Category Archives: Cell Biology

Global Laser Capture Microdissection Market 2019 | How The Industry Will Witness Substantial Growth In The Upcoming Years | Exclusive Report By…

Global Laser Capture Microdissection Marketis expected to rise from its initial estimated value of USD 101.3611 million in 2018 to an estimated value of USD 251.14 million by 2026, registering a CAGR of 12.01% in the forecast period of 2019-2026. This rise in market value can be attributed to the increasing applications in pharmaceuticals, hospitals and research and development

Few of the major competitors currently working in the Laser Capture Microdissection market areMolecular Machines & Industries(Germany), Danaher (U.S.) , Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. (U.S.), ZEISS International(Germany) , DENOVA Sciences Pte Ltd. (Singapore.), Indivumed GmbH(Germany), AvanSci Bio (US), Avant Diagnostics, Inc.(US), Ocimum Biosolutions (India), 3DHISTECH Ltd.( Hungary), Biocompare (Canada)., BioTechniques(UK), MIA Cellavie Inc. (Canada), CaresBio Laboratory LLC (US), Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc.(US), genedrive plc (UK), Promega Corporation(US), VitroVivo Biotech(India) and Precision MicroFab LLC (US) among others.

Get Sample Copy Of This Report @https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/request-a-sample/?dbmr=global-laser-capture-microdissection-market

Queries Resolved In This Report:

Key Developments in the Market:

Segmentation: Global Laser Capture Microdissection Market

By Product

(Consumables, Reagents and Media, Assay kits, Other consumables, Instruments, Software and Services),

System type

(Ultraviolet lcm, Infrared lcm, Ultraviolet and Infrared lcm, Immunofluorescence lcm),

Application

(research and development, molecular biology, cell biology, forensic science, diagnostics, other applications),

End user

(Academic and Government Research Institutes, Hospitals, Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology companies, Contract Research Organizations (CROS)),

Geography

(North America, South America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East and Africa)

Market Drivers

Market Restraints

To know more about the[emailprotected]https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/reports/global-laser-capture-microdissection-market

AboutData Bridge Market Research

An absolute way to forecast what future holds is to comprehend the trend today!

Data Bridge set forth itself as an unconventional and neoteric Market research and consulting firm with unparalleled level of resilience and integrated approaches. We are determined to unearth the best market opportunities and foster efficient information for your business to thrive in the market. Data Bridge endeavors to provide appropriate solutions to the complex business challenges and initiates an effortless decision-making process.

Data bridge is an aftermath of sheer wisdom and experience which was formulated and framed in the year 2015 in Pune. We ponder into the heterogeneous markets in accord with our clients needs and scoop out the best possible solutions and detailed information about the market trends. Data Bridge delve into the markets across Asia, North America, South America, Africa to name few.

Data Bridge adepts in creating satisfied clients who reckon upon our services and rely on our hard work with certitude. We are content with our glorious 99.9 % client satisfying rate.

Contact:Data Bridge Market ResearchTel: +1-888-387-2818Email:[emailprotected]

Read the rest here:
Global Laser Capture Microdissection Market 2019 | How The Industry Will Witness Substantial Growth In The Upcoming Years | Exclusive Report By...

Molecular Structure of LRRK2 Gives Clues to Parkinson’s – Alzforum

28 Aug 2020

For the first time, researchers have solved the molecular structure of LRRK2, a major risk factor for Parkinsons and autoimmune diseases. Structural biologists at the University of California, San Diego, used innovative methods to provide two complementary views of the molecule. In the August 7 Cell, researchers led by Elizabeth Villa described the three-dimensional architecture of full-length, pathogenic LRRK2 inside cells. The protein formed filaments that corkscrewed around microtubules. Researchers led by Andres Leschziner isolated a fragment of wild-type LRRK2 suitable for cryoEM. In the August 19 Nature, their high-resolution molecular maps revealed that this portion of the protein folds to bring its kinase and GTPase domains into close proximity. The finding explains previous experimental data suggesting the two domains interact.

By combining data from both studies, the research groups determined that for LRRK2 to bind microtubules, its kinase has to be in a closed, or active, conformation. Pathogenic mutations, some of which are known to increase microtubule binding, appear to bias the molecule toward this shape. Leschziner and colleagues data hint that microtubule binding could contribute to toxicity, because LRRK2 filaments impede the passage of motor proteins down these highways, potentially causing traffic jams.

LRRK2 kinase inhibitors currently being tested as PD therapeutics may also trap the protein in this closed conformation.

Microtubule Decoration. Monomers of LRRK2 (black outline) join together to form a double helix of strands (gold and blue) that wrap around microtubules (gray). Viewed down the microtubule axis, each monomer assumes the same orientation with respect to the microtubule surface (bottom). [Courtesy of Watanabe et al., Cell.]

The new structures described in these two elegant studies represent a significant step forward in our understanding of LRRK2, Dario Alessi at the University of Dundee, Scotland, wrote to Alzforum (full comment below). The data provide new insights into how pathogenic mutations might exert their effects by promoting LRRK2 to adopt a closed conformation that is able to bind microtubule filaments.

A Peek at 3-D Structures in Their Native HabitatMutations in LRRK2 account for up to 10 percent of familial PD cases. In addition, the concentration of this protein is elevated in many cases of sporadic disease, hinting at a broad role in pathology (Di Maio et al., 2018). Yet how LRRK2 contributes to Parkinsons has remained murky. Besides being a kinase and GTPase, this large protein contains many other protein interaction domains (see diagram below). LRRK2 participates in numerous cellular processes, including vesicle trafficking, cell signaling, and autophagy, prompting a plethora of hypotheses about how it might cause harm (Oct 2012 news; Mar 2013 conference news).A structural map of the protein could help researchers decipher its function, but despite years of effort, LRRK2 has stubbornly resisted crystallization.

