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Category Archives: Transhuman News
OHSU advancing first-of-its-kind strategy to overcome infertility – OHSU News
Posted: August 6, 2022 at 7:37 pm
OHSU researchers will receive a grant to helpadvance a first-of-its-kind method to turn an individuals skin cell into an egg, with the potential to produce viable embryos. (OHSU/Christine Torres Hicks)
Scientists at Oregon Health & Science University have received significant philanthropic support to advance a first-of-its-kind method to turn an individuals skin cell into an egg, with the potential to produce viable embryos.
The technique, initially demonstrated in mice, could eventually provide a new avenue for child-bearing among couples unable to produce viable eggs of their own.
Paula Amato, M.D., professor of obstetrics and gynecology in the OHSU School of Medicine, andShoukhrat Mitalipov, Ph.D., director of the OHSU Center for Embryonic Cell and Gene Therapy. (OHSU/Christine Torres Hicks)
Even though the proof of concept in mice shows promise, significant challenges remain to be resolved before the technique could be ready for clinical trials under strict ethical and scientific oversight. Even then, Congress currently precludes the Food and Drug Administration from providing oversight for clinical trials involving genetic modification of human embryos.
Shoukhrat Mitalipov, Ph.D., (OHSU)
It will take probably a decade before we can say were ready, said Shoukhrat Mitalipov, Ph.D., director of the OHSU Center for Embryonic Cell and Gene Therapy. The science behind it is complex, but we think were on the right path.
This type of research is not funded by the National Institutes of Health, so it depends on philanthropic support. For this project, Open Philanthropy awarded $4 million over three years through the OHSU Foundation.
Paula Amato, M.D. (OHSU)
Paula Amato, M.D., professor of obstetrics and gynecology in the OHSU School of Medicine, sees the potential for an enormous benefit to families struggling to have children if the technique proves successful.
Age-related decline in fertility remains an intractable problem in our field, especially as women are delaying childbearing, said Amato, who is the principal investigator for the grant award.
The technique holds promise for helping families to have genetically related children, a cohort that includes women unable to produce viable eggs because of age or other causes, including previous treatment for cancer. It also raises the possibility of men in same-sex relationships having children genetically related to both partners.
The skin cell can come from somebody who doesnt have any eggs themselves, Amato said. The biggest implication is for female, age-related infertility. It can also come from women with premature ovarian insufficiency due to cancer treatment or genetic conditions, or from men who would be able to produce a genetically related child with a male partner.
The award from Open Philanthropy will enable OHSU researchers to develop the technique in early human embryos using eggs and sperm from research donors. As with other groundbreaking research at OHSU including a gene-editing discovery that generated worldwide attention in 2017 none of the early embryos will be allowed to develop past the early blastocyst stage.
Researchers will build on a study in mice published this January in the journal Communications Biology.
The study demonstrated that it is possible to produce normal eggs by transplanting skin-cell nuclei into donor eggs from which the nuclei have been removed. Known as somatic cell nuclear transfer, the technique was famously used in 1997 to clone a sheep in Scotland named Dolly. In contrast to a direct clone of one parent, the mouse study published earlier this year required OHSU and collaborating scientists to cut the donor DNA in half and then fertilize the resulting egg with sperm to generate a viable embryo with chromosomes from both parents.
The process involves implanting the skin cell nuclei into a donor egg, and then allowing the egg to discard half its skin cell chromosomes a process similar to meiosis, when cells divide to produce sperm or egg cells. This results in a haploid egg with a single set of chromosomes with precisely half the chromosomes of the diploid skin cell with two sets of chromosomes. At just the right phase of the cell cycle, the new egg is combined with sperm chromosomes through in vitro fertilization.
An embryo then develops with the correct diploid number of chromosomes from each parent.
We had to show in the mouse that this hypothesis works, Mitalipov said. Open Philanthropy saw the implications for fertility with a new way of looking into this. The key is inducing haploidy.
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Viral Vectors Manufacturing Market: Increase in the Number of Gene Therapy Candidates due to Rapid Development of Diseases to Drive the Market -…
Posted: at 7:37 pm
Wilmington, Delaware, United States, Transparency Market Research Inc.: Gene therapy is one of the best treatment options for most chronic diseases. It involves inserting a functional copy of a gene into a defective cell. Gene therapy is useful in the treatment of cancers, inherited disorders, cardiovascular diseases, and infectious pathogen neurological disorders.
Read Report Overview https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/viral-vectors-manufacturing-market.html
Viral or non-viral vector methods are used in efficient transfer of therapeutic gene into the target cells. Viral vectors used in gene therapy include adenovirus, lentivirus, retrovirus, and adeno-associated viral (AAV). Non-viral vectors generally depend on delivery of plasmid DNA.
Development of quality vectors in terms of formulation, physical size, cost, and delivery function is quite challenging. To minimize this problem, manufacturers use various approaches such as development of cell line culture, current good manufacturing practices, cell culture system, and expression systems that are used in the development of vectors. This is projected to boost the growth of the global viral vectors manufacturing market.
