Faculty positions in Biochemistry at SUSTech Medical School job with Southern University of Science and Technology (SUSTech) | 273926 – The Chronicle…

The School of Medicine, Southern University of Science andTechnology (SUSTech), seeks outstanding applicants for full-timetenure-track/tenured faculty positions in all ranks. In our newlyestablished Department of Biochemistry, we welcome exceptionalcandidates in any areas of biochemistry including protein design,structural biology, protein misfolding diseases, nucleicacids,translational biology, proteomics, chromatin biology, proteintrafficking and metabolism. The successful candidate should have arecord of outstanding research creativity and productivity, and isexpected to establish an innovative, cutting-edge researchprogram.

Since its inception in 2012, SUSTech has quickly risen to a top 10university in mainland China. Located in Shenzhen, arguably themost dynamic and vibrant city in China, we have unique advantages,including but certainly not limited to: 1) a new university withinnovative spirits and little traditional barriers; 2) bilingualeducation with lectures conducted in English and/or Mandarin,attracting top global talents; 3) an internationally competitivestartup package that allows many PIs quickly build a team withdedicated researchers; 4) a highly collaborated environment withstrong administrative and scientific support.

SUSTech Medical School offers equal opportunity and welcomesapplicants of all ethnic backgrounds who can contribute to theexcellence and diversity of our academic community. Applicants mustpossess a Ph.D. and/or M.D. degree, demonstrated researchexcellence, and strong teaching ability. Candidates with clinicalbackground and a translational focus are encouraged to apply. Aglobally competitive start-up package will be provided tosuccessful candidates. Salary and rank will commensurate withqualifications and experience.

All applicants should submit the following documents tohraoh@hotmail.com or hr-med@sustech.edu.cn : (1) Curriculum Vitae,(2) a Statement of Research and Teaching Interests.

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Faculty positions in Biochemistry at SUSTech Medical School job with Southern University of Science and Technology (SUSTech) | 273926 - The Chronicle...

Biochemists to Bolsonaro: virus protests across the world – Yahoo News

As the prospect of a second virus wave fuels fears of new lockdowns in Europe and elsewhere,anger is growing in some quarters over crippling restrictions imposed to slow transmission of the disease.

From football fans to far-right conspiracy theorists to presidents, here is an overview of those who are protesting measures related to the pandemic.

- 'Lateral thinkers' -

A movement calling themselves Querdenken-711 or "Lateral thinkers-711" sprung up in the western German city of Stuttgart with anti-coronavirus restrictions demonstrations as early as in mid-April, days before Germany began to ease its lockdown on April 20.

The movement rails against the "dictatorship" of the corona measures and has held "vigils for the constitution".

Initiated by Michael Ballweg, an IT entrepreneur, the movement has snowballed, gathering along its way conspiracy theorists, anti-vaxxers and far-right or far-left activists.

Some 20,000 of them marched in central Berlin last weekend, most wearing no masks and failing to respect social distancing rules, sparking a hail of condemnation.

The movement has called new protests in Stuttgart on Saturday and in Dortmund on Sunday. Another round of demonstrations is also expected in Berlin on August 29.

In the Netherlands, similar groups have launched protests but the demonstrations have so far stayed small, although hardcore football supporters have joined in, openly seeking confrontation with police at demonstrations.

A group calling themselves "virus truth" is co-led by former biochemist-turned-dance instructor Willem Engel, who told local papers he was schooled in the Dutch tradition of individuality and the right to question decisions by the country's health authorities.

In July, dozens gathered in London to protest the face mask requirement in England's shops and supermarkets, many of them holding banners with widely discredited conspiracy theories -- such as coronavirus prevention measures being used for "mind control".

Story continues

Romania has also seen a few hundred so-called coronasceptics -- holding religious icons, the national flag and signs that read "I believe in GOD, not in COVID" -- frequently protest in Bucharest against what they call a "sanitary dictatorship".

Small groups of protesters in Spain have meanwhile flouted one of the most stringent restrictions in Europe to march.

On July 12, police broke up an unauthorised gathering of a few dozen protesters shouting "no to dictatorship" and holding up anti-mask and anti-5G placards.

- Leaders fighting restrictions -

Beyond the grassroots, leading criticism against restrictions aimed at dampening transmission has come from top politicians themselves.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonarohas fought stay-at-home measures to contain the virus, despite testing positive and spending three weeks in isolation after coming down with a fever last month.

Last week, in his first public event since his illness, he greeted a crowd of supporters in the northeastern state of Piaui, removing his face mask to loud cheers.

US President Donald Trump had adamantly refused to advocate for the wearing of masks until mid-July.

Many sheriffs -- who are often elected officials -- have also resisted enforcing state-imposed mask regulations in their counties.

In Italy, far-right leader Matteo Salvini was widely criticised last week after he spoke in the Senate without a mask, saying that "greeting with elbows is the end of the human race."

He has since backpedalled, saying that masks should be worn "when needed".

- Tighter measures please -

But in some countries, people have come out to express dissatisfaction at their government's failure to impose stricter measures.

Serbia saw a brief but intense outburst of anger in early July, when police clashed with protesters outraged over the government's handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

Demonstrators came out into the streets, accusing President Aleksandar Vucic of having facilitated a new wave of infections by lifting an initial lockdown for general elections that his party largely won.

Some demonstrators hurled stones, firecrackers and flares at police, who responded with tear gas.

In Sweden, which controversially adopted a softer approach to fighting the virus, demonstrators have called for tighter rather than looser measures.

A handful of protesters have regularly assembled outside the Public Health Agency's weekly press conferences in Stockholm.

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Biochemists to Bolsonaro: virus protests across the world - Yahoo News

Biochemical Diagnostic Reagent Market | Covid-19 Impact | Demand, Cost Structures, Latest trends, and Forecasts to 2024 | Key Players: Roche, Siemens…

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COVID-19- Current Scenario & Potential Impact

Various communities and companies are doing their best to function and perform, and eventually cope with the challenges raised by COVID-19 pandemic. The COVID-19 pandemic had a negative impact on the market size for the year 2020, with small and medium scale companies struggling to sustain their businesses in the near-term future. Industry leaders are now focusing to create new business practices to deal with crisis situations like COVID-19 pandemic.

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Biochemical Diagnostic Reagent Market | Covid-19 Impact | Demand, Cost Structures, Latest trends, and Forecasts to 2024 | Key Players: Roche, Siemens...

Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers Market 2020: Challenges, Growth, Types, Applications, Revenue, Insights, Growth Analysis, Competitive…

Automatic biochemistry analyzer (FABCA) could be a high-performance micro-controller based mostly measurement organic chemistry instrument used to live varied blood organic chemistry parameters like glucose, urea, protein, and bilirubin etc. that are related to varied disorders like diabetes, kidney diseases, liver malfunctions and alternative metabolic derangements. The global Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers market is segregated on the basis of Type as Semi-automated and Fully-automated. Based on End-User the global Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers market is segmented in Hospitals, Clinics, and Others.

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The global Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers market report provides geographic analysis covering regions, such as North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Rest of the World. The Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers market for each region is further segmented for major countries including the U.S., Canada, Germany, the U.K., France, Italy, China, India, Japan, Brazil, South Africa, and others.

Competitive Rivalry

Siemens Healthcare, Abbott, Hitachi, Mindray Medical, GaomiCaihong, Horiba Medical, Sunostik, Tecom Science, Sysmex, Senlo, and others are among the major players in the global Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers market. The companies are involved in several growth and expansion strategies to gain a competitive advantage. Industry participants also follow value chain integration with business operations in multiple stages of the value chain.

The Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers Market has been segmented as below:

Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers Market, By Type

Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers Market, By End-User

Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers Market, By Region

Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers Market, By Company

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The report scope includes detailed competitive outlook covering market shares and profiles key participants in the global Bench-top Automated Biochemical Analyzers market share. Major industry players with significant revenue share include Siemens Healthcare, Abbott, Hitachi, Mindray Medical, GaomiCaihong, Horiba Medical, Sunostik, Tecom Science, Sysmex, Senlo, and others.

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MSU grad student selected as one of only 34 to receive NASA award – KULR-TV

BOZEMAN - A Montana State graduate student will investigate unique bacteria that could provide insights into how multicellular life evolved.

George Schaible, a doctoral student in biochemistry, will receive $133,000 worth of funding in support of three years of research that started while studying microbes in Yellowstone National Park's hot springs as an undergraduate at MSU.

Schaible is one of only 34 graduate students in the U.S. to receive the Future Investigators in NASA Earth and Space Science and Technology award from the agencys Planetary Science Division.