Villa and colleagues decided to flip the challenge of mapping LRRK2 on its head. Instead of trying to purify and crystallize the protein, they reasoned, why not simply image it in place? They took advantage of the fact that pathogenic LRRK2 is known to decorate microtubules, making it easy to find and visualize within the cell. Joint first authors Reika Watanabe, Robert Buschauer, and Jan Bhning expressed fluorescently tagged LRRK2 bearing the PD mutation I2020T in a kidney cell line, froze the cells, diced them into thin sections, and located LRRK2 on microtubules by correlating light and electron microscopy. Then they tilted the sections at different angles and imaged these decorated microtubules with an electron microscope in a process known as cryo-electron tomography. CryoET constructs three-dimensional structures from sequential two-dimensional images of surfaces (Luciet al., 2008). With this technology, the authors mapped microtubule-bound LRRK2 filaments to a resolution of 14 angstroms.

Notorious Multitasker. In addition to a Ras of complex (ROC) GTPase (green), and a kinase domain (pink), LRRK2 contains many protein-protein interaction domains. The C-terminal of ROC (COR) N and C domains regulate the GTPase. These are commonly called COR-A (yellow) and COR-B (orange). [Courtesy of Watanabe et al., Cell.]

To my knowledge, this is the first time someone has solved a structure inside a cell before it could be solved with biochemistry, Villa said. We took a technologically fancy but a biochemically lazy approach.

CryoET revealed LRRK2 molecules forming a double helix around each microtubule, like the spiraling stripes of a candy cane (see image at top). In these long daisy chains of LRRK2 proteins, each bound to the one behind it through their respective WD40 domains (yes, here WD40 is a glue, not a lubricant), and to the one in front of it through their respective COR-B domains. The proteins were oriented such that their C-terminal halves, containing both catalytic domains, were located near the microtubule surface, while their N-terminal portions floated off into the cytoplasm and could not be resolved by cryoET. This orientation left the ROC GTPase domain facing the microtubule surface, and the kinase exposed to cytosol (see image below). Structural modeling suggested that the kinase was in the closed conformation, although this detail could not be resolved visually.

Dual Dimerization. Two LRRK2 monomers (left) sitting on a microtubule (outline) link via their COR domains (yellow), leaving their kinases (pink) exposed to cytosol. Their WD40 domains (red) link to adjoining monomers (gray). Rotation to show the view along the microtubule axis (right) exposes the GTPase domain (green) nestled against the microtubule surface. [Courtesy of Watanabe et al., Cell.]

Villa believes her groups approach of using cryoET to scan molecules inside cells might help crack other recalcitrant structures, as well as provide clues to what proteins are doing in their native environment and how that changes during disease. Its the beginning of a new era of bridging structural and cellular biology, Villa said.

Close Contact. The C-terminal half of LRRK2 folds to bring its kinase (orange) and GTPase (green) into proximity. Common Parkinsons mutations are well-placed to modify this contact (right). [Courtesy of Deniston et al., Nature.]

A High-Resolution Glimpse of LRRK2s Business EndFor their part, Leschziner, co-corresponding author Samara Reck-Peterson, and colleagues took a different approach. Co-first author Sebastian Mathea in Stefan Knapps lab at Goethe University in Frankfurt had expressed the C-terminal half of wild-type human LRRK2 in insect cells, and found it was amenable to purification. Co-first author Colin Deniston imaged these molecules to 3.5 angstrom resolution by cryoEM. They determined that the molecule folded into a J shape that brought the ROC GTPase into close contact with the kinase domain (see image above). Previous studies had found that GTPase activity was essential for the kinase to function, but it was unclear how these domains interacted (Ito et al., 2007; West et al., 2007). In this protein fragment, the kinase assumed its open, catalytically inactive shape.

Intriguingly, the C-terminal tail of the WD40 domain formed a long -helix that extended along the backbone of the kinase, interacting with it at several points. Noting that this -helix contains at least one phosphorylation site, Leschziner speculated that modification of this tail might help regulate the shape of the kinase, perhaps switching it on and off.

Finally, the researchers overlaid their model onto the LRRK2 filaments described by Villa and colleagues to see if the structures matched. The monomer fit relatively well, but not perfectlythe COR domains clashed against those of the neighboring LRRK2s. When Leschziner and colleagues altered their structure to model a closed kinase domain, however, these steric clashes resolved (see image below). This finding suggested that an open conformation of the kinase would prevent microtubule binding, Leschziner said.

How Do Microtubules Fit In?Whether LRRK2 gloms onto microtubules under physiological conditions is unclear. In cultured cells containing endogenous, wild-type LRRK2, the protein is not apparent on microtubules, Villa noted. However, when wild-type LRRK2 is overexpressed, it forms filaments on microtubules. In addition, five of the six most common PD mutationsI2020T, N1437H, R1441G, R1441C, and Y1699Cpromote LRRK2 filament formation.

All of these mutations supercharge kinase activity, which would compel the kinase into its closed shape. I2020T sits in the activation loop of the kinase domain, right after G2019S, the most common pathogenic LRRK2 mutation, and the other three are at the interface between the GTPase and the COR-B domain, where they would be positioned to alter communication between the kinase and GTPase (see image above). It seems that if you force LRRK2 into an active state, it binds microtubules, Villa said.

Open and Shut. In the open kinase conformation (left), the LRRK2 monomer fits poorly into the filament structure. With its kinase (orange) closed (right), it clicks into place. [Courtesy of Deniston et al., Nature.]