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Additionally, increase in the number of gene therapy candidates due to rapid development of diseases and rise in funding for gene therapies are expected to fuel the growth of the global viral vectors manufacturing market. The Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy (ACGT) is a public charity foundation in the U.S. which funds for advancement in cancer gene therapies from laboratory to clinical trials. However, high cost of gene therapies and possible mutagenesis restrain the market.
The global viral vectors manufacturing market can be segmented based on type, disease, application, and region. In terms of type, the global market can be divided into adenoviral vectors, retroviral vectors, adeno-associated viral vectors, and others. The retroviral vectors segment dominated the global viral vectors manufacturing market due to ease of application in major target diseases such as cancer and genetic disorders. Based on disease, the global viral vectors manufacturing market can be classified into cancers, infectious diseases, genetic disorders, and other diseases.
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The genetic disorders segment is anticipated to dominate the market due to increase in research activities on various genetic disorders such as sickle cell anemia, hemophilia A and B, and Huntingtons disease, and a strong gene therapy pipeline in the last phase of drug development. In terms of application, the global market can be bifurcated into gene therapy and vaccinology. The gene therapy segment is expected to account for the largest share of the market due to increase in the number of gene therapy clinical trials conducted for chronic diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and neurodegenerative diseases globally.
Geographically, the global viral vectors manufacturing market can be segmented into North America, Europe, Latin America, Asia Pacific, and Middle East & Africa. Each region can be divide into specific countries/sub-regions such as the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Germany, Brazil, China, India, and GCC Countries. North America dominated the global viral vectors manufacturing market because of increase in research activities, large number of regenerative medicine companies, rise in prevalence of target diseases, and availability of funds. Asia Pacific is expected to be the most attractive market during the forecast period due to increase in health awareness and demand for advanced medical technology.
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Key players operating in the global viral vectors manufacturing market are Lonza, Merck, Oxford BioMedica, CGT Catapult, Cobra Biologics, uniQure, FUJIFILM Diosynth Biotechnologies, Kaneka Eurogentec, and Spark Therapeutics, among others. These players adopt various strategies such as collaborations, agreements, partnerships, and launch of new products to gain competitive advantage in the market.
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The association of APOE genotype with COVID-19 disease severity | Scientific Reports – Nature.com
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Omega Therapeutics Reports Second Quarter 2022 Financial Results and Highlights Recent Company Progress – PR Newswire
Posted: at 7:37 pm
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Aug. 4, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --Omega Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: OMGA) ("Omega"), a clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering the first systematic approach to use mRNA therapeutics as a new class of programmable epigenetic medicines by leveraging its OMEGA Epigenomic Programming platform, today announced financial results for the second quarter ended June 30, 2022, and highlighted recent Company progress.
"This has been an exciting second quarter for Omega, in which we were thrilled to receive FDA clearance of our first IND application for OTX-2002, representing the first ever Omega Epigenomic ControllerTM, a new class of programmable mRNA therapeutics. This is a critical milestone for Omega as we enter our next phase of growth and reflects our pioneering work to realizethe potential ofepigenomic programming," said Mahesh Karande, President and Chief Executive Officer of Omega Therapeutics. "Additionally, we were also pleased to share exciting, new supportive preclinical data, both from our lead program OTX-2002 in hepatocellular carcinoma, as well as from another program in our pipeline focused on non-small cell lung cancer, a potential future indication. We look forward to continuing this momentum as we enter the clinic in the second half of this year and further exploring the broad ranging capabilities of our novel platform in additional therapeutic areas."
Recent Business Highlights
Development Pipeline and Platform
Corporate
Second Quarter 2022 Financial Results
As of June 30, 2022, the Company had cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities totaling $173.7 million.
Research and development (R&D) expenses for the second quarter of 2022 were $19.4 million, compared to $11.2 million for the second quarter of 2021. The $8.2 million increase in R&D expense was primarily driven by an increase in personnel-related expenses, external manufacturing costs, and study costs in support of the advancement of our programs
General and administrative (G&A) expenses for the second quarter of 2022 were $6.2 million, compared to $3.6 million for the second quarter of 2021. The $2.6 million increase in G&A expense was primarily driven by an increase in personnel-related expenses to support business growth.
Net loss for the second quarter of 2022 was $25.9 million, compared to $15.4 million for the second quarter of 2021, driven predominantly by increased R&D and G&A expenses to support the Company's growth and operations as a public company.