A Missoula native, Schaible earned his bachelor's in biotechnology with a microbial focus from MSU in 2014. He also earned minors in biochemistry and astrobiology, which involves studying how life originated to understand what it might look like elsewhere in the universe.

"One of my favorite things about being an undergraduate at MSU was that we were encouraged to join research labs," Schaible said. "Those experiences really got me into research and how interesting and exciting it can be."

Although scientists have known about the bacteria for more than two decades, they haven't been able to grow, or "culture," them in a laboratory setting, which has halted efforts to understand how the microbes achieve their unique form.

Schaible was named a Molecular Biosciences Fellow, which allowed him flexibility to conduct research across departments. He was also awarded a STEM Storytellers Fellowship, funded by the National Science Foundation to improve graduate students' oral communication skills.

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MSU grad student selected as one of only 34 to receive NASA award - KULR-TV

The impact of the coronavirus on the Lactic Acid and Derivatives Market Business Opportunity, Segmentation, Industry Overview and Forecast Till 2026 -…

Lactic Acid and Derivatives Market report provide the COVID19 Outbreak Impact analysis of key factors influencing the growth of the market Size (Production, Value and Consumption). This Lactic Acid and Derivatives industry splits the breakdown (data status 2014-2020 and Six years forecast 2020-2026), by manufacturers, region, type and application. This study also analyses the Lactic Acid and Derivatives market Status, Market Share, Growth Rate, Future Trends, Market Drivers, Opportunities and Challenges, Risks and Entry Barriers, Sales Channels, Distributors and Porters Five Forces Analysis.

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Scope of Lactic Acid and Derivatives Market:In 2019, the market size of Lactic Acid and Derivatives is million US$ and it will reach million US$ in 2025, growing at a CAGR of from 2019; while in China, the market size is valued at xx million US$ and will increase to xx million US$ in 2025, with a CAGR of xx% during forecast period.

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Lactic Acid Lactic Acid Derivatives

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Biochemical pedomorphosis and genetic assimilation in the hypoxia adaptation of Tibetan antelope – Science Advances

Abstract

Developmental shifts in stage-specific gene expression can provide a ready mechanism of phenotypic change by altering the rate or timing of ontogenetic events. We found that the high-altitude Tibetan antelope (Panthelops hodgsonii) has evolved an adaptive increase in blood-O2 affinity by truncating the ancestral ontogeny of globin gene expression such that a high-affinity juvenile hemoglobin isoform (isoHb) completely supplants the lower-affinity isoHb that is expressed in the adult red blood cells of other bovids. This juvenilization of blood properties represents a canalization of an acclimatization response to hypoxia that has been well documented in adult goats and sheep. We also found the genomic mechanism underlying this regulatory isoHb switch, revealing how a reversible acclimatization response became genetically assimilated as an irreversible adaptation to chronic hypoxia.

When members of multigene families are developmentally regulated, shifts in the stage-specific expression of individual genes can provide a ready mechanism of phenotypic change by altering the rate or timing of ontogenetic events (heterochrony). For example, retained activity of early-expressed genes in later stages of ontogeny can result in the retention of juvenile characters into adulthood, a well-documented developmental mechanism of phenotypic evolution (1, 2). In extreme cases, deceleration of development can produce a truncation of the ancestral ontogeny, resulting in the juvenilization of the adult-expressed phenotype, a phenomenon known as pedomorphosis.

In jawed vertebrates, the subfamilies of genes that encode the - and -type subunits of tetrameric hemoglobin (Hb) are developmentally regulated such that structurally and functionally distinct 22 Hb isoforms (isoHbs) are expressed during different ontogenetic stages. During mammalian development, different pre- and postnatally expressed isoHbs have evolved different oxygenation properties and perform distinct O2-scavenging/O2-transport tasks during different ontogenetic stages (36). Genetically based shifts in stage-specific isoHb expression could therefore provide a heterochronic mechanism of evolutionary change in respiratory gas transport and aerobic metabolism. Similarly, in humans, hereditary persistence of fetal Hb alleviates the severity of thalassemias and other pathologies affecting the synthesis or stability of adult Hb (7).

Prenatally expressed isoHbs of eutherian mammals typically exhibit substantially higher O2 affinities than adult-expressed isoHbs (3, 5, 6). In anthropoid primates and bovid artiodactyls, expression of a high-affinity fetal isoHb during late stages of prenatal development helps to maintain an O2 affinity difference between fetal and maternal circulations, thereby facilitating O2 transfer across the placental barrier (5, 6). Given that increased Hb-O2 affinity is generally beneficial under conditions of severe hypoxia due to the importance of safeguarding arterial O2 saturation (6, 811), the retention of early isoHb expression into adulthood could provide an effective mechanism of adaptation to chronic O2 deprivation. Consistent with this hypothesis, when adult goats and sheep are exposed to acute hypoxia, they up-regulate a juvenile isoHb at the expense of the normal adult isoHb (12, 13). Here, we report the discovery of a canalized version of this response in the high-altitude Tibetan antelope, Panthelops hodgsonii (Artiodactyla: Bovidae), a champion among mammals in aerobic exercise performance under hypoxia. This species is endemic to the Tibetan Plateau and lives at altitudes of 3600 to 5500 m above sea level. At an altitude of 5500 m, the partial pressure of O2 (PO2) is roughly half the value at sea level, a level of hypoxia that severely compromises aerobic exercise performance in humans and most other mammals (1416). However, at these altitudes, Tibetan antelope can sustain running speeds of >70 km/hour over distances of >100 km (17).

In addition to documenting the phenotypic consequences of developmentally displacing the low-affinity adult isoHb with a higher-affinity juvenile isoHba form of biochemical pedomorphosiswe also found the genomic mechanism by which the up-regulation of the juvenile isoHb became canalized in Tibetan antelope. Specifically, we document how a reversible acclimatization response to acute hypoxiaas observed in modern-day sheep and goatsbecame genetically assimilated as an irreversible adaptation to chronic hypoxia.

We characterized the genomic organization of globin genes in Tibetan antelope and other bovid artiodactyls using published genome assemblies (18). Among mammals, bovid artiodactyls are unusual in that the entire -globin gene cluster has undergone multiple rounds of en bloc duplication involving the same set of pre- and postnatally expressed -type globin genes (Fig. 1) (1921). Cows (Bos taurus) have two duplicated gene blocks, each containing separate paralogs of the -globin gene, A and F, in the 5 and 3 blocks, respectively (Fig. 1). As with other eutherian mammals, the product of A is incorporated into an adult-expressed isoHb, HbA (2A2), whereas the F gene has been recruited for prenatal expression and is incorporated into a fetal isoHb, HbF (2F2) (22). Goats (Capra hircus) and sheep (Ovis aries) have an additional gene block at the 5 end of the cluster that contains a third -globin paralog, C (Fig. 1) (1921). Whereas the A and F genes in goats and sheep have retained the same developmental expression profiles as their respective orthologs in cow, the C gene has been recruited for a new ontogenetic stage of expression during the first few months of neonatal life, and its product is incorporated into a juvenile isoHb, HbC (2C2) (23).

Colored boxes represent individual genes. Labels denote previously annotated C-, A-, and F-globin genes.

The -globin gene cluster of Tibetan antelope appears superficially similar to that of cow in terms of gene content (Fig. 1), suggesting that the Tibetan antelope inherited the same pair of A- and F-containing gene blocks. The alternative hypothesis is that Tibetan antelope inherited the additional en bloc duplication observed in goats and sheep but one of the triplicated gene blocks was secondarily deleted, in which case the sole remaining pair of -globin genes would be represented by one of three possible combinations: A + F (a reversion to the ancestral gene complement observed in cow), C + A, or C + F (Fig. 2, A to C). Either of the latter two combinations would implicate a novel isoHb profile that is not observed in other bovid taxa. To distinguish among these three alternative scenarios, we estimated the phylogeny of bovid C, A, and F genes and the pair of Tibetan antelope -globin paralogs. Estimated phylogenies (Fig. 2D and fig. S1) demonstrate that the 5 and 3 -globin genes of Tibetan antelope are orthologous to bovid C and F, respectively, consistent with the scenario illustrated in Fig. 2B. This result indicates that Tibetan antelope inherited the triplicated set of C-, A-, and F-containing gene blocks observed in goats and sheep (Fig. 1) and that the middle gene block containing A was secondarily deleted. This phylogenetic inference is unambiguously corroborated by patterns of conserved synteny and pairwise sequence matches (Fig. 3), as the C- and F-containing gene blocks of goat and sheep match the 5 and 3 gene blocks in Tibetan antelope. This comparative genomic analysis revealed that a ~45-kb region of the Tibetan antelope -globin gene cluster was deleteda gene region that contained the ortholog of the A gene that encodes the chain of adult Hb in bovids and all other mammals.