Reck-Petersons data suggest that microtubule binding could cause problems. Co-first author John Salogiannis combined LRRK2, microtubules, and the motor proteins kinesin and dynein in cell-free assays. The motor proteins normally walk along microtubules, ferrying cargo toward the strands plus and minus ends, respectively. However, even low nanomolar amounts of LRRK2 shortened the distance the motors were able to walk. At 25 nM LRRK2, the motors ground to a halt, unable to step over the helical LRRK2 strands in their path.

No one knows if this roadblock serves a purpose, but Leschziner noted that LRRK2 is known to phosphorylate a subset of Rab GTPases that adorn vesicles transported along microtubules by motor proteins. Possibly, transient binding of LRRK2 oligomers to microtubules could pause motors long enough for the kinase to phosphorylate Rabs and change what cargoes get transported.

What Could This Mean for Therapy?Questions about microtubule binding may be pertinent for PD therapy development. Type I kinase inhibitors trap the enzyme in its closed state, while keeping it inactive by preventing it from binding ATP. Do Type I LRRK2 inhibitors enhance microtubule binding? Deniston et al.s data suggest as much, at least in cell-free assays. The researchers added the Type I inhibitor MLi-2 to their assay along with LRRK2, and found that the inhibitor further hampered motor protein movement along microtubules. MLi-2 is a pharmaceutical tool, not a drug in development (Fell et al., 2015; Scott et al, 2017). Conversely, Type II inhibitors, including the Bcr-Abl kinase inhibitor GZD-824, which stabilize an open kinase conformation, freed the motors to move again.

Mark Cookson at the National Institute on Aging, Bethesda, Maryland, noted that this finding might help explain the apparent paradox that LRRK2 kinase inhibitors enhance the formation of filaments inside cells, just as pathogenic PD mutations do. This was particularly puzzling when considering that mutations in LRRK2 are gain-of-function, and we have thought of kinase inhibitors as potentially therapeutic, Cookson wrote (full comment below).

These data provide further insight into another potential pathological mechanism of LRRK2, and may explain some on-target toxicity of certain LRRK2 inhibitors, though more research is needed, Andrew Koemeter-Cox at the Michael J. Fox Foundation wrote to Alzforum (full comment below). Likewise, Alessi suggested investigating whether Type II inhibitors would have fewer side effects.

Denali Therapeutics has two LRRK2 inhibitors, DNL201and DNL151, in Phase 1 trials. They are both thought to be Type I. No one has yet developed LRRK2-selective Type II inhibitors, Alessi noted.

More Mysteries The scientists are pursuing other LRRK2 riddles. Leschziner and Reck-Peterson have set their sights on the structure of other mutants. Curiously, so far G2019S has not been shown to increase LRRK2 binding to microtubules in cells. Like other pathogenic PD mutations, it turns on the kinase. However, unlike them, G2019S does not increase Rab phosphorylation in cells. G2019S may contribute to disease in a different mechanistic way than the others, Leschziner suggested.

To probe LRRK2s physiological role, Villa will study endogenous LRRK2 in PD-relevant cell types, such as dopaminergic neurons and glia. In cells, the protein is more often found associated with membranes than microtubules. Does it assume a different shape when it binds membranes? Villa will recruit LRRK2 to membranes in cell culture, and combine cryoET with mass spectrometry to identify its structure and interaction partners.

Huaibin Cai at NIA believes that finding these interaction partners is crucial to deciphering what the protein does. Future studies will be needed to determine the signaling cascades that regulate the conformational changes of LRRK2 kinase domain in different subcellular compartments, as well as to identify any particular cargoes stopped and modified by LRRK2, he wrote to Alzforum (full comment below).Madolyn Bowman Rogers

View original post here:
Molecular Structure of LRRK2 Gives Clues to Parkinson's - Alzforum

Cell Imagers Market to Witness Huge Growth By 2027 | Top Manufacturers GE Healthcare, Sartorius AG, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Leica Microsystems,…

New Jersey, United States,- A recent report on Cell Imagers Market added by Verified Market Research provides a detailed analysis of the industry size, sales forecast, and geographic landscape related to this business line. Further, the report highlights key hurdles and latest growth trends which are accepted by leading players and are part of the competitive spectrum of this business.

The Cell Imagers market research report provides a comprehensive analysis of this business segment and provides essential insight into the factors influencing revenue generation as well as industry growth. Apart from the regulatory outlook, the document also includes a detailed assessment of the regional scope of the market. Further, the report includes detailed SWOT analysis and explains the driving factors of the market.

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

Additional information including limitations & challenges faced by new entrants and market players in tandem with their respective impact on the revenue generation of the companies is enumerated. The document scrutinizes the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on growth as well as future remuneration of the market.

The report covers extensive analysis of the key market players in the market, along with their business overview, expansion plans, and strategies. The key players studied in the report include:

The report provides valuable insights about the advancements of the Cell Imagers market and the approaches regarding the Cell Imagers market with analysis of each region. The report further talks about the dominant aspects of the market and explores each segment.

Other details specified in the Cell Imagers market report:

Global Cell Imagers Market, By Product

Equipment Consumables Software

Global Cell Imagers Market, By Application

Drug Discovery Developmental Biology Cell Biology Stem Cell Biology

Global Cell Imagers Market, By End User

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

To understand the Cell Imagers market dynamics, the market is analyzed across major global regions and countries. Verified Market Research provides customized specific regional and country-wise analysis of the key geographical regions as follows:

North America:USA, Canada, Mexico

Latin America:Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Peru, and Rest of Latin America

Europe:UK, Germany, Spain, Italy, and Rest of EU

Asia-Pacific:India, China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and Rest of APAC

Middle East & Africa:Saudi Arabia, South Africa, U.A.E., and Rest of MEA

Comprehensive assessment of all opportunities and risks in the Cell Imagers market.