About Omega Therapeutics
Omega Therapeutics, founded by Flagship Pioneering, is a clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering the first systematic approach to use mRNA therapeutics as a new class of programmable epigenetic medicines. The company's OMEGA Epigenomic Programming platform harnesses the power of epigenetics, the mechanism that controls gene expression and every aspect of an organism's life from cell genesis, growth, and differentiation to cell death. Using a suite of technologies, paired with Omega's process of systematic, rational, and integrative drug design, the OMEGA platform enables control of fundamental epigenetic processes to correct the root cause of disease by returning aberrant gene expression to a normal range without altering native nucleic acid sequences. Omega's modular and programmable mRNA medicines, Omega Epigenomic Controllers, are designed to target specific epigenomic loci within insulated genomic domains, EpiZips, from amongst thousands of unique, mapped, and validated genome-wide DNA-sequences, with high specificity to durably tune single or multiple genes to treat and cure diseases through Precision Genomic Control. Omega is currently advancing a broad pipeline of development candidates spanning a range of disease areas, including oncology, regenerative medicine, multigenic diseases including immunology, and select monogenic diseases, including alopecia.
For more information, visitomegatherapeutics.com, or follow us onTwitterandLinkedIn.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements contained in this press release that do not relate to matters of historical fact should be considered forward-looking statements, including without limitation statements regarding the timing and design of our Phase 1/2 MYCHELANGELOTM clinical trial; the potential of the OMEGA platform to engineer programmable epigenetic mRNA therapeutics that successfully regulate gene expression by targeting insulated genomic domains; expectations surrounding the potential of our product candidates, including our lead OEC candidate OTX-2002; and expectations regarding our pipeline, including trial design, initiation of preclinical studies and advancement of multiple preclinical development programs in oncology, immunology, regenerative medicine, and select monogenic diseases. These statements are neither promises nor guarantees, but involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, the following: the novel technology on which our product candidates are based makes it difficult to predict the time and cost of preclinical and clinical development and subsequently obtaining regulatory approval, if at all; the substantial development and regulatory risks associated with epigenomic controller machines due to the novel and unprecedented nature of this new category of medicines; our limited operating history; the incurrence of significant losses and the fact that we expect to continue to incur significant additional losses for the foreseeable future; our need for substantial additional financing; our investments in research and development efforts that further enhance the OMEGA platform, and their impact on our results; uncertainty regarding preclinical development, especially for a new class of medicines such as epigenomic controllers; potential delays in and unforeseen costs arising from our clinical trials; the fact that our product candidates may be associated with serious adverse events, undesirable side effects or have other properties that could halt their regulatory development, prevent their regulatory approval, limit their commercial potential, or result in significant negative consequences; the impact of increased demand for the manufacture of mRNA and LNP based vaccines to treat COVID-19 on our development plans; difficulties manufacturing the novel technology on which our OEC candidates are based; our ability to adapt to rapid and significant technological change; our reliance on third parties for the manufacture of materials; our ability to successfully acquire and establish our own manufacturing facilities and infrastructure; our reliance on a limited number of suppliers for lipid excipients used in our product candidates; our ability to advance our product candidates to clinical development; and our ability to obtain, maintain, enforce and adequately protect our intellectual property rights. These and other important factors discussed under the caption "Risk Factors" in our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2022, and our other filings with the SEC could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by the forward-looking statements made in this press release. Any such forward-looking statements represent management's estimates as of the date of this press release. While we may elect to update such forward-looking statements at some point in the future, we disclaim any obligation to do so, even if subsequent events cause our views to change.
Investor contact: Kevin MurphyArgot Partners212.600.1902[emailprotected]
Media contact: Jason Braco, Ph.D.LifeSci Communications646.751.4361[emailprotected]
Omega Therapeutics, Inc.
Condensed consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive loss
(thousands, except share and per share amounts)
Three Months Ended June30,
Six Months Ended June30,
2022
2021
2022
2021
Collaboration revenue from related party
$
476
$
$
743
$
Operating expenses:
Research and development
19,387
11,184
33,659
20,933
General and administrative
6,202
3,637
11,336
6,452
Related party expense, net
741
384
1,562
763
Total operating expenses
26,330
15,205
46,557
28,148
Loss from operations
(25,854)
(15,205)
(45,814)
(28,148)
Other expense, net:
Interest expense, net
(55)
(190)
(210)
(402)
Change in fair value of warrant liability
(11)
(340)
Other expense, net
(3)
(4)
(52)
(8)
Total other expense, net
(58)
(205)
(262)
(750)
Net loss
$
(25,912)
$
(15,410)
$
(46,076)
$
(28,898)
Net loss per common stock attributable to common
stockholders, basic and diluted
$
(0.54)
$
(3.36)
$
(0.96)
$
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Omega Therapeutics Reports Second Quarter 2022 Financial Results and Highlights Recent Company Progress - PR Newswire
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Revolutionizing Healthcare Testing: 1health Unveils Next Generation Diagnostic Platform that Enables Precision Medicine at Scale – Business Wire
Posted: at 7:37 pm
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--1health.io Inc. (1health), an industry-leading healthcare tech company that empowers laboratories to make diagnostic testing accessible and affordable at scale, announces the launch of its Next Generation Diagnostic Platform.