Alternative histories of gene deletion in Tibetan antelope yield testable phylogenetic hypotheses: (A) Deletion of C, (B) deletion of A, and (C) deletion of F. (D) Estimated maximum likelihood phylogeny of bovid -type globin genes indicates that Tibetan antelope has retained copies of C and F and that A has been secondarily lost. Bootstrap support values are shown for relevant nodes.

Purple, green, and blue colored boxes represent genes within the C-, A-, and F-gene blocks, respectively. (A) Gray shading denotes percent sequence identity between homologous -globin gene clusters. (B) A ~45-kb chromosomal deletion in the -globin cluster of the Tibetan antelope lineage resulted in secondary loss of the A-containing gene block.

Deletion of the adult A gene in the ancestor of Tibetan antelope effectively truncated the ancestral ontogeny of globin gene expression, such that juvenile HbC completely supplanted HbA in adult red blood cells. Thus, blood-O2 transport in Tibetan antelope has been juvenilized relative to the ancestral phenotype of adult bovids. To examine the effects of this pedomorphic change, we measured the oxygenation properties of purified recombinant Hb from Tibetan antelope and purified native Hbs from adult specimens of 10 other bovid species (Fig. 4 and Table 1). The adult red cells of these other taxa contain HbA alone or in combination with HbC as a minor component (fig. S2). We measured the Hb-O2 affinity of purified total Hb from each bovid species in both the absence (stripped) and presence of 100 mM Cl (in the form of KCl). The stripped treatment provides a measure of intrinsic Hb-O2 affinity, whereas the +KCl treatment provides a measure that is relevant to in vivo conditions in bovid red cells, as Cl ions are the principal allosteric regulators of Hb-O2 affinity (i.e., heme reactivity is modulated oxygenation-linked binding of Cl ions at sites remote from the heme iron) (6, 22, 24). Results of our in vitro experiments revealed that Hb of Tibetan antelope has a substantially higher O2 affinity than that of all other bovid taxa (Fig. 4 and Table 1). Hbs of all taxa were similarly responsive to Cl, as the average P50 (the PO2 yielding 50% Hb-O2 saturation) was 27.1% higher (i.e., Hb-O2 affinity was lower) in the +KCl treatment (Table 1).

O2 tensions at half saturation (P50) for total Hb in the absence (stripped; gray hatched bars) and presence of 0.1 M KCl (black bars) at 37C (pH 7.4) (0.1 mM Hb4). Values are shown as mean P50 SEM (n = 3).

P50 values are reported as means SEM. Cl effect calculated as logP50[+KCl] logP50[stripped].

As a follow-up experiment, we isolated and purified HbC and HbA from two of the bovid species expressing both components, and we measured isoHb-specific O2-binding properties to determine how blood-O2 affinity would be affected by elimination of the major HbA isoHb (as would occur with the deletion of the A gene, leaving juvenile HbC as the sole-remaining isoHb). There was very little among-species variation in the measured O2 affinities of either juvenile HbC or adult HbA (Table 1 and fig. S2), but the O2 affinity of HbC exceeded that of HbA by a consistent margin (average, 10.6 torr) in all species (Table 1 and fig. S2). Moreover, O2 affinity of HbC alone was always substantially higher than that of the composite HbA + HbC mixture (with the two isoHbs present in their naturally occurring relative abundance) (Table 1 and fig. S2), reflecting the fact that the lower affinity HbA is always present as the major isoHb in adult red cells (average HbA/HbC ratio = ~80:20).

The higher Hb-O2 affinity of Tibetan antelope relative to that of other bovid species is entirely attributable to a difference in isoHb composition: They only express the high-affinity HbC instead of jointly expressing HbA and HbC (with the lower-affinity HbA present as the major isoHb). To infer the direction of evolutionary change in isoHb-specific O2 affinities and to reconstruct the phenotypic effect of deleting A-globin (thereby leaving HbC as the sole-expressed isoHb in adult red cells), we reconstructed the ancestral bovid A and C genes as well as their single-copy, preduplication progenitor (AC) (Fig. 5 and fig. S3). Triangulated comparison of O2 affinities of the three recombinantly expressed ancestral isoHbs, AncHb-A, AncHb-C, and AncHb-AC (all of which had identical chains), revealed that the juvenile AncHb-C evolved a slight increase in O2 affinity relative to the estimated ancestral state (represented by AncHb-AC), whereas adult HbA evolved a slight reduction in O2 affinity (Fig. 5). These data indicate that if HbA and HbC were present in a 80:20 ratio in the red cells of the Tibetan antelope ancestor (as in extant bovids), then the deletion of A-globin and the consequent elimination of HbA from the HbA + HbC composite mixture would result in a 13.5% increase in Hb-O2 affinity in the presence of 100 mM Cl (P50 decreased from 18.5 to 16.0 torr). Theoretical and experimental results indicate that an increase in Hb-O2 affinity of this magnitudeif accompanied by a corresponding enhancement of tissue O2 diffusion capacitywould likely translate into a physiologically important enhancement of aerobic exercise performance under hypoxia (6, 811).

(A) Reconstructed ancestral -globin genes (C, A, and AC) of bovids. (B) O2 tensions at half saturation (mean P50 SEM, n = 3) for recombinant ancestral isoHbs in the absence (stripped) and presence of 0.1 M KCl at 37C (pH 7.4) (0.1 mM Hb4). Schematic diagrams show the subunit composition of the three ancestral isoHbs (which have identical chains and structurally distinct chains).

The derived blood phenotype of Tibetan antelope is consistent with the theoretical expectation that an increased Hb-O2 affinity is adaptive under conditions of severe hypoxia (especially in highly athletic species) and is consistent with patterns observed in other high-altitude mammals and birds that maintain especially high rates of aerobic metabolism (2533). In other case studies of high-altitude vertebrates, evolved increases in Hb-O2 affinity have been traced to one or more amino acid substitutions in the and/or chain subunits of the 22 Hb tetramer (6, 3132). Here, we document a unique case in which an evolved change in Hb-O2 affinity has been accomplished via a heterochronic shift in globin gene expression, such that a high-affinity, juvenile isoHb supplants the lower-affinity, adult isoHb. This juvenilization of blood properties represents a novel mode of biochemical adaptation and highlights the utility of heterochrony as an adaptive mechanism, whereby the existing channel of ordinary ontogeny already holds the raw material in a particularly effective state for evolutionary change (2).

There has been debate in the literature regarding the relative importance of regulatory versus coding changes in genetic adaptation (34) and phenotypic evolution in general (3536). In the case of Tibetan antelope, the evolved increase in Hb-O2 affinity was caused by an unusual combination of regulatory and structural changes. Specifically, a marked regulatory switch in protein isoform expression (via truncation of the ancestral ontogeny of globin gene regulation) was caused by a large-scale chromosomal deletion, highlighting the unexpected diversity of genetic mechanisms and substrates of phenotypic evolution.

Frozen erythrocytes from 10 bovid species were provided by the San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservation Research (Uniform Biological Material Transfer Agreement BR2017063). This sample included six species in the subfamily Caprinae (Capra aegagrus cretica, Capra caucasica caucasica, Ovis nivicola, Capra nubiana, Ovis orientalis musimon, and Ovis canadensis nelsoni), two species in the subfamily Alcelaphinae (Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi and Connochaetes gnou), and one species of each from Hippotraginae (Addax nasomaculatus) and Bovinae (Bos gaurus).

RNA was extracted from ~100 l of flash-frozen erythrocytes using an RNeasy Universal Plus Mini kit (QIAGEN). Complementary DNA (cDNA) was synthesized from freshly prepared RNA using SuperScript IV reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). Gene specific primers were used to amplify the - and -type globin transcripts. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) reactions were conducted using 1 ml of cDNA template in 0.2-ml tubes containing 25 l of reaction mixture [0.5 l of each deoxynucleotide triphosphate (2.5 mM), 2.5 l of 10 Reaction Buffer (Invitrogen), 0.75 l of 50 mM MgCl2, 1.25 l of each primer (10 pmol/l), 1 l of Taq polymerase (Invitrogen), and 16.75 l of double-distilled H2O], using an Eppendorf Mastercycler Gradient thermocycler. Following a 5-min denaturation period at 94C, the desired products were amplified using a cycling profile of 94C for 30 s, 53 to 65C for 30 s, 72C for 45 s for 30 cycles, followed by a final extension period of 5 min at 72C. Amplified products were run on a 1.5% agarose gel, and bands of the correct size were subsequently excised and purified using Zymoclean Gel DNA recovery columns (Zymo Research). Gel-purified PCR products were ligated into pCR4-TOPO vectors using a TOPO TA Cloning kit and were then transformed into One Shot TOP10 Chemically Competent Escherichia coli (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Three to six transformed colonies were cultured in 5 ml of LB medium, and plasmids were subsequently purified with a GeneJET Plasmid Miniprep kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Purified plasmids were sequenced by Eurofins Genomics.