This exclusive study addresses key questions for stakeholders in the Cell Imagers Market:

Thank you for reading our report. The report is available for customization based on chapters or regions. Please get in touch with us to know more about customization options, and our team will ensure you get the report tailored according to your requirements.

About us:

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

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

Contact us:

Mr. Edwyne Fernandes

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

Email: [emailprotected]

Read more:
Cell Imagers Market to Witness Huge Growth By 2027 | Top Manufacturers GE Healthcare, Sartorius AG, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Leica Microsystems,...

Cells Solve an English Hedge Maze with the Same Skills They Use to Traverse the Body – Scientific American

From the embryonic stages to late life, cells often make incredible journeys, sometimes even traversing an entire organism. They reach their destination by chemotaxis, following signals that lead them to the goal like a chemical yellow brick road. The catch is that different levels, or gradients, of a chemical drawing cells to a target only work over short distances. What guides them over the hills and valleys of a longer journey through the body has been unclear.

Findings reported on August 27 in Science show how two kinds of cellsone a dirt-dwelling amoeba and the other a mouse cancer cell linemanage these seemingly impossible journeys. The key is that the cells do not work along a preexisting gradient but create one themselves by breaking down the chemical lure as they encounter it. Like gathering string while finding ones way out of a labyrinth, the chemical-free path they leave behind keeps them binding toand followingthe guide in front of them.

Take melanoma cells, which are among the most avidly metastasizing tumor cells. Once they have broken down a chemoattractant called lysophosphatidic acid locally in the tumor, they move toward higher levels of the molecule away from the tumor. The cells forge a path into the bloodstream, where lysophosphatidic acid is relatively uniformly distributed. The melanoma cells break the chemical down as they go, leaving a high concentration of it in front of them that they follow and consume, Pac-Man-like, whereas low levels remain behind.

The research team confirmed the use of this tactic in both an amoeba and a mammalian cell line, suggesting a commonality among cells engaged in long-distance orienteering. That outcome is really interesting and demonstrates that self-generated gradients are a universal mechanism for steering directional migration of groups of cells for long distances, says Pablo Sez, a professor and group leader in the department of biochemistry and molecular cell biology at the University Medical Center HamburgEppendorf in Germany, who was not involved in the work. He adds that the result highlights the usefulness of some of the techniques the researchers used, including mathematical modeling to predict how the cells might behave and employing mazes to test those predictions.

In navigating real mazes, cells broke down an attractant chemical (purple), creating a gradient that left more of it ahead and less of it behind. This high-to-low gradient drew the Pac-Man-like cells forward. Credit: Luke Tweedy, Michele Zagnoni and Cancer Research UK

In fact, Luke Tweedy, a postdoctoral research associate at the Beatson Institute for Cancer Research in Scotland and his colleagues reasoned that following a winding path through the complex topography of an organism might be a lot like navigating a labyrinth. To test their idea, they used two kinds of cells: the amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, or Dicty for short, and mouse pancreatic cancer cells. Dicty cells were especially of interest because of their proficiency at breaking down the chemical yellow brick road as they travel it so that the right path is always before them. With this tendency to gather string as it moves along, Dicty was an exemplary candidate for maze solvinga chemotactic prodigy, as Tweedy puts it.

Tweedy and his colleagues found that Dicty lived up to its reputation, rapidly solving a complex maze in an hour that could take the tortoiselike pancreatic cancer cells several days. The researchers tested the cells in a lot of different mazes, some with shorter versus longer dead ends and different forks. When cells faced a choice between a dead end and a true path, a few wayward ones would dispatch all of the chemoattractant trapped in the cul-de-sac, and the rest of them would orient to the other fork that was still flowing with the alluring molecules.

The most memorable test the investigators used was the one they modeled on the famous maze at Hampton Court Palace near London. They chose it, Tweedy says, for the razzle-dazzle and to capture the imagination. Dicty, the prodigy protist, not only solved this maze but also managed to use its self-generating gradient skills to find a shortcut.

Researchers also brought incomputational modelsto predict cell behavior, which could have implications for human conditions that involve migrating cells. An example is human cancer cells that have something in common with amoebaswhether that connection involves the normal migration of immune cells or the pathological journey of metastatic cancer cells They use the same fundamental mechanism of migration, [in which] receptors detect attractants and guide the cytoskeleton to move the cell.

In fact, the similarities are strong enough that Tweedy sees many ways to bridge the amoeba-human-cell gap, including applying maze-solving ideas to predicting the path that the cancer cells of glioblastoma follow.

The results could also offer a rare window into some early processes in mammalian embryos. The cells that eventually set up shop in the gonads start far away from their target early in an embryos development. These so-called germ cells have to move over embryonic hill and dale to get to the appropriate destination. If the behavior of Dicty or the much slower pancreatic cancer cells is universal, then these germ cells may use a similar tactic to get to the future gonads and avoid taking a wrong turn toward, say, the gut. The implication is that building complex organisms sometimes means that cells only get where they are going by making their own way.

Read Our 175th Anniversary Issue

Read Now

Go here to read the rest:
Cells Solve an English Hedge Maze with the Same Skills They Use to Traverse the Body - Scientific American

How Plants Close the Door on Infection – Technology Networks

Plants have a unique ability to safeguard themselves against pathogens by closing their poresbut until now, no one knew quite how they did it. Scientists have known that a flood of calcium into the cells surrounding the pores triggers them to close, but how the calcium entered the cells was unclear.

A new study by an international team including University of Maryland scientists reveals that a protein called OSCA1.3 forms a channel that leaks calcium into the cells surrounding a plants pores, and they determined that a known immune system protein triggers the process.

The findings are a major step toward understanding the defense mechanisms plants use to resist infection, which could eventually lead to healthier, more resistant and more productive crops. The research paper was published on August 26, 2020 in the journal Nature.