With 1healths innovative platform, laboratories can expand market reach in the clinical and direct-to-consumer segments, and launch tests to healthcare providers, clinicians, and consumers faster, all while offering improved accuracy and an intuitive user interface.
Building on its years of healthcare experience and processing nearly four million diagnostic tests since 2021, 1health has created its next gen platform to enable labs to track insurance, obtain physician authorization, facilitate test ordering and shipping, report on test results quickly, and more. Test ordering is automated in such a way that any testing process - no matter how simple or complex - can be configured into a repeatable, easy-to-use approach. The platforms accuracy and speed enable doctors to focus more on individualized patient care and provide better outcomes for population health. In addition, the platform enables labs to outsource services needed in a product testing workflow to partner organizations. Labs can also stand up a direct-to-consumer store in days using 1health.
1healths Next Generation Diagnostic Platform is modern, cloud-based, secure and compliant, and easy-to-use for all types of testing. It drives affordable, accurate, and timely healthcare outcomes which in turn lead to higher patient satisfaction and better lives lived.
We are entering an exciting age of precision medicine powered by next generation testing and diagnostic services. 1healths mission is to help our lab partners make testing easy to access, affordable, and simple to order, states Mehdi Maghsoodnia, Chief Executive Officer of 1health.
With our direct-to-consumer capabilities, labs can enlist a 3PL to handle shipping and logistics, send orders automatically to specific physicians for review and approval, and, if desired, allow businesses to re-package tests with their own product brand, states Nikhil Arun, VP of Product at 1health. The flexibility, speed, and market reach that 1health offers labs is unprecedented, adds Arun.
No question that 1health is revolutionizing the lab testing experience for patients and healthcare providers, states customer Blaine Smith, COO at Apollo Health Group. In addition, the ability to get a lab up and running in 30 days is an incredibly fast timeline for this kind of deployment, adds Smith.
1healths Next Generation Diagnostic Platform saves precious time, reduces chronic process errors, improves testing visibility, and provides global reach of critical lab tests that may not be available locally. The end result is stronger, more-trusted relationships between laboratories and their customers, better healthcare outcomes for consumers, and ultimately more lives saved.
About 1health.io
1health is driving healthcare innovation by revolutionizing the way laboratories service medical providers and consumers. By providing a modern, secure, and easy-to-use software platform, 1health enables lab testing results to be accurately delivered in minutes, not days or weeks, thereby reducing costs and expanding growth opportunities for laboratories. The result is stronger, more-trusted relationships between laboratories and their customers, better healthcare outcomes for consumers, and ultimately more lives saved.
1health is proud to help leading-edge laboratories like St. Jude Labs, Thomas Scientific, Lucira Health, Gene by Gene, Apollo Health Group, Premier Lab Solutions, and many others and provides testing services to hundreds of leading enterprise companies including Raleys, Starbucks, General Motors Cruise, and the U.S. Air Force. Learn more at: 1health.io.
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Reshaping how doctors and researchers share phenotypic information: first GA4GH standard published by ISO – EurekAlert
Posted: at 7:37 pm
image:Collaboration between the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) and the Standards Council of Canada resulted in GA4GH Phenopackets being published as an ISO standard. view more
Credit: GA4GH / Stephanie Li
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has published Phenopackets, the first clear computational way to responsibly share individual patient traits, removing a major barrier to research on disease diagnosis, treatment, and mechanism discovery.
The standard was initially developed by the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) and championed at ISOunder the Canadian Mirror Committee to ISO/TC215/SC1Genomics informatics, and supported by the Standards Council of Canada.
We finally have the very first standard for phenotype data available worldwide, said University of Colorado professor Melissa Haendel, a GA4GH contributor who launched the Phenopacket idea eight years ago.
Having this ISO standard will encourage software developers, infrastructure developers, healthcare systems to consider Phenopackets as a method for sharing patient-level information securely and in a deidentified way that can be useful for everything from rare to infectious diseases, and addressing many kinds of public health questions, Haendel said.
The standard, ISO 4454 Genomics informatics Phenopackets: A format for phenotypic data exchange, was published on 6 July 2022.
Phenopackets debuted at ISO thanks to theleadership of GA4GH and through the support of Canadas National Member Body, theStandards Council of Canada (SCC), and itsInnovation Initiative.
Beyond furthering the UN Sustainable Development goals for good health and innovation, Phenopackets has the potential to benefit a range of Canadian and global organisations, from Google to the Canadian Institute of Health Research to the Red Cross.
A Phenopacket is a packet of data typically a file that humans and computers can read. It describes a personsphenotype, a term for the way our genes manifest in our bodies, such as hair colour, hormone levels, or a bad reaction to a drug.
For more than a millennium, physicians have used the same technology for recording and sharing phenotypes: the written note.
While handwritten scrawl has morphed into sophisticated electronic health records, fundamentally, little has changed. Clinicians may record two patients identical phenotypes in vastly different ways that are difficult to compare.
For bioinformaticians studying how genes affect our chances of cancer, rare disease, and illness, this freewheeling flexibility is a problem.