Genomic sequences containing the complete - and -globin gene clusters for the domestic goat (C. hircus), sheep (O. aries), cow (B. taurus), and Tibetan antelope (P. hodgsonii) were obtained from GenBank (table S1). Sequence identity between bovid chromosomal regions containing the -globin gene clusters was calculated using Blastn, and patterns of sequence matching were visualized using Easyfig 2.1 (37). Coding sequences of - and -globin genes were extracted from genomic and cDNA sequences available on GenBank (table S1) and were combined with the newly generated cDNA sequences mentioned above (fig. S3). Sequences were aligned using MUSCLE (38) and were then used to estimate phylogenetic trees. The best fitting codon substitution model and initial tree search were estimated using IQ-TREE with the options -st CODON, -m TESTNEW, -allnni, and -bnni (39, 40). Initial trees were then subjected to 1000 ultrafast bootstrap replicates (41). Bootstrap consensus trees (fig. S1, A and B) were used to estimate ancestral globin sequences using IQ-TREE with the option -asr (figs. S1C and S3). As bovid C-globins are truncated by 9 base pairs (relative to A), the ancestral reconstruction of indels in the -globin gene tree was performed by FastML (42).

Blood samples (~200 l) were added to a 5 volume of ice-cold water and incubated on ice for 30 min to lyse the red blood cells. Samples were centrifuged at 20,000g for 10 min to remove cell debris. Buffer was added to the supernatants to a final concentration of 0.01 M Hepes/0.2 M NaCl (pH 7.4) and passed through a PD-10 desalting column (GE Healthcare) equilibrated with 25 ml of 0.01 M Hepes/0.5 mM EDTA (pH 7.2) to remove intracellular cofactors. Desalted lysates were loaded onto a HiTrap SP cation exchange column (GE Healthcare), and isoHbs were eluted using a linear pH gradient [0.01 M Hepes/0.5 mM EDTA (pH 7.2 to 7.7)]. For each species, a subsample of each isoHb was pooled to create a Total Hb solution. Each Hb solution was then desalted using a PD-10 column (GE Healthcare) equilibrated with 0.01 M Hepes/0.5 mM EDTA (pH 7.4), and eluates were concentrated using the Amicon Ultra-4 Centrifugal Filter Units (Millipore).

O2 equilibrium curves for purified Hb solutions [0.1 mM Hb in 0.1 M Hepes/0.05 M EDTA buffer (pH 7.4)] were measured at 37C using the Blood Oxygen Binding System (Loligo Systems). O2 equilibrium curves were measured in the absence (stripped) and presence of chloride ions (0.1 M KCl). Each Hb solution was sequentially equilibrated with three to five different O2 tensions (PO2) at saturation levels between 30 to 70%, while the absorbance was continually monitored at 430 nm (deoxy peak) and 421 nm (oxy/deoxy isosbestic point) (4345). Hill plots (log[fractional saturation/[1 fractional saturation]] versus logPO2) constructed from these measurements were used to estimate the PO2 at half saturation (P50) and the cooperativity coefficient (n50) from the -intercept and slope of these plots, respectively. O2 equilibrium curves for each Hb solution were measured in triplicate, and P50 is reported as means SEM.

Globin sequences for domestic goat, Tibetan antelope, and the reconstructed ancestral globins were synthesized by GeneArt Gene Synthesis (Thermo Fisher Scientific) after optimizing the nucleotide sequences in accordance with E. coli codon preferences. The synthesized globin gene cassette was cloned into a custom pGM vector system along with the methionine aminopeptidase gene, as described previously (46).

Recombinant Hb expression was carried out in the E. coli JM109 (DE3) strain as described previously (4648). Bacterial cell lysates were then loaded onto a HiTrap Q HP anion exchange column (GE Healthcare), then equilibrated with 20 mM tris/0.5 mM EDTA (pH 8.3), and eluted with a linear gradient of 0 to 0.25 M NaCl. Hb-containing fractions were then loaded on to a HiTrap SP HP cation exchange column (GE Healthcare) and eluted with a linear pH gradient (pH 6.8 to 8.4). Eluted Hb factions were concentrated using the Amicon Ultra-4 Centrifugal Filter Units (Millipore), and oxygenation properties were measured as described above.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.

S. J. Gould, Ontogeny and Phylogeny (Harvard Univ. Press, 1977).

S. J. Gould, The Structure of Evolutionary Theory (Harvard Univ. Press, 2002).

J. F. Storz, Hemoglobin: Insights into Protein Structure, Function, and Evolution (Oxford Univ. Press, 2019).

M. H. Blunt, T. H. J. Huisman, The haemoglobins of sheep, in The Blood of Sheep: Composition and Function (Springer, 1975), pp. 155160.

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Biochemical pedomorphosis and genetic assimilation in the hypoxia adaptation of Tibetan antelope - Science Advances

COVID-19: Potential impact on Automated Biochemistry Analyzers Market top key players, size, Analysis, growth, research, Types, Regions and Forecast…

The novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) has caused a slowdown in the global economy and disrupted the stock markets. Hence, companies in the Automated Biochemistry Analyzers market are tapping incremental opportunities via alternative business solutions to revive market growth post the lockdown period. Get a full analysis report on the impact of Coronavirus which has affected the Automated Biochemistry Analyzers market and learn how businesses are tackling the situation.

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The following manufacturers are covered:AbbottDanaherHitachiRocheSiemensThermo Fisher Scientific

Segment by RegionsNorth AmericaEuropeChinaJapanSoutheast AsiaIndia

Segment by TypeStationary Biochemistry AnalyzersPortable Biochemistry Analyzers

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COVID-19: Potential impact on Automated Biochemistry Analyzers Market top key players, size, Analysis, growth, research, Types, Regions and Forecast...

Evensen, Kasl named winners of campus Herfurth-Kubly Awards – University of Wisconsin-Madison

UWMadison graduating seniors Claire Evensen and Patrick Kasl have been named 2020 winners of Herfurth-Kubly Awards for Comprehensive Undergraduate Excellence, among the oldest and most prestigious honors on campus.

The awards of $2,000 each are given annually to seniors who have made the most effective use of their time at UWMadison.

Claire Evenson

A committee comprised of faculty and staff, a former award recipient, and a representative of the donors family selects recipients based on high academic achievement, effective communication skills, leadership in significant extra-curricular activities, financial self-support and personal initiative.

This year, 311 students were nominated by faculty and staff. The committee selected thirteen finalists and made two awards, with two honorable mentions.

The award is made possible through the generosity of Theodore Herfurth, a member of the class of 1894, and his daughter, Theodora (Teddy) Kubly.

Evensen, of Verona, Wisconsin, is the winner of the 2020 Teddy Kubly Award for Comprehensive Undergraduate Excellence. She earned a bachelors degree this month in biochemistry and mathematics, with comprehensive honors in biochemistry and the liberal arts.

Evensens research on the mechanisms of prokaryotic transcription initiation led to a Goldwater Scholarship and an Astronaut Scholarship. She served as president of UWMadisons chapter of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and was an active member of the clarinet studio and university wind ensemble.

Evensen was a finalist this academic year for a Rhodes Scholarship and received the Marshall Scholarship. At the University of Oxford, she will pursue a masters degree in mathematical modelling and scientific computing.

Patrick Kasl

Kasl, of Wyoming, Minnesota, is the winner of the 2020 Theodore Herfurth Award for Comprehensive Undergraduate Excellence. He earned a bachelors degree this month in biomedical engineering. He has spent time researching in three labs at UWMadison. His projects have been diverse, although a unifying theme has been the development of cellularly inspired therapeutics. He was an offensive lineman for the football team on a full-ride scholarship for two years and a peer mentor through the Engineering Department. This fall, he will be attending the University of California-San Diego to pursue a Ph.D. in bioengineering.

Honorable mentions this year went to Christopher Gitter (pharmacology and toxicology, with certificates in environmental studies and global health) and Joseph Kern (materials science and engineering and computer science). Each received a $500 award.

