Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 2106
Dec 16, 2018
United Therapeutics to Develop CollPlant Technologies for 3D Bioprinted Lung Transplants
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, biotech/medical
United Therapeutics will license, develop, and commercialize CollPlant Holdings’ recombinant human collagen (rhCollagen) and BioInk technology for 3D bioprinting of solid-organ scaffolds for human transplants, the companies said today, through a collaboration that could generate more than $44 million.
Through its wholly- owned organ manufacturing and transplantation-focused subsidiary Lung Biotechnology PBC, United Therapeutics has been granted what the companies termed an exclusive license “throughout the universe” by CollPlant to its technology for producing and using rhCollagen-based BioInk for 3D bioprinted lung transplants.
Lung Biotechnology PBC is a public benefit corporation formed to address the acute national shortage of transplantable lungs and other organs with a variety of technologies that either delay the need for such organs or expand the supply.
Dec 16, 2018
BioInteractive’s virtual labs help you dissect such fields as anatomy, immunology
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
How much do you know about anatomy? Cardiology? Have you ever set foot in a scientific lab? Once you visit BioInteractive’s virtual lab, you’ll feel as if you have.
The website is offered by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, a nonprofit organization that funds biomedical research. It features free virtual labs for anatomy, bacterial identification, immunology, neurophysiology and cardiology.
The concept is simple: You tool around virtual, web-based spaces as if you were a scientist. And you learn in the process. It’s designed to help users practice the skills and techniques of scientific research.
Dec 15, 2018
Scientists crack the CRISPR code for precise human genome editing
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: biotech/medical
Scientists at the Francis Crick Institute have discovered a set of simple rules that determine the precision of CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing in human cells. These rules, published in Molecular Cell, could help to improve the efficiency and safety of genome editing in both the lab and the clinic.
Despite the wide use of the CRISPR system, rational application of the technology has been hindered by the assumption that the outcome of genome editing is unpredictable, resulting in random deletions or insertions of DNA regions at the target site.
Before CRISPR can be safely applied in the clinic, scientists need to make sure that they can reliably predict precisely how DNA will be modified.
Continue reading “Scientists crack the CRISPR code for precise human genome editing” »
Dec 15, 2018
Scientists are developing a breakthrough test that uses gold to detect all types of cancer in 10 minutes
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
- Scientists at the University of Brisbane may have found a simple way of detecting the early stages of cancer.
- The method is inexpensive, takes 10 minutes, and can work for all types of cancer.
- The test uses gold particles to detect cancerous DNA.
According to Nature, researchers at the University of Brisbane may have developed a simple test that’s able to detect the early stages of cancer.
Not only that but the method is inexpensive, takes a mere 10 minutes, and works for all types of cancer — and the central component used for identifying cancer cells is gold particles.
Dec 15, 2018
Mind-reading machine allows completely paralyzed patients to say if they want to live
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, computing, neuroscience
Some patients were even able to indicate that they were happy.
A brain-computer interface records “yes” and “no” answers in patients who lack any voluntary muscle movement.
Dec 15, 2018
Scientists design custom nanoparticles with new ‘stencil’ method
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology
Nano-sized particles already make bicycles and tennis rackets lighter and stronger, protect eyeglasses from scratches, and help direct chemotherapy drugs to cancer cells. But their usefulness depends on being able to precisely sculpt them into the right configurations—no easy task when they’re so tiny that thousands of them could fit into the thickness of a sheet of paper.
Dec 15, 2018
Bioquark — Bustle — 7 Creepy Things A Dead Body Can Do — Ira Pastor
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: aging, biological, biotech/medical, complex systems, cryonics, fun, futurism, genetics, health, homo sapiens
Tags: aging, bioquantine, bioquark, biotech, Death, health, ira pastor, reanima, reanimation, regenerage, regeneration, wellness
Dec 14, 2018
Anti-cancer virus fits tumor receptor like a ‘key in a lock’
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
Seneca Valley virus sounds like the last bug you’d want to catch, but it could be the next breakthrough cancer therapy. Now, scientists at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) and the University of Otago have described exactly how the virus interacts with tumors—and why it leaves healthy tissues alone.
The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on October 29, 2018, provides the first detailed images of how the complex Seneca Valley virus forms with its preferred receptor. The researchers used cryo-electron microscopy to capture images of over 7000 particles and rendered the structure in high resolution. They predict their results will help scientists develop the virus, and other viral drug candidates, for clinical use.
“If you have a virus that targets cancer cells and nothing else, that’s the ultimate cancer fighting tool,” said Prof. Matthias Wolf, principal investigator of the Molecular Cryo-Electron Microscopy Unit at OIST and co-senior author of the study. “I expect this study will lead to efforts to design viruses for cancer therapy.”
Continue reading “Anti-cancer virus fits tumor receptor like a ‘key in a lock’” »
Dec 14, 2018
“Spy” Virus Eavesdrops on Bacteria, Then Obliterates Them
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
Viruses use bacteria’s chemical language to time their destruction; this might lead to new ways to fight infections.
- By Angus Chen on December 14, 2018