If somebody gives you a piece of paper with a bunch of scribbled stuff and says, Do research with that, youre going to go, Well I dont know what that is! You have to read it, understand it, extract all the data, and make sense of it in your head. And that takes time, said Julius Jacobsen, a bioinformatics software developer at Queen Mary University of London who co-leads the GA4GH team working on Phenopackets.
But the Phenopacket provides a sense of how all the bits fit together, like a blank form. All someone has to do is fill in the pre-existing fields, and then they can give you a nice piece of structured information which anyone can understand, said Jacobsen.
So in 2019, GA4GH the worlds standards organisation for genomics approved thePhenopacket standardfor storing phenotypic data in predictable formats that computers everywhere can read.
A few months later, the newly-formed ISO Genomics Informatics subcommittee met in the South Korean city of Daegu. The group chose Phenopackets as one of its very first standards to develop, working in tandem with GA4GH contributors updating the original version of the standard. (Phenopackets v2was adopted forthe ISO standard after being approved in February.)
To officially propose Phenopackets to ISO, GA4GH Work Stream manager Lindsay Smith, who is based at the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research in Toronto, collaborated with the Canadian Mirror Committee to ISO/TC215/SC1, with the support of SCC.
Through programs like its Innovation Initiative, SCC helps innovators to commercialise technologies and facilitates their participation on national and international standardisation committees for the benefit of economic growth and the health and safety of Canadians.
Finding ways to advance health technologies has been an important area of interest for the Innovation Initiative, said Chantal Guay, CEO of SCC. Developing an ISO standard is key to aligning perspectives internationally and promoting shared health information across the world.
Many rounds of reviews from ISO experts in Japan, India, Canada, the U.S., and Korea ensured that Phenopackets would work in diverse healthcare systems.
In Japan, a network of 14 major biobanks has implemented Phenopackets, with 920,000 samples and 250,000 genomic and omics data provided by 490,000 individuals,said Soichi Ogishima, a member of the ISO project team that reviewed Phenopackets.
Researchers can access phenotypic information with GA4GHs Phenopackets standard for capturing clinical data and integrating them with genomic data to develop precision medicine,added Ogishima, a professor of genomic informatics at Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan.
The humble Phenopacket has the potential to transform the treatment of common disease.
Asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, schizophrenia, and other complex conditions are unlikely to be one disease. But its been difficult to divide these diseases into groups that respond to specific treatments. One reason is because everybody uses their own formats, so you cannot combine data, said Peter Robinson, a computational biologist at the Jackson Laboratory who co-leads the GA4GH Phenopackets development team.
By using Phenopackets, well be able to improve precision medicine for individuals by being able to compare and cluster patients based upon their individual characteristics, he said.
The standard could also improvestudy and diagnosis of rare disease.
There should be a tool for patients to share their information as Phenopackets, said Haendel. Right now, there are rare disease patients all over social media sharing free text that could be structured in such a way that we could mine it as data for example, to identify patients who have the same condition around the world.
Patient matchmaking would get easier with a database of cases described in the Phenopacket format.
Many journals in human genetics are willing to consider cajoling or requiring authors to submit Phenopackets together with case reports. Usually if you find a new disease gene, youll describe ten patients, but none of that information is accessible at the patient level, said Robinson.
In June, Robinson, Jacobsen, Haendel, Smith, and collaborators published anarticle inNature Biotechnologyoutlining how Phenopackets lets researchers and cliniciansexchange patient characteristics more effectively and link those data to genomic information.
While the Phenopacket schema is stillavailable free of costfrom GA4GH, ISO publication significantly broadens its reach. Beyond Japanese biobanks, databases like the widely-used BioSamples have already implemented Phenopackets. Electronic health record vendors and national health systems are considering the standard.
As an added benefit, any organisation that adopts Phenopackets can easily link to other powerful clinical and research tools from the GA4GHGenomic Data Toolkit.
Going forward, there are plans to build Phenopackets into standards for sharing electronic health records, such as Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) by the Health Level 7 (HL7) organisation.
Phenopackets was chosen as one of HL7sVulcan Accelerator projects. Accelerator projects try to improve how clinical studies are designed, conducted and reported by advancing the implementation of research-ready standards. A project to represent Phenopackets in the FHIR standard is underway to make sure that this schema thats now an ISO standard can also be used in the context of HL7, said Haendel.
Phenopackets may be the first GA4GH standard published by ISO, but it will not be the last. Currently, the ISO Genomics Informatics subcommittee is reviewing a proposed standard for genomic surveillance systems such as the public health systems that track Covid-19 variants spreading around the world. GA4GH standards feature prominently within the requirements.
When standards development organisations align their work, everyone benefits.
The ISO publication of Phenopackets exemplifies the benefits of standards coordination. When different standards-setting bodies collaborate, it amplifies the impact of all our standards. Truly global standards expand responsible data sharing and bring the benefits of precision medicine to more patients and their families, said Peter Goodhand, Chief Executive Officer of GA4GH.
