Mindful eating and healthy living – epicureasia.com

Esther Lew 5 February 2021

The Ritual Caf and Bar invites diners to begin the journey with wholesome food with plant-based and gluten-free options.

From the sambal belachan mayonnaise sauce and tempeh to the freshly baked bagel and pastries, the food at The Ritual Caf and Bar is meant to get you into that conscious space of clean eating and lifestyle practices. Besides serving up a flavoursome and healthy menu, it is also a venue that aims to bring together a like-minded community for wellness healing and self-development activities after opening hours.

Headed by Chef Matthew Tham formerly from Two Men Bagel House and Meta Fine Dining, the menu is defined by robust east-meets-west flavours. A good example was The ImpossibleTM Mala Somen, which was dressed with homemade Szechuan sauce, garlic crumbs, bak choy and a sous vide egg. It was fiery but not overly numbing, making it a satisfying choice for mains. My favourite was Uncle Matts Beef Bowl, which featured sous vide steak with truffle oyster dressing, a sous vide egg and tsukemono with fragrant Japanese rice. It made a grain lover out of me for the day. It was worth it.

Special mention must also be made for the Tofu Tempe Fries, a moreish appetiser of fried tofu and tempe fritters served with homemade sambal belachan mayonnaise sauce. Whilst tempe typically has a dry, firm and chewy texture, this rendition was soft, moist and freshly made, perfect with the sauce. It got us into a mood to munch, and the Truffle Kombu Fries with Parmesan was addictive as well. For dessert, the freshly made Buttermilk Belgium Waffle with salted caramel ice cream, and bananas was a delightful treat as well.

The breakfast menu, available till 3pm daily, is a highlight by itself, with hits such as the Beetroot Gravlax Bagel, which was lovely to bite into. The bagel was soft and not too dense and chewy, while the pickled beetroot counterbalanced the saltiness of the gravlax, smoothed over by the satisfying mouthfeel of the cream cheese. Another star dish is the Madames Truffled Egg Croissant, with scrambled eggs made even more delish by the creamy brie and bechamel, enhanced by earthy black truffles.

Apart from its sumptuous food, The Ritual also impressed with its agenda for wellness lifestyles. The name of the caf stems from my pursuit of living a purposeful life through meaningful rituals and to share the importance of having a balance between mind, body and soul, said Cassandra. Many people are too focused on just one area of their lives and they find theres always something missing hence I want to create a safe space where the community can gather and practise healthy rituals that allow them to live a purpose driven life, changing routines to rituals, says Founder Cassandra Riene Tan who also owns sister cafe and bar Botany.

In this community, there will be mental wellness advocates, coaches, industry experts and strong social advocates, also known as The Ritual tribe leaders, who will be leading wellness programmes and experiences that bring together communities of different backgrounds. Expect non-conformists and seemingly controversial topics such as mental wellness, sexuality, metaphysics and spirituality; and alternative healing topics such as Ayurveda, herbal remedies, TCM and Reiki in these knowledge-sharing and experiential sessions, workshops and casual mingling sessions.

Alocassia Apartments, #01-09B,383 Bukit Timah Road. http://www.theritual.co

Continued here:
Mindful eating and healthy living - epicureasia.com

Amid virus, developers woo Twin Cities area renters with fresh air – Minneapolis Star Tribune

If they can afford it, Twin Cities area renters now have access to apartment buildings with the kinds of amenities and features typically found in high-end houses and luxury resorts: Spas for people and dogs, apps that control everything from lights to package delivery and indoor and outdoor gathering spaces with chefs kitchens, firepits and big-screen TVs.

With pandemic worries unlikely to subside anytime soon, developers are now trying to woo renters with a perk that can't be seen: fresh air.

Several Twin Cities apartment buildings are being built and retrofit with a range of features that aim to help ease concerns about the COVID-19 pandemic. From wider hallways to expensive high-tech ventilation systems, a handful of rental owners are incorporating health-focused features that can cost tens of thousands of dollars, but give them a competitive edge over other high-end apartment buildings.

"Air has always been this unseen commodity," said Patrick Crowe, a Twin Cities-area developer. "But we've become hyper aware of it since the pandemic."

Crowe had long planned to make the Quentin, a 79-unit apartment building that's under construction in St. Louis Park, a showcase for the latest sustainability and energy-efficiency features. Since the pandemic, he's doing even more.

The five-story building was designed to enable residents to live "net zero," meaning they won't consume more energy than is produced on site or purchased through solar and wind credits from Xcel Energy. Strategic placement of operable windows enable residents to take advantage of as much natural light as possible. The building will have supplemental smart LED lighting, smart thermostats and additional insulation to help withstand extreme temperatures.

Crowe said that since the onset of the pandemic, he has added other features. Common spaces were also adapted to facilitate social distancing, including wider corridors and indoor and outdoor areas that enable residents to gather safely. For $850 residents can upgrade to a catalytic air-cleaning system that kills bacteria and viruses and he has added energy-efficient elevators with an air-purification system that kills bacteria and viruses. He has also increased the size of those elevators to enable residents who are sharing a ride more space to keep their distance and to maximize air volume in elevators. He has also added stainless-steel interior surfaces to make them easier to clean.

And this week crews are installing a rooftop system that will continuously supply fresh air to the building. That's in contrast to more standard techniques that bring fresh air exchange into the units only when the individual heating and cooling systems are operating. And soon, crews will begin installing 85-kilowatt rooftop solar panels.

Crowe said the upgrades will add about 10% to the cost of the $22 million project, which includes eight income-restricted units for people who earn 50% of the area median income. Market-rate rents start at $1,460 for a studio unit.

Developing a "healthy" rental building stems from Crowe's interest in a building that's more energy efficient and sustainable than what's currently available for the market. And while he said the marketing potential of such features wasn't his primary motivation, he and other developers are constantly looking for ways to make their buildings stand out in an increasingly competitive market.

"People really want to know about the quality of their spaces they're living and working in," he said. "And now people are way more hypersensitive about it."

That includes renter Lauren Strahan, who said the focus on air quality in the building played a significant role in her decision to sign a lease in the building, which is currently preleasing and will open this summer.

"Since we are still in a pandemic I wanted to choose an apartment complex that provided outstanding air quality in order to continue to be as safe as possible," she said.

She said she was initially drawn to the building by its fitness facilities including the yoga studio, Peloton equipment and year-round spa area where she can relax after workouts.

"Initially I wasn't aware of the air quality being something that I should be concerned about," she said. "This year has really shined a light on the importance of a healthy living environment."

At the Viridium (Latin for "green") Apartments in the North Loop neighborhood in Minneapolis, Twin Cities-based Schafer Richardson lists "antimicrobial surfaces and materials" and an "air-cleaning ventilation system" among its amenities.

The building, which opens next month, is also pursuing LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification from the U.S. Green Building Council. That includes meeting higher standards for indoor air quality, materials and sustainability.

Katie Anthony, director of development, said that in response to the pandemic, the company has also installed ionizers in Viridium's common areas, and in all other common areas in the company's portfolio.

The same is being done at most of the buildings that are owned and managed by Kelly Doran. At the Mill & Main Apartments across the Mississippi River from downtown Minneapolis, the company is finishing the installation of ozone-free ionizers in all common areas and are making them available for residents who pay an upcharge to have them installed directly into their apartment's heating and cooling systems.

"They're not cheap," Doran said. "But if a resident wants one, we add a little to the rent to help pay for it."

He said the company has also hired its own on-site cleaning staff rather than outsourcing it in an effort to do more regular cleaning, and he's bought electrostatic sprayers, which are used several times a week throughout each building in all common areas.

Pat Huelman, coordinator of the Cold Climate Housing Program at the University of Minnesota, said that with some exceptions the apartment industry hasn't embraced cutting-edge building science technologies that are more common in other sectors of the construction industry.

To date much of the focus has been on preventing the transmission of sound and smells between apartments. Now, more research is being done on preventing viruses and other contaminants being shared from one unit to the next.

"It wasn't one of their top priorities. It's a little more challenging and more expensive," Huelman said. "Getting them up quickly and at a very competitive price point with enough pizazz to catch eyeballs is what it's been about."

Jim Buchta 612-673-7376

Read more:
Amid virus, developers woo Twin Cities area renters with fresh air - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Sydney and Melbourne named in international Healthy Lifestyles Cities Report among best cities in the world – 7NEWS.com.au

A UK health agency has analysed cities across the world and come up with a definitive ranking of the top places to live.

Two Australian cities feature prominently in the list, coming in second and 11th place, out of 44 cities.

The Healthy Lifestyles Cities Report used ten markers to decide if a city lent itself to health living.

In each city, researchers looked at the cost of a bottle of water, the pollution index score, how many outdoor activities were available, the number of takeaway restaurants, the cost of a monthly gym membership, the number of sunshine hours and the annual average hours worked.

To get a better idea of the city, they also examined the obesity levels, life expectancy and happiness levels of the country as a whole.

Netherlands capital city Amsterdam was a clear winner, with manageable obesity levels, more than 400 outdoor activities and the third highest happiness index.

In second place came Sydney, almost topping the charts with its sunshine hours, at 2636 hours.

However, Sydney wasnt as good as Amsterdam in terms of its annual average work hours - Sydney-siders work around 33 hours per week, while Dutch citizens work around 27 hours a week.

Melbourne came in 11th place, with a small amount of pollution and a relatively cheap gym membership - $66 a month.

Other European cities ranked highly, with Vienna, Stockholm and Copenhagen ranking third, fourth and fifth respectively.

In last place was Mexico City, in Mexico, with a low life expectancy, at 76 years, and also with high rates of pollution.

The research did not take each citys handling of the coronavirus into account.

Read the original:
Sydney and Melbourne named in international Healthy Lifestyles Cities Report among best cities in the world - 7NEWS.com.au

The Importance of Working Together to Advance Health Equity – LMH Health

February is Black History Month, a time designated to celebrate achievements by Black Americans and recognize their central role in U.S. history. LMH Health honors Black History Month by focusing on health equity and acknowledging our role as a health care provider.

Health equity has been an important consideration for LMH Health since its inception more than 100 years ago. As a non-profit community hospital providing more than $25 million in charitable care each year, investments in this area are meant to ensure that everyone has a fair and just opportunity to be as healthy as possible. This requires removing obstacles to health, including discrimination and implicit bias, lack of access to quality education and housing, and health care.

Though health disparities are a nationwide issue, they also can be seen in our local community. The Lawrence-Douglas County Public Health 2018 Health Equity Report showed disparities in health by income and education. In Douglas County, racial and ethnic minorities are disproportionately impacted by their social determinants of health, such as availability of resources like safe housing and food, and access to job opportunities and healthcare. Residents with low income are also affected.

Providing equality means providing an equal opportunity for everyone, said Erica Hill, LMH Health director for Health Equity, Inclusion and Diversity. Though we strive for equality and understand its importance, equity fills the gaps that equality might not. For example, if you give two people a book but one cannot read, you provided them with equal resources but one cannot gain the knowledge the other can. Similarly, when it comes to healthcare, it is important as an organization that we do our part to ensure health safety and equity to our patients and community every day.

The CDC reports that one in three deaths in the UnitedStates is due to cardiovascular disease. People of all ages, genders, races and ethnicities are affected. However, certain groupsincluding Black Americans and older individualsare at higher risk than others.

As part of LMH Healths commitment to better serve all populations in our community, the hospital named Erica Hill as the new director of health equity, inclusion and diversity.

Hill is currently the director of finance and strategic initiatives at LMH Health Foundation and will continue to serve in that role alongside her new position. Over the past few years, she has worked to increase education and programming around health equity, inclusion and diversity at LMH Health and around the community.

Hill leads the LMH Health Equity Advancement Team, which focuses on addressing health disparities.

LMH Healths purpose is a partner for lifelong health, said Hill. Through the work of our Inclusion, Diversity and Equity Advisors and the Health Equity Advancement Team, we are affirming our commitments to this purpose by providing the infrastructure needed to educate, innovate and advance efforts designed to eliminate health and healthcare disparities.

We continue intentionally collaborating with our LMH Health colleagues and community partners to ensure everyone in our community has the opportunity to be as healthy as possible. We want everyone to feel a sense of belonging when they come to LMH Health, said Hill.

LMH Health and the LMH Health Foundation are building programs to help bridge the health equity gap. LMH Health President and CEO Russ Johnson believes this work is integral to the hospitals role as a partner in lifelong health.

Eighty percent of health is determined by social factorswhere you live, how much money you make, said Johnson. The single best predictor of life expectancy is zip code, and in Lawrence, adjacent zip codes have an eight-year discrepancy in life expectancy. As the largest safety net organization in our community, LMH Health must extend its work into more areas that can affect the health of our patients.

Race and ethnicity is central to health, as diseases like cancer can affect individuals differently. For example, Black women are nearly twice as likely as white women to be diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer and are much more likely than white women to die from breast cancer, according to the National Cancer Institute.

Over the past two years, LMH Health has hosted several workshops on implicit biasthe unintentional, unconscious stereotypes or automatic assessments that we all make about people whose backgrounds differ from our own. These workshops, featuring Dr. Jabraan Pasha, discussed when implicit bias occurs among doctors, educators and other professionals, the results can have a direct impact on our community.

The LMH Health Foundation has provided funding to advance health equity and reduce disparities. In 2020, LMH Health Foundation created a new Health Equity Advancement Fund, which supports various health equity initiatives at the hospital. To contribute to this fund, please visit lmh.org/donate.

Working for the LMH Health Foundation, I see firsthand how philanthropy has an impact on health outcomes, Hill said. We have donors that are willing to bridge the gap and create an opportunity for others to be healthy. Because of their generosity we are able to provide mammogram certificates for anyone who cannot afford one. We also have our help and healing fund that helps support our patients who may not be receiving be able to afford certain medical expenses themselves, this fund also helps our providers ensure their patients stay on the path to healthy living and safe healing.

LMH Health Foundation, through funds raised via the oncology fundraiser Rock the Block Kick Cancer, offers mammogram certificate to cover the costs of mammograms, breast biopsies, and prostate screenings. To learn how you can receive a certificate, please call LMH Health Patient Accounts at 785-505-5775.

In order to advance health equity in our community we must work together, Hill said.

View original post here:
The Importance of Working Together to Advance Health Equity - LMH Health

Addressing the Health Concerns of African Americans – SpaceCoast Living

Everyone wants to be well, however, many dont understand what it takes to be well, said Dr. Rocourt. I spend a lot of time with my patients educating them on the importance of a healthy dietand nutrition, combined with remaining active.

Making healthy choices is often made more difficult, culturally speaking, while so many of our family traditions how we eat and how we prepare meals are heavily influenced by how we were raised. However, the importance of making proper food choices cannot be overstated when treating or living with diabetes, she continued.

Dr. Charles Croft, a Melbourne interventional cardiologist affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, agrees that reducing the risk of a heart attack or stroke requires controlling risk factors. This means choosing not to smoke, limiting alcohol consumption, eating a healthy diet, getting plenty of exercise and sleep, working to control high blood pressure and diabetes, decreasing weight if needed, and monitoring cholesterol.

Regular checkups with the dentist and annual checkups with health care providers are another important tool in the fight to stay healthy.

Its encouraging to see that more and more African Americans are taking a proactive approach in their healthcare, while working to understand disease onset and how to manage life after a diagnosis.

While socioeconomic hardships still persist, through education and understanding how lifestyle choices and adjustments can positively influence health outcomes, we are seeing patients take an active role in their health, Croft said.

African Americans are widely insured, both through private and federal programs, and plans like the Affordable Care Act have opened inroads to access that previously did not exist.

Knowledge is strength and patients know this dictum. They are increasingly informed, intelligent and well-balanced with their treatment options and this contributes to better patient outcomes, added Dr. Croft.

See the rest here:
Addressing the Health Concerns of African Americans - SpaceCoast Living

From the Extension: Be heart smart in your food choices – Daily Commercial

Lori Johnson| UF/IFAS Family & Consumer Science Agent

February is American Heart Month with the goal of creating awareness of the importance of choosing a healthy lifestyle to prevent heart disease. Changes made could help reduce the risk of additional chronic diseases from developing or their severity. Small changes over time can make a lasting effect on your daily habits, food choicesand health status. Remember to balance what you eat with physical activity, aiming for at least 150 minutes a week.

When grocery shopping, review food labels and nutrition facts to have a better understanding of what you are consuming. Compare products in serving size and the nutrition they provide. To make heart-healthy choices, aim for foods that are 1g or less of saturated fat per serving and zero trans-fat. You can also reduce your fat and sodium intake by choosing reduced or light, which will provide 25 percentor 50 percentless compared to the regular product. Fiber also contributes to heart health and 5 grams per serving is considered a good source.