This is a major advance, because a substantial part of the worlds food generated by agriculture is lost to pathogens, and we now know the molecular mechanism behind one of the first and most relevant signals for plant immune response to pathogensthe calcium burst after infection, said Jos Feij, a professor of cell biology and molecular genetics at UMD and co-author of the study. Finding the mechanism associated with this calcium channel allows further research into its regulation, which will improve our understanding of the way in which the channel activity modulates and, eventually, boosts the immune reaction of plants to pathogens.

Plant porescalled stomataare encircled by two guard cells, which respond to calcium signals that tell the cells to expand or contract and trigger innate immune signals, initiating the plants defense response. Because calcium cannot pass directly through the guard cell membranes, scientists knew a calcium channel had to be at work. But they didnt know which protein acted as the calcium channel.

To find this protein, the studys lead author, Cyril Zipfel, a professor of molecular and cellular plant physiology at the University of Zurich and Senior Group Leader at The Sainsbury Laboratory in Norwich, searched for proteins that would be modified by another protein named BIK1, which genetic studies and bioassays identified as a necessary component of the immune calcium response in plants.

When exposed to BIK1, one protein called OSCA1.3 transformed in a very specific way that suggested it could be a calcium channel for plants. OSCA1.3 is a member of a widespread family of proteins known to exist as ion channels in many organisms, including humans, and it seems to be specifically activated upon detection of pathogens.

To determine if OSCA1.3 was, in fact, the calcium channel he was looking for, Zipfel's team reached out to Feij, who is also an affiliate professor in the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources at UMD and is well known for identifying and characterizing novel ion channels and signaling mechanisms in plants. Erwan Michard, a visiting assistant research scientist in Feijs lab and co-author of the paper, conducted experiments that revealed Zipfels BIK1 bait triggers OSCA1.3 to open up a calcium channel into a cell and also explained the mechanism for how it happens.

BIK1 only activates when plants get infected with a pathogen, which suggests that OSCA1.3 opens a calcium channel to close stomata as a defensive, immune system response to pathogens.

This is a perfect example of how a collaborative effort between labs with different expertise can bring about important conclusions that would be difficult on solo efforts, Feij said. This fundamental knowledge is badly needed to inform ecology and agriculture on how the biome will react to the climatic changes that our planet is going through.

Feij will now incorporate this new knowledge of the OSCA1.3 calcium channel into other areas of research in his lab, which is working to understand how the mineral calcium was co-opted through evolution by all living organisms to serve as a signaling device for information about stressors from infection to climate change.

Despite the physiological and ecological relevance of stomatal closure, the identity of some of the key components mediating this closure were still unknown, Zipfel said. The identification of OSCA1.3 now fills one of these important gaps. In the context of plant immunity this work is particularly apt in 2020, the UN International Year of Plant Health.

ReferenceThor, K., Jiang, S., Michard, E. et al. The calcium-permeable channel OSCA1.3 regulates plant stomatal immunity. Nature (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2702-1

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

View original post here:
How Plants Close the Door on Infection - Technology Networks

Hamilton Thorne to Present at the Baird 2020 Global Healthcare Conference – GlobeNewswire

BEVERLY, Mass. and TORONTO, Aug. 27, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Hamilton Thorne Ltd. (TSX-V: HTL), a leading provider of precision instruments, consumables, software and services to the Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART), research, and cell biology markets, today announced that David Wolf, President and CEO of Hamilton Thorne Ltd., will deliver a virtual presentation at the upcomingBaird 2020 Global Healthcare Conference on Wednesday, September 9, 2020 at 3:45 EDT. Mr. Wolf will also be available for virtual one-on-one meetings during the conference.

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

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

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

For more information, please contact:

Read more from the original source:
Hamilton Thorne to Present at the Baird 2020 Global Healthcare Conference - GlobeNewswire

The Merging Of Human And Machine. Two Frontiers Of Emerging Technologies – Forbes

Molecular Science as a Scientific Field of Study

An amazing aspect of living in The Fourth Industrial Era is that we are at a new inflection point in bringing emerging technologies to life. We are in an era of scientific breakthroughs that will change the way of life as we currently know it. While there are many technological areas of fascination for me, the meshing of biology with machine is one of the most intriguing. It fuses many elements of technologies especially artificial intelligence and pervasive computing. I have highlighted two frontiers of mind-bending developments that are on the horizon, Neuromorphic technologies, and human-machine biology.

Neuromorphic Technologies

Human computer interaction (HCI) was an area of research that started in the 1980s and has come a long way in a short period of time. HCI was the foundation for what we call neuromorphic computing, the integration of systems containing electronic analog circuits to mimic neuro-biological architectures present in the biological nervous system.

In 2018, in research funded by the Defense Advanced Projects Agency (DARPA) demonstrated that a person with a brain chip could pilot a swarm of drones using signals from the brain. There have been a variety of studies and experiments since then, and no doubt science combining neural networks and artificial intelligence is on a path to enhance and even upgrade human cognition capabilities.

Recently, a research team from Columbia University tested the convergence of neural networks. They combined brain implants, artificial intelligence, and a speech synthesizer to translate brain activity into recognizable robotic words. The implications of this neuromorphic technology are mind-boggling, including allowing paralyzed people the ability to communicate and the potential to read human thoughts via cognitive imaging. (1)

A Frontiers in Science publication involving the collaboration of academia, institutes, and scientistssummed up the promise of the human computer interface, They concluded that We can imagine the possibilities of what may come next with the human brain machine interface. A human B/CI system mediated by neural nanorobotics could empower individuals with instantaneous access to all cumulative human knowledge available in the cloud and significantly improve human learning capacities and intelligence. Further, it might transition totally immersive virtual and augmented realities to unprecedented levels, allowing for more meaningful experiences and fuller/richer expression for, and between, users. These enhancements may assist humanity to adapt emergent artificial intelligence systems as human-augmentation technologies, facilitating the mitigation of new challenges to the human species. (2)

This week, Elon Musk announced that his neuroscience company, NeuraLink, created to develop cranial computers that can rapidly upload and process information, will demonstrate their lasts device that would let humans control computers with their mind via surgically implant electrodes. Linking brains to computers is no longer the stuff of science fiction.

