.

The results of the phase one and two human trials of this vaccine have just been published in The Lancet. So what have we learned?

First, lets look at what type of vaccine this is. The vaccine platform used in this study used adenoviruses. These common cold viruses, called Ad5 and Ad26, are made safe and are incapable of growing in the body. They only function to deliver the genetic code of one of the novel coronavirus proteins, called the spike protein, into a cell.

By injecting people with these modified adenoviruses, the immune system is stimulated to respond to the spike protein at the time of immunisation, and hopefully to respond for many years in the future, if the immunised person is exposed to the COVID-causing coronavirus, known as SARS-CoV-2.

The vaccine platform the Russians are using is not novel. Some of the leading COVID-19 vaccines use adenoviruses, including the Oxford University vaccine and an Ad26 vaccine developed by Johnson and Johnson. Following successful animal trials, both are now being tested in humans. CanSino Biologicals, a Chinese company, has also shown that its Ad5 vaccine is safe and induces immunity against the coronavirus in humans.

However, the Russian group has shown that their stable, freeze-dried preparation of the vaccine works to the same extent as their frozen liquid vaccine preparation. This is important for shipping and deploying a vaccine.

The Lancet paper outlines acceptable safety data, even with the high dose used. These safety results are not unexpected as the safety of several adenovirus-based vaccines for different diseases has been demonstrated in earlier research.

So its safe, at least in healthy people aged 18 to 60, but does it work does it protect against COVID-19?

The Russian group showed that their vaccine induces high levels of antibodies that can bind to the spike protein. But a more important measure is the level of antibodies that are functional. That is, can the antibodies prevent, or neutralise, infection of a virus into a cell?

The levels of neutralising antibodies were quite low in this study, compared with other published vaccine trials. So too were the T cell responses (the other arm of the immune systems adaptive response).

One interpretation of this is that these vaccines do not induce good neutralising protection. Alternatively, the methods used to measure these immune responses may not have been optimal. In the absence of international reference standards, we cant tell if this vaccine is better or worse compared with others.

Crucially, as with other COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials, we dont know if that level of neutralisation is enough to protect from infection and how long these antibodies remain in the blood. The publication shows responses only up to one month after immunisation. The ultimate question of whether these vaccinated people are protected against COVID-19 was not a focus of this paper.

Despite the positive results of the small phase one trial of the Sputnik V vaccine, it needs to be tested in a much larger group of people before it can be used on an entire population with confidence.

All vaccines need to be tested in large numbers of people, of different ages and ethnicities, in phase three clinical trials. Phase three trials are necessary to gain a high level of confidence that the vaccine protects against infection. They also help to tease out rare side effects that may not be evident in a small group of healthy volunteers. This final stage of testing is not one that can or should be left out.

Unfortunately, the Sputnik moniker highlights the politicisation of earnest scientific and medical efforts to develop vaccines against COVID-19. This vaccine nationalism is a source of much concern for everyone in the vaccine field who understands the power of vaccines to eliminate disease, but only when used with the acceptance of the population.

Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry and Cell Biology, University College Cork

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Russian coronavirus vaccine results have been published heres what they reveal - Australian Times