Aim to stock your pantry with heart-healthy choices from each of the food groups to balance your plate and nutrition. Choose seasonal fresh fruits and veggies or frozen in a variety of colors. If choosing canned fruits, ensure they are packed in water or light syrup. For vegetables, look for reduced-sodium or no salt added.

When choosing grains like bread, pasta, crackersand tortillas, focus on the ingredient lists and look for the whole before the grain used in the food or labeled as 100 percentwhole grain. Your protein choices can vary from meats, poultry, fish, nuts, and seeds to legumes. Choose leaner cuts of meat such as 90 percentor higher lean ground beef, skinless poultry, or pork tenderloin as a few examples.

Fresh or frozen salmon, albacore tuna, herringor mackerel contain omega-3 fatty acids which are healthy fats. They can help to reduce the build-up of fat in our arteries and unhealthy fats in our blood. Each week try to include at least twoservings of non-fried fish;oneserving of fish is about 4 ounces cooked.

Monounsaturated or polyunsaturated fats can help improve your total cholesterol and heart health. You can find these in protein foods such as nuts and seeds and peanut butter. Other heart-healthy protein choices include edamame, tofu, lentils, and beans like pinto, black, garbanzo, white and navy. To complete your meals and snacks add low fat or nonfat milk, yogurt, or cottage cheese. Add low-fat and reduced-fat cheese to sandwiches, salads, or eggsor try string cheese as a snack.

Ditch the salt-shaker and flavor foods with fresh or dried herbs and spices. A little can go a long way:try different flavor combinations to see which you like best. Try preparing your foods by either baking, broiling, saut, steamingor grilling. When baking, substitute butter or oil with applesauce or other pureed fruit. During preparation, use canola or olive oil for a heart-healthy choice. Healthy choices made every day can help keep our bodies healthy and our hearts strong.

An Equal Opportunity Institution. UF/IFAS Extension, University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Nick T. Place, dean for UF/IFAS Extension. Single copies of UF/IFAS Extension publications (excluding 4-H and youth publications) are available free to Florida residents from county UF/IFAS Extension offices.

Read the original post:
From the Extension: Be heart smart in your food choices - Daily Commercial

Lands’ End Partners with Iowa County Health Department to Support the Distribution of COVID-19 Vaccines – PRNewswire

DODGEVILLE, Wis., Feb. 5, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Lands' End today announced it is partnering with the Iowa County Health Department to transform the Comer Center, a fitness and recreation facility at its Dodgeville, Wisconsin, headquarters, into a COVID-19 vaccination clinic. The facility will initially provide the capacity to vaccinate 160 people over a four-hour period and will eventually be able to accommodate up to 1600 people over eight hours, making it the largest vaccination center in Iowa County.The Iowa County Health Department will begin administering vaccines at the Comer Center on Monday, February 8 and will continue for the foreseeable future.

While Iowa County is currently only receiving a limited number of vaccine doses, Lands' End's 91,500-square-foot Comer Center will allow the Iowa County Health Department to significantly increase the amount of people who can be immunized over the course of a day, as vaccine supply increases.

Home to state-of-the-art fitness facilities and sports equipment, the Comer Center was donated by Lands' End founder and lifelong philanthropist Gary Comer in 1989 as a place for the company's employees and retirees, and their families, to stay active and take a proactive role in pursuing a healthy lifestyle. However, with many employees now working from home due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Lands' End saw an opportunity to support the local community and give back.

"We are honored to partner with the Iowa County Health Department to take an active role in bettering the health and safety of our local Dodgeville and Iowa County communities," said Jerome Griffith, chief executive officer, Lands' End. "The rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine is a critical step toward supporting Wisconsin's vibrant culture and business community, and we are grateful to be able to utilize Lands' End's facilities to help fight the pandemic."

"Iowa County is incredibly grateful for this partnership. This space allows for a much larger number of people who can be immunized, helping us get to our goal of achieving robust vaccine uptake. The use of this space will have a direct and favorable impact to the health of Iowa County residents. In a word, it is extraordinary and once again, we cannot convey how appreciative we are," said Debbie Siegenthaler, Director/Health Officer, Iowa County Health Department.

Vaccines at the Comer Center will be administered by the Iowa County Health Department with the support of Iowa County Emergency Management and numerous community volunteers. The vaccine will be available to people who live and work in Iowa County who meet the criteria for phase 1A or are over the age of 65, subject to vaccine availability.

In Iowa County, if you are eligible for a vaccine as described in Tier IAor age 65+,you can contact the Iowa County Health Department at [emailprotected]or call 608-930-9870. Patients of Upland Hills Health can also visit the Upland Hills website to sign up on their waiting list for their clinics which are separate from the Iowa County Health Department Clinic at the Comer Center. You can also check out any health care provider's website for instructions on how they are distributing vaccine. Vaccine quantities are limited, and clinics are scheduled as soon as vaccine becomes available.

About Lands' End, Inc.Lands' End, Inc. (NASDAQ: LE) is a leading uni-channel retailer of casual clothing, accessories, footwear and home products. We offer products online at http://www.landsend.com, on third party online marketplaces and through retail locations. We are a classic American lifestyle brand with a passion for quality, legendary service and real value, and seek to deliver timeless style for women, men, kids and the home.

SOURCE Lands' End, Inc.

http://www.landsend.com

Go here to see the original:
Lands' End Partners with Iowa County Health Department to Support the Distribution of COVID-19 Vaccines - PRNewswire

Zero calorie chips Market by Services, Technology, Overview, Component, Industry Revenue, Cost Structure Analysis and Forecast to 2027 KSU | The…

Zero calorie chips Market:Global Size, Trends, Competitive, Historical & Forecast Analysis, 2021-2027.Growing health awareness among the people across the globe coupled with hectic life, rising in demand for ready-to-eat packed food products and increasing prevalence of diseases such as obesity and blood pressure as well as increasing adoption of healthy lifestyle among the people is some important factors driving the growth of zero calorie chips market.

Zero calorie chips are thin slice of potato, tapioca, tortilla with zero calorie content. Chips are baked at high temperature to make them crunchy. Zero calorie chips can be made from different source such as potato, tapioca, tortilla etc. Different flavors of zero calorie chips are available in the market. Zero calorie chips are considered very healthy as a snacks rather than normal chips. It is very effective to reduce weigh and makes healthy lifestyle. Benefits of zero calorie chips are it lower the risk of cancer, diabetes, blood pressure, due to low calories. Zero calorie chips provide a healthier alternative to deep-fried chips, It is a good source of several essential nutrients, including minerals and vitamins beneficial for your health.

Get Sample Copy of The Report@ https://brandessenceresearch.com/food-and-beverage/zero-calorie-chips-market-industry-analysis

Zero calorie chips are segmented into type, distribution channel, region and country. On the basis of type, zero calorie chips are segmented into potato, tapioca, tortilla and others. On the basis of distribution channel, zero calorie chips are segmented into supermarket, convenience store, online retailer and others.

The regions covered in global zero calorie chips market report is North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Rest of the World. On the basis of country level, Global zero calorie chips market sub divided in U.S., Mexico, Canada, U.K., France, Germany, Italy, China, Japan, India, South East Asia, GCC, Africa, etc.

zero-calorie chipsCompanies-

Global Krill oil market reports cover prominent players like,

The Kellogg Company

Mission Foods

Tastemorr Snacks

Shearers Snacks

ARA Food Corporation

General Mills

PepsiCo

Deep River Snacks

Popchips

Others

PepsiCo has acquired BFY brand.

News:02 Dec. 2020- PepsiCo has acquired BFY brand, the maker of air popped snacks, flex protein chips, Flourish veggie chips and low calories chips to expand product portfolio and distribution channel as well production capacity of PepsiCo.

Zero calorie chips Market Dynamics-

The key factor for the growth of zero calorie chips market is increasing prevalence of diseases such obesity and blood pressure across the globe. According to World Health Organisation (WHO), it is estimated that 2.7 billion adults will be overweight, over 1 billion affected by obesity, and 177 million adults severely affected by obesity by 2025 in worldwide. Furthermore, rapid urbanization, hectic lifestyle coupled with rising disposable income of the people which leads to rising in demand of ready-to-eat packaged food products across the globe is driving the growth of zero calorie chips market. In addition, growing trend of adoption of healthy lifestyle coupled with increasing health awareness among the people this drives zero calorie market. However, the factors which restrict the growth of zero calorie chips market are availability of alternative option of zero calorie products of competitors. Moreover, introduction of different flavors to chips will create huge opportunity in zero calorie chips market.

Zero Calorie Market Regional Analysis-

North America is expected to dominate the growth of zero calorie chips market due to rapid urbanization coupled with changing preference of consumers towards healthy snacks. Furthermore, increasing prevalence of obesity in this region is driving the zero calorie chips market. According to, Centers for Disease Control and prevention (CDC) the disease of obesity affects about 78 million Americans.

Asia-Pacific is projected to dominate the growth of zero calorie chips market due to increasing population coupled with increasing purchasing power of the people owing to rise in disposable income. In addition, growing health awareness among the people owing to rising obesity across the globe is driving the growth of zero calorie chips market in this region.

Europe is anticipated to grow due to changing lifestyle of people and consumers are more inclined towards ready-to-eat packaged food products owing to increasing working population in this region.

Key Benefits for Zero Calorie Chips Market Reports

Global zero calorie chips market report covers in depth historical and forecast analysis.

Global zero calorie chips Market research report provides detail information about Market Introduction, Market Summary, Global market Revenue (Revenue USD), Market Drivers, Market Restraints, Market opportunities, Competitive Analysis, Regional and Country Level.

Global zero calorie chips market report helps to identify opportunities in market place.

Global zero calorie chips market report covers extensive analysis of emerging trends and competitive landscape.

Zero Calorie Chips Market Segmentation

By Type Potato, Tapioca, Tortilla

By Distribution Channel Supermarket, Convenience sore, Online retailer, Others

By Regional & Country Analysis

North America, U.S., Mexico, Canada , Europe, UK, France, Germany, Italy , Asia Pacific, China, Japan, India, Southeast Asia, South America, Brazil, Argentina, Columbia, The Middle East and Africa, GCC, Africa, Rest of Middle East and Africa

Get Full Report :@ https://brandessenceresearch.com/food-and-beverage/zero-calorie-chips-market-industry-analysis

About Us:

Brandessence Market Research and Consulting Pvt. ltd.

Brandessence market research publishes market research reports & business insights produced by highly qualified and experienced industry analysts. Our research reports are available in a wide range of industry verticals including aviation, food & beverage, healthcare, ICT, Construction, Chemicals and lot more. Brand Essence Market Research report will be best fit for senior executives, business development managers, marketing managers, consultants, CEOs, CIOs, COOs, and Directors, governments, agencies, organizations and Ph.D. Students. We have a delivery center in Pune, India and our sales office is in London.

Contact us at: +44-2038074155 or mail us atsales@industrystatsreport.com

Website:https://brandessenceresearch.com/

Article:https://businessstatsnews.com

Read the original:
Zero calorie chips Market by Services, Technology, Overview, Component, Industry Revenue, Cost Structure Analysis and Forecast to 2027 KSU | The...

Regular Exercise And 4 Other Lifestyle Measures That Can Help You Be Cancer-Free, As Per WHO – NDTV

Being regular at exercise can reduce the risk of 13 kinds of cancer: American Cancer Society

According to the World Health Organization, the number of people diagnosed with cancer increased by almost 10 million in the past two decades. Of the newly diagnosed cancers, breast cancer is the most common (12%), followed by lung cancer (11%), colorectal cancer (10%) and prostate cancer (7%). By 2040, it has been predicted that the number of newly diagnosed cases of cancer will be nearly 50% higher than in 2020, reports WHO. Several cancers can be cured if they are diagnosed on time and treated properly. Vaccination can help preventing certain cancers like cervical cancer (HPV vaccine) and liver cancer (hepatitis B).

Believe it or not, several kinds of cancers can be prevented and well-managed by following a healthy lifestyle. WHO shared some of these lifestyle measures on Instagram recently. Here are they:

Tobacco use is considered to be a leading cause of cancer and death from cancer, according to National Cancer Institute. Regular use of tobacco or being exposed to secondhand smoke can increase risk of cancer. Cancers of Lung, larynx, mouth, throat, oesophagus, kidney, liver, stomach, colon, pancreas, rectum and cervix can be caused by use of tobacco. Quit smoking and tobacco use in all forms in order to reduce the risk of cancer.

Also read:What Happens When You Quit Smoking? Tips To Deal With Withdrawal Symptoms

The American Cancer Society says that being regular at exercise can reduce the risk of 13 kinds of cancer including that of oesophagus, liver, stomach, kidneys, myeloid leukemia, multiple myeloma, head and neck, rectum, bladder and lungs. Make sure that you do 150 minutes of moderate intensity exercise or 90 minutes of high intensity exercise every week. Apart from exercising regularly, it is also important to stay physically active throughout the day and prevent long hours of sitting.

Exercise regularly to reduce your risk of cancerPhoto Credit: iStock

The less alcohol you drink, the lower is your risk of cancer. Excessive intake of alcohol on a regular basis can increase the risk of cancer of the mouth and throat, oesophagus, colon and rectum, liver and breast (in women), according to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. All kinds of alcoholic drinks, including cocktails, red wine and white wine, are linked to cancer. The more you drink, the higher is your risk of cancer.

Also read:Increased Stress, Disturbed Sleep And Other Risks Associated With Drinking Too Much Alcohol

Exposure to the ultraviolet radiation of the sun can result in early ageing of the skin and can also increase the risk of skin cancer. The National Cancer Institute instructs that sun's rays are strongest between 10 am to 4 pm. They can go through light clothing, windshields, windows and clouds. They can be reflected by sand, water, snow, ice and pavement. Avoid spending too much time in the sun and do not forget to apply sunscreen.

A healthy a nourishing diet can take you a long way in terms of building immunity and being cancer and disease-free. Avoid processed and packaged foods and stick to naturally grown, organic and homemade foods most of the times. Your diet should include lots of fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains, lentils, legumes, nuts and seeds.

All of these lifestyle measures can together reduce your risk of developing cancer and may even help manage it. Let's beat cancer!

Also read:World Cancer Day 2021: Are You At Risk Of Developing Cervical Cancer? Let's Find Out

Disclaimer: This content including advice provides generic information only. It is in no way a substitute for qualified medical opinion. Always consult a specialist or your own doctor for more information. NDTV does not claim responsibility for this information.

Waiting for response to load...

More here:
Regular Exercise And 4 Other Lifestyle Measures That Can Help You Be Cancer-Free, As Per WHO - NDTV

LIVE WELL: TSET approves youth advocacy and education program – Stillwater News Press

The Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust Board of Directors is seeking to empower Oklahoma youth to improve health outcomes for future generations. Teens are facing increasing threats to good health as rates of vaping and obesity continue to climb in Oklahoma and nationally.

The TSET Board of Directors on Tuesday approved a proposal to launch a four-year youth advocacy and education program. The plan is the second phase of the TSET Healthy Youth Initiative that began this past fall with a youth-focused media campaign to educate on the risks of vapor use.

Changing behaviors and preventing chronic disease are key to improving the health of Oklahomans, and healthy behaviors learned early last into adulthood, said TSET Board Chair Michelle Stephens. Creating a healthier future for Oklahoma starts with todays youth. This program will seek out youth leaders and volunteers to advocate for policies and lead activities that will improve health for other youth and for all Oklahomans.

Tobacco use and obesity contribute to the leading causes of preventable death in Oklahoma heart disease and cancer. The TSET Board of Directors have identified youth prevention and health improvement as a priority in their multi-year strategic plan. The TSET Board approved a proposal from Rescue Agency, a group focusing on behavior change, to implement and manage the new program expected to launch later this year.

The program will have two main components: a youth engagement program that high school students can join, and educational and policy change activities lead by youth.

The program seeks to partner with existing high school clubs and student councils to recruit and train high-school youth in tobacco use prevention, physical activity and nutrition education activities to improve community health.

The talents, creativity and energy of Oklahomas youth are an untapped resource for promoting health in our state, said TSET Executive Director Julie Bisbee. By empowering our young people and helping them hone their leadership skills, these young leaders will have a greater understanding of their role in creating a healthier future for Oklahoma.

The first phase of the TSET Healthy Youth Initiative is a multifaceted statewide media campaign that addresses vapor, tobacco use and obesity among Oklahoma youth ages 13-18. The educational messages launched on TV, cable and radio in 2020.