The following students were finalists: Shiloah Coley (journalism, with certificates in studio art and African American studies); Kevin Crosby (nutritional sciences, with a certificate in environmental studies); Kenneth Fiala (biochemistry); Kristina Geiger (biomedical engineering, with certificates in business and biology in engineering); Michael Gui (microbiology and neurobiology); Helen Heo (molecular biology and neurobiology, with a certificate in stem cell sciences); Maura McDonagh (biomedical engineering and communication arts); Anusha Naik (molecular biology, anthropology, and African studies); and Luquant Singh (applied math, engineering, and physics).

A member of the Herfurth family has been involved with the awards since the establishment of the Theodore Herfurth Award in 1928. (The Teddy Herfurth Kubly Award followed in 1943.) Beth Kubly, granddaughter of Theodore Herfurth and daughter of Teddy Herfurth Kubly, currently serves on the selection committee.

My mother used to tell me how her father would return home from the award dinner enthusiastic, impressed, and pleased, says Beth Kubly. For him to witness the levels to which students could rise was both inspiring and invigorating. Some winnersbecame life-long friends. As my parents becameincreasingly involved they were equally impressed by the remarkable finalists. And now I, the third generation of the family to be engaged with these awards, remain likewise amazed by your accomplishments.

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Cal Poly students produce backup supply of hand sanitizer – KEYT

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. - It was not long ago when hand sanitizer was difficult to find.

That's when Cal Poly chemistry assistant professor Dr. Scott Eagon turned a difficult situation into a classic Cal Poly "Learn by Doing" experience.

Dr. Eagon who runs a medical chemistry lab and reached out to students still in the area to help.

Six students volunteered: biochemistry majors Spenser Platt, Eric Schwegman and Julia Gibbs; biomedical engineering major Maetja Verbarendse; biological sciences major Jessica Travis; and biological sciences and psychology major Trevan Klug.

Following World Health Organization guidelines, the team produced 25 gallons of hand sanitizer in one day to use on campus and at local hospitals.

I was really excited, because it meant I could do something to help against the coronavirus and I could get back in the lab, said Eric Schwegman.

A lot of our projects take months if not years to come to fruition, but making hand sanitizer was a way to immediately able to help our community and make a difference, especially with the uncertainty of this pandemic, said Maetja Verbarendse.

The finished product is being stored in a warehouse on campus to supplement the needs in the community.

There is a very good chance we will need this supply before we are able to replenish stock via normal supply chain methods, said Jude Fledderman, executive director of Facilities Operations.

Dr. Eagon said his lab has the supplies and can potentially make more hand sanitizer if there is a critical need in the community.

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Cal Poly students produce backup supply of hand sanitizer - KEYT

Outsmarting cancer: Innovative treatments and diagnostics offer new hope – Stanford Medical Center Report

Researchers at Stanford Medicine are thinking up new ways to tackle one of the world's most daunting diseases: cancer.

My colleague Krista Conger and I tag-teamed an article in the new issue of Stanford Medicine magazine that features some of the latest and most innovative tactics Stanford researchers are pursuing to detect cancer earlier and stop the disease in its tracks.

More than a dozen scientists told us about the impressive research that's helping patients survive what was once a death sentence.

"In biomedicine, we're faced all the time with intractable problems, and cancer is one of these problems that is very difficult to solve," biochemistry professorSteven Artandi, MD, PhD, the Laurie Kraus Lacob Director of theStanford Cancer Institute, told us. "Often, these problems are solved by thinking about them in a completely different perspective, and that's the kind of attitude and approach that we foster at Stanford."

In this feature, we highlighted a handful of new diagnostics Stanford researchers are developing, such as smart toilets to detect signs of cancer from stool and urine. We also described several treatments that are in clinical trials or under development.

In the lab of of Garry Nolan, PhD, for instance, scientists are using a powerful and complex cell analysis technique called multiplexed ion beam imaging to detect and measure levels of certain molecules, including those that flag cancer. The research could reveal a new, deeper understanding of cancer at a molecular level.

Among the treatments featured in the article is one some people call a "cancer vaccine," a breakthrough from the lab of oncologist Ronald Levy, MD, who has dedicated his career to fighting blood cancers. Unlike a traditional vaccination, which prevents disease before it starts, this one bolsters the body's ability to battle disease that already has a foothold.

Levy injects tumors with an agent that boosts activity of immune cells called T cells, after the T cells have infiltrated the cancer and begun to fight it.

Levy and his colleagues have shown that their strategy could eliminate established human tumors in mice not only at the site of injection, but also at distant sites throughout the body.

Image by Keith Negley

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Outsmarting cancer: Innovative treatments and diagnostics offer new hope - Stanford Medical Center Report

Four UTSW Researchers Named to The National Academy of Sciences – D Magazine

Four UT Southwestern Medical Center scientists have been elected to the The National Academy of Sciences, one of the top honors for American scientists.

Peer scientists selected Sean Morrison, Kim Orth, Michael Rosen, and Sandra Schmid for their original research and achievements. UT Southwestern now has 25 members of the academy, the most of any institution in Texas.

Election to the prestigious National Academy of Sciences recognizes the pioneering contributions these scientists have made to advance our understanding of basic cellular function and molecular processes with application to addressing a broad spectrum of unmet medical needs including cancer and treatments for bacterial infections, said Dr. Daniel K. Podolsky, President of UT Southwestern Medical Center via release. Their election enriches the National Academy of Sciences efforts to provide data and advice on the nations most critical issues in science, health, and medicine.

Morrison is the Director of the Childrens Medical Center Research Institute (CRI) at UT Southwestern and Professor of Pediatrics and has worked in the fields of stem cell biology and cancer, and has created new methods to purify stem cells and allow them to persist and regenerate after injury. This recognizes, first and foremost, the work of many talented people over the years in my lab, most of whom have now gone on to their own laboratories at UT Southwestern and other institutions. Many of the key insights for the important discoveries that were made came from them so this really recognizes their work. Id also like to acknowledge all my colleagues, all of you at UT Southwestern and at Childrens Health, for the incredible environment that you created for science, Morrison said via release.

Orth is a Professor of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry and has discovered biochemical mechanisms behind many bacterial infections, revealing how pathogens use host cells for their own benefit. I want to thank you all for this wonderful celebration, even though we have to Zoom . Thanks to this amazing institution, UT Southwestern, the wonderful administration including Drs. (Daniel) Podolsky and (David) Russell and the other administrators and staff. As (Chair of Molecular Biology) Eric Olson said, I have moved up the ranks here, starting as a technician, to a student, a postdoc, and now Professor, Orth said via release. And this path has driven my success. Another major key to my success is all of the talented people that have worked in my lab and my mentors, friends, collaborators, and, of course, my family.

Rosen is the Chair of Biophysics and Professor in the Cecil H. and Ida Green Comprehensive Center for Molecular, Computational, and Systems Biology, and investigates how cells compartmentalize processes without the use of membranes. When we began our work on phase separation about a decade ago, it really was not obvious at all whether this was going to be some weird, esoteric little thing that a few proteins did or (if) it was going to become a more general principle in biology. So it wasa tremendous risk that many of us took in making a move in this new direction. More than anything, I want to thank the various people whojoined me in taking this great risk a decade ago that I think has proved to be very much worthwhile, Rosen said via release.

Schmid is the Professor and Chair of Cell Biology and is recognized for her work on endocytosis, or how cells absorb nutrients and other molecules, including the major pathway for uptake within the cell. Ive been lucky to start and end my academic career at two unique institutions, Schmid said via release. As a PhD student in the early 80s, I was supported and challenged by my peers and faculty in the Biochemistry department at Stanford to ask important questions and do the most impactful research. Over decades, the leadership at UT Southwestern has inspired, supported and celebrated the very best research creating a collegial culture that breeds success.

This important recognition by their peers reflects the breadth and quality of research underway at UT Southwestern, and serves as inspiration for new generations of trainees and scientists to carry on the tradition of discovery that is the hallmark of distinguished academic medical centers, said Dr. W. P. Andrew Lee., Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, Provost and Dean of UT Southwestern Medical School via release.

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Four UTSW Researchers Named to The National Academy of Sciences - D Magazine

Suncor, Western University team up to make COVID-19 tests using wastewater tech – Financial Post

Suncor Energy Inc. has teamed up with Western University scientists to tackle the shortage of COVID-19 tests, using technology intended to treat wastewater from refineries to produce home testing kits.

The devices, which could be ready in a few months, would allow individuals to test small samples of bodily fluid, such as blood, for COVID-19 antibodies, and receive the results in minutes.

We started in mid-March and its been going very well, said Martin Flatley, a senior staff engineer at Suncors Sarnia, Ont., refinery. Western is about 100 kilometres down the road so its very easy to visit and bring samples. Were in constant contact all the time.