Human-Machine Biology

The field of human and biological applications has many applications for medical science. This includes precision medicine, genome sequencing and gene editing (CRISPR), cellular implants, and wearables that can be implanted in the human body The medical community is experimenting with delivering nano-scale drugs (including anti-biotic smart bombs to target specific strains of bacteria. Soon they will be able to implant devices such as bionic eyes and bionic kidneys, or artificially grown and regenerated human organs. Succinctly, we are on the cusp of significantly upgrading the human ecosystem. It is indeed revolutionary.

This revolution will expand exponentially in the next few years. We will see the merging of artificial circuitries withsignaturesof our biological intelligence, retrieved in the form of electric, magnetic, and mechanical transductions. Retrieving these signatures will be like taking pieces of cells (including our tissue-resident stem cells) in the form of code for their healthy, diseased or healing states, or a code for their ability to differentiate into all the mature cells of our body. This process will represent an unprecedented form of taking a glimpse of human identity. (3)

In the future biocomputers may be able to store on the DNA of living cells. This technology could store almost unlimited amounts of data and allow the biocomputers to perform complex calculations beyond our current capabilities.

Researchers at the Technion have already created a biological computer, constructed within a bacterial cell. developed a complex biocomputer, that is, a programmed biological system that fulfills complex tasks. The research by Ph.D. student Natalia Barger and Assistant Professor Ramez Daniel, head of the Synthetic Biology and Bioelectronics Lab at the Technion's Faculty of Biomedical Engineering, was published in September 2019 in the journalNucleic Acids Research(NAR) "We built a kind ofbiological computerin the livingcells. In this computer, as in regular computers, circuits carry out complicated calculations," said Barger. "Only here, these circuits are genetic, not electronic, and information are carried by proteins and not electrons." (4)

The Human-machine synergies now being explored offer us a glimpse into the not so distant future. Clearly, from the perspective of human augmentation, the promise is exciting. The future will also encompass moral issues to address such as containing super artificial intelligence, ensuring cyborg rights, and a whole host of other related ethical topics. It is evident is that human-machine interface will help pave our futures. How we harness it for good should be our focus. Perhaps that will be what the Fifth Industrial Revolution will codify.

Footnote:this past year I designed and wrote a graduate course for Georgetown University called Disruptive Technologies and Organizational Management. I am now enjoying teaching it. What excites me is receiving back insights on my assignments. Paraphrasing Leonardo Da Vinci, you should never stop learning in life. The imagination of my students as they contemplate the applications and fusion of emerging technologies in society and security is an inspiration.

Sources:

1) The New Techno-fusion by Chuck Brooks

2)Human Brain/Cloud Interface

3) Emerging Bio-Science and Health Security Implications for Biometrics by Chuck Brooks

4) Researchers turn bacterial cell into biological computer

Read more from the original source:
The Merging Of Human And Machine. Two Frontiers Of Emerging Technologies - Forbes

Genetic mutations may be linked to infertility, early menopause – Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

Visit the News Hub

Gene in fruit flies, worms, zebrafish, mice and people may help explain some fertility issues

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a gene that plays an important role in fertility across multiple species. Pictured is a normal fruit fly ovary (left) and a fruit fly ovary with this gene dialed down (right). Male and female animals missing this gene had substantially defective reproductive organs. The study could have implications for understanding human infertility and early menopause.

A new study from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis identifies a specific genes previously unknown role in fertility. When the gene is missing in fruit flies, roundworms, zebrafish and mice, the animals are infertile or lose their fertility unusually early but appear otherwise healthy. Analyzing genetic data in people, the researchers found an association between mutations in this gene and early menopause.

The study appears Aug. 28 in the journal Science Advances.

The human gene called nuclear envelope membrane protein 1 (NEMP1) is not widely studied. In animals, mutations in the equivalent gene had been linked to impaired eye development in frogs.

The researchers who made the new discovery were not trying to study fertility at all. Rather, they were using genetic techniques to find genes involved with eye development in the early embryos of fruit flies.

We blocked some gene expression in fruit flies but found that their eyes were fine, said senior author Helen McNeill, PhD, the Larry J. Shapiro and Carol-Ann Uetake-Shapiro Professor and a BJC Investigator at the School of Medicine. So, we started trying to figure out what other problems these animals might have. They appeared healthy, but to our surprise, it turned out they were completely sterile. We found they had substantially defective reproductive organs.

Though it varied a bit by species, males and females both had fertility problems when missing this gene. And in females, the researchers found that the envelope that contains the eggs nucleus the vital compartment that holds half of an organisms chromosomes looked like a floppy balloon.

This gene is expressed throughout the body, but we didnt see this floppy balloon structure in the nuclei of any other cells, said McNeill, also a professor of developmental biology. That was a hint wed stumbled across a gene that has a specific role in fertility. We saw the impact first in flies, but we knew the proteins are shared across species. With a group of wonderful collaborators, we also knocked this gene out in worms, zebrafish and mice. Its so exciting to see that this protein that is present in many cells throughout the body has such a specific role in fertility. Its not a huge leap to suspect it has a role in people as well.