TheTSET Healthy Youth Initiativeis a statewide effort focused on preventing and reducing tobacco use and obesity for Oklahomans ages 13-18. The initiative promotes healthy lifestyle choices for teens and gives adults resources to support children in maintaining or developing healthy habits for a lifetime.

TheOklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust(TSET) serves as a partner and bridge builder for organizations shaping a healthier future for all Oklahomans. TSET provides leadership at the intersections of health by working with local coalitions and initiatives across the state, cultivating innovative and life-changing research, and working across public and private sectors to develop, support, implement and evaluate creative strategies to take advantage of emerging opportunities to improve the publics health.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

Original post:
LIVE WELL: TSET approves youth advocacy and education program - Stillwater News Press

REVIEW: ‘The Dig’ is captivating, beautiful exploration of past The Daily Free Press – Daily Free Press

Combining the directorial skills of Simon Stone, the screenplay adaptation by Moira Buffini and the cinematography of Mike Eley, The Dig portrays a dynamic, true story intertwining themes of history and modern existential longing with dramatic scenes concerning life, death, love and family.

The Netflix film, released Jan. 29, is an adaptation of John Prestons 2007 novel of the same name and is based on a true story. Taking place in the rustic countryside of Suffolk, England on the eve of World War II, self-taught archaeologist Basil Brown, played by Ralph Fiennes, embarks on a dig to uncover whats believed to be ancient Anglo-Saxon ruins potentially dating as far back as the Vikings or further.

The site lies on the vast estate owned by Edith Pretty, played by 2013s The Great Gatsby star Carey Mulligan. Pretty is a widow left with one son and a dream to dig up three large, grassy, hill-like mounds located in the fields. Though the archaeologist is unconvinced theres anything significant to be found, attempted grave robberies have convinced Pretty theres something extremely valuable hidden within.

Brown, a local archaeologist with the Ipswich Museum, leads the Sutton Hoo excavation, with Peggy Piggott, played by Lily James. Hes portrayed as a modest working man with vast knowledge of the land. His soil expertise is what leads Pretty to hire him in the first place.

Given the politics of the time period, the dig site is seen as an area of national interest as Britain was preparing to protect the countrys ancient ruins from German air raids.

The story shifts toward a more intimate focus, concerned with family and belonging, when Prettys young son Robert, played by Archie Barnes, grows increasingly fond of Brown. The two are portrayed almost as father and son, bringing the narrative closer to one of community rather than national glory.

The Dig captures a unique perspective of existentialism, with the story taking place during Britains mobilization before wartime. It keeps audiences reflecting on the significance of human legacy, wondering what will be left of us after we are gone.

As the characters on screen are forced to come to terms with their own mortality in an age of destruction and uncertainty, we get a better understanding of the significance of these ancient runes that are still standing a testament of humanitys longevity.

Aside from matters of historical and ancestral significance, The Dig is a nod to the struggles that affect ordinary people of today, with overtones of love, lust and heartbreak.

What keeps viewers satisfied throughout the film is the unchanging and breathtaking scenery of the Suffolk countryside. Eley yields cinematographic mastery by capturing the lush wheat fields of eastern England, combined with enticing pan shots of the site to emphasize how massive this project is, yet also how seemingly small of a role it plays in the full history of the nation.

Stone keeps audiences holding their breaths by turning a story of national history into a heartfelt drama that so accurately touches on struggles that afflict people of all backgrounds.

Its worth mentioning the film has received some criticism for sexist portrayal of characters, for ageism despite the whimsical setting and for fictionalizing some of the truth.

Be that as it may, it was worth the watch.

At surface level, The Dig seems like a story of historical drama, but it takes audiences into deep-cutting, emotionally luring instances of love, loss, triumph and human connection.

Link:
REVIEW: 'The Dig' is captivating, beautiful exploration of past The Daily Free Press - Daily Free Press

Around Town: UC Irvine to host a virtual celebration Monday to ring in the Year of the Ox – Los Angeles Times

The Lunar New Year will be welcomed Monday afternoon when UC Irvine hosts a special virtual celebration of the Year of the Ox.

The festivities are free and open to the public and are expected to include a dragon dance and feeding of the lion in addition to performances from artist Abigail Washburn and world-famous guzheng musician Wu Fei.

There will also be a virtual wishing tree and guests will be able to make a wish for prosperity, happiness and longevity by writing a wish on a red wishing card and taking a selfie with it. Wishing cards and more details on the event can be read at humanities.uci.edu.

Registration is required to attend and the event will begin at 4:30 p.m. on Feb. 8.

The Lunar New Year is on Feb. 12.

Laguna Beach hires recruiting firm for city manager searchLaguna Beach has begun the recruiting process in search of the seaside communitys next city manager.

John Pietig, the presiding city manager of Laguna Beach, announced the first week of January that he plans to retire in June. His service to the city has spanned 20 years.

The Laguna Beach City Council, which makes the appointment for the position of city manager, has hired the recruiting firm Bob Murray & Associates to carry out a search for candidates to serve as the citys top executive. City officials said the estimated cost for the executive recruiting firms services is less than $30,000.

This is one of the most important positions in the city, and hiring the recruiting firm will allow us to thoroughly evaluate both internal and external candidates for the City Manager position, Laguna Beach Mayor Bob Whalen said in a statement.

Pietig began his run with Laguna as assistant city manager, and he has served as city manager for the last decade. According to Whalen, the City Council aims to name his replacement in May.

Laguna Beach Dems to host OC Supervisor race talk Attorney Ashleigh Aitken will address the 6:30 p.m. Feb. 10 meeting of the Laguna Beach Democratic Club, a Zoom meeting that is open to the public. The events topic is the upcoming Orange County Board of Supervisors election, what role the board plays in running the county and how it allocates its $7.5 billion budget.

We should all be informed about and weigh in on how our tax dollars are being allocated by the Board of Supervisors, Gwen McNallan, president of the club, stated in a news release.

To learn more about the club, or to register for Wednesdays Zoom meeting, visit thelbdems.com.

OC emergency rental assistance program accepting applicationsThe County of Orange is accepting applications through the month of February for an Emergency Rental Assistance program for eligible renters struggling with unpaid rent or utilities bills during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Launched this week and funded by a $65.5 million allocation from the U.S. Department of Treasury, the program aims to provide financial assistance to those whose combined household income is at or below 80% of the countys average median income.

In Orange County, the median income is approximately $71,750 for an individual, $82,000 for a two-member household, $92,250 for three people and $102,450 for a four-person household. For more information on household size, visit era.211oc.org.

Residents of Anaheim, Santa Ana and Irvine may not participate in Orange Countys assistance program, as those cities have population sizes over 200,000 and maintain their own local city programs, according to a release issued last week by the Orange County Health Care Agency.

The Emergency Rental Assistance program does not apply to homeowners with past-due mortgage payments, utilities or energy costs. Funds may only be granted to renters.

Applicants will need to provide a photo ID, a copy of their lease agreement, proof of income affected by COVID-19, such as an unemployment letter or a letter from an employment detailing reduced hours or pay and proof of unpaid rent or utilities, such as documentation from a landlord or utility company stating an amount owed or overdue.

To learn how to apply, call 2-1-1 to receive assistance in multiple languages, visit era.211oc.org or text ERA to 898211.

Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation accepting applications through March 2A range of college scholarships are available to children or stepchildren of a Marine or Navy corpsmen, chaplain or religious programs specialist attached to a Marine unit who have a cumulative grade point average of 2.0 (on an unweighted 4.0 scale) and whose family has an adjusted gross income of $106,000 or less for 2021-22.

Scholarships are available for those pursuing an associates or bachelors degree, attending or planning to attend a college or career training school listed on the National Center for Education Statistics College Navigator website during the 2021-22 academic year.

Career and technical education scholarships are also available for students planning to attend a non-degree certificate program or vocational training 12 months or less at a community college or private career school listed on the College Navigator website.

Applications may be submitted through March 2. For more information, visit mcsf.org/apply.

Laguna Beach Festival of Arts 2021 grant applications due March 5Nonprofit organizations with programs promoting fine arts in and around the city of Laguna Beach are welcome to apply for a series of art grants through the Festival of Arts Foundation beginning Feb. 8.

The Foundation, established in 1989 to preserve and promote fine arts and other artistic endeavors in the area, will be accepting applications through March 5.

The FOA Foundation is proud to be able to assist local non-profit art organizations during these challenging times, Foundation President Bob Earl said in a statement. We hope that these funds will help to continue the programs that educate our community on the importance of art and cultural experiences.

Applications can be submitted online at foapom.com/grants. For information on eligibility, grant awards and the application process, contact Bob Earl at (949) 494-4132.

Laguna Beach school board appoints Michael Conlon to assistant superintendentThe Laguna Beach Unified School District has named Michael Conlon its assistant superintendent of human resources and public communications, according to district officials.

Conlon, who was serving as the director of human resources for the district, was appointed to the role at the board meeting on Jan. 28, at which the board considered reorganizing into a format with three assistant superintendents.

A statement from the district said that the decision would not result in an increase in staff. Jeff Dixon is the assistant superintendent of business services, and the district plans to hire an assistant superintendent of instructional services.

Michael [Conlon] has continued to demonstrate his focus on continuous improvement for himself and our community, District Supt. Jason Viloria said in the release. He is committed to developing positive relationships with staff and problem-solving conflicts when they occur. He has proven to be an effective human resources leader and administrator whose work is characterized by a genuine concern for the entire school community.

Back Bay products Mo Kenney, Tanner Pulice earn mens water polo honorsNewport Harbor High alumnus Mo Kenney earned Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Player of the Week honors this week, while Corona del Mar High product Tanner Pulice was named the MPSF Newcomer of the Week.

Both Kenney and Pulice are freshmen for the UCLA mens water polo team.

In his collegiate debut, Kenney scored a game-high five goals on Jan. 30 to lead the No. 2-ranked Bruins to a 15-9 home win over No. 5 Pepperdine. Four of the goals were even strength, and one came on the power play. He needed just six shots to score the five goals.

Pulice had two goals and two assists in the victory, also winning a sprint and drawing an exclusion.

Cal senior football player Michael Saffell, an Edison High alumnus, has been named the Pac-12 Football Scholar Athlete of the Year.

Saffell, a center, started on the offensive line for the Golden Bears each of the last three years, earning honorable mention All-Pac-12 honors in 2020. He began his career at guard before moving to center as a junior.

Due to COVID-19, he is eligible for a fifth year of competition, and he has opted to return in 2021.

Saffell earned his bachelors degree from Cals Haas School of Business in three-and-a-half years, graduating in December with a 3.62 undergraduate GPA. He was accepted into the universitys Master of Information and Data Science program, which he began in January.

Orange County SC shirt sales to benefit OC Educational Arts AcademyThe Orange County Soccer Club has started the JuntosMsFuertes campaign, hoping to combine the communitys passion for soccer and the arts to support diverse nonprofit organizations.

A custom shirt has been created in collaboration with a local artist, and all net proceeds from its sale will go to the Orange County Educational Arts Academy.

Located in Santa Ana, the institution serves about 630 students, ranging from transitional kindergarten to eighth grade.

Hugo Cesar Chavarria was the Southern Californian artist called upon to create the design for the shirt, which depicts action in an Orange County Soccer Club game with landmarks like the Santa Ana Water Tower and the Great Park Balloon in Irvine in the background.

The shirts are limited edition and will be on sale through February. The cost is $20 per shirt, and they can be purchased at the following link: bit.ly/OCSCDASH.

Sage Hill School accepting applications for 2021-22 school year through Feb. 15Sage Hill School, a nonprofit, non-denominational independent high school is accepting applications for students in grades 9-12 for the 2021-22 school year through Feb. 15.

Having reopened its doors to students in September five days a week, Sage Hill offered classes virtually or in-person during the 2020-21 school year.

For more information on programs, or to apply online, visit sagehillschool.org and click on the Admission tab. For all candidates who apply by the Feb. 15 deadline, first-round decisions will be announced the last week of February.

Support our coverage by becoming a digital subscriber.

View original post here:
Around Town: UC Irvine to host a virtual celebration Monday to ring in the Year of the Ox - Los Angeles Times

Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Report 2020 by Key Players, Types, Applications, Countries, Market Size, Forecast to 2026 (Based…

Overview for Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Helps in providing scope and definitions, Key Findings, Growth Drivers, and Various Dynamics.

Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Data and Acquisition Research Study with Trends and Opportunities 2019-2024The study of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market is a compilation of the market of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy broken down into its entirety on the basis of types, application, trends and opportunities, mergers and acquisitions, drivers and restraints, and a global outreach. The detailed study also offers a board interpretation of the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy industry from a variety of data points that are collected through reputable and verified sources. Furthermore, the study sheds a lights on a market interpretations on a global scale which is further distributed through distribution channels, generated incomes sources and a marginalized market space where most trade occurs.

Along with a generalized market study, the report also consists of the risks that are often neglected when it comes to the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy industry in a comprehensive manner. The study is also divided in an analytical space where the forecast is predicted through a primary and secondary research methodologies along with an in-house model.

Download PDF Sample of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market report @ https://hongchunresearch.com/request-a-sample/113635

Key players in the global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market covered in Chapter 4:Acorda TherapeuticsUnity BiotechnologyAntoxereneCelgeneCohbarSenex BiotechnologyHuman Longevity Inc.T.A. SciencesAgex TherapeuticsRecursion PharmaceuticalsCalico Life SciencesSpotlight BiosciencePowervision Inc.Sierra Sciences LlcRestorbioInsilico MedicineOisin BiotechnologySenolytic TherapeuticsProteostasis Therapeutics Inc.Prana Biotechnology Ltd.Cleara Biotech

In Chapter 11 and 13.3, on the basis of types, the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market from 2015 to 2026 is primarily split into:Senolytic Drug TherapyGene TherapyImmunotherapyOthers

In Chapter 12 and 13.4, on the basis of applications, the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market from 2015 to 2026 covers:LongevitySenescence InhibitionCardiovascular DiseasesNeural Degenerative DiseasesOphthalmology DisordersCancer

Geographically, the detailed analysis of consumption, revenue, market share and growth rate, historic and forecast (2015-2026) of the following regions are covered in Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13:North America (Covered in Chapter 6 and 13)United StatesCanadaMexicoEurope (Covered in Chapter 7 and 13)GermanyUKFranceItalySpainRussiaOthersAsia-Pacific (Covered in Chapter 8 and 13)ChinaJapanSouth KoreaAustraliaIndiaSoutheast AsiaOthersMiddle East and Africa (Covered in Chapter 9 and 13)Saudi ArabiaUAEEgyptNigeriaSouth AfricaOthersSouth America (Covered in Chapter 10 and 13)BrazilArgentinaColumbiaChileOthersRegional scope can be customized

For a global outreach, the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy study also classifies the market into a global distribution where key market demographics are established based on the majority of the market share. The following markets that are often considered for establishing a global outreach are North America, Europe, Asia, and the Rest of the World. Depending on the study, the following markets are often interchanged, added, or excluded as certain markets only adhere to certain products and needs.

Here is a short glance at what the study actually encompasses:Study includes strategic developments, latest product launches, regional growth markers and mergers & acquisitionsRevenue, cost price, capacity & utilizations, import/export rates and market shareForecast predictions are generated from analytical data sources and calculated through a series of in-house processes.

However, based on requirements, this report could be customized for specific regions and countries.