Suncor, the Calgary-based oilsands giant, had already been collaborating with a lab led by Western biochemistry professor Dr. Gregory Gloor when the fast-moving coronavirus swept through North America, forcing closures of non-essential operations and universities.

The team was attempting to identify and sequence genomes of organisms that naturally break down napthenic acid, a toxic byproduct that is part of the wastewater produced by the refinery.

One floor below Gloors lab at Western, fellow biochemistry professors David Edgell and Bogumil Karas were working with students to examine a specific type of algae that had been shown to produce proteins in large quantities.

Their lab is basically next door and we see them all the time, we talk to them all the time, we go out for beers, said Sam Slattery, a PhD candidate in Edgells lab and a lead researcher on the COVID-19 test project.

After the Suncor project was put on hold as COVID-19 hit, the leaders of the two labs wondered if the algae known as PT algae could produce the protein necessary to react with COVID-19 antibodies in a test. As part of the process, the Suncor technology could be used to sequence the protein and the algae.

Someone said lets see what the algae could do in this situation, said Slattery. Suncor said were on board and that was it.

The past couple of months have seen Flatley, Slattery and PhD student Daniel Giguere working around strict university COVID-19 protocols including a restriction that calls for only one person in the lab at any one time to produce and sequence the algae and its protein.

The process would be an alternative to current methods, which generate the protein using mammalian and insect cells. That procedure relies on far more costly materials, including a media the rich broth used to grow the protein that costs about $3,000 a litre compared to pennies a litre for the media used in the algae process.

The algae is photosynthetic too, so the energy it needs is free, we dont have to feed it, said Slattery.

The collaboration, funded by Suncor and Mitacs, a non-profit organization funded by federal and provincial governments to promote innovation, and should have a workable test within a few months.

Epidemiologists have urged countries to dramatically ramp up testing for COVID-19, arguing that identifying and isolating infected individuals is essential to keeping the viruss spread under control until a vaccine is developed.

The call for testing has become even more urgent as provinces ponder reopening their economies, raising the risk of a second wave of infections. However, fierce global demand for tests has left countries competing for limited supplies as they attempt to develop and ramp up domestic production.

At the moment, the most commonly administered test is the nasopharyngeal swab, which identifies the active presence of the virus. The 6-inch swab is inserted through the nose by a medical professional.

However, scientists have been anxiously awaiting the development of both at-home tests and antibody tests that could measure those that have already been infected. Enabling individuals to administer their own tests could dramatically improve existing data on infections, particularly since the disease is carried by asymptomatic individuals.

If you have antibodies, you are probably over the infection, said Barry Bloom, a professor of public health at Harvard University and a specialist in infectious diseases. If you dont have the antibodies and dont have symptoms, thats where youre at risk of being infected, youre a threat. But the only way to know that is to test.

Financial Post

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Suncor, Western University team up to make COVID-19 tests using wastewater tech - Financial Post

Know your target: Fundamental science will lead us to coronavirus vaccines – The Conversation CA

The current pandemic, and maybe even more importantly the next one, will be beaten in the laboratory by strong fundamental science that informs smart medical responses and public policy.

Globally, the research community is galvanized to fight this virus: researchers are developing ways to reuse personal protective equipment, devising better treatments for people who have been infected, creating vaccines and trying to understand what makes this virus so deadly.

Read more: What the coronavirus does to your body that makes it so deadly

One of the major issues in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic is that we simply dont understand why SARS-CoV-2 the coronavirus that causes the disease is so dangerous. We do know that its deadly nature is a function of small genetic changes, called mutations, which distinguish it from other viruses. But which mutations?

SARS-CoV-2 is a close relative of SARS-CoV, the virus that caused the 2003 SARS outbreak, but even between these closely related viruses there are around 6,000 genetic differences (a staggering 20 per cent of the genome). Between these two SARS viruses and other, far less deadly coronaviruses there are even more mutations.

Which of these changes, or combination of these changes, makes SARS-CoV-2 so deadly? This virus has 14 genes in its genome, coding for 27 proteins. Proteins are chains of amino acids and those 6,000 genetic differences result in 380 amino acid changes. Its the changes in amino acids, and what those changes do to protein function, that give each virus its unique character.

SARS-CoV-2 is, like other coronaviruses, a sphere with spikes radiating out of it. In electron microscope images, these spikes form a crown the corona that gives these viruses their name. In infection, the spikes attach to human cells and control the virus genes entering the cells. Different coronavirus spikes bind to different receptors on the cell surface. SARS-CoV-2 and SARS-CoV, for example, bind to different receptors than the MERS virus, resulting in different pathologies.

Every virus has its own form of these spikes, and this large amount of variation in these spikes is a challenge to, and possible solution for, creating a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. Vaccines work by training your immune system to recognize an antigen, a specific aspect of an invader.

A challenge for creating a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine, or any vaccine, is that because virus surfaces vary so much, antigens change and a vaccine for one virus doesnt recognize another. But, if we can identify something that we know is on the surface of a virus, we can possibly create a vaccine to that antigen. With SARS-CoV-2, its unique spike is just such a possible candidate and work characterizing the spike is underway.

Why do different spikes have different biology? The spikes are proteins, and the differences in spike binding and shape are a function of amino acid changes, but we dont know which ones. In part, our lack of understanding reflects our ignorance of how amino acid changes affect protein shape and function. This is where fundamental science comes in.

My research group studies how amino acid substitutions change protein function and biology: the exact thing we do not understand about the variation in SARS-CoV-2. We study a protein called malic enzyme which converts the chemical compound malate to pyruvate in essentially all living organisms, including Drosophila melanogaster, the fruit fly we work with.

Like every protein, Drosophila malic enzyme is a string of amino acids folded into a three-dimensional form. You can picture this as a ball of rubber bands if the rubber bands were all one long string, and the ball wasnt necessarily round. This not-round aspect is important; the shape that a protein takes depends on the amino acids in that chain.

A proteins shape is determined by how its sequence of amino acids packs. Change an amino acid and you change that shape and shape determines how proteins work. This hierarchy amino acids determine shape, shape determines function holds whether we are looking at a metabolic enzyme or a viral spike protein.

Drosophila malic enzyme is made up of almost 600 amino acids, but across the entire species, only two of these ever differ. At the first site, the two amino acids that we find, alanine or glycine, are fairly similar to each other, but substituting between the two actually changes the enzymes activity by almost 30 per cent, which is a big deal in biology. A closer look at this site may explain the difference in activity.

It is at the edge of the active site of the protein, the pocket in which the enzyme breaks down malate, and part of a helix, a twirl of amino acids forming a spiral staircase-like structure. Alanines form spirals but glycines do not. That 30 per cent difference in activity seems to result from a slightly shorter or longer spiral, a small difference leading to a subtle change in shape but very different biochemistry.

The second site tells a different story. At this site, the two amino acids, leucine or methionine, are also fairly similar to each other, but again we see a difference in biochemistry, here about a 40 per cent difference in the strength with which the enzyme binds to malate. The second site isnt particularly near to any known structure, but is in a region of the protein in which the amino acids lie down in a sheet, interacting to form a pleated surface similar to a pleated skirt. The subtle difference between leucine and methionine likely changes the shape of this sheet, resulting in the difference in binding biochemistry.

Understanding both of these small differences helps us understand how amino acid variation leads to changes in protein function and gets us closer to predicting how other changes in other proteins, like a viral spike, alter their function.

Fundamental science is the basis of much of the work to develop a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. Research from labs around the globe is getting us closer to beating the next pandemic. Our fly work is a small part of this process. As we get better and better at understanding protein variation, for example, we get better at designing new vaccines and possibly predicting which viruses have the potential to be deadly.

The COVID-19 pandemic is very unlikely to be the only such crisis we face. There are potentially millions of viruses that could pose threats to humans, not to mention other non-viral pathogens. Success in fighting these threats depends on strong science and strong funding for fundamental research into traditional and novel ways to fight infectious disease.

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Know your target: Fundamental science will lead us to coronavirus vaccines - The Conversation CA

Supply, wholesale prices of fruits, vegetables being monitored – The News International

FAISALABAD: Deputy Commissioner Muhammad Ali has said that the supply and wholesale prices of the fruits and vegetables are being supervised minutely for keeping the balance between supply and demand to discourage the negative trend of the price hike during Ramazan.

He stated this while examining the auction process of fruits and vegetables during the visit to the fruits and vegetables market at Ghulam Muhammadabad. The deputy commissioner visited different sheds of the market and reviewed the auction process of strawberries and other fruits. He warned that unwarranted and unfair increase in auction would not be tolerated. He said that the fair profit was right in business, but exploitation of the consumers would not be allowed.

He directed the Market Committee staff for keeping a vigil eye on the business activities in the market and said that immediate action should be taken against the elements involved in creating scarcity of the essential items through hoardings. He said that the price lists should immediately be issued by the Market Committee.

He also directed that anti-corona measures should be followed during the auction process and sanitizer would available at the prominent places of the market. He also checked cleanliness situation in the market and asked the Market Committee to do better management in this regard. He said that the price control magistrates fined Rs 221,400 to 165 profiteers on Thursday. He said that 35 price control magistrates were active in the markets and bazaars. He said that the monitoring of markets and bazaars would continue and profiteers would be sent behind the bar if they did not follow the price lists.

Prof Bajwa appointed UAF dean faculty of sciences: The Governor Punjab being Chancellor University of Agriculture Faisalabad Friday appointed Prof Dr. Muhammad Asghar Bajwa of biochemistry department as Dean Faculty of Sciences for a period of thee-year. Prof Bajwa, who is senior tenured professor of the varsity, has many distinctions on his credit. He has vast experience of serving as members of almost all statutory bodies of the varsity. He has so far produced around 20 PhDs, 90 MPhil and more than 90 MSc graduates under his director guidance. Earlier, he served as Chairman of Biochemistry Department, Dean Faculty of Sciences, member Syndicate, Finance & Planning committee, Affiliation Committee, Sports Board, and Affiliation Committee etc. He has won and executed numerous research projects as PI and Co-PI.

He has published more than 200 research papers in journals of international repute, including 190 papers in journals having impact factor with an Impact factor of over 290 and citations over 40,000. He has also presented his work in 80 national and international conferences and as invited/keynote speaker at different forums. Dr Asghar has submitted 2 patents for approval to government agencies. He has been working as reviewer of 51 Research Grants for different national and international funding agencies and 73 research papers/reviews for international journals. Dr Bajwa is the founder Managing Editor of Journal of Biochemistry, Biotechnology and Biomaterials.

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Supply, wholesale prices of fruits, vegetables being monitored - The News International

Global Biochemical Pesticides Market 2020 by Company, Regions, Type and Application, Forecast to 2024 Cole Reports – Cole of Duty

The report on Global Biochemical Pesticides Market documents a detailed study of different aspects of the Global Biochemical Pesticides Market. It shows the steady growth in market in spite of the fluctuations and changing market trends. In the past four years the Global Biochemical Pesticides Market has grown to a booming value of $xxx million and is expected to grow more. Every market intelligence report is based on certain important parameters. It includes a meticulous analysis of market trends, market shares and revenue growth patterns and the volume and value of the market. Market studies are based on methodical researches.

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This report on Global Biochemical Pesticides Market is also based on a meticulously structured methodology. These methods help to analyze markets on the basis of thorough research and analysis. Generally, research includes information about manufacturers, vendors, products, consumers, research papers and more. The analysis part mostly includes qualitative and quantitative analysis of markets like business models, market forecasts, market segmentations and other aspects that help in analysis. Every market research study gives specified importance to manufacturers dwelling in that market. A detailed analysis of manufacturers or key players is essential for anyone seeking to jumpstart business in any market.

Major companies of this report:

Valent BioSciencesCertis USABASFBayerIsagroMarrone Bio InnovationsNeudorffBioworksKoppert

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Competitive analysis or competitor study includes detailed information of manufacturers business models, strategies, revenue growth and all the data required that would benefit the person conducting the market research. For new investors and business initiatives market research is a must as it gives them a direction and a plan of action to move forward keeping in mind their competitors. Global Biochemical Pesticides Market segmentation is also an important aspect of any market research report. Market segmentation is mostly based on demography, geography and behavior. It helps understand the consumers and their demands and behavior towards a particular product or market. Another important aspect covered in any market research report and is also a part of market segmentation is the regional study of the market. This section focusses on the regions with significant advancements in a particular market.

Segmentation by Type:

LiquidPowder

Segmentation by Application:

Insect ControlWeed ControlPlant Disease Control

Regional analysis of any market can give a detailed overview of regions which have more business opportunities, revenue generation potential and a forecast of next few years. For any new business establishment or business looking to upgrade and make impactful changes in their businesses, this particular section in a market report is very important. In this Global Biochemical Pesticides Market report, the region highlighted the most is North America. For many markets this region is of extreme importance.

Following regions are covered in Global Biochemical Pesticides Market Industry report:North America Country (United States, Canada)South AmericaAsia Country (China, Japan, India, Korea)Europe Country (Germany, UK, France, Italy)Other Country (Middle East, Africa, GCC)

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Global Biochemical Pesticides Market 2020 by Company, Regions, Type and Application, Forecast to 2024 Cole Reports - Cole of Duty

Florida’s Tori Bindi One Of Two McWhorter Scholar-Athlete of the Year Nominees – SwimSwam

Courtesy: UF Athletics

GAINESVILLE, Fla. University of Florida womens senior swimmerTori Bindiand senior baseball infielderKirby McMullenwere named Floridas student-athlete nominees for the H. Boyd McWhorter Scholar-Athlete of the Year, as announced by the Southeastern Conference Friday.

The H. Boyd McWhorter Scholar-Athlete of the Year is an annual academic award for the top scholar-athlete in the SEC. Each respective conference institution nominates a male and female student-athlete, with the ultimate selection of the two winners being made by the Faculty Athletics Representative Selection Committee.

The final announcement of the McWhorter Scholar-Athlete of the Year winners will be announced on May 26. Additionally, the remaining 26 nominees will receive a $10,000 SEC Postgraduate Scholarship Award.

The nomination adds to a long list of academic and athletic achievements for Bindi, a Gulf Breeze, Fla., native.

Bindi, a biochemistry major, boasts a 3.94 grade point average and wasrecently namedan Outstanding Leader of UFs Spring 2020 graduating class, becoming the first student-athlete since 2015 to earn the honor. This year, she served as the President of the Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), met monthly with Athletic DirectorScott Stricklinas members of the Gators Leadership Experience and represented Florida at the SEC Leadership Conference this past June.

Additionally, she achieved SEC Academic Honor Roll Status each year as a Gator, as well as earning CSCAA All-American and UFs Anderson Scholar Award with Highest Distinction honors in 2018.

She has placed an extreme importance on career development away from campus, gaining experiences under Dr. David Fuller at the UF Brain Institute (research assistant), UF Shands Hospital (surgical services intern and physician shadowing) and the Andrews Institute (orthopedic surgery intern) in her hometown.

Bindi finished her swimming career at the 2020 SEC Championships, setting personal bests in the 100, 200 and 500 free. Additionally, she was a member of the sixth-place 800 free relay. As a junior in 2019, Bindi traveled to the NCAA Championships in Austin, Texas as a member of the Gator 800 free relay.

Her next steps include receiving her undergrad degree with Cum Laude honors this spring and passing the MCAT in the near future. Bindi will continue to study with Dr. Fuller as his lab is aiming to create a gene therapy treatment for kids who are diagnosed with Pompe disease.

She will also begin to apply for schools across the nation to begin studies in the fall of 2021 with aspirations of becoming anorthopedic or pediatric plastic surgeon.

McMullen is set to graduate this weekend, and will earn his degree in food and resource economics with a 3.59 GPA. In his four years at Florida, McMullen made the Deans List twice, he SEC Academic Honor Roll three times, and in the fall of 2018 made the Presidents Roll which is awarded to students who achieve a 4.0 GPA with a course load of at least 15 credits.

This past December, the Ocala, Fla., native was one of Floridas two participants for the 2019 SEC Career Tour, a three-day event which provided exposure for SEC student-athletes seeking career opportunities in a variety of fields. McMullen and the group visited the headquarters and executives of several corporations in the Atlanta area, including Cox Communications, NCR Corporation, Winning Edge Leadership Academy, The Home Depot, and UPS.

In the summer of 2018, McMullen completed an internship with Dinkins Construction, where he assisted with the management and clean up at job sites.

McMullen, a contributing member of Floridas 2017 NCAA Championship-winning team and two SEC title-winning teams in 2017 and 2018, carved out a starting role as a senior this past season. He hit .278 with 10 runs batted in, along with four doubles and a team-high 14 walks. McMullens .458 on-base percentage ranked second on the team.

McMullen intends to return to Florida for the 2021 season via the NCAAs eligibility relief waiver for spring student-athletes.