To study this floppy balloon-like nuclear envelope, the researchers used a technique called atomic force microscopy to poke a needle into the cells, first penetrating the outer membrane and then the nucleuss membrane. The amount of force required to penetrate the membranes gives scientists a measure of their stiffness. While the outer membrane was of normal stiffness, the nucleuss membrane was much softer.

Its interesting to ask whether stiffness of the nuclear envelope of the egg is also important for fertility in people, McNeill said. We know there are variants in this gene associated with early menopause. And when we studied this defect in mice, we see that their ovaries have lost the pool of egg cells that theyre born with, which determines fertility over the lifespan. So, this finding provides a potential explanation for why women with mutations in this gene might have early menopause. When you lose your stock of eggs, you go into menopause.

On the left is a normal fruit fly ovary with hundreds of developing eggs. On the right is a fruit fly ovary that is totally missing the NEMP gene. It is poorly developed and no eggs are visible.

McNeill and her colleagues suspect that the nuclear envelope has to find a balance between being pliant enough to allow the chromosomes to align as they should for reproductive purposes but stiff enough to protect them from the ovarys stressful environment. With age, ovaries develop strands of collagen with potential to create mechanical stress not present in embryonic ovaries.

If you have a softer nucleus, maybe it cant handle that environment, McNeill said. This could be the cue that triggers the death of eggs. We dont know yet, but were planning studies to address this question.

Over the course of these studies, McNeill said they found only one other problem with the mice missing this specific gene: They were anemic, meaning they lacked red blood cells.

Normal adult red blood cells lack a nucleus, McNeill said. Theres a stage when the nuclear envelope has to condense and get expelled from the young red blood cell as it develops in the bone marrow. The red blood cells in these mice arent doing this properly and die at this stage. With a floppy nuclear envelope, we think young red blood cells are not surviving in another mechanically stressful situation.

The researchers would like to investigate whether women with fertility problems have mutations in NEMP1. To help establish whether such a link is causal, they have developed human embryonic stem cells that, using CRISPR gene-editing technology, were given specific mutations in NEMP1 listed in genetic databases as associated with infertility.

We can direct these stem cells to become eggs and see what effect these mutations have on the nuclear envelope, McNeill said. Its possible there are perfectly healthy women walking around who lack the NEMP protein. If this proves to cause infertility, at the very least this knowledge could offer an explanation. If it turns out that women who lack NEMP are infertile, more research must be done before we could start asking if there are ways to fix these mutations restore NEMP, for example, or find some other way to support nuclear envelope stiffness.

This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health, research grant numbers 143319, MOP-42462, PJT-148658, 153128, 156081, MOP-102546, MOP-130437, 143301, and 167279. This work also was supported, in part, by the Krembil Foundation; the Canada Research Chair program; the National Institutes of Health (NIH), grant number R01 GM100756; and NSERC Discovery grant; and the Medical Research Council, unit programme MC_UU_12015/2. Financial support also was provided by the Wellcome Senior Research Fellowship, number 095209; Core funding 092076 to the Wellcome Centre for Cell Biology; a Wellcome studentship; the Ontario Research FundsResearch Excellence Program. Proteomics work was performed at the Network Biology Collaborative Centre at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, a facility supported by Canada Foundation for Innovation funding, by the Ontarian Government, and by the Genome Canada and Ontario Genomics, grant numbers OGI-097 and OGI-139.

Tsatskis Y, et al. The NEMP family supports metazoan fertility and nuclear envelope stiffness. Science Advances. Aug. 28, 2020.

Washington University School of Medicines 1,500 faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals. The School of Medicine is a leader in medical research, teaching and patient care, ranking among the top 10 medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

See more here:
Genetic mutations may be linked to infertility, early menopause - Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

Study may help develop new types of non-addictive pain therapies – News-Medical.Net

A team of scientists from ASU's School of Molecular Sciences and the Biodesign Institute have recently published a study in Nature Communications that helps clarify the contributions to an ion channel's temperature - dependent activation. This in turn should aid in the development of new types of non-addictive pain therapies.

The ability to sense and respond to temperature is fundamental in biology. Ion channels are formed by membrane proteins that allow ions to pass through the otherwise impermeable lipid cell membrane, where they are used as a communication network.

TRPV1 is an ion channel that is widely expressed in various tissues and plays a variety of roles in biology. It is best known for its role as the primary hot sensor in humans; it is the main way that we sense heat in our environment."

Wade Van Horn, Professor and Senior Author, School of Molecular Sciences and the Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University

Although important contributions have been made in the investigation of TRPV1 thermosensing, its mechanism has remained elusive.

TRPV1 is also a common taste and pain sensor, think spicy foods and pepper spray. Beyond these roles, it has been implicated in longevity, inflammation, obesity, and cancer. For decades it has been a target in the search for new types of pain medication, ones that are not addictive.

"However, to date, a common feature is that while TRPV1 targeting compounds can relieve pain, they also cause off-target effects, especially causing changes in body temperature, which has limited their utility. These off-target effects happen because TRPV1 is activated by many distinct stimuli, including ligands (i.e., capsaicin - the main ingredient in pepper spray), heat, and protons (acidic pH)," says Van Horn.

Also particularly limiting, is the uncertainty about the mechanisms that underlie temperature-sensing and how the different activation mechanisms are linked together.

This study used a variety of techniques, from cellular to atomic in nature, to investigate the domain of TRPV1 that is key to its ligand activation.

The techniques included Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy experiments (like an MRI) aided by Brian Cherry (Associate Research Professional in the Magnetic Resonance Research Center), intrinsic fluorescence carried out in SMS associate professor Marcia Levitus' lab.

Levitus is also part of the Biodesign Center for Single Molecule Biophysics. Other techniques included far ultraviolet circular dichroism and temperature dependent electrophysiology.