Brief about Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Report with [emailprotected]https://hongchunresearch.com/report/longevity-and-anti-senescence-therapy-market-size-2020-113635

Some Point of Table of Content:

Chapter One: Report Overview

Chapter Two: Global Market Growth Trends

Chapter Three: Value Chain of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market

Chapter Four: Players Profiles

Chapter Five: Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Regions

Chapter Six: North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Seven: Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Eight: Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Ten: South America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Eleven: Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Segment by Types

Chapter Twelve: Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Segment by Applications 12.1 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Applications (2015-2020) 12.1.1 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Market Share by Applications (2015-2020) 12.1.2 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue and Market Share by Applications (2015-2020) 12.2 Longevity Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.3 Senescence Inhibition Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.4 Cardiovascular Diseases Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.5 Neural Degenerative Diseases Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.6 Ophthalmology Disorders Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.7 Cancer Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020)

Chapter Thirteen: Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Forecast by Regions (2020-2026) continued

Check [emailprotected] https://hongchunresearch.com/check-discount/113635

List of tablesList of Tables and Figures Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Size Growth Rate by Type (2020-2026) Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Share by Type in 2019 & 2026 Figure Senolytic Drug Therapy Features Figure Gene Therapy Features Figure Immunotherapy Features Figure Others Features Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Size Growth by Application (2020-2026) Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Share by Application in 2019 & 2026 Figure Longevity Description Figure Senescence Inhibition Description Figure Cardiovascular Diseases Description Figure Neural Degenerative Diseases Description Figure Ophthalmology Disorders Description Figure Cancer Description Figure Global COVID-19 Status Overview Table Influence of COVID-19 Outbreak on Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Industry Development Table SWOT Analysis Figure Porters Five Forces Analysis Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Size and Growth Rate 2015-2026 Table Industry News Table Industry Policies Figure Value Chain Status of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Figure Production Process of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Figure Manufacturing Cost Structure of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Figure Major Company Analysis (by Business Distribution Base, by Product Type) Table Downstream Major Customer Analysis (by Region) Table Acorda Therapeutics Profile Table Acorda Therapeutics Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Unity Biotechnology Profile Table Unity Biotechnology Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Antoxerene Profile Table Antoxerene Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Celgene Profile Table Celgene Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Cohbar Profile Table Cohbar Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Senex Biotechnology Profile Table Senex Biotechnology Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Human Longevity Inc. Profile Table Human Longevity Inc. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table T.A. Sciences Profile Table T.A. Sciences Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Agex Therapeutics Profile Table Agex Therapeutics Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Recursion Pharmaceuticals Profile Table Recursion Pharmaceuticals Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Calico Life Sciences Profile Table Calico Life Sciences Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Spotlight Bioscience Profile Table Spotlight Bioscience Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Powervision Inc. Profile Table Powervision Inc. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Sierra Sciences Llc Profile Table Sierra Sciences Llc Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Restorbio Profile Table Restorbio Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Insilico Medicine Profile Table Insilico Medicine Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Oisin Biotechnology Profile Table Oisin Biotechnology Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Senolytic Therapeutics Profile Table Senolytic Therapeutics Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Proteostasis Therapeutics Inc. Profile Table Proteostasis Therapeutics Inc. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Prana Biotechnology Ltd. Profile Table Prana Biotechnology Ltd. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Cleara Biotech Profile Table Cleara Biotech Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Regions in 2015 Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Regions in 2019 Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Middle East and Africa Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure South America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Countries (2015-2020) Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2019 Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Countries (2015-2020) Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2019 Figure United States Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Canada Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Mexico Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) Growth (2015-2020) Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Countries (2015-2020) Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2019 Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Countries (2015-2020) Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2019 Figure Germany Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure UK Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure France Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Italy Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Spain Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Russia Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Countries (2015-2020) Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2019 Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Countries (2015-2020) Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2019 Figure China Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Japan Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure South Korea Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Australia Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure India Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Southeast Asia Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Middle East and Africa Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) continued

About HongChun Research: HongChun Research main aim is to assist our clients in order to give a detailed perspective on the current market trends and build long-lasting connections with our clientele. Our studies are designed to provide solid quantitative facts combined with strategic industrial insights that are acquired from proprietary sources and an in-house model.

Contact Details: Jennifer GrayManager Global Sales+ 852 8170 0792[emailprotected]

NOTE: Our report does take into account the impact of coronavirus pandemic and dedicates qualitative as well as quantitative sections of information within the report that emphasizes the impact of COVID-19.

As this pandemic is ongoing and leading to dynamic shifts in stocks and businesses worldwide, we take into account the current condition and forecast the market data taking into consideration the micro and macroeconomic factors that will be affected by the pandemic.

https://neighborwebsj.com/

Read this article:
Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Report 2020 by Key Players, Types, Applications, Countries, Market Size, Forecast to 2026 (Based...

Who wants to live for ever? – Ageing can be curedand, in part, it soon will be | Books & arts – The Economist

That is Andrew Steeles thesis in Ageless

Feb 6th 2021

Ageless. By Andrew Steele. Doubleday; 352 pages; $29. Bloomsbury; 20

OLD AGE is a massacre, wrote Philip Roth, long before the pandemic underscored its hazards. Even those who count as young must often watch the ineluctable drift of loved ones into decrepitude. Andrew Steele has a hopeful message for all those facing this prospect (ie, everyone). Old age neednt be a massacre; in fact, old age neednt even be old.

Your browser does not support the

Enjoy more audio and podcasts on iOS or Android.

Mr Steeles thesis in Ageless is that ageing can be curedand, at least in part, that it very soon will be. The giant tortoises of the Galapagos Islands show no age-related decline, in some ways seeming as youthful at 170 as at 30. Mr Steele thinks this phenomenon, known as negligible senescence, is within humanitys grasp, too.

Whether or not readers are persuaded that ageless humans could ever be more than a theoretical possibilityand it is a stretchthis book will convince them that discounting the theoretical possibility altogether is based on nothing but prejudice. Western art may have something to do with it, bristling as it is with morality tales about the folly of wanting to turn back the clock; but there is actually no good reason to assume an upper limit to longevity, or that ageing must come with decline. And there is quite a lot of evidence to the contrary. Without the rich worlds denizens really noticing, a life that ends after the biblical three score years and ten has already come to seem a life cut short; instead, 90 is now seen as a good innings.

This prejudice held back the field of biogerontology for a very long time, but in the past few decades some scientists have cast it aside. This has enabled them to see that the real folly lies in the attempt to cure the diseases of old age one by one, rather than tackling their underlying causeageing itself. Now they are trying to understand that process in all its extraordinary complexity, and to intervene much earlier.

They have many tools at their disposal, and Mr Steele, who has a background in computational biology, evaluates them expertly and with verve. They range from drugs that mimic the life-extending effects of dietary restriction to gene-editing tools such as CRISPR and computer models that simulate whole biological systems. Such models may eventually prove the key that unlocks the inner Methuselah in everyone, by revealing both the limits to these systems and their redundancies: what can be tweaked, and what had best be left alone.

Temporarilyand with a bitter ironycovid-19 has slammed the brakes on this burgeoning area of research. But Mr Steele thinks its first dividends will emerge within a couple of years, perhaps in the form of senolytic drugs that clear the accumulating cellular detritus of a long life. He makes the valid point that if, for every year of scientific endeavour, a year could be added to the average human lifespan, old age would recede into the future at the same rate as todays population approached it. That would itself be quite a milestone on the road to negligible senescence.

This interim goal is easily within reach, he claims. Many scientists agreeand are among those who have chosen to take experimental anti-ageing drugs. For some of these treatments they have calculated that the risks are small, compared with the potential benefits. The true sign that a scientific revolution is in the offing is that the scientists themselves have bought into it. Whether that revolution is desirable is a different question, which it may fall to a new generation of artists to answer.

This article appeared in the Books & arts section of the print edition under the headline "Who wants to live for ever?"

Read the rest here:
Who wants to live for ever? - Ageing can be curedand, in part, it soon will be | Books & arts - The Economist

PerkinElmer’s Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE Cell Line Supports Trinomab Biotech’s Development of the World-First, Tetanus Toxin mAb Drug for Clinical…

WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PerkinElmer, a global leader committed to innovating for a healthier world, today announced that its Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE CHO-K1GS knockout cell line licensed by Trinomab Biotech. Co., Ltd. (www.trinomab.com), of Guangzhou, China was used to help produce and bring to clinical trial the worlds first, fully native human monoclonal neutralizing antibody (mAb) drug candidate to fight tetanus toxin.

Officially approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) and Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC), the phase I clinical trial in Australia is expected to be completed in August 2021. Leveraging Horizons CHOSOURCE cell line, which includes a gene-edited Glutamine Synthetase (GS) knockout Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) K1 cell line and well-established GS expression system, Trinomab was able to get its drug candidate from DNA sequence to clinical manufacturing more quickly and easily.

Trinomab Biotech explained: Since implementing the CHOSOURCE CHO-K1 knockout cell line in our drug development workflow in March 2019, we have been able to hit the ground running and develop this mAb drug candidate against different diseases including the first in-human mAb in phase I trial in Australia against tetanus toxin. These efforts have shown how easy and effective the Horizon cell line was to implement and adapt to our processes. We are pleased with the results and continue to build our drug pipeline using the CHOSOURCE CHO-K1 cell line.

We are delighted that the CHOSOURCE cell line has been part of Trinomabs pioneering efforts to combat disease and are pleased to be working with other organizations in China and around the globe to move drug science and new therapeutic candidates forward, commented Jess Zurdo, Global Head Bioproduction in PerkinElmers Horizon business.

The CHOSOURCE platform, designed for pharmaceutical, biotechnology and biosimilar companies of all sizes, is recognized by the industry and regulators as optimized for high yield bioproduction and is licensed by more than 80 organizations globally. More than nine biotherapeutics expressed in these cell lines, including Trinomabs, have progressed to investigational new drug (IND) filings.

For further information on PerkinElmers Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE technology please visit: https://horizondiscovery.com/en/chosource.

About PerkinElmer

PerkinElmer enables scientists, researchers, and clinicians to address their most critical challenges across science and healthcare. With a mission focused on innovating for a healthier world, we deliver unique solutions to serve the diagnostics, life sciences, food, and applied markets. We strategically partner with customers to enable earlier and more accurate insights supported by deep market knowledge and technical expertise. Our dedicated team of about 14,000 employees worldwide is passionate about helping customers work to create healthier families, improve the quality of life, and sustain the wellbeing and longevity of people globally. The Company reported revenue of approximately $3.8 billion in 2020, serves customers in 190 countries, and is a component of the S&P 500 index. Additional information is available through 1-877-PKI-NYSE, or at http://www.perkinelmer.com.

About Trinomab

Trinomab is a biopharmaceutical start-up focused on the research and development of new, fully native human antibody drugs to fight infectious, autoimmune, and other diseases as well as malignant tumors. The core technology of the company is a fourth-generation antibody HitmAb, a proprietary technology platform. Additional information is available at http://www.trinomab.com.

Read the rest here:
PerkinElmer's Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE Cell Line Supports Trinomab Biotech's Development of the World-First, Tetanus Toxin mAb Drug for Clinical...

Oh! How the stay at the top has changed Comrade Museveni – The East African

By TEE NGUGI

I was amazed to hear Yoweri Museveni lamenting about foreign interference in the internal affairs of Uganda. These fellows, he said, in reference to foreign news networks in particular and the West in general, have a primitive culture that allows interference in other peoples affairs. He intimated that African culture would never allow him to interfere in other peoples business.

Now, this was exactly the sentiment voiced by African leaders in the 1980s when they were faced with agitation for a return to democracy. They castigated news networks and the West for trying to impose a foreign ideology on otherwise peace-loving Africans. Democracy, they said, was a system alien to African culture, because it was adversarial while African traditional democracy was consentaneous. They dismissed those calling for democracy as foreign stooges.

Human rights originations, such as Amnesty International, were accused of trying to bring about a re-colonisation of Africa.

When Museveni took power in 1986, he represented a new kind of leadership. He brought stability to a country ravaged by murderous chaos for decades. He revived an economy ruined by corrupt regimes, beginning with Milton Obotes in the 1960s. In the rest of Africa, his progressive ideas were a beacon of hope on a continent in the vicious grip of tyranny and consequent poverty. He supported progressive forces in Kigali when the rest of Africa looked the other way. Likewise, he gave support to forces attempting to overthrow Mobutu Sese Sekos rapacious dictatorship.

Kenyan dissidents, facing death or jail, found safe passage through Uganda. He memorably called the Organisation of African Unity, the predecessor body to the African Union, a trade union of dictators. He advocated for a new Africa where leaders served the people, not their stomachs. He did not object when the West and human rights organisations, which he now criticises for interfering in the internal affairs of Africa, praised the new breed of African leadership he represented.

But oh, how years at the top change everything! Critics and oppositions members like Bibi Wine are regularly arrested. Elections are accompanied by intimidation and violence.

In the region, Museveni is a defender of the old order. He is now an ardent supporter of the AU which, like its predecessor body, looks the other way as leaders terrorise and impoverish their citizens, but is quick to condemn ill-treatment of African-Americans in America. Museveni, who once said that the problem of Africa was leaders not wanting to leave power, now says that longevity in power has made him an expert in governance.

Now, if he Museveni were a Lee Kuan Yew, the man who presided over Singapores spectacular rise, perhaps his longevity in power could be justified. But like last weeks column argued, his continuation in power is detrimental to the economic and social welfare of Uganda in particular and Africa in general. Who would have thought back then that Museveni, like Mugabe, would transform from liberator to oppressor.

Tee Ngugi is a Nairobi-based political commentator

View original post here:
Oh! How the stay at the top has changed Comrade Museveni - The East African

Targeting oncoproteins with a positive selection assay for protein degraders – Science Advances

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

To develop a positive selection assay for protein degraders, we made a bicistronic lentivirus encoding (i) a POI fused to a modified version of deoxycytidine kinase (hereafter called DCK*) that converts the non-natural nucleoside 2-bromovinyldeoxyuridine (BVdU) into a poison (4) and (ii) green fluorescent protein (GFP). We reasoned that GFP could be used to mark reporter-positive cells, to FACS (fluorescence-activated cell sorting) sort for cells with the desired reporter mRNA levels, and to count cells in multiwell plate assays. In our initial proof-of-concept experiments, we used this virus to create 293FT cells expressing the IMiD target IKZF1 (1, 2, 5) fused to DCK* and compared them to cells expressing unfused DCK* or unfused IKZF1 (Fig. 1, A and B). As expected, the IMiD pomalidomide (POM) down-regulated DCK*-IKFZ1 and IKZF1 but not DCK* (Fig. 1B). We also confirmed that 293FT cells expressing DCK*-IKZF1 or unfused DCK* were more sensitive to BVdU than 293FT cells expressing IKZF1 alone or infected with an empty vector (EV) (Fig. 1C). The increased BVdU sensitivity of the DCK* cells relative to the DCK*-IKZF1 cells is likely explained by the higher protein levels of DCK* compared to DCK*-IKZF1 (Fig. 1B). Similar results were observed with cells expressing DCK*-K-Ras (G12V), DCK*-Cyclin D1, DCK*-FOXP3, and DCK*-MYC, indicating that DCK* remains active when fused to a variety of proteins (fig. S1). POM increased the BVdU median effective concentration (EC50) of cells expressing DCK*-IKZF1 but not of cells expressing DCK* (Fig. 1D).

(A) Vector schematic. DCK*, variant deoxycytidine kinase with Ser74Glu, Arg104Met, and Asp133Ala substitutions; V5, V5 epitope tag; GGS, Gly-Gly-Ser spacer; IRES, internal ribosomal entry site. (B) Immunoblot analysis of 293FT cells infected with the lentiviral vectors depicted in (A) and then treated with 1 or 10 M POM, as indicated by the triangles, for 24 hours. (C and D) Relative survival of 293FT cells infected with the lentiviral vectors depicted in (A) and then treated with the indicated concentrations of BVdU for 4 days. In (D), cells were also treated with 1 M (POM) starting 24 hours before BVdU was added. n = 3 biological replicates. (E and F) Number of GFP-positive 293FT cells infected to produce DCK* (E) or DCK*-IKZF1 (F) using the vectors in depicted in (A) and then treated with indicated concentrations of POM and BVdU in 384-well plate format. POM was added 24 hours before treatment with BVdU for 4 days. n = 4 biological replicates. (G) Immunoblot analyses of cells treated as in (E) and (F). (H) Fluorescence data of 384-well plate containing 293FT cells expressing DCK*-IKZF1 treated with DMSO (columns 1 to 11 and 24) or 1 M POM (columns 12 to 23), followed 24 hours later by the addition of 100 M BVdU for 4 days (columns 1 to 24).

Next, we seeded either the DCK*-IKZF1 cells or DCK* cells in 384-well plates and treated the wells with increasing amounts of POM or with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). We added BVdU 24 hours later and measured cell viability 4 days thereafter by measuring the number of GFP-positive objects per well. POM again promoted the survival of the DCK*-IKZF1 cells, but not the DCK* cells, over a range of POM and BVdU concentrations (Fig. 1, E to G). In anticipation of using this assay for a high-throughput screen, we next seeded the DCK*-IKZF1 cells in 384-well plates and treated half the wells with POM and half the wells with DMSO, followed 24 hours later by BVdU (Fig. 1H). Measuring GFP-positive objects 4 days later produced a favorable Z value (0.7) for this assay.

