Science Market Update

TAMU Wins $14M in USDA Grants for Bovine Disease and Feed Research

Posted by Jaimee Saliba on Fri, Dec 07, 2012

tamu bovine researchFor both dairy and beef production, cows are an important part of the US economy and food supply. When they get sick, it's bad for business (and not too pleasant for the cow). The most common illness in cattle is Bovine Respiratory Disease (BRD), which accounts for losses of more than $690M annually in the US alone. To combat this threat to bovine health and productivity, the USDA has recently awarded a $9M 5-year grant to researchers at Texas A&M University's College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, in collaboration with colleagues at the University of Missouri, to study genetic selection for breeding more disease-resitant stock. A second $5M grant will go towards research into feed efficiency, again with the aim of breeding heartier, healthier, and more profitable animals.

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Tags: Texas A&M University, Texas, veterinary medicine, Southwest, 2012, animal science, College Station, TAMU, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Texas A&M Research, Genomics, Genetics, Texas A&M

Biochemists Develop Light-Sensitive Molecule at UI Chicago

Posted by Sam Asher on Thu, Dec 06, 2012

At the University of Illinois at Chicago, biochemists have developed an intuitive solution to the age-old problem of macular degeneration, the leading cause of loss of vision for people over the age of fifty. Their new product is a light-sensitive molecule that can restore vision lost from degenerative eye diseases.

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Tags: Midwest, University of Illinois Chicago, 2012, Illinois, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Chicago, IL, UIC

Gladstone Institutes Advance Stem Cell Research at UCSF Mission Bay

Posted by BCI Staff on Wed, Dec 05, 2012

ucsf mission bay researchIt might or might not surprise you that some very strong private biomedical research institute funding at the University of California San Francisco campus comes from the father of the first enclosed southern California shopping mall, on the one hand, and the founder of Star Trek on the other. Those two innovative individuals, J. David Gladstone and Gene Roddenberry respectively, have left much of their considerable legacy to science research into understanding human disease. A year ago this time, the Gladstone Institutes welcomed the Roddenberry Foundation into its research family with the establishment of the Roddenberry Center for Stem Cell Biology and Medicine within the Gladstone walls on Owens Street in Mission Bay. Two months ago one of the Gladstone's senior research scientists won the Nobel Prize for his groundbreaking work with induced pluripotent stem cells. Those events, in conjunction with the 3 decades of research milestones made by their scientists, as well as their affiliation with UCSF and its world-class stem cell research program position the Gladstone solidly to meet their 21st Century mission goal:

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Tags: CA, University of California San Francisco, Stem cell research, California, 2012, San Francisco, Biotechnology Vendor Showcase, UCSF, Gladstone Institutes, San Francisco at Mission Bay

Rockefeller Research Shows White Blood Cells Not Lone Warriors in Immune Response

Posted by Jaimee Saliba on Tue, Dec 04, 2012

immune response research

Researchers in the St. Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases at Rockefeller University have recently published the results of a study that demonstrates how organs like the brain have their own defense systems which, when disrupted, can permit disease despite a healthy white blood cell count. The key is the production of interferon, which are proteins triggered by a receptor called TLR3 that send up the alarm to fight infection (by interfering with the pathogen's reproduction). When that TLR3 receptor is faulty on a neuron or other brain cell, no interferon is produced and the patient can suffer a disease of the brain even though that same pathogen is being combatted effectively in other parts of the body. We now know there seem to be localized systems of immune response within specific organs, and that interferon therapy may help patients with rare localized diseases. 

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Tags: Rockefeller University, biomedical research, Stem cell research, New York, 2012, Immune System, brain research, BioResearch Product Faire Event, NY, New York City

Duke University Receives $10 Million Grant from USAID

Posted by Jennifer Nieuwkerk on Mon, Dec 03, 2012

Duke University has been selected as one of seven schools to be on the forefront of a United States effort to help eliminate desperate poverty around the world. Duke will receive a $10 million grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to form a development lab whose goal is to pinpoint and support progress in solutions to worldwide health problems in low- and middle-income nations.

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Tags: USAID, Duke University, North Carolina, 2012, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Durham, NC, Duke, research scientist

University of Michigan Slims Neural Electrode

Posted by Sam Asher on Fri, Nov 30, 2012

Earlier this week, we discussed the commercialization of neural interface chips at the University of Utah. Meanwhile, at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, researchers are innovating in neuroscience on an even smaller scale. A new, slimmer electrode allows for the more precise studying of individual neurons and promises insight on the workings of the mind based on the interactions between neurons and the brain.

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Tags: University of Michigan, Midwest, 2012, Michigan, Ann Arbor, Neuroscience, BioResearch Product Faire Event, MI, UM

First 25 of 250 New Research Faculty Hires Announced by Stony Brook

Posted by Jaimee Saliba on Thu, Nov 29, 2012

Last year when we reported on the extraordinary $150 Million gift by the Simons Foundation to Stony Brook University (read the blog), we noted that part of the gift was earmarked for new research faculty hires as part of the SUNY 2020 Plan. Indeed the goal is to hire as many as 250 new researchers into the SUNY System by the year 2020--100 at the Stony Brook campus. The first 25 of those positions will be in 5 "clusters," which were recently selected from a larger pool of program proposals in the first round of the University's interdisciplinary faculty cluster hiring initiative. Rather than approving individual faculty members, or even allotting funds to individual departments, SBU is looking at using this unprecedented opportunity to strengthen its interdisciplinary programs through this clustered hiring of faculty who will work within a department but also as part of a larger team.

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Tags: New York, 2012, Stony Brook University, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Funding, NY, Southwest Region, National Lab, Stoneybrook, new research faculty

New Advances and Commercialization in Neural Implants at the University of Utah

Posted by BCI Staff on Wed, Nov 28, 2012

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(Courtesy of Balougador on Wikimedia Commons)
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Tags: biomedical research, Utah, university of utah, , 2012, Life Science Market Update., Front Line event, Salt Lake City, Life Science Technology, bio medical research

Caldwell Memorial Hospital to Join UNC Health Care System

Posted by Jennifer Nieuwkerk on Mon, Nov 26, 2012

On November 9, the board of directors at Caldwell Memorial Hospital in Lenoir, North Carolina, made the unanimous decision to take the next step in their exclusive negotiations with the UNC Health Care System.  Close to 75 miles northwest of Charlotte, the 110-bed acute care hospital employs a network of about 50 primary and specialty care physicians as well as advance practice professionals.

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Tags: University of North Carolina, 2012, Southern, BioResearch Product Faire Front Line Event, NC, Chapel Hill, UNC, Caldwell Memorial Hospital, UNC Health Care

7 Sales Lessons from the Volunteer Front

Posted by Jaimee Saliba on Fri, Nov 23, 2012

Most of us ate turkey with friends and family in a warm house yesterday. Today many are shopping. Meanwhile on Long Island, Staten Island and the Jersey Shore, volunteer organizations are still hard at work cleaning up the mess from Sandy and helping people move their lives forward. Instead of Thanksgiving at home with family, military veterans volunteering with Team Rubicon probably ate a donated meal with fellow workers or community members. Maybe they got to rest their muscles for a day.

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Tags: Northeast, New York, 2012, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Front Line event, New York City, Trade show, Biotechnology Vendor Showcase, Sales

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