Van Horn explains that this work identifies for the first time, both functionally and thermodynamically, that a particular region (of TRPV1) is crucial to heat activation. The team proposes, and provides experimental validation for, the heat activation mechanism and details a number of structural changes that happen as the temperature is changed.

This study provides a framework that the team anticipates will be foundational for future studies to further refine how we sense high temperatures and, importantly, how we can distinguish and target specific activation mechanisms that should promote the development of new types of non-addictive pain therapies.

See original here:
Study may help develop new types of non-addictive pain therapies - News-Medical.Net

The Road To Scale: Challenges Facing the Implementation of Animal-Free Recombinant Proteins Into Stem Cell Supply Chains – Technology Networks

Most industries today are under pressure to switch to more ethical and sustainable animal-free alternatives, and now the trend is coming to stem cell labs. As stem cell applications accelerate towards the clinic, novel drug discovery platforms are rapidly scaled, and new transformative stem cell-based technologies such as cultured meat arise, there is a drive to switch to animal-free cell culture media. This move is essential to facilitate future regulatory approval for advanced therapies, and enable pharma and biotech companies to ethically, reproducibly and cost-effectively scale stem cell-based innovations.Most stem cell scientists today use recombinant growth factor and cytokine proteins in their chemically-defined media to supply their cultures with the necessary biological signals required for maintenance of pluripotency, cell proliferation and differentiation into specific cell lineages. However, the fundamental biochemistry and manufacturing processes of these protein messengers can often be overlooked. But as scientists are trying to establish new animal-free systems to support the scale-up of their stem cell applications, the properties and challenges inherent in these proteins are becoming more prominent and frankly a headache for many.

Highlighted here are three key challenges facing pharma and biotech companies as they embark on the path to implementing animal-free systems, from the perspective of two protein scientists.1.Why batch consistency is kingAs stem cell therapies gear up to make the leap from bench to clinic and the promise of stem cell biology in drug discovery and other industrial applications is realized, more subtle and still largely inexplicable challenges in optimizing growth factor and cytokine supply chains for defined media are being identified why when you change from one supplier or even batch of a recombinant protein do stem cells need weaning onto that protein, or dont tolerate the change? Is this a fundamental lack of batch consistency across the supply chain or is there an underlying biological basis?

At the minute, there is simply not enough data to answer this definitively. While we are starting to tease apart these questions, it highlights the need for greater innovation within the recombinant protein supply chain to bring best practice and innovation from other areas to improve the robustness of the global supply chain and encourage great openness and scrutiny of fundamental biochemical quality early in process development.

Questions we should ask include: are we seeing heterogeneity in post-translational modifications, which is well documented in monoclonal antibody manufacturing? Can synthetic biology or protein engineering be used to optimize proteins and engineer out features contributing to this variation?

For now, and until we have answers, its a good idea to source proteins from reputable suppliers that have rigorous standards for batch quality testing and meticulously scrutinize all biochemical and bioactivity data provided.2.Cost of goods as a barrier to scaleTo bring innovative stem cell applications to market, pharma and biotech companies need to be able to seamlessly scale their cultures, meet regulatory requirements and achieve a sensible and sustainable process cost. Where recombinant proteins are needed in cell culture media, they are usually the greatest contributor to cost of goods.

Well-defined industry challenges catalyze change and the stem cell field is seeing renewed focus on much needed innovation in complex bioactive protein production to meet the needs for animal-free, highly reproducible proteins. Protein engineering technology, enhanced cell-based and cell-free expression systems, such as bacteria, yeast and even plants, coupled with improvements to downstream processing systems are just some of the latest innovations in this space. Previously, there have been concerns over the ability of simpler systems to form correctly folded and bioactive recombinant proteins. However, it is clear that many of these barriers can be overcome to produce highly pure growth factors and cytokines at scale.Others are striping back chemically-defined media protocols to determine the essential growth factors and cytokines needed for their cell type. For example, homebrews of key growth factors to reduce costs - Paul Burridge and his team at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine have pioneered a cost-effective B8 chemically-defined media for weekend-free hiPSC culture at just 3% of the price of commercially available media. Now the challenge is to take the learnings from academic studies such as these and translate them into industrial processes.Meating the price of lab-grown steaksYou cannot discuss the cost of growth factors without mentioning the daunting step-change and barrier facing the fast-evolving cultured meat market. Here, highly optimized animal-free growth factor production systems will be required to provide the economies of scale needed to deliver kilogram-ton quantities at a fraction of the price in order to bring these lab-grown meat alternatives to consumers. After all, it just isnt viable for companies to be spending hundreds of dollars on each liter of culture media - instead, this needs to be reduced to ~$1/liter.3.Animal-free or ADCF? Now that is the questionDespite animal-free/animal-derived component free (ADCF) growth factors and cytokines becoming increasing important, there are no standard definitions for these terms across the industry, with many protein manufacturers supporting the sector by defining their own internal standards. For the clinical space, the United States Pharmacopeia and International Organization for Standardization have published a framework for classifying raw materials used in cell therapy manufactureinto four different tiers based on their risk. Under this classification, ancillary materials used in the manufacture of cell-based therapies and tissue-engineered products, such as recombinant growth factors and cytokines, are considered low risk so fall into tiers 1 and 2 with an ADCF level of manufacturing defined as all components, sub-components and consumables do not contain materials derived from animals.To support the wider sector, not just those at the transition to the clinic, clarity over definitions and transparency from manufacturers will help to define and overcome the challenges faced and allow the promise of stem-cell derived innovations to be delivered.

Article Authors:

Beata Blaszczyk, Senior Scientist, Qkine

Dr Catherine Elton, CEO and Founder, Qkine

Read more:
The Road To Scale: Challenges Facing the Implementation of Animal-Free Recombinant Proteins Into Stem Cell Supply Chains - Technology Networks