Encouraged by these findings, we did a pilot screen with 293FT cells expressing DCK*-IKZF1 or unfused DCK* grown in 384-well plates and a library of ~2000 bioactive compounds, which included lenalidomide (LEN) and POM (Fig. 2, A to C). Each well received a different compound at a concentration of approximately 10 M by pin transfer, followed the next day by BVdU. BVdU was added at 100 M to the DCK*-IKZF1 cells and at 10 M to the DCK* cells to achieve comparable cell killing despite the higher levels of DCK* relative to DCK*-IKZF1 (fig. S2). Four days thereafter, the GFP fluorescence for each well was measured and converted to a z score based on the GFP fluorescence values for the other wells on its plate. LEN and POM scored positively (z > 2) in the DCK*-IKZF1 screen but not the DCK* screen (Fig. 2, B to E). Some compounds promoted the survival of both DCK* cells and the DCK*-IKZF1 cells, including compounds that interfere with BVdU uptake (e.g., dipyridamole) (6, 7) or incorporation into DNA (e.g., thymidine) (compare Fig. 2, B and C). Such assay positives could be largely eliminated by subtracting the DCK* z score for each chemical from its DCK*-IKZF1 z score (Fig. 2F). For comparative purposes, we also did a screen with the same 2000 bioactive compound collection using 293FT cells expressing a bicistronic mRNA encoding (i) an IKZF1Firefly luciferase (Fluc) fusion and (ii) Renilla luciferase (Rluc), using a decrease in the Fluc/Rluc ratio to identify IKZF1 degraders (Fig. 2, G to I, and fig. S3) (2). As expected for such a down assay, this screen underperformed the DCK*-IKZF1 up screen with respect to both signal to noise and the number of false positives, which included compounds that inhibit Cap-dependent translation (e.g., VX-11e or BIX02565) (810). Compounds that nonselectively inhibit transcription, translation, or protein folding would predictably be especially problematic for Fluc fusions with shorter half-lives than the Rluc internal control. Notably, the transcriptional inhibitor actinomycin D and the translational inhibitor cycloheximide did not promote the survival of the DCK*-IKZF1 cells at any concentration tested (fig. S4).

(A) Scheme for positive selection protein degradation assay. (B and C) Representative fluorescence data of 384-well plates containing 293FT cells expressing DCK* (B) or DCK*-IKZF1 (C) treated with compounds in the Selleck BioActive Library (one compound per well), followed 24 hours later by the addition of BVdU at the EC85 (10 and 100 M, respectively) for 4 days. BVdU was omitted in column 1. Columns 23 and 24 contained 10 M POM and 12.5 M dipyridamole (DiP), respectively. Library wells containing POM and DiP are indicated by the red and white arrows, respectively. (D and E) Z-distribution of GFP fluorescence of DCK* cells (D) and DCK*-IKZF1 cells (E) screened with the full Selleck BioActive Library. LEN and POM are indicted by the blue circle and red triangle, respectively. n = 2 biological replicates. (F) Corrected z scores obtained by subtracting z scores in (D) from z scores in (E). (G) Scheme for negative selection screening using the dual-luciferase reporter assay. (H and I) Z scores of Fluc/Rluc ratio of 293FT IKZF1-Fluc-IRES-Rluc cells after screening with the Selleck BioActive Library for 8 hours (H) or 4 days (I). n = 2 biological replicates.

As one way to minimize false positives, we seeded 384-well plates with a 1:1 mixture of 293FT cells expressing either (i) DCK*-IKZF1 and GFP or (ii) DCK* and TdTomato (Fig. 3A). Both POM and dipyridamole increased the number of GFP-positive cells, but dipyridamole was readily identified as a false positive by examining the TdTomato fluorescence channel (Fig. 3B). We then repeated these experiments in 384-well plate format, exposing the cells to 10 different concentrations of a small library of approximately 100 analogs of POM that we had synthesized, which included the known IKZF1 degraders LEN, POM, and avadomide (MI-2-65) (11) and several uncharacterized IMiD-like molecules from the literature (12) (Fig. 3C and tables S1 and S2). This library was generated to test whether our assay could correctly identify the known IKZF1 degraders and identify additional IKZF1 degraders made by alternative diversification of the aryl moiety of POM. LEN, POM, and avadomide all scored in our assay (Fig. 3C). In addition, several previously uncharacterized compounds, including MI-2-61 and MI-2-197, appeared to be at least as potent as POM in this screen and in confirmatory immunoblot assays (Fig. 3, C to F, and fig. S5). Our screen also correctly classified compounds that did not down-regulate IKZF1 in immunoblot assays, including some (e.g., MI-2-192 and MI-2-118) that still bound to cereblon in biochemical assays (fig. S5).

(A) Scheme for in-well GFP/TdTomato competition assay. 293FT cells were infected to produce DCK*-IKZF1 and GFP or DCK* and TdTomato using bicistronic vectors analogous to those depicted in Fig. 1A. (B) Top: Heatmap of the fold change (relative to treatment with DMSO) of GFP fluorescence of a 1:1 mixture of GFP-positive DCK*-IKZF1 and TdTomato-positive DCK* cells treated with 3.125, 6.25, 12.5, or 25 M POM or dipyridamole or with vehicle (DMSO) and followed 1 day later by the addition of 100 M BVdU for 4 days. Bottom: Heatmap of the fold change (relative to treatment with DMSO) of the ratio of GFP fluorescence to TdTomato fluorescence of the cells treated in (A). n = 2 biological replicates. (C) Heatmap of the fold change (relative to treatment with DMSO) of the ratio of GFP to TdTomato fluorescence of a 1:1 mixture of GFP-positive DCK*-IKZF1 and TdTomato-positive DCK* cells treated with 1.3 nM, 3.8 nM, 11.4 nM, 34 nM, 102 nM, 310 nM, 920 nM, 2.78 M, 8.33 M, and 25 M of the indicated IMiDs, as indicated by the triangles, or with vehicle (DMSO), and followed 1 day later by the addition of 100 M BVdU for 4 days. n = 2 biological replicates. (D) Immunoblot analysis of 293FT cells lentivirally transduced to express IKZF1-V5 and treated with the indicated IMiD derivatives for 24 hours using the same concentration range as in (C). (E) Structures of POM and IMiD MI-2-61. (F) Quantification of immunoblot data in (D); n = 2 biological replicates.

To begin looking for non-IMiD IKZF1 degraders, we screened ~546 metabolic inhibitors and anticancer drugs at 10 different concentrations using the DCK*-IKZF1 293FT cells in 384-well plate format (tables S3 and S4) (13). In parallel, we counterscreened against unfused DCK* cells. Spautin-1 (14), like POM, promoted the survival of the DCK*-IKZF1 cells, but not the DCK* cells, in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 4, A to D). We confirmed that Spautin-1 down-regulated DCK*-IKZF1 and V5-tagged exogenous IKZF1 but not DCK* (Fig. 4E). IKZF1-V5 was among the 100 most down-regulated proteins after 24 hours of Spautin-1 treatment, as determined by quantitative mass spectrometry proteomics (fig. S6 and table S5). Until the direct target of Spautin-1 linked to IKZF1 turnover is known, it is impossible to know how many of these changes in protein abundance are direct versus indirect and on-target versus off-target. Notably, Spautin-1, unlike POM, down-regulated IKZF1 in cells lacking cereblon (Fig. 4F).

(A) Chemical structure of Spautin-1. (B) GFP fluorescence of DCK*-IKZF1 and DCK* 293FT cells treated with ranolazine, Spautin-1, and resveratrol at concentrations of 25 M, 8.33 M, 2.78 M, 920 nM, 310 nM, 102 nM, 34 nM, 11.4 nM, 3.8 nM, and 1.3 nM, as indicated by the triangle, followed 24 hours later by the addition of BVdU at the EC85. Shown for comparison are cells treated with POM (10 M) or dipyridamole (DiP) (12.5 M) before adding BVdU. n = 2 biological replicates. (C and D) Quantification of GFP fluorescence from (B) for Spautin-1 (C) and for an analogous titration with POM (D). (E) Immunoblot analysis of 293FT cells infected with lentiviruses as in Fig. 1A and treated with the indicated concentrations of Spautin-1 for 24 hours. (F) Immunoblot analysis of isogenic 293FT CRBN +/+ and CRBN / cells transduced to express IKZF1-V5 and treated with the indicated concentrations of Spautin-1 or POM (1 M) for 24 hours. (G) Immunoblot analysis of 293FT cells stably expressing IKZF1-V5 and simultaneously treated with MLN7243 (1 M), MLN4924 (1 M), MG132 (1 M), Spautin-1 (10 M), or POM (1 M) for 24 hours as indicated. (H and I) Immunoblot (H) and RT-qPCR (I) analysis of KMS11 multiple myeloma cells treated with indicated concentrations of Spautin-1 or POM (1 M) for 24 hours. n = 3 biological replicates.

Spautin-1 reportedly suppresses autophagy by inhibiting the USP10 and USP13 deubiquitinases (14). IKZF1 protein levels were not decreased after small interfering RNAmediated down-regulation of USP10, alone or in combination with USP13 (fig. S7A), and Spautin-1s ability to down-regulate IKZF1 was not altered when one or both of these proteins were suppressed (fig. S7, B and C). Moreover, Spautin-1 down-regulated IKZF1 in 293FT cells in which autophagy was disabled by CRISPR-Cas9mediated disruption of ATG7, Beclin1, or FIP200 (fig. S8).

In contrast, down-regulation of IKZF1 by Spautin-1 was blocked by compounds that inhibit either the E1 ubiquitin activating enzyme or the proteasome (Fig. 4G). Down-regulation of IKZF1 by Spautin-1 was not, however, blocked by an inhibitor of neddylation, which is required for cullin-dependent ubiquitin ligases [e.g., the cereblon-containing ubiquitin E3 ligase that is coopted by the IMiDs (1, 2, 5)] (Fig. 4G). Down-regulation of exogenous IKZF1 by Spautin-1 requires the IKZF1 N-terminal region containing IKZF1s first zinc finger domain (ZF1) but not the IKZF1 zinc finger domain (ZF2) targeted by the IMiDs (fig. S9, A and B) (15, 16). The down-regulation of the N terminus of IKZF1 was similarly blocked by compounds that inhibit either the E1 ubiquitin activating enzyme or the proteasome but not by inhibitors of neddylation (fig. S9C). Preliminary structure-activity relationship studies identified both active and inactive Spautin-1 derivatives (fig. S10), suggesting that down-regulation of IKZF1 by Spautin-1 reflects a specific protein-binding event and that Spautin-1s potency and specificity can be optimized further.

The experiments described above implied that Spautin-1 posttranscriptionally regulates IKZF1. Nonetheless, Spautin-1 also suppressed exogenous IKZF1 mRNA levels in 293FT cells (fig. S11). However, Spautin-1 suppressed endogenous IKZF1 protein levels in KMS11 and L363 myeloma cells at concentrations that minimally suppressed IKZF1 mRNA levels (Fig. 4, H and I, and fig. S12, A to C). Spautin-1 did not down-regulate IKZF1 in all myeloma cells tested (fig. S12, D and E). The biochemical basis for this variability is not clear.

Notably, down-regulation of IKZF1 by Spautin-1 occurs much more slowly than with IMiDs, suggesting that its effect on IKZF1 is indirect (fig. S13). Nonetheless, its ability to score in a positive selection assay, as well as its inability to down-regulate IKZF1 in some myeloma lines, suggests that it is not broadly toxic at concentrations that down-regulate IKZF1. We are currently seeking the direct Spautin-1 target linked to IKZF1 turnover using genetic and biochemical tools.

One advantage of positive selection assays is their enablement of pooled screens. Our positive selection assay, however, uses a suicide gene. Some suicide genes cause bystander killing that could confound their use in pooled screens. In pilot studies, however, we confirmed that DCK*-IKZF1 cells rapidly outgrew DCK* cells in cocultures treated with IMiDs and BVdU (fig. S14A) and that the DCK* single guide RNA (sgRNA) was rapidly and specifically enriched relative to the control sgRNA in Cas9-positive 293FT cells expressing either DCK*-IKZF1 or DCK*-FOXP3 and then treated with BVdU (fig. S14, B and C). Therefore, bystander killing is negligible in this system.

To begin to address the general utility of our methodology, as well as its ability to function in a pooled format, we next did experiments with ASCL1 in place of IKZF1. ASCL1 is an undruggable lineage-specific transcription factor that is required for survival in many small cell lung cancers (SCLCs) and neuroblastomas (1719). We made Jurkat T cells that express Cas9 and either (i) DCK*, (ii) the neural/neuroendocrine lineagespecific transcription factor ASCL1, (iii) DCK*-ASCL1, or (iv) ASCL1-DCK* (Fig. 5A and fig. S15A). Jurkat cells were chosen because they are easily grown and expanded in suspension cultures. ASCL1-DCK* was chosen for further study because we could not generate cells producing high levels of DCK*-ASCL1 (fig. S15A). We first confirmed that ASCL1-DCK* expression sensitized Jurkat cells to BVdU and that this was partially reversed after down-regulating the fusion with ASCL1 sgRNAs (Fig. 5, A and B, and fig. S16, A and B). Cas9 expression was also slightly attenuated in the ASCL1-DCK* cells over time for unclear reasons (Fig. 5A). Nonetheless, these cells efficiently edited a GFP-based reporter of Cas9 activity within 10 days of receiving a GFP sgRNA (fig. S15, B and C). Next, we infected the ASCL1-DCK* and DCK* cells with a lentiviral sgRNA library targeting 788 genes (seven sgRNAs per gene) that encode druggable proteins (table S6). Ten days later (to allow time for gene editing), the cells were split and grown in the presence of 200 or 500 M BVdU for an additional 2 weeks (fig. S16C). We then determined sgRNA abundance by next-generation sequencing of genomic DNA and analyzed relative enrichment of sgRNAs compared to the time point before BVdU treatment (fig. S16D). We identified multiple sgRNAs against CDK2 that were markedly enriched at both BVdU concentrations in the ASCL1-DCK* cells but not the DCK* cells (Fig. 5C, fig. S16, D and E, and table S7).

(A) Immunoblot analysis of Jurkat cells first infected to express Cas9 and then superinfected to express exogenous ASCL1, DCK*, or the ASCL1-DCK* fusion. NCI-H69 cells are included as a benchmark for ASCL1 endogenous expression. (B) Growth inhibition (%), based on viable cell numbers relative to untreated controls, of the indicated cell lines from (A) treated with BVdU for 6 days. n = 2 biological replicates. (C) Hypergeometric analysis of BVdU positive selection CRISPR-Cas9 screen on day 25 relative to day 10 (early time point before BVdU treatment) of ASCL1-DCK* Cas9 Jurkat cells treated with 500 M BVdU. n = 2 biological replicates. (D) Quantification of fold change in mCherry:BFP ratio after 18 days of 500 M BVdU or DMSO (0) treatment of ASCL1-DCK* Cas9 Jurkat cells expressing the indicated sgRNAs and mCherry or a nontargeting control sgRNA and blue fluorescent protein (BFP) (initially mixed 1:3). n = 3 biological replicates. (E) Immunoblot and (F) RT-qPCR analysis of ASCL1-DCK* Cas9 Jurkat cells superinfected to express the indicated sgRNAs. n = 4 biological replicates. (G) Immunoblot analysis of Jurkat cells first infected with a lentivirus to stably express exogenous ASCL1, then infected with Dox-inducible (DOX-On) sgRNA-resistant CDK2 wild-type (WT) or CDK2 kinase-dead (KD) mutant, and lastly superinfected with a CDK2 or nontargeting sgRNA. Following superinfection with the sgRNA lentiviruses, cells were grown in DOX to maintain exogenous CDK2 expression. n = 4 biological replicates. Exo, exogenous CDK2; Endo, endogenous CDK2. Error bars represent SD. ns, nonsignificant; *P < 0.05; ***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001.

In validation studies, ASCL1-DCK* Jurkat cells expressing CDK2 sgRNAs outcompeted ASCL1-DCK* cells expressing control sgRNAs in the presence of BVdU but not in the presence of DMSO (Fig. 5D and fig. S16F). CDK2 sgRNAs also posttranscriptionally down-regulated ASCL1-DCK* protein levels in the Jurkat cells (Fig. 5, E and F) and endogenous, unfused, ASCL1 in human SCLC lines (NCI-H1876 and NCI-H2081) (Fig. 6, A and B, and fig. S18, A and B). Down-regulation of exogenous ASCL1 in Jurkat cells treated with a CDK2 sgRNA was rescued by an sgRNA-resistant CDK2 complementary DNA (cDNA) encoding wild-type CDK2 but not kinase-dead CDK2 (Fig. 5G). The kinase-dead CDK2 was, however, produced at slightly lower levels, presumably because it is less stable or because of its known dominant-negative effects due to cyclin sequestration (2022).