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Florida's Tori Bindi One Of Two McWhorter Scholar-Athlete of the Year Nominees - SwimSwam

COVID-19: Responding to the business impacts of Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons Market Boosting the Growth Worldwide: Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons…

The latest report on the Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market provides an out an out analysis of the various factors that are projected to define the course of the Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market during the forecast period. The current trends that are expected to influence the future prospects of the Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market are analyzed in the report. Further, a quantitative and qualitative assessment of the various segments of the Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market is included in the report along with relevant tables, figures, and graphs. The report also encompasses valuable insights pertaining to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market.

The report reveals that the Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market is expected to witness a CAGR growth of ~XX% over the forecast period (2019-2029) and reach a value of ~US$ XX towards the end of 2019. The regulatory framework, R&D activities, and technological advancements relevant to the Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market are enclosed in the report.

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The market is segregated into different segments to provide a granular analysis of the Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market. The market is segmented on the basis of application, end-user, region, and more.

The market share, size, and forecasted CAGR growth of each Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons market segment and sub-segment are included in the report.

companies profiled in this report are BAE Systems, Inc.; Lamperd Less Lethal, Inc., Taser International, Inc.; Raytheon Company; Textron Systems, Corp.; General Dynamics Corporation; Chemring Group PLC.; Moog, Inc; Qinetiq Group, Inc.; and LRAD Corporation. These organizations focus on evolving innovative products after investment of substantial amount of their net sales in research and development for introducing progressive technologies with large range abilities, reduced weight, and relatively higher precision.

The segments covered in the Non-Lethal Biochemical Weapons market are as follows:

Global Non-Lethal Biochemical Weapons Market: By Operation Type

Global Non-Lethal Biochemical Weapons Market: By Product Type

Global Non-Lethal Biochemical Weapons Market: By End Use

Global Non-Lethal Biochemical Weapons Market: By Geography

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COVID-19: Responding to the business impacts of Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons Market Boosting the Growth Worldwide: Non-lethal Biochemical Weapons...

Daniel Wang, Institute Professor and pioneer in biochemical engineering, dies at 84 – MIT News

Daniel I.C. Wang, an MIT Institute Professor who was considered one of the founding fathers of the field of biochemical engineering, died Saturday in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was 84.

During his long career at MIT, Wang contributed to many aspects of biochemical engineering a field that involves genetically engineering microbes and human cells to produce useful proteins. His research spanned all phases of the process, including fermentation, monitoring and control of bioprocesses, enzyme technology, product purification, and protein folding.

In 1985, Wang was the driving force behind the launch of MITs Biotechnology Process Engineering Center (BPEC), which was founded as a multidisciplinary research center bringing together faculty from the departments of Biology, Chemistry, and Chemical Engineering.

Dannys work and impact in the field of biochemical engineering were profound, and led to a major shift in the growth of chemical engineering at the interface with biology, says Paula T. Hammond, the David H. Koch Professor and head of the MIT Department of Chemical Engineering. He extended chemical engineering concepts to bioreactors and the first efforts in bioprocesses, enzyme technology, and mammalian cell cultures, among many other accomplishments. Chemical engineering has lost a giant, and the department has lost a good friend and incredible mentor to our faculty, researchers, and numerous alumni.

The establishment of MITs BPEC coincided with the overall emergence of biotechnology as an industry and a research field. Wang and other early pioneers developed ways to use emerging knowledge about the genetics of microbes to engineer them to produce useful products. Among many other projects, Wang worked on engineering E. coli to increase their production of desired recombinant proteins. He also studied techniques for increasing yields of therapeutic recombinant proteins and monoclonal antibodies from mammalian cells.

He also worked closely with the biotechnology industry and was one of the original members of Biogens scientific board, where he was instrumental in the companys development of the manufacturing of complex biopharmaceuticals.

Born in Nanking, China, Wang worked to establish international ties between MIT and universities in other countries, particularly in Asia. He established a joint program in molecular engineering of biological and chemical systems with the National University of Singapore, which became part of the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART).

Wang, who served as the Chevron Professor of Chemical Engineering before being named an Institute Professor, was also known for his dedication to his students. Noubar Afeyan, a former student of Wangs who is now the CEO of Flagship Pioneering and a member of the MIT Corporation, described him as a friend and cherished mentor.

Danny touched thousands all over the world by inspiring generations of students, industrial collaborators, and fellow professors. He was confident yet humble, tough yet caring, serious yet playful, with an insatiable appetite for good Chinese food. We will miss Danny and work hard to make his legacy proud, Afeyan says.

In recognition of Wangs pioneering research, MITs Frontiers of Biotechnology Lectureship was renamed for him in 2014. Now known as the Daniel I.C. Wang Lecture, the lectureship honors achievements at the frontiers of biotechnology, and the distinguished scientists and engineers responsible for them.

Dan Wangs influence as a teacher, mentor, researcher, and friend has been monumental to so many people who have become the leaders in building a biotech industry and biochemical engineering as a profession, says Charles Cooney, the Robert T. Haslam Professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT. Though saddened by his passing, we celebrate his legacy of unwavering nurturing of students and colleagues to address challenging problems with innovative solutions.

Wang earned two degrees from MIT a BS in 1959 and an MS in 1961. In 1963, he earned a PhD in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. He joined the MIT faculty in 1965 and was named an Institute Professor, MITs highest faculty honor, in 1995. He received numerous honors and awards, including the Amgen Biochemical Engineering Award in 1995 and the William H. Walker Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers in 1994. He was also a member both of the National Academy of Engineering and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

In 2019, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers established an award in his honor the D.I.C. Wang Award for Excellence in Biochemical Engineering. The award is given annually and recognizes individuals for their contributions to the field and to the practice of biochemical engineering through their position in industry or academia as exemplified by Professor Wang in his 50 years of contributions, according to the AIChE.

Wang also contributed to national efforts in biotechnology, as chair of the Membership Committee of the National Academy of Engineering, a member of the National Biotechnology Policy Board at the National Institute of Health, a member of the National Research Council Committee on Bioprocess Engineering, a member of the National Research Council Committee on Biotechnology, and a member of the Board of Biology of the National Research Council.

He also co-authored five books, published more than 250 papers, and was awarded 15 patents.

Wang is survived by his wife, Victoria; his son, Keith; his daughter-in-law Katherine; his two granddaughters, Veronica and Emily; his sister, Judy, and her family; and his sister-in-law, Cecile. Plans for a memorial will be announced at a later date.

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Daniel Wang, Institute Professor and pioneer in biochemical engineering, dies at 84 - MIT News

Was Changmao Biochemical Engineering Company Limiteds (HKG:954) Earnings Growth Better Than The Industrys? – Simply Wall St

Assessing Changmao Biochemical Engineering Company Limiteds (SEHK:954) past track record of performance is a useful exercise for investors. It allows us to understand whether the company has met or exceed expectations, which is a great indicator for future performance. Below, I assess 954s latest performance announced on 31 December 2019 and evaluate these figures to its historical trend and industry movements.

Check out our latest analysis for Changmao Biochemical Engineering

954s trailing twelve-month earnings (from 31 December 2019) of CN58m has jumped 15% compared to the previous year.

Furthermore, this one-year growth rate has exceeded its 5-year annual growth average of 9.2%, indicating the rate at which 954 is growing has accelerated. Whats the driver of this growth? Well, lets take a look at if it is solely owing to an industry uplift, or if Changmao Biochemical Engineering has seen some company-specific growth.

In terms of returns from investment, Changmao Biochemical Engineering has fallen short of achieving a 20% return on equity (ROE), recording 8.7% instead. However, its return on assets (ROA) of 7.9% exceeds the HK Chemicals industry of 6.6%, indicating Changmao Biochemical Engineering has used its assets more efficiently. And finally, its return on capital (ROC), which also accounts for Changmao Biochemical Engineerings debt level, has increased over the past 3 years from 4.9% to 9.6%. This correlates with a decrease in debt holding, with debt-to-equity ratio declining from 17% to 3.1% over the past 5 years.

Though Changmao Biochemical Engineerings past data is helpful, it is only one aspect of my investment thesis. Companies that have performed well in the past, such as Changmao Biochemical Engineering gives investors conviction. However, the next step would be to assess whether the future looks as optimistic. I recommend you continue to research Changmao Biochemical Engineering to get a more holistic view of the stock by looking at:

NB: Figures in this article are calculated using data from the trailing twelve months from 31 December 2019. This may not be consistent with full year annual report figures.

If you spot an error that warrants correction, please contact the editor at editorial-team@simplywallst.com. This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. Simply Wall St has no position in the stocks mentioned.

We aim to bring you long-term focused research analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Thank you for reading.

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Was Changmao Biochemical Engineering Company Limiteds (HKG:954) Earnings Growth Better Than The Industrys? - Simply Wall St