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About the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH)
The Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) is an international, nonprofit alliance formed in 2013 to accelerate the potential of research and medicine to advance human health. Bringing together 600+ leading organisations working in healthcare, research, patient advocacy, life science, and information technology, the GA4GH community is working together to create frameworks and standards to enable the responsible, voluntary, and secure sharing of genomic and health-related data.
About the Standards Council of Canada (SCC)
Since 1970, the Standards Council of Canada (SCC) has helped make life safer, healthier, more prosperous and sustainable for people, communities and businesses in Canada through the power of standardization. SCC works with a vast network of partners nationally and around the world, acting as Canadas voice on standards and accreditation on the international stage, including as a member of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). As the countrys leading accreditation organization, SCC creates market confidence at home and abroad by ensuring conformity assessment bodies meet the highest expectations. In all these ways, SCC opens a world of possibilities. For more information, visithttps://www.scc-ccn.ca(link is external)
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New futuristic diner replacing The Crest on Parsons – 614NOW
Posted: at 7:33 pm
A brand-new restaurant concept serving up a blast from the pastand from the futureis coming soon to Schumacher Place.
The Mercury Diner, a futuristic diner serving up throwback restaurant fare with a twist, is tentatively slated for an October opening at 621 Parsons Ave. The space, at the corner of Livingston Ave. and Parsons Ave., formerly housed The Crests second location.
Like The Crest and the nearby Alchemy Kitchen at 625 Parsons Ave., The Mercury Diner is owned by A&R Creative Group.
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The Mercury Diner will feature space-age interior decoration, complete with intergalactic murals, all while serving up variations on classic diner fare from eras past.
Inside it will feel like youre eating in 3022, but youre really eating in 1922, said Managing Partner Justin Wotring.
According to Wotring, A&R wanted to capitalize on the daytime traffic at the location from its proximity to Nationwide Childrens Hospital and German Village.
The Mercury Diner will function as more than just a restaurant, however.
The Parsons Ave. spot will likely host different after-dark pop ups and cook-off events, and it even boasts a small stage that Wotring envisions opening up to local creatives and musicians. It will also act as a restaurant incubator for A&R employees with food dreams of their own.
We have a lot of creative people working for us, a lot of people with ambition, Wotring said, And we wanted to give them a launching pad.
Want to read more? Check out our print publication, (614) Magazine. Learn where you can find a free copy of our new August issuehere!
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A prehistoric Disneyland attraction created futuristic technologies at the park – SFGATE
Posted: at 7:33 pm
The groundbreaking 1964 New York Worlds Fair was a creative playground for Walt Disney and his Imagineers, a chance for the greatest visionaries of the time to experiment before a global audience.
Three of Disney parks most iconic attractions came from the event: Its a Small World, Walt Disneys Carousel of Progress and Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln. A fourth Disney exhibit at the fair never fully made it to parks, but millions have passed by one of its most impressive elements every year at Disneyland.Primeval World, a diorama that is part of the historic Disneyland Railroad, is something that many casual guests pass by without a second thought. You cant miss the staggering heights and breathtaking size of these three-dimensional, audio-animatronic dinosaurs, but many overlook their historical significance.It all goes back to the 1964 Worlds Fair held in Queens, New York a hotbed of inspiration and a promising peek at the future where technology merged with creativity and passion. Fueled by some of the biggest corporations at the time, it was also a pivotal moment for Disney as it was his first big reach to the East Coast, years before Walt Disney World was built, and a chance to flex his creative muscles.At the Fair, Disney spearheaded the creation and design of four exhibits that would lay the groundwork for much of what Disney parks offer today. This ultimately set the trajectory for theme park innovation as we know it.During the planning stages of the Worlds Fair, Ford Motor Company was looking to partner with a pioneering visionary for a unique exhibit that would showcase its new automobiles. Naturally, they thought of Walt Disney and his Imagineers at WED Enterprises, who were making waves at the time for the technologies used at Disneyland.
Primeval World was taken from the 1964 World's Fair attraction Ford Magic Skyway.
They really wanted something to show off their cars particularly, said Ted Linhart, a Disney and Worlds Fair expert behind Disney Docs. This exhibit would also be the debut of the highly-anticipated Ford Mustang, which further solidified the pressure to make a big splash.
They needed a showman, Linhart added. Something to really make a pop.
The result was Ford Magic Skyway, an attraction narrated by Disney himself, that would transport guests aboard actual Ford motor vehicles as they time traveled to different periods, including the era of the dinosaur.The partnership at the Worlds Fair would not only prove to be beneficial for Ford, but for Disney as well. He used the opportunity for his Imagineers to research new technologies and never-before-seen storytelling methods, on the dime of the mega-corporation. It was a big undertaking for Disney, but allowed them to expand their Imagineer technology and audio-animatronic technology, Linhart said.His grandest display of showmanship? Forty-six towering dinosaurs, marking one of the earliest and grandest displays of audio-animatronics.Some 15 million people attended the show during its two-year run. For many, this was the first time they saw audio-animatronics with their own eyes. This new and groundbreaking entertainment medium showed guests the most life-like dinosaurs they had ever seen before, which moved and even grunted.