(A) Immunoblot and (B) RT-qPCR analysis of the NCI-H1876 SCLC cell line that endogenously expresses ASCL1 infected to express the indicated sgRNAs. n = 3 biological replicates. (C and E) Immunoblot and (D and F) RT-qPCR analysis of NCI-H1876 human SCLC cells (C and D) and 97-2 mouse SCLC cells (E and F) after treatment with the CDK2 PROTAC degraders (TMX-2138 and TMX-2172) or the indicated negative controls, all used at 500 nM for either 36 hours (C and D) or 8 hours (E and F). Neg Deg, negative control degrader ZXH-7035. n = 3 biological replicates. (G) Immunoblot analysis and (H) quantification of ASCL1 protein levels in 97-2 cells first treated with the CDK2 PROTAC degrader or negative control (500 nM) for 4 hours and then treated with cycloheximide (CHX) (150 g/ml) for the indicated times. S.E., short exposure; L.E., long exposure. n = 4 biological replicates. In all experiments, error bars represent SD except in (H), where error bars represent SEM. *P < 0.05; ***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001.

CDK2 has been well recognized as a potential anticancer target. The development of selective small-molecule CDK2 inhibitors, however, has been hampered by their off-target effects on other CDK family members, especially the broadly essential kinase CDK1. We verified that well-established CDK2 inhibitor dinaciclib (23) down-regulated both ASCL1 protein and mRNA levels (fig. S17, A to D), potentially due to its polypharmacological activity on both CDK2 and other CDKs such as CDK9 (23, 24). We obtained, however, two small-molecule CDK2 degraders (TMX-2138 and TMX-2172) that more selectively target CDK2 through recruitment of cereblon (25). Both of these compounds down-regulated ASCL1 protein levels in both human (NCI-H1876 and NCI-H1092) and mouse (97-2 and 188) SCLC lines (Fig. 6, C to F, and fig. S18, C to F). For unclear reasons, ASCL1 was down-regulated more rapidly in the mouse lines than in the human lines. We focused on TMX-2172 because TMX-2138 also suppressed ASCL1 mRNA levels in the mouse cells (Fig. 6F and fig. S18F). TMX-2172 decreased the half-life of ASCL1 protein (Fig. 6, G and H), consistent with posttranscriptional regulation of ASCL1 by CDK2.

We conducted our screens in IKZF1-independent 293FT cells rather than IKZF1-dependent myeloma cells and in ASCL1-independent Jurkat cells rather than in ASCL1-dependent SCLC cells in an attempt to preserve positive selection. It is possible, however, that some degradation mechanisms will be highly context dependent and restricted to the therapeutic target cell of interest. We also anticipate that some DCK* fusion proteins will not be functional due to steric or conformational effects. This might be remedied by fusing DCK* to the alternative POI terminus (N-terminus versus C-terminus), by exploring different linkers, or using alternative suicide proteins.

IMiDs are important multiple myeloma drugs, but loss of cereblon has emerged as an important mechanism of IMiD resistance (2628). Identification of Spautin-1s mechanism of action could eventually lead to drugs for circumventing this problem.

ASCL1 is a sequence-specific DNA binding transcription factor that would classically be deemed undruggable and serves as a lineage addiction oncoprotein in neural crestderived tumors, such as SCLCs and neuroblastomas (1719, 29). Genetic studies in Xenopus indicate that CDK2 regulates ASCL1 function and that ASCL1 contains multiple potential CDK2 phosphorylation sites that prevent it from inducing neuronal differentiation (30, 31). CDK2 is a potential dependency in some neuroblastomas (3234). CDK2 and N-MYC drive the accumulation of phosphorylated ASCL1 in undifferentiated neuroblastomas (31). Conversely, loss of CDK2 activity, such as through retinoic acidmediated induction of p27 or small-molecule inhibitors, is associated with neuroblastoma differentiation and decreased tumor formation (3237). It will be important to determine how, mechanistically, CDK2 regulates ASCL1 turnover. In particular, we have not yet shown that the regulation of ASCL1 by CDK2 is direct. Nonetheless, our study provides further support for CDK2 as a potential therapeutic target in SCLC and neuroblastoma.

The discovery that the IMiDs reprogram the cereblon ubiquitin E3 ligase for therapeutic benefit has galvanized interest in identifying compounds that can degrade, directly and indirectly, otherwise undruggable proteins. Sometimes, one can engineer heterobifunctional degrader molecules consisting of a POI-binding moiety, a linker, and a ubiquitin-ligase recruitment moiety (38). This approach requires a ligand with suitable binding affinity for the POI, and identifying a successful linker often requires multiple iterations of trial and error. Moreover, this approach fails to harness the many other ways a chemical could directly or indirectly degrade a protein, such as by inhibiting a deubiquitinating enzyme, displacing an interacting protein, or altering protein folding or subcellular localization. A trivial way to down-regulate proteins, especially those with naturally rapid turnovers, is to poison transcription or translation. The screening methodology described here should facilitate the characterization of designer degraders as well as enable mechanism-agnostic searches for compounds and targets that regulate the abundance of previously undruggable proteins.

293FT cells were originally obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). 293AD cells were from Cell Biolabs. 293FT CRBN / cells were made by CRISPR-Cas9 editing (see below). 293FT and 293AD cells were maintained in Dulbeccos minimum essential medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 g/ml). KMS11, KMS34, MM.1S, and L363 human multiple myeloma cells [gift of K. Anderson (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)] and Jurkat cells (obtained from ATCC in September 2016) were maintained in RPMI medium supplemented with 10% FBS, penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 g/ml). NCI-H1876 (obtained in November 2016), NCI-H1092 (obtained in November 2018), and NCI-H2081 (obtained in November 2018) were obtained from ATCC. NCI-H1876, NCI-H1092, and NCI-H2081 cells were maintained in DMEM/F12 media supplemented with HITES [10 nM hydrocortisone (Sigma-Aldrich, #H0135), insulin (0.01 mg/ml), human transferrin (0.0055 mg/ml), sodium selenite (0.005 g/ml) (ITS, Gemini, #400-145), and 10 nM -estradiol (Sigma-Aldrich, #E2257)] and 5% FBS. The cell lines 188 and 97-2 were isolated from genetically engineered SCLC mouse tumors (see below for description of cell line generation) and maintained in RPMI 1640 media supplemented with HITES and 10% FBS. All cells were grown at 37C in the presence of 5% CO2. Fresh aliquots of cells were thawed every 4 to 6 months.

The following compounds were purchased: POM (Selleck, #S1567), LEN (Selleck, #S1029), MG132 (N-carbobenzyloxy-l-leucyl-l-leucyl-l-leucinal; Thermo Fisher Scientific, #47479020MG), MLN4924 (Active Biochem, #A-1139), MLN7243 (Thermo Fisher Scientific, #NC1129906), Spautin-1 (BioTechne; #5197/10), cycloheximide (VWR, #97064-724), BVdU (Chem-Impex International Inc., catalog no. 27735), actinomycin D (Thermo Fisher Scientific, #11805017), and dinaciclib (Selleck, #S2768).

CDK2 degraders. Synthesis and characterization of the small-molecule CDK2 degraders TMX-2138 and TMX-2172 and the negative degrader ZXH-7035 (structurally similar to the CDK2 binding region of TMX-2138 and TMX-2172 but lacking the cereblon recruiting element) are described previously (25).

293FT cells stably transduced with bicistronic lentiviruses expressing (i) a fusion between DCK* and the POI and (ii) GFP were seeded at a density of 0.25 106 cells/ml in 25 ml of media in a 15-cm dish (Corning, 353025). Two days later, the cells were counted and resuspended in media to a concentration of 10 106 cells/ml. The sample was passed through a mesh strainer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, #352235). The GFP fluorescence of the cells was analyzed by FACS using a Fortessa Aria II instrument. The brightest 1% of cells were collected in an Eppendorff tube, replated in a six-well dish, and expanded. This process was repeated three to four more times to isolate cells expressing the desired GFP levels.

Jurkat cells were first transduced with PLL3.7-Cas9-IRES-Neo. Neomycin-resistant cells with confirmed Cas9 expression were then superinfected with pLX304-ASCL1-DCK*-IRES-GFP or pLX304-DCK*-IRES-GFP, and transduced cells were selected with blasticidin. The blasticidin-resistant cells were then prepared for FACS sorting as above. In total, the brightest 1% of cells were FACS-sorted three times to isolate cells expressing the desired GFP levels. Jurkat cells expressing Cas9 and DCK*-FOXP3 were made in an analogous manner.

Cell pellets were lysed in a modified EBC lysis buffer [50 mM tris-Cl (pH 8.0), 250 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP-40, and 5 mM EDTA] supplemented with a protease inhibitor cocktail (cOmplete, Roche Applied Science, #11836153001). Whole-cell extracts were quantified using the Bradford protein assay. For experiments with 293FT cells, 10 g of protein per sample was boiled after adding 3 sample buffer (6.7% SDS, 33% glycerol, 300 mM dithiothreitol, and bromophenol blue) to a final concentration of 1; resolved by SDSpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) using either 12.5% SDS-PAGE, Mini-Protean TGX 4 to 15% gels (Bio-Rad, #456-1086), or Criterion TGX gels (Bio-Rad, #5671085); semi-dry transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes; blocked in 5% milk in tris-buffered saline with 0.1% Tween 20 (TBS-T) for 1 hour; and probed with the indicated primary antibodies overnight at 4C. Membranes were then washed three times in TBS-T, probed with the indicated horseradish peroxidaseconjugated secondary antibodies for 1 hour at room temperature, and washed three times in TBS-T. Bound antibodies were detected with enhanced chemiluminescence Western blotting detection reagents [Immobilon (Thermo Fisher Scientific, #WBKLS0500) or SuperSignal West Pico (Thermo Fisher Scientific, #PI34078)]. The primary antibodies and dilutions used were as follows: rabbit anti-IKZF1 (Cell Signaling Technology, #5443S) at 1:1000, rabbit anti-V5 (Bethyl Laboratories, #A190-120A) at 1:1000, rabbit anti-DCK (Abcam, #151966) at 1:2000, rabbit anti-ASCL1 (Abcam, #ab211327) at 1:1000, rabbit anti-CDK2 (Cell Signaling Technology, #2546S) at 1:1000, mouse anti-P62 (Abcam, #ab56416) at 1:1000, rabbit antiLC3-I and LC3-II (Cell Signaling Technology, #3868S) at 1:1000, rabbit anti-ATG7L (Cell Signaling Technology, #8558S) at 1:1000, rabbit anti-Beclin1 (Cell Signaling Technology, #3495S) at 1:1000, rabbit anti-FIP200 (Cell Signaling Technology, #12436S) at 1:1000, rabbit -phospho-RB1 S795 (Cell Signaling Technology, #9301P) at 1:1000, mouse -RB1 4H1 (Cell Signaling Technology, #9309S) at 1:1000, mouse anti-actin (Sigma-Aldrich; clone AC-15, #A3854) at 1:25,000, mouse anti-Cas9 (Cell Signaling Technology, #14697) at 1:1000, mouse anti-vinculin (Sigma-Aldrich; #V9131) at 1:10,000, and mouse anti-actin (Cell Signaling Technology, #3700S) at 1:10,000. The secondary antibodies and dilutions used were goat anti-mouse (Pierce) at 1:10,000 and goat anti-rabbit (Pierce) at 1:5000.

A total of 750,000 293FT IKZF1-V5 cells per well were seeded in six-well dishes in a volume of 2 ml. On the next day, drugs to be added were diluted from a 10 mM stock (stored at 20C) into 0.5 ml of media before being added to the cells. The final volume in each well was then made up to 3 ml by adding a second drug in 0.5 ml or adding 0.5 ml of drug-free media.

Myeloma cells were seeded in 10-cm plates at a density of 0.75 106 cells/ml in a total volume of 8 ml. On the next day, the desired drug was diluted from a 10 mM stock (stored at 20C) into 1 ml of media, which was added to the intended well to achieve the desired final concentration. The final volume in each well was then made up to 10 ml by adding a second drug in 1 ml or adding 1 ml of drug-free media. After 24 hours, the cells were harvested for analysis.

293FT cells stably transduced with bicistronic lentiviruses encoding (i) IKZF1, DCK*, or DCK*-IKZF1 (IKZF1 cells, DCK* cells, and DCK*-IKZF1 cells, respectively) and (ii) GFP, as well as corresponding EV control cells, were seeded into six-well plates at 20,000 cells per well in 2.5 ml of media. The next day, 1 M BVdU dissolved in DMSO was diluted into media to prepare 6 stock solutions of BVdU at concentrations of 6 mM, 600 M, 60 M, 6 M, and 600 nM. For each stock solution, DMSO concentration was adjusted to a final concentration of 0.6%. Each well in the six-well dish received 0.5 ml of a 6 stock solution of BVdU to achieve final concentrations of 1 mM, 100 M, 10 M, 1 M, and 100 nM, respectively. A total of 0.5 ml of media with 0.6% DMSO was added to the sixth well as a control. Four days later, the cells were collected and counted using a Vi-Cell XR cell counter.

293FT cells were seeded as above at a density of 20,000 cells per well in 2 ml of media. A stock solution of 10 mM POM in DMSO was diluted into media to prepare a 6 M stock solution of POM. Cells received 0.5 ml of the 6 M POM stock solution to achieve an eventual final concentration of 1 M or 0.5 ml of control media. The next day, BVdU was added as described above, and cell proliferation was analyzed as above.

Jurkat cells expressing Cas9 and either ASCL1, ASCL1-DCK*, or DCK* alone were plated at 0.05 106 cells/ml per well in a 12-well plate and treated with increasing concentrations of BVdU (0, 1, 10, 100, 200, or 500 M). Six days later, the cells were counted using a Vi-Cell XR cell counter. For ASCL1 sgRNA rescue experiments, Jurkat cells expressing Cas9 and ASCL1-DCK* cells were superinfected with pLentiGuide-Purobased lentiviruses expressing sgRNAs targeting ASCL1 or a nontargeting sgRNA (sgCTRL). The cells were selected with puromycin, and expression of ASCL1 was analyzed by immunoblot analysis. The cells were then subjected to the BVdU assay as described above.

293FT cells stably transduced with bicistronic lentiviruses encoding (i) DCK*, DCK*-IKZF1, DCK*-K-RAS (G12V), DCK*-Cyclin D1, DCK*-PAX5, DCK*-FOXP3, and DCK*-MYC and (ii) GFP, as well as corresponding EV control cells, were seeded into 384-well plates (Corning, #3764) at 200 cells per well in 30 l of media. The next day, 1 M BVdU dissolved in DMSO was diluted into media to prepare 4 stock solutions of BVdU at concentrations of 4 mM, 2 mM, 1 mM, 400 M, 200 M, 100 M, 40 M, 20 M, 4 M, and 400 nM. On each plate, 10 l of each stock concentration of BVdU was added to two columns (32 wells) to achieve final concentrations of 1 mM, 500 M, 250 M, 100 M, 50 M, 25 M, 10 M, 5 M, 1 M, and 100 nM. Ten microliters of control media was added to four columns. Four days later, the cells were analyzed using an Acumen laser scanning cytometer (TTP Biosciences). GFP fluorescence was quantified by defining the metric GFP-positive object to identify GFP-positive cells while excluding debris or cell fragments.

Determination of Z. DCK* and DCK*-IKZF1 cells were seeded into 384-well plates (Corning, #3764) in 30 l of media at a density of 200 cells per well and allowed to adhere overnight. For each plate, an HPD300 dispenser (Hewlett-Packard) was used to add 4 nl of POM to a final concentration of 1 M to half the wells. An equal volume of DMSO was added to the other half of the plate. The next day, BVdU was added to the entire plate at a concentration of 10 M for the plate of DCK* cells and 100 M for the plate of DCK*-IKZF1 cells. Four days later, the cells were analyzed using an Acumen laser scanning cytometer (TTP Biosciences). The number of GFP-positive objects in each well was measured, and a Z statistic was calculated comparing the POM-treated wells to the DMSO-treated wells.

High-throughput chemical library screening. DCK* and DCK*-IKZF1 293FT cells were seeded into 384-well plates (Corning, #3764) at a density of 200 cells per well in a volume of 30 l of media. A custom-built Seiko Compound Transfer Robot was used to pin transfer 100 nl per well of small-molecule stock solutions from the wells of a drug library plate to the wells of assay plate, such that each well of the assay plate received a unique small molecule. An HPD300 non-contact dispenser (Hewlett-Packard) was used to dispense 100 nl of POM and dipyridamole into columns 23 and 24 and to add 100 nl of DMSO to columns 1 and 2. The final concentrations of POM and dipyridamole were 10 M and 12.5 M, respectively. The next day, 10 l of BVdU stock solution was added to columns 2 to 24 of each of the DCK-IKZF1 and DCK* assay plates, respectively. The concentration of the BVdU stock solution was calculated to achieve the desired final concentration of BVdU (10 M in DCK* assay plates and 100 M in DCK*-IKZF1 assay plates) in the well.