Walt Disney reportedly referred to these brontosauri as Huey, Dewey and Louie.
Walt realized that the Worlds Fair would be a great place to expand that technology, expose it to many more people, enhance it and get it more out there, added Linhart. The dinosaurs would revolutionize theme park technology as we know it, setting a precedent and introducing guests to figures on the grand scale that they would come to expect from Disney parks attractions.The use of synchronized movement and sound was first on display, although to a much smaller degree, with Walt Disneys Enchanted Tiki Room. The total immersion of the senses displayed in the dinosaur scenes on Ford Magic Skyway, though, was a new level of storytelling that would soon be used at forthcoming Disneyland attractions, like Pirates of the Caribbean and the Haunted Mansion.The dinosaurs were a big hit, Linhart said. They seemed realistic to people. The whole pavilion was a huge smash. Documents show that guests would wait hours to ride the attraction for a glimpse of the dinosaurs.
Industry standards were also set beyond the dinosaurs. Disney and Ford were tasked with learning how to manage the flow of people, marrying ride capacity with guests' demands. A new ride vehicle system was developed that would later be used at Disney parks. One of the technologies they created for the Fair would allow the car to move at the same speed as the track it was on so that people getting in it could get in the car without having injuries, shares Linhart. This vehicle propelling technology, developed for the Ford Magic Skyway, would be used with the now iconic PeopleMover attraction first at Disneyland and now at Walt Disney World.The success of Disneys dinosaurs and all of his exhibits collectively boded new confidence for the companys expansion to Florida and provided the groundwork for beloved attractions seen today. While the three other exhibits made their way to Disney parks fully intact, only Walts popular dinosaurs were rescued from the Ford exhibit.
The diorama culimnates in a fight between a Tyrannosaurus Rex and a Stegosaurus.
They were brought to Disneyland in 1966, where they have entertained millions for the last 56 years. Guests experience these dinosaurs aboard the Disneyland railroad between the Tomorrowland and Main Street, U.S.A. stations.
On this journey, the train passes through the Grand Canyon before coming face to face with these figures in the multi-set Primeval World diorama. The cavernous scenes were inspired by the classic film Fantasia with a soundtrack provided by the roaring dinosaurs and the Primeval World Suite.
During the ride, guests can spot a brontosaurus and three babies; Walt playfully called them Huey, Dewey and Louie. After appearances by pteranodons and triceratops, the final scene finds two dinosaurs, a tyrannosaurus rex and a stegosaurus, battling it out before an erupting volcano.Today, paleontologists have questioned Disney for discrepancies found within the attraction, like the physical attributes of the dinosaurs and conflicting eating habits. What cant be disputed is their impact on theme park innovation and technology.While Primeval World never made it to Walt Disney World, it was reimagined at Tokyo Disneyland and similar life-like dinosaurs seemingly roam the earth or attractions in popular Universal Studios park rides today. It also inspired the now-defunct opening day Epcot attraction, Universe of Energy and Primeval Whirl, another defunct ride in the Dinoland area of Disneys Animal Kingdom in Orlando. (That park made much more realistic dinos on its Dinosaur ride, which uses the same ride track as Indiana Jones Adventure in Disneyland, although riders are escaping extinction, and not a giant stone ball.)The Ford show was designed as a time machine to immerse you in different parts of the past and the future, Linhart added. It does seem like theres a very strong connection from that ride to the iconic rides of today.
For now, the dinosaurs are safe and sound, remaining a beloved part of Disneylands colorful fabric. Only time will tell if they, like so many attractions of yesteryear, will one day roar into extinction.
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Crevice Gardens: A Futuristic Way To Save the Environment? – Nature World News
Posted: at 7:33 pm
It's great that gardens with an eco-conscious aesthetic are popular. The harmony of a successful landscape with its surroundings, in terms of its flora, planting style, and general mood, is one of its defining characteristics.
However, it is important to be aware that the widespread interest in plant naturalism that exists now is a very new trend.
Gardeners have sought distinctly alien plants and strikingly unusual for at least a century; examples include non-native varieties of lilies, roses, azaleas, and hostas.
(Photo : Annie Spratt/Unsplash)
It's a rock garden that has been carried to the very limit; an extreme design that draws inspiration from improbable, dramatic locations like mountain peaks, windswept seacoasts, and sun-baked deserts, as per The New York Times.
To understand the underlying principle closer to home, all you have to do is glance down. See that lone dandelion with its grip in a tiny crevice between curbstones or sidewalk pavers, with no soil in sight? Its colorful blossoms shout in opposition to everything gardeners believe they know about what plants desire, just like a Saxifraga or Silene clinging to tiny crevices in a wide, rocky environment do.
The Crevice Garden: How to Make the Perfect Home for Plants from Rocky Places," a new book, exhorts us to imitate the processes that take place in such settings, both big and tiny.
Rock-garden designers Kenton J. Seth of Colorado and Paul Spriggs of British Columbia are its authors. They occasionally work together.
They have established themselves as de facto crevice gardening ambassadors, drawing in a larger and younger audience with their ambitious lecture schedule, their Facebook group, Modern Crevice Gardens, which has more than 5,000 members, and now a book.
In contrast to flat gardens, crevice gardens typically have berm-like contours that give the appearance of a natural outcrop and allow the roots of the plants to swell deeply (although not very far sideways).
These gardens may be scaled down to fit in a trough or up for a botanical garden or park. They range from naturalistic to high modernist art.
A preliminary design that the men are frequently requested to come up with is a little larger than a container garden. It's maybe a three by three-foot mound that Mr. Seth described as "a little garden" or Mr. Sprigg described as "a modest outcrop."
Instead of being an eyesore that you wish you didn't have to see, a crevice garden transforms this vacant area into a focus point.
No matter the scale, Mr. Seth suggested that the goal may just be to "create a lovely element in a xeric environment that can elevate plants a bit closer to the observer" or sustain plants that you would not otherwise be able to grow in your environment.
Read more:Species Biodiversity: Rare Plants in Urban Gardens Can Also Attract a Rare Biodiversity of Bees and Birds
In the early parts, they utilized very little soil and a lot of PermaTill, a horticultural-grade aggregate.
Many plants, including 588 hardy cactuses and agaves, did not survive the winter.
This caught everyone off guard because the only thing that keeps somewhat hardy plants alive over the winter is the lack of moist soil.
The growth medium was excessively open, and chilly air was penetrating the ground, Tony Avent and Jeremy Schmidt, the botanic garden's supervisor of grounds and research, and rock garden designer Kenton Seth, of Fruita, Colorado found.
Avent claims that the soil temperature in the crevice garden was just four degrees warmer than it was 18 inches below the surface when it was winter.
The growth mix was modified in later parts to incorporate compost and some native soil to address the issue.
More agaves, resilient cacti, delosperma, arabis, and draba are among the 1,500 species that are now flourishing in the garden; these plants would definitely not survive in typical garden beds in central North Carolina.
The waves created by the undulating crevice slabs lend motion to a rigid medium. Schmidt claims he used a skid-steer loader to lower them over their designated spot, then utilized gravity to assist position them.
There is a pleasant tension seeing seemingly fragile, unique beauty like globularia bloom against such imposing settings, with its chive-like flowers.
This served as an organizing principle for the design, but according to Avent, his fissure garden provides a paradigm of urban sustainability by bringing beauty to the wasteland of repurposed concrete.
According to Seth, it's a fantastic method to green cities, prevent waste from going to the landfill, and introduce people to a wide variety of new plants. "I'm hoping this will serve as an example for cities all across the world," as per Independent.
Related article:5 Essential Things for a Well-Kept Garden
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Ambitious Researchers Want to Use AI to Talk to All Animals – Futurism
Posted: at 7:33 pm
"Were species agnostic."Kingdom Come
A group of researchers are looking to use machine learning to translate animal "languages" into something humans can understand and they want to apply it to the whole animal kingdom, a highly ambitious plan to say the least.
AsThe Guardian reports, California-based nonprofit Earth Species Project (ESP) which was founded in 2017 with the help of Silicon Valley investorslike LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman plans to first decode animal communication via machine learning, and then make its findings available to all.
ESP co-founder and president Aza Raskin says that the group, which published its first paper in December 2021, doesn't discriminate and is looking to help humans communicate with, or at least understand, as many species as possible.
"Were species agnostic," Raskin told The Guardian, adding that the translation algorithms the ESP is developing are designed to "work across all of biology, from worms to whales.
In the interview, Raskin likened the group's ambitions to "going to the Moon," especially given that, like humans, animals also have various forms of non-verbal communication, like bees doing a special "wiggle dance" to indicate to each other that they should land on a specific flower.
Despite the seemingly insurmountable challenges the group is facing, the project has made at least some progress, including an experimental algorithm that can purportedly detect which individual in a noisy group of animals is "speaking."
A second algorithm reportedly can generate mimicked animal calls to "talk" directly to them.
"It is having the AI speak the language," Raskin told The Guardian, "even though we dont know what it means yet."
While there are certainly exciting implications to this kind of research, particularly when it comes to conservation and convincing skeptics that animals are worth saving, Raskin admits that AI likely won't be the only answer to saving them.
"These are the tools that let us take off the human glasses," he concluded, "and understand entire communication systems."
READ MORE:Can artificial intelligence really help us talk to the animals? [The Guardian]
More on animal AI:Smart Pet Door Uses Facial Recognition to Keep Strange Animals Out
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