After 4 days, the GFP fluorescence of each assay plates was quantified using an Acumen scanning laser cytometer. For each plate, the average and SD of the GFP fluorescence of wells in columns 3 to 22 were calculated. For each well on an assay plate, the GFP fluorescence was converted to a z score using the formula: z(well) = [GFP (well) GFP (plate)] / GFP (plate), where GFP (plate) is the mean GFP fluorescence for that plate and GFP (plate) is the SD for that plate.

High-throughput chemical library screening (in-well competition assay). DCK*-IKZF1 (GFP) and DCK* (Td) cells were mixed together in a 1:1 ratio and then seeded into 384-well plates (Corning, #3764) at a density of 400 cells per well in 30 l of media. Pin transfer from IMiD derivative library plates and dispensation of POM and dipyridamole were performed as described above. The next day, 10 l of BVdU stock solution was added to columns 2 to 24 of each plate to achieve a final concentration of 100 M. After 4 days, the GFP and TdTomato fluorescence of each assay plate was quantified using an Acumen scanning laser cytometer. For each well, the ratio of GFP/tdTomato fluorescence was calculated and normalized to the values in the well that received DMSO and BVdU. The resulting values were converted to a heatmap using Morpheus (Broad Institute).

Determination of Z. 293FT IKZF1-Fluc cells were seeded into 96-well plates at a density of 2000 cells per well in a volume of 50 l of media and incubated overnight at 37C. The next day, an additional 50-l media and POM (final concentration of 2 M) was added to 30 wells of the plate (rows B to G, columns 2 to 6). Control media containing DMSO was added to 30 wells of the plate (rows B to G, columns 7 to 11). A Dual-Glo assay (Promega) was performed by first aspirating all media from the tissue culture plates. Twenty-five microliters of a 1:1 dilution of Dual-Glo luciferase assay reagent in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) was added to wells and incubated for 10 min. Luminescent signal was measured with a plate reader. Stop & Glo reagent (12.5 l) was then added to the wells, incubated for 10 min, and luminescent signal was measured. The average Fluc/Rluc ratio for cells treated with DMSO and POM was calculated, and a Z statistic was calculated.

High-throughput library screening using Fluc/Rluc readout. IKZF1-Fluc assay plates were generated by plating 293FT IKZF1-Fluc cells into 384-well plates. For the 8-hour treatment arm, cells were plated at a density of 4000 cells per well. A custom-built Seiko Compound Transfer Robot was used to pin transfer 100 nl per well of small molecule from the drug library plate to the assay plate, such that each well of the assay plates received a unique small molecule. After 8 hours, the plates were shaken out and blotted on clean paper towels to remove the media. A Thermo Multidrop Combi was used to dispense 20 l of a 1:1 dilution of Dual-Glo luciferase reagent, and the plates were shaken for 10 min. Firefly luciferase signal was quantified using an EnVision plate reader. A Thermo Multidrop Combi was used to dispense 10 l of Dual-Glo Stop + Glo reagent, and the plates were shaken for 10 min. Renilla luciferase signal was quantified using an EnVision plate reader. For each plate, the ratios of the Firefly/Renilla luciferase signals were converted to a Z-distribution as outlined above. For the 4-day treatment arm, the experiment was performed in an analogous manner, but the cells were plated at a density of 200 cells per well and were incubated for 4 days before analysis.

Gene-targeting sgRNAs and appropriate controls were designed using the rule set described at the Genetic Perturbation Program (GPP) portal (http://portals.broadinstitute.org/gpp/public). Oligonucleotides were flanked by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primer sites, and PCR was used to amplify DNA using NEBNext kits. The PCR products were purified using Qiagen PCR cleanup kits and cloned into pXPR_BRD003 using Golden Gate cloning reactions. Pooled libraries were amplified using electrocompetent Stbl4 cells. Viruses were generated as outlined at the GPP portal. The sgRNA library (CP1080, M-AB34) was custom-designed to target cancer-relevant druggable genes. It consisted of 5566 sgRNAs targeting 788 genes (7 sgRNAs targeting each gene) and 300 nontargeting sgRNAs as controls (table S6).

Jurkat cells that had been infected with PLL3.7-Cas9-IRES-Neo and subsequently maintained in G418 were then superinfected with pLX304 ASCL1-DCK*-V5-IRES-GFP or pLX304 DCK*-V5-IRES-GFP and placed under blasticidin selection. Blasticidin-resistant cells were sorted for GFP expression (top 1%) three times by FACS. Protein abundance of ASCL1-DCK* or DCK* alone was confirmed by immunoblot analysis, and functionality of ASCL1-DCK* or DCK* alone was determined using BVdU sensitivity and rescue experiments with sgRNAs targeting ASCL1. Cas9 expression was confirmed by immunoblot analysis, and Cas9 activity was confirmed using a Cas9 GFP reporter [pXPR_011 (Addgene, #59702)] (39) that showed near maximal editing 10 days after infection.

On day 0, ASCL1-DCK* and DCK* cells expressing Cas9 were expanded and then counted. For each line, 2.2 107 cells (4000 cells per sgRNA) were pelleted and resuspended at 2 106 cells/ml in media supplemented with polybrene (8 g/ml) and infected at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of ~0.3 with the sgRNA druggable library (CP1080, M-AB34) described above. The cells mixed with polybrene and virus were then plated in 1-ml aliquots onto 12-well plates and centrifuged at 434g for 2 hours at 30C. Sixteen hours later (day 1), the cells were collected, pooled, and centrifuged to remove the virus and polybrene, and the cell pellet was resuspended in complete media at 2 105 cells/ml and plated into nontissue culturetreated t175 flasks. The cells were then cultured for 48 hours before being placed under puromycin (1 g/ml) drug selection at 4 105 cells/ml.

A parallel experiment was performed on day 3 to determine the MOI. To do this, the cells infected with the sgRNA library and mock-infected cells were plated at 4 105 cells/ml in the presence or absence of puromycin. After 72 hours (day 6), cells were counted using the Vi-Cell XR cell counter, and the MOI was calculated (which ranged from 0.2 to 0.3 for each replicate) using the following equation: (# of puromycin-resistant cells infected with the sgRNA library / # total cells surviving without puromycin after infection with the sgRNA library) (# of puromycin-resistant mock-infected cells / # total mock-infected cells).

On day 6 after MOI determination, puromycin-resistant cells were pooled, collected, and counted, and 1 108 cells were replated at a concentration of 4 105 cells/ml in complete media containing puromycin (1 g/ml). The remaining cells were discarded. On day 8, again, the puromycin-resistant cells were pooled, collected, and counted, and 1 108 cells were replated at a concentration of 4 105 cells/ml in complete media containing puromycin (1 g/ml).

On day 10, puromycin-resistant cells were pooled, collected, and counted. A total of 2 107 cells were collected and washed in PBS, and the cell pellets were frozen for genomic DNA isolation for the initial time point before BVdU selection. Then, 2 107 cells were resuspended in complete media (now without puromycin) containing either 200 or 500 M BVdU at a final concentration of 5 104 cells/ml and plated into t175-cm flasks. Thus, at least 1000 cells per sgRNA were introduced into BVdU selection.

On day 15, cells treated with 200 or 500 M BVdU were collected and counted. A total of 10 106 cells from each arm of the screen were then resuspended in complete media containing either 200 or 500 M BVdU at a final concentration of 5 104 cells/ml and plated into t175-cm flasks. The remaining cells were centrifuged and washed in PBS, and the cell pellets were frozen. Again, at least 1000 cells per sgRNA were maintained under BVdU selection.

On day 20, cells treated with 200 or 500 M BVdU were collected and counted. A total of 10 106 cells from each arm of the screen were then resuspended in complete media containing either 200 or 500 M BVdU at a final concentration of 5 104 cells/ml and plated into t175-cm flasks. If available, the remaining cells were centrifuged and washed in PBS, and the cell pellets were frozen. Again, at least 1000 cells per sgRNA were maintained under BVdU selection.

On day 25, all remaining cells were collected and counted. The remaining cells were divided in aliquots of 6 106 cells (which corresponds to 1000 cells per sgRNA) and washed in PBS, and the cell pellets were frozen for genomic DNA isolation for the final time point after BVdU selection. The screen was performed in two biological replicates.

Following completion of the screen, genomic DNA was isolated using a Qiagen Genomic DNA midi prep kit (catalog no. 51185) according to the manufacturers protocol. Raw Illumina reads were normalized between samples using log2[(sgRNA reads/total reads for sample) 1 106 + 1]. The initial time point data (day 10) were then subtracted from the end time point after BVdU selection (day 25) to determine the relative enrichment of each individual sgRNA after BVdU treatment using hypergeometric analysis and the STARS algorithm. A q value cutoff of <0.25 was used to call hits. The averaged data from two biological replicates were used for all analyses.

293FT cells stably transduced with bicistronic lentiviruses encoding (i) DCK*-IKZF1 and GFP and (ii) DCK* and TdTomato were mixed together at a ratio of 1:99. Pooled cells were plated at a density of 20,000 cells per well of a six-well plate and in a total volume of 2 ml of media. Cells received 0.5 ml of the 6 M POM stock solution to achieve an eventual final concentration of 1 M or 0.5 ml of control media. The next day, the cells received 0.5 ml of 600 M BVdU stock solution or 0.5 ml of control media. Cells were collected for FACS analysis on days 0, 3, 6, 10, and 14. After each time point, cells were reseeded at 20,000 cells per well and treated with fresh BVdU (or DMSO).

DCK*-IKZF1 293FT cells were infected with a mixture of two lentiviruses encoding Cas9 and either (i) sgDCK and mCherry or (ii) sgCTRL and BFP (blue fluorescent protein). The two lentiviruses were mixed together such that the ratio of mCherry-positive to BFP-positive cells after infection and puromycin selection was 1:99. An analogous experiment was set up using a lentivirus encoding sgCTRL and mCherry. The pool of infected cells was plated at 20,000 cells per well in a six-well plate and then cultured in media containing either 100 M BVdU or DMSO for 21 days. Cells were collected for FACS analysis on days 1, 6, 18, and 33. After each time point, cells were reseeded at 20,000 cells per well and treated with fresh BVdU.

Jurkat cells that had been stably infected to express Cas9 and DCK*-FOXP3 were superinfected with lentivirus encoding either (i) sgDCK and mCherry or (ii) sgCTRL and BFP. These cells were mixed together and analyzed by FACS to achieve a final ratio of mCherry-positive to BFP-positive cells of 1:99. The pool of infected cells was plated at 40,000 cells/ml in a six-well plate and then cultured in media containing either 100 M BVdU or DMSO for 14 days. Cells were collected for FACS analysis on days 6 and 14.

The Jurkat cells expressing Cas9 and ASCL1-DCK* that were used for the CRISPR-Cas9 screen described above were superinfected with lentiviruses encoding sgRNAs targeting CDK2, ASCL1, or a nontargeting sgRNA as a control, the fluorescent protein mCherry and a puromycin resistance gene or with a lentivirus encoding a nontargeting sgRNA as a control, and the fluorescent protein BFP and a puromycin resistance gene (see schema in fig. S16F). The cells were selected with puromycin. mCherry puromycin-resistant cells were then mixed with BFP puromycin-resistant cells at a 1:3 ratio as determined by FACS analysis. The mixed cells were plated at 5 104 cells/ml and then cultured in media containing 500 M BVdU or DMSO (0) for 18 days. FACS analysis was performed every 6 days. After each FACS analysis, fresh BVdU was added, and the density of the cells was adjusted to 5 104 cells/ml with fresh media.

Cells were counted using a Vi-Cell XR cell counter and were plated at a concentration of 4 105 cells/ml per well for NCI-H1092, 188, and 97-2 SCLC cell lines or at 1 106 cells/ml per well for the NCI-H1876 SCLC cell line in six-well plates. Cells were then treated with the CDK2 degraders TMX-2138, TMX-2172, or the negative degrader ZXH-7035 (Neg Deg) at 500 nM for 36 hours for NCI-H1092 and NCI-H1876 human SCLC cell lines or 8 hours for 188 and 97-2 mouse SCLC cell lines. For half-life time determination with cycloheximide, 97-2 cells were treated with CDK2 degraders for 4 hours before the addition of cycloheximide at 150 g/ml. Cells were harvested at the indicated times after addition of cycloheximide.

293FT cells were seeded in six-well plates at a density of 750,000 cells per well in 2.5 ml of media per well. The next day, the cells were treated with the indicated concentrations of Spautin-1, POM, or DMSO for 24 hours. Multiple myeloma cells were seeded in 10-cm plates at a density of 0.75 106 cells/ml in a total volume of 9 ml of media. The next day, the cells were treated with the indicated concentrations of Spautin-1, POM, or DMSO. RNA was extracted using an RNeasy mini kit (Qiagen, #74106) according to the manufacturers instructions. RNA concentration was determined using the NanoDrop 8000 (Thermo Fisher Scientific). cDNA was generated by reverse transcription using the AffinityScript qPCR (quantitative PCR) cDNA Synthesis kit (Agilent, 600559) according to the manufacturers instructions. qPCR was performed using the LightCycler 480 (Roche) with the LightCycler 480 Probes Master Kit (Roche) and TaqMan probes (Thermo Fisher Scientific) according to the manufacturers instructions. The Ct values for each probe were then normalized to the Ct value of ACTB for that sample. The data from each experiment were then normalized to the control to determine the relative fold change in mRNA expression. The following TaqMan probes were used: Hs00958474_m1 (IKZF1 human), ASCL1 human Hs04187546_g1 for detection of endogenous ASCL1, ASCL1 human Hs05000540_s1 for detection of the exogenous ASCL1-DCK* fusion, ACTB human Hs01060665_m1, Ascl1 mouse Mm03058063_m1, and Actb mouse Mm00607939_s1. All quantitative calculations were performed using the 2Ct method using Beta Actin (ACTB) as a reference gene.

For the positive selection small-molecule screen, GFP fluorescence for each well was normalized to untreated wells. For each library drug, normalized GFP fluorescence was plotted as a function of library drug concentration. Each drug treatment was performed in duplicate. Data were analyzed and plotted using GraphPad Prism v6, median inhibitory concentration (IC50) values were determined using the log (inhibitor) versus response -- Variable slope (four parameters) analysis module, and area under the curve (AUC) values were determined using the AUC analysis module (13). For the positive selection CRISPR-Cas9 BVdU resistance screen, the relative fold enrichment of each individual sgRNA after BVdU treatment was calculated using both Broad Institutes hypergeometric analysis and the STARS algorithm to determine a rank list of candidate ASCL1 stabilizer genes ranked by q value, where statistical significance is q < 0.25.

For all other experiments, statistical significance was calculated using unpaired, two-tailed Students t test. P values were considered statistically significant if the P value was <0.05. For all figures, *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, and ****P < 0.0001. Error bars represent SD unless otherwise indicated.

Acknowledgments: We thank the members of the Kaelin and Oser laboratories for helpful discussions. Special thanks to the ICCB (Longwood) at HMS for assistance with small-molecule screens, to W. Gao for generation of adenoviral vectors used for recombination cloning, and D. Hong for generation of SCLC mouse cell lines. Funding: W.G.K. is supported by an NIH R35 grant and is an HHMI investigator. M.G.O. is supported by a Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation Clinical Investigator Award and an NCI/NIH KO8 grant (no. K08CA222657). V.K. is supported by an American Society of Hematology Research Training Award and T32 NIH Training Grant CA009172. J.A.P. is funded by an NIGMS grant R01 GM132129. E.S.F. is funded by NCI R01CA2144608. N.S.G. is funded by NIH R01 CA214608-03. M.I. is supported by an Internationalisation Fellowship from the Carlsberg Foundation. C.J.O. is supported by an NIH/NCI Pathway to Independence Award (R00CA190861). Author contributions: V.K., L.D., and B.L.L. performed experiments and, together with W.G.K. and M.G.O., designed experiments, analyzed data, and assembled and wrote the manuscript. J.A.M. helped design experiments. A.C.W. and A.H.S. performed experiments. M.I. designed and synthesized the IMiD library. J.P. and C.J.O. measured CRBN binding and cellular activity of candidate IMiDs; J.B. supervised these experiments. I.S.H. and J.E.E. constructed the Ludwig anticancer and antimetabolite libraries and helped analyze data from the screen. E.D., X.L., and S.J.B. synthesized and characterized Spautin-1 derivatives. J.A.P. performed TMT global proteomic profiling of Spautin-1. S.P.G. supervised these experiments. K.A.D. and E.S.F. analyzed TMT proteomic data. K.J.B. determined the half-lives of luciferase fusion proteins and the Z of the dual-luciferase system. J.G.D. helped analyze data from the CRISPR screen. M.T., T.Z., and N.S.G. helped generate and validate CDK2 degraders. Competing interests: W.G.K. has financial interests in Lilly Pharmaceuticals, Fibrogen, Agios Pharmaceuticals, Cedilla Therapeutics, Nextech Invest, Tango Therapeutics, and Tracon Pharmaceuticals. N.S.G. is a founder, science advisory board member, and equity holder in Gatekeeper, Syros, Petra, C4, B2S, Aduro, and Soltego (board member). E.S.F. is a founder, scientific advisory board (SAB) member, and equity holder of Civetta Therapeutics, Jengu Therapeutics (board member), and Neomorph Inc. E.S.F. is an equity holder of C4 Therapeutics. E.S.F. consults or has consulted for Novartis, AbbVie, Astellas, Deerfield, EcoR1, and Pfizer. The Fischer laboratory receives or has received research funding from Novartis, Deerfield, and Astellas. The Gray laboratory receives or has received research funding from Novartis, Takeda, Astellas, Taiho, Janssen, Kinogen, Voronoi, Her2llc, Deerfield, and Sanofi. M.G.O. has sponsored research agreements with Lilly Pharmaceuticals and Takeda Pharmaceuticals. V.K. has consulted for Cedilla Therapeutics. S.J.B. is on the SAB of Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma Foundation. J.B. is an employee, executive, and shareholder of Novartis AG (Basel, Switzerland). J.G.D. consults for Agios, Foghorn Therapeutics, Maze Therapeutics, Merck, and Pfizer; J.G.D. consults for and has equity in Tango Therapeutics. J.G.D.s interests were reviewed and are managed by the Broad Institute in accordance with its conflict of interest policies. I.S.H. is a consultant for ONO Pharmaceuticals (USA). V.K. and W.G.K. are inventors on a patent application on positive selection assays to identify protein degraders, which was filed by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (U.S. patent application number 16/332,921, filed on 13 March 2019 and published on 1 August 2019). N.S.G., M.T., and T.Z. are named inventors on patent applications covering Cdlk2 degraders described in the paper, and which were filed by the Dana Farber Cancer Institute (U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/829,302, filed April 4, 2019 and U.S. Provisional Application No: 62/981,334, filed February 25, 2020). The authors declare that they have no other competing interests. Data and materials availability: All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors. All plasmids are available from the authors.

See the article here:
Targeting oncoproteins with a positive selection assay for protein degraders - Science Advances

Programming in the pandemic – Perforce: In open source, crowd is a positive – ComputerWeekly.com

The Computer Weekly Developer Network examines the impact of Covid-19 (Coronavirus) on the software application development community.

With only a proportion of developers classified as key workers (where their responsibilities perhaps included the operations-side of keeping mission-critical and life-critical systems up and online), the majority of programmers will have been forced to work remotely, often in solitude.

So how have the fallout effects of this played out?

This post comes from Justin Reock in his role as chief evangelist for open source software (OSS) & Application Programming Interface (API) management at Perforce Software.

Reock reflects upon the use of open source platforms, languages and related technologie in general in light of the Covid-19 global crisis and writes as follows

On the whole, I would argue that open source software has been invaluable during the pandemic.

Crowd-sourced software initiatives and hackathons, protein-folding peer-to-peer networks and foundation sponsorship have all been in play throughout the contagion and many of these initiatives continue forwards.

GitHub has shown us that commits held steady or even increased suggesting (if it is fair to measure that in terms of raw commits without considering quality) that developer productivity has held steady or even gone up.

For many developers, having a shared project and sense of community during a very isolating time for humanity has been uplifting and good for their spirits. Its a reminder that coding together is in fact a social activity, no different than any other collaborative and creative endeavour.

Perhaps the biggest impact and fallout from this whole period of experiences (for programmers, operations staff and the wider software engineering community) will be the acceleration of transformation and DevOps initiatives within businesses.

So many have witnessed the resilience of businesses that have already undergone the DevOps transition (and even watched their profits soar) as we moved to online ordering, contactless delivery and more.

The CI/CD part of the DevOps makeover has always been about dealing with constant change.The mantra of releases are hard, so release often embraces the notion that change is difficult, so organisations should make themselves really good at dealing with it. That meant when the pandemic hit, the seams of our global digital twin were tested. Companies that were capable of quickly refactoring to online experiences, digital goods and other conveniences have now become essential to carrying on a reasonable quality of life in the physical world.

It is one thing to expect the unexpected, and it is quite another to design systems that thrive in unexpected conditions.Whatever requisite effort may need to be invested to achieve DevOps maturity in an organisation, the positive impact it can have to business longevity is now indisputable.

However, especially in segments of the industry that are highly collaborative such as gaming, quality and deadlines have suffered drastically and development teams have blamed it squarely on moving to a remote work model.

NOTE: As a software change management specialist, Perforce has a particularly acute proximity with and close understanding of how games programmers work.

Even enabling employees to work from home was a challenge, as the hardware supply chain which we rely on to deliver our webcams, tablets, and laptops and other tech gear suffered major disruptions: so, all in all, there is no question that organisations, including open source communities, which had already taken steps towards transformation and remote work were able to continue operations smoothly, though not completely without impact.

That said, the overall industry picture is not all rosy, with many segments that rely heavily on peer collaboration taking a hit in quality and productivity.

We hope, of course, for brighter future times for all.

Reock: Commit to commit dear developers, you know you want to.

Go here to see the original:
Programming in the pandemic - Perforce: In open source, crowd is a positive - ComputerWeekly.com

Synthetic Biology Startup Acquires AI Platform To Disrupt The Drug Industry – Forbes

Sean McClain, Co-Founder and CEO of AbSci.

There has been a lot of recent attention on the challenges of delivering COVID-19 vaccines. But there are also challenges in making them. For some of the newer options like those from Johnson & Johnson and Oxford-AstraZeneca, the modified cells used in vaccine production are struggling under the scale of demand. But synthetic biology company AbScis recent acquisition of the artificial intelligence platform, Denovium, could help mitigate this type of challenge in the future.

Unlike mRNA vaccines, the Johnson & Johnson/Oxford-AstraZeneca class of vaccines rely on a type of virus called adenovirus which is known to cause colds in chimpanzees. To address COVID-19, the adenovirus is genetically altered to express the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein which is what ultimately triggers the bodys immune response. Like mRNA vaccines, adenovirus-based vaccines train the body to recognize and fight COVID-19, foregoing the need to inject a person with a weakened version of SARS-CoV-2.

But producing enough adenovirus cells has been a challenge. To make vaccine doses, large volumes of altered adenovirus are produced by replicating cells in bioreactors. But, the scale of production can also cause the cells to weaken. This can result in a reduced output of adenovirus copies. So while these new vaccines may represent a breakthrough in adenovirus-based therapeutics, the process also highlights some critical roadblocks.

One major issue is that drug discovery and drug manufacturing are often disconnected from one another. Drug discovery typically starts with screeningthe process of finding a set of compounds out of 100,000 combinations that can best neutralize a targeted weak point of a disease. But when a promising protein is identified, it often turns out to be difficult to scale effectively.

Once a therapeutic compound is identified, researchers must then determine if it works well with a group of similar cells called a cell-line. By inserting the compound into the cellswhich then divide and multiply in a bioreactorthe cells act like factories to produce greater volumes of the compound of choice. But, as in the case with adenovirus-producing cells, not all cells can maintain their functions at large volumes. If the protein compound doesnt work well in a scalable cell-line, researchers often have to go back to the drawing board to find a new compound and start again.

Many in the biopharma space are aware of this inefficient process. The synthetic biology company AbSci has spent years developing a platform solution that streamlines the workflow. [Our platform] is simultaneously a drug discovery and manufacturing platform that allows you to discover your drug and the cell line that can manufacture [it], says AbSci CEO, Sean McClain. Were finally uniting drug discovery and manufacturing the first time.

AbSci refers to their core process as their Protein Printing platform, not because it uses ink and paper to make proteins but as an analogy for ease and speed. The first technology [in our platform] is our SoluPro E. coli strain. It has been highly engineered to be more mammalian-like to be able to produce mammalian-like proteins that E. coli wasn't previously capable of doing, says McClain. AbSci also uses what the company calls a folding solution to precisely tailor how proteins fold and therefore function.

Imad Ajjawi, Co-Founder and CBO of Denovium

To find the most effective protein, AbSci alters its folding solutions to create as many protein varieties as possible, often to the order of 10s of millions. The more protein types available, which AbSci refers to as libraries, the higher the likelihood of success. But this also creates a challenge: so many options, but which to choose?

To address this, AbSci recently acquired artificial intelligence company, Denovium. By integrating Denoviums AI platform, AbSci can improve its data analysis via AI models. From there, the company can take the best candidates and find the most effective cell-line to produce the chosen compounds at scale. McClain explains that traditional drug discovery and manufacturing typically takes years. But AbScis platform can take that timeline down to weeks. Were actually able to manufacture [therapeutics] because the dirty secret in pharma is that so many drugs get shelved because [pharma companies] can't actually manufacture them, says McClain.

For McClain, acquiring Denovium is a big step forward for AbScis discovery process. Its going to change the paradigm. Its really a perfect marriage of both data and AI technology. If you don't have good data feeding into your AI model, it's worthless. But if you don't have an AI technology, you can't mine [the data] and get all the benefits, says McClain.

Denoviums co-founder and CBO, Imad Ajjawi, also sees the new collaboration as a significant opportunity. It's really exciting to be a part of AbSci because they have all the data, billions of points that the deep learning engine can now analyze, says Ajjawi. AbScis acquisition also comes on the heels of the companys $65 million Series E in late 2020.

Upgrading the union of biology and AI is important for advancing synthetic biology innovation. But the true potential beneficiaries of this advanced discovery platform are those in need of novel drug options.

AbScis main goal as a company is to bring therapeutics to market more quickly. This technology's impact on healthcare is profound because more drugs and biologics can now enter patients' hands faster, says McClain.

McClain believes that AbScis technology will help speed the process of clinically testing new medications. Faster clinical trial turnarounds could increase the number of drugs approved to address a range of diseases. This could be most impactful for patients with rare or difficult to treat conditions as drug discovery is often prioritized based on how long it takes to find a scalable cell-line.

But though AbSci is working to accelerate drug discovery, the process still takes time. Right now, we have six drugs that are in preclinical or clinical trials. And one of them is actually in phase three. So we could have an improved product here in the next couple of years, says McClain.

As Absci and Denovium finalize their technology integrations, McClain is also looking ahead to build as many partnerships as possible. The more partnerships we do, the more patients were able to affect that at the end of the day, says McClain.

In line with that goal, AbSci today announced a continuation of its partnership with Astellas and Xyphos. AbSci will take on screening and identifying an optimal cell-line for a leading variant of Xyphos MicAbody, a bispecific antibody-like adaptor molecule used in the company's immuno-oncology program.

McClain expects more partnership announcements will follow in the first quarter of 2021. We have some really exciting partnerships that are going to be coming out over this next quarter that I think speak to the [range] of the types of disease states we're working on and the breadth of how the technology can be used within biopharma, says McClain.

Im the founder of SynBioBeta, and some of the companies that I write about are sponsors of the SynBioBeta conference and weekly digest, including AbSci. Thank you to Fiona Mischel and Vinit Parekh for additional research and reporting in this article.

Read more:
Synthetic Biology Startup Acquires AI Platform To Disrupt The Drug Industry - Forbes

TYME Granted U.S. Patent Claims Covering Use of TYME-19 to Treat COVID-19 Infections – Business Wire

BEDMINSTER, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Tyme Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: TYME), an emerging biotechnology company developing cancer metabolism-based therapies (CMBTs), announced that it has received notification that the United States Patent and Trademark Office has granted additional patent claims related to the Companys metabolomic technology platform. The patent, U.S. Patent No. 10,905,698, is directed to methods for treating COVID-19.

Unlike immune therapies that depend upon the structure of the external virus coat of COVID-19 where the therapy directs its attack, we believe TYME-19 is agnostic to this structure and any mutations to the viral coat. Like other TYME agents, TYME-19 affects cellular metabolism. It constrains viral replication after a virus has inserted its genetic blueprint into an infected cell by inhibiting the ability of the virus to use the cells synthetic apparatus to make viral proteins and lipids. As a result, we believe that TYME-19 diminishes the ability of COVID-19 to hijack an infected cell. TYME intends to initiate the appropriate clinical trials to substantiate the safety and efficacy of TYME-19.

TYME-19 is an investigational compound that is not approved in the U.S. for any disease indication.

About TYME-19

TYME-19 is an oral synthetic member of the bile acid family that the Company also uses in its anticancer compound, TYME-18. Because of its expertise in metabolic therapies, the Company was able to identify TYME-19 as a potent, well characterized antiviral bile acid and has performed preclinical experiments establishing effectiveness against COVID-19. Bile acids have primarily been used for liver disease; however, like all steroids, they are messenger molecules that modulate a number of diverse critical cellular regulators. Bile acids modulate lipid and glucose metabolism and can remediate dysregulated protein folding, with potentially therapeutic effects on cardiovascular, neurologic, immune, and other metabolic systems. Some agents in this class also have antiviral properties. In preclinical testing, TYME-19 repeatedly prevented COVID-19 viral replication without attributable cytotoxicity to the treated cells. Previous preclinical research has also shown select bile acids like TYME-19 have had broad antiviral activity.

About Tyme Technologies

Tyme Technologies, Inc., is an emerging biotechnology company developing cancer therapeutics that are intended to be broadly effective across tumor types and have low toxicity profiles. Unlike targeted therapies that attempt to regulate specific mutations within cancer, the Companys therapeutic approach is designed to take advantage of a cancer cells innate metabolic weaknesses to compromise its defenses, leading to cell death through oxidative stress and exposure to the bodys natural immune system.

With the development of TYME-18 and TYME-19, the Company believes that it is also emerging as a leader in the development of bile acids as potential therapies for cancer and COVID-19. For more information, visit http://www.tymeinc.com. Follow us on social media: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube and Instagram.

Forward-Looking Statements/Disclosure Notice

In addition to historical information, this press release contains forward-looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act that involve substantial risks and uncertainties. Such forward-looking statements within this press release include, without limitation, statements regarding our drug candidates (including SM-88 and TYME- 18) and their clinical potential and non-toxic safety profiles, our drug development plans and strategies, ongoing and planned preclinical or clinical trials, including the proposed TYME-19 proof-of-concept study, preliminary data results and the therapeutic design and mechanisms of our drug candidates. The words believes, expects, hopes, may, will, plan, intends, estimates, could, should, would, continue, seeks, anticipates, and similar expressions (including their use in the negative) are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements can also be identified by discussions of future matters such as: the effect of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and the associated economic downturn and impacts on the Company's ongoing clinical trials and ability to analyze data from those trials; the cost of development and potential commercialization of our lead drug candidate and of other new products; expected releases of interim or final data from our clinical trials; possible collaborations; and the timing, scope, status, objectives and strategy of our ongoing and planned trials; the success of management transitions; and other statements that are not historical. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release are based on managements current expectations and projections which are subject to uncertainty, risks and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of our control. These statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the Companys actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any historical results and future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include but are not limited to: the severity, duration, and economic and operational impact of the COVID-19 pandemic; that the information is of a preliminary nature and may be subject to change; uncertainties inherent in the cost and outcomes of research and development, including the cost and availability of acceptable-quality clinical supply, and in the ability to achieve adequate start and completion dates, as well as uncertainties in clinical trial design and patient enrollment, dropout or discontinuation rates; the possibility of unfavorable study results, including unfavorable new clinical data and additional analyses of existing data; risks associated with early, initial data, including the risk that the final data from any clinical trials may differ from prior or preliminary study data; final results of additional clinical trials that may be different from the preliminary data analysis and may not support further clinical development; that past reported data are not necessarily predictive of future patient or clinical data outcomes; whether and when any applications or other submissions for SM-88 may be filed with regulatory authorities; whether and when regulatory authorities may approve any applications or submissions; decisions by regulatory authorities regarding labeling and other matters that could affect commercial availability of SM-88; the ability of TYME and its collaborators to develop and realize collaborative synergies; competitive developments; and the factors described in the section captioned Risk Factors of TYMEs Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on May 22, 2020, as well as subsequent reports we file from time to time with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission available at http://www.sec.gov.

The information contained in this press release is as of its release date and TYME assumes no obligation to update forward-looking statements contained in this release as a result of future events or developments.

Originally posted here:
TYME Granted U.S. Patent Claims Covering Use of TYME-19 to Treat COVID-19 Infections